CHATTO &> WINDUS, PICCADILLY. 3 



Crown 8vo, Coloured Frontispiece and Illustrations, cloth gilt, 7s. 6ii. 



A History of Advertising. 



From the Earliest Times. Illustrated by Anecdotes, Curious 

 Specimens, and Biographical Notes of Successful Advertisers. 

 By Henry Sampson. , 



" We have here a book to be thankful for. Among the many interesting illustra- 

 tions is a photographed copy of the ■ Times' for January ist, 1788, which may be 

 easily read by means of a magnifying glass. We recommend the present volume, 

 •which takes us through antiquity, the Middle Ages, and the present time, illustrat- 

 ing all in turn by advertisements — serious, comic, roguish, or downright rascally. 

 The chapter on ' swindles and hoaxes* is full of entertainment ; but of that the 

 ' volume itself is full from the first page to the last." — Athen^um. 



Demy 8vo, cloth extra, with Coloured Illustrations, ids. 



A Popular History of Astronomy. 



By J. Rambosson, Laureate of the Institute of France, the French 

 Academy, and the Academy of Sciences. Translated by C. B. 

 Pitman. With 10 Chromolithographs, 3 Celestial Charts,- and 

 63 Woodcuts. 



Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 7-f. bd. 



A Handbook of London Bankers ; 



With some Account of their Predecessors, the Early Goldsmiths ; 

 ' together with Lists of Bankers, from the Earliest London Direc- 

 tory, printed in 1677, to that of the London Post-Office Directory 

 of 1876. By F. G. Hilton Price. 



" An interesting and unpretending little work, which may prove a useful con- 

 tribution towards the history of a difficult subject. . . . Mr. Price's anecdotes 

 are entertaining. .... There is something fascinating, almost romantic, 

 in the details given us of 'Child 's Bank. . . . There is a great deal of amusing 

 reading and some valuable information in this book." — Saturday Review, 



Crown 8vo, cloth extra, gs. 



Bardsley 's Our English Surnames : 



Their Sources and Significations. By Charles Wareing 

 Bardsley,. M.A. Second Edition, revised throughout, con- 

 siderably enlarged, and partially rewritten. 

 " Mr. Bardsley has faithfully consulted the original mediaeval documents^ and 

 works frpm which the origin and development of surnames can alone be satisfac- 

 torily traced. He has furnished a valuable contribution to the literature qfsur- 

 names, and we hope to hear more of him in thi s field." — Times. 



Small 8vo, cloth extra, with Frontispiece by Cruikshank, 3^. 6d. 



Blewitt 's The Rose and the Lily ; 



How they became the Emblems of England and France. A Fairy 

 Tale. By Mrs. Octavian Blewitt. With a Frontispiece by 

 George Cruikshank. ,.,*».' 



