27 JANUARY 1906, page 41

The Good Old Times. By J. C. Wright. (elliot Stock.

6s. net.)— Mr. Wright has collected with diligence, and brought together with no little skill and in effective contrast, a multitude of interesting facts. In such a wiaic it is......

Leland's Itinerary In Wales. Arranged And Edited By Lucy...

Smith. (G. Bell and Sons. 10s. 6d. net.)—Miss Toulmin Smith has gone for her text to the manuscript authority,—i.e., to Leland's own MSS. (the " Itinerary " and the "......

The Sa'-zada Tales. By W. A. Fraser. (d. Nutt. 6s.)—

Sa'-Zada is the keeper of the "Animal City "—what we commonly call a menagerie—and in a great heat-wave he contrives for his charges the distraction of telling the stories of......

Blackie's Standard Dictionary. (blackie And Son. 2s....

the look of a very serviceable volume. It is of manageable size (7 in. by 4} in. by 1 in.), bound in leather, as much- handled books ought to be, with a useful collection of......

The Law Of International Copyright. By William Briggs,...

and Haynes. 16s.)—Dr. Briggs gives a comprehensive view of the subject, dwelling in especial detail on the law as it stands in the United States and in the Colonies. It is, of......

Scarabs. By Percy E. Newberry. (a. Constable And Co. 18s.

net.)—The scarab, or beetle-shaped seal, is one of the commonest of Egyptian objects. There are multitudes of genuine specimens, ranging in date over a very long period—there......

Explained In A "publisher's Note" That This Is An Entirely

new book, "embodying little more than the framework of its pre- decessor," the well-known " Lippincott's Pronouncing Gazetteer." Its pages exceed two thousand in number, and the......

Clubs, 1906. Edited By E. C. Austen Leigh, M.a. (spottis-

woode and Co. 3s. 6d.)—" A List of over 3,000 Clubs frequented by the English in All Parts of the World," and of the 3,000, 1,140 are golf clubs, 319 ladies' clubs ; while, to......

The Gould-en Treasury. Pictures By F. Carruthers Gould....

Unwin. Is. net.)—There is as much humour and good humour, and as little ill-nature, in those caricatures as any reasonable person could expect in the circumstances. They appear,......