Art Enamelling on Metals 



By H. H. CUNYNGHAME, CB. 

 Illustrated. Second Edition, revised and enlarged. 6s. net. 



The book contains, in addition to about twenty other illustrations, two 

 coloured representations of exquisite Limoges enamels by Penicaud II. and 

 Leonard Limousin, which are very brilliant and faithful representations of the 

 originals. 



This book is an indispensable adjunct to every art or technical library, 

 inasmuch as most of the information it contains is not to be procured else- 

 where. 



Amateur Fish Culture 



By CHARLES WALKER, Author of "Shooting on a Small Income." 

 Crown 8vo, 2s. 6d. net. 



Motor Vehicles and Motors 



Their Design, Construction, and Working by Steam, Oil, and Electricity 

 By W. WORBY BEAUMONT 



M.Inst.C.E. M.Inst.M.E. M.Inst.E.E. 



Price 42s. net. 



About six hundred pages and more than four hundred and fifty illustrations 



and working drawings. 



" All that has been written in the English language falls to a rear position 

 when Mr. Worby Beaumont's ample history is seen. It is a credit to the author, 

 a splendid tribute to the industry, and should be a great factor in the future 

 development of automobilism. Mr. Beaumont is known as something more 

 than a writer on the subject— he is an authority who can speak without notice 

 out of the fulness of his knowledge. When such a man seriously contemplates 

 writing a history, facts, many and authoritative, may be expected. And in such 

 we have not been disappointed. . . . The book is one that will be extremely 

 valuable, if not indispensable, to engineers and makers of motor vehicles." — 

 Motor-car Journal. 



Acetylene 



A Handbook, for the Student and Manufacturer 

 By VIVIAN B. LEWES, F.I.C., etc. 



Professor of Chemistry, Royal Naval College, Greenwich ; Chief Superintending 

 Gas Examiner to the Corporation of the City of London, etc. 



About 1,000 pages and 228 illustrations. Demy 8vo. 31J. (>d. net. 



"The work is a most valuable and complete handbook to the subject, more 

 exhaustive than has been published in any language, and reflects the greatest 

 credit on the author. No manufacturer or user of acetylene and no student of 

 the science and art of artificial illumination should be without it." — Athenceum. 



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