INDEX TO APPENDIX I
Alaska, 309.
Anticosti, 309.
Areas in the Dominion of Canada unexplored, 311-319.
Canada, 310.
Dunvegan, 306.
Exploration still possible and useful, 304.
Great Bear Lake, 309.
Great Slave Lake, 309.
Hudson's Bay, 309.
Hudson's Bay Company, 305.
Lewes, 309.
Macleod Fort, 306.
Maps proved wrong, 306.
Mistassini, 309.
Newfoundland, 309.
Pelly, 309.
Red River Valley, 308.
Reindeer Lake, 309.
Rocky Mountains, the, 306.
Winnipeg, 308.
York Factory, 309.
Yukon River, 309.
THE WORKS OF
SAMUEL BUTLER
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler, Author of "Erewhon." Selections arranged and edited by Henry Festing Jones. New Edition, with an Introduction by Francis Hackett, and a portrait
Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino. New edition with the author's revisions. Edited by R. A. Streatfeild. With 85 drawings chiefly by the author
Life and Habit
Unconscious Memory. A new edition with an Introduction by Prof. Marcus Hartog
The Way of All Flesh. A novel. With an Introduction by William Lyon Phelps
Erewhon, or Over the Range. With an Introduction by Francis Hackett
Erewhon Revisited, Twenty Years Later, both by the Original Discoverer of the Country and His Son
Evolution Old and New
A First Year in Canterbury Settlement
The Humor of Homer and Other Essays. Edited by R. A. Streatfeild. With a Biographical Sketch of the author by Henry Festing Jones, and a portrait
The Fair Haven (as by the late John Pickard Owen). Edited, with an Introduction, by R. A. Streatfeild
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WORKS OF
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THEODORE ROOSEVELT
James M. Barrie says: "It is one of the choicest things of our latter day literature."
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In "A Shepherd's Life" Hudson takes us into a quaint old-fashioned world, that of the shepherds of the bleak South Downs of England, where in sheltered folds of the naked plains nestle placid little old-world villages, shaded by immemorial trees and surrounded by quiet, forgotten streams.
WITH A CRITICAL APPRECIATION BY
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ACTION FRONT
These are the words that swing the muzzles of the advancing guns towards the enemy. More stories that give you a respect for Thomas Atkins that borders on affection.
DOING THEIR BIT
A vivid description of the way the munition workers in Britain are backing the boys in the trenches.
GRAPES OF WRATH
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A
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DONALD HANKEY
Published originally in the columns of the London Spectator, these short articles, sketches, and essays, written by a man in the trenches, form a "war-book" of quite unusual kind, dealing with the deeper things of human life.
The high spiritual idealism which actuates so many thousands in the ranks of the Allies finds a voice in it, and the mental attitude of the fighting-men towards religion, the Church, their officers and their comrades, is exhibited not only with sanity and sympathy, but with a fine simplicity of language and an inspiring nobility of outlook.
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they awake from their present Nightmare.
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An examination, searching and merciless, of Germany's mediæval dynastic and political system, by the author of "Because I Am a German," and a demand for reforms which all civilized countries of the world have enjoyed for decades.
"The book is one of the most important which the war has produced."—The Spectator.
"We recommend the book to every serious reader as one of the foremost books of universal and permanent value thus far inspired by the great war."—New York Tribune.
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Hill-Towns of France
EUGÉNIE M. FRYER
Illustrated with 50 pen-and-ink drawings by
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Not a guide-book in the technical sense, and not a history; but a charming series of descriptive and historical sketches of some of the most storied, romantic and beautiful places in Europe.
This superbly illustrated volume deals with the following:
Poitou: Poitiers, Chauvigny & Uzerche.
Normandy: Falaise, Gaillard, Arcques-la-Bataille
& Mont-Saint-Michel.
Brittany: Saint-Jean-du-Doigt, La Faouët,
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Quercy: Cahors & Rocamadour.
Languedoc: Najac, Carcassonne & Lastours.
Provence: Arles, Montmajour & Les Baux.
Savoie: Miolans.
Auvergne: Le Puy.
Picardie: Laon.
La Beauce: Chartres.
Touraine: Chinon, Amboise, Blois & Loches.
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Transcriber's Note
Obvious punctuation errors were corrected.
Hyphen added: birch[-]bark (p. 38), foot[-]hills (p. ix), mid[-]day (p. 3), north[-]east (p. 65), sand[-]bars (p. 13), snow[-]shoes (pp. 82, 92), south[-]east (p. 30), up[-]stream (p. 209).
Hyphen removed: back[-]bone (p. 53), cattle[-]men (p. 331), land[-]marks (p. 307), medicine[-]man (pp. 330, 332), over[-]land (p. 7), pin[-]tail (p. 175).
The following words appear both with and without hyphens and have not been changed: deer[-]skin(s), gun[-]shot, half[-]way, snow[-]drift(s), snow[-]time, Store[-]room, touch[-]wood, wild[-]fowl, wind[-]bound.
P. 23: "prosspect" changed to "prospect" (the prospect of finding the musk-ox).
P. 41: "buerre" changed to "beurre" (le pain avec le beurre).
P. 67: "afternon" changed to "afternoon" (well on in the next afternoon).
P. 94: "suppose" changed to "supposed" (but supposed there was some good reason).
P. 104: "let" changed to "left" (have left us houseless).
P. 124: "feul" changed to "fuel" (fuel was rapidly vanishing).
P. 130: "abtruse" changed to "abstruse" (more abstruse subjects).
P. 131: "scare" changed to "scarce" (when the caribou are scarce).
P. 142: "sankbanks" changed to "sandbanks" (mostly inside sandbanks).
P. 143: "semed" changed to "seemed" (How strange it seemed).
P. 151: "winter" changed to "water" (to descend the Great Fish River with the first open water).
P. 187: "debateable" changed to "debatable" (there was a debatable ground).
P. 191: "tighty" changed to "tightly" (tightly-stretched deer-skin).
P. 216: "was" changed to "we" (we passed into the short stretch of river).
P. 221: "roughtly" changed to "roughly" (we reckoned roughly).
P. 226: "given" changed to "give" (forbids a white man to give an Indian).
P. 238: "and" deleted (end in dry sand [and] instead of running).
P. 244: "hgher" changed to "higher" (higher up at Smoky River).
P. 249: "Lukily" changed to "Luckily" (Luckily whitefish are very plentiful).
P. 321: "Baptiste Testerwick" changed to "Baptiste Testerwich".