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— TH__— ' ■'■"•". DAILY _l_Jli_i_ Milt (LONDON) OFFERS FOR A FIRST PAYMENT OF Five Shillings THE MOST COMPLETE AND ACCURATE ENGYCLOP_EDIA Ever Published, 25 Volumes. 22,000 Pages. 30,000,000; Words. 338 Full Page Plates. 671 Maps & Plans. 9000 other Illustrations. 1,100 Contributors, including the most distinguished Authors and Authorities oi the day. i Delivery Free in Wellington. SOME QUESTIONS AND SOME ANSWERS ABOUT IT. For the guidance of those who are desirous fco know more of The Times Reprint of the "ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA," we give a series of questions such as are daily asked, and also a series of answers which convey very full information aboufc the book. One of the questions mosfc usually asked is : — Q. I.— Does fche "ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA" really appeal, as you state it does, not only to the student, but also to the man who is seeking for practical knowledge, and to the man who merely desires to read for entertainment? A.— lt certainly does so, bufc of course we can do little more than make the mere statement, the real proof of which can only be found by actual appeal to the volumes. It is for this purpose, amongst others, that we have carefu : ly prepared an illustrated Prospectus, which by actual extracts from the articles in the book proves every statement we make to be absolutely true, indeed, less than the truth. With the book before you, you can very quickly test the truth of our statement ; whatever your business is, whatever your profession may be, you can turn to article after article in the volumes, and a mere glance will show you that the "ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA" abounds in profitable and practical information. Q. 2. — But surely a book which does all this cannot at the same time be entertaining? A. — Again we have to make practically fche same answer, and tell you that we can only ask you to prove the truth of our statement by appeal to fche work itself or by study of fche prospectus. The prospectus, you should remember, is not a mere description of the book ; it contains . very numerous extracts from all kinds of articles, and you will find there precisely the same interesting reading, only in small quality, which you can find in vast quantity if you turn to the books themselves. Q. 3.— Why was the "ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA" reprinted rather than a new Encyclopaedia compiled ? A. — It was absolutely impossible to produce an Encyclopaedia which could possibly compete in completeness, in brilliance, and in thoroughness with tlie "ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANN ICA." All that could have been done would have been to ask the same men to sit down and write again the same book. The "ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA" is in. the highest sense of the word a standard work. 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It is only necessary to mention the names of suuh masters of science as Lord Kelvin, Sir Robert Ball, Huxley, Lord Rayleigh, Sir William Crookes, Sir Archibald G-.ikie, Sir Norman Lockyer, Professor Ray Lankester, Sir Frederick Ab-l, Grant Allen,- Prof. Romanes, James Clark Maxwell, and Alfred Hus .ell Wallace, to. show thafc as a scientific library fche "ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA" can hardly be equalled and certainly cannofc bo surpassed. We could make precisely the same answer from whatever .-vvpecfc you look at the Encyclopaedia, asking, Is it a standard work ? You have only to glance at the list of names of those who have written it to know that in literature, universal biography, history, art, travel, and commerce, the "ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA" is complete, accurate, and profound. . Q. 4.—^But would not a smaller work do as well? 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The "DAILY MAIL" can only dispose of a limited number of sets upon the present terms, which we need hardly say limits the number of subscribers, and judging by fche number of applications we have already received, this limited number of sets will be subscribed for so quickly that numbers of would-be subscribers will find themselves left oufc in the cold, A First Payment ot os brings you the 25 Volumes. Monthly Instalments of 12s pays for them. A Discount is Given for Cash. Free Delivery in Wellington. Here's something new. FREE.— Every subscriber to the "ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA" will receive, without extra cost, an extra (26th) volume of nearly 250 pages giving hundreds of suggestions and outlines for courses of reading in the Encyclopaedia upon almost every imaginable topic, thus making the work available for every member of the family who can read. It points out profit and recreation for everybody. 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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GRA19020226.2.27.3

Bibliographic details

Grey River Argus, Volume 57, Issue 10520, 26 February 1902, Page 3

Word Count
1,130

Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Grey River Argus, Volume 57, Issue 10520, 26 February 1902, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 Grey River Argus, Volume 57, Issue 10520, 26 February 1902, Page 3