c 



"A work whic 

 edition [the pre 

 have something 

 would scarcely 

 commendations 

 the general reac 

 uninteresting:, f ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^_ 

 meagre, superficial, and unsatisfactory. The 

 fact, then, that the Cabinet Lawyer has at- 

 tained its sixteenth edition, is the best evi- 

 dence of the utility of the compilation, and its 

 appreciation by the public. In the preface to 

 the first edition, the editor, or rather the di- 

 gester, stated his object to be compression 

 and simplicity, which he endeavoured to attain 

 by avoiding everything extraneous to a dis- 

 tinct elucidation of the immediate question, 

 and by divesting the subject of all technical 

 obscurity. The work is divided into six parts, 

 comprising the origin of the English Laws, the 

 Administration of Justice, the laws affecting 



taring on the 

 life ; the laws 

 cted with the 

 and personal: 

 s, and crimes 

 f Law-Terms, 

 ii Ji 



tiquities, is added; including valuable miscel- 

 laneous information on the import of the most 

 recent statutes of universal interest, as the 

 Stamp Laws, Assessed Taxes, and Post-Office 

 regulations. Indeed, by confining himself, as 

 he says, to a simple enunciation of fact and 

 inference, the compiler has most successfully 

 attained his aim, by concentrating almost in 

 an aphorismaticform, facts and legal points, ex- 

 hibiting them in popular language, under such 

 arrangement and classification as will afford 

 the utmost facility for obtaining the informa- 

 tion necessary to the immediate object of 

 research." CALEDONIAN MERCURY. 



Uniform with the above, price 10s. 6d. ; or calf lettered, 13s. 



THE CABINET GAZETTEER 



A IV i ition of all the Countries of the "World. 



By the came Author. 



" The author is really skilled in the rare 

 art of judiciously abridging, and has availed himself of 

 all the recent statistical returns published in Europe 

 and America, and of the most accredited sources of 

 information attainable, to render his work as correct 

 us possible, and to bring down the data to the 

 moment of publication. For all ordinary purposes 

 of consultation, the Cabinet Gazetteer will be found 

 sufficiently comprehensive and scrupulously exact." 



GLOBE. 



I" A very compact handy volume of over nine hun 

 dred pages, in which, as far as inspection enables 

 us to judge, every notable place throughout the 

 I world is described, its condition, population, produc- 

 tions, arts, history, and every other feature of inter- 

 est. The latent information, particularly as regards 

 statistics, has been made use of, and indeed no pains 

 or research seem to have been spared in making 

 this work a valuable appurtenance to the desk of 

 the student, the merchant, the professional man, or 

 the general reader." MOBNIXG ADVKKTISEB. 



London : LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, LONGMANS, and ROBERTS. 



13 



