Uniform with this Volume.
FOR THE BIBLIOPHILE AND BOOK-LOVER.
Each Volume bound in Library Style. Cloth gilt, 2/- net.
By JAMES DOUGLAS STEWART.
How to Use a Library.
With Explanations of Library Catalogues, a Systematic Description of Guides to Books, and a Guide to Special Libraries.
RE-ISSUED FROM “THE BOOK-LOVER’S LIBRARY.”
By HENRY B. WHEATLEY.
How to Catalogue a Library.
Contains various points and rules for making a Library Catalogue, and discusses the principles involved, etc.
How to Form a Library.
Full of helpful and practical suggestions for the Bibliographer and much that will both amuse and interest the book-loving reader.
How to Make an Index.
The various theories concerning Indexing are set forth, certain rules are laid down and illustrated, whilst erroneous methods are exposed in this volume.
By W. CAREW HAZLITT.
Gleanings in Old Garden Literature.
“A volume that may afford delight to a lover of gardens, even if he be not a lover of books.”—Morning Post.
Old Cookery Books & Ancient Cuisine.
An historical sketch of the subject of cookery as supplied by the earliest MSS. and Printed Cookery Books of this and other countries.
Studies in Jocular Literature.
A Popular Subject more closely considered.
LONDON: ELLIOT STOCK,
62, PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C.
A KEY TO THE FAMILY DEED-CHEST.
How to Decipher and Study Old Documents
Third Edition, Revised. Enlarged and Illustrated.
By E. E. Thoyts. Art cloth, 5/- net.
Some of the difficulties which beset any one who studies such documents for the first time, unless he be an expert, are the deciphering of the ancient and unfamiliar style of writing; the peculiar abbreviations and signs which were used by our forefathers; the quaint phrases and expressions and obsolete words occurring; the arbitrary and old-fashioned spelling, which to the uninitiated are always vexatious. It is to enable the more or less experienced student to meet and cope with these and similar difficulties that this work has been compiled, by one who has had considerable experience in research.
LONDON: ELLIOT STOCK,
62, PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C.
FOR THE GENEALOGIST.
By WILLIAM H. WHITMORE, A.M.
ANCESTRAL TABLETS.
A Collection of Diagrams for Pedigrees so arranged that Eight Generations of the Ancestors of any Person may be Recorded in a connected and Simple Form.
Royal 4to, Quarter Roxburgh, gilt, 8/6 post free.
“A difficult plan to explain on paper, but is fascinatingly simple when actually handled, as an American critic truly remarks—‘No one with the least bent for genealogical research ever examined this ingeniously compact substitute for the family tie without longing to own it.’”—Reliquary.
LONDON: ELLIOT STOCK,
62, PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C.
HOW TO
TRACE A PEDIGREE
BY
H. A. CROFTON
LONDON: ELLIOT STOCK
62, PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C.
1911