FOR READERS AND WRITERS, COLLECTORS AND LIBRARIANS. 2, KING STREET, St. JAMES, S.W.1. Specialists in all matters connected Heraldic Artists, Stationers and THE INDEX and PUBLISHERS' CASES to Vol cli. will be ready for issue at the end of July. Readers are requested to order early from the NOTES:--Goldsmith and A Concise History of England,' 3-English Cookery Books: Biblio- graphy, 4-Parry, Perry and Pyke Families. 5 Rubrication in Churchyard inscriptions Curious book bindings, 6-John Ziska: Warrior of God-The Bedford Level, 7-A Pluralist Rec- tor-" Oxford Bags" The Leighs of West Leigh, Co. Lancs.-John Stirling; autograph, 8. QUERIES:-'A second Tale of a Tub': a biblio- Croke Family Bartholommeo's Lamentation' - - Commons, 13-Old Writing Schools-Portraits of Voltaire-Wednesbury Church: Harcourt monu- ment. 14- Bryan O'Lynn '-Hartley Coleridge: Suard-The Wife of Charles Knevet, 15-Legal circumlocution-Kirkby Malham: inscription- Early printed Works, Standard Authors. First Editions, &c. Catalogues free. Book and autographs wanted for cash. Lists free.- Reginald Atkinson, 188, Peckham Rye, Lon HE FIFTH, SIXTH and SEVENTH SERIES, sold separately.-Offers to A.H., Box 193, N. & Q., 20, High Street, High Wycombe. Visitors to London are invited to The Piccadilly Auction Rooms (Calder House) to inspect the display of ancient Silver, Jewels and Antiques collected from the Ancestral Homes of England. To obtain the full value of your treasures, employ the Auctioneer with expert knowledge of values, and one who studies the customer's interest before his own personal gain. Although it may seem paradoxical, it is nevertheless a fact, that if you wished to buy you could not do better than attend my rooms or instruct me to purchase on your behalf. It is simply a case of one person buying what another wishes to sell that enables me to perform a double service to the advantage of both buyer and seller. one I have a fleet of motor cars and staff of experts constantly touring the country visiting the homes of the hard-pressed fixed income classes, who are compelled to part with their treasures in order to meet the everincreasing demands of the tax collector. For 21s. two of my representa tives-one with a knowledge of Plate and Jewels, and the other Pictures, Porcelain, Old Furniture, Objects of Art, etc.—will call and impart all the information they can, and, if necessary, bring the jewels and silver away in the car. If desired, a third will also call to confer with those who wish to sell their landed property by auction or by private treaty, to talk about valuations for mortgages, dilapidations, and all such matters undertaken by a surveyor. Valuations for Probate, Insurance, etc., at moderate fees. Weekly Auction Sales of Pearls, Diamonds, Old Silver, Sheffield Plate. No buyingin charges. Stamps purchased for cash to any amount. Parcels safe registered post. W. E. HURCOMB, Calder House (Entrance: 1, Dover Street), Piccadilly, London, W. 1. 'Phone Regent 6878-9. HURCOMB NOTES AND QUERIES is published every Friday, at 20, High Street, High Wycombe, Bucks (Telephone: Wycombe 306). Subscriptions (82 28. a year, U.S.A. $10.50, including postage, two half-yearly indexes and two cloth binding cases, or £1 158. 4d. a year, U.S.A. $9, without binding cases) should be sent to the Manager. The London Office is at 22, Essex Street, W.C.2 (Telephone: Central 396), where numbers, indexes and bound volumes should be sent either to London or to Wycombe; letters for the Editor to the London Office. the current issue is on sale. Orders for back Memorabilia. WE heartily congratulate the Editor of Antiquity and his contributors on their new number. It starts out with Dr. Hooton's discussion of the ever-fresh enquiry, Where did Man originate?-a discussion which ends by rejection of the theory of a central Asiatic area whence the protohuman (is this an accepted word) stocks were dispersed, in favour of the view that the Medi now terranean zone and Northern Africa were the scenes of great part of anthropoid SO of The Mercure de France for June 15 pect of doing so is not bright. to THIS last week has seen the celebration of two great centenaries-of three even, if we are not too minutely, pedantically |