SEVEN-AND-SIXPENNY WORKS. 
23 
By the same Author uniform with ^‘‘The Great JJjiwashed^^ 
One Volume.^ Seven and Sixpence. 
SOME HABITS AND CUSTOMS 
OF THE 
WORKING CLASSES. 
“ Readers who care to know what a spokesman of the working classes 
has to say for his order will find this a capital book. The writer is a 
clever fellow ; but he is more than that.” — AthencEum. 
“ The book is written in a plain, straightforward style, with an entire 
absence of humbug. It sets before us a very intelligible picture, and 
one which we may assume to be substantially correct, of the manners 
and habits of the classes whom he wishes to describe .” — Saturday 
Review. 
“We are distinctly of opinion that a more just representation of the 
working man himself has never appeared in print .” — Pall Mall Gazette. 
“ We have here, in a book lately published, a monograph of the 
working classes, by one of themselves, which speaks with clear utte- 
rance, neither exaggerating nor extenuating .” — All the Year Round. 
“ Professing only to describe some modern characteristics of the 
working classes, it fastens on all the most important, and is likely to 
throw some useful light on the subject.” — Examiner. 
TINSLEY BROTHERS, 18 CATHERINE ST, STRAND. 
