4 WORKS PUBLISHED BY A. AND W. MACKENZIE. 



say were necesssary proceedings. . . . One thing the book has as- 

 sisted to do to make capricious evictions in the Highlands in future im- 

 possible." Oban Times. 



"There are few tales more pathetic than that of the thousands of 

 Sutherland Crofters who were driven from their native soil and turned out 

 of the homes to which they had a better claim than those who expelled 

 them." Athenaeum. 



"The events which are transpiring in Skye and other districts in the 

 North of Scotland render this volume one of great national interest, and 

 one which should be in the hands of all who desire to have an intelligent 

 acquaintance with the important questions involved. A great part of the 

 work deals with the events of past years, but these events are so closely 

 linked to the present that they may be held to be of the most vital and 

 pressing interest, . . . No one who shuts his eyes to the facts which are 

 here recorded can claim to speak with any authority upon the land question 

 in the Highlands of Scotland." Perthshire Constitutional. 



"We heartily commend Mr. Mackenzie's volume of 528 closely-printed 

 pages as a valuable storehouse of information to all who are interested in 

 the grievances of the Highland Crofters. . . . We would especially 

 advise those who have derived their ideas of the crofters' grievances from 

 the grossly one-sided and sensational statements of the Scotsman, to read 

 the plain, unvarnished tale of Mr. Mackenzie, who has studied the question 

 on the spot, and has n personal interest to serve in misleading the public." 

 London Echo. 



Just PublisJied, in Paper Covers, price One Shilling, 



THE TRIAL OF PATRICK SELLAR, 



FACTOR ON THE SUTHERLAND ESTATES 



(From 1810 to 1818), 

 FOR THE CRIMES OF 



CULPABLE HOMICIDE, REAL INJURY, AND OPPRESSION, 



Before the Co-art of Justiciary, held at Inverness on the 2jrd 

 of April, 1816. 



By the HON. DAVID MONYPENNY, Lord Pitmilly. 



The original Report, published in 1816, has long been very rare, and 

 when a copy turns up it realises a very high price. The present issue is 

 limited. 



A. & W. MACKENZIE, "Celtic Magazine" Office, Inverness. 



