io Mr. Edward Arnold's List of New Books 



MY SPORTING HOLIDAYS. 



By Sir HENRY SETON-KARR, C.M.G., M.P. 

 Demy Svo. With numerous Illustrations. 125. 6d. net. 



Sir Henry Seton-Karr has all his life been accustomed to devote 

 his spare time to sport in all its forms, and, fortunately for those 

 who love to read a well-told fishing or shooting story, has kept a 

 record of many of his most interesting adventures in Norway, Scot- 

 land, and the Far West. He differs from many sporting writers in 

 mentioning the ' misses ' with no less frankness than the ' hits,' and 

 his bright and amusing pages give a vivid picture of the vicissitudes 

 of the sportsman's ' luck.' There is a valuable chapter on sporting 

 rifles and their use. 



GHOST STORIES OF AN ANTIQUARY. 



By MONTAGUE RHODES JAMES, Litt.D., 



DIRECTOR OF THE FITZWILLIAM MUSEUM ; FELLOW AND LATE TUTOR OF KING'S COLLEGE, 



CAMBRIDGE. 



Crown Svo. With Illustrations. 6s. 



Those who know the extensive and miscellaneous character of 

 Dr. James's researches in various fields of learning will not be sur- 

 prised to find him appearing as the author of a volume of * Ghost 

 Stories.' Originally written for domestic entertainment only, they 

 certainly succeed in producing that dreadful feeling of growing 

 horror which belongs to the best kind of ghost stories, told in the 

 right way. 



ENGLAND IN EGYPT. 



By VISCOUNT MILNER, 



HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR SOUTH AFRICA. 



Eleventh Edition. With additions summarizing the course of events to the 

 year 1904. Crown Svo. 6s. 



The great and far-reaching change in England's position in Egypt 

 effected by the signature of the Anglo-French agreement has rendered 

 necessary a further addition to Lord Milner's work, tracing the 

 course of events from 1898, when the book was brought up to date 

 by a chapter by Sir Clinton Dawkins, to the present time. This 

 important task has been carried out by Sir Eldon Gorst, K.C.B., late 

 Financial Adviser to the Egyptian Government, who describes in a 

 masterly chapter the recent results of British rule in Egypt and the 

 Soudan, and the hopeful possibilities of the future. 



