LIFE AND LABOUR IN INDIA. By A. Yusuf- 
Ali, M.A., LL.M. (Cantab.), M.R.A.S. With Illustrations, including 
Drawings by Native Artists. Demy 8 vo, 12s. net. 
* “ It is a welcome surprise to find in Mr. Yusuf-Ali an essayist who combines an individual 
sense of style with a light and humourous touch of which the most polished Englishman 
might well be proud .”—Daily Chronicle. 
MY LIFE AS AN INDIAN. By J. W. Schultz. 
With Illustrations. Crown 8 vo. 6s. net. 
“ The boy who loves adventure will feel himself once more under the insidious spell of 
Fenimore Cooper as he turns Mr. Schultz’s spirited pages. . . . The very artlessness of 
the narrative adds to its charm ; the sincerity is patent and persuasive. The young of all ages 
will find it a treasure-house of delight and of suggestion .”—Daily Telegraph. 
“ This is a book that will live. It is a fascinating story. . . .We must vote this one 
of the most readable, interesting books ever written on the Red Indians .”—Sheffield Daily 
Telegra pit. 
FROM WEST TO EAST. Notes by the Way. 
By Sir Hubert Jerningham, K.C.M.G., sometime Governor of 
Mauritius, of Trinidad, and Tobago. With Illustrations. Demy 
8 vo. 15s. net. 
“Sir Hubert Jerningham shows himself to he a keen observer and a charming writer, 
and, taken merely as a sympathetic study of Japan and the Japanese after the great war, his 
present work must rank among the most notable books of the day. . . . His description 
of Port Arthur and of the battlefields in Manchuria helps us to understand more than one 
point which even elaborate histories of the operations have left doubtful.”— Standard. 
A HISTORY OF SOUTH AMERICA, 1854-1904. 
By Charles Edmond Akers. With Maps, Portraits, and other Illus¬ 
trations. Medium 8vo. 21s. net. 
“ We would highly recommend this work to all interested in the future of South America. 
. . . Lovers of history will also derive much pleasure as well as profit from its perusal, and 
the way the chapters are divided and furnished with exhaustive summaries and the index at 
the end will make Mr. Akers’s book valuable as a work of reference.”— Field. 
LETTERS TO A SALMON-FISHER’S SONS. 
By A. H. Chaytor. With 8 full-page Illustrations and Diagrams. 
Demy 8 vo. 9 s. net. 
“No keen angler would grudge finding space for such an engrossing volume. . . . 
Mr. Chaytor treats of all forms of salmon-fishing, with flies, minnows, worms; he describes 
the habits of the fish, and of their chief enemies, human and others. . . . Even the expert 
may find much instructive matter in this most readable volume.”— Outlook. 
“. . . A very delightful book. . . . A great portion of the letters deal with purely 
practical matters, and the author’s sons are lucky indeed to have such a mentor.”— World. 
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