Phases, of my Life. 



By the Very Rev. FRANCIS PIGOU, Dean of Bristol. 

 Fourth Edition. Demy 8vo., i6s. 



' A brighter, pleasanter book of amusing stones and sound good sense applied to religious and 

 social questions of the day there could not be.' Daily Telegraph. 



' Full of capital stories.' Times. 



' A Niagara of anecdote. We have never handled a volume of reminiscences so crammed 

 witii good stories as this.' Academy. 



'The Dean of Bristol has a rich store of anecdotes. Story succeeds story with delightful 

 ease.' Standard. 



' A book about two-thirds of which is packed with funny stories about the clergy and the 

 churches.' Daily News. 



' The whole effect of the book is extremely racy.' Yorkshire Post. 



' A volume which abounds in humour that may be appreciated by every reader, and yet can 

 offend nobody. In short, it is every bit as entertaining as the biography of Archbishop Magee, 

 and to say that is enough to commend it to a wide circle of readers.' Scotsman. 



Notes from A Diary in Asiatic Turkey. 



By LORD WARKWORTH, M.P. 



With numerous Photogravure and other Illustrations. One vol., fcap. 4to., 

 2 is. net. 



' Lord Warkworth has produced a book which is at once interesting, informing, and beautiful 

 to look at.' Literature. 



'The book, a handsome volume printed in large well-spaced type on excellent paper and 

 illustrated with remarkably fine views and a very good map, will make a very worthy item 

 indeed in any library of travel. But the political element is, of course, most important, and the 

 book is a really valuable contribution to the Armenian question.' Pall Mall Gazette.^ 



'A work of vivid and varied interest, dealing with regions of the Ottoman Empire rarely 

 visited by European travellers, and throwing much instructive light on the political and 

 religious differences that have convulsed Asia Minor during the past five years.' Daily 

 Telegraph. 



' The author may be congratulated on this agreeable account of an interesting journey and 

 on his adequate handling of some of the more important problems which such a journey 

 suggested.' A then&um. 



Amateur Clubs and Actors. 



Edited by W. G. ELLIOT. 



"With numerous Illustrations. Large 8vo., 155. 



The volume contains a history of the most prominent Amateur Acting Clubs, 

 and anecdotes of their members. Among the contributors are Mr. J. W. Clark, 

 Mr. B. C. Stephenson, Captain George Nugent, Mr. Yardley, Mr. Frank Tarver, 

 Mr. Claud Nugent, Mr. P. Comyns Carr, and Colonel Newnham Davis. 



' This is a book of so delightful a character that Amateur Clubs and Actors must rejoice to 

 have it always at hand. Its record of the achievement of the leading spirits of the drama is 

 abundantly entertaining, and will serve for guidance in all similar excellent stage-work. No 

 organizer of amateur theatricals ought to be without this handsome volume.' Irish Times. 



' The book is one which every amateur actor, and, indeed, many professionals, should possess, 

 giving as it does a very adequate picture of the playful stage of the present century.' Black 

 and White. 



' A very entertaining volume. The justification for such a book as this is not far to seek. 

 The materials are ample, the records available abound in entertaining episodes and anecdotes, 

 and, finally, many of the parsons who have played a prominent part in amateur theatricals have 

 achieved distinction in other and widely divergent directions.' World. 



