ELEMENTARY ATLAS OF GENERAL AND DESCRIPTIVE GEOGRAPHY, for the Use of Junior Classes; including a Map of Canaan and Palestine, with General Index. 8vo, half-bound, 5s.
NEW ATLAS FOR PUPIL-TEACHERS.
THE HANDY ROYAL ATLAS. 46 Maps clearly printed and carefully coloured, with General Index. Imp. 4to, £2, 12s. 6d., half-bound morocco. A New Edition, brought up to the present time.
This work has been constructed for the purpose of placing in the hands of the public a useful and thoroughly accurate Atlas of Maps of Modern Geography, in a convenient form, and at a moderate price. It is based on the ‘Royal Atlas,’ by the same Author; and, in so far as the scale permits, it comprises many of the excellences which its prototype is acknowledged to possess. The aim has been to make the book strictly what its name implies, a Handy Atlas—a valuable substitute for the ‘Royal,’ where that is too bulky or too expensive to find a place, a needful auxiliary to the junior branches of families, and a vade mecum to the tutor and the pupil-teacher.
Keith Johnston’s Atlases.
EXTRACTS FROM OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
SCHOOL ATLASES.
“They are as superior to all School Atlases within our knowledge, as were the larger works of the same Author in advance of those that preceded them.”—Educational Times.
“Decidedly the best School Atlases we have ever seen.”—English Journal of Education.
“ ... The ‘Physical Atlas’ seems to us particularly well executed.... The last generation had no such help to learning as is afforded in these excellent elementary Maps. The ‘Classical Atlas’ is a great improvement on what has usually gone by that name; not only is it fuller, but in some cases it gives the same country more than once in different periods of time. Thus it approaches the special value of a historical atlas. The ‘General Atlas’ is wonderfully full and accurate for its scale.... Finally, the ‘Astronomical Atlas,’ in which Mr Hind is responsible for the scientific accuracy of the maps, supplies an admitted educational want. No better companion to an elementary astronomical treatise could be found than this cheap and convenient collection of maps.”—Saturday Review.