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CHATTO & WINDUS, PICCADILLY.
31

Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with Illustrations, 7s. 6d.

Timbs' English Eecentrics 'and Eccentricities:- Stories of Wealth and Fashion, . Delusions,. Impostures, and Fanatic Missions, Strange Sights and Sporting Scenes, Eccentric Artists, Theatrical Folks, Men, of Letters, &e. By joun Timss, F.S.A.. With nearly 50 Illustrations.

Demy 8vo, cloth extra, r4s.

Torrens' The Marquess Wellesley, Architect of Empire. An Historic Portrait. By W. M. TorRENS, M.P. - [Zx the press.

Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with Coloured Illustrations, 7s. 6d.

Turner's (J. M. W.) Life and Correspondence: Founded upon Letters and Papers furnished hy his Friends and fellowAcademicians. By WALTER THORNBURY. A New Edition, considerably Enlarged. With numerous Illustrations in Colours, facsimiled from Turner's original Drawings.

Two Vols., crown 8vo, cloth extra, with Map and Ground-Plans, 145.

Walcott's Church Work and Life in English

Minsters; and the English:Student's Monasticon. By the Rev, MACKENZIE E, C. WALCOTT, B.D, .

The 2oth Annual Edition, for 1880, elegantly bound, cloth, full gilt, price 50s. n . 21s .

Waliord's County Families of the United Kingdom. A Royal Manual of the Titled and Untitled Aristocracy of Great Britain and Ireland. By EDWARD WALFORD, M.A., late Scholar of Balliol College, Oxford. Containing Notices of the Descent, Birth, Marriage, Education, &c., of more than 12,000 distinguished Heads of Families in the United Kingdom, their Heirs Apparent or Presumptive, together with a Record of the Patronage at their disposal, the Offices which they hold or have held, their Town Addresses, Country Residences, Clubs, &e. ., (ve the press. " What would the gossips of old have given for a book which opened to them the vecesses of every County Family in the Three Kingdoms?, - Lhis work, however, will serve other purposes besides thase of mere curiosity, envy, or malice. It is just the book for the lady of the house to have at hand when making up the County dinner, as it gives exactly that information which punctilious and particular people are so desirous of obtaining—the exact standing of every person in the county. To the business man, ' The County Families' stands in the place of directory and biographical dictionary, The fund of information it affords respecting the Upper Ten Thousand must give it a place in the lawyers library; and to the moneylender, who is so interested in finding out the difference between a gentleman and a 'gent,' between heirs-at-law and younger sons, Mr, Walford has been a real benefactor. In this splendid volume he has managed to meet a universal want—one which cannot fail to be felt by the lady in her drawing-room, the peer in his library,

the tradesman in his counting-house, and the gentleman in his club," —Times.