Great Reductions in this Catalonie 



Professor H. H. WILSON^ author of the '' Standard History of India'' 



Glossary of Judicial Terms, including words from the Arabic, 



Persian, Hindustani, Sanskrit, Hindi, Bengali, Uriya, Marathi, 



Guzarathi, Telugu, Karnata, Tamil, Malayalam, and other languages. 



4to, cloth, 30s. 



Wynter's Subtle Brains and Lissom Fingers. Crown 8vo, 3s. 6d. 

 Contents. 



The Buried Boman City in Britain, Early Warnings. 



" Silvertown." Dining KoomB for the Working Glasses. 



Advertising. Bailway and City Population. 



Vivisection. A Day with the Coroner. 



The New Hotel System. Tho English in Paris. 



The Eesloration of our Soil. The Times Newspaper iu 1798. 



Half-Hours at the Kensington Museum. The Under-Sea Railroad. 



Mudie^s Circulating Library. Oh, the Boast Beef of Old England. 



Fraudulent Trade Markp. Physical Education. 



Superstition : Where does it End? Advice by a Betired Physician. 



The Now Counterblast to Tobacco. Tho Clerk of tho Weather. 



Air Traction, Portsmouth Dockyard, 



Illuminations, Village Hospitals. 



Boat-Building by Machinory. Railways, the Great Civilisers. 



The EiTects of Railway Travelling upon ^ On taking a House. 



Health. Photographic Portraiture. 



The Working-Men's Flower Show. Doctor's Stuff. 



Messages under the Sea. Smallpox in London. 



Town Telegraphs. Hospital Dress. 



The Bread We Eat. Excursion Trains. 



"Altogether ' Subtle Brains and LiRsom Fingers' is about tho pleasantest book of 

 short collected papers of chit chat bleudlng information with amusement, and not over- 

 tasking the attention or the intelligence, that we have seen for a good while." — London 

 Reader. 



LIEUT. G.J. YOUNGHUSBAND, Queen's Own Corps of Guides. 



Eighteen Hundred Miles in a Burmese Tat, through Burmah, Siam, 

 and the P'astern Shan States. Illustrated. Crov^'n 8vo, 5s. 



" There is a good deal of jocular description in this book, which, as the reader will 

 easily see, has been introduced with an eye rather to amusement than to accuracy; but 

 after all the volume will have repaid the reader for the few hours which may be spent 

 in its perusal if it conveys to him, as it is calculated to do, a fair impression of the 

 difficulties which beset the wayfarer in a strange land who, when in soarch of the 

 pleasures of travel, begins his Journey where he should leave off, and ends it where ho 

 should have started."— .4iAen(Kwm.. 



"Mr Younghusband's account of bis adventures Is written simply and without 

 exaggeration, but on the whole we think we would rather read about the Shan country 

 than travel in it." — Literary World. 



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