Books on Rural Affairs. 13 



NORFOLK BROADS AND RIVERS ; 



Ob, The Watbr-wats, Lagoons, and Decoys op 

 East Anglia. By G. CHRISTOPHER DA VIES, 

 Author of 'The Swan and her Crew.' 



Illustrated with Twelve full-page Hates. Post 8vo. 14s. 



Whitehall Review. — "The author's descriptions are so easy, 

 fluent, and understandable, his account of repeated annual visits to 

 Norfolk at varying times of the year, and with different companions, 

 are so graphic and realistic, that every page teems with interest and 

 amusement. " 



Pall Mall Gazette. — "Mr Davies has made the Broads (or river- 

 lagoons) his special study and pleasure for many years past, and he 

 writes of them hoth with the fulness of knowledge and with the 

 contagious enthusiasm of the devoted amateur." 



SCOTCH LOCH FISHING. 



By " BLACK PALMER." 



Crown 8vo. Interleaved with hlank paper. 4s. 



Dundee Advbktiseb. — "The great charm of 'Black Palmer's' 

 work is its simplicity. He eschews technicalities, and is thoroughly 

 practical. And the angler who takes up the little book will be re- 

 ■ luctant to stop till he has perused every word of it, and will only lay 

 it down after mentally resolving to read it again from beginning to 



end at the earliest opportunity 'Black Palmer's ' notes abound in 



practical hints." 



Bell's Life in London. — "Both to the tyro and the expert 

 angler ' Scotch Loch-Fishing ' should prove a valuable guide." 



RAMBLES WITH A FISHING-ROD. 

 By E. S. ROSCOE. 

 Crown 8vo, 4s. 6d. 



St James's Gazette.— "Such books as Mr Eoscoe's are our only 

 gxiides to Continental sport ; nor could the traveller who desires to 

 explore the resources of the rivers of Germany and of Switzerland 

 desire a better companion than ' Rambles with a Fishing-Eod.' " 



Scotsman. — "A very delightful book." 



Bell's Lh'e in London. — "It is a right pleasant pocket com- 

 panion." 



