October 5, 1916 
LAND & WATER 
19 
Times. — "Delightlul . . . Joseph Bindle is henceforth 
our friend." 
Observer. — " ' Bindle ' is one of the most ' knowing ' books 
ever written. There should be a verb ' to bindle ' very soon." 
"Pall Mall Gazette. — " A publisher who can add so effectively 
to our small stock of gaielyat the present moment by the writing 
and publishing of so delicious a piece of fooling as ' Bindle,' 
deserves all the success it will assuredly bring him." 
BINDLE 
Some Chapters in the life of Joseph Bindle. 
A Novel by Herbert Jenkins, author of "The Life 
George Borrow." First printing, 10,000 copies. 
Price 5s. net. 
of 
40 YEARS 
AT 
THE 
BAR 
THE 
AND AFTER 
WINTER IS COMING, and 
has received an URGENT detnand for 
The Recollec ions of J. H. B.lfour Browne, K.C., one of the 
most prominent figures at the Parliamentary Bar during recent 
years. Full of interesting reminiscences of his distinguished 
contemporaries. Just out. Illustrated, 128 6d. net. 
HERBERT JENKINS' BOOKS 
12, ARUNDEL PLACE, HAYMARKET, LONDON, S.W. 
NINETEENTH CENTURY 
OCTOBER. 
Right and Wrong Methods of Demobilisation, Ry Major-Oeneral S. S. LOMQ, 
C.li. {Ifite UirectoT of Supplies and Transport). 
Britain's Coming Industrial Supremacy. By J. Ellis Barker. 
Baigian Unity and the Flemish Movement. By Fernand Passelecq (.Ditecteur 
du Bureau Documentaire lielge). 
"Faust" and the German Character. By George Saunders. 
Is there a Way out of the Chaos in Ireland? Some Reflections by a Southern 
Unionist. By .Sir Henry Blake. G.C.M.G. 
The Mohammedan Law Courts of Egypt ; a Recent Chapter In Egyptian 
History. Hy Sir Malcolm McIlwk.uth. K.C.M.G. (iote Judicial Adviser to 
the Egyptiart (invernment). 
A Visit to Paris on the Eve of the Revolution. By Lady Kinloch-Cooke. 
The United States Navy in the Making. By John Leyland. 
Belligerent and Neutral from 1756 to 1916 II. By Sir Francis Pioqott (late 
Chief Ju-^tice of Ifong Kovg). 
The Re-education of the Diiabled. By L. G. Brock. 
" Male and Female created He them" : a Reply to Miss Picton-Turbervill. 
By Athelstan Riley. 
A Great Russian Philosopher. By Eugene Tavernier. 
A Study of German Propaganda. Bv LEwi.i S. Benjamin (Lewis .Melville). 
The Ministry of War and the Military Executive. By Captain Cecil Battine. 
Eighteen Months with the New Armies. By Brigadier-General F. G. Stone. 
Lotidon: Spotti.swoode. Ballantyne & Co., Ltd., 1, New-6treet Square. 
THE CHURCH ARMY 
FIFTY MORE 
RECREATION HUTS 
for the spiritual and temporal welfare of our brave soldiers 
on the Western Front; in jiiMition to the hundreds 
already there and at home and in other theatres of War. 
CAN WE MEET THE DEMAND ? 
PRAY HELP US TO DO SO 
Each Hut costs £300 and its Equipment £100 
Week's Working £5 abroad. £2 at home. 
Cheques crossed "Barclay's, a/c Church Army" payable to Prebendary Carlile, 
D.D., Hon. Chief Sec., Headquarters, Bryanston Street, lilarble Arch, 
London, W. 
"A CLASSIC OF THE WAR." 
GALLIPOLI 
A Short History of the Dardanoiles Campairn' 
2/6 net. By JOHN MA8EFIELD. 2/6 n«t. 
"Told in nobl« and powerful prose, it grips the mind of the r«ad«r with an 
Intettsity and aJi enthusiasm which no other war-book haj aoMeTed. . . . 
Mr. Mafiefieki ha<6 written a masterpiece. "—Datli/ Telegraph. 
THE NOVELS OF THE YEAR. 
THE GREEN ALLEYS 
By EDEN PHILLPOTTS. 6/. net. 
THE WORLD FOR SALE 
By GILBERT PARKER. 
Aothor of " The Weayers," &c. Cr. 8vo. B/- aet. 
"Sir GMlbert Parker has the secret of romance. . . . 'The World Jor 8»le' 
Is an engrossing story." — Daily Newt. 
THE WINGED VICTORY 
By SARAH GRAND. 6/- net. 
A novel which is creating a good deal of talk and ttteotioa. 
"BriUiant in plot Wd cb«ract«n^tion."— Pailj/ Telegraph, 
GILDED VANITY 
By RICHARD DEHAN. 
Author of " The Dop Doctor," &c. 2nd large impresiion. B/- net, 
A comedy of youth and Wifh ipirits. 
"One of. the most amusing Society novek ever written."— Sunday Time: 
WITH WINGS OUTSPREAD 
By MARC GOUVRIEUX. 6/- net. 
A ihrilluig romance of the air, describing the exploits of a inper-airman 
daring a great European war. A novel that will hold breathlesi the 
most jaded reader. 
SOLDIERS' TALES of the GREAT WAR 
A List of these fascinating books i< now ready. 
LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN, 21, Bedford Street, W.C 
CASSELL'S NEW NOVELS. 
. BRITLIN6 SEES IT THR0U6H. 
H. G. WELLS. 
Writing in the Daily Telegraph re "An Autumn Harvest," Mr. 
W. L. Courtney says : "At the top of the list I place Mr. H. G. 
Wells' most characteristic piece of work ... in 'Mr. Britling 
Sees It Through,' Mr. Wells is at his best, and his concluding 
pages are some of the most moving that he has ever penned. 
The characters are firmly designed." 
"... A really remarkable event . . .a creation vpith which we have 
as yet seen nothing whatever to compare." — Times. 
"Is assured of immortality." — Daily Express. g/. 
THE LION'S SHARE. 
ARNOLD BENNETT. 
"An ideal war-time novel. ... It is all such good fnn — so 
irresistibly and ingeniously gay." — Observer. 
". . . Sunny, human, wise and witty . . . the whole book is 
excellently good." — Mr. Sidney Dark in the Daily Express. 
"So excellent and rich a story of adventure." — Miss Rebecca West 
in Daily News and Leader. g/. 
THE RETREAT FROM MONS. 
MAJOR A. CORBETT-SMITH. 
"A singularly graphic and actual story giving a record of a 
strategic operation of which the details are of the most intense 
interest to every Briton." — Times. • 
"Full of stories of superb heroism." — Observer. 
". . . Bringing home to people the glory and tragedy of the 
retreat from Mons. Graphic, clear, direct." — Evening Standard. 
3/6 net. 
MOUNTED POLICE LIFE IN CANADA. 
CAPTAIN R. BURTON DEANE. 
"A straightforward, graphic record of work in which many a 
writer of adventure stories has sought material, by one who has 
been in the midst of its realities, . . . with many personal memories 
of historical episodes, particularly of the trial and execution in 
1885 of nie\."— Times. g/_ net. 
THE HOUSE OF CASSELL. 
