TWO INDISPENSABLE REFERENCE BOOKS ON INDIA Constable's Hand Atlas of India J. G. BARTHOLOMEW, F.R.G.S., F.R.S.E., etc. This Atlas will be found of great use, not only to tourists and travellers. but also to readers of Indian History, as it contains twenty-two plans of the principal towns of our Indian Empire, based on the most recent surveys and officially revised in India. The Topographical Section Maps are an accurate reduction of the Survey of India, and contain all the places described in Sir W. W. Hunter's "Gazetteer of India," according to his spelling. The Military Railway, Telegraph, and Mission Station Maps are designed to meet the requirements of the Military and Civil Service, also missionaries and business men who at present have no means of obtaining the information they require in a handy form. The Index contains upwards of ten thousand names, and will be found more complete than any yet attempted on a similar scale. Further to increase the utility of the work as a reference volume, an abstract of the 1891 Census has been added. UNIFORM WITH THE ABOVE Constable's Hand Gazetteer of India J. G. BARTHOLOMEW, F.R.G.S., and Edited with Additions by JAS. BURGESS, C.I.E., LL.D., etc. Crown 8vo. Half Morocco, 10s. 6d. The Hand Gazetteer of India is based on the Index to Constable's Hand Atlas of India, which contains nearly 12,000 place-names. To these have been added very largely from various sources, bringing the number of entries to close upon 20,000. The populations of districts, towns, and villages, and the position of each place are clearly indicated, thus forming within a small compass a general reference book to the topography of India, and a companion volume to the Hand Atlas of India. ་ |