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16 & 17 Teviot Place, EDINBURGH

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

Including every discovered attitude towards the Problem Covering every Method of Transmitting Ideas, and of Abridging their Promulgation upon every SubjectMatter.

By THEODORE SCHROEDER

25s. net.

(H. W. Wilson Co., New York)

GRAFTON & CO.,

Coptic House, 7 & 8 Coptic Street,
LONDON, W.C.1.

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SOCIAL INSURANCE.

By E. C. ROBBINS.

CATALOGUING RULES.

By JENNIE D. FELLOWS.

GRAFTON & CO.,

COPTIC HOUSE, 7 & 8 COPTIC STREET, LONDON, W.C.1.

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Cloth, 5/-net.

INDEXING: A HANDBOOK OF INSTRUCTION.

By GEORGE E. BROWN.

A SCHOOL & CLUB LIBRARIAN'S HANDBOOK.
By MARJORIE PEACOCK.

AN INTRODUCTION TO LIBRARY CLASSIFICATION.
Embodying the Short Course in Practical Classifica-
By W. C. BERWICK SAYERS. Cloth, 10/6 net.
(New and Revised Edition in Preparation.)

tion.

A PRIMER OF LIBRARY PRACTICE.

BY GEORGE E. ROEBUCK and W. BENSON THORNE.

READY SHORTLY.

COUNTY LIBRARY SYSTEMS.

By DUNCAN GRAY

(County Librarian of Warwick).

Cloth, 5/- net.

Cloth, 7/6 net.

Many other publications in all branches
of Library Science and Administration.

Send for Latest Catalogue.

GRAFTON & CO.,

COPTIC HOUSE, 7 & 8 COPTIC ST.,
LONDON, W.C.1.

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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SUPPLIES

PUBLICITY POSTERS.-11-in. by 14-in., 50 varieties.

LIBRARY POSTERS.-3-in. by 11-in., 400

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POSTER HOLDERS.-5-in. and 10-in., finished Oak or Mahogany.

PAMPHLET BINDERS.-5-in. by 7-in., to 12-in. by 17-in (28 sizes).

DUPLEX PAMPHLET BINDERS.-5-in. by 8-in. to 12-in. by 16-in. (11 sizes), to hold 2-6 pamphlets.

SHELF AND CASE LABELS. - Printed with Dewey Decimal Classification Numbers.

BLACK JAPANNED LABEL HOLDERS.

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SPECIAL RANGE OF ADHESIVE CLOTHS of every description for Library use:

Large variety of colours and stitchings.

Celluloid

Stitched

Book Cards, Guide Cards, Date Slips, Daters,
Picture Holders, Adhesive Cloth, Adhesive Tape,
Binders, Repair Outfits, Shellac-o, White, Gold and
Engrossing Inks, Embossing Stamps, etc.

MESSRS. GRAFTON & CO. have facilities for supplying all forms of catalogue cards at reasonable prices.

Enquiries Solicited.

Prices on Application.

Send for Illustrated Catalogue.

GAYLORD BROS., Syracuse, N.Y., U.S.A.

GRAFTON & CO., Coptic House, London,

W.C. 1.

THE Advocates' Library, the greatest of the Scottish Libraries, has been offered to the Government, largely owing to the fact that the Faculty of Advocates at Edinburgh has found it too great a burden in these expensive days. The Secretary for Scotland has answered the offer by what is, for the present, more or less a refusal ; but he has offered a grant of £2,000 a year, and has intimated that government control and support of the library are to be desired when national conditions permit. It is most unfortunate that the offer had to be made at the present time, when expenditure on education and culture is attacked daily; especially when the fact is remembered that the Advocates' Library is able to exact a very large tax from authors and publishers and ought certainly to be a public library" in the old sense of the phrase. The Advocates' Library has certainly been available to all genuine students quite freely, but not by the same right that a Londoner may use his British Museum. It is manifestly unfair, too, that a body which numbers only 400, which we understand the Faculty of Advocates to do, should be expected to maintain what is equivalent to a Scottish British Museum Library. We trust, therefore, that the hope expressed in varous quarters will be kept in sight and realised later, when Scotland has got over her astonishing-for her crusade against education.

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There is not very much to record in what may be called the larger library politics this month. It is too soon to say how far the meeting of the Library Association in Holland may be expected to be a success, but we confess that we do not envy Mr. Berwick Sayers the work he must have done and still be doing in getting ready for it. Whether few or many go, there is much to be done in such a connexion. It will be a pity if the affair is not a success from the numerical point of view; such invitations ought not to be accepted unless there is an intention to profit by them. As for the programme in Holland, if we may judge by former experience there is no doubt whatever about the success of that.

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In minor politics we have had an unpleasant example of the appointment of a non-librarian to a public librarianship in the case of the town of Grantham. The appointee is a reverend gentleman of the Congregational persuasion who says "he always held that eight to ten years represented the limit of any minister's effective work in any church, and he began to want a change." That is quite an interesting suggestion but not exactly important to librarians. What is more important is his next remark: "The town wanted a librarian, and not a girl to hand out books, and it was not in a position to pay a trade union librarian." We gently suggest that if the town wanted a librarian, it ipso facto did not want a parson; and we further suggest that if there really were

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