van Beneden, P. J.
de Cuvier, Georges, Baron.
of course, placing them under Ewald, Beneden, Cuvier. The effect is not wholly satisfactory and it breaks the running line in the alphabet.
54.—The next difficulty is that of the compound names. It has been already hinted that stereotyped uniformity is not always to be recommended, but in dealing with names of this type it is as well to fix a rule and adhere rigidly to it. In the case of English compound names the best course to adopt is to give the entries under the last name in all cases. Examples of such names would be
Phillipps, J. O. Halliwell.
Turner, C. Tennyson.
Dunton, Theodore Watts.
These are so well known to most people as changed names, that it would not be quite correct to give merely an initial for the first name, as
Phillipps, J. O. H.
Turner, C. T.