1 6 Great Reductions in this Catalogue 



DR TALBOTT, and others. 

 Keble College Sermons. Second Series, 1877- 1888, crown ^vg, 6p. 



" To those who desire earnest, practical, and orthodox doctrine in the form of abort 

 addresses, these Gennona will be moat acceptable ; and their lofty tone, their eloquent 

 wording, and the thorough manliness of tlieir character, will commend l^em to a wide 

 circle of readers."— JJfomin^ Po8t. 



" Dr Talbot has a second time thoughtfully placed on public record some of the 

 lessons which were taught during his Wardenship in Se^-mons preached in the Chapel 

 of Keble College^ Oxfiyrd, 1877-1888. The sermons are fresh and vigorous in tone, and 

 evidently come from preachers who were thoroughly in touch with their youthful 

 audience, and who generally with much acutencss and skill grappled with the 

 spiritual and intellectual difficulties besetting nowadays the University career." — 

 Church Times. 



G. H. KFNAHAN. 

 A Handy Book of Rock Names. Fcap. 8vo, 4s, 



"This will prove, we do not doubt, a very useful little book to all practical geo- 

 logists, and also to the reading student of rocks. When a difficulty is incurred as to 

 a species of deposit, it will soon vanish. Mr Kinahan's little book will soon make it 

 all clear. The work is divided into three parts. ' The first is a classified table of rocks, 

 the second part treats of the Ingenite rocks, and the third part deals with those rocks 

 which are styled Derioate. Dana's termination of yte has been most generally used 

 by the author, but he has also given the ite terminations for those that like them. 

 The book will be purchased, for it must be had, by every geologist ; and as its size is 

 small, it will form a convenient pocket companion for the man who works over field 

 and quarry."— Popwiar Science Review. 



REV. F. G. LEE, D.D. {Vicar of All Saints\ Lambeth). 



The Church under Queen Elizabeth. An Historical Sketch. By Rev. 

 F. G. Lee, D.D. (Vicar of All Saints', Lambelh). Second Edition. 

 Crown 8vo, 7s. 6d. 



"There is the same picturesqueness of detail, the same vigorous denunciation, the 

 same graphic power, which made the earlier book pleasant reading even to many who 

 disagree heartily with its tone and object. . . Dr Lee's strength lies in very graphic 

 description." — Notes and Queries. 



" This is, in many ways, a remarkably fine book. That it is powerfully wfitten no 

 one acquainted with Dr Lee's vigorou3 style would for a moment dispute."— Jfwmni/ 

 Post. 



'* Presenting a painful picture of the degradation into which the Church had sunk 

 in EJIizabeth's VGi^n."— Daily Telegraph, 



Sights and Shadows. Being Exfamples of the Supernatural. New 

 Edition, With a Preface addressed to the Critics. Crown 8vo, 6s. 



"This work will be especially interesting to students of the supernatural, and their 

 name is legion at the present moment; It deals with more than one branch of what is 

 commonly known as spiritualism. The introduction gives a brief resume of various 

 forms of magic and divination which have obtained credence in all ages, and later on 

 we find well-authenticated accounts of apparitions, supernatural warnmgs, hypnotic 

 experiments, and miracles of healing. Mr Lee evidently believes that * there are more 

 things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in our philosophy,' and few sane people 

 will disagree with him, though they may not be inclined to accept all his opinions and 

 assertions as they stand." — Lady. 



** Here we have ghostly stories galore, which believers in supernatural visitations 

 will welcome as upholders of the faith that is in them. Dr Lee is a hard hitter and a 

 vigorous controversialist, with a righteous contempt for your Darwins and Stuart 

 Mills, and such like folk, and is not above suggesting that some of them have a decided 

 worship of the god Self. As for ' the pompous jargon and silly cynicism which so 

 many ^blic scribes again and again make use of to throw discredit upon any phase of 

 the supernatural,' I have nothing to say. They can take care of themselves. This 

 much I know, that 'Sights and Shadows' gives one an eerie feeling as midnight 

 approaches and the fire flickers on the hearth."— Gentieiwoman. 



For the Reduced Prices apply to 



