Crown 8vo, pictorial cloth, 3s. 6d.
“A book which every tourist may well buy.”—Daily Chronicle.
“The work is much more than a guide book, and it is certainly that and an excellent one. It is a history as well of the country, and contains a series of admirably arranged tours.”—Leeds Mercury.
“A book which every tourist may well buy.”—Daily Chronicle.
“The work is much more than a guide book, and it is certainly that and an excellent one. It is a history as well of the country, and contains a series of admirably arranged tours.”—Leeds Mercury.
By Josiah Crooklands.
THE ITALIANS OF TO-DAY.
Translated from the French of René Bazin. Crown 8vo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
“By those who would study more closely the political and social aspects of Italian life to-day, Mr Crooklands’s translation should be accorded a hearty welcome and an attentive perusal.”—Public Opinion.
“M. René Bazin is a writer whose style we have often praised.”—The Athenæum.
“By those who would study more closely the political and social aspects of Italian life to-day, Mr Crooklands’s translation should be accorded a hearty welcome and an attentive perusal.”—Public Opinion.
“M. René Bazin is a writer whose style we have often praised.”—The Athenæum.
By William F. Regan.
BOER AND UITLANDER.
The True History of Late Events in South Africa. Crown 8vo, cloth, 3s. 6d. With Copyright Portraits, Map, etc.—Fifth Edition.
Mr Gladstone writes:—“I thank you very much for your work, and rejoice that by means of it public attention will be called to all the circumstances connected with the origin and history of the Transvaal, which possess so strong a claim upon our equitable consideration.”
“The writer should be able to speak with authority, for he is none other than Mr W. F. Regan, the well-known South African financier, whose name has been a good deal before the public in connection with the events following upon the ‘Raid.’”—Glasgow Herald.
Mr Gladstone writes:—“I thank you very much for your work, and rejoice that by means of it public attention will be called to all the circumstances connected with the origin and history of the Transvaal, which possess so strong a claim upon our equitable consideration.”
“The writer should be able to speak with authority, for he is none other than Mr W. F. Regan, the well-known South African financier, whose name has been a good deal before the public in connection with the events following upon the ‘Raid.’”—Glasgow Herald.