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CATALOGUE NOTES.

IN THE PRESS.

COPTIC SERIES.

Gray (Duncan) County Librarian of Warwick, COUNTY LIBRARY SYSTEMS. 8vo, cloth. 7/6 net.

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Fellows (Dorcas) CATALOGUING RULES, with explanations and illustrations. Large 8vo, cloth, 304 pp. 1922. The H. W. Wilson Company. £1 net.

A review of this work appears on another page.

Schroeder (Theodore) FREE SPEECH BIBLIOGRAPHY. Large 8vo, cloth, 240 pp. 1922. The H. W. Wilson Company. 25/- net.

Archbald (Hugh) THE FOUR-HOUR DAY IN COAL. A study of the relation between the engineering of the organization of work and the discontent among the workers in the coal mines. Cloth, 8vo, 148 pp. 1922. The H. W. Wilson Company. 7/6 net.

The author, who has twenty years' experience as an engineer in coal mines, has packed into this small work information concerning the whole question of coal mining, and the conditions under which the mines are worked. The book contains a number of instructive charts and tables. STUDY OUTLINE SERIES. (The H. W. Wilson Company). Reely (M. K.) COUNTRY LIFE AND RURAL PROBLEMS. Cr. 8vo, wrappers, 40 pp. 1/6 net.

Davidson (Chas., Ph.D.) ACTIVE CITIZENSHIP. Cr. 8vo, wrappers, 52 pp. 3/- net.

Dawson and Huntting. EUROPEAN WAR FICTION IN ENGLISH AND PERSONAL NARRATIVES (Useful Reference Series, No. 25). 8vo, cloth, 120 pp. 1921. F. W. Faxon Company. 10/6 net.

Lyell (James P. R.) THE SENTENCE OF PONTIUS PILATE. Demy 8vo, 12 pp., wrappers. 1922. Grafton and Co. 2/- net.

All the above publications are procurable from

Grafton & Co., Coptic House,

7 & 8, Coptic Street

:: LONDON, W.C.1.

AND

INDEXING SERIES

OF

THE H. W. WILSON COMPANY
-Is invaluable to every Library.-

THE CUMULATIVE BOOK INDEX
THE READERS GUIDE TO
PERIODICAL LITERATURE

INTERNATIONAL INDEX
TO PERIODICALS

(Formerly Readers' Guide Supplement)

THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS INDEX

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are stocked by GRAFTON & CO., and can be seen
at their offices, or specimen parts can be sent on
application to

Grafton & Co. Coptic House, London

Printed by FRANK JUCKES, 85, Aston Street, Birmingham.

and Published for the Proprietors by GRAFTON & CO., 8, Coptic Street, Bloomsbury, London. W.C. 1.

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SOME admirable remarks by Sir Gregory Foster on the Library Association are printed in The Library Association Record for May. Deprecating certain strictures on the Association, he is reported to have said: "He felt that it should be recognized that that Association had a very difficult task. Step by step they were bringing about the organization of the profession, which until the Association was founded was entirely unorganized. To organize a profession was a difficult matter and took time. No doubt the Association has made many mistakes, but such mistakes are inevitable, having regard to the nature of the business undertaken. The business of all those interested in the Profession of Librarianship is to support the L.A., and to help it discharge its duties more and more effectively." That is well said, and represents our own views; but, within the Association, every member should reserve to himself the right of criticism. The fact that mistakes have been made is the clearest indication of the necessity for such criticism, and although we deprecate public criticism of the L.A., that association has no special reason to pride itself because it has been so eloquently defended. It is not a new association just feeling its feet; it has been struggling to find them for nearly half-a-century.

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Our good friend F.B., whose identity we now recognize, writes wisely on Speeches in Libraries," also in the last issue of the Record, and chastens a colleague for addressing a Rotary Club on ancient libraries and omitting to tell the business men who are its members that the modern library gives a sound return for the money spent. This reminds us of the Publicity Work of the L.A. The Committee concerned has been gathering opinions of literary men on the value of public libraries; but we suggest that, interesting and conclusive as such opinions are to librarians, they are not so to the general business man who pays rates, and who may even think that the author is an interested person. Opinions should be gathered from great, successful business men. To prove to the local tradesman that a millionaire believes in public libraries is a much more effective thing than to prove that a man who writes books believes in the usefulness of institutions which distribute them.

*

We are sorry to learn that owing to the few entrants, the projected L.A. and L.A.A. visit to Holland had to be abandoned. The two associations could produce only ten persons who wished to participate; and our friends in Holland, who were under the impression that as two associations had accepted their invitation. there would be really an impressive gathering of British librarians in their country, suggested the postponement of the affair until

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