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PUBLIC LIBRARIES

A HISTORY OF THE MOVEMENT AND A MANUAL FOR THE

ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT OF RATE-SUPPORTED LIBRARIES.

THOMAS GREENWOOD, F.R.G.S.,

AUTHOR OF

" Museums and Art Galleries," "Eminent Naturalists," etc.,

vivmi or THE Lit* 111 ■"-;' . . I IO!4 OF THF. VN'ITBP « X< .:;..".

THIRD EDITION, ENTIRELY RE-WRITTEN.

S bonbon:

SXMPKIN, MARSHALL, HAMILTON, KENT, k CO., Limited.

1890.

6 U£*t*L<Z

0 \-

NOV 26 1890

CUsGd fW>-t

Extract from ft Letter by the Duchku of Rotlakr in " The Times";—

" Sir,— I find it difficult to reply to inquiries as to establishing Public Libraries in towns, and would suggest that Mr. Thomas Greenwood'B book on the subject should be consulted. If this work could be circu- lated among ratepayers in towns where ii is desired to adopt the Public Libraries Acts, the movement would be much encouraged. Yours faith- fully, Janbtta Rdtlakd."

The Right Hoh. W. E. Gladstone. M.P., as**.—

" I am sensible of the importance of the subject, and I cannot doubt that your volume will win, as well aa draw, a great degree of public attention."

The late Loan Iddesleioh.

"lam glad to hear that you are interesting yourself in the promotion of Public Libraries, and heartily wish you success."

The Right Hon. A. J. Mu.vdblla, M.P.

'* Your work will do good service to a good cause. No town should be without a Publlo Library, and your book will assist greatly in the pro- motion of these valuable institutions."

Pbops&sob T. H. Hoxlbt. 1 1 have found your book on Publio Libraries full of useful information.'

Sfris Sbnril <&bition is macribcb

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PUBLIC LIBRARY MOVEMENT,

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HAVE PLACED THE MOVEMENT IN THE POSITION

WHICH IT NOW OCCUPIES.

IF, BY INCREASED EFFORT AND AN ENHANCED PUBLIC INTEREST,

THE NUMBER OF ADOPTIONS OF THE ACTS

CAN BE RAISED FROM TWO HUNDRED TO FOUR HUNDRED

DURING THE NEXT TEN YEARS,

WHEN THB

JUBILEE OF THE EWUT ACT

WILL BE CELEBRATED, A MOST DESIRABLE END WILL BE ACCOMPLISHED.

/

m J

i m

PREFACE.

|IIE Public Library movement bac boon piogn splendid rate Fbnry«aw n#o, when ttie ton edition of Ibifl work wits published, only 133 plurc* hud ndopied the Public LiU'.mc.V AOt«. Now, as this third edition cln&ft& for press, a total of 2f)ft WtOptlOnil of the Acts ha* boon rflftCtlfld. SowntY-Iiw iidopln^ «>f Lin* Arts in foCTTOOn

i IlKtV 1)0 ('i-TI-id.TpJ ,1 Vi'l> N.iti.s-

iv record. Bo mind havu been the advance and expansion of ta whole questii n thit the present edition forms in entirety new

I : I, I] the BKll I'Tl.

The discontinuance ol the word " Free,* as applied to rata- supports Public LibruriMH m wlviied, The use of the word *;fr*«" attached to these libraries rather stamps them as I

la nature trf charitable msbitutlon*. In no itutM are thfij m,

nore ncourat* u wall on bho mow dignified doeJgnnUox i-

i Public Libraries.

Tha ir ii it i i m* r of Amoctatfofin tor the promotion of various oftjaoti

very l»rg<». Real ol these appeal to t »n« public for subscription*

itenaneG of d paid *uiff and t<» meet the expenses of u

Thorn w n nton the promotion of flu

i i^rary movement, and there is notn single paid somal

»r the advocacy of the movement The whole of the wort I

bci uf workers in ^e cause is ever extend*

I hi ! illy 0!IC I' )l* Tllf #Hh1 rif II;, entile

the . Mi-nr-: in ■: u of Lt» many friends has placed position which it now occupies. thanks are

tn flu' I'ivvs for the publicity which has been given the operation* o! Ihvne institutions.

XII

I'tlKI'V K.

Thnt excellent hotly, the Library Association, i* doing much to create a spirit oi' emulation among Ubraii;ius. Quite n new life lias of lute been infused into it, and its work is destined to pormcoto every section oi library operations. Many members of ihis Association have rendered valuable aid to the movement*

The present volume has exceeded the limits which it was at first intended it should reach. This has boon necessitated by the abundance of material with whie.h 1 ban- had t<> deal. Further, the movement has passed the Rubicon, and whatever ooJJ there may bO t(ff future im*6 of tine work, they will be in different form from this edition. Keeping this fact in view I have thought that the historian of the movement, writing a hundred peon hence, when the entire country will be uoney- oorabed with Public Libraries, will see in what position these in- Mitutions stood in the last decade of the present century.

There has been much generous benevolence- towards Public Libraries. Mr. and .Mrs. Andrew Onrnrgie, and others, have ren- dered especially useful aid to thla movement In their liberal gifts

towardx rate-supported libraries. The advocacy of the CiospeJ «i Wealth, and the help which those possessing the means and the will can bestow upon these institutions, have been recognized by many. Still we ELK not satisfied, and I would plead for increased hi anility towards Public Libraries. Other objects

whieli appeal to the generous rich are, no doubt, useful, but I

BU bold onOUgb to chum that the greutcst g I ><f tin* greatest

mimbcr in perpetuity cannot bo better secured thau by Public Libraries. These institutions are the property of the people. and will l»e administered by the people through all time to conic.

The wannest encouragement lias beeu extended to me in my wirk. Ubr&riftaJ in all parts of the country have shown me great Kindness. Every facility has been nHurdcd mc, and my thank.* Bte* lue, and are gratefully rendered, to all who have in person or by letter given me information and suggestion*. Mr. J. Potter Hrisooe, the popular borough librarian d! Nottingham, has been

BBOOgfl bo revise the proofs, and .Mi. l'oublcdnv, i librarian of the Murylehone Library, has compiled the index, it is notorious that librarians differ widely in their views respect- ing library odxoiiiZBtffib&San j sad us my own experience us a librarian wsfi gained many years ago* i have thought It best to I'laee the two chapters dealing with "The Formation >\ Public Libraries" and " Library Administration " in the hands of ■a experienced librarian. I am. •.hcivioiv, indebted to Mr.

pbrpacb. xiii

James D. Brown, the chief librarian of the Clerkenwell Public Library, for writing these chapters.

It is not creditable to us as a nation that we should be almost alone among the leading Great Powers in not having a fully responsible Department of Public Instruction. Ultimately, when a Minister is accredited to such department, his office will naturally be the headquarters of Public Libraries and kindred institutions. When that time arrives it is to be hoped the Government will see their way to giving small annual grants to Public Libraries under the Acts in rural districts, where the rate is insufficient for maintenance. One of the pressing needs of the day is the establishment of Public Libraries in the thousands of English villages, the majority of which are at present but indifferently supplied with books.

The result of my labour— which has not been by any means light, but one which has been a labour of love is now in the hands of the public. I have sought to construct a quarry to which friends of the movement might go for their facts and information ; and in anticipation of inquiries, I may in advance say that my book is for the freest and fullest use of all who seek to further the cause. The expansion of the work of Public Libraries, and the promotion of the movement, are the ends I have had and still have in view. For these ends my services are always at the disposal of those who desire to have them.

SO, Loembif Park,

8TOKI NtWIHOTOM,

LOSDOK, N. Ju'y, 1890.

CONTENTS.

C HA ITER L

iM'HOIH'CKnN

CHAPTKK IV,

i I "m::. OP PDHM<< LlDltAIltF.s

•V.

1

HUITEU II. it Pi ici 01 Pi m.h LlBUtna is oiiii Xatiosai. Liyy. >'

CHAPTER III.

[B PlRA FGK PrBLlC LlBRAUIEA |7

n

CHAPTER V. Eabi,t Ppomg LimiARim 40

CHAPTER VI. Pavmno or the Ewakt Hilt, of 1H50 40

CHAPTER VH,

I'nt Pa t'i in.' LlfiTtARV imDRR fRR *.<"!

fM

chapter vm.

BOW ro nicrMH AK"lfT the AlK>mON TUB ACTS 70

XVI CONTENTS.

CHAPTER IX.

PAGE

Public Libraries in the Northern Counties 83

CHAPTER X. Public Libraries in the Midland Counties 142

CHAPTER XL

Public Libraries in the Eastern Counties 194

CHAPTER XII. Public Libraries in the Western Counties 208

CHAPTER XIII. Public Libraries in Scotland 222

CHAPTER XIV. Public Libraries in Ireland 2&3

CHAPTER XV.

Public Libraries in Wales 261

CHAPTER XVI. Critical Examination of the Work of Public Libraries ... 270

CHAPTER XVII.

The Future of Public Libraries, and what remains to be

Accomplished 275

CHAPTER XVIII. Public Libraries in London 287

CHAPTER XIX.

Public Libraries in Villages >■ 328

CHAPTER XX.

The Public Libraries Acts and the Legal Aspects of the

Question 336

CHAPTER XXI.

PPBLJC JjIBBARY FUKW, BUILDINGS, *C. ., 848

CONTENTS. XVII

CHAPTER XXII.

PAGE

The Formation ok Public Libraries 359

CHAPTER XXIII. Public .Library Administration 373

CHAPTER XXIV.

Board Schools as Branch Public Libraries ... 380

CHAPTER XXV. Public Libraries in America and Canada 390

CHAPTER XXVI. The Public Libraries of Australasia 411

CHAPTER XXVII. Public Libraries and Technical Education 420

CHAPTER XXVIII. Public Library Lectures axd Science and Art Classes ... 426

CHAPTER XXIX. The British Museum Library and its Work 435

CHAPTER XXX. Object Lessons in Public Libraries 444

CHAPTER XXXI. The Sunday Opening of Public Libraries 469

CHAPTER XXXII.

Mechanics' Institutes, Workmen's Clubs, and their Relation

to Public Libraries 471

CHAPTER XXXIII. Public Library Committees and Commissioners 479

CHAPTER XXXIV. Statistics of Puhlic Libraries 498

xriii CONTENTS.

APPENDICES.

PAGE

I. SUGGESTITE PARAGRAPHS FOR CIRCULARS, HANDBILLS, *C. 611

II. Public Libraries' Acts

Public Libraries* Act, 1855 530

Public Libraries' Amendment Act (England and

Scotland), 1866 536

Public Libraries' Act (1855) Amendment Act, 1871... 587

Public Libraries' Amendment Act, 1877 538

Malicious Injuries to Property Act (1861) (Eng- land and Ireland) 539

Public Libraries' Act, 1884 689

Public Libraries' Acts Amendment Act, 1887 .. 641

Public Libraries' Consolidation (Scotland) Act, 1887 643

Public Libraries' Acts Amendment Act, 1889 ... 655.

Technical Instruction Act, 1889 556

III. Forms for Calling Public Meetings, Notice of Poll,

Voting Papers, &c 559

IV. Rules and Regulations Suitable fur Public Libraries,

Form for Guarantor, ,4c. 567

INDEX 575

LIST OF ILJXSTKATIONS.

I'\i:i'

EUftftU Public Library, Muxsta, a.xd Ant (jallkky,

PEBBTOT VrontUpitM

! '" '-IMIUE OP THE FlftST PACE OF THE ORIGINAL PUBCBA'iK

Hook, CaeruAM Library . W

Oi [EL Window ik Readiko-room, Chetham Library 48

Thk LATl William Ewart, M.P 60

!ii.AiK»uii.\ Public Liuhai.y ... ho

BoOTLB PUBUC LlBRAJlY AND MUSEUM „, 98

IkioTLK Polio Library, Ground Pla>- 04

DM Public Library, Ground Plan 07

f.i.i.i.v MumuVal Ofmcek and PUBLIC Library I OS

Newcastle Public Library and Kbm-bboom 122

T«r. tATR J. Brother-ton, M.P 131

Wim> Kkmiom Library . 188

:M>UAM Rkvkbkm:jc LlBBABY . . ... lfil

Derby Public Library Attn tfUBBffM Ml

WwrcoTE* Public LmAftY, Lbicbbtkr 173

OlLUTlUP PUBLIC LIBRARY, NEWARK, GROUND FlOOR PLAN ... 174

GlLMTRAP PUBLIC LIBRARY, NEWARK 175

KoTTIMlflAK CENTRAL PUBLIC LlBRAlUBU 101

Wi5«roRD Public Libbabt ... 186

WiN-iroRD Public Library, Ground Plaj 187

Irawica Public Library, Mukevm, and Srimm of art

RfcAinv Pueuu Library, Ground Plan 205

y Public Library am» Scuoomop Apt and8cience B1 i

.:Li:i Memorial Humecm and Purmo Library ... 2li*

rTiwt*c i Library sis

Alloa I'lbll Library ... .. ... 227

1 hi.n Library, Mt-aia-m ami Abt Uallrry 230

XX

LIST OP ILLUSTRATIONS.

Mr. Andrew Carnegie

Edinburgh Public Library, Elbvation

Edinburgh Public Library, Reference Library Floor

Belfast Public Library ...

Swansea Public Library, Art Gallery, and School ok

Westminster New Public Library

St. Martin-in-the-Fields Public Library

Chelsea Public Library, Ground Floor

Library Ladder and Drawer ok Card Catalogue Case

Clapham Public Library

Clapham Public Library, Ground Floor

Clerkenwell Public Library, Ground Floor

Clerkrnwrll Public Library, First Floor

Village Library, Bebinoton

Plan of a Circular Reading-room

Standard Bookcase with Shelves on Both Sides

Wall Bookcase with Ledged Base

Library Indicators

Newspaper Stand

Periodical Rack

Metal Book-holders

Pamphlet-box

New Public Library, Boston, U.S.A.

Concord Public Library ...

Public Library, Northampton, Mass.

Toronto Public Library

Sydney Public Library

Plan of Reading-room, British Museum...

Reading-room, British Museum

The James Keckitt Public Library, Hull

Art

PAGE

232 236 237 256 266 ... 294 ... 300 ... 303 ... 806 ... 808 ... 309 ... 813 ... 314 ... 335 ... 856 ... 360 ... 861 863—365 ... 866 ... 367 ... 367 ... 868 ... 401 ... 403 ... 404 ... 410 ... 416 ... 488 ... 487 ... 451

NOTE. While in the press, the number of adoptions of the Acts hma reached 90S. This makes an increase of 76 adoptions of the Acts in fonr yearn instead of 70, as r fated on pafel. ' Lawisham (London) adopted the Acta by a majority of 773, on June 26, 1890.

PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

una r

&

the 1

m u at

CHAPTER I.

INTRODUCTION.

m.-iy with safety bo Mid thai (here [s no modeni move- ment which has matte Bach rapid pTOgTOU as has the Puttie Library Movement. Only a very few years* ago the leadcra of public instruction hnd to l.irncnt that i few districts had availed Ihemserrea of ttu PttbHe Act*, and voluntarily taxed themselves for the rapport ol an institution, which should be th anson p* party of the people, and the home of the productions of fchagrcal mm* Is of pQflt and present jtorindft. In 18.9 the number of Public Libraries wnd only eighty-eevon, being the total far the forty years from the tossed in 1839, or an average oi tvo dint net a per no. After nn intervnl of thirty-six yems from tin |u --ii.J «.■! tha Evrart Act of \>^o, only 183 districts hud enrolled themselves

Vao " th*' nimble penJDJ ." but now the total mnnbor stiunln

i at JO, making an addition of no fewer than seventy i:i ( -vi -. ii i- indicates that we have reached a rung of the r in our national life when these institutions are fast bfl-

Knntng 1 1 he looked npon as on Inseparable corollary of Che d Schools, i'ui that without, them no district pan be oon- •'I us complete until it has <i mnldim/ imjcnbed as a Pu >.k- Utann

PcMlmlBtie writer* are fond at times of a^urim? us flint th- I ivlnjc study of books Ih a thing of ibe pusr., that the hustily- wrltten mlnmns of the newspaper, with Its list of murders, burgnirlc*, rntlwav undents, price-fights, and its police reports, riK. n i!n* pmce of literature in the estimation ol the people. The fuel* hard \ ••• -n (o wnir-int ihix assertion. Itorough ;.

mtm inloptiiiK tlie Public. IJn>rurie»' Acta, purchasing, .ii;.' from l);r benevolent, sets of valuable books, and in ;it lie disposal of the inhabitants of such local which tiit- political economists E t generation B < persistently, that the unly business of a luunici*

1

Pt'OMC MHIIAItini5.

polity was to pave the street*, 1<n-i|< .tftorlho lighting and watering, und maintain public order, never took ;\ firm hold <>f th« people ( ;m«I today dial: idea is openly scouted bj tii" majority. The | in-: <>i the Efflomentary Eanoation a si hi 1870 vu a pro . motion of the belief that the cultivation of the minds of the people was a mott"i- ol public interest, n was soon felt thai the mi cullivutiou with which the community was concerned couhl l >( logically be confined to the training afforded by the elementary. [■■.inner facilities were needed, and *n the Pubac Lttwary "'time to be regarded as a legit i oat pfl 1 i I the raa- ohiaery of the municipality. Thanks to the cnlighteimieu'. <>! individuals, and the generous help ot public-spirited men and WOinen, the movement for establishing theso centres of Unow- ledge li n k wy rapidly developed dining recent years: end it will Boon l»o looked upon as a disgrace to any district t<> he without its Puttie Library.

But htill. unt\vUlisi;iii(linjr (1 Iinnge which lias come over

public opinion with regard to thene itisiiiutions, there \- motuj :iin of work to be done, and our urnee! into ull in towns .mil rural districts who care for the welfare of the community among which they dwell* to agitate and discuss the iulvlsah as to the formation of bhaae Institutions where the* an a i

il n. :ii l.v oatablie had <'.< ri_'\meii an-. miniHtors <>l all dcnomiui- Mojis. nunutters of political clubs, debating and literary nuclei i .on I friends uf the people of every shadoof opinioUj this is o ijuo- tion fur you. Those with well-filled boolwhchea of their own ran and ought the more readily to sympathize with those wh< are

. - I-, -iird, .ii-i Miould exert themselves to place within the reach oi ail a Public Library which shall be as free to [ ten M the highways upon which they walk, Tlic tnek oi advocating and defending those institutions U Miir.-,- lighter with each succeeding your, for there is now I aoneeneua oi opinion that the Public Librae ban bastftutJ ononcatlonable utility, and it may be affirmed that the triflii a addition which it mokes to the rates fa infinitely more than repaid by the advantages which the ratepayers reap from these in none, The next generation will bole book with astonishment at the prolonged opposition, coming sometimes from sources tat least exported, with winch the proposal to found those librarian dab been met a certain centres usually regarded as enlig itenad Bngtiebittea. have long been accustomed to pride bhemselvotf

on the Itatfl of -iMli/atioii Which Hum "ti^bt little ixbiiH ! hi-

reached. But, if wo take us a criterion Sit number oi Public Libraries existing in each country, the comparison la woefully agamsl »is. The European country which possesses the largest number of Public TJhrari) . strange to Ray, Gastrin a countn

up. i. which it has in some quarters bean the custom i b witn

:i sort of half-pltyhig eye, in iustria there are no fever t Iron ■». i rubiic Libraries, containing 0^70,000 voliunea, wfchout reckoning nape and nuuati£erlpts---a total vhlcli ooxoea oui ai h* volumes per too nf the popuw lou, Prance powosaee 000 Public i ibra

ivrnnn ttton

;>.

»ontafnfaifl YJSBHflQO volume* und 135,000 munuBcript*, or IS

volumee pet 100 of the inhabitants; Italy ranking nasi with

108 Ubrnnes, 1,848,000 volumes and 380^000 manuscript, or L6

volume* per h«n '"> Germany the Public T.u>mrirn ininiiter.w,

10,000 volume* and 58,000 manuscripts, or li

rolnmee per 100 tftfia population, ftreul Britafn possnmoK only

200 Public Ubnir i itabli lied under the Acta, the volume*

numbering between 3/XXX000 and i .< > * KOOO, and a largo number

•Mjj.'iii-is ' it e " 145 libraries ts Russia, with 962,000

volume* and -I,«kk) manuscripts, or n fraction orei one volume

i»> 100 i' Bona. It it noteworthy thai in Bavaria alone the

Public Ubnui - number L60»-with 1,866,000 volnmea and 24,000

oscnpte

Reviewing i ic pi ncipal !: i trie* separately, the largest

in i i the irorldisth.it nl Paris, which contain'* upwards

000,000 minted books ami Ii^'mhw* miiniiwripK Hetween

rial 1 .!■ rar.i ii - Petersburg and the British Museum

bore u sol orcaoc. in the Britlnh Museum there

are about 1,400.000 volume*. The Uoynl Librury of Munich

has i otning ever 000,000, but this Included 5 >0,000

I iiri:,. ii;< Koyal Libraryat Berlin contain* 700,000 volun

bponhagon 510,000; the Library at I >i -

W; tin? Library at Vienna I00,000j the i Diversity Library

ny wofXX). The Vatican Library at Rem*

I30,U0U trtuted books, and commenced in 1378. Liu

Paris is one of the very oldest in ICurope,

tnded in ISfoU ;and the I Diversity Library at Pro

. beci founded the name year One el the earliest

,.tl ilnr. ti< work! ever l:i':irtl of w:ix that l'»»rnie*l

ie PtolemlM i: Egypt The tar-famed library of Lutx* in.i.,1 work "i several rnonurclis md no greoJ was the

veneration of Hie i ■■ ir it that they looked on it almost

-.-(I j tin" no 'ar w U nscribe over its jmi'tala tin se word6 :

nnmiflhmeni nl the soul." Tit** em!* of the earth ware

raseai i rich Its shelves, und, at* was the custom of the

ttrnea, the would be pi siseasore were :i •{ Lou particular how they

mine by their Uterarj treasures) li is related thai one of the

ilmiilliU'ly refused In frupplj the l'n nim --., rit-ken

lain aith corn until tliej furnished Ikih with .■■■.

which he coveted. Fanca thi Queen de

:• |i rafacTilH' I" tin AI'.-insioTi llmi.-r Kr-lirl' 1 'nrn 1 u-ilenf*

it) I ,:!ln'i - , i Mill up to Hi r M. ;■■ v tin- [iriYjit* pypf re

i ml VVhittingtoii '. < H the large librw \t* En Mm-

Pub i i . brar.i i omes next to tin I tan

' volumes (including the duplicates in

;.-h.- ). The Harvard I . i collection a i ics < 1 1 with

." m. rii.- National I i irary, however, i P the United

I to urpu nil, for it I o nl iiti, when oom

Kno, mo volume, i i i nice: »ll, Micni :.i'< in the ['nil I v.<" hi.rariofl, of which luiK 150 are Public «\? now andentand the term in thu eountry.

inarms*.

and Franoo again nre far ahead ores in pi i'i! of number. although in the net mil use mini * «•) the ln>ilcs < iron! Urltoin will

bold n- "''II --I mi mj i ha eonntriL \< i.

The nnnririiiitx distance ROBBSs hi behind the times in tin;

matter «'» providing for the EnteUeotaal wants >! I it people is

rvMont from the fact tint i!ie ti r At public roadlng-TOOO) in tin- M wooi te Empire v.!- »pened only lately in the ettj ol Petersburg The room u oonneeted with a good horary.

V.li:rl: OOOlD3 ll;)y(> |lp(»n POntril UltOf I by AiUli** pilhl:.- -. ; .lilt I •. 1

efttsena. Admittance Is rroe.and permission is given Bo borrow - r»»r reading at home. The new Institution 1* namod after Pushkin, the novelist But thai the oundatiou of the Pushkin Public Library ban no BigntflcaDce as Indicating b change police on [Ik- pari of the Russian uithuritie* towards literature and the prow, Is evident from the hei thai bho Government has Issiicd an order forbidding the editors <>i newspapers In RuMfaa Poland to receive foreign exchanges! Aj one wanders about among the cast libraries En which some English famlHea keep under lock and key many rare editions 01 Famous books, worth their veiifhi iugi>M, Die iviirrtinn is inevitable that valuable as are these collections, they are aol put to the beet use within Che range of posalbtiSty. Bound Eaull lensly, and shut up in elaborately curved oak bookcoaea thai i •• seldom opened, inncfcssible saw I . a lavonr .1 few, and 00

idiis n rn-at rarity, thoy bco mo little mor< than i xpa :r iclcs of furniture. Books, tike coins, arc only performing th< Lr right Eunction whoa they arc in circulation. Boarded up, the i become onrj so much metal, and the books only •><> muoJl paper nnd leather. In a Public Library, books bo#in t<> live nii't'idT the people, arid tn cisort no influence forgood upon tl

OKI j< ffonileinon of Kngland, who arc said to "live at hoi u case, is this not worth remembering? There are meant shelves ol Public Libraries throughout the country waiting t<> be ailed. Let theee gaping fihelves appeal r<> youl By pla your treasures upon fcnom a now lease of life would be mm cooks you have prized, and it is irapomhle to say where, along the Una &t the generations to follow, 'hey would cease to gratify and enlighten,

To the possessors of wealth an even more urgent appeal made, For all thr large-hearted generosity which has *! i the lafil flaw years Rowetl out inwards these Institutions nil the Mends of this movement are grateful. Bui the high-water mark

-■ - to Public libraries has not yet, it is sincere^ 1*» nopert, been reached. There am thousands r>f Bng Scotch, Welsh, and Irish villages, and very many towns which an absolutely devoid of any serious- eflbrt tu meet uku demand for hooka to read Will the wealthy not make St possible Tim- one or other ol these rtaccf b sherish the mcraorj ol the aid given I tocH iblish ;i library In their raids! : En wliat manner nan the opulent, bettei employ their richee than thisf A Public Lib wii i it* books Uvea foi rer,end this way of jicrpol nunc

i\ntom rno.v

a

.it,

ilum

my lie eiiiiMieiltlnl [>0 ihe ih'-ll, :iinl HO bORtOwSlIfl UD yviiini-

unborn ,i prlcelesi ilcjad i--. There we 1. mdi lua ui su i

u iii,i-.! !i md merchants who have in their power Ihe

tnc;i v. 'i i |fte of books secure perpetual

blessing, and there will be seen to future years, ft ia hoped, much

ted giving tea Pubh't Library purposes, [therm the way

' nwnrV. l-i. I I... I ililu "i< l|' I- ,-li.v. .] uiHin

it i ibrarioe benefit all clossoc wil i >ul

the taint o oharlcj attaching to thorn, Wealth can confer

aiitrthan bj being bestowed upoa those

utkme, M i ituble j?iftu pauperize, notwil

him ji.m hi ;.. ii of the donor, Nol flOthow-

. ■. Iu'h oxordi '■•! in Ms n y. Etm tendency oi tho gift ta bo

te,toopon out in the mtndaof on incalculable number ofpooplo

Bdfl avemi pleasuri b. I lenora-

-v t? . MH>ni..]'\ of the man whogtve* libraries

iftor tho donor has go in- gift

uvomtilishw g !. and cannot full into abuse as some schools and

n«r Institutions oavedoi e, IT* system oi p >pubtf control keeps em rtoalthj and i igoroos. Would I 'i ii there v, ere more bequests nstitntionai What run confer more universal good Public Library or Museum? Ob thai the phllnnthro

he i:.-li w mM flow OUt int. re ;ii ri,i« direction ! It :i

be pei i lit in! n those who ire Into iiiing to clistfn mtiu] them- hw in 1 1 iraj it In to mi ke the gjfl enndftlonnl on the town dj trie thePublti Uhrarletf Acts for la maintenance.

1 1- -.- •; .ii ii ii <t lie laid upen tins, because this course oi

■M.iii i linn;- rln- lilvTMrv in IMM'pelllitj iiiiiirr I !ir ;hIiii ini.H-

ii M .ii (i the elected suthorUfcti oi tlie people. Tliis Is infinite^

: li da 04! to 1 1 ustecs and their succct

be flral luflaji which frightens the inbulritante, and ii' this

m be bridgedbj i noble gift being made to a town U

i , Vw place* would give n negative repl> to

urc to caatanv reflections upon othcg

iri constantly laying tneir appeals before the

■■!, i>ni ii ■- legitimate to point ou1 that iu connection

. i iiu(ion> liic -lit in it- ent ret) wuul I <o towi rd i

i.i ibjcct intended Uy the donor. There is no expensive

rictf, collectors, mid other* hi pay mil n|' it, ami the

i Ii: pjH'n I" i>< my, would then go tor tlie purpose

d. Down i" ;i •• last >onny tho public would roa| the

I hi', id i.D imp turc,wcll worth while

mind Th< extension of Public Librari©* cannot,

ii ii i II ih<- I'Vdloiil rnuki' up their i lind? tt.: .i. or

road, i ■! Rifts of thi« nature made k iowi . i -I cuu '"' aid in i the '

■. I < ■■ r\: ,: -:r.rl calmly BUd - 1 ■] ■: - fl 01141 8 |V I Ircidnig I he

i : -. n i't viiMn.i iii- tin--. ito j ction in the

this work. fhe follow ng nob s| mz w from u now poem, written [vy l»r.

I. Inii.-H( I.i -h hi'iito t)\t* i.|»tii;i -. ot a VuUVV

6 PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

Library at Boston, U.S.A., will be welcomed by our own library builders and supporters :—

" Can freedom breathe if ignorance reign?

Shall commerce thrive where anarchs rule ? Will faith her half-fledged brood retain If darkening counsels cloud the school !

Let in the light ! From every age Some gleams of garnered wisdom pour,

And fixed on thought's electric page, Wait all their radiance to restore.

Let in the light ! In diamond mine

Their gems invite the hand that delves ; So learning's treasured jewels shine,

Ranged on the alcove's ordered shelves. From history's scroll the splendour streams,

From science leaps the living ray ; Flashed from the poet's glowing dreams

The opal fires of fancy play. Let in the light 1 These windowed walls

Shall brook no shadowing colonnades ; But day shall flood the silent halls

Till o'er yon hills the sunset fades. Behind the ever-open gate

No pike shall fence a crumbling throne, No lackeys cringo, no courtiers wait

This palace is the people's owu ! "

CHAPTER II.

THE PLACE OF PUBLIC LIBRARIES IN OTJR NATIONAL LIFE.

iHERK is no more marked characteristic; of our national life than the growing self-dependence of the people, which has been the outcome of municipal corporations. Where these corporations are the strongest and most vigorous, there must we look for the highest sense of the duties of citizenship and the most self-reliant populations. It is again in these municipalities, such as Birmingham, Manchester, Liver- pool, Leeds, and Nottingham, that the most has been done for the education of the people, in the way of Board Schools, Public Libraries, and Museums. The same municipalities have the best street lighting and street cleansing arrangements, and the police force are under the most perfect control. Surely this fact should dispel the fear that the energies of the poor in the way of self-help may be relaxed, and the rich become apathetic to their higher duties, by the spread of Public Libraries and kindred institutions, supported out of the same funds as are the local police and the street lighting and cleansing. It may be asked, What is a corporation ? There are various

M.ACB f>7 PUBIJC UBBAJUB6 IN 01711 NATIONAL UPB,

kindc, >«ut we I K DOTO 00 LOCTBOd With tbfl OOTpOTDtiOB U it bodv

politic elected by Hie people, and re*| - -i •!»> to them. The word

Eg used ts equivalent I i in< orpori ed joint-stock oontpasiWj where

ilwtti'iii'i.1 the citizen* are ahan jholoere and in banded together

irocornmoB pnrposoj that purpose i».'inv the o lurao i veal of the

ntiiv too*] .'.i!ii!iiur.ity.

1 1" one Kal principle which surrounds corporation* la tihni

i od '.. [| ;,i p p i :i life Thej may well have been in

come laws designated immortal, :iith<n :m- ease* their

have run ..hi v i Mr n definite numbei o! ».■■<•■;. i nit during

. ',,11 nl';"iniyil1, Hli'J r l 'Mini llil ': D I \\ 'I I 1 1 Bl 1 1 II |-

all ii -i:i:ii memlwrs are withdrawn, Foi they are

nurd T i_v -ili'iv-,:: i *. i-<n por.-il iott ha8, fU fart hccii

* to identity throughout

nil tfic i Ti-iiMiums i hanging d( .Ik pan-;. Men come and ;:■>. lets

ul r.uli . ■iH'iit are punned and bee >me often a dead letter, to swell

ii -ii iilaiiy eumbroufl Muff already on the

MaUlto ! k, I ii : Ifl C H ("'! il:< D Itvea OH, III many ol'imr

i ions all the mo i i - ere elected reptv-

ii .i.;i i riii Mia first granted have gone over bo

i ity, i»ui ( i i : life ia ool i jved . p .<.

. Mm* I.. consolidated and added strength. This la the

><>n why no nrirntc enterprise i i DosRiorj lofoi Public

tion what tlif . nrpnr.il ici - n I * *. ;m«l ( i \

•ii Hits rent « the. plea oi : [Siblic Libraries, Muaeuina,

which hIihII 1»i the property <'i' the ciUzena, . mi i r ■'. .- !-.-• i \>\ their wwn electa cprcaontatives, and torn im intcfrml part ol then local life.

Iln tern "ratepayer " is o designation altogether i-rumpcd

name citicen would he jui

! Iiottor and more aoproprititi' -. 'Putc <suu scarcely he

:<'«Nlng mattor 1 1 importance at the present time than

I,-- i undK ol the ] pic a high sense of the

izeiifthiji It )- t I healthy eh irae.teristic "I public life In thin

the rntd«t ol controversies which go down to A our outiontd existence, our ttotesmen "i : .\\ j, ■> n - -:i r. I.*! hv their i? n i i n n ran ol light and leading, i rahjecta o general and non-political Lateral tvrHIrd ;it i i im..-: !, respectful henringnnd attention irnaaoma I'vi.liMii ii niiuij.' ]i:ii lifr>, anil men of cn;»pe

mntterH for the gjpne ba goofl. Around

tntlonn could loenl ttu- lienor gather than MuHoumft

There Im too much Hontimental pntrtotiam.

ititter nlaiiil lovo of country, and far Loo little of

ii^i'i; Vutioiinl patriotism in an excellent thing,

... alwi o i<tral patrlot.tMtii and no inatitutfoni are more H

!• CUltlTUtA the latter i|liaUt>} Ilia n rinse The ^tatc lt;i,s inn iIihic Im :• ; i jilr that it i- called uiton t •> do when it has

orklio i-''. ,i liiiiiiti'- asylum, a pidicenuu., .u«l tliare In llw comwiou hangi i m

-

PCULIC I.IH6ARIIS.

Wli(y. D-a.i . mIuhiUI our pnupfr life bo •*<> heavy :i I;iv ml the

,.v and rich \Yii> (a if. not made more ral Supporting either 11 i"i ii labour 01 ithei ways? Not that its being broi law competition with the labour out ol its doors Is advocated,

tnil rarely ii. the raising of food, ;uid in Uie waking of their uwi

oiottdnffi there \t ample scope for such i»r"ni'iuv hiiour, Ob ye

people, with &U youi wealth ;-u*i boasted •>i>miuoa

, tioa long U tolsaationffl mate of money and force i<» $ru

on, and the country idly look on, content with an occasional futue

protect I

'\'\-.r higher life "I '•"' fiii-Miji lui» received tciu liiiu- iith-ntiou, &od the lower and baser life .Hem.-* to have absorbed til the . apathy and sure I the authorities, Hut we have i iuch<

i of b* btor days, and oon do municipttUty or I « >** = > I rovenung bodj will be conetdored oompletc unless 11 has under to sdminietra- I .< i ii library nnd it museum, us well us a workhouse, a pr md the preservers ol' luw ami order. It iafor the provision for this higher national life that ilii* plea Is made, and upon mouiei- polftioa is earnestly urged the ram of riving toe fuUoai and bent attention to this quoaaoo. The fact hhould beomphosiaod that Che inuiiw'ipriiir.y can do for the people in the way ot libraries ;in.|

niii:-i'uin> v-n! t'junint ix^sihly In' doim hy private enterpriMi

it may bo unhesitatingly asserted that in fullest nnrf iim am iv..ii..hi.'':ii moaagi moot and boal value for nnm-v riw^-.i, the existing rate-enipported librariea arc Ear in advance of the private hutituoons of this nature.

It U some forty yours since Carlyle ssUi'ii tin' question, " Why la there not a BoaJesty*s Hbrary in everj countj townf there 1st U i jesty** gaol and gsllowa in every one : " and it is as long the Public i i 'i-ru's' \r( wea passed, and yet the lack of Uorariea Ik HtlU one of die most startling deflolencies in tiuw inlaid* u e have riven the people evergreatei and greater political power, imt they have shown no Inclination to benefit themselves by means of books or other means of culture. "Wo must now educate, our masters," said Mr. Lowe when the Reform Bill uf 1807 was passed, lie was quite right, for "our masters" were hy no means quick to educate themselves, and the num- ber i'i Public Librariea which thc\ consented to establish lor three years after lf*C7 was about ten. Then came Mr. Foroter'a Education Set.; that was not permissive, and yiv.it thing* were expeoted of it. Hon that everybody was to he taught bis letters, everybody would surely wani books to read use. What, indeed, would be the good of loachin^ pe^pli at all unless the* wciv also to have a supply ol good bool i ion might as wcU teach a man the use of We icniiv and fork sod then not give bim any meat, fublio Libraries would ho the natural and legitimate outcome of compulsory education. So it was <*oTiii«ie-i:iy expected) but the expectations h w* ouij to en

' iiltill.- I, ns ;i |m ruHiil of [ho pf06«ut \oli:nir IU0

II, a affect ol education upon crnnohas been a subject much diaCUBSOd by sociul reformers, It nuv lv awumed that there in a

r;i.r- umaAaiBS r.*; orn NATIONAL i.iri:.

0

J Nil

relation between th< t wo thiri^, although it not ptrawble to ascer- tain the precise ratio in whion orimo diminishes with On >pread at education. R may, howev r be maintained thai the bioi

power raises the mine ol the people above the tonipta- whian lead to crime, mid that, 080 rule, menial and morul atpengtb ire likely to advance together. Toe ease if - ;

rd education not merely as :• process by which

Icnowb .,.; - imparted, but u s nystara of careful training iu

which the subject iB surrounded by guiding, ret . and

uplift og influence*, when the environment w the indiviaual im

:o bring out its best characteristics and to cheek

ihnan nod paasion. The effed oj raeh si

i ,■. !i i n the best ■■■■' a i ion Is n led edui itioi nus be

(^ |»i'.h'<! r.i 1 1 -ri' itest when ir is employed towards the ehQdren

ftf il.nf alamaf (►iii'ini- who iln no! nr r:imior |.» rl'ru-m fa

parental duties f is well lent wn tfutf there exists .1 degraded

umn from which the criminal olniti > ormatnnbly recruited.

e retail it) wen m the reci rde of Hie poHce-ouurts,

Qvictlon nfter conviction i* recorded against tin- taoio person.

11 i> therefore .1 problem of the greatest social Importance to

:.:in Iww ii.t the higher and better influences 01 education

can be brought to hear upon these children, and it U ia possible

•;i'.;iil of miser j, to bar the g&tea of crime, and,

, , "throw hut ajai the portals to ;i decent life.

Suci d Question aa this has long formed an interesting subject

1 mongsl moral nnd social philoso-

On the one aide* we are told that the influence of heredity

al U be overcoxae, that the criminal is bom, and not

l that, however well intended, each efforts nt m< ral doomed to di.-tfppwntim-nt. ' »n the Dthcr Bide, the atom that, whatever muy bo the tend 10

> 1 village, theiv Is miruVicut olastieitv and

adaptability in the moral nature of humanitv to enable us to

is ii 1 ffeetuollyif euro in taken that ull tin.1 surroundings

of tic 1 are properly and judiciously selected

1 1 mother Hfteerj or twenty years, when some raUliorift more

.»'ii have pened tUrougfi the Board Schools, and Public

1: « t other similar institutions have hoon established

mi, then we shall tecum* a cultivated people.

In irwt*- nr similar words, half hopeful, liulf regretful, the

jenmn-up generation summarize their estimate of popular culturo.

.1 School i< the star 1 * steer by; the Board School beg

olviltaation. There In humility in the oonffi

Rut whfln Young Knglanrl Is, doubtless, a line promising fellow,

1 he also miid for his senior.-. If the question

\n rinrtldfrwl slowly, II Is found that whal bheotiull generation

[1 l' thl ; word in It* ordinary aceepta-

iii|>ii-hi. 11 4clf-iiisti'uexloii bir themselves in .mm

of modern Micieiv as tin* pruKiebs which

are snaking, more or lew* under compulsion. Tlie

inctvn " ■' htori'H of literature, brought about

10 PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

by the establishment of Public Libraries, is, therefore, one of the indications which help to show us the tendency of the educa- tional movement of the present day. That tendency is strongly towards the equality which means the placing of the same opportunities of knowledge within the reach of all. The Univer- sity Extension movement, with its gatherings of students at the great shrines of knowledge, is a striking illustration of the tendency. Rut that extension has rested upon voluntary work, and the devotion of the students themselves to the branches of knowledge taught by the " extra-university " professors. The Public Library movement, however, represents the determination of the community to offer special facilities for the cultivation of the mind at the expense of the community itself. The readiness of the people to second and support that determination shows how great has been the growth of the feeling, not only among individuals, but among the public at large. The educational welfare of the multitude has at length become a matter of importance to us all. There has been a revolution in public opinion as to the true functions of Public Libraries. For a time they may be said to have had only a slight relation to the life of the community, hut the authorities are now ready to acknowledge that success or failure is to be measured by the extent to which they come in contact with and shape for good Hie mental life of the nation,

The subject of local taxation is inseparably a part of this large question. The present system under which, in England and Wales, the first incidence of local taxation (with some slight exceptions) falls on the occupier and not on the owner of lands and tenements, is unjust: such owners ought in equity to bear at least a moiety of those charges. The system under which country mansions are rated is unfair. The owners of ground rents in towns are liable to no part of those charges the outlay of which is essential in order that the property may possess any marketable value whatever. This is a matter which lies closer to the roots of our national life than the public are generally aware of. It is to some large readjustment of the present inequalities of local taxation that we must look in the imme- diate future for a much larger impetus to be given to the movement for the formation of these libraries than has yet been known.

A very interesting study is afforded by comparing the gross rates levied in towns in various parts of the country. A glance at the following list will probably produce a series of surprises to many readers :

Total Rates. s. d. s. d.

Accrington . . . . 4 2

Ashton-under-Lyne . . 4 6

Barrow-in-Furness . . 3 10

Blackburn 4 8

Blackpool 4 2

Bolton 4 10

Bradford 5 5

Brighton 4 8

FLAcr or rriu.rc mukaiuks i\ oi k .v.vhi.in.\[. iii'i..

11

«. d,

•i«t«.l r, 1 1 j

Burton m Trent ■", ]

lev !J||

. . 1 -

lift

i i

4 5)

;; LO

6 0

Darlington "i

*bary . . . . 6 3

tesheiHl . .. .. B i

i 3

II ii. I

[pftwl 5

In . oft

"i II i 9

a a o

g m

ii i

5 B

.-. |l)

Makkoi .. .. Manchester Middlcsboi &uah

Xewcantlt.'-uii-l"^ ao

Northampton

Norwich

D ....

I'lviu.-uth .. .. Preston

Rochdfllo .. .. Shofflold .. .. Southport . . Sunderland sr. Helens

Swa.iiSO:i

Wakefield

Wijrin

\\ r-liciuli

\\ ilverhamptmi

\>vu . . ftrmouth , . ..

r. d.

: :;

5 3

6 4

■'. 3

8l"« 0

l B

•I l

7 0

. 0

., s

S (I

7 '>

4 -J\

.. |0"

;■■ i rates include the rote* for poor, countj

- «i j - 1 1 , watch, 8cl ool Hoard, l*ubHe Librwy, both, r and an hi eH ujMiti the year* !>-.->-:', The ortioi '• i i "r from the ^roew rental variea bo much

wintry llml il in impotiaible i*4 (five particulars

ire h ■!■.■ -r, in cifi proi icling the boi I oompanaon.

it ot these thi total Quznbor having rate-eupported Public

i/tt oven. Thotovn«no1 po&aestring th«ee useful

i' i|ii(»ti?il:iri U'rrin^tirii, I turn Icy, Uurtnn,

Urn ithu i . If mUli rsliold, Hull, Lancaster,

. Muldon, v\ akcflold, "'a i*heaeh md n urk.

ono great Deed ol the age, and ii is one which cannot be too

!. - the app< ''it i i-ii! without delay of n

■i Public tnftimction After many contradianoxw of

»nn nature the country has teen the appointment of ii

knrtcultum ind so thorn •* room for large hope

icm -icw ptjhiii' official, with or without ftwattnto*

r. Mil !>♦• :i Mtnlflter whose department shall have under

ii nf our national education, Public

ttrnirfoi. MiiM'im. ichulnil schools. Tin- name official

tilble Tor our rial oi I I III rum, .South Ki'iiMiiuiuii, unci their Nh. i mill elsewhere. This in i Mibjccl iutoi'CTl» iu " ii national life, d id ii I :. forn i ii-; pub] i ipinioi v il! only take roruualj u-c rua.v -<»<n l>c wilkin unv\;v,A>V-

[a

I'l IW.ir 1.I".HARIE&

distance d c ug appointed u Blmialcr uf Public Lnatrucl Iu thie rospoot "iir Mvn Ooverntncnl ori <h-Lri:«<' rni i> behind otliei I lovernnn i.i; -. Even the Liftlmn Oovnnimeni hu. In Imod !!;.■ |in'|).'ir itu 1 tn-nl irnpury into I 10 l*ubhr 1,11 n

■I liiily. Tin- vuliu <'i the governmental report* upon the libraries of the 1 nitedStatee la ful \ rocoffnixod bj ul who take an tutored Is tit.- worfc »\ libraries. V\li«n we ooropari ttu little which haa boon d >ne to this country, with what has t»e 1 Q tin-- n-speet dou<> i-v tin«( format] md 1 uted States Governments,

Hi.;- 01 1 i[rtn-. 1- -.i.i j QgaJnel UK There in before US :tt tlie

present moment the w hole of 1 iia Hluo B k>Icn and parlta 1 1 ut; rj returns referring to Public 1 ilhrarlcx which li tve been prow

1»i thfl I'.i'lllsli 1 1 mi so i<l I.IHH..I-. li will \>o inliri's! in.-. h

d mi 1 "ii,< 1 in riic order in which they have been Issued First :iiid foremost are the reports from the neli« ;i Mmni on Public libraries Issued In IMfl and IHfltt Kach <>f these in ;i rolumc iii between ;>'*> unci 4<x> pngtw of oliihnrnn

I i siirs. mid il vldenoe before the *eleel uumittei appointed

in 1848 00 the best means of extending the eHtabllKhmenl oj libraries Creelji open bo the public. Judging from the coal »f other select committees and commissions, the net cos! to ilu- oountrj of bbdti oomraittee could uol have been less than some. thousands of pounds. These two IJlue Books constitute our noi national owe lamb In publications of real value dealing wiUi Public Libraries. Then follox Dhc othoi returns, which can be dismissed in a sentence. In IH-VJ there was a return o1 Publii Libraries, some of which had adopted the Kworl Act of 1850, Tlli* return conslflta of nine pntro. Then, i:i 1866, there w 1 further return, and as matters were growing ;i little tins re

a total •■ hi in 11 pnffes. In 1857 the Ilouse of Commons added ;> further inatalmonl ft mx pages, the extent of on utl :rh m it turn. Our IcgieJatore kindly took a rest after no Juhoriousn task, and for twelve years there wasno official document ie respecting these institutions. Hkv then gave us a return oJ libraries und muflcuma aetuully reaching twenty-nine pn#03. There was then e further leap to 1875, when we navo u further

II 1 hiiKiit <>i thirty-one pngee. Those iu charge of this rctui*n nmsi h:i\o I noi mipi'Uii;. t >r all thi'iiuffh il there 1e the tonn " free

l-il'n.n.". A--I- ;i <l i-_ ■■! . I. > 1 \\ hirh lia'I nut apprurod in lli<'

AeU thttnielvi - ind the ueo of such u phru»e ought never to hove been allowed to creep into tin* parliamentary doeumenl In l**78 thi ra appeared the iniiiiii-st '»i' the«e reiuruM'. Tins is a Hluo Book i i a tutica totalling up t«» ninety-one pages. So exhuuvtc* Parhanient beeome after *<> extraordmary an effort that nothing appeared between a abort return ol \R7~/ and n return of isho purchased For :i penny, and it let bowi left t<> private indrvlduala, ou1 of » pure dealre to Rsrva the conunonwenlth, to supply the deficiency, and bo <l< wlul ihould have been done >y Oov< inrii! long Bgo. it in perhaps too bad to expose the naied teas ol ml i'l tnia extent, but 11 onlv a relterailoD ol :< lev simple and pertinent rueU wnicli wake* up John Hull to the floods ol

HJlCK W miiii-- i.['ii{.\i:ii> r\ Ota IUTIOJM& i.ikk.

K.-ri\ nH'ir>.s i.-iik i ephen'a, and how small a portion <>(

wtial i. lone there touches the rttaliof im national I to. not furtbej statistical returns for "which It ia neceeaary to plead. Mliii Iidb now been lone. Bui m the making «»f a department in the State where PubKc Libraiiea mid Mueeums will find a cvutre and a head. I urther, the moot preeafajg educational need Lvanccd tn that of State aid for (In- formation nod mnintenan A FubHo libraries i vfllagi b imortion which i* man fully diet uttaed in a mcccodiiur chapter,

most r «--<i> :.p\ which is riven to thcee request* tot

ii.| to national aatitution* la, Where ia the monej to com<

ii -in f< r the inirponc? That, auroly, with the raaoureoa vrM< b U<

ut lia- (1 i] i Uuturmountal le difficulty* If it were o

% iidditiooal poiisionSj the matter would t]«»ul>tl<*Hn

he olvcd In :i prompt way. Ae o commentary on the orj oi on

checmt -r. there maybe quoted tho following two or throe

olicnt 1'nctn i ■■: i "in clerk recently died at Ventnor.

in tii i'i i i VI Igh , who waa :i contemporary in official

Chariot '..Miii' and John Stuart Mill. Thai in itself is

bio ovent to chronicle. II -j ■- . -i:»l point in his

com* i*i that he retired from tho public service under medical

certificate of unfitness in Ift35,and that during fifty-four years he

draw a pension tn the Chancery Court, a aide clerli was retired

loageol thl wnpeuKionol £1,381; and & sworn clerlL

olutm nto had aveni ced Etywu a year,wn« juMixmneii nil

>:.li »' 1. '».".:; :i ;:r: i : RJ II 1 1 ut -t< !■• rlrl'k H :,-;_• r I 'it fid E I £40 :i J 06 "'

vci ty-nino The Accotmtftnt-Oenaral took £4,900 rl :i hnmhle door-keeper grit t'iMWi year In the Office we find tho wrveyor reuring in 1*75, ifter seven-end- a-hnif years' service, with a pensioner £800- and the Clerk of tin' i went on* t< Iraw carifl i year rrom the revenues of

ir country The mosl uutragcou-i example, however. of "ra- tion" is afforded hj tlie ease * the Rev. Tli"niasTliurlow, nephew ol Lord Chancellor Thurlow, who waa " Patentee ol and Keeper and Clerk of the Hanaper." These u*ee were abolished when he wm forty-three, and he waa [Tie ocnaions (aacompepsaf oi \ amounting in the nggtegate to 1.7 1"> .t \ > ir. which pensions hecontinu I to draw for |. »rt v pears, i this nature are not scarce in the English service, racn '.sill i Aerate with indifference this waeti it in difficult to eay. It would be too much tot the "■ rnment, wliiohever party in in power, to .. thi 'v\ir\ perpetually, with ilirir i<!r;i* .>r I'iuV

■' l at the moneys already expend) i nee, litcrutnrc, und art, and are ton dispi

;. |grant tn the HrlMsh BlUKtmm, tho South ■ii. :iTt- othci national institutions. We eon to I'Ktnbliitli I ipportmentaJ Register of itiuv, *ueh w the Keeper or the Pub le R >cordi ha In ..-ir i yoi i!ic lii.am. t:u/cs 4»1 mch, or a Bimilar por> i*ord Mid means of mtorrfimmimicfttion between wii

14 POTJIJO LIBBAKIB8.

scattered libraries and librarians need only be mentioned to be appreciated. Nor is it wise in this connection to forget that Public Libraries abroad frequently possess unique treasures which are not in any of our collections Wittemberg; Berne, Basle, and Vienna containing, especially, rarities of considerable literary importance.

England must take care not to be left behind the Chinese in the matter of Public Libraries. A Public Library has been established in Canton city. Speaking officially of the inaugura- tion oE this institution, the Viceroy of the province declares " how important it is to the good government of the country that educational projects should be promoted, so that the people may gain the benefits of good learning." With the Public Library is connected a large printing establishment for the production of " good and useful books, whereby the present and the past may be compared, help obtained in the path of rectitude, and morals and manners strengthened." The Viceroy himself, with certain benevolent associations and trade guilds, have subscribed a sum equivalent to £11,000 for the maintenance of this institution, and the interest of this, and annual subscriptions promised, will yield an annual income of £2,000.

The Japanese arc even going beyond this. The Government of that progressive country has sent over Mr. J. Tanaka as a special commissioner to spend two years in this country, the Lnited States, and some parts of the Continent, to study the Public Library system. This accomplished gentleman left England on his return to Japan in December, 1881), and in several confer- ences which the present writer had with him prior to his depar- ture, lie gave an outline of the plan he will suggest to his Govern- ment for establishing Public Libraries throughout Japan. As chief librarian of the national library at Tokio, his library experience is not by any means slight. The permissive feature, which forms so essential a part of our library work in England, is to be entirely absent in Japan, and municipalities and other governing bodies are to have the power of establishing Public Libraries, and the maintenance of them, without any restrictions as to the amount, is to come out of the general local taxation. It will thus be seen from this and other facts that as a nation we must indeed be up and doing.

The place of Public Libraries in our national life is of so great importance that it cannot be over-estimated. The growing popu- larity of these institutions proves this unmistakably. One of many examples which could be named is that at one of the London Public libraries vary recently established under the Acts, a most unusual and encouraging scene was witnessed. The buildings had been closed for a week for the ordinary purpose of cleaning and arranging, so that readers had been deprived of their privileges for that short period. "When the day of reopening arrived the doors were surrounded by an eager crowd. This happened in Lambeth, and at West Norwood the road was blocked by an expectant throng of three or four hundred people long before the

FP

15

y wn- ipttDOd I I dAJ long the people same puuring in pooK£,andat nightfall no fewer tniu l,l48i >lumesnod

taken .»i,t :il»ni( (..iu--:"i rh ol the windy sl.n-k the lending

iv posBOBMB tl the othei Public Library, Almost :a the

i b end !|i" pariah, similar ttcenet were witnessed, and

the number of books distributed there in the day was i.ciou.

The*? act* are aa good b testimonial in favour of Public Libraries

ili! well lie ooocetred. CHtb ft man the run of a I Hbrnn a rl I ■«■«■ hire fa m the anxJoua reflection Mint the money 1 i . be i even ho little, might be more profitably spent -ivv tare ind tie to open on all Bides to refining uiflnances, numv them mui due to literature Iteelf Should In- want lt>he wul :■!■ -I'll: i I lence n d public reading-room, and be 0 emulate the courtesy which oils the wheels of <\<-i\ argon- : p.-, is made of tin* Puritanical argument .iif .. Literature keeps a maaawaj from the pot-haiiee.

Tin- bane of luxury lies not in moderate indulgence, hut in excess* Ith. and mental energy mat be wroruzfblrj frittered away in ream' rg u well i - in tippling. Tiut a temperate fratifloe t|oi oi one pi "r strongest >1 all checks to axceeairc

lulgcoce In nether. The natural faculties ol the mind I I in whnlcaomc ro rcution in the Public Library. They ti in Die uotivi w.-ilv of life, i iatoroouwc with active mind*; alii udo and Ea idle company they rofc And from a >• , !, where ibey may £ain hcultl. and vigour fur those ii:iii\ of the poorer eUiHKoe, who may in no disrespectful oi be called children a intellect, are debarred bv (oak of can*. ' iewthe matter from a point whence only its nor-

: tort an ru. 'Mi i:-; t istbli , t moll nay i"; laid for \iHic l.ibrai I a ghoul the entire country. 1 iplc who proteat very loudlj against what in not quite aveanratcly oollea "free Kluoation" in elementary schools, seem 1 1 •! that, under the PubUc Libraries Acta, sorae- thaatr ■• ''iv 1 neh Uka free education ia being provided not only 1 lid r en oi : li<- poorer elasse#, but for the aona and daugh- ter* of the middle classes, and all cloaaea, bo far n* they choose t<. read or borrow the thotiaanda of priueatinrnil wih-v* pi need at The P iblio l Ibrary is the university of the work- lluf 1 university is not'ror every man "its true value

ap| m .'<: \\\ rh.-.' whose pnninuN tniin'uuy fits them to

It* lulvaiiUurea Books are tml\ valuable to those who •a N 1 rnad 1 1 : 1 in, :imi libraries are only valuable to those « to use them. NevortlmlcMi, the growth of the l>nwy ayattttn In al leant a proof of the gradual Invnlop- cUeotual iutereate throughout the Indai- ii \. This ia an advantage in every way. Il i* iai the Industrial competition througnoul the lafly becoming more and more; competition ol mtelll- .-.-. U Ea certain that if w< caunothold oui uwuin this corn-

petiUOU, ■■■ 0 - 11 Mirri- It .'. (1 i ■> I 1 1 hc-ii.i illtftt of

" d<\ liue !-■: »w lccig< Ib powci , and in the loup r , 1

WBLir fJIIRARIi:S.

the <>n1_v power thai prevails. Dm it la as wall no! <> Pori tin- recogni ion ->i tin- power ihui dwells in knowledge oaJ knowledge is n good in iUelf unci contains titti-fiction* w Itself Intellectual pureuil »i evi d such aa raon burners

br) can oompaan, often carry within themselves their own best fruits to the pursuer. In the present condition of we can noneofnsafF< (elect the material profit thai reside*

in knowledge and In bhc cultivation of the intelligence; bid Itaowiodgc.likc virtue, is (tfl iwn truo reward, and the plerisurw of a cultivated inteiliffcncc aroeo pure and an unalloyed that eves if no profit ensued from them they arc worthy "i pniwufl (of their own sake alone, it :?■ clear that as a nation we areonihi

right road to educational oxoolle and have become, If wo

pal .n:\ trust in arithmetic and appearances, a nation of learned and teaming people. From the swaddling clothes ol Crltk Druldlsm, the yonBhfuJ habiliment* of Saxon Paganism, ami the corduroys of raodueval barbarism and ignorance, we b.n to the inJi woll-mftdo garments (mentally) ol noionc«, an general ukpIuI knowledge. EplctetuB said that you win "4a ti i< greatest service to Che State if you should raise uoi thi

rOOfS Ol till? ImUIXl'.S, lillt tllO BTMIh Ol lht> iMli/.'"!-. ; I »P

bettor that groat aonut should dwell In small houses rather than fop nit"!i slaves ro burrow in great palaces." Sip John Ilersehcl ottered a similar truth whpn he said thai "there tag want too much lost sight- of in our estimation of the pi ttons of Mi** humbler r.hsses, though It is one »»f the i hUfifnantly craving ill* ill) our wants, and in arr-unlly the Impelling power which, in tin- viist iimjority of eiiM-s, urges men into rle*

iiml crime it i* the waul of amusement." Like the Indulgence of Ul other appel Ites, It onlj requires to be kept within due bo :iinl turned iipmi iniii.M'i'iit (»!• toneflcial objects, to become a spring ofhappineflB; but gratified to a certain moderate extenl it must be, in the case of every man. if wi« desire him to be either e uhcful. active, or contented member ol society. II is llicrci niiillfr i * I" M'iy uie.it consequence, that those who on- at their case in this world should look about for means of harm gratification to the industrious and weU-diapoeed classes, who an

Srepared to prise highly every accession of true cnjqvmcnt, t' :ill tin- amusements which con possibly be imnfpm-ii far ;i 1kh.I-u -iking: man after hia daily toik or in H i intervale, thcro to nothing like reading an entertaining book, it calls for no bodily exertion, of which he has had enough or boo much. U roUevca hfs home ol it:* dulncea and sunioness, which, in nine eases out of ten. is wlmi drives him to the ale-house, ro his own ruin and to thai ol hie family. Supposing him to have been fortunate En the choice

of his l)o*(.k, mi«l to have iilighti'<t ejmti one nal'v good, wl Bouroe of domestic enjoyment it laid open! Jlemayren<i it aloud, or get faze wife to read it,orhii sldest boy or girl, or pass it round From hand to hand. A feeling of oommon Interest and i>i<*mcurc [g excited. Nothing unites people like companionship [b Intel

lectuaj ©njoyroe it. t\ doe* more, it gives them tfeli-rcs]>oet( lhal

THR PI .FA FOB TTIiLIf I.TBKABiEfi.

II

eornei rirtuc. it we would generate ;i taete for

v< nust begin bypleerfng. Give a man thta taste, and tiw means san I - rdlj fail ol roaklngnlm a

iiMppv i i. in You place .inn in jonfcact vitli the beet society in DTp-n period of history, wuii the risoBt, the wittiest, with |Hc tender veeUund the pureal dbaraotera who Imvt?

tied humanity. Il is Uardlyppes We bu the character ehould a higher aau better tone. Then ta ;: gentle, bul perfectly lc cocr< ioi »ii of reading, wel d c ed 01 ei the

hoick inter, which ib nut the leas cfTcnLual

•canec i leeaail ly,

ae truth winch tt appears i <.i- -. again

! is bo tihe im.i ol the people i- 'lir.Tiirtcof the ilui :(■.-. bilifcice of citisenanip, and it maj be maintained ii [SldHi Libraries and Huecu i -. whft their ooncamitanta of ndixur-roo n , lecto ■<■■ , and all the other departmente which are ?* beta tk* Institutions, />ar e.rccflenc*t wMch ::v« 010*1

the i v ilego ol cil .;■■ tbip. Am! % i in nncdi&b future the place of IVblio Libraries in out naUona] ii- wiH ■■ lore linniv established Thee* progrcs-

reiatftii ■■' noJ Ufa find 'u echo in tho language of

mv, ii

" N»w omtstona taioh new delta

Time luttkos anolonl good uncouth ;

Tlmy meat onward still, ami ontui .

Who vroiila kocjt ftltrctftt of Truth,"

CHAITKK ill.

THE PLEA FOR PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

s ^ question purely wcial tad free from the influences ..I party politic* or religious prejudices, the Public Library movement lias rap! ortance

m ii i <.. : m'm!-. however, hai h g for their ot>J< 1 1 I he

nod of rh« commonwealth, appear i 1 1 < promoters

mi.] were i not thai the loading

... i il reforms onnics. ^ n rule, : i- 'i- i men ox

t'tei'iuinuUon and intduuntcd perseverance, many n

mi .1 ! ..■ allov "i M dii hi atural deal h lung bel i ■>- tl

■] the Rubicon. The proocwi of rdu eating the public on

ml. mi!.. I Lime run] patimii t; and opposition,

img .is it treiJuenUy doen from unexpected Koureee, milieus the

>rk at tin i ti'l very utluuua. Nm( q few preening1

ij-e i1ik>iikhI I" Mil! in 1 1 1 -j- delaj l-v the Educa-

i ! ifii oi' t U'.'ni v \ i',u: too ate, and

i w'Iul'Ii liaa had. on Una account, bo

i Public Libraries. Considering that the

illy those in the large i nercial

provinces, have ao fully and conclutwclj justified

18 PUBIJC LTBBABIES.

their existence, the wonder is that we have not now from four to five hundred, instead of the comparatively insignificant number of two hundred. Truly this is a meagre number to meet the book-hunger of a reading people, and is not by any means creditable to the enlightened and practical character which we Britishers claim to possess; and in the provision of books for free-lending we have been left so far behind by the United States, France, Germany, and our Australian colonies, that the nation may well ask itself a few serious questions respecting the cost, uses, and operations of these institutions, and seek especially to solve the problem of their extension. The purpose of this chapter is to endeavour to reply to some of the arguments usually advanced against Public Libraries. The first and foremost reason is that the British taxpayer objects on principle to any increase in his rates. All that the Act permits is one penny in the pound per year on the rateable value, and no possible manipulation on the part of the authorities can make it more than this very small sum. There is somehow a chronic objection to rates, and there are not a few people who think we ought to be able to live any- where without the troublesome quarterly visits of the ubiquitous rate-collector. The author of " More Worlds than One " does not enlighten us how the supposed inhabitants of those regions get on about the rates, or, what would be still more interesting to us, whether they have Public Libraries. What the comforts and conditions of life would be if there were no rates, the good people who object to them do not stop to inquire. It is this penny in the pound per year which forms the gons asinorum of their extension, and yet nothing could be simpler and more just to all classes of citizens than this vital principle of the entire question.

The language used against this additional penny on the rates by the false economists on the one hand, and those who object to all progress on the other hand, who, as a rule, are the chief opponents to the movement, is invariably so strong that it tells perceptibly upon the ratepayers, and effort after effort is fre- quently defeated, until eventually the question is settled by sheer force of moral suasion. We have rates for police, lighting, paving, cleansing, improvements, and the support of the poor, and a rate for the mental health of a town is just as necessary as any of these. Public Libraries are no longer a luxury, for the march of education has made them absolute necessities. They are, in the truest sense, educational institutions, and as such are as deserving of support out of the rates as are the Board schools. They provide facilities for the continuing of study after school- days are over, and, more than any other institution, they are the best link between leaving school and adult citizenship.

The statement has gone forth that in Ixmdon alone, out of the 80,000 boys and girls who leave our elementary schools yearly, a minority only continue their education at evening classes; and this may to a large extent be attributed to the lack of Public Libraries ; for there is clear evidence of a very important

the plsa rem pfbuc ioniart?.

tfl

■i .1 young people in the large towns: ooatinufng their edu- ol riic Public LftrarJet. Even <•■ the icon of

Nlitnmnl penny to the rates. ;i town OUUlOt nink. « -w Invest n.i'iii fbr Its citizens than f>> bitihl. stock, arid mronmin i

irary and ii would Iw lmpossnile to name any outlay sq hfn which |n*u(incfs so ranch far-reaching utility as this

CBoajr. I'Ik' benefll du1 of themton for the poor, police, Drainage, Kbti< . ul bfl EJiel 1 hi' tlir penny library

'* direct and personal. It is within the reach of all adult* est* Public Libraries exist, to derive n lamefll so {{real

I that, ii the} bad to paj fbr it at the currenl rote ol subscription es, would oat 'hem ten or twenty Limes aa much. The ion of the infinitely little could not be better exemplified ui the penny library rate, for in some bownt tt means an annua] incomeot ovc* !: 10,000. Cnfortunately, in lone *■ ,l1'" of life and human nature are what fchej are, it will notb without rates. But rate economist* usually

af the aimiij.: end, for the} resent and oppose oducati mm - and meekly pay the nollce, gaol, and workhouse rates with- oy Enquiry to whetner there might not bo Home saving in those <llreotione. England ie the only country with anelab i i in,:. ml whether the labour oi those In ourwerk- nooaoseouM doI be made mora remunerative, and so reduce Ois r»ten for their maintenance, Es a question which must sooner or .!•• to Hn i 'out. when rhie huppy time arriveSj there will then be more tospend for libraries andmuseui is U present :!■■ rata expenditure in chiefly for the In pr< rtdent, the criminal. i -di. tr luluesomi citisten, and the peaceable and respectaiile eitixcil i* left to take care of bimselff whereas the

tad as the public become educated

I (U 'i 'I Vast ntiliU i>i Public 1,iU*j !■:(.•* Mic\ uill dcniMlwl

•■ii . !!. v wed enemies everywhei i Public Ubrarfes nre

it i* acknowledged on all bands ; tint their

■■ ■.!.! »f the workhouse and gaol, with

for Management. How long will thrifty nrl Irti'iii/rnr rff.lxci - continue tn he gorerned hy this powerfni ingp themselves ugufnsl pxery movement or it* obji-i't the tnic iutcroKts of Piti£f»nin1p '

In the previous chapter there are Home utatfrttlcs of t-heerosa

■liim.A H \\ m - "Mm" plftiVH rnitl'l of CiUIN-C liaVQ ln'i'ii

e. suflhw I'm' isvseai purposes, mil there mi \ lie

i' .ii I .ij/li nixl oilier towns i"ip 1. 1' thin

1 or the lime I" discuss, Striking an average1,

ipeai Ilia) onj luwu with its groaa rates no!

i. in llic iiiiiiil, con .ilVm-1 Ii iiui ii;it< I v »ct :l>

ii lopt the FubhV Libraries Acts, and it' all the

lii oui try pot ut present piw* - i ig ils/aries do bhis. : mi [in reasc iu i •■^■, t as n i

adopted the Libraries' Acts which ring ef a penny in it* rates and loawny

It i i i< [.i:;u.wm.^

will ii - Publfi i bran rherc le t >< >i an atom d urool m.« re 'a ;i sinjclc one . hut i h dcn< e thai »

ho would lilco to extend thoir opcmti< n and nil " illi a higher i

i, M r.nV (: UOl I 3 my r»c: R (I H tl I I WtiOII 0 ■!. t*

in tin- i;i:i|"nl v m1 CMC Mi. tl.i COO ally pold it- in >u Mm

A companion argument to Use one Domed toj thai they m

I : . j- . i [al In itioni ,and as bui I ■■' 31 not ;"' usei by i he u I

people, and the rich pay tor supplying hot ki to the working cIohmb. Thin is an amusing argument to nil wht u'c 1 LmlUai wild Hi.- working of Public Libraries, The designation •>( "Free Ufcraiie* Is highly objectionable, and II to inoeroVj to bo hoped that librarians and n mm Itecs will drop the use ol the word, and simply coil their Institution! Cm .( I.- Libraries i:i \ m< n.-:i no i'nt lie i bi ■< ) i u lowed o 04 called "tree"* unless supported entirely i\ private munhV rence. LUirnrtea, nducatlon, trade, und land nover can he ab- -< ?i t i-i v free The nrgumeni just mimed Ik only heard when an effort it iK'in;r made to adopt the Vet* W ! rarelj licni It in towns where tnej exist, In Birmingham, the oceupatli borrowers reach a Uital of 200, and II would tie dlfllcJ mention uny occupation <•! prufewlon which i> nut Included. Other Iuwun can show u like Reueral use of their Public Libimieo, proving beyond a duubl thai all classes avail l/hein- BBlreB i -I out raj oi other of their tnalitiee. Public Ubrarita an

00 mure p;:j<ichial thaillU'C the l't>H<l> ;iud LtlC Mli'i-l gag l.n.ii

the oltlEcn who refused to use n library because tl w as * m.( " parochial " slmuld be the first to move in having the lamp abolished from the street or road in which he dwells. l\y utni r', again, Bhey arc classed with free soup kitchens and free v tuba in public washhousoA. lint this is an unfair and Inaccu analogy. Inhere is no doubt thai tin term '• freezes applied to (hi e libraries ha* «lc cit< number of people from uring

i'i tin* libraries on. the RToundthat they objected lo participate in any of tho bencfite of B oharitoblo institution.

" Twey are not m unmixed Rood." mya another. WoU, is there anything in bhiB mortal lit'e which is ulieolutclyun uiimixed g bat tiwrr - eo much srpod mixed up with thomi thai a which refuses to adopt tho Acts U depriving itself A an lm Uon, tho influence ot which could not fail to be for the best interests of the district in which it i* situated. Workhouses

aot an unmixed good, because they induce hrittli while they provide sheltei* for the unrortunate and uitbjyonJ The twlice are not an unmixed good, for they are BometUQes fonad treacherous, and lose their heads in a mob. Die high- wjiys 'iro n-ir an m mix "l yon«i, i«»cause they are used by pc ii:iv tng mJawfoJ purposes in view, All sanitary provlsioi not an unmixed yood, hecinis*' iho drainage Hows iw: y to the TJuunes ox othor place, where u mi k&s the aurrounding district unhealtiby and eanjet uestiferouH smells, ^'lt nil these th

I'l -..■;•■ mi to i inn intra

L'l

ed lb food ind haneflefii . are mpportod «<i!t of the

■r«--.. "iii the rigid eeonoml h y > I ought ba bo: bul the

a

i

State, OH ri'iiri--.. iil. <. by llii* |m\il : I 111 |i -n I v, li;is no rt;- ' Ih'Vii'h! Il •!■ iirrt>.-»ilii'.-« nf <ti iii. mi I imi, :unl provide bonks ;nnl

01 ta whir)i ahull !«■ us free m ill" highways Tin* onmJ . argui letil ahould, if oirrJcd out, kmd (how who

advance h abeuiin fruiu merrfajR*, from inoat kind'-, a food,

M*l linn dlmort r-.riAl liin- vliu-li :h|i|s lu |l|r ci i| n:\irl Mid

liatijihics* of life.

rryiug this argument Further, thai these institution* arc

isl i ' ■- ci bc< au ■■ be 81 ate lb tsxw i ted bo do

what i ■■ i should do fi i theniacNoe, in n little pamphlel leeued i'.v the Lfl>erty and Propcrt) Defence J.coguc, there are iven under the heu'd of " 8o< ml si i it St. Stephen'*, I0M rod BS7>" wbal this body of rentleraen are pleased to •_ .HI the Social wti* Veto and Bills, R70 to 1867 ' Inthia they include- all i ho I'Mui- it .. :. ,vt find I'.iiu, Public Libraries and Musoumn Art. , the Technical Education Bills, and :i bout of others. This League haafot Eteobjert State-help, and haa been, formed

for the purpose oi reflating ovor-l©#iHlution, for maintaining roodom m •< ntract, and foi advocating Indiviaualisn asoppo ad ill wo, irrespective o1 |>urty politics. II ic inflnen <u u1 Mr. I lerbert Spencer on r 1 1 ■■ thoughi of the atfa in ufiii:iH!:ii::ii>!', and bin poUtioal philosophy is permeatinjr tne ffcrtc i fwardfl reforms which on nil $Xaw are looked upon ic nocoaxary; the difference resting only in the degree with which Able md necessary ihnruje, in order to adjust a w-i i theivxjalrementaol the time. Mr.IIerberl

8ies<M t considers it htghh doalral le thai mnseozni and literature rmld boprorfdetf for the public in a wnj acceselDta :•> them, lit, hf tunes, when we l**gta to hw on the public Khouldera the >i what Ihej say la not vital tait merely destrubla, where is > itop And he- further rhargftfl ns with Itoing : in State Socialism to bring about social amel oration by force. Every thought hi I mind which ins rend Mr. ilei-hrr! desire to do him jus lice eon m;ii<v1v fall la nave m'i -,i inn -i. mental stimulus n al to feel oneaeli dl l< i d | om ii ii . Htcr, raol wi much in the gi-nci'al pilnciplea hud down la btiou of a particuuti principle to a particular depurt- tK .1 the 3tttte, ie not an j-j.p eable [losiUon. Ii i- ! t|ii nlhle n"i to feel the force of ):i^ statements in nun« Slavery,' in "The Man rww« Tin- Stale," and till mnch that be snyf* nlmut tin- si.:ic monopoly in letter . id. and telephone s, many arc in lull bco rd, such from diff< rina; Protu I im " I he rii.uj, made, the chanejes in pro ■•■ , i»l the ehanfci'.i urged wi'A earn an noi - 1I3 towarda State m nei nd an 1 dwellin>rs, uid rn i ' ol communication, till to .;■ . i by Stafc affcnto, Imt townrda State i| : ii Induj Iric , :li<- |>rlv»t.< forio.s <t winch, dl .il mnr« id .. iti[H>titiuii with I be State, whi

:i"ii am) i'Ul til rVn ...

22 ii m. i. iiiui.m;

rerythlna, forii tvn . . >i \< in- 11. i-, svii more iad

«hr :iW:l\ ; ju.-t M i'i:iii\ \ ..luiitiiry -•{ hftVl ni p

Boar Vim > will he >rought about the dcairod id

the Sorialurts, Bui 11103 it nol Ik» reiuwnably su*kod, v\

the action ol the State be tlmJtod to whai is noeeasory t'> the

niv <it :i li:l!|nh, :l!l'l MgttUy eSOlUded :'r>'in

minUtenitoitobufaorUfo! what Divine right hai pn nodemainU th'tuiil i'V*T Ih« mule upon i tor the latter pur] m.i v. n mej noi wetwe the organised forces o1 hocommunitj [•> <Im :h:ii which ii Is desirable In the mtorests o1 Hie whoM community fan it be done - Vo school of thought 00m

llebmeul nit! maintenance ol the British Museum Ub w and Hi.- National Gallery out ol national taxation: why. then

slmilhl il In* c:i :!.•■ I - State Socialism " far ft local i-omn |U ui\\ '..

suppori Its tiwn museum or Public Ml rury om of us local \. \ , to the uucHtlons of Suite ownership of l;ni<l mul riwclll Hit- Inst f. ;, i.-hl- i1((l ijifiil ;i> I'M-iiiplilU'il in llio Sluts

Oildtff II' COUl I'll 'if 1 !|f KrilrsiaMiial a in I ( 'li.n :l \ ('1111111

hue with regard i<> Ihe second muni there ic not much danger ol ih<- - ate beoomuig 1 1 1 •■ landlords ol huge industrial dwel Stall1 usurpation, as-;* i ."i existing insane of communication ;ill in- rfeej i-. receiving considerable check a1 the preaenl i. thai i Imu nn Impetus, m lodged by tbc dismissal of wot from the dbokwdfl and Nothing factories, and tlic tendency of public opinion to prerent the State from intei-fcring with particular industries. Does not the line of demarcation lie hero? That the State

cttnnni winp< r<- with private enterprise when it comet to liie

building ol slxins, making rifles, guns, or clothing. The advantages arising chiefly from costly ond inefficient roan ntoni, wuhout an Individual pockot to euffor from depreciation n stock and plant) U becoming neutoly recognised, When Stale line nought to come into competition with Industrie ioI an* UiikI it bus egregiously Cailcd in < very department, Thl unwise and impolitic State Socialism which cannot be too

(•lie unllv Ki'otcllCil.

Bui iii all educational matters and affairs ralatingto tho pubUi b and safety, il this be State Social ib m for the munici] to taka thaee under tt» oontroli it haw been an inestimable boon in the people, and ^ diminution of the first category ol Socialism, and an i nlargaraent ol ttie second class may wall be

ndvoeuU-d. Mr. i I. il ,<>i't spencer has tj- »i a^ci'teil :»ny\v'ti"iv il::i(

tii*.- I'Miu'.iiinii \.'i oi |gyi has lot worked most beneficially tor thi good of the oountry, although it may haw caused the appearanoc "i a tew voluntary sahoola. The mr.-i deadnens ol 1 1 1 : 1 1 j \ of the viiiuninvy NohoolM so closed was universally Rpparenf IliarecognlMoTi by the two leading political partlealn the Sti tethal unwise and In poti Ic Stati Soulausin i^ a noBalbHIty i nil i

it wiiii-ii we should be on blw alert Is a ><nffleionl hnfegunrd for out naUonal welfare I he mi* I lef lies, not in tlie tendimey

Of the Stab) bo do In the future what tin- iumplp Mi.miIi) <Im r. ii

TUB

tfamoNlTOft, tml t*».it op :.. 1889 thi i oplc ir*r< i ad ii

tiling For them ■•• . bul bud t < . r lawt wore pa* d contrary i < I The i h logod cld*flcfl| up i" hnl tftnA, placed upci ehanctcr that the ruii politieoJ history up tofbattbn

ooo of thesaddoti >■ thai we hare in

agt .-f UUantare Ths foe 9 ■■ bi

nation, ■<■> lit., too much St b 0 nn Fa 1

ag the unjnsl State 3od

1 i iphatl<'all> ■! mouncpfl thai tin :.iiiniiii>tiT Justice, and i

he eitlzeu, 1 iul r ' il eoi teal providing hlna vitl 1 oojic^maii, u worlchouft&, l kmatl c asylum,

;i ni'UMTi'rr. S r.-u .if I:iliip-|»iix1)». and :i h&ngm*D TTl* iiu.ii.ii tli:il ):i 1 1 *: Iftlftfl i'tii'|iiir:itu us, :iml nation* .n'r OTganlEftd fief

1 ; 1 m |) NtsniiM '" an n retle of

. 1 mei 1 1 ■• 1 I- rloda. The indlvldu ire us

ttml urtvau? entwprlse w I «*ai nrntah I 1 commnxilti a tli

»li:U>-\ -■ civ iii/nr; ■im! eillKibll 1 irnrr-. it nrn!>. I Imlil

■' l 1 II II I fllNl lIuIV Of llir SlUtO, J- r\r|ii|.!tli'-'l 1" I

■■■ In horltj . ■■ mold lx u m ik< I - Etwens, i

ii -.I .]> do 13 <• ..« adina; every opportunity for eullgattin- 1 1 yeiirral advaucerueu

Library and recreation rwma for wurlcin u-Cl e*tcr Hi Mir. -ii .;..!' October, I-- eatone

l.ri ;!n wars i..v. man l«- i I his guard against anothai diiitfrr. We live ill | liinr wlit-ii there is a disposition tO ll.iiil.

t > 1 •-■ Government ough.1 U do this and that, and tlial ili«'

... 'Ml (Hiylit |o <!n rvrrvMilli.!:. Thru u'imIi llir

1 «om ouj iii i" iiw, I have no doubt, [u former perlodathc rernmcml have neglected much, and poaaibly oven

•riKtliititr. i'.ni I '1 n . ilunjc* ' mi tin: otln'i ftide.

Into il I nch the mail

for himself, It w !l nflicl upon him ^renter mischief all the benefit* ho will have r oeivod or u'l the .uivm

uMi . Pin 01 »i the whole lliiny ikp tltnl

Otf-rolfODCO, tin :.|iiiit if in:r :iinl p"iimir manly

hi the mind* of the people, ii 11 roll moo, 1 1 Icai 11 wealthier people raUioi than upon himself , be

; riado ' It U in

thai tho I'u! Ii< 1. bran movoincm will Ico hondw ly. In 1 1 1 < manyuAoa of tnese in

i. ti.i.-iM ■.■ :,■ ii i noil ■! er»i nd al d*p< i

iVtio: i me vrai referring N" ''■<- who has

CCOO faal^ III" ]NIIV iii'rl|i'i-h;:.l U J !li-|[-

m r ., , m il Pul 1 i i

VlliM" n|MMi \nii' . ' i! Id- Ul .-il.-i' fl II RUOl i |mmImI

in . r .1. *a-ti wiiii -..mil' really rood boi K and in a ta%

/

-.-»

;■• rteiJ out of m wi i k- wj i

into brigh i . i- hare m

End ( i holr] n;f :tml .ln»i«s. I'.uf tin i Ivnii [li^'L1 r stop noroj is la a i mnuv an onjoymont, bul I pur uo3 llv it oonstituteij u riberul education. There aeediiov mow pan lonlarly, to give to the peoph further education. It i* n Iblv «ad to wo thufti

lu.'itii'ii 'ii> imu'h h:i'. i'V', •■■■■• ii m 'ii' Board k&iooI* hu<1<

llftll education w il U tin- i-n liny «>l ih.n- -:. 1 1. l

. Hi.' DAA1 ii ) '1 OUT |>i'»"-rii! ftCl I D 'A G

pounds r mi i ' w i h '-ii i ' Ion ol wi wy mo il i neee nhoo nhlli r< i . and thei wo dam them thn mcni aoii i Inl in tfiolr life when

il.ly iln -,, TO TOOh i^ llii-sr i i'ul It l.iltr.'uv DTOV* pli»:lMtlit luuilr 1. 1 :nl llli"' t«i tholr >r<icK ..'■ k i (Vi Irtln, :i:i<l .

it" It to ii farther point The unninwnr ill I'nnlit

being . ii in mired good referred to |iwl now lie* referrnce crh ,i be a i tlleratun which In mipponcd i<* be Ii

ilrtii:iii(l, \i/„, Iiclii.ll ill thai I'm- n : 1 1 1| i"-r, .. I] |)fl | u . *\ i !. -.1 n>| |<r

for loafer*, in aani [hi u ni he. bwuc.n of flcttou show a per OOptlblti decrease, whilst 1 1 .«■ tocrouae In tin Imucs tif On science, history, travels, and

1 1 : i j - 1 , . c J . T; Ki- ~v-\m;:.v||1--.i|; Tvt.' 10 :il eXtUnple, H'-P' Mr

Issue foi the las1 Com years ol works of Action isaa follows:

|sh;.[, w-yCfy- i -i,< i : ,. 01 M IfiBOWSS; mid In the

library year ending March :'•"-. *69, the percentage - ml; I

Th.jsr. .rj.u i. V.I .. ill \y I..' -iH]. »so.l I< ■■ ;jT«- 1 th-- l.trj-- .;>•";. 'in

nice i. iii» issue* ol l W>t literature, anould boar ir mind that

liixik-s ol I ■hi: 1'-. riplinii ..i. •c;ul\ri\ rj| u«tl y, ;<ml tl'uil lit

w-ak may be issued to three or four different bormwi i durin < tin.- time that another book, which requires more oar* I i! n-.i. i.- kept by one roadcr Uid tin expenditure upon the i or]

n, a* compared with other book*, fa iy n\ means to pn : I" ill. lassos. Even if the ntatenui;( were :i'ii>-

my hut nuvels aro road— and it i^- :i1.:i'1ui«-In -I i i/uth .i i'. 06 Said that n people euRacod La reading i >v La miffht be Cnfiaitolj woreo amplQyod, for the cholcoal works ol bh

ire pri ndod 03 tno PabKo Lil rnrie* nol the o mmon and todeeent t bc people appear t" think aria the only

Boveli to be 1 1 -i »t 1 PubUa Librarj Fiction - a orenerii pli like wealth, l>.it oareftil eupervteSoa is exercieod by mom Boittoefl reapa able fee the work ag »l i'ublie Ubmrlea, that qaeatlonoble proda Eons under this bead arc excluded. The b many ol v&es naanv liiiriirianain thni thp tendency Sn the 1 ktte "i readers In iip warilfl ralhnr tfinn downwards and thai paapli

bj boino inveterate noveJ-roadftw usnallj drift 1 '• reading taore profll ibfe ind Instructive book*, it nhould be n 1 icrnb index flotlon are daeaed Hie works "f many wrlten circulation of whose novels 0 Ighl still be wfaeVj [ii^orantetl ;»i he ■• ' ■• !' ■.. 1 non purse . tot bhej sre one 1 he mnsl

FU 09 ..■ i i.tli i w;ll>-

26

am

skilful nud the no*! •.» it»ub live moral and intellect ■! ■!

idttoal >W| end th*y snpply n 1 1 ted recrea ii c ol the ttlghacl value

.in i ii nil j r n.- nutation ol the circulation <»i Hctton Ei

dealt with d little mow hilly in another chaptar

a question often Mked i«, •■ u ii v should the rich provide

rii-tc- fov iin pocrf " :ix ifl also Mi.' feliow^oueetlon, Why

ihOnlli WO OdUOAtfl n! her people'* child ll'li .- '" The sii n j »|i>

r to IicpIIi Is, Mini ttlfl BflfHty nf tins rnmmonWflAltn id thai if il. jk not done there will bo infinitely to pay in repressive organizations The people of i

[and. ' '»lir Sl:;lrs,' .in l (n'lliriilV li:i\i -nii'i : .11 y i'fl t ■- = I cd lliiii-

en, .i I thej u the rnosi intelligenl and thrift toft

it the world, lucre ia no choice about the educating of

other people's children. Nnfc only has it bo !*• done, bul It

to -I i il In educated com uonwealth menus law-abld ou

•ii. en. .ipI these in., iii .. j " ' i i' - strung", ju«t, and upright, mid

cranliries nourish the best and truest interests of the country.

Vo in- i ,\ and clieene-varine. economy in educational matters

>lu and li;ii a-.s. without effecting i uy (rood vrhihri large and

educational measures have always proved the

wirw*t course. In most interesting article En the "Lei

Mr, F M. 1 fob i ■-'. <>'i Public Librarieer based on the

i'h'-i ■■-; in.ii ol this hook, he calls attention r<> "the iv.-iiii ■■ of

mates many people againal the 'now ' system,

which, it is Boidj orcrrulofl and subordinate private ri#hti< to the

henoflt of the multitude, and heavily taxes the fow for tho advan-

•.vIm'I in»r i.i.'.v and thriftless o? not We shnll

in- i' deal "i thit tooling expressed in different ways

ia thu at are t no< . For the | i i mention it. In

i in inn- opinion ii very decided intluenee against the nenl n\ I'uhlii LibrnrioK. I'o give an instanee, our (food :i\k, ' Why should 1 pay a sovereign a year I >r IJlelt, and and thou wivei and children, to read

iy-bcoksr simply leeanxe Tom, Dick, and Elm ry al tnenranii tpal itemor rhe amount of their rate will be bul sixpence perhap* nothing : v-r rhoy will g»r all ths benefit, for I onka I enro for n home Why should I he ruled and *i by hew for their advantage P It l?c poopertztng the 'iiiiirn i- ji -i and reasonable; but we wouM n ii, thai I ifl increasing municipal and political people i> Inevitable, and that, as an economical ■. ii pays a community to tax taalf pro raw tor the r\ [":!>< elevating and ciluuating Influence in Bducatl "i sl< i v will noi make pwple irood and i>eace- . but ltd tendency nnd effect are hi this direction, A famotiwi<aIt-h mii^t necessarily »c imposed of all clean

. rory rich U> the terj poor ; and it is an EnerhV

are thai the Intercut* of all shall ^<- so intermixed

Is a mutual dependence one un the other forthecoia-

safetT, and Immeduite advantaged and wrl h th -v may

. \. -A 'in- •_!■■ ■>' xi i hai " man lire th not tohinv

t«U?e

*J

i

self aloni .' i- Ihi onj 1 1 iplc and oaxnnionwcalth. 1 1 i * t ! i oal "i the principli

when ill i-itij ' ■'- "' i ic mmon

OoaoTi d ft u panporumtioa a* r.m ■■ befeta roro nation, oamrmw ty.< c an individual to aim at

rid bfl v. -i. ol Public LthrarUui tint :■ i taU:i! :

Lnjfunol tho pooplo. It i* better for Midon to *

yofi^if hoiirotod aJ BSOO, than a larger ram on nil qi * far

■tail of extra policemen and Kaolora,

beooznng aow n ■•■ an axiom thai i ■• looati

ncroaaca crlni** <ii.i m; in-;, and politician) ol oil ahod opinion make um ed In i nertion 10 repeatedly tlial it •aem irj i itippori il with figure* SI i

ag iii\ and uninterwttn£ thai to inlltet an avals i -ho ol I nom up thagonaraJ road - aiy Ijotp nndnol perhaps convince. SMI

thert irao tow flguro in Lin* section which should bo studied wl oara bj hD who dellghl In the uplUting ol the people and th spread oJ Intelllj nee, In Itftts the numlier ol < •• taraoi

ni;i.i, imi what ore •.'■•< inrtietahle offences wan 14,000; In ISCSC 11 had fallen to 10,000: In K76 i i 7,0(H); in IW81 totf;000; and in LB86too\100. \nd this though the population hud from 19,000,000 to 2r(000;000,» Hi il i i\cTii i *rlme was leas than half what it waa, thnngh the number of children wna our i larger. Ttn* orison iri ntla&l are ncaredy lew Natlafaetorj The

tffl n iiuImt d1 pcTW»M hi piiwtfi was, In 187*, 1,000; I IwiU'ij'*); n 1882, 18,000; \u 1884,17,000: In 188(1, l.1«ACJf) r i -■ ■- i^JOO Indeed, uup prison population in mululj rwn i from those wlw cmim i read, < Mil id i <> i,tx « i jhtmimih cimiih to prison, no leaa Hum ltK),000 worv uneducated, and »nl> ).< wi'if able to road and wnU: well. The Mulr uf jumpe depends, no doubt, frreully on the tftati" of trude uud u«ricu Qui while, a* we know, tlit'y have laltrrly Imn aulifcci In fluctuation*, pitiipri'iMii lu* nI.-.<> MeadiM de :n ad wnlrfli due, to a ff rent extent, to our better education, leading 1 ' i thrll

and more power ol adaptation to ch*cuin»tonc« Elowwer tb| naybi a l870thc paupers were KW5 In ovon l»00 'Bora

J'ears fcne number had rathci increased than diminished. I i d Gallon to 83 per 1,000. and in 1880 LI « I, 00. il .

loweel ■" "oonl c Bineo tno introduction "1" il i pool I ..\. \\ :th tii< -. fn n<l . '..■■ beCoro iia, It mav well tie doi whether Public Litn u i really cor.l the It maj bo said that they actually save more thai thopei Doae ool thie help to i >-■ - ^ w

bast fit in iviiuj Lh ) of il* admiufaimtfoii hyma :ii

SroTiiaon for aducational purposes ? I-ooU<n l( hroadly and I us fuel Khoald enn-i' [owns, where they do aot< on

aatAbUflb these arlma-radiiolug inatiUittoni

The dj tl "i il nead is !.h i we 1m? i •■: ilac^d nl any illaaihin I in tin* neclMuooVneelt n >■>■ of competition with the Gcrmoiw and Ajnerioana, wUeh has become Lncvltable, aa th

ffB HI II * FOll IM i i' l.inEiBIK-

:'7

iiiii'.n i<"- i.rucr: iiv i! the midfil el these nation* has ■-•iv-n E-be people an adv ml iga which him been Inciting En Rnglian Ufi

will take* us years U) overtake the drawbacks, on tins account.

which have fnerlutblj Bcenied NatlonnJ sentiment alone should

Ura i and lnr*^ rnral district where a Pnblio Library

im no) .1 Iran j racist, to at race set about the adoption nf Ebe

Some friends kiv tlul books are bo aheap, a whole library run

mi he )>u elixsed fcu*B Irw JhT i £$. SoiUS Iniukf cvrlninly lire

clioap, especially ropvtnt* of vni-. when Hit- copvrighl has

expired, bullet nek, in all seriousness, whetlioc the nation'*

Erhongei has been mul when 6wo or three publishinsj houses

•,, ...ii pete* I with each othci in vomiting out cheap reprints by

rttoadf Publn Libraries may contain these, bill Lbey also

tin joraetlunK nfinitelj nori rahutble. flowl as minn o

ii. minded the nation an no more feed solelj

» thorn tiiini the appetite cau be BHtinflcd with spoofte caki - . i : i have xiM against the ahonl ut' rhcn|i n nrml:i not known. But ii is sale t" aver that when he atotea that •Hit tm >i' these •Jays it i jolleetion of books," he

Id ool i' ••• threepera v andsixpoiRQ iditton

fha t:ti-i "i books being aheap doa loI

■r:i'.* bring those which anyone may desire to read within

reaaD Do the large subscription libraries lind a tin inution

dun* crambo? of borrowers because book* are cheap? Their

proves that they do not ; and the wune truth applies

borrowers from Public Libraries, foi he t:"-t rein an- thai the

nmbor osiug them where thoy arc established is rapidly mercus-

iini itul, notwithstanding some book* being cheap, tossy

<-:ir. Amidst the- cln:.peniim' process, which hits

ii- 1 1 t ii.- been goin jen in almost nil classoael commodil as, lea have maintained until recently a ^mgiiliirly hij/h price. ire has nnl adapted flnel! tu the democratic tendency of

irM; and [I the nen racy has anfTerad in consequence,

Itejatiin U i ha I ran injuriously affected by the narrowness nf

he i rorkcl Hie i hi . peuing- of good IxKiks is it vital point now

u:;i ir.-i'iiiini is the posaewriuu "f the masses, Fur the

i.iIim <;o»ntry n, read; anil the only

mi h u ; fthai b presented to them for their anrascraeiil

iiient to its logical sequence cry,

people w no waul to tea* buy their own books * reading,

; excellent tiiini:. but lei the render p.iv f< i i:

:lf, nfttctul -I wkino lie atepavci's to bear the expense.1*

i .mi ..i vii w, it would ""i be ufficull

c. r. very Bhort-Hiichtcd policy.

■!hfl •■!• « : Ii"it. t.<". |i.< I.L1\ lo« i:_!ll m.:i i- : !:'-■• 1 1 iSlllUt iuMh

where uttomptn have \--vu amdc t" c^l,ibh,sh them, ia that they wcul' ption libraries and the 1 trade,

UHtiUitii'li . iirli ;i:-. iiicel in i:r.,' 1 1 : 1 1 1 1 I e... It iillty

!■- illiuind. v- Hi i'.-.- m'I ti i , thai tliia is

■-'"

prm.ip i.mp.AnrFR.

not the case, and tn support of this statist! could be quote big tint the shares la sulwerlption Ibmi'le* lud gone up n than down where public Libraries have l*en esmbliahedj ind

the teat) n_\ Hi* booknallcrs In most largii towns ih thai the sale

i.r IhhiWs \s "not •luii i isin'il hv the nroxlmll v nf thrac Itlu I'll*- existence of the Public library hia iiertul nly nol i tletamtrri effect upon tie Bale of booluv li enables many a man to read books which he could nol afford to purchruto, and which would ih. ■!•!■ fn ir not be bought even II the library were not En existence.

it enables him to rend u 1 1* before purcluutiiijr it* ho tluri ho

way judge whethei I will be worl u hi* while lu add it io his o*wn private collection. The fact 1a that thore nerer wai i tSmi when vi man) books -•! oil sort* were m demand n* iu'c i >" \><> by tit-- public. It iv u- doubted whether the compul cToeing ox .iii the ctrculatiujz ;it.<i other libraries En l\v kins doto leoojd make on oppr i bio difference En the wile <>t Is* .

general public. In February, 1886, a public meeting of t\w burgesses "I* Harrogate waa held to consider the ouostion of adopting' the Libraries' \< is. The motion in its favour was carried with only throe dissentients. Ad alderman Btated that be b 1 1 been oi communication with four of the booksel lei's of Harrogate, ill of whom had circulating libraries. One was present :»t the meeting bo support the adoption oi tin Acts, two were indi fferenl . whilatne fonrtn said he should be delighted to pay his share u the library rota, and if anything was required (or its initiation Hi would \)c glad to rubscrlbe ftvs pounds.

There are n great many subscription libraries whose v, n teas than 200 vols,, and tfiej do :t thriving; business on per week per Tolnmo, or in nomc cases Id. per day. The elasn <ii books is often the veriest r 'ash ever issued from the printing Drafts, and must have been bought ar so much a ton. These trade* are not Injured, and Ihe seller of lamps has just as much reason tn complain when an enterprising company socks to light bis town with gas, its ;i hooksdlor or propriet ir of i mirMci h library hue against a town's library being pstablished, Pu Lilnarif- iMiui-iiib.T li;d»il> "i" reading, and no trade benefits so much from tnis as the booksellers, Some. lMHikxelWs hit mnong the best friends of the Public Library movement .

In mrnnj phu » there i* a pardonable fear that a Publii lil i would be bherulnof the mechanics' or kindred institutions. All wUm knov* anything of these instltutiiniH would l>«- prepared i i acknowledge that in time* peat they have done n most ruim treble work, but it may very eerimisly be doubted whether bhey are e< i.:l be the aoeds ol the day. ITieyare too exclusive in dnv i:i< tor, being proprietary institutions. They i re, . _ in, too oostyj to thi ave age working num. for there arc iV« d! them w ih, subscription i* loss than 5s. per year, and ;i working tnnn would need to be rated at 660 a year to paj thfc amount b

rot oi I oven in thsoa a i I a E at table valne, there Is batter

value in a Public Library than In the mechanics'. Hie libra ta in many roechai ■■ i til are poverty itself. New literature

mv i>K uV priii.:*' i.ini*. .\ R.IK.S.

30

is run-.] 'i i-i 1 1 -\ lu absence, and to not ;> few towns they are

lungufsiilng :inii gradually dying foi want of fund* They luck

the one ribs principle which keeps Public Libroriea bcnltoynnd

■us. inasmuch ,i- they are not subject to the control of the

popular rote, md are, moreover, too much umlcr tin? adiuinis-

i ration of clique* tn some towns thc> exist side by aids with

Public i-iiniii n*v muI ihr twin institutions are in no sense an-

I'h other. In other plnoea bfo committee of

management hat* well and wisoh offered to band ovai their

institution at a *ublic Ul rary.if the town will adopt the Aeta,

Thla has bee i followed with uc most ntutoetcrj resvltB, mid

i worthy dI being Imitated in other towns. Certainly no

,,..!,■ ■. i . ihi: i uon mittet son reasouably expect a town to

adopting tl».' A.ih si nijily because their Institution might

CHAPTER IV THB USBB OP PUBLIC LIBRARIEB.

|I1K bbqb of Public Libraries are beccnilug so rnanifcel on .ill bands that it would appear almost a work of nipereroKSliun t\> enumerate pome nf theft many UWS.

Let any one not accustomed to these Institutions go i<> Manchester, Liverpool, Dirnalnghanj, Bristol, Leeds, tinguain, Newcastle, and other towns, and see for himself what t!i. v i . ii to the Enhabitante in those towns. It ia not aainpi' that Lbc citizens have the privilege oJ borrowing books, fely avail themselves of it, out if they wish for uoionna- -ubject, the first step tliey ndopt is to go to the reference department «>f the Public Library. Books on uny \i -t can be ubtainod there, where there ia absolute quiet, so Iboae de tartraonts become public studios, whore the book- vena m v revel to bis heart's content, and hero may coma the ftahhath-eehoni teacher to prepare the better For his orhoroluss, aadt<> consul i boobs otherwise beyond reach, Here the mechanic, * to improve himsell in the technique of his trade, can read mindt have soldo! it. Here, too, you may find the tetcrof the < ;ii«fw?I desirous of making the acquaintance of the l»t**t erftfcs ancl scholars, or to learn the most pcnmit iIi'vow-ik-i of travellers and the < pinions i f iiie erudite students. STet again n these hiirarfi"* die hiinily doctor, bonl on con. g the mo mthoritios on the netiling art, the literary

nan in search <tf data tihs student mid the rx«oy-writer upon the Mini- i t: ik! the schoolboy or schoolgirl to sas maps or gnzet- iKKM innn be w& direetorlefi in fact, repn « find their wot liitlicrinBeareh of much-needed i i ni nrlirrwise so i :im!.v arcessflile, If ilna ill-- newsroom " 111, in all probability, be full of

adult visitors, diligently perusing tin.' pupers, uiayaaiiii'M, nr honks

PUBLIC LIBSAJUBA

These Itbrsrii ire ''run of light, and *. d. t.ut

to for poadfng, find, un ni I t/,

this in <>t bonofll '■' the community, and nidi rooJ itfi \\y n i]u roprottinj.' nrr In* rougher sad bi e pan ox human

p-«?, rhi* wru-'i*. v iim formerly held > he p ix w.>n aware how flea wive* ana ehtidren cotw for books, and i ike ' "• i'*>(|Uobc, " I'Icnac pii'lc ma ,1 nice I I take

homo m Interesting bonk, mv husband (o* father, m ti.<

i i (v bfl ICfl] NOp!l lnrni'- ll:r ri.-niii" :itnl read It to ui tin-

»i onVlnIl*rii does no! extend to by far J he greater rnnj mi fbrarlan* and aasiKtimtK, for, taken a* n u«iy, u *wn

i i -it'll' to rind n more murtiMiin body ol men m i

among public officials, They are Invariably willing i. help the

iv.ulrr* :ind rMHTOWPI'H ftftd til 1 1 li IllSftl it i> Of iiiKhOin-. l'i, :

not merely the. attendants who givn oul and toko In the booli tint Uusy are the vocal key to tne . Liinli»<.r'n*^. .luliiur with rheir nations ;n.'l knowledge in tin.' ^oiircli lor Imhjkm un a par- ticular subject. Noi afevi ol them, Again, look upon thtirofnYo I i, a nubile Instructor It isaoid of Wordsworth thai a stranger having ou one tfoa asked to see his study, (lie maid ttaid: "This is mnsteir's room, but he studies ra n>< fields." The agricultural labour©] Learns tgreai deal In the fields, i\> know* much more than we give him erodii for, only it is Beld-learning, not book-learning— nnd none the worst for liar. Hut th< m lo who works i i or a manufactory haa a much more monotonous existences is confined, perhnp*, '" h""' i't'oeos*. 01 even « mo part of u pic from Tears end to year's end He acquires, no doubt, ,i %kiil litMr .-li'ii .i the miraculous, but on the other hand vcrj row. If he is not liimMolf to become a mere animated

ii -.t generally obtain, :ui< l in .-tun- im.s.-h he can only oi> i i. u. ■■. :-.iry variety and interest fivi tin- mi of books Th hnppilv now some tendency to shorten the hours of labour, and, what its less sutisfhotory, "there are time* when work is Mack. Itut the hours of Leisure el uld q >t be hours ol idleness; !< . i>. one ..I toe greatest Massing*, idleness one ol •i pees one is the source ol h ppiness. Che other i miaen. Suppose :i ix-Hjr iiiiin bus tor a few days no workj whftft ifl be fo do? Ilowis he to employ bin tnnof H need no loi

i wli.-r.' there !i Public .Libmry h" uewK-rooiu to which

he etui resort. It is not luting advocated here that tl IbroriOE should be the common resort of those win wish o

idle away then- tmu\ nnd receive i puRsmg half-hour

meat, it Is said Mint ttiia ervil afflicts -* 1 1 Public Libra to i less OT greater degree; but the statement fthonlfl « with u. vr-i-y frsat degree of nantion and qualiAcatfon Some havo gono so far as to aay tlml it i-; undoubted that the Public Library everywhere Is Largely patronized by the reapoctablfl loafer He bbb no dub, esu cannot take u> he dr iw a o the Public Libraiy, poesesfles himself i f i ei i nt rliuliv a iini-i-1 comfort uhlt •. lie a*k» fur n b(

inr r»K or pi nr.rr uniuwRS.

i

ail ! CDdesVOUTt I >iim. H 1 1 ii' effort '*ih1h in

implctc physical and mental prostration, he oamioi help It

Now, w< hare I" dcenrc U prevenl the Public Librarj from

ministering lo the amusement of the public, On the contrary,

.-. iiould be sorn i it did no I, We luiu1 i aetRutioua

[j niiiM'nMiiy:" class, which inci cs o h sorl of

leave no room for the healthy develop*

of tl - in i .-!■.■ or entertainment By all means

the I'ui in- Library provide the public witti nowepadperaj

novels, end othej Hghi reading Hut the li^ht readers onghl not

stand in the way of the solid once, us thei do in num-

r of pl.i-- i. Tl:. iiilnre of an attempt in Liverpool and

i i. i j nra i he wo clasoi I - b en emewhat

i 'i'i.:il'lr. Tin* I'l.ii Li'IitJ'M.1'! V;i - In ;<<( .-i.~-.i-] ' - :i '• nl ii'lm I

00m."1 and it foiled. A hotter plan would be to give fUk

i tho first elaim to tin* available accommodation.

i who ie merely skipping through a QOVeJ

i > 1 1 - s (ptfl way for the reader wh< lc 'ead some wort

ii<] literature. Monj booke now ii tho lending department

! be transferred to the referonee deportment, and the

:• ronni it iln- thrirv -h <nU| In- [iren'mntuiUy given to t^ ivi'i'MUT reader*. .\" mercy should be shown to the leopei's. When :i "i eepsil ietiraa of him r<»

Dome, .mo mulct nwnn "i I--1- li:»i'i»> nmrtalfl t»i whom tlio : early nhnnber is denied, ind tills is unquestionably and In being exercised with greater strictness every »ue> ;c y»kuv. In not a few referent' rending rooma even tin* writing of letters is strictly forbidden, and any attempt in Is immediately stopped by tho caretaker or news- i tupertntendenr. This official, usually in i distinotfve ooaC| ii toome an mdiapenKoble jierson in the newwooraa, where endaooe to rery large and his prcsenre certainly tends tn

i.il immfoi't.

Thodtr itah reform should taknia indicated bvthe tianraa

aili ol the evil Ui which reference hufljUBl been mode.

item ie a development of the mechanics'

:*'illitt'N mil i-f.ii !iit '-rouiii.^ n[ Ulirr ' I'l VH. Il * st*o|ir and pi'Ul-

ea have never been dearly defined. Its central ;deH is tliat

y man nh< uld be able to have any book for the asking thai

"f obtaining whole-some reading shall be as indopon-

lu tucket as are the lighting of tl o street!

d tho d The t tii ' I i .-..■ Lihn i ;

eourw, n ii. i : i nci one n ighl a* w< II U Ik of tree drains.

i has developed without the limitations which

» ihc ine, organisation, and discrimination

in.'""-. Tlmt ;: ihr <ii:rin of the evil. Iln' remedy is clearly

[imitations, The indiscriminate

1 pro\-isnon of soat and desk accommodation,

nau^t prfre j>lu-: tyatem under which workers are dietin-

ind the foiTuer given the first consideration.

But oven granting thai there in a modicum of tmth In (bese

.

ondeeirabU usee ©i Publics Ubrarie that the

ioad reasonable use ol Itiblic ft iiictr midmg

Mini n*'\V*-rtHiMlH, |A ; I III .An--. .1 W 1 1 .lN'Vi'1 :ihil-

pointed out 'I'll'- tendon y i* iiKtinrtly upward, mid a no*

SOtttl WtlO l Mv s;mii t-T- ! I., .HI.' i,1 ihi'Si- |il-i,',.. n , . i.' .

t}gn l.> |i>ol lllftl llic [ii.-nr [MiWPfMM Which

pIvSMlir* :.nd H'llr :'i' i: i s :.T !ou 11: hi- Ifffl .ri«l '

i«) raliM then accordingly. The KTilrlt of fnel

:«>iii. for precisely similar wu» could be ixrinted nut m

r\i'.'triir in r-liiirclii'- ;.n<( - 1 1 : t ; » v EVBL (In* vt-rv WOM '»! t ho nil u in ' : Win - u '-liini:i- iMiliul (pet li:i:ii

what iiirv peruse, .mil the chances lie in thu probability ol their petting aomething of an opposite charm-tci'. I'm >lie l.il i N>i*k to realise IvnnysoaB words

"To ti\»i'tt ni#h fhmijflil and UDttbfo ui'*, Anil oonrtu'nsss, and a desire of fame, Ami fori of troth, mnl all tlmL mako a mmi."

\ nry targe nninbera <>f the eoinjiiunlty are engaged from in . i ; i v in a simple struggle for existence, am their tti

I'lllly Jirriipii-il With Mil' t-M-rs .'iim: w HITiO ul il;i.il\ lltr WlltTl ViflltiuB Hi" I iMn' LI brill ii'i :nnl n,;i«liiij.'-l'imlilN ill tilt! •■ . m ni f,

sod do imi want books which "ill continue the same tra n o thought in which they have been engaged daring the daj 11 -.. naturally went jomethiag which will lift them into s different

Mplivu- :i i":'- -Mii-i, ,;i<l excite L In- r iiu.i final inn ;iml in;

Ilium

When I'ni'lit Libraries were Aral catahlishcd, it waa gi e feared, u bu *en already mentioned, that they would militate .1 the in'ukBcllirur trade and Mutt Ibia worthy Lai

h nlr-iiin WOald BttfltSfi On Ulfl rnntiMi-y. tin- v. | y ippoOltC haa

I't 1 1. the ca* . At one ol tlie annual coaxerences <:' the Library Association, tho uloning day ol the session was marked by tin- reading <»i" tv paper <>i more than professional or technical n- (ri'.-:«i, iii< jubjecl discussed in it being'' l'ui 1;> l.ibr.u-;. t-h. .< bookseller'! poinl ol view." [t was argued, when Pul )-< Li were first institute I, that thoj w oukl have the effect of injuring aolo of books, People, it was urged, would £•> to the lib] what they wanted, metoad <»f buying it as heretofore! And there v.iih i cei'tuui uiddunt of plausibility iu tho suggestion. Moat f'lT.M.uts, it might i>o s\mpoaed, would bo eatiRnod with pern tin* volumes m Whioh tney were interebted, and would bo happy to to relieved ol the necessity ol acquiring them for tin An<l to ;> certain extent chat In the case. No doubt the i iin.'.-ii ui Public Libraries has iieenof great advantage to many who formerJ^ \v< ed to expend large sums in book- hi. a Ing.

NeverthvLesatthe bookseller who oddressc tie librarian •t the result. Of hix experience that I'iIiIm; Lilrani increased than decreased the tr;id>Mii wh h'li hi. i- tonoarued U ttie reason dirnenlt to diseover. Granted thfit th <• ire I who yre (dad bo rend without buying, there are probably Hffl who are led to bus what they ren«i. or are led, by n

' i i I': OI (I hU< T Iltll.MClJ,-.

dcaare to buy. A .young moo who borrow ;i Pottle Ltbrerj

book, find* it| i>rr>ini», -■ attraetlvOj fehar In- brem hs anxious to obtain :i '"I'.v of it. Hi-- ta not Battened with reading, he wishes to bom. That, one can wen1 believCj rery frequently happens. v:i«i ben, of . Dureo, thoro can bo do nueenca boat the muqocv (<> (bra .•' utile library r»i one's own is, i: ;i genera way, fostered l>y tho reeding vrhJeii the libraries supply. A taste Cor book] n ■mlercd, ami then come* the feeling that it would be nfrnfltlTlt to have soiue of cue's nvn. And il Public t4hropi« did no more Hkwi luspift this feeling, they would Hat* a enffleie&t reusoo for Ing. in nemo districts the proportionate issue t<> each inhabitant im over fan? bookN per year of tin* entire population ol the . -rut in ivirii actual iMirrovOT over twenty volumea per year. This feet not onh jnstifle* the existence of cbe libraries in Enow town*, hut shonln N . »ery powerful argument to other districts a rtnldnd them. Pttiftswor w . .Stanley Jevons said truly, that "The main rafaM

<Tttn> of Public T il>! .1: :r.'i. M imlrei], of pnblie. museum?-. ir:

gallrrlc*, parks, halls, public docks, and man) ol 10 kinds of

works, is the enormous increase ul utility which is thereby

lired Un the coram unity nt a trifling" coat. If a beautiful

picture be 1 ung in the iliniog-room ol a private house, a dust,

mrhaps, be gajsed at 03 a few guests a score ©1 two of times ld

ill-- ft utilii.s 1.-. 1 ft en that of niimstermu 10 the

do of it- owner. Ifil be bung in the National Gallery

it will be enjoyed by hundreds of thousands <«t' peraona, whose

jelano:*. if need hereby be said, do not tend to wear out the canvas-

principle applies to hooka m common ownership. 11 1

man pcnmui a library of -.1 few thousand volume*, by far the

. ri it* them must li'1 for years uatouahod upon the

: helvi - ; ho eaonot poaaibry use raoro than :i Frnct1< n of il .. whole

Hut a I ive or ten thonsand volumes iponcd

tin population "l * town may be used h thousand tJi icsoa

triking eas< of what 1 propose to call th« principle

firm t,f utility. :i |»i*it»-i|»lc which hen at the baxi \

. 1 the mod important processes of political econ<

iding the division "I labour,"

■! whioli oare» for its citizens will estoblisl d Public

1 \ , and take care of it with just us much interest :is ii mil

utt.-ii iter, drain*, and gas of the town. If il isneee*

forth* hi dth <ii the inhabitants thai they have pure water, perfect

.. good gas, surely It In the more necemtary Ibat they

neejthj pmvlslnn for the mind, and no institution* which

iean provided In any pari of the country wi thorough!;

bile Lihwta

- the Mian lie endeavoui to carry oul the

j.l. Uml every town ought i< have a library cuntaluliig

1* tho town has inliahltnnta. Such .1 lili;n\

l*ft-«]i»'- .0 •■ Hk- cent it «>f the intellectual life oJ the town,

aod 1 1 moralfl and uiauuere of the entire community,

3

HI PUBLIC LIBBABIBS.

And more : its influence stretches out into the whole country, wherever its readers may chance to go ; and its importance is not for a moment to be compared with the entire sum of the mercan- tile and manufacturing interests by which it is surrounded. A town with a library can be distinguished easily from one which lacks any such collection of books ; and those parts of the country in which town libraries abound are the parts which are most influential in every department of intellectual and even material labour. " Let those," says a recent writer, " who pride themselves upon their devotion to the so-called practical, reflect that the advantages of a library are no longer of a purely literary character, and are becoming less and less so ; that the ' arts and mysteries' of manufacture are no longer taught by word of mouth alone to indentured apprentices, but that the 'master workmen ' of the nineteenth century speak through books to all ; and that in proportion as our workmen become intelligent and skilful does their labour increase in value to themselves and to the State." These are weighty words.

It may be a cause for wonder that any private person should make such a bad investment, pecuniary and literary, as to buy an expensive encyclopedia. In the first place, unless the person be a universal student, and life is too short for that, he pays for a far greater proportion of what he never will or can read, than of information that he cares for and can assimilate and utilize. He must be rich or extravagant who can afford to pay for a pound's worth of tablecloth to accompany a half-pennyworth of bread. In the second place, such rapid advances arc nowadays made in nearly every department of science, that most of the articles on that subject will l>e superseded and out of date, even if not incorrect, before the publication of any single edition is completed. Public Libraries are the most suitable purchasers and owners of encyclopaedias, for the sake of giving their readers the opportunity of reference to such works. But to the private individual the possession of such a great expensive work is as a white elephant.

As one of the uses of Public Libraries, it may be noticed with pleasure that juvenile reading is becoming elevated. The decrease of illustrated books, for use in the reference library, is at some libraries very marked. When this department was made accessible to young readers, the books in greatest favour with them were those containing illustrations, but in many cases they did little more than turn over the leaves and glance at the pic- tures, one reader l>eing thus able to take out several volumes during a single visit. This custom, if not a very intellectual one, had at least the negative merit of keeping these young people off the streets, and out of possible mischief; but it has resulted, as it was hoped it would, in the positive virtue of enabling them to acquire the habit of reading. Large numbers of these young lads now regularly ask for books in various branches of literature, and fipend a whole evening reading one, instead of merely turning oyer the leaves of several volumes. This shows that the libraries

Illl I

:\r,

ar

are bi a for Bduu ii-«i.i to di ttnguiahed

win

Sit 1 thoro -i <■ <•<> \ fcvo

i 'iii-li. Libraries in tt* i ounl pj nernl

' I j.l.i. | ; .i : i in' Q| I.V.-

'Hi pi; ■■ i VVi \ Hhd '..'■■'■■ m in' II 0, it pi- Hcutinjt RctioQi

n . [In itrated books - t travel, and other*

i I; s ur and it v .. ,,_■,. in twotro

. : tin . . !■• ok*. T!.v. -- 1 1 1 1 ; * 1 < -

irrty ■■■■■■ I the vary coram I though! asdatten

vh* aj that i ubUc I

m p , i deserving of the m ad

'Ih-H WO J'

\\ ii:i. -! m Idnoi bowvnon Hifftftl I nrinevrg-rooms

■! •. :im toill t , 1\

run '■■ i '':i" Btil v hile going

irii . >i . h* 'ii ml !•;■, the pi . -mi: n HU P hue - d

.pin. :. IhtpYnj ol iIk'm

; I i in:, ii .". u.r w, i qnfriaji ti<

I J'DUnK l"l:. i I 'HU <i tin- nov

;. the liiMrM and i ike i hem ij> o read. 1 1 1 1

\U', ! llli Ii' l. in: Ur ll< :i | n 1 " ' V .'nr -;i V M <■ th&l

cm | iiil ' 'lit never u be in. iii- ii.*- mean* of

i I;. i mp : llll or

or vrlii liould tiHYe ttiu "i>i"'i-in , j these

in- In* - I ; 'iinrl in' ll'ii |>i'i|u::,i ; Li, A'cul mm I lii.s >1 >jee> the other * ii' >v which \>, thai i In- -irkU mid mi it i-

U Iwl Hill .j,' 1 In- III" I ' l.:lik "I ' ttlOM .' I.viinl 1 1_>

u i|uite iveenl v«'in-. hnve had I hefi

ll IS UOM !: D I ll I »l Ii Jiy •!' it I 'C Vrholl -"I I" OTCjOT

' ■■ i . i lui'liriiii; I'" i'1 •IllIllUIlH V

- -ii Milil be proi Ided

1 :"' I . . : . . .

; ! iy i io4' -.I'll i lor •' a t '

!'.nt ii ma be reh .i .1 thai voi y cortlj I I... i r I rft-rtl

.■ni« spirit would not Lie In place

to Bill* " Sol ii' I il "ii (hf tinOEOII

i »ch Ci Uld I -mi. . V\ ill, I . I

, I . . ' <?ull yt foi : ppeari I en nruwuo thi I

ould thetw i i i uded : md then ti Intel- nl (rnvcl. I."- thorn.) Bad i- I natli p o l m <-h:n-i. ':■.-', pi . . rri

ippmnehod I'oa i iue.li il i Ito laid mi the

Dmt in the majority ol in nee* the Public Library the

dioii [or ni <'■-'■ cl * i-i '^ i hu large :i

i<r <>i tin- >i<i and nv&luaMo documents aro now rotting

- 1 ti v i i ii! u nitty holoe il it a i

| now who Ii'ivc In r: ■; l f | i.- i- imr. !h

i i .' i i v frii imI i f iii»' prew

ri BUI umam.

writ i " tlm ustuf) ol .< county, and travelled over tli<- entin

ji .inn to lie old rceoi a U 03 0 tin -■

most Inaccessible ilocc . rat-eaten tnd mildewed, 'm arnosi

tppcal I;- in. i'! t. ! I.r.iii inn to 'lav. tllQ6C doCOIQCnta SCOTi

mi, II' thov need aloanha torinc coramuni tattoo should

i.. made v. ih dir uutbontfoe at the British Museum. Bvery bclphas boon clvoo, 11 many raw* in fchi direction I .

<r 11 . 1 no ol ih<' attendant spent In the wi rlc. Ko I'ui he Library can now fcn ooaaidercd impletc until i\ pcrfbol .-. collection ol local Wfitorfen and literature

; I I Pi ii-nlv .:!i'l 0001011 Will afford. TImM' :il I | L Q Jn g I I.I 1 M .

tfanonoster, Nottingham, Plymouth, and Kewcuetlo, ura ■■■. eaUent, and it may lie confidently hoped thai nl theex institu- tions Wfll witli!:i 'lie DOXl Ivchtv V*".tVH p0AS@68 SUCtl ;i r,.\\.< ,,m

How i:it tin no libraries aw Justified in (ponding thoir mi

in ni.i hi. ! ram collections "i tx i tree works

in ih. r whii-ii iiiu-.i in- led to the Individual retjnireraenti resources of *Terj I ba

i in r there U II iratuw which has become

Indispensable and Invaluable, and thai n collection >t boatus i"' rfng iinon rho itaple Industries ol the (own or dlatrlel bi which the library Is situated, This la a multei t tal to the future welfare of libraries, and ii should noi lur nocpsHuo to restrict this i ollccMo i lo woi u in tin* English language. Some tew of those Public '.i I'.iiit-. arc Dlrvudj Lhc mnttl complete Kturelumffc i i tor these colleulroiu at technological books, and others will Minn ln'^ni in iiiakc ;i *t|avial fculuru of Una department .

There arc other uses which could be enumerated. Files of local and leading London pnpei arc kept. Here buki are maps, oh arts, and other special matters, and il Ih impossible bo deny that these are ;i great public convenient'' Some libraries upon the docre of their aowa-roome at B.Dt) a.m., in ordor to specially accommodate thai : who wish to have the vei y earliest opportunity -•I i insulting the advertuiementa of situations vacant in the tu

iy at tunes bee oppressing eight to e< many eager to d<> this, i>nt it m1i<>u1<I he a cuusc for local ^ttlHfactiun that tho uncmployod can at once x<> and mako aoquojnti the wants of too labour market

ijeuboanl tovrnfi And ;> demand for the shipping papers) sad wisely plaofi these in positions whoro they tu*o most accessible Iimc will be of tan seen hard headed captaina and horny nandod sailors Looking ever each ►thor'a shoulder otthelast sopy ol the shipping paper. Eiere too oomes the oaptoin'e wi& whan tlmt woriiiv ifi awaj on the mighty deep, to see if her Imsband's Ktup has been spoken or rignaUod These are bul straws :<> ahovi the univt'i'siii appreeintion in which thcue eitixens' reading-roomi are bold.

Tin.' question i>i the supply of Government papers and other offldal papers to Public 1 JbrarSas Isol the higheal Lmportane i

in August, i - i, ' dc lutatlon watted upon tin* !:it<* i ord Cddoo- lelglt mi i lis official rastdenoe in Downiag-etreet. The ultimate

THB I'gBS OF JTBI.IC I.IBU.UU1CS.

a;

result ol the interview isam ttdied in a letter ol fins lamented

statesman, ol v vembar 13, - -■•■ in which lie said i "I have cartv fully considered the ouesticai brought before rae by thftdeputa-

- to the poaritrintyol freograi taol i ■> xemmont publications

I'ulilK' Libraries I st;iUM it Hie linn* the

oltfactlons which r saw to such b proposal, and on further oon- si.iri-jiij "i r i-t>ni:i ;i. i i - !■■ opinion, r.i.t i am glad to gag

- been able tomato i i i ngfl nent which, hy apprftcinhly reducing the coat to Public Libraries ol pan

UonSi mi). I trust, be oj considerable advantage. A oonfracl fa

about to lie made, undi r wl [eh one contractor » 111 undertake the

Bale ol all the tJovernmeni publications published try (he Sto-

i li-in-i \ Office; ind i i3 to oc a oondibJoE ol the contract thai

the w ta uf Public Libraries are to be allowed n

leas) -' per cent, discount iroiu the price* t>l* the publications as

Stattooei y ' ufive."

Tin.** Important matter has been fortha tdvaneed, for on

Februan .••. 1897, tl i I hanceHo o bhe Bxchequei said thai

his u r had promised to submit a vote to tin- House to

ll(»M..r Ui decide whether .i glfl *houId Ix*. made of

t«i l*nhli< Libraries. ITe would mbmtt

vote* lo the House t or thie purpose, i h oto Parliamei

, only, ci aboul C16, he thought that the inoounl mfffhi

! m- i ii cctinomtcM In the Stationery Office and n rconc-

. the «■■--■ ol distributing Parliamentary rmpora. Ilithorto

■■ imy thorn, : u<l wjili few oxa ptiani their

m has i»'''i i ■■' Members of I'arliament, the

in the oud folding their way to the paper makers as wi i te

taper, it ti i '.-:r conab i to hope that their distribution to the *UbUo Libraries ol the kin<fil«»m will sivuiv !<r them ;i wider iMri i < than hue hitherto been possible, and be fallow ■■!

thoughtful perusal and even study ot" their contents. i . letter reserved from the Troasury on December 8, I88tt, dc i" the ebate in the Hi i"' "i I'ommniw on Mav u ui Mm year, when the vote for the Stationery Office was ! ^mi.-mhii It w;ik ti.i, Khitcil thai i!:t amiiij^inenf made n still holds good, ondei which applications oi this r act within the prov rion <>i '-UK) 'i . ae by Parliament, on mart contain .' list o1 the papers which the tit nhtntii, iiii«1 k1ioii1<1 1 ■* - :i(!<!rc-M-i! fi Mii« Con- El M.'n Hl.atliifici \ < fffli'i', SUtl'ry'js (Julo, l/uiilitii, S.\\ .

Lo«e win. frorn tune to tlmn finv fcnalen to non»ult

e offlultJ documents know their real value. Those who

ormation iU>-\ viulxxlj do wo under an entire

. i nm Miinr. ii ..-. meat dew rnble that

rei Khuiild lit* diNpelli' I. Tli - i-nii hest be e ' i paper? in the Public Libraries, and thus

rjringiniE toem within tfie roach of all in search ol reliable i iforma- ..' i)n'*'ifil -ui jeetfl in •• w hii ii the reader o thi it ndcnl m»/ be ln<ju/rii Tlu' nii)»plyi"^ of r.iti-nt Office ip ^vkcsttoo Cfl

38 PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

burning interest to librarians and coraraittees. At present these arc very costly, and fill up a vast amount of space, that it is in many libraries becoming a very serious question, indeed, as to whether they will he able to continue obtaining them as' they have hitherto done. The condition of affairs in this respect at Newcastle-nu-Tyne is so thoroughly indicative of what is being felt at other places, and what lias been done there summarizes the position of atTairs so thoroughly, that there can be no better plan adopted than by stating what steps have been taken at those places. A suit-committee of the Library committee was formed to report on the supply of Patent Office publications. This committee reported in September, 1889, that they had received from the Patent Office a letter informing them that, as the l>ound volumes of specifications of patents could not be got> ready earlier than eighteen months after the publication of the? separate specifications, the Board of Trade had decided, with a* view to the distribution of the specifications at the time of publi- cation, to discontinue the distribution of these volumes, and, in lieu of them, to issue a packet of specifications every week, on the understanding that the library receiving them would undertake to biud them up at the end of every eighteen months. This letter was referred to the chairman of the Hooks and House Committee and the Chief Librarian/Alt*. Ilaggerston, who, after considering the subject, presented the following report to the committee :

"We have gone carefully into the points raised in the letter of Mr. J. Lowry Whittlp, of the Patent Ottice, dated July 24th, 1889, and report as follows:—

The speciticstion* of patent* are now received in bound volumes from righteen to nineteen month* after the date of publication.

t Tin- arrangemfiit which the Patent Office now propose will give us the specifica- tions in parti M so<n ss published, which is some threo weeks after the acceptance of the completed specification. A specification may be completed at the date of application for provisional protection, or at any time within fifteen months after-* wards.

The Patent Office authorities undertake to make good any copies of specif! a- tions which may be abstracted, lost, or damaged prior to the binding of the volumes.

The proposed change will involve our appointing a London agent to collect the specifications wetkly, and to dispatch the same to Newcastle. If this be necessary. Messrs. H. &»thcran A: Co. have offered to act for us at an annual charge of £1 Is. Od.

_ We shall need 150 cardboard boxes for storing and administering the speciflca- tiuna prior to their being bound. The boxes will cost 2s. 6d. each, altogether £18 10s. Od.

It will be necessary to bind from 90 to 100 volumes of specif! cations annualjy. The estimated cost of each, in half linen buckram guuded, will be about 3s. 6d,, or an anuual cost of from £15 15s. Od. to £17 10s. Od.

The total estimate of preliminary cost will, therefore, be £20 5s. Od., and the estimated annual cost £20 Is. Od.

The grant of patent specifications was made to the Corporation of Newcastle We have not been able to ascertain the date, but we are informed that they were deposited by the Corporation with the Literary and Philosophical Socieiy not less than 40 years ago- The Corporation paid the Literary and Philosophical Society the cost of binding and of carriage. In eight years -from 1850 to 1867 the amount thus paid tor binding was £232 lGs. 4d.

In 1882 the Literary and Philosophical Society required the room which the

Kit'..- Lit. specifications occupied, and tnev were transferred to the Public Library ; at they did not become the property of the Public library, as they had not been the property of the Newcastle Corporation. The Government maintained the right of withdrawing the grant at any time, and recalling tho volumes.

Whilst it is right and fining that books such as theBe which the Corporation receive from Government for the benefit of the entire community should And mom

thr raw <\v prm.rc mukaiiiks.

::<>

rili inl tl.i.uu . || i- i,. : liyht th.it the I'lihlu Ijl.r.ry choulil ln» rliainivl with cxrxni—-* for tlitia which a j>ri*»t« library wae not cburgxd wjlu whi-u if tool lhan, ■(>,. y n'. not i>oriU" wtii.-ti th<> FNiMI. I ilirniT-9 Ounmillo* would li(e«ly to

Sif I ?onttoo 'li'". not ji (Tide t)icm. V7« him- uobed fcbat (ho <v m<*1] th. in 'iiii.y (.1.1 open rn n'fAn.iiwe hy any pi'rwtii whr>

Onto! »'l ainnea Tiicv in iii Um Palme I .ibrary *■» « .. at n 1 1

Ow - 1 1 1 i . not oaly of tfewfwUe and mlr'ibourbuuJ, hm ol lb.: fftMh of 0m

i Th* naanal pUmmi to NwwvuUo whore complato ««t« of

i1 ■■ ■■ "ii- •■' i ■■ on* iii.- .: iu* Edinburgh oi Q1aw>» in i_1j •. ■» " l , '■ ^luichrKtrr in Lbe WfSt nnd l/»d* in the faatR. 'iliur* u Hit i ... i . wlij ;•....„,.., of lb* PllbUo Libitir; ilmiibl bo

EiurdcunJ wiUi uy ptyxauita fur Uum *pcrillni'.imi*: but. on Kba attur hand,

tboj' •hull "J Bot b*<M be*ft HtjUUvJ '-i n lb.- im\ i i' >'i ill- >luf fo(f llw* |i«

y«tr». Tbcy huvo »imply ait**! fur ihv Bonveuwoo of Ibfl QuipufMHB in tlio

K' > :■ i" f'-f- ili '■ l"«lj 'i nil mil I--.I . .■-!.■. i

.' body will •■ thi .,iuu*AJidproprlctr i»f rtcUnowlcag-inirtU re«p(iu»ihllity. j iiujjorUul ufic. In 1801, DO vMluines of putent <\ tioni wwo jmbh ).• " . : tht^eoontaJiwd «b<mt fiOaepuvUnwoini

I . ^iT, '.-1 VuluiUfa »Bt publi>U'-(l. KiM't'lf It'Ulbkl ol 4,700

1 voltimr*. MKh containm; annul 100 vpoctflMtinni, nr a total of &|000; and in I' 7.91 ">lum<e, c*eb conUtain^- about JftO rppdnVntion*, or o tMt« ol i1 tout bv iccd Mini. tbi»i»* art n>or< - i...r, :nv uv\r- .\*

many -tK«illon!lon* puMi«li«l now Minn there wnr* thirty yean* niro.

' ■■ •' I i" calico! ipon Iu defray

tin witou i( 'I - foi ?n«a» patent. RnooifioatiuiM ; l>i!t wo imwt ronenbor

ofUi }■<> i' i" cily no tlio raetnipoUe of

ti,. dktrlrt II in.ni'v.T. tin .-iiuiinweof tb* l*ub!lf Ul-riry. whlih nn? alrouly »o t*t*rrv, ti" i" ii *-.«■-'. r . . i i,\ ii^ p.vin.nit- wo nam lowolionoJ, '\\< Qaowml

i' *JII I'.m . ,■, i. to ■nuniiii-. nhotbet i1 ^ iMiilit<Huo«n»liiK

i,'i «i"'ii '■■ i'ii.'i' < 'i'i. pi.i-.'i-.' 1 1 .■ i .., i. i>ii i- of Paloute

.1.. . ■• kitii- ■■.■] .'',.,, iii,- •;...,- . ,i tlir- Tbaidof Iniili, aad Itwillprofiablj ' Ui* >i"it]''.'itinni» in mty otbvr lumi limn ^hnt waleb H turn

W ii -i.niit tiiuti tlin a obuabl W opoootl wlih

d i Ui i rlalubow farlt aw bu luduoud lo ntub i. .In. Uml, n r ■-. .1 will iii'iiliMi.i- (In i 'nipitrnt dm hi- ulln'i- |«v-M'ii who DUU!

i-i > f"i md li'i.v fin ». i i". -..1 ii- Wj .i, In . it to undortafci

t'n UndlQi iii M mm I"1 thnl f ii 35* could n"t lw done wtfhiul '•••(<

■I ■-• tho l.i'..- ! •■ 'I'.Mu'.it.H..- I'Kjilta wttfob arr

ii I'hUiiI initJimi ' mi' in iniml, und Hi. rtmuiubuvd

that tin ui '!•• jmUmU tJic«o«lwi, rnrtU tbs'- the oblool M

:i. u to 'iiiouia^i1 tf ■•> taking out of p. it cut*, and mv txi

flii- t mi na*< fntinbrtl, Miiwl tliiiT it. wihiM only he

\pon«. of thn*. vbloa in praotiaalu th« bo<t advortiaomont of the raUutt'UUv. v ' I.. I'uttint OUkt il*elf.'

lActi ! u nidi an enormous annual revenue that :iit .in tinrti -:i iblo rcquofit to make on bolutll" <.■!' those be ' i"' Lvgularty suppJiod vith Mil* "l'atunU* »L(J - ,.. ottic ii lorn i'i-".'.' From all wtp

on and pamphlota oomo from jmblishcrfl, author*,

d pabUc bodiM, die ubi g received from the Lords Oom-

Uer Vi[.'j) * Troiwury i ulondiu'B of State fapers,

,-.. i ;iji.:iii: volu i hroniolec and Memorials of wa&I

rcland during the Middle a j;--. sixty volumes; and

of the Uc« ord ' iommlssiona, ' Sec., m

.ii' v-.iiM- ui viiirh w.i- .:,::/ >^ od, The u.-.-nis-). pal

ml iiilv- an*] pamphlPts uid the Condon nnrl

«lii the Niiiu*. The VmoricAii Rnronu of Education,

im»l other .-:in;.i- cm Llie other ride <»| the

i i works to Public Llbrarle&tD

.;.;

I KAPTER V. EARLY PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

HE Idngi "i ..hi v...*. «1m La theft1 taj ration

I Iim-, wciN nnl tlott In n i ■■

the popu i : ■■■■ n.i fi> m the idle political (hi in book*. Hie plMKurca trt which nil

might enjoy throng] Hie channel of a On iry warn i e - m, and I

nfdlit, mil. :ilft>" -! lit-:- i InvV nl lilir.ifnv t'n;i! m.h!i- Mir

i. oman Rropcror* reckon mwiu*crtpti uminigNt the moat valued ol i ii.ii- Kpoflti of v., ii'. or to ivsijiniiii- them even mow highlj In i yesaela ul gold. All the literary trcuaurce ( uu

i i< < i were sure to Dud their wa> to i;» ■. Julius

•! in open in the I'.Hii:. the magnificent library M i (.'ii villi Ii bad i m ■■■ii . li I !'■■! iu< opulence ol Luoullu which Plularoli spenla in the higheat term*. The daggei

; . .1 ij Iijm com project In the bud. Hut

the i .:. who followed were i

t I'uUi' Mbrarii . and even eallei th

Biter ttieir own tuun< •■ in o m >'!■ r of i

riaved no thirty Lliul would add to the then? i i . - 1 - 1 1 - y hobbica. than, wc rend ol marble ftnarn, cow red « nil j . and Rhclv m >f ebony «»r * i

JiiKt aa man of i I ilor period thought nothing too qoh U to bind or uruuiaenl the baoke I <■> is the plutocrat . t to-4aj

will layluli in- sold ft* Eroolj on yardu ol well bound I for which he muiv c iroa no mi interne

.■a,/ oft uvr< which hat soil him thousands Still, the

i m the earlleal tfrnefl the (treat men of I imvmiM;. urnod thfir attention Jtwl to the collection of books unauocrtpl . uid next to taking care that the people ufaouhfl i :. n free aooeae r<> them

in tIk- id okl days" When Kino John wan trying co Imp tse

lih nroowhai tnrbnlom aul [i ■■ . and, indeed, fmr

two or three decadiw iftimrwdn, IfhmrtoM hardly existed. The

wing m b viiiumr ww k lerioua concern a thoficduya, heavy « i^ i'mi- pini'T ur ihe bond required far the ksu One : ami of the llbrai*} ol thi AUtoi nf OroylandL Dujulphui i :.-. i he " i idirnj o hooks, u

the entailer without picturce at tin larger with piotti . brbfidden ui ; iiy than that of ••■■

poesCblv he b >• »< ret p ininbiocnl I ■■■i. i re i arc and precloui thing « .tii the i i id rich, and Public LibrarieBwer< ote j anknowndni rfod The i >rpue< forieti, Oambridjrj ■■ w n tab sting

feature of thai i oh en, Uthoual moel ol the Ighl

i idgo are fri ; ;>hc

ZAkLV prnuc rrnn.utirs.

41

allows U those who visit h&tt she, too. hat aav BMnd ptoses whither not ill may penetrate, 9uoh, for the mo&t part, m bar libraries. Perhaps thli ronservatism is an inheritance from medium times, when books too often proved ;in irrcsUtiMe temptation, and gave rive to much grave shine anil seandnl,

Hotfero ' iinl l.'i'c :nmi :i like r.'] ti'mich. Soil ilmv

have been either pn | 1i«-t i irwighl into futurity, or conBoioiisneas

of tha | 1 1 .'liiloc.* of bin cantamparaiiafly whlen led Archbishop

Parker U iwm (lie stringent rulea under which Ins Utiran Is held

by Corp uh Clu'lstl His tnl ma) connection with tlifa coilega, of

which in- i'-ii. Mftste in IM4, to suitably marked by tin*

beq ■!. ■■-: of lie ip'cfttcrt of all bis treasures, some little account

turns In* Imposed >»u their ilsc maybe of Lntereet

Two pernios mist ul\v;n\ in- present before any volume urn be

consulted one Mi sterol Fellow of the CoUegd the other Fellow

cholar. Should longei "t1 the \>vok* he necessary, they

red !-• one ol the Fellows1 room*, not more than

lime, and after due registration. Beyond the College

uual never av. A system of duplicate keya to

affords security that the* U>u* he olwi-j wil,

i-i'i will i- vi-i.^ that if six folio or an equivalent

tier volumes be lost, the entire collection, together

with tli«- plate he also bequeathed, shall pass to Coins, Should

ip ("en l !»c ;i- Me t -\ more, il travels to Trinity Rail; u

. lilso low. md \\liiit con aina returns to I i rpus. For smaller

in ihesoi Bust arc imposed, do doufrf heavier in the

A : \> !■. , thai they cent now. Once nyearthe Uaaten

tiui : -i (I Trfn ty Hall, t igothor with two Scholars of CorpaSi

■iviti'd to vorifj Hi'.- list, tho two former receiving 3s.4d and

tho two latter la each; and subsequently thoy are cntortunod at

the College. Uut no volume has yei disappeared alneo

nde nearly SW) years ajro. While looking

nt Die casof oni i- com ndod ot the old joke «>t Edmund Burke**,

■who remarket i, m seeing Borne Locked presiea "i books, that it

**rn bided him ol " i «ke on the Human CTadcrstunding.n

ii. i : T-:t ■■ w:tfl original I j a room hnflt over the old chapel.

pulled down m I«24, the hooks wei^ temporarily

1 in ,i private apartment until the completion of the new

'7. when they were transferred to their present

5u1>N<t|ueiitly( n few uf the most intereHtine were

■<\i\s cAMvtdown the centre of the room, The lllirary

is* s ane : . Itli bookcase* of carved oak, and n nandaorns

i m i lhe west end Ncjmmt<w Aivlihinhop Parker'*

IriHU the oilier hook*. Ileum made at Lhe time of lhe

4imjlnt -ii ill ill luumiM cries by Henry VIII, il contain?*. ii1*

atetil be expected, i large i rtlon of oecleslastical paper*.

report ol the Bodleian Library, 18*2-8", which the

'iied. -.hows that the Lumber of volumes on the

in f;ir k1h»i-( hi liiilf i million, Keforriug to the

"Me* \. it ..- 'Jin! th.it until his death, iu

never slackened hie munificence, a&d

lv

ki.i. LinlURrRS.

i! iiihi\ I ( i j * -in ]•. ■r:ir v donors, the Moans ami Chupte

Kxcter and Windsor wore W Ilium Herbert

ni Pembroke, 8lr Kenelm Dishy snd VrchhlHhoji l*aud roll

v. iiii moot extensive and splendid Iwnefn lorn n MS

i; i. :hhI Oliver Cromwell rami eollne.tlon* uf WSft., ■» ilcli sitll

i»c.i] heir an i i The lUuKtriouN Seidell bequeathed

-^ ,1 x x > MSS. and printed rutaiutst. And in tin

Thorn aa b iatoplier Lord Halloa, :nul 'Juii

rrlchr [4fi| M* < i !lrrl io.i- Marshall &D fjp T. Harlow (on

nit! i; bnu an), collections >l MSS, and printed book?

fttnee (]>'• \< nteenth .oiitiii \ there haw been othe bi oeinotSona i . 11 tern inriHir-nt, wuj iii<- Library -.- also entitled i<> ;i ,■<,■>> of 'I'll booh Issued In the United I under the

i lopyi jghl A-!. In the minster of Wimborne, Dorset, which i* A I QCrttbl cture, believed h hav« i>««). Rret erected botwcoi the "06 ind ! ,; . nd fco which wd |olned i monastery, there I'lih. Llhrnn ittnched that wnn rounded by the donor, Reverend VVuliorn Stone, a B8& Wiraborno who u (dace ot ini|»>!i;iiue' in Siivh timrM, und most hutlorftuiB dots Ebb i «H- dot ion to ili< Roman i, who nmdo it one "i Ihelr military -i Ltionj , for as finch we Bra find it mentioned. The old minster was Innlly founded by Cuthlw Lighter nj Kcudrediin the

year "il a century and u hall latvr,St* Kthelred, fifth J*jqr of nil Efingland, who was" mortally wounded i j « contticl with t Dunes, wnv. hurled hero, The king must havo boon wo acquainted with tho ehnroh and monostery, for it wo

iiWIi n- |U''-! In- was l'iiri<"l w II in il portals. ThO l':i

destroyed bg Br* tho elioreh nnd mumi Hie tenth CO

ii.rv, and bo effort was ii i le t > restore them tfll IU43, wh la! ward founded n college >i secular canons on tin* snore rntna The present minster was founded altout the middle tho eleven b oonturi snd was not oomplsted till that or tho fifteenth, on thai it,.' rhnrch nonslsta of varlomi rlntee. l\ through -.1 'inal: door in the restrj of this Inter style uf ii-i'iii e, which i-i ;i most Interesting ehiuuber. that lui *1 obtained bj h turrel stair of the Periiemlimilar |M*rind, ii il"' T'nMti' Library, [t Ih eerialnlv not uncommon i « > llni ■lor,' inn., attached to churches of impoi'tniice, but the peen l;:iii\ ii. Wfmhorne is that i its one ol the very curlieel iji up to popularize knowledge, and gave to the townspeople of Whn- bomD the unspeakable sift in ai tuse wheu booss wer* and expeiiaivti the riyht to I U knowledge I

far llii^ bona w,i- u]>|M'eeiiitcd \y the tfood Colkl 0 WlmUtrneol Hint dn> ia i."t known, hut we find tha

b, born in Wimborue in I6W, aeod u- risH the .: i n i b |ili'ii.sni'r read i u'oo *i* of the 949 i ii h i conti in> The room la mmll, I i I th< libri rj i i ; d fed, ' id round the cota of uoeh shell rune un Er i ro*L to

which Ifl ibtnchied oil the |(i1"' I ft cho n, so that it t-

eai i -.- 1 in lihc dnys ol Ui< donor thi re were Him c vUn h

IMfti.Y i'i r.ii ' i.iiumiik*

I.".

i

■id (V-jmtI In) III iitli rciiilii 'iii'linriil . I I II \<»\s :;iv ..n 'i.icil

In loCKM, mi I lull, to rrinl t-oiiii 'i i.iM;. it u ;-. i i-i «■:■■, nt t(l ii

■toed beneath the I b « inted, M in) tri the chain* ore oroken, i-u ti ti proeexved. "IT i - boukaare of gteal rata ami

r in tuuscripl bean t<he date

C< III] ' i.-.tlllil fill tl.r 1 11*1 i iii'Iii'il > I | I) ;:■■ I j \\liu

i.l-.. Then I: 0 i 'i autifull j b< i ad 1 1 pj

I-. l.i lii'.li-, in Miii'k It U< i . <I.il< « ". ■". in milt lio; n.ls,

',\ ili.r lUilcijjir* ' Mihtorj of he ^ -n-M",

Ixo W:il m I'olyglol llfblc, wi i-lt'lr, dated 1657. The

i fourvol moa. in uctoti lartjruagcfl, and the Not

i i Kii \ tiomi i i fivi lunguagc*, and n L cicon in

, h* i ' ,. i , l! .. ii.-it, 1 <u;'j.

TbtbAnicn of rnbUe Ubi lie nppenrf te-d&ta tn EDgla&dal

i tec fourteenth century. Monks, from a< i 5oi ma,

■i io -' htw ii"" i ea1 I !i ill time I otwoo

> : and wlml . onnbic loiibt there DSU

I thOtr " I'i'L l<- tin : l-< ill winch llir\ livv-l,

i i , i . , . i . . : «rjj] rvo i them a bl gratitude

-I:-. 1 1" y a wn - I the [fenerations

iihiii \ bingtilar iwh 'i-ii.ui hnt bee le r<» the

oin inure i Nil In- i.ii.nr!. h iv n or I land than there nro at tbo pi ■■■■ il ttmo. Thie Is

an tn : oly to ill lit to all niutfontj t<»

too pi iu not- retrogression fhere in much to he laid 5n

i i lion Tins pinivm the irre:il n I for llu-

i n nf I ■ill Id 1,11 i::rn-\ 'ill ovor the I nlti-rl

i tin 11 i.- thnl rinrtag the Pi'otnAtoratr

i i romwell. 1'ublio I lbniricrc were nvtahlfahed, and ii in

-..!-. f>i Hifx piihllr-Kplrfted Bngllsl nun thai

In- ehmih), ni i-hai Hirlj dale rmvi i.v./.i •■! Llial Hie trueel

tin' [ifupli- vn Mic ii-puUiic- ol k»Mcn

to a w.fj rnpurUiul period, no loss In i';n i. than

ii burnii km u& lu vrlucl vrw actually the flrsG Public

Cm i uit] T a- ■■ i iiu lira rhie(l.v bel* »e i Uriab I iuuI

Mi JmIih Tn; .i i, cliii-l lilti nriiiti <>f llir Hi \%UA

up I n1 i i i.-ii.v nf Brintol, uml hiw

illt-i act* v ill irn t -*Kill. lit! s;iy-. I1 slioukl I'f

iiborotl i i mr prtvHMii invutul illuinina-tion wu« of no

ii ki I'll i |ji ii I'ioiii tin- aywi k 1 1) il

lointered thorlt ol old, It wae poasdblo thai

!■ i *a1 the diBsolution o na> liare pertahed whirli, had iIhv l>eea ^; - r-**l, would haw : monk or frla v d . as eta -■, mm i man of in1 evi n ol gci iun. N itwifch

i.-.l i-rcjudio il hi mcoiks und seeulnr elerff^

i i'V 111 '_;lil I'H'k luick v" It' ''Ii I hi-;.

■•iiik i viih oi'lin^i of ihaoldulnoft or vrhai thOT bad dani! bin tho (vinnnonwi-riltli ol letter^, il iu»l l»v ori ■radvctioii*. ol IoukI i \ Dm prewwul on irkn >l the

Hu r<' was »n : nt'lonl library Uiai oaee

i4

pirn lic !Jun.\iiiBN

tii.uriRhcd in Bristol, for which thcrj claimed the distinction of being the flnri library aooettiMa Eo the puMic. His purpose in ibov 1 1 * : t Bristol mighl claim toe honour «>1 b*Tfug dad n Pnblic Library tn her midst two eemni than the liii- of L3iotbam*i Library, and alao thai n a Public Liiirury wpK pwtuhiHhoii in umtol in ir.:::. or forty yeaa

ouatothai nl Manchester Cloaeti the Exel nge B i^ ;i el urch, which, judging from The Italian campanile-, n bays baoD built la an lual century, though the windov Mr aartli attle against the streets wouk indicate > date sf baok ai the fifteenth eentury. An examination of the Ente

luiwi'vrr, would diaCOVCI I hut 1084866 iim>l Ii.im- been RUnjr

within ita precincts as early :ls the twelfth century This . pniiim-ni., nr upper room, which extended the length of die iihvi', served up tin rotinjji.' md library of n Inileni.u >l .im-

monastics, to whom was committed the custody of the cMe . rchlvoSi and whose office 11 was to- keep a register of local mid

{■ -vents nnd acta. This body were termed Ualendiii*, and ,v u re-eatabliahnienl oi the ordinances, in 1464. by John, Btohop nl Worcester, it woe instructed that the prior should consto n Idc "i the bona of the kalendars, and take custody -•! i certain library, nowlj erected, at the Bishop's - n tin

saint house; so that every festival day by which, of course «

thej :". i ill daws which were not V-n. .w | w< hours fa

nine, and (oi twt hours after, froc access should he grunt* i oil willing l>» ••nh-r. I'n the sake of instruction, the prior under* taking to oxploin difficult pnaaagot oi Holy Scripture, to tin hcht of hi« knowledge, and to give a public lecture in tl Ubi i j every week* Leal through nrefligenet' tin hooka should be lost or oJionatod, it wai ordered that throe catalogues of thorn should he ic - i t *. one to remain with the Dean of Antiquarian Canons, another with the Mayor for the time being, and the third with the prior himself. The Hiahnp also ordered thai mai ever?

Soar there should he » duo collating of all the books, with the nvontoriea «'i' catalogues, by the dean, prior, mid nnotlni appointed by tba Mayor, between the feast of St. Michael &nd Au8aJnta; nrjdU it anould happen that some book, through the sot ol the prior, ahould be carried out ol the horary, ud stolen, the prior was to restore rho hook to the library , under ( penalty o1 40a. above its true value; nnd if he could not rai it again, lli'-ii he was to pay the value of the book and IOr., besides 90s. to the Mayor, and the reet ror the benefit cd tha library, lie ventured, therefoiv, to conclude tlmt :im curly a* 1464 B reference library WOM instituted in Bristol." Thi« Ik the i. nil .ii-jrunH'iii nhi.'li Mr. Taylor brlrigw forward, fn farther

Kiippurl ho <i'-il :i ;'i'w -i.uiill -. i -it !•• (in* " \lhcn;euin." ill

i-ri]ii. of a document, hitherto unpublished, that waa oui forty

{i'.n> before the Due old library yet existing in Manrhrslrr w:e* punded. A similar iuailtatlon book Its rise in Bristol, and i tunded bj Robert Redwood iu 1C16", and Mr. Taylor cxplal is tint ihii tin- iiuii.v, spoken "i £n the deed of 616— was rebuilt

kari.v pctoi.i" i.nmAnxra.

16

in 1740. The library has had cos fin odd existence) and in 1896

B under the opcr:iii«ni Of Hie Act. There is, however, now, mother claimant in tl,e Held Mr Charles Welch, the librarian

a h ildhal] Library, says I i l( f^ondon had n Public Lfibn rj nearly two hundred yours before tin* Bristol Library of 1612 was I landed There VU B Public t,ihr:iry founded l>y the htnimw

Richard Whtotingtou and William Bury, certainly as early as This library nifferod from an illustrious book thief] ax, rtftngto Stow, the Protector Somerset borrowed bhe hooka, probabrj In I '■■'' . ad forgot to return them

it would require a second rolurae and an antiquary Co enter mitiiiii'i % int. i the merit* of these three claimants as to which

WW (he Ant l'liMir Lib:', in "|>eii lice (.if charge to the public

The Chatham Library is unique in the history Ubraries, tnd

when Due Steps into il on1 ill i!tr !'im \I;r rhoirr thoroughfare

la which i t situated, ii vrould only require ;i fewi pooplo dre&eed

la i j i. - ca* tunic of the period moving about, to imagine oneself

it leaal three centuries. Within Bight of the two largest

railwav m.iIimi>. in Manchester, and under iho shade of the

.•..(ii. •led church, there la, atVi p<i.»inn rlu-miLdi ih« gateway

quadrangle, almoAl as much quiet an it' one wen

■in the madding crowd und the busy haunts

of man. The buildim? datee bock to I 191, and was, no doubt,

. . i"i* inoiia.she uir: i i> «'H, JllC 00llc#C WU.S creeled UJ>OU rocky

d ivcrlcji king Lhc oonfluonca of the Irk mid the IrweMj

h\ Thomas NVost, Baron dc la Warr. in the tunc of Henry VI.

The hit*? had previously boon occupied by an old manor house

vn um the Barons Hall, whose antiquity even then was un

iwn quantity Anyhow, it had r*>r centuries boon the resi-

c ol tiio *' Lords of Manchester." The generous Baron handed

-l .Hi v..r to the warden mid w-llows of the collegiate body,

in whose can it remained until 1647 Not being a monastery

■. tin- ttnrii, if si meliow escaped tin: predatory i] Henry Vlll. it fortunately survived the dissolution

of tit-- in. ■' was left to his successor, Edward VI., to

iWve the wor«hipfnl ?oininmiity, which he appears to huve

oVm* with roach riinriiii'dii i -- The hoy king "conveyed'* Che

than Karl of Derby. Then followed the troublous

battle nf the people agalnBt i harles I . and the

. . i i ..-I! ! i i*i .di the RtunlevK. During the Common-

•\i the main part, of the pri-mixe* » .is a,sn] :is a prfMUi.

ri.. util ■■'.iiiehr-.i worthy, Humphrey Chatham, bow cornea

niHiii the -rt IK-. Horn in 1680, he had, during the latter years

life, mniuluined .tnd educated twenty -two poor boys. In

IG63 I the wu of »eveuCy-two. and left £7£00for the

t|Mi-. . : an cMate, the profit* of which were to be devoted to

ico ol fort j boys. In 100/3 a charter wits grunted

Ainjr the twenty-four feofces an incorporate luivc ir on .lime then on IhcseH-olectivc process,

edmii . and at the present time there are 100

hool or hospital who ore fed, clothed, and educated

s;

14

>' iii.m Upii.ibif:*.

CJ -•!-•

Ui

c*»..raf>./v

.■>»»«»

. .,

f^ff/-

<7 or

*J

« M

ft

;MlM pi iilk LliiHAl

4:

1

in th'* EnititutiOD. A 1 ii'ihor bequeet of B 1,000 mu devoted to

b lm of n librarvi and a sum of X'l',100 vu* allotted frou

ii.il i-:;i;iir for tho Nciinironionl 1 iituble buildiuj? in

whu-li i- 1 Miti Hi.' \>i<\- ;u...i [in' irntkb. Tho truatoos aalocted

d 1 illctf . "I B flil I ( ' f - > t< I. ]" ■-' i"ii in I''"'- I. Mi«

pin- 1 •• 1 made iii August, 1B55, but tha whole ad

>.-in«':ithc(i van not expended until Qear tha eloae of the

. wlion tho "ongiaiod ul 1,450 volumes. \'

nambw bad IncroAsod to -i.i-vi in 1713 ncluding bturteon onum-

«?npt*. At tha proMnl Lima the aumber of volumei in th ■■

linn 18 Ii;,IKMl,ol whirl ..■-,vr:il 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 !--_'. 1 -t _. n_- MSS 01 JXl ■■•■•*lni|^

IntorM and \:ii io Lbout ono-hal( oJ the tooks&re ol raodarci

iii.- library i- espei in iv strong in work* on ircnno-

logy, history, theology ■■ i county histories, urn the eJ irt» <»i

H.tlVH i;iv« in * i i.i ; II ■.■!:!• ' Ii.- !■'■•- i .1 ■'"•)■; ,!

: -in-pi. -ff- ol hTcrntnre Hare are to Be found

Limn* Iti I 'it i urn wl I nri inl Chn r\ .i!tv for

mailer ;nnl Icj* linpca' iml wuola Mr ■■nt iv one lniir paniphlet tn the •■, in i,-

;. Winch IH fe l>Wl I it I : \r l.'loii <■• I [■• i I , n p | I 'In'. !i:i)ll.

he ! tin [hi n mlj .i rtiorl time ago from .1 1 1

A pcnCC ii i Ulg a iiiliiili-'i .] |..i i.i...

! 10 >k hop. in t tbi r !-■ U 1 signature 1 II irn Cliettauu, li" proof Llittl Hie library uae been >poued Ui i'i<- niah ftlnre lifijfl lies clued) in tho <>.•'. original uur- ilnujo ti Kik, .1 1 leaiuulc >■! t '■■ flosi ung ol which 1.1 irivan. Eroi 1 n !■» iln- pi esent * iic tin n >rd« of the pun '

■■.!-.. .tin 1 writlci 11 a clear 1 1 1 •> the various lib

\ r i-.i i i.-L.-ri j -i mI the lii-l frfl line* . n "i 1 parci ll ol I'i'dIm-. fur yi mWii k< 1 ilb u iesol U 1 . ts .irt ii Uowin.fi1 Pol, I . Eta i ivod rona Mr. John LSI eburj thi 2< y ol ^uffi l6ofi, ^tun ttni < pi - r. r, Vqufnath Simin oniu conical < 'nj.-i \ I .. ArUtotclifi dpi.. V ii .',U . --. . iuttiii tl . 1 otcno In

. . m:.' "I Epi : 0]

m 11 C^uo 1 ii i>u1 ''f. lo Xt., I"-. ; Uvor dia (dh i 1 1

n hroaii « ']>:i . Vol. 1', el lOfi." Onh 1 day consult the bool .1 tho ibr iry, but :. imd tl ■■ m11'" '"" ' ' . i- or i*xeui'*uonwt« oonwlder thai thw 1"1 1 .:. morn 11 iritil iJi<*\ h:i\» s«'<-n tii.- ihothiutt Obrary. 1 : "i to our in the winter montha and \ itannff 1 ie Hiiinnier Bui the library d< 1

hi'lfcr l.i't" lliitti In Uv lived :i-( :i llli'l't' -liou pl:nv. -.i-il

lilHt rho hurry :iml rmw for wcnlrh, 11 p»od pui'Mnn 1

■■ |ni ilir will italr/r the i.n-t tlint rli-y have in tfcfl

hran "i iiti'ir '■ 'i;. old bnlldlnffti ol oowdderable irehoao

ad the homo of literatim* "f 'in- 1 i-i writer, in. I

eh iifi:«ui tnu hiM-ti M'rnpiiliiu.sl\ cxcliidod.

... a'Iiciv 1 he n itiuiure.i "I tlic lilmi rei h

alaoedai iludent, ii u very panirThwi fa tin-

4H

!.I*ft\RIK9.

KOokintf mi Hi till" HH1V* . i , -. . I; -ii "II. '.I,

..n i lii'in hang :i mini !«•■.■ . I | . ifl ri || , l M i p w orl Ii,-.

iii- >l ttlOSfi portrait* i- :t verll i ilf (hilnnhnraugtl, S- m\ in

ohii room on mm iif the high-back ehatra ot Charles 11

and with nil the other furniture of the -::nm- [wrio<i.

require ;■ great atreton of the Imagination to pepeoplti the oU

rliiMiilirr i\i:h tllOM who nnixr hOTO tro<! It* flftOT ri'TiTUrfe* apo.

In this vrry room there probably walkwlSIr \\ iilrn- Rntatgh, i m

vu entertained there by Dr. Dee. one Is tempted to

thU quaint old place mrrounded by Its lore ol Itteratun < u'

archaeology, but *"*• nitixl I'lirlH-ii'

OIUKI. WINDOW IN BBAWNO-ItOOM.

Without desiring to enter minutely into the i ueetton of which

raill.v wnA the Jirst, il dues appear that, so In us Bristol md ttanchostcr arc concerned, the former place in the older found* tion and Muncheftter the older building. Furthermore, the Latter place presents the unique fact of a&WiiitciTiipred inon! of iw since lU5o it: the aiiiim looui^ ;in<] tl:e «june building.

A matter of afanoet equal intercut to the foregoing in the discovery u year or two ago by Mr. II. T. TulUurd, the librarian

THB *A*StXG CV TUT RWxftT SIM. OF iKVl.

HI

<»i iiu'1 Wjgai I i i tract saned in 1690 bearing

i tie. 'An 'Jvoi-I i.-y for Founding and .Main: itlUKka in i'Vitv PfeTOCh throughout this Kingdom." Thf author of this n hm been identified ns the Rev. J rimes

kwood, iiini-.it i o Mint'), mi that I'm- " kingdom i vi .- ■-■-•• .i i..

is tin.. Rcotland 'i forcible language iin-

' pniir.-. nut the great tMefulnew of rmrochf&l libraries, ideal before ** the curea o1 din fumilj of tin- suaira >!" <■ i , - i : : doa nk uphio uind l-but lu

mn nor heart hi aludv," ThiH N itaplt-al ffe then urge*

nblish aenl of .i Ubran In

. ib. Mr. Kul ■* 1 proposed that after :i stiitubli place

had been provided and placed under the superintendence or the

mid send i > it .ill Ids private bo jmd be |Mi'i fa them \ ,:i. annual tax on (he Enconae of the parish. This.;] ttb sinffnlar in the liffht of to-dftr. The

jrcneral ox] tin vaa to :»<_• met by the Levyine of one month a

method wluVli would, in Mr.

Kirk v. ilon, have realized GT^OOOSc- ta oi L'o.owsterling

i i mrn he expected t be mor than nutfieicnt for the

port) md lie therefore proposed thai Ihe surplus

I in r»undii -■ intionul printing office-, which

voald "oiled bj n Committee ol tin- ( .' vn.-m 1 a.-m-mIiU.

I'll-, Founding ind iromoting Bibliothocke in oiorv paroefl

kingdom, < rnlfd, "ik u-.th ii.voK«iry uud

|< nnUu*>on inn lumo ii'Ohlt', our intvM'nM md our duty."

So In I [in.- old pamphlet, copies of w hich ore not to be

q the Hntiflh Museum or the Bodleian, thai it M

reproduce Mid wiU be found amnm? the ippfiuh ■■■

lln whole matter \> that, though nearby

i pawed nlnee the pamphlet was written,

-Kin.. -I ..1 the w rii lot i he . i nntry by which

i'k author WW i antnmted hue nol yet Infected moro

m.u small poreeiit.ng« of bin countrymen

CHA'ITKK VI,

THE PAS8INQ OF THE EWART BILL OP 1850

been rmule to llir vnhmiinom

report of the Select r«iinmittee on Public Ubrartfw

i Lb, l&l&lt wa* ordered that ifielectOotn-

i iiih-i i "■ ijn- : :i <-<i .)-i 'in- beat mean* "i < litem i <-.-.i.ii>lj.%liiin i:t of libraries freely uimwj li be public, especially in Inrffc ta^m* in flreat Britain and hi-Lrn-.. The crar "v due to the exertion >!

Llmlbertun, who. u vnrimin intervale i .- l&M), had bren tjriUttin.; the qa o ol Common* On

the 23rd of the aan,-. month the Committee n-a.s appointed, and eoncbtcd of -Mr. Ewi rt. Vim on, Mr. Disraeli, Sir

4

fiO

PUBLIC LIBJUBXBS*

ii i . .' Vorawr, M ;.«"; Lrti rle. \\t. Banbury. Mi .George Vlexa Huiuhnji. Ait Brothorton, Mr. MUnw, Tne Lord Cdvocate, Mi. burn, Mr. Thlokneaws Mr* Mackinnon, M.-. Kershaw, nod

Mr ( '.ii«I\vi'!I, ill of Vhoni Q&TI passed OV6T to the majority. The

1 1 1 -*: ini'i-tlnH il i it:-. Committee *m on March 30» 1S40. Three mooting* vorr hold in April, eight in May, and tow in making in all in thai year sixteen meeting*. Mr. Ewurl

J resent, aid took m i chair a1 all the meetings except one. Mr. trothcrton wu absent from only one. Sir Qarry Vomejr and Mi. Monckton Milncs wore regular attendants tt these com- naitto Mr Mora i was present at two of the meetings. The report o IftlO wa uod in July o! thai year, and consists of i- pages. The evidence ol fcidward Edwards ws and owupios thirty-six pages, Ho was also exnmnu ■■! at a UtOI date, hie evidence aga n extending to about the sama length. lie rnrniflbed o number ol maps ol hie own compilation, showing the distribution ol libraries in the loading countries ol tne work! The report presented to the House ol Commons bj tin. Committee provides very g"orl reading even nt this :> date, They begin by referring to toe inquiries made in Parliament during the years immediately preceding the appolntman) ol i Committee, These Inquiries referred more partn.'ubriy to the formation "i' unseams, art tmlleries, si wi*h :ih kcIhhiIx of design, a* k meant* of enlightening the country. Right, in the very foreground of th\* report there itandi the •.shun that Then' were not nt that time wanting those who held thai mioh Institutions, however NuceoKsfnlly pstnbl in one Foreign nations, would not be appreciated, and might be bused In OUT own. Old prejudices in Kngland die hard, said the name objection Lh son ana again even yet made in Home quartern The Committee then shoot thcii rig gun. Thev state trial >•>'•

withstanding '.he fact that the hVitiish Museum, tin- gallery at

Hamptoa Court, and the National Gallery had been thrown open i< Hi-- peopli a wi - generally admitted that ao abuse bus marked tho change, but that mucl: iM iiuii ;: I enjoj nent md uuch popular eiirttenmeat have distinguished it. The heavy shot of the gun liet lien', 'l'\u-y soy one improvement, however, yet remains to be accomplished, hitherto (in 1849) slaiosl untried in thin oounl i \. and tli;:t fa tho establishment of Pui LU I J »rai lea freely aoci BelbTe to alt the people. It was a humiliating confession for tlicm bo make thai each librar i s :i vd long exietcd on the Continent, and iho.v wore further compelled to own that if could not be doi i haithoir existence had been pregnant with advantage k> liters and to the general character 01 the countries in which they I ftd been founded, No one can deny that it was n just oompoi Eoi tho Oommittoe to make when they said thai il might with «(|ual fairneafl be inferred that our own literal ire .1 well a on own people being denied the benefit M such institution must 1 w fftionatolj Buffered. They <irove thi> In mo by-iiiymg that

they had learned that more than half a century t»ei f 1840 the tit*'-! etep taken tn as English writer wastoconsu t a Foreign Pal ii'1

THH TAtSSX:; 08 I'M I, EVAM DILI 09 i960,

6]

n .1

oi i i. Mil..,! ,.i hia studies, and that *o such auxiliary

rioeol British intellect. They referred to Gibbon.

who complained that in his time the greatesl city in the work)

was d iol isefu) iiiRtirn Ion, i Public Library; nod

■• II . ». nl.-r \\ i i 1i:mI li in IitI : ;lcrn I- 1 I nvi! ;inv |:ityi» I i«l«>n.' 1 1

abject, whs pediired to theneeessity of purchas] ig foi hit) private numerous and valuable collection »f hoolei which mnM form the basin of his work." They quote* number of similar cases tw lawfulness of tlio Foreign Libraries i** largelj brought out,

id :tll.<i;.'i-lliri' the I'SpOTl i)f Ihft minimi .1 *-■■ tfl 'oirW:il : t n 3

> •■■ ; i ti vi u -! ■_■_■<• -u . nnaw. Hie j point out that the principal

ttagc* offered bj Foreign Libraries consist in their Dumber,

it. I- acuessil llity, and La il»' fact that the booka were

allowed on libera] ye-l - 1 Reionl ly protective conditions '«» circulate

! the walla "i the library.

ii fa Doneci isarj to go further into the details of the Com-

ittee*a report \ digest oi the evidence of Edward Edwards

uuld be iatcre9tiu£, i ut Che exigencies of the present book pre-

beinffdonc, Asked what had been thi result of opening

Motion I Gallery and Hampton Court Pulnee, he unhesitat-

mgly Buid thai largt aumbere oi peopla had been withdrawn

: mi .i .in cincntn oi :ui ui.iutrlli.vi ml mikI t-t'lru of :iti injurious

haractcr, bo such amusements as are rational and improving; and

calculi tH icaefit thorn in very many waja. lie was asked

•uffbl that Libraries woolc have the iosai effect, and jlied thai oven in a greater dey tve ii iln-v wwv made^neraOjj ible, 'lliin » where Edwards's warm-hearted onthUHKi-iii tfiovcd itself. Th'- immense and almost daily extension of

ton bad even at that early date begun to show itself, and be

viu imked if tin* policy nl" creating PuMie hi brut ies vrntj not 'lily

coming o J more importance no replied tothla that he thought

ii Recounts, Vnd thai "not only from the growth

d making the uetnal existing provision of tfbrariee more

and more inadequate, but also from the fact that the increase In

r.iiim-i '.on <:i liookft makes It still more difficult for ppiwms,

who have considerable prfvnte resources, to keep puce

vitb what ts produced both here and abroad. Therefore, thai as

mare difficult for many persons adequately to purchase

, ii is .Mill iniiiv impiH taut that they should be proi Ided in

,l.r:,Hrs."

Questions about tin; provision of l£1>rarJes in manufacturing and ncrclal towua were then put to him, and be said that this vaw daily beoumiuu a question of Increasing importance. Asked w\vaI attempt* had riccii made t»' supply libraries in largi towns,

led 1 i ii tli.it "ill', lomt attempts of an imperfect

i ide b> In in elnmics' institution*. lb produced

a liato some of thi libraries In Lancashire and Cheshire tovnui

but brota the fluctuation loturcol the resources oi those aotitu-

oi permanency in Uicm,suob librariea often

Ivtt but .i bhort timi . and wort tin n »*1 sold

r the report A 16 •',. i h< .«•( < n imMish.-d

IM»

N»»UC l.!TinJ.UlES-

1 extendi! to 01 er 100 pn i . oc »ligh( U for i ii In the constitution 3 t i

i \.im littee i ' firti i ■•> l M'uvh, i-.".M

Hi .if: Ith, i .1!'. ::!!■! 'I vi i ] thfl ■■ ' in- i .will',

and then ftdloarood In ardor to grretlmc t ir thepi

iuon "i ci tain orelgn papers 'elating U I mtinental Libraries ') l u- \ ifterwaTdf motonJimn itn and fag was on June nth, mafc seven meeting*. Mr FCwart

| . . v ftjll ..I i'Vim\ IOC "i I h ' ! Ml I <'<l .'■-

man. Mi r Ion attended five ol lh< sittings, and the i

. ; M;\ DIaraeU does noi appear a hai been present at one of the seven The Awl witnos* again examined was Mr. Rdward Edws . I >■ i osl Irnportan ol that

i ltd before the I "oi imittei . lie ol hi r gej tli u ■• i who ivc ace were Mr. Robert Leiuui chiel clerk >l the State Paper Office, Sir llci i\ Kills, principal librarian of the British Museum, Mi Nni'.iiio Pan j../... keeper of fche printed books si tin m ii.-. e un,and Mr. * '. It NS eld, Librarian to the lto;ral Soi ii I v. Thi « rr .,; . tnoet vaxied and comprehensive char- iivrv i rancl ol the library world was dcnll with, and the [ion* wen framed with n view of bringing out the moal t worthy and useful In ormatioi N'aturaUyo very large number , T the quoeti w doi I with the Brit I h Mi houui, Mr, Pauiazi was aake< whether he thought that the interests ni the public b an Intellectual point of view would warrant the cxponso incurred bj Hi. i extension of the reading-roomi >f the British Museum He thought that d< ney w raid, but idded that o bottei

3 I . |u provide D6V liln'iincw IW yi'iioriil iv-k. -? i , . | i i fo all

corner ii>! to roerard the librar} ol the British Museum 6e a library for the higher elass oi Btudents, rather l"i

. th i: «i erudite i udy, and 80 to meet both requirementa. Ac

:i librarj foi the euro of man of letters, the regulations w d b I

i . tout obtain at the British Museum are good in in ae

i probably it could be devised : but I tat.in addition to thai

.: needed another provision ol i different kirn

■-. t i i.il iv:i.(< PB :i pTOTtfliOTI of nliti':if i lUftl I l.nu'ir . Which WOUld

I'.-rr.imlv I'Miiic umli*r regulations fit' a different kind from those oh arc found quite sufficient for the uses ol the British Slu both i J irtw,

Tin1 whole of tne evidence In this direction was, thai in London, libraries wore required in all directions, and ili.it (In British Museum Library could posslhlj supply the I uew Lunduu wasaiuplj erroneous. Questions were sent to

the Public Libraries on the I untlne it, Greece, Rusaia, and i countries, and Hit repliei are printed in the languages of those countries. The whale of thi two Blue Book? n. _* be su as follows; The Committee Iwlieved I ml then ww muel

of otliei i'v whit ii h a

miglu profll and i\ wi would

i n pulse i to

oatin the subject ^hich (in boonei '.'.; in to nionypcrti

.ii I I ip TKB aV Mir DILI &B I 360.

.',::

the

oountr^ further, that Mi country Ee BlflJ greatly in

at of Ii) .-. '•■ ■-.'!■■ to trio p ilic, and would derlvo

at benefit txcxa bfieiz ovtablishtnent There Ei nreob En tho

•r :ni- ! ft their. WOfk, thai W* unv 'I'I'ly to our-

lapse ol tortj years, although we have made

oat '-• I programs, and the \aas ten Iocs not now by am means

in going throngb the ondonco ox air. S, u*da n [a nr |h, n!b e not to fe tn pulsnt tn ol i tnaa ;i o tin book needi of tho time, aad tho keen prophetic splrti touting him In nil ha : did far the enlarging -»i tin-

ork of Public Libraries, Sufficient honour t - \a\ ir rl I D

■I to Ms work on behalf of these Institutions, and the vn-v

t>i. Hint should now be done Is tithers monograph ol his Itfe

ura, v.i tten by ah d i » man as Mr. W. E A- \xon or a

or bust placed :n the M;n 1 1 ester P iblii Etafcrenec I brary.

fleeyon l "I •_- 7th February j 1886- and van ■■

the must oaraoel and enthusiastic wurkvra whtaij this uiuvei

imii known. !!■ wai ginallyan assistant in the printed

u-traent of tha British Museum, When the Mancceafcer

[braxies were in couro ot 'ormatiou, In worked Tory

ctioa wttl them, and there is noifoubl that

■. iili-i tii"M -■'.■ ■:* t" hirt wiili; ku"^l''<|'jL of books

anil the ability displayed during his nix yeara' managementi ii.- netircmeni From ihc Borvioo of tin Manchester Public Commute ■, be published loveral b >ks on libri rica and etr roan tho m mi nuptu'tii i: Ih-il^- his " Free Town

i," arid Mom •:!'- ■■; Libraries." He was alao the author lew ol the British Museum," n " I. fa ol and i i ; i\ ■: . •■• works, and wuh granted ' > ^"- 1 Li I ■!'. and never v. u.- a pensft n bettor rod, for tibrorie ind librarian*! owe liiiu :i debt of gratitude . uei er hi |i ibl peoiollj when it - considered thai )ii«

I i ; ears While :it work :it tho J-;''

111 Lo i per BMW per am urn. lie was i hi* des . n m., and

on I ,i i »:--i .-f i ■-. late iaeK to l$3 when he was twenty- Mr was seventy-four at the tlrai ol his death. n oi the i wan Rill -»f ISO trehua been pntly *■■■■ e Da, and the question seemt qok

i- ih :i -,•■•■ i n j I i I it ho many mi ve- i !■ do in i and w hioii hi vi yone i i he k*crj core

Ifc have had tlirtr hrurJnnlngR In the mf-etinff trt^i'. ■■■■. ;.in". ir aore men In a hltle ujiper room. HuS

i with the luti-C'on I w L itfue. ;uid Jtuiay beiwudtohavfl

il la." M : i ii'-. i :| ill" I,- I", v. I eh i fa \\ t<iiiiril "A), lie [Hrviuu> v ■! I 'mi l i-|'i ,ll -1 i

' iho Ewurl Itill In one of the ela oi bhc then

. ihi lio.viil Vh m I" lor li I ituUon

were, on o wintt r'a morning In 1W4, warming bhem«

the ' -i >wing '^t «>f doora. Thcac two

ids were the htl- Mr.<ioua'. Jiu-K^.d. th- lii.in»r, m - ■- i- tary f

.-,1

I'l lll.fi IhlUllll.v

the -.I'lnhii, ii-ni the other waa Mr <-• '> - ■. Wall to, then the ter of that school, no* lliu keeper of i \c Vrl noUectl South Keoirtngl m M woma. Wi . u Ic on uri ■■ 1 v>. Wall to to prepare .1 tapei m the rah* of museums in the province! means of Improving public taste. Mr Wallis, however, hn 1 1 .'i be (Mi i;i "Jw uu) w i* 1 in- proper person i<> prepare h paper, :nin-.!i jia vi i-.n K u IHJJ7 li<" had prepared for ami read heater M- urn--.' Institution two papers i >eh of

Design," in which DC id ld\ t* &t< d Bomotliuue very lik< in.

uie i lor h idi i tic a< I he frfcndlj contention end Jackson andcrtakin a to prcpi re n paper, en condition t i t hi

t\... .i,--.-i..t. .:;■ i oi Mi (VaUifl, m-I help in its discussion. 'Hie

r< -nit wi\ ;i ;.'i|»(T mi "'Hi ii ^i ioi ; i proving public

it was r«ii<i til .1 cnnTorAoatono held In th<

In^tituii.iti on u.ith November^ 1*11. II* paper, and il it

[on which followed, i art Mi V i ti . »* il id o m i torest thai i*. woe proposed t<> bold -■> public meeting 'or tht Further consideration ol the anbject. This mooting ww held b tin- thcutiv uf the M.'iiieheitef Athenaeum, cm 80th November, iHu.tli.' Into Mr. Rid tr<l Dobden, M P., taking tile ohair. Th* papet was -jgnin read by special reuuest, and il i tiibjed di -

rii-! h. at recorded in tho Vtanoneater newspapers. Una

1 ' rm*nl - Mr. Josi-pli Ill'otl 4-i-t* »n. M.I*. I'll' vil[. i'.

seemed deeply interest** l . u tva* Mr Cobden. in the tna tea and ufter tin' meeting Mr. Brotherton pmpoaed '<> Mr Jackson and Mr \\ ottiBthat thoy should furnish him with the materials for drafting a bill to empower eorparatlons and tho governing i< dies i ton us to csinbli&li mnsenins, and mpporl them, a* discwesed, by a

Sunny rata, Mr. Brotherton undertaking r<» lay the matter b r v'\ in lam Ewart, M.P. for Liverpool, who had heencli the < lommittea "i 1836, which recommended the establiahniem ol schools of design. This suggestion wan carried out, and on the ';h of Karen, 1846*, Sir Ewart moved in the House of Con n for Leave to bring in :i bill to enable corporations to establish and maintain museums or arl. An interesting debate followed, amongst the speakers were 3ii Robert Peel (then Premier), Mr. Joseph flume, Mr. Drotherton, and Lord John Manners ; Mr.

i unciudiiig tin.1 delrnLe by ulvuealn y ->i ndio opei ing. whirl i

did not help the- proposal. The result wasbhe"Ac1 fw encourage ing the cetabllflhrnent oi moeenrnfl in large towns," Owing to a> variety of circnmafcancce— not the least difficult of which wi p oondiaona on which rurporations could cofcabliah such muncuui.-s. and support them by a halfpenny instead of a penny rot'.*— the \ct was practieally u dcud lettrr but in the se^nion ol I860 Mr. Kwart « iiirird m\ amended Aet, by repealing that of 18-15,

B\mz powers enabling town oounrile to establish Publt Ebrariee md museums.

Mr. WaJUG o wry modoet man, but wo aro glu-.l thai ht luv* onnbled us to clear up the point ob to how ratc-aupportod l*nlli.

Ubrariet came to I tablishod. In a Jotter re> I w weobi

affo, no says r.tun bifl ofloioJ wort hai I moro with the *•:■

TUJC PAtttlltA OF THE KWART BILT. OP 1850.

Wi

rtoB of museums than villi lihrnrirK. but he has ner** r losi his Interest in the latter, and baa alvays begged book* or money !<•

lm\ Itirm ,\ 1 « nc vii lie ! L&g ;1 i;id :i cluiiri' of doing 00. lie \\:is

late enough some livr or ':x jmis ago to got n friend to ■■ ire CflO vrortl od I i- kn to one of the London libraries,

Bfl ■, l h utli efforts fare h concrete form to :ui idea which was

widely prevalent lathe public mind. The diTTu&ion of education

- n'l' the beginning of fcne century Imd been groat, and b rapfdly-

loexeaaintg class had begun to Seel the necessity of providing

i- i'mi carrying la a n. ter developinfinl the i dnoation which

bad boon oonfemra on the poor in the aatfcmal schools, By co>

opci iii*'-1 effort the necessary books could be readily placed at

;d of those who were too poor to big thorn top Wh n>

■erres. Hence the suggestion i rate-supported libraries. But

ii limitatlca which it was then thought useful to impo c i i

ably, to prevent the ratepayer from spcndinfi ii

Iclcsaiy tor lua own advantage; were strm^mt, .md not i

The expenditun whb to bo limited to n halfpenny

in the pound on th< 'ateable value <>i the property in ttio

borough <>r dlrtriot odopttnfl the Aot, .mil ivm of thib uoi ;i

;, was to lw spent on Looks. There might ho ;i library,

but it shoulo oontals no books bought :it the public cost. It was

philanthropists would come forward, and at their own

rges " till the empty shelves, lloub

n tamed philanthropist was as rampant in those- <i;iy- :is now,

but hi* mnpnthiei did nor run in this direction. The books

wcw not fortlicomirur, find l*urlianient had again to appealed

id i in result that in 1666 the Let, whiehte uptothenreaent

:!,■ principal enabling Act, wag passed.

The wo] U "i th< late Mr. Willi im Ewarl in connection with this

Hill was i"i bj any meatus light, rind the struggle he bad to

passing i his Bill provides one ot the many examples

often i!n' House tif Commrmfl Imw opposed aisAMiras

to which, after they have ? *- •*• 'i passed, it. has given no

■tinted praise tor the beneficial results i<< the nation non-

terred tu the Acts. vTlien Mr Ewarl proposed thnl British

limn:. Iiuuld be empowered to build libraries, as well as

ri mmi ii||'i\ l';in .mil w ;ih-i, iii: i.l hi levy a local rate

fbrbringui] I ki Into the druwtng-rooni of the wealthiest, the

Clour of !li« tradesman, or the kitchen ol the working nan, he n sll rcfornaerc have foundi thai hia onJ> proepeel "l* . 1 1 .-ini'iii wi h iiir huhjfet. The record Uj Hansard of thi debate on the question is very inter eating, If not profitn I I ■. rending. The appearance of the "talking shop.'' as Carl vU- irreverently called it, on the second reading of the Bill i.ii i( was iropoacd to create for the first timeia England BaniMuniil Fnlilli Tuiiiiiinii mi hat etrildng. The House

was not bv any nioanrt a full one, but the benches were well occupied by those who bad previously oxpraeaed themselvea agait Had there bean ionic trumpery personal

In: m.'ulo, find i "'<(!■ expected, every seat

SH

.

would li «■ ■• boon occupied, but booaun this feeding ol toi tolllgeuee i tion w ' '

IlliMnliiTH liiitfi'iv.l irvor tlK'll' till I. I. |>l;

VOLCaal roii.stltiK'iirii-y Mnv \v:it.'h wry «■!.«.. ]•. I in

of their men «n <\ di viriOM, and it Is well for tho ontlonthW

I IM WW i',-:it ^l;i:i Tn lllI'M k'trU to HOll

road ii ] tin' i ml roading tin- crucial tfagr ni nil

Uld I*- 1110*1 ' I tTKWC Will) tlKlfc pUl'l I '1 !ln-

hnvr join iver iii" majority, :1m* pith of he ehl€ i- nude ":i March 13, 1880, t* hare elveD.

M. Swart, In moving the second mutiny, nth] iii.r Ho* simple

: <»! u w.i- t< ■-.' ive [xiwer to town councils to

Kiii;ill rule Cur be eetalriiehiueul uf Public Libraries mil

BUU6UOU to ill ti!i;nii-j|.:i; ( < « \\ 1 1 > . An Aii Called tin; Miim'uiii

wm paaacxl f our vcoj y,eu tiling town council

li.'Un:-. i |MiuuUitii'ii vi lo.ooo inhabitants and npworda. ! i lovj . o -t.iUish museum* of science i"l arl for tin beaefj

ol' llo; |"il)|ic. imii all Mini tllfl preeOUt Hill proposed waa lo

i-xtrin! tin- |»t'i:nipk- •}{ tin- Mu^.iiiu*' .\<t to the C*d»1

ii PubUi Uoraxiee alao. In asking th-* II luso to adop

ore» he> woe booked I j the acting uf inoxg E the towns of ilh country $ and eirioo he tied introduced it, he hod re© ire* coaununlcouone from .-■• >raJ large tow ad and Iro-

i ill. who wore deairouE of having tho Hill extended to both m those countries. Afterwards

Colonel Bfbthorp Uld he would bo hsppy to contribato his mite toward* providing libraries and tniuonnu aril jn'j - - t r * t i :-* :w the hnnabfor

rlsts in Ergo towns; hot he thought thst, howsvsr nxcellsnt food for the mind uiit'lit bo. food lor the body huh what wo* now most wanted lu: the paopfa 11' -lid not tik'-- [fading at all. and Vic hated it >% h Oxford : 1ml !io cunM dot «co how one iialfp^Miny in the pound would be •nou^h fcneiisilil" i ,mi ./.mm-ila t . carry into all'cct thw UnmaBM pOWMI iiii<y ware '" have by 'hU Bill. Ho ftdt that tlii* F-iill would tanruss* tbl taxation of the people in times when It was not si all necessary, and, therefore, be moved that the Bill ho icad a second time that i i mouths.

Mr, Hrolln-rtou wns nurpri*od tit r.h up > tion to tho Hi. I. In the Brat place, the measure was entirely permissive : and ■ooondlyj flic rate w u In iited to one halfpenny in the pound.

The moony could, he poiatod out, only bi: applied t*> the en- of, or paying rent for a building for holding o Public Library or Museum. No power was grvou to layout the fuu-Js iu the purohosa of books, apficiuoenu, or pictures ; al ti .-. u.ir ii.n m dpru-nd on t voluntary uimtrihnclone ot the inhabit anta. In the popufoiis boroil^ ol the country ibis vaa u vary propsj uiouun. In bmlford \im

dQi acting »■■* the rayceeeniativos uf all thu ratope ecm

forward with eloejri y to provUe i bnttduig for a Fuufio Library »nd miw private ailu of tbe inhabitants had alr#«ily »took«d

"iirn to a ao&aldftrabfi tent, and there had boon voluntary cm done made of batmen fi.ooo and u.ooo volumea to Uia library (wMftl

ran vjjxxxo cv tu kw.ut mm. or I860.

■v

:

wan attended by hundred? ttw.ty iii^iit) iti U«k than SU HUkntJUL B$ oootandwl that iIik Kill would provide th« rhnapwt noli™ that could ixjuibl) be establish" d, tad what was the use of alucatiou for the

SB i!-v WON enabled to conault valuable works which they nnwlvra t'oald not pWOhlMl It wua tho duty of the Ho ilk to promoto all Ibat had a tendency to btitig the higliar and the humbler. claw tngollif»r ; but this eould not. hi< dopo unlaw the jwonh* hail lln» aaahitanco of those above tlicxii.

Mr Hi nml Cit-nwanU Me. I'.p-nial OAbOVM) SAld hi* OhJ&ftl i<m

the Bui Mated on a vary narrow and limn. -.i ground Than poi tinned :

If it had proposed to flivo powor to towu couiiciIh on an npnlindi.m 7KM IB ' 91 I two thirds or thru« -fourth* of tho inhabitantx of

S

my a t'two, to be allowed tin* principle «tf tho l'ill, to tax the general body

of ihr ratepayers for the establishment of libraries ami miueunw, ho

would not. havy bad *o uittch objection to thin lueaMim. Dul In; (omul

fault with it boeSBIM it would enable any town council desirous ol

rviryiii'< "»'ir tho v.l'Wj ol any Mull Section "I tb»» inli'i ■itont^, to l.ix

" opener*) body of ratopoyer* for an institution that might soon dogoim-

> political slab, for which onto n few nf* those who wert*

noiuptdled to contribute Hm Ita support hod auy sympathy. Had the

BUI ho a res ly permianrBi aa it was alhj'.od, ho would not have apposed

--'lotiio town councila with imperative power?, oinJ.

cwfori'. If VKKlU •nijtpart tho Amomlrnont,

Lord John Manners now tho Uuho <»f fotthiiiri)piiid, a* far ■..>

root print iplo of the BUI was concerned, no one was more

o support i rbau himself, for his expenonoeoi towns led

j wish that hi every town, not only museums but Public

Libraries were catabl - 1 . Qt the «um<? tunc the public did eionf

pu 01 Co it

witn great Buspiolon my measure that tended t<> increase tru local taxation, Uo admitted thai tho Bill would not upon the landed gentry, but it would impose an additioiiftl •s upon the agricultural labourers,

Mr. urtiouohcre llsiliei nf the present member for Northampton) said

. to tide. the same view OS tic number for Moutroso, It

uhl hi: most useful if in ovary good-sisod town a woll-oompoKed library

btahliuh'-il to whir! .d! t »• inhabitant* Imd froo ivi^.sa. H«* W*J

nion that it was of much grent^r importance that thfrc *»lionl»l l»ea

■!', than a flood Enuaeum. Noth tig, believed, could \k mora

1 - ' . i -.r thaL thoN liluiiiira would he fillod with novrlx ao.l th« worst •Le«criptioii of litornturo, or that they would be mow

r*-"*y-tA«'i'* of nemiiaparf WI« ihould rooh distrust besBtortaE&ed of th«* 4l«r?rcTion of thp town oounaus, who, he oouceiTed, oonld h* aa erusud with the iiauu^etuent of this as of other matters placed un i

Tha <| ticxt.Li.rii w.-ia of u'oiisiileral'hi iinnurtsuco, and OOO Efl ii all cla«ii« #0W iDtafOSted ; and be onft^scd did not think i!:r i Ubramv could h*ad to tho«o oonsoaucn<a-ca which sotno hou. goDtl •too oppoaod tho inoavuro, sppasrsd '.<< apprehend.

Mr id hia objootlon tii tha Kill was, that it gavo the town

il i he potfnu "t taxation without •con«ont. Moreover, then waa liko a falsn pretence in the Bill, for nl though tlm duu

rato ssfid I inly •> halfponny in tho pound, ho observed, b] hi ihird v'UiiH-, It w.v onacUxl, thai loi tbj larohaso oi land.it ihaD

lawful far the town conned, from time to time, with the approval of the 'fni-tiiv, In In now BWMJ at bltM

Mi, John Ilriyllt «iid theft) Wit* mdflatly ETttt a*'* ■inl.ini < ■•! 1m |h

side* of tho House with regard to tho nhj. i. .if the Bill, and lie hoped, therolbro. that tho Hout* wriukl Dot, on account of certain ofejaol which might Iw removed, rofueo to rend it a moo i I tun*. The n far th« Uctrtntftj rfOambri to ttfca an untMy ifronaouavisw

Of llir li.ili;.. mi- i i , whiili Wft| only iiminiri] to apply m the DOJldtng and fmriiihinjz of tl- the W>fc.i brinj; *nimlied by vuluulaiv

coutributiomt. Thore uixut W a ]ar^>> of oplaiou bofoi

nup could ho taken. The town coanaQi would not borrow £6,000 ti> bofU aKbhirj nnlM thoy mi ^ii.-ih-i r ! » -. t 1 1 1 . - wealthbr inhabitant* would tarnish booftSi would '«< wbamod of lilnu*lf snd t h«* Home ti

ho BUpiKjfu-d that it wouM ho uet'ownry to oar a word iu favour of tUc ol tho Hill. II* (Mi. Bright) woa qtriu rare that notMni would bond m >i' i.» th" proHrvfttioo of order than tho diffusion of the n fttoount of liicolliy-'ii'.-«>, nid the prevalence -i tho m< I compute, and OpCB iliiriisxion iinongMt all clsfflM, Ho WOllliI glM nfo support t> the itecoud reading.

Mr. ItoandvLl Palmer, umv Lord Selborne, expressed b dauM bhftt they were all ukiwI .i- i.. r.lio principle ol brtffl BQL He admitted

That it would be desirable to liavu good Public Libraries 10 nil towns ;

it Unit was not trm principle of this Hill. T)ir principle of this Mil n u ta.vntion without the consent of the persona tone nixed. Accord tn* In

LUr Oliootptfl of Lh" llOO, intruder for Mnii-ln sin. tills Idll win.

totally inetlicitnt for , til the purposes for which it wm to bointrcdi for the hoo. gentleman eaid, that by pawing it they did no more than enable town conned i to erect the buildings and to purchase furniture. Why, unit's?- rhf'V wr-? ii'wfN.M ol libraries and museums, what n.hm eOQQoU would be justified in Meeting building* iu anticipation fbir cliniilablo [lereoiiM would afterward* prawn t them with books and curiofiiticA ' It was ovident that the Dill was intended for ult objects, by which power* would bo priven for the jiui'chat** of book*, ami, perhaps, «>■> !m U- liifm^-up of loot are rooms. lioj fTOnld coii&idur wnll befnr* they applied to institutions of this ml Qi .

jH-im'iploB of uuhliv manafivioauU wk] coinpuliiory riling iuoload o voluntaiy rt"'* ivlf-oupportiug principle, which he coiiMdorod to U- Lho life and ecae ii co nod tlio couso of the utility of race Lnotltutloal, Chi thoeo groumln bo should uortahnly dMda againot it.

BIT, T'jiliiH'i' fXpi'rssi'd vvlmt. wuh I'Viili'iill) !n- fouling of :i IHMB«

Mik-iiiLuV jhuuIa'I' of membtra, that tho time hud not thru boon reached when the principle! "i popular control could b€ latrotluoed i:ii" aiatwra ol Dhhj kixia How B»r this rniatnirt

WBB im^ruuinlf'O h&fl hem vhovo hy fteuItA

Sir It. JI. Iiifflis, and other mombore, opposed the oc< rending.

Mi UTt, is reply, tftid that the lnttcrhon. pent lei too ■<■ to forget that this vraa merely u pcrminwivc Hill. Kovoald now u( tlmi lnl« hour go liitt Ml tho objection*! which had ! QVged Sgfiinst it, liul would only soy that oxiwtinn- iii»i-:» -i. ^ hod

be#o fomuHi i>n tin* Musi-urns A.-t, on tho principle* of ffhidi ) i

Tiir tam ;■• '" ras KWiitr mi.ii ow 1850

69

lyca. 118 | noon. 101 ; majority, IT. i >ji A[M'il 1 0th the Bill passed tnrougb I oi

earned tin.- present Dill. He would give in.1* careful con- . ition i" .ill those objections, and endeavour, if pomible, to moot tl. in, and render bftc Bui more popular.

I After .Mi- M'im v., -■! 0. Grey, and Sir Lav had addreeeed the ilivi niton, the result being tor tho second

■■

Committee, with eortein [I nasi be confessed thai the House looked bored with the

■<■:. Tin' nni nliiid- pvopoxd > .of. ire thorn was limited to <■ tearing "i -H'- and the erecting or adapting of bail

ror Public 3, and The provision from time to timed the

ol maintenance in means of :t library rate; and it wa«

oly d permisclvo measure, leaving every town to decide for

itsielf. The provision "t books was Co te matter tot future

'itlnti I.i.nl.irv :i( llii' !lUl'*fitl0T n*. :t IVKt.'d lii'falv rli.»

House i .' ::!ni':i]l> Wonders That io .vho[ilo :i n.n-niv •'imlii

have i i ppositlon. in later stage* the -mull measure

..i practicability which the B0] cani lined was, by the persistent ►orients, lessened in Committee Wheni! was •i ii ir ird (rem i ho i 'in ii mil irr ii had yei another 1 1 tal to pass, slid . i it wenl 1 1 hi my i. :i dozen ili*oussionn and six formal *ii\ l- beforc the opposition ncosed I IMmntely, when it reached Hie Lords, i i ihe ireoJtol EtwtherecUtw'y clumber It said, it was k] withuul Any uppoaltiou whatever, and, in fact, whal «;<* KiiU i:i the u 1 1 Led irhauiber was rather on the aide of furtfi i.in hi hindering the neosure. Ii ruusl be admitted, however, i.i i i- landed proprlei ra they would not have to pay the t,ix. When :t received Hie BeyulaBsent on August Utfi, 18G0.its chief dtoti.-; ae follow;—

I. wn count ii- were pern itted, I they thought it well to do oo, to put i«. iln-ii burgewen thi itiestion " Will yon linvc n . ..' for providing a l'i -lii Library/ and to i<"li i thai in ition. Tin proi>o*i i was, I i w :\ \ iin '• d o i in mi nf no) less than lO,(K)f) within the municipal Iin i the event of the ratepayers leading thai >| testion in tin. itiv._'. t i *- :-ui. bo levied vas limit.1 1 u< n halfpemrj ;" Q i |K»ii"i'i "t the rateabl* prop< rty,

[fa pro* n-'i ol any mte no IovumI whs :o he applied (I) t< -.1 of ha MiiiL"-, together with contingent expense*, if any, I >rthe te; (2) to current charges of mm nee, i. i . i a. re I i ' emp wi red to borro* i to toy on

of any citv or borough which «liall hnvo ad-M Other legislation followed, ns will be seen on referenee ;• Che

which the various -Vols will be Found. ir ; tag t.i unto that tho late Lord Hatherley (Lord

or) then Nfr W P Wood tool* the Hveltesl tnteroHl In ami «ir«* i nUtancc i<- Mr W Rwart, ni the possli

udii.i ■: i l.ilino'U*"' \v\ ol IWifi l.di-il Hatherley whs h

tbi

i Ion trinfc noi --; tlio W - .. p i! »iio Lllirorin , flro a

ad ;-! \t I <>f the Act, m l&W, by tho»e pariah/-;, until h.

.

i in uni ■<->••

Xhfl tsto W ii! i.i i M Bwart, lived to ioc omc wry h IV the eatcamo oi his work. Re died m ISUU

nan ii

ii m\ . of rin: BWAftT uii i 01 IWW.

fil

r«n ImmortnlUi i i-i marble, who ill I fai -■ foi iit»» public weaJ than has been aeeoTDnWabed Ih tin- Public Libraries' Acts, which ■,: i r a? c. tic . . loctatad with bin Dome. lit.' mu the second non d the la i- Mr EvarLmerehaab, rf Liverpool, near which dtj he vu bora m 179& The Bwnrtc are as >ld Ki kcudbrlght

i; nil.; . daUl fl ImcK lln-n i.t [070

I Ii- r;u u !i. . pd nt Kton, where he had .nuong

fellows l'r. Puaoy, Mr. Dcniean, i peat Speaker A the

..) Commons, Dr. TVowi r, Bishop of Gibraltar,

i lundunderry, and othei *. Prom Et< 1 be

•. , n i : I h, Oxford, and took his U..V degree In IfiJl,

:i!i.l hi 1827 lie waa culled to the l»tir. After leaving Oxford ho

irn in Italy, Germany, and France for the purpose

; ol ii i bo fiou i1 rioa He not only

I i very Lccompliehed linguist, bul hia fcron ! i

lira ii, librunofl I i op -\ \> I ho

I;.;, i ',■• : )i, I lOttlM I 1 1 |l ! I ;. i: ;i i nl :i - !ir;J i|-ti \ i>r| tin .i I ies and lov. ih .t- wo! endowed in

hiU !.'•■;. In ■'■ le entered Purhurnent for tho wnee i-i ..i Bl«torringU>y and voted or the first i . it toi Liverpool i nd lat< r Eor

iov pvp i in hum i toted with roe Dumfries

, which ■'.■:: xnx fn m I--I1 f«> lMttft. In the

M ! .'I I :- i i r - -. * : Ml'. !''u:i'l\ ii:ri,r rijtjii'ni'i'il VCl'V ■■-

. in ihe report a r.f ihr Parlii men I ir_\ debate* na i xpenker,

ii -■ i >ii tlra n w iirii he was in onvanCM

in. i nn i' Hurh a*! the augar duties, J'oi Free

ir, i'l id I KM tor the Repeal u the Oorn l.;i\vs. i ■'.-.- which have gone to (he very roots of i] w i i"i-l .I -i n- . lit ulvtay* exhibited .i laudable zeal *»n lie iHipuluiiuu uJ i) ir lar^H and tdvui'iitcd the opening' of public museums and :. |h M'.H \?h of M-oi k- of ;ui, it-- free from p" - < tie. lie also was among the nrsl to me of tli"- v h i ■■■ Ktcadj perseverance iii bills for the L'stuhlwhment of schools of l m;iIioh i:- very apt t<> forg< t the west blessings rue* I h -in »omc of the nmall and apparently raed l>y the House of Commons, but the ■■■ Ilium 'i'.- ;M ever he kept green faj tho

"seollonl portrait or him appears In tho middle of 1887, Mr Gladstone, h) j Pal i.' Lil i iry, paid n high tribute to hi:, me ■■

h;il Sir Jehu iJlndetono, t ic father of \Lr. m:iti ; i i>f ! i hither o1 William Kwort,

rriend'8 »on &a Chriatian names

tiis ov.ti *on, wl ■■ isticgniflhed. WiUiani

Piter monument than that ol ins noma

: i.-i in ii.,' name ->t L*ngland'fl greateat living 11 nkmg nt Swansea, snie] i

the -niy it»y of my political life, mid the iiauto

id

es

i-i i

«n« «l>om I know w*ll from my l-oyhood apn-*Td-, MS William Ewait, who putctl iho Pnt- I

lory and whoso »omo» I look back tv.it tha g

ML Thru- iv SO (lotlhl thai Mr. BWAtt, liy I

[led u[wn ii., h-i ui i

Ho *.'-■ fa r hi t.l.i-

I i «- t - :...(!..: I'uMii lufiiv.pi'i- at a very oarly (1«t> , mi 1 hi

ffhOZ I'll' I holier cT>1i<irc

hifaettfi RuntlUf tow ill— -ha wu fa thai

I'.i:l 'ny .|» pre llit'ir lim-mif A|i;nr * mul Nfl it* '■ '• ftliiili w/i- ii

v. !m'!i ■••' ;■ !• '-ived by bin in tiki fa «!:■' .n. . Ioor twfarc otn n irni f ft wUld tin1 majority wot*-) rorh»pi n< ■! m >1 ' ■■ tr«t

it »v ii - r •'■ i i-t -<f a bonevoltnt mind, md ih< -■..:]■.-■ Hum <»f lrw jiiil.viin-iiT. Notwithstanding ituJi i)!myhi i Mr. Bwart laboured Ktwwiib ■" ,!" l'-" •' lll,i "■",!l1 no* lw »m db b. . i -I' i. tbo aooeptn

f'Ui'poac ho-i

Mi. Bwiu i vu tor thi twin* Hie 1828 and 1868, when lie resiffned In Una

DtirghSi li.'ivii :; rcpn-M nt<'«l llirni h-i &W

The prote&t wTtter fai ;" i d rom Miw Ewi pi

i ottoni 'i : u i uie bu vith I" ion pi oti :: i 1 1 : of their lati father to mi I i ic in the conntry,

I TTATTKR VII. THE FIRST PUBLIC LIBRAKY UNDER THE ACT.

[|HK influence ->i Mtnchaalei on con i »• -j- ■<-, politics, and

edOOfttlOD UU 01 ■■* "'''ii ' r ■.'.-r-t'i' fane, and .

cn-ivi-t in/ rrcdifi of MuiH-ltcsIcr be i' - :i n ) thai i

i tie Aral I twn bo will Itmil nl the i nUi.- Mbrunc ol 1660, l '"ii mo] i i ■■ ni.i;. ran nnMy i»- nn Pad iml the author of Lltfi work,! ni Uvm i i thnl iltstrtrt, looks buck in.' i . ii u limr when, iw n Ins] i -

teens, in* iwed i to old CwtJii Geld Library i - i born honour to Unnchcste oi what uric lin* iloni1 for the arii im. iu of luxowledgi and noeia] progress in it-* •. Harrington tiud Mi jcuto and tloferciici Libntrj from i: : iportod Mufteum from 19 1 1, ande*

h an Actol .......

Lihriii v. and Mn- it . Ewurl VI . bul ' m loiijri il i n»dii «-i : to the Acl hi i ndinir and '■

■7-

TJi Mt kin : ill pep >'-i i

Tiirv wttt then issued rw 1 1 .. veck( cli

and Satl ;,: ■; . fh> op nin r-n n

run mm !■< mi' i.inrunv cm lr thh ah.

BS

t; place on the afternoon and even ngof Thursday, -■< |»i« i iber i - , ', and to iiu- issui -1- of Sal arday the 1th the fullest pro nm- »xj is given bo the report* of the two meeting*. Gach ■•[ the LnebeeCor papers devoted about a column bo ;i Leader "'i the

| i-vciii uliirh had i.-ik.-n pUkCS in lln'.ii- miilrit. To the

ternoon im-ri ii:.</ snmeebrjil iTilurnns are devoted, ami bha report

i>i riir Bvenin z meeting extends to between fiva and six mtumn*.

Nothing could belter demonstrate ihe signifleaiiec of tlu* eveul

estimation of the Maoeheeter press than this fur, ami

in thai 'in" to the present the "Manchester Guardian/'

Examiner and Times " and * Courier " lmu- uever nv.s'il in vm-

bile libraries their earnest and consistent advoeaoy. Tin- to ia

tlit editorial* is hopeful and Uioyont throughout, and iu

ruaiug cwefollj iin- entire fifteen column* *>i newspaper matter

issible not to be struck with th< inspiring tone which

lixed the procee'liug-A. Tin- " M.iu. heat r Guardian " in ita

itorial, remarked that "Sir John IVtter tun I hits < u.hIjuIm-.,

i ih. foundation o* the Public Library, softreery need bobeoon-

ilntvd on the brilliant ceremony which bus crowned their

boon, it bhey Ecel towards the nnaoeni institution as towards

irnotur.ii "tT>rrin^ Mn-y i : i i s i have some satisfaction in rcflcet-

:i more successful christening never ushered into bhe

odd n favourite of fortuno. No good tuns was absent from

fcntal boardj nor, we firmly trust ana believo* did anv

t genius alip in uninvited to mar 1 1 * ** destiny whian

many powerc Elad contributed to reader perfeot. In our age

i:itiv few undertakings have been laimched under more

t or \:iri«.l :mspi.'4'K.' Then then- lirilovi later cum tho i Qoce '.i rds, bo pregnant with hope and foresight : " To hot ratal fields ol mental end moral elevation, Indrvubud and avenue was opened for our teeming population <m that v never, ars trust, to be shut to the poorest of our fellow- bo long as BCaneheKUT ho» an existencv nrnl .1 name." years &he doors have been open to t* i-* very ml through nil time to come, as far as obi can be ojmanly certain, fcliey will remain an open portal for the long . i ^.-n.- itlona in mllow. La the time approached ror the opening ceremony the interest Khe uiijcri increased, subscriptions were multiplied, and morons were the ipphcations for tickets, \ more brlllianl and

l.i'lli- -iu.il ,i.-.M'!]ilil;ii',« was seldom seen tliuii thai Which filled

tv nook and cranny of the reference room of the Oampfteld pliers the meetings were held. The lending library m

: id Hour was 'p«-iuM.i il> ;i ictvption room, At a quarter ■en .i.tn. the principal gncnts came upon the platfoi u, ; with loud applause, Op the chairman's i; i ;u i Mayor of Manchester, the Bi&ac i i Bufwci Lytton, Bart., M.P..R. Monckton :i,r [afterwards Lord Houghton), w, Makepeace lv, .John Hright. M.l'.. ''harlca fought, James I'lossley, 1 M. Robs, To the left of the ehairmun were— the Earl of

<-.!

PUBLH JBttAJU 9

Shafted | ., , > I,,,. |. ;,-i ,i w ,1,.,. Dickon^ Sir I

Stepl Jo*eph Hrotherton, M.P .1 x Turner, tteavurex oJ tho

i'i.m.- 1 ibri ■■■ Kttnd Sir K \ mttago and Diomafl ftudty IV

whole* of thoBC hiiVe nOW pMWfMl "ViM- tO the n :ijonlv, 0U1 UM

movement whose birth the* were celebrating 1* dootUM

tti\ i-l. i|»i- Iltr rlililr PiMintPy liV llic ':i;i il:.

mitnfl QtuDM round.

The entire ri iry oJ tin-so two meatlngn in »-» full of tnteres bears retelling au well thai the Indulgence of (in- m ho

asked r the detail* seem wearisome "Hie chairman Aral :: raporl of the hlstorj if tho Institution, Thto occop etl 1

"I miju .1 1 \ |»c i 1 ill- 1 •: ivpuitv h. I h Ml 1

a rata 1 wat ■■' I on fool for Lite (BtabHshincnl of 1 Ub r.ui ,1- ii wan Hie eepecfaJ objeel ol the pr tera u< proYfoc

inr.ui> for thO Hint,:! ciillinr .in<i Him i! CleVHtioil Of UlC lU'llSMi- .llnl V, 'rk|n-M|il.-. \\!:.- ; . .] )li|)(H hllll .111 rli.-iiir

such a ooaununity .■- Manchester, it was hud dowi ,

in. 1 l;il bSBSfl Of th< ■- ■Ih-iim-11Ii:i( \i (llOOld include B FTC* l.mtliuj;

Library, &n Institution up to that time without example In count! v. In rapport of thin ohject twenty-nix t< iw leuaen mjI- Beribed. either for thcmecl tea or for thi tr respective Arms, the man of C100 each.

Tho baUdinp :it Campfield hod oarly boon pointe 1 1 I .. well ndnptod to the oonton plated purpose. It had originally been built by thi w rking eloasoA with om outlay exceeding £ft,000, 1 mi 1 iln then existing elretunstoneoii tho 1 ntcroated worowilliD dispose of it for £1,^00, SirOewol Motdoy owned n ehiel itpnn it of tH Us. por annum, winch wax estimated bo be worth twenty-four yoara purehaae, or about £$£00. That gentleman! on being informed o1 the purpose to which it was intondi devote the building, expressed his cordial approval, and m that he should value toe eluef I'pnr at twenty yeare' £1,826, and should fni'tli^r t«>'-iit'\ Mi'- goodwill to the |>r<>jei I by reterning one-half *"ii ihn piivoi ■"■■! -- ••<! tniHituxn tottu fond. In January, Iftfil, the first appeal was made to tho pub!

iii-h|ht iht i: itu I mppOrt, I':nlii'iil:tiv ;,\ to lln' timnuWnn *.! the

Mhrary t\u-n follow. Tho spcocli of the chairman, Sir John Potter,

Aral after the recital of the partleuUrR by tho ■•■ Thp mayor, Robert Barnes, who won* hi* ennui and badge ,i! ffflcf. followed Tiic Earl of Bhaftesburj - Rh€ good eart— eaidt—

In riirinp to propose tea Ant rwoltition, I mojl defend rnyaoir tg Ilio iiPCiliftblf charge, that, an a stTBiiger. ui'l 1:1.- uTinci'ti'd will; y>ii 1 i \. I prctouna (.'> obirude myaelf upon Lie notloe of this niotHin^r. 1 \ 1 R-ftoiution whicli I ain called upon to ruovn, cxprcaars : " That tluo in« witiifssoj with gre*t Natisfaotion thu oponing o«romonial of the ' dierter l'nhjio Liltrar)*, and durinti to axpTQSl '- mtire coolidoui^ tba 1 1 1 1 tttetion will eifcrt gcrnt ami lantin^ ^nod to tho coraoinnlty fbt KOtH'iiilioiir. lui-uiiu'." Thoru will !»■ .1 <ii lnjull v in ubuiniii^ jnnr cor- curreiice to this resolution, aud tliere "ill lio iu IiitJ« cliOlculty in allowing to the hy atandera and the world tho largo and local Vncl'ts that will

ri I, [. -:ih;auv rvi>KR THI'. ACT, &J

loin ihii iiiftiuiidOB Hut we muat go further than local benefits ; and elluw me to observe that in thane day* of punmit of exiuteweut, in th«M day* »f novel projects end restless inqu&y, En these day* of soonler- atnl prdj'n\Hs, vrnsn time And space MSfil alrruwr. BCtlnOt }'"" ar* preparing hereby an antidote to mischief* thai un^ld likowiae Arise, ami hetting en \(, may be imitated ; audio laving down a principle of uni reran! application, yon assert that the true cud of com moron ia to make the sMMoitiiM or the oouutry mbaement *o it* civilization, and then ite

--.tinti subservient to the tofial and moral amelioration of tlip whole family of mm. N«ik, *ir win, m ttlBSG days will presume to ntifetlnn the

! rowing mporUnoa -i uu man of commerce ami industry* Thsj lo , ■> before, limine for a fcime, and then become absorbed in the grritt maw of proprietors. Thoy now stand apart, upon a aoparato and lude-

tptident. r.naie, and claim lo be beard as e<iua1 to the boat in patriotism, i principle, and In Intellectual power. Our institutions Ood beprniaed I <nn we!! bear this demand. . . . You have founded this great And

florSoui institution, large, liberal, and cosmopolite ; and fiom my heart, vvt. iiiiy fjod prosper it to the pnrjioao to which it woa intended ; and In tho pursuit of wealth, and in the duties of rommoree, in tbo virtue, and in tin- rjD«£nUDfBO0 of ©very sound and gi'oat "iay you, I any, thereby sanctify the pr>sw*sion nnd enjoyment

m ridies, ;ind iiniv yon enjoy fur yourselves, and transmit to those

who ii hfttt you, lb', ciri/.i ii&iiiu of a crowning city. "w!m«

merchant* are princoa, ami whoso traffickers arc the honourable of the rarrb,' Ih.-refot'-. urn hmrtlolt ntisfootioOi I propose, the rotolution I have bad the honour to rend to you.

Brtvard Bulwer 1-yttoDj m.r, spoko u follows:—

In rieuruf to second the proposition WfilOb ha* been platwl before you in

•uoh eloquent ami touching tonus, 1 am reminded that there wu once a

i^int, who, having raised himself to a rank in tho eyes of

rfi) Iwyond thai i*f oixl i nary princes, desired ulso to luise the whole

<law which liu ennobled in the scale of intellectual nobility, and wan the

first to institute libraries for the people in the rural districts of Scotland

That peaeant wai Robert Hums tho poet, and when I Look around this

noble- hall and this Urge assembly ; whan I know that behind me Arc ( !•>•

aonl rffaattOM that come from the palaces of your kings : when 1 see that

q tnej i* one of our most reverend dignitaries uf the church ; wheu I

■c* be] he rflpros«rilativcs of aome of the loftiest houses of our

aristocracy ; and when 1 look upon cither aide and know that you bavo

present alto the representativec of the orders of literature aud art ; and

win n fan me nrul sen an array that I eon few* awes and dazzles

m men '.run k!1, composed of those woo Are never absent where $;ima1 ia

b> V done. I own I do wish thuL Burue could have foreseen what msnl-

loence you hare pven to bin idea, . . . But, ^uUomon, education does

net ceeeo when wo leave aohool ; education rightly considered is tho work

of a life, and libraries aro the aohool hnoka of grnwn up num. 1 wr«

touohed when the other day I wa* taken by Sir Elkanah

;nil niusaum at Tcel Park, which. 1 believe,

owe*** much to Mr. Brotbertou ue this library owes to Sir John Totter.

I km moved «nd affected when 1 saw *<» many inteUigflAt young facce

teeit OTtr bookl with each ear neat attention ; and when I felt, what

Mn> old RnglLth KOltemont <^f tho alc- h«»* and il

:■• ni.i MSB

ran nunc Chariot Dtckefil ;—

1 have kcu so uiui)' references made in newspaper*, in pajliamcnury detains aod elsewhere to the "Menoheoter School, that ! have loaf had a con«idcrahln anxiaty to know what that phra.uo tnight mean, ana whaL the " MmOOhvtat BobOOl " Blight bn. My natm-el curiosity on this head lia* not b*U diminished l»y Efac wry contradictory acr-mint* I have ii" ivni rt*|wctiiiR that same " school ; " some great authorities a* i rue tust it was a verj good uuc, »ouit thai iL was a reiy had one . tint it was very broad and comprehensive, some that it very narrow tail limited ; some that it was all .-ant, ami some that it wee all OOl >•■..<-. ln<lio» and gentlemen, I have solved this ditrioulty br finding ben today that The " UaofihMtST School " is ft great, free an lino 1, hunt on , i mug iimLruuliciD to On- poorest healths. It is thU great frc* school in v King the humblest workman to come in ami he Us student ; this great five school, most munificently endowed by voluntary subscription in aii incredibly short space of time starting upon its glorious career with 20,000 volumes of books— knowing no sect, no party, no distinction—

knowing hilt the public Want Anu thfl ftflbllo good. Henceforth thi«

boUdlng shall represent to ui« the ' Manchester School/1 *nd I pray to

][r;i\L'ij, DOnOTor, thai imiuy great towns and cities, and many high authorities may go to school a little in the Manchester seuiiiiarv, and profit by * iw: Dobla lesson that it teaches. . . , I hove long boon, in my sphere, a leal on 8 advocate for the diflimoii of knowledge among all elaseea and conditions of men ; heesuse 1 do believe, with ill the strength and talA : with which I am capable of bojicvirtg anything, Hint the more a man known, the more humbly and with a more faithful spirit he cornet* back to the Fountain uf all knowledge, and takes to his heart tlio great sacred prtceDt, " On earth peace, goodwill towards men I"

Willuiin DtnkepeOG6 Thackeray stakl:—

Sun will see that in seconding this resolution, iny trouble need hut b* hiuaII. Of oouree, amongat the many tanitary aud social reforms which t.very men in tor sated in the public welfare ui now anxious to push forward, the great ntfaSOTeof books will not he neglected ; and w^looV to thos« rut much an wo look to air. <*r to lijjln. «r m witter. If hook.- do motho. cheer, and console; if hooks do enlighten, enliven, and fortify ; n' <\d make Rom w bearable to UB, or touch us to forgot or to endure it . if they do nrente in us harm lea* tears or happy laughter, if thoy do I

t . pa in da that peace and that feeling of goodwill of which Mr. L)i spoke, ,ind whirr anybody who hs<i read his tH>oks must have felt ha« mtiu from them surely we will not grudge these estimable bl easing! to the poorest uf our friends, but will try with all our might to dia lit. k ..heap but precious benefits over all, Of educated niochoiii course, it is not my bufiinetfi to speak, or ovoi my wish to protend to bo an LnitrUOtOT. Those who know the educated mechanics of this vast I this empire, srn aware that thoy am in the hahit of debating the greatest literary and political tiueslioiis iimoiigst themselves; that they leisure li> lluiiK, and talent to -pink, much yrentui than Ihat of man WnC BOflnctlnua an obliged to Appeal for a moment before von. Thfj ha\« thoir poets and thoir I'iiilo.n-pli.r-. The character of their education fa vary much ehanged from that of oue hundred years ago, whon, if jrou remember, HofSlth Npresented the evil mechanic as occupiml with riundi- :. mid the good mechanic as luring arrived at the reading of the stoarj ttf the good apprentice, who wi> iiuide Lord Mayor of London. The

trr rum prit:.. r.rmtAnv iamsr vhv act.

.17

inTiiVi nt our ilty liavt goi tl>n r ( arlyli bo raid, their TMolcensc* on

half, ami their Bttlweri by thofl aide. It i* only to tin I ri

(g -Iiot the resolution which wo luvn l*:ioi.- U

4ji|ilirM, I am nurc that JCO Wul UM all your endeavours to tm»ot the

purpoaee for which it woe- intended, and to carry the •■ontontn of your

noble volume* into tba eottftflet, garret*, and eellan I am awai'i',

Sim h men. that in so vast n collection, the sort of work* which I am In e habit of writing can occupy but a very soinll space. I know that qui uotvIs ar«: bat whal w.: may call tart* for the people. Ilicto/y ia bread, aiiil science ii bread, and historical and epiritua) truth form that upon eh li'v must 1"--<I. But, a* one knows, that whoa evory fresh book written, * n«* deain springs op for better and better reading. I fee] rhot your attempt to improve and iterate the condition of the working eluaica of the ■••'iiiimimlY will bt cruwucd with sucee*.-..

1 I'" lessor of Modern History at Cambridge,

rnoredi "Thai In the It for< i ct Library this meeting hail* with

iboxc i. provision fur the vrante ol the scholar and

i i.k-ni »r vwry clam, and in most branches aJ liu-minn-,

i e, i ul art . and records its firm expectation thut, hy a con*

mace "I liberal aid, this department ot the institution will

ri i ]■!"< ii ictual information and improvement."

In tin oourft '( hft speech, Sir Jamas sold;

K*VV« are liriug at a time wlim it in not permitted to any uisn tn with- Id tbe littlf which it may br in his rawer lo contribute tomttdfl the mih -iRiit ■«( such oigoetfl a** tliiM, l'hteo mighty discoveries them- juigit inventions, these gigantic revolutions, tlieao uuhenrd-ot miffrt- tbGM heaving* of tli*1 lower strata of human society-— the increasing p-Af«r of the popular voice, —all tliunu tiling testify that we have reached lonipliaumeiitofthe prophoov of the time when ' : man shall run to and (Vc, ami Knowltdgo be increased." We are, therefore, approaching a gnat I and catastrophe of human ahTaira. To approach Buob n orieU and tropho in the right spirit, it behove* us all to do oar bttVL S*OT . donti your best . you ' avo erected thm temple el knowledge in the of a multitude whom now, ts we havo heard, we regard with con*. i-i-i ■■ mi in. Kin. bul tfhoai altered circa instances might cause to vita othorand difforant feelings. The future, however, bio thr boLi» of Him who niloa us all ; on? businaaa is with the present hour, in I - '.-at duty.

i: hi p< ^ >nokton Milnes, U.P., said he remembered, not with- tamo, U iv* many "i the elans to whioh ho belonged poueSB noii^rniri' vni i*<*|K>a1l friea ol ttookaof which hardly a vohrme avax

n< od ii'diii tin1 nholvea " lint let me," he wont on to say,

ilato yon on having n population which can rend the

, ,: s . . 1 1 hurt* gutlnM-«'d, let mo congrntuhite you Ilial llio

lrpoars ot t i library uro noi Umltad i*> y^' own Ubdralil^,

i|n\ rc;irli ut oner with tnimpot-voico the inroll'i-

. ,-.,: ..1 III.' (MKtH'm «tf till* [H'U[ll«' ul MMIH'lu'sI'T "

i i ii Bright, M. ' . whs ii Ium heHi vein, as will In* Keen :-^

TIk labia* if V Aot wu a very iuaiiieiviit and inuomplnt. niouwirn. Ho

v»s in ViLi-Uament at the time, and wiw the dilKcnltlex which Mr. Kwart

o»d Ur. BfOt barton, the nAreuta of the mewnre, Imd to pass it through

rTeoav It way an extraordinary fact that the opnosit\oi\ cahw

OH PT»M. IIHRARIIS

almost ontrrely fr-un that «■!• "f ***** Hetet which was oompoard of (-..uiiiiv jpmtumen.a groat portion of them, no doubt, having had *n ■'iliK-Aiion At on* of our tern* l imi\. Those jpmUeiunn oppeiiedthe

lateen l thai Uion ncr* certain tra mUftol

the corporation included corUin j+jrirultural districts, and thai ii would BOt 1 1 d [■dVltom * proper thine to *dd to tho " burden* on land " by

I Lhl Hill. Ho wa* »uro that no class, whether connects agrbaltOfl «r with inniiuf»<'tnrw, could iHtptUB with mioh an UMtru- - iin ritbiii r.ihreiy aflbrded w Uu people; end thai 11

would bo hot tar for tho country if eTery manufacturing *ui<l agricultural iabuurc.*. every manufacturing nT'itol'ot, and every farniar, «wm well read and uuouetot) in til Uu branehoa which were accumibl* in this library IK.ptiUiMu of Manchester.

Qharloi Knight, who «iid ao ranch In tho prorfc bag crl cheap literature for tho people, moved, "That

Matjdl of thifl inr.1i!i:i. r i >i i -■ * 1 v ■!<• .in- that the c\nruplc

now given nuiy bo fed lowed by tho establishment of tlmuftx UbrtUTM in fin- populous cities ana towns of the United B Then later IB he soid:

HfiSt ■.imori'ly mi it (n be prayed lh*t this example might bo followed ; but ho p.. i I - 1 nr.t refrain from -viirc«iting Mb conviction that tho timo was not fai distant wbcu it wuuU no aaiversally (61 lowed, anil when the populous cities and townn of thfa kingdom would rival (hi- siatefn! BXample. . - Out of thin library tlicro must, grow aO UteaUgeaoc that would go forth throughout tlie country to exilian tea *nd to lor it Was perfectly clear that, amongst tho groat body of won who worked mi the factories, tit ore lunar, bo men who wore anxious enlttvato xomr pertlpular punttlt, In which limy might uue day attain to "^ntflfta,

A few other speakers followed, and a working re I 'umimgham, hoped thai Mr. John Bright would see there through tills "halfpenny luit4-.li" referring m the limit of n rralfr* pate in the Ewarl Bill, ami which was afterwards removed by the Bill of L60JI

Thette were? the leading speeches at the afternoon meeting. At the more public meeting in the evening, the Earl of Sbaftaflhiin a^rain SpQaO, ami SO »li<l Mr. Thackeray, and an Incident occurred

in connection with the speech of the able and pore-minded author just named which should nol be allowed to be forgo reflecting a* it does the greatest credit upon the seustl ivi

p itn. ii.mii of | is writer of * Vanity Fair " and " Esmond " IhoK- whn lutM .iMtl his speech at the y.-Mii-nu^ earlier In the tlnv cannot fail to have been struck with the tone vi dignity and the- earnest hope! dnosfl which pervaded it. In the ?\- the vista of popular libraries being c*taMishod all a fcli D nantry and the educational and elevating influences n weald necessarily flow from the extension of tin. movement, nrei oame Mr. ThaokeT y, and he olnuptly Bat down in the umldle of ,ui inc'impleiod ^onN'm-e, much U> tho eurpriae of the audience, who cheered him when tlie words he was uttering came I sudden atop. After learning of the incident, mv respect for the memory of this genial and good mon was greatly enhanced. It

TH» riBST I'l KIIC i.JM«AHY I SI>ICR r II K l< 1.

,;i

doi Hie lack of words lootracb m M Hbci oo the Mglily-

-rasitivf man, on the opening out of this dc^ m.:.. in Kngland'a educational history, The Manchester papem make no mention of this incident. And not only Ibaokeraj all who lift ui» Lln'ir voice En publlo, nave al boi io period ol i lu-ir ■■■ to be grateful U the kindly charity of the Freae,

Lt..i'..iuy hi : i*ili::. on Mi- inauguration uf Public Libraries

i red also in "The Times," ft Athena-urn," " Illustrated

.<>n News," and other papers; but at a distance of bhirty-

eijtht yean we have yet to ttei En] j real ted thcee tnetftatfonj

.- pari of om national tnstatutloiie. One of the pnpera

just named made use of the following language, and were it not

very ecrtuin that it was in 1863 when it waa flret pril tod, we

,i i ir disponed to rub our eyes and sci* if it was - »l tfday

when jt actually appeared* Ihe writer aye : " In an age when

Public Libraricfl hare become necessary, wboi the love uf hooka

is daily spreading wider and wider in Moiety, tlio li i

is 16 much i legitimate business as unv other* It,

Ic'it, il- '• 'Hie;; ;i i < - ('oil, wlit-llur, ills! e;t<l <»1 l/iiijI" | Fl'00

brary to borrow, the wonrintf man and the cottager, u wall

'! j ivr |»>rlioiN "i the middle-classes, would not purchase

, if justice were in this respect done to their producers,

nth an international copyright, and untaxed paper asd advwtJee-

menu, the literary j/euiua of this age would Bad itt money

rewardfoom the public oi its- own md other States. I wouM

eeeeo. to a great extent, to bo indwrtreeaand in difficultly md I t>e as well paid by the sale of its commodities as the ruanu- c&n •>: Manchester in the production and sale <>i thelra Rxpi •: molca d< not suit the multitude of readers. Books

must be made cheap ere they can be made accessible to the

the wnrlcship. Ky n":l menus ler our towns and dtfeti

have riirii- Public Libraries \ but, at the same time, let eahave Rree i ore Tin- two objects are an far from being I leompatttile, tlint the eeoond In reality includes all cha advantages of the flint, villi many others of Its own The ' million ' require cheap books us well as cheap bread. If they cannot gut cheap good hooka i'i'' >\ ill have cheap bad ones "

itioo of the Public Ubrary Movement, graced a* it washy the presence and active aid of several of the

i liora of Llie day. whose reputatR'U* ^iiiii lustre

il dj i uioh so the years rece h . wae an event to "huh

i) well ook back Upon that occasion the readers and

Mukcr5 o! books »trii) l t.i -t- to face, Manchester, the city id

nameroua industries and well-dlstr touted wealth, declared witb

H.v appreciated the uses and I i igaof

U , and desired U extend thorn i>. nil classes of her

peopl- . edged literatu o to be ^ powei in Qn

' lovernmcnt then practically denied .wl( 1^. . Bifr. Vlexander Ireland, a Muuchcttcr worthy "! I »< Brsi water, a tdciutilc literacy i"lc, ic-of the very few .nil living

7«!

i ' Rl i' 'T OB A RIP*

ofcan lotivo pan hi the prom crw movement, and

fratutatcd, aol only on the purl he than t K)k

-n ii loi II i i public usefulness. \nothi -man who

! i- h| :ll || Al "■! i l>'\ WOOtJ, .1.!'..

wild imii remwobwn the maeUrn? Ft (h inmoeslbl' for i M»n.

(■hearer man in !**- 1 i\iin tYnii ■_»■ >inir ImeU, In meatiny, n premise* In wlneli II:. ii inci'llii).' w.i:. Iii'l.l i hnflill im.

toolbar mm, hut vbdeh deserves « tablet placedup aenrd

it* history n-> Hi" onuUe of i new nuoiu] mi cement wluch will yet spread Kelt orer U e entire length and breadth of the land

ll'iw much wo owi 10 of theao appaj

tmportonl hoi ""■ "1 reform, which buve, through much difficulty, been pieced 021 Hie Statute-book, will never, perhap*, 1* fully recognized, hue so Tar a* this movement la concerned, we woaU scatter a handful of lowers over the graves of Ewarl, Potter, DrothertoD, Edwards, Shaftesbury, 1S1 ighl . 1 liokena. Thackeray, and Lyttou ; and ae the movement gains nev Life* euia in fas: enveloping the entire country, we would thus call to miud the 1 eraory of those who struck this uew vein in tV nation'i ;u id gave the Drat Impetus to a cause h Might with blesatnjE for bh« 1 ommon weal.

CHAPTER VIII.

HOW TO BRING ABOUT THE ADOPTION OP

THE AOTB.

JT is ;i healthy and liappy eharacteristi "I public life in Ibis country that, in the midst (if political controversies whli b gu down to the very roots ui our national exjsten© unity, our Btutesim-n (if nil partus .ire looked upon as 11 < -u of light and leading whose views on subject* "I" general ami aon-politlcal interest are entitled at all times to reevoclful bearing and attention. Aa .1 people we light »toutXi and vigorously when political issues are at stake . but even while the battle ragefl mow fiercely we are always ready U lay down tie weapons of political warfare and to listen paticnl j ai rt ped 1 ui It ■•> men who have earned the right to speak with authorH tuples \>i common social interest. This is a trait in our natj charactor which cannot be too highly valued, and we may well be proud of it. Life, and especially public life, would son '< 1 worth having l tnorcwere no questions or movement** uffc the oomxn m weal of the people in whfel those <>f nil b1 ol political and religious opinion could stand together, and wodi shoulder to shoulder for the achieving erf agrvex purpose Ear the

g i al the whole local community Tin.- characteristic u\ \

will, fffoatost loive wlien it i- lu^u-iit in ;li<- teat tA movement* tike tli- '!i<- now '...Mil*- it.lv.t.-at.'il. Th-iv is 111 l-.iot. 11- effort lor

ii- public g t which eonld be commenced in any distri

capable oi effectually welding the eyrapathie* and sotlvltl holding "ii -; ui politics and religion ai the 1

HOW FQ IMilNr. ABOUT THK AI'Ol'TION Of 7)1 K ■. < i

»• .1

fl<M ami Fit Kviry town mid every rural district ought to

bi Public Library ud reading-room ; and Instead ofe paltry D odd "i these msbTtutrona In forty pears time, the number

h next ten Years should be more than doubled

i.i-i ii be said with Borrow however, thai In scans teae* Etui

.vriiifiii hmheon lefaated not i \ the indifference of the majority

tin1 people bur Ire the utrenuoua opposition of those possessing

elKftflod l>ookshelTOB ol Ihdr own, and to whom the pentrj rate

rilt) i 16 ii -i'i'\ Mi.- nu'i-i'sl trinV. In nn( a \<<* tW8tS fliM'gvlilcn

id other leaders tn i* ■= » 1 opinion have so damned tlia movement

.! i.l i i praise, if bhej have ant kepi altogethei eUooJ from I , i;ii failure has attended Hie efforts nude. Conridering those

- md the ye iri ol Igftatlon which have been ncawsary in

me towns, 16 is of vital naceasifcy that the subject should be •-■n nj> onl\ by those prepared <<> meet with bitter opposition, tit to vigorous^ maintain their riewa, The British ratepayer rci s often a tough customer. The sent ol" sensitiTCJieSJi is the brous p< i k< i. and in every district h<' ha.-, tin- impression that . J, and tl <■ Ic.i-st hint of any iiu'i'.'a.se in that direc- tion brings paterfamilias up In arms directly make haste alowlj should, therefore, bo the motto of ill friends oi bbemcTo- m\ The more the question i-* di.seiuwe-i, the more friendfl the ement gains ; so that the Fullest publicity should l-« courted irkod. In one year there haYe boon twelve refusals t- i adopt the Acts, and this i.-« a fact patent enough to prove tliat the adoption of the Acts i* oot easily brought aboub.

Bel re paosfcng to the more important section of this chapter

there i* a matter of vital interest to this movement to whii'h ii

will be here opportune to direct attention. The present writer

mo Orel i" launeh, severtu years ago, the suggestion that the

-o to (iceide thisqucstion should beabolishod, and many

<tr- have been von over to this view of the aubject. All are

agreed that the various Aets as they stand are a conglomeration

vl jihrawes, ^onrn&iun worse confounded. Bven lawyen them-

wivi>fc t\>> not understand them, or interpret them in dlffereni

. as has been the case in some noted instances. The ground

for the bringing forward ol n Consolidation

i ;ii.:i which librarians anil the frk'inl>- >i thiK inovi.'!ii*.Mit. -.hall

rived For the present, counsels arc somewhat divided and

ir:iifiiT\ f.»r ;: in r ml fi:ll tiis.nwmon

whole subjeel This quest Ion Is more fully discussed imder

i ipter -.n the l.i'yul \spectK,

The more, iiowevci-. that tin present writer nonsWera the

Hon ol the Pi pnlnr Vote the more is he convinced that the

■mem will never miike the; progress which it ought to do until

i el operation is altered, md the power ii» adopt the

[il.icxl wiih i in- " <\ "i r,;7 hndy. This is, of course, tile one

ptvoi :i|hui which iiu- whole movement, as Ii Is at present

i ■■ . !■ li til i i* imii! ]»rrlia|M whiclM'onfenis the novo-

UCUl mon hfl I il in llhninjin>. Jinluiuy roni the fnrty yt i

rienei! ul lie popular vote It eaunot be wild to have hem u*

.:' pt-SLic unaABUB.

ooaeful na the tout friends vt theflrrt BUI hoped would auto. In many districts where tho adoption hi then

hiifr boon mi appnllinjr amount of apntny and indifference, and the question haft been ultrmatelj carried by 5ie fow H ho have advocated

dm m im -ii ■'. Bnoeethey have l qoi bled to gather iromi I them.

Proqas il I3 not one m ton ot the ntannws naa voted v hoi

method hi* been bj votU ESQ oases when* it hU

been settled by statutory meeting there baa been, an even worso

effdeoeo of ton want of foteresi [n the movement b

town in England, within ttiol isr yenr <i

a!1 told fiifty souls, carried rh-* adoption of tho Public Lib]

Act*. And when this dead level of EheBtatflb >;, meeting hasbe*Ti

reached H wrelj time to abolish either this raei thatcd

voting papers for eetr.Hng the question.

Those who are not friendly to this innrement will at on» tliat this hick of local interest is a proof the people do not want ii" ml- libraries. But Uiia is not so, arid repeatedly the vi who have shown the mosl iiidi lave been he

their Public Library when i( boa been opened. The c&usi deeper down than the absence, in some quarters, of a desire for libraries. Our local imtiuiial life m ! the sewnc uf citizenship . k

nidy fust beginning ro take root, and on many aides when (pieetlon comae up for self lemon there i^ a much versal interest in thesuccesa of the efforts than been before^

lHit the time has arrived when tho accredited repreaental h tbfl peoplei the local governing body, ought be safely left t>

charge of Ehia q lestioo. Through them their conebituenu) would still have a voice in the decision. Surely if these rcj re may he trusted in the expenditure of larger sumo and the j> to impose Infinitely greater inor* aee© in the rates than the fo penny, they mil; lit be 1 runted withlhi* imcetiou, which is so close to the welfare of the ontire ilistriot. Tli*. pop Can he resorted to on so tow questions that to make it totter to Public Libraries eeeina unwise, unnecessary, and . n pohtie. This argument ie strengthened by the fact ot the I meal Instruction Act of J88U giving the power to tho rover authority to levy a rate not exceeding a penny in the pou DOt first obtaining the consent of the people.

A* already stated, the constituents would still bavs S I through their representatives. And there is no fear Councils, Local Boards, an< >ther governing bodies would rtu

rjge body throughout the jountry to ea Mo- lets within themselves, Representatives are too aim] jii-ousinj^ tin? Miitagnnlam of their constituent.* by the imi 1 an extra penny on the rules to do any such thing. They know full

well that out <>r doors every vote they give ror the Increase of looal taxation brings upon them OMoojuy and misrepresent! r.ai the Doin Is thai the elected representatives ol 1) 1 [wopl in educational mat iu« especially be trusted, mji< boiuentaJ

ii'lvjucciiMiii of tic people narelMonj md iiiggardly cconnm]

HOW 7.. RUtXU *nnl I II. r I . II uoY OP TUF. ACTS.

::;

ii.ns n v. i - h ihrv can beexerdsed. Kxtra- axpeodrture ire Dot suggested, and ir should ill ays be seen that the people get Lr»>"<l value for the public i neai latin i u In > ther direction*. 8tlll our economical

irisncias have began al the « n ind when tUv ire inpllAd education*] mutters. Tin- em ig u .1 turned ujh n the Mgbtfo]

E

coBt vrhi< . drink, and self-made poTertj Infltal upon ur»

mould have long before thin Lppreoiable savina in those

'i ^' there Would now bu mure to upend nu educational

One vi thr elitof objectiona again pnhu I itoll the ooat

of tsAouu the poll. This mean* k KM LB (UBtrlcCB an outlay of

rvernl Qnudreo pounds, In tact, where vomit pupi-ra .u<

reared and collected bi band alniu&t the whule t the machinery

at a i nun f-.il election has to lie Pet iu operation. It

eafc to say that iu many <Iistricta the local public money which

ii'.,.vi'C<l \zi taking tlic wfte would so ■« totj Long waj tow

atocUi",* b ii'i n'v. It i- possible that returning officer:* will

Oppoj roy with the popular vote because the question of

few in not by any mesne u anmll oik. Hut tlic ratflpayen whose

i pay those foes should consider whsthi I

Hcpandlturs in taking a ] >pular rotoi rei llj aom i wry

Another cbiection is that in the taking of the popular vote the

ibh'oana ind >ther raise Eriends of the people have it in bholr

defeat th< movement ir*w >ftei this attempt at populax

ittafha* bean Strang! I oe & Co it U lamentable to

. oonsidai This proline rJaeaoi society seonm to mi-- and

utmost every department of our national and local life

directly or indirectly. There in u cnu-,tui t drum upon public

o pay the depredaf ions upon society created by the ravages

trade- And when an attempt it* made to promote

i ratio*, museum*, education generally \>-.iyV -. mid other advnn-

for the people, up Bl irt the publicans and block the way

bam i o! i r Thai there i re ionae respectable rnernbi hi

trade ifl acfcnow lodged . but :t Is sufficiently clear how often this I'll I c Library movement ha« been defeated solely by the eflt. r-ullem to cause nil thoughtful people to seriously

notneder the fuel or tlmt this trndc is in our nut ion Ml life.

ii" i'|r,'(iiMiM;r. road making, pOOT bu>. :in<l

po4ii< . there l* no popular voting The local \t< lerntng bo*h has

.il with Lhcse and other affairs Whj should the

line ue any lonvi'i1 di-avMi ttt Public Libraries mid museums? The

William Ewartcuuldgel his BUI through the (louse

erf the pennisaivy clause. 81111 from the

■m, tu the present there has been a

sufficient test of tlje popular vote, and we should, as a nation,

hare now groim beyond that ftlage.

■in . hi im::! are | th< '-""'i of il" wholt district, and

tion •■ it, the powor cai with safety be entrusted to

lecti .1 i-> popular m t*-. Thcac i usted

k a: the question from every standpi int. The mere i.i- 1 of

it her

JVfcUC I.UI1UKCIS.

Its being i i uii i teal qneBtSonal the polls would be ;i dial i.. i! i moromei t, for then the constftocueles would hear kj i ..m. m one 14c &ad or he other tli uld be m\ ell<

b about the rubject. rh< popular vote would thtw ren it i* only changing ii* field "I a> tion Thia ia n ii.ii ;< r which may irged apoo the attention of all who &k ui interval u mea i. Tito aaiu would be y \ t. There would be :■ m i •■> -.. I c .-.. '■■>■«*, and ii better way ol i cnrto4nin# tbo tool wish of the people; and t)io mftuenccj t present brought t> bear in opposing tho adoption of the Act* would b< minimised i- hi aoaoontratcd in one partirular direction, l"h*rc w< uld u

In- :iii top itUi in thl RUSDbor Of ftdOpMo&A Ol tli«' Art- . Ofl it

down tho ground t" coror. Hut tin* i pro i'<-rtivo, and wo bsvc bo deal with the Act* as tho? stand oJ Qua oat [April, 1800), and these otearly defino that until they are repealed, the popular vote, either m meeting ■»■ by means o! voting papers, shall boadi-p'i i loquontly similar methods which nave produced -■■■■■—- m the past arc ealoulated to ignin linvc tbo Bame effect lnr-t md raremosl n th< very front rank <>i influence* Likely t<i aid in i iy district desirous of starting the movement m that <•* the

Press' The Fourth E»tatrlr:is ln-i'iiinc ^nirivat a I ir i J iglish

life, tlmt my public effort which leaves oul La the cold, or pre- fcendfl to '!•» -". the local newspapers, in almost sure, from the very first, to be doomed to failure. And if propi iatnr* mil wl i it newsaupertt can l«* made friends of the cause, an«1 U* prevailed upon r > treat the matter vigorously in their columns, the efforts toward* the adoption of the Acts cnnnol fall t»> be nltlm Knccenfnl.

i Tho hall might, in the first Instance, he set rolling by sonic promlneni resident In a letter to the local press, showing the wide usefulness i»i Puhllc Libraries to all classes, and the de- sirability of ndcmttng the Art in Hint town nr district. The \s ritaraf such ;i letter »hould give some particulars of w!i;it these IliatitutionG have 'lone and are doing in oilier district*. He

should go into figures, uiving the rateable value of the bownj v.iiii i li«- penny in the puuud would produce, and conld be done in the way of estuhllshiuir, stocking, taining a lihrurj with th< grow oxuounl It would be idi ii such a Letter to combat the idea iliat the rich nrovidi booka forthi poor -that the town i* doing for in what

thC3 should '!" for themselves, \i/... provide I « tfc

booka. U'lH.iMiit opponents everywhere dub these institute

< ^i'1-ufiive luxuries in n town. Tlicv an* nothing ot bhe kind.

The argument to the effect that if n. -own provides water, jrns, ,i! .1 lowers for its catopayors, why ahould it not provide I ..! (1 ii sding-rooTua, ahonld be riduolly handled.

One IcttOl would thus lead to others, and th Bubji i I ■'., i lil ) a pi-f'minontl> \entUntod ox i>"il* sides, Promoters masl In In." !"W ihwl there it an iinnit'uso union il ol non ense about Public Ubraries, and tlmt it lecms to be thouxfhl that

tv. 0111X0 AEVX-T TUB AfKtPTrn^ OV TUT

75

Imt:iUm' UmUti ;ilv u gOOd tliilljj, LilLl.-l <»!**_■ tlnvy HliollM It

provided !..r n.T!ii:ij\ Su.-h will, as ;i parallel inference, any that brc id id 'i -.-■ i i. iorefoTi it should bo given without work. Other -* i' ■■ -i hi are sure t. i»> made— such ts, u in jual si reasonable to provide fret boots a* Public Libraries, free every- thing, m fact, as books (or loud og to all adult eituena, withoui ! ■: or hindrance Ifco conclusion will be drawn that if these tutionu are provided for the citizens it tends to destroy the moral fibre of a raan,and dulls the sense of BelMndepenoenee. Elaborate irgnroenra will he advanced that Lh intone, Stephen- b nodi "i other noble Englishmen achieved success withmit the aid oi Public l.iiirtri- -. !*.)p«>'s ..it-quoted words, bat which are neither wisp nor renaonable

"A little teaming ie a da&nroUfl thiu^; Drink Jct'ji or tast* i»>t dm Pterin) spring!

Tlir-ro inatlow draught* intoxicate tbs beaut,

And drinking largely solars us Again"

will ho served up and do duty in a variety of ways. Other*

WiU (aythol till such measure i- lli« I'i l.|i.> LiLrnri'V \<l~ .or.'

•inii>i; i in*- q! i TOtection— devices for compelling inori to

maintain :i channel of supply which \x supposed to be beneficial

|0 the enmmmrirv, but which confessedly cannot stand alone.

tonus "faddists," "fanatics," and tin real are sure to bo

d, especially by anonymous letter writers, lor it is n dgnifloant

:■ iim. more than one in twenty*ftve letters in the

public press <'•■ inst Public Libraries which gives trie name of the

writer In discussing mis question, as with Si others, it should he

well borne In mind that bpore u no reason to bo ashamed of an

ast opinion, no mntter whether it is for or against ;i particular

movement Every question admit* "i reuaombly different views

■■• taker of it, and rJie one immediately under consideration i*

no exception tu the rule. Lctier* such at those Indicated, and

replies tannot fail to bring our the editor in his column* with

loader**, mid i Hie Kubjccl kooii yrowa Into :i burning cniestioa

the district. Every letter against the movcincnl should be

answered fcq one in favour.

Tin- morn JxtraoriiInai\> a*wriiuji* will lie made respecting

heir cost, management, etc. A lung chapter

I be tillc-. with a selection culled from various sources. One

r travel* -.:;(<'. . .i i< -i i— sume "facts" against Public

.: .ii :>i > would have a ucw excuse when they

i i p:t nut in the- evening. Instead of the excuse being a

,. ii irould be ■* To ' hange my buok at the library ."

■• Please t want ,i l k for my balp '<• piujf kiYA/" was B request,

aav- ctuallv made to s librarian ai b Public Library.

v lliix Yi-rv ehiidish argument thai I)k books borrowed

source would be badly used, is one "I many Mich

d i£uinnl them. In uthcr ooaeB onponente wQlbe stronff

*, prorinp (to I i that the libraries wil

living nnkn an<l outlay, which may bring the

..[ parten i i ie vevg* »J ul olutc banki*uptcy in other

76

I ill AMI

cumiu'aik w.n be quoted whore, bi h n|wcb bou&l Lwji

Vet. they have obtained pel i it should bo remembered Unit in these nan bri iu b D partea hua been the moan -.mum.

Second iu influence fur iIk uiwetueul tire i.-Iervjmeii imii-H'i ■» 1.1 r Hi bers, and di

n bo havi mill. thin fcllow-Uiwi

|j these could easily introduce the subject In sen speech, or address. Some capital lecture* on the subject have been tfiien by c-leiyynvn am uini8tere, and b

i ii Instance* the .successful iS4U« <'■■■■<■ :u< rn n-m l».i - i i.

owing to the spirited championing of it tofmentU] classes of the community Notices from the pnlpi the Sunday prior to (he vote being* token, referring bo PuMic i ■- 1 1 >mv ! po< i 1 1 1 v helpful,

I ■Mm;.- ii K-n:, literary and debating societies, oil- can and do render very good aid.

It is astouisliing how mum' friends of education there arc when such a movement as tliit it OOt gOf&gi And the v«»h:iiinrjr help of

nil these should he at once enlisted. When the subject ho forward for a time, a provisional committee should he Pol a man of definite qualities for light and leading elected as chair- man. Mi trim In«'!i.!-: <>i tin- cause will have no jealousy against BOZOd gentleman talcing a very prominent lead in the matter i hut it only one of strong individuality who can do this., end others ihoulJ rally round. Such work is. of course, all and a pood leader wiJl take care that these voluntary worker* are well organised into sections fur various district*.* School- rnnmt, a* a rule, will In? willingly lout for the purpose of meeting*. Speakers at these meetings would do w^ll not to burden their audience with too many statistic.*; but speeches, to the point, would do much more good.

Street moat be laid sil through the agftAtiot thai more than on* penny in the pound per year for maintenance cannot be levied. This is the one vital point or the entire cjUARMrm u d this argument cannot be driven home too firmly. An olahorat* preliminary scheme nhould be avoided. A library committee appointed oo the carrying of I are never bound bg

m-Iiimmi' put. forward liy the provisinuid nn un:i a,

If friend* *-■ f the movement have visited Pnl lie I country nil the letter, as they will from thes< derive Insp ration Much lielp must not, at first, be expected from alderm m md town council lore, or members of load boards under the oil

Thc-^e gentlemen kuuw only tuu well the seuaitl inn consUtucnta respecting the rates, and a prominence on U B part of man? of them in a movement for an extra rate, however slight, might moan the loss of a seat in the council or board. Tin local members o* Parliament again sometimes IkuM from the movement, for reasons best known to thcmAorree.

Bo careful that every step token is legal. Enemies to wfll be 'v.i on the watch for Wpfcoles a

i H«\«. \liui | in, ilirtfrfUJ. I] 1HK ACTS.

( mill where I biuer opponent refused to pay the rate when levied, his plea being [hat & rucetinp had decided

mist rhr idoption <'\ thr A<(.> A- It Yaft ft tOSt 0000 hs W80

•cmrnoned in the County Court, and of course lost, a* he had mistaken a mectine of the opponents as the statutory meeting defined by the Acta. Sometimes town clerks, when perhaps tin ir ie peXBOOaJ fechne; in tV matter, ;\tc rolDCtftfiC to gtvo »u winch would keep promoters within the .shirt line* of the Aet*; hut in other cases they srive tho freest utul follcet odvico, and so render ndruiroblc help, Wherever possible local solicitor should bo asked to «crv on the provisional

As it i& impossible to carry on any propaganda without some

For and snot, a small preliminary fund is indispensable, and nendsof the moremenl in i ly with subscriptions for

A distribution of literature is the chief expense, and the outlay for this depends, of course, upon the site of tli<- »wn. Local printers nre the best from whom to get leaflets, is odj prefereno* being given to the publishers of the ■i m ipett which support the movement. Kepnnt« pi Ct#rs and other matter are given at the end of this book, and from &M typo standing, after nppenring in the local press, for n number to he strui k off will he found B practical plan. in npansea for taking the poll come out of the rates, hut. for clings for the purpose of advocating the adoption of vets, and literature, a subscription fund among the promoters will ho neoeflBoiy.

It ix I:rnrx8*ihlt* tu (like too gre;it i'itc l>> ko*p (tic ipiexifrin

■teolately froo froni political Was, and wborewr practicable Dip

leader* of the two chief political parties should be induced to

i prominent part in the movement. Life would not be

worth Irving if there were no platform where all could meet

her and work for Ihe cojumon (food, and no other public

welding lotf ether :^11 thoroughly those of :ill Guides of

kniM Ami political opinion as this. It does not, a* a rule,

ftUffnr well fur the movement when it is brought forward and

advocated chiefly by those who are open to tho charge of being

attitude of shopkeepers i>* always a vital factor in the movement, and they are. of course, a class largely interested when on ic* reuse in the local rates is contemplated. Every effort should :. o conciliate them and to win them over to the schc e 4 Public Library buildings always improves the property, and in some towns tradesmen advertise their business ns being within so mciny door.- of the Public The«< inslitutiunsin<*uloati hylhcii in flu one* EempOr&te IttMts end thrift, and as the massi s upend less in drink they will have more to spend with the boa I odesmen. Many -tliopkeepere render moot valuable service by advocating the claims of these uutita Drawing-room meetings for the purpose of explaining the usee

i iiihAtirs*.

to-do tire

bio PI &< . ■!'].■ who \m ! :.

take tho trouble Co inform tl

irho " light bfl :

o thu type

i, ifl I-, ite 'j are tw ■' u pNpeclalh n i ip people wo difficult t i reach bj other m

Opni 0 I HIS ClftMOd :

i. ri I©, who do not too v

d ben 1 1 o other 1 1 ii !(.-.■ who <tv bonks are so cheap nowadays CbeJ no a

nr<-il lie v. Ittim I

ill. Tho nncra Ion— Mid fchwa

these. FV. The burdened (?) ratepayer, who object* in prl

:ill r:tli;- :mi! I:im'v

v. Tin- publicans md their nunwoui votarfo*.

\ i. ill.- working oloase*, who ver) often arc noi |tn .iu,.> X; in i ■: oi Publii Llbmi

VII. Tlie foil;* who doul ("ii' for books, and I'm, to oilier |ti n ill* should poor creatures, what a Life i o lead '

vm Tin- nbsulutclv indiJTcrcnt, who care icivenwn

ii. i iii.illri h0X (fOOd [tfl ■•l-j'.-i I-- 1' M '!;:« DinpS," QUI

ii b .tl them, FX Those who say thai Public Libraries, oft ri

:• pi Irate benevolence in this Bred ton, ^. Shareholder* i xuhscrlption libraries, who feai thai tl

■■'in ut «ill L |" As a rnutUT

nf fiut. Public CJbrariee do nothing of tho kind. Tal town In ii a rth ol England, for Enetauce Short b "tier* in tho circulating library of that town, in 1870, al -•>. n&d command over £"20. In some movements thin I mi

mistaken ooneideration Cor existing circulating IJ and

,i- be made too wid< ly known ihnt wl i n Libraries

uMr established, & far from injuring »th they bad alvaj ■■ i ad iabrj benefited them.

I nnd other institutes are very frcquonti

errtxl o It max ■■ tod that the oc vital dinoren

1 1 r i ifto lames d< iIodI LAo instil I

hi.! 1'iiMic Ubrarto that the latter iro aubjaot t.> p»] ii pol, and tho former ure not Thia onanrofl I'or them a it- mi.i i idll Ion, i »r thel

it. Librarian i' responsible tolds committee, who ire In IB

tanstble to h* to* ri muni II or lor il honrd md i have in i'iuii.' periodical I'liviimi \i. . \

Instil nit-, being pr< pi I Ions, n e aoi unhjed b9

lor control and idmlnfotnUon, and If the saw uf (ail

.!., i dUCati iDfll OS 'I ivnl: I 0l 'hi- «l;.v is i

urn

HOW TO BRING ABOl'T THK ADOPTION OF THK ACTS. 79

into, it will be found that the absence of this popular control largely accounts for it. Mechanics' institutes have done in the past a magnificent work, but they are scarcely in touch with the edaoational needs of the day. These institutions, in some instances, wo**ld form a good nucleus for a Public Library, by the taking over 0f the building and books at a fair valuation price j or, what i8 better still, for the committee of management of the mechanics' institute to offer to hand over the institution if the town will ^o i>t the Public Libraries Acts, and turn the mechanics' institute uito^ a Public Library. National and local pride should save these institutes from becoming mere clubs and lounges, and there is £*. reasonable fear that many of them already possess this character.

T>ie provisional committee may be urged not to prematurely P*s*i forward the taking of the vote. The cause has been lost 10 xnany towns through doing this. The ground must be well cleajed before this is done, and test votes can be taken at the

Kvious public meetings on such a question as Those hold up ds who wish to see a Public Library established in this to/Mrn?

. Then following vigorous discussion, and the period appearing nI>e for the test, a requisition signed by ten ratepayers to the ma^or. or local authority, requesting him to issue voting papers °** call a public meeting to decide whether the Act shall l>e ^lopted in that town. (See Appendix for this form.)

-A poster announcing this town's meeting will then be issued, ai*<i so the town will experience an event fraught with important consequences upon its present and future generations.

The mayor or chairman of governing authority will, of course, preside, and the town clerk will commence by reading the notice convening the meeting. Speeches in favour of the step, and perhaps one or two against, will be made, and then will come the formal proposition by some prominent ratepayer, and this **11 be seconded, and then a show of hands decides the book fate °* the town for weal or woe.

Ifa simple majority of those present at this town's meeting Qeeide in favour the vote is sufficient.

Some years ago a meeting was held at Stockport to consider j**e advisability of establishing a Public Library. It was P^Ufestly hostile to the proposal until a young man rose, and, JJ an impassioned speech, exhorted the citizens present to go to HleU' children's bedsides and say, "Oh, my little children, I have ?Ursed you with the blight of ignorance, with all the power that jj at my disposal." Although hyperbolical in tone, it is not Grange that such a taunt should have struck home. The Act was ^pted.

. A show of hands is not final, although, to ordinary persons, that * the distinct meaning of the Act. But there is another Act of *«liament which steps in and enables a citizen, by a right of common law, to demand a poll. This may be done in such an ■tte^ular way that it can be ruled out of order, or the request

I.IKMJLHIKX

a perwm ma rumpctnit to (Sum 5BCt a «t«p

of the . sea, be

< on

ou the port

unwise ami uiiwfe. Mid would mih leail to Icgnl :.-iiif;

raised which a feud It is im.

. demand »i>

btlc< I i.\ ;i « *■• 1 1 card la - '•' Bog r, 9l U I I bw, BeUmal Greu when it was ruled thit the light to detufl

poll is a uecewary if ol electa

Thn :.'.•■..■■ i action Re

Wimbledon Local Hoard wiu tried. Tl wiu» ibat'&uj

quali6ed person present nt a meeting conv niav, after a show of baud*, demand a poll.

Iliv pei ling :i poll should be asked up to the

platform, and must there *ign « do name and

nddroM. Ho mnel also bring with him a witness to bis aurri i Thii action may bring an cony and cheap notorioty where tlie

•bow ol i ad i . fi ' i f the o;.pnnoni demands

tbo purpOAO OJ lr|>:itum tlu- iimviMhvut. The docui

placed In tho : :md no will go down Bo I le local

[WKtiTity 1 h"->n .-1 -ill : rne.

\i Mill. ' h.'iv ism he mi amendment to the

motion The answer Lrn nr"!i;iy." The power

of demanding a poll la the utihatitute for an amOBdlQCnl Eo the mbatandre mottoi In the chapter on legal aspects reference It made to the ton whoso shoulder* should lull the

of iiif poll where ii ii demanded.

If in :iiv, .iy-. w -f :iiul Aftf* In I n«:i.r f 1 It" iijipniiciiK tO bit

rnimly, Tact, skill, and nomteav in handling tl hare often won over tlioac* vhonnvc gone to the u «■ v uii the ffxsd Intenftfon of opposing the wheims

Tfie iik*' nf VOtlBg papers Is the Imit i«.r miic] more xntisfnctnry

method These can be dollverod by pollcexneo Send on papers by poet is permitted by the Root«h Act, hut ci resorted Yit in Enfflatwl ut this date [April, 1890). '• Herr are— move taxes I" Bald by the posliueu as they handed la pipers, lost Olaeffow tho adoption of the Act, and the oitl hail It.: pa] bo wic tunc of several hundred pound* for the gratuitous remarks ol those industrious members ol the Civil Service. The cost of taking the vote by papers La defrayed out »-f the fatrfi, \ Town Council or a Local Board bave the power, nf course; of deciding within themselves which of fcbc Ln methods shall be adopted for ascertaining the views of the i payers.

Sometimes the number of spoiled papers in very oonatden :ui<i \u- tsauc of a httic alii jii ng plain instructions e> day or ts i before the polling takes place is advisable. "' STee" or " X'V name and address i 'f v spayer. and, if 1- >r eho ro deetree, a tote that the rate shall m I exceed owe hing mdor a penny, all tho writing permitted Anything beyond this nullities the Some exceedingly goocf friends want to aa/t on their papers thnt they are m favour uf Khose Lihmriefi, but

t vote, coting l they

I THK AD01-TIi»>- ■!• Ill I. ACTS.

S|

2

are not in providing novel? It tlic public IVpentt, Of

novel Wftdlng, ai)«l they cannot resist making the fact known on 'heir papers. Booh n vote would, of course, be toefc others agam wish to oukke ivmurlcR of Homo other nature; and too much slrC88, in mam- pta£Q8j CMmOt he hud upon the nooewsil v of ^iviTit: l: tfiapU answer, " Yes/' and their name and add]

Th<. qnoeuan oj who are quuliiied to vote has for years been a very vexed one, but wus settled y the Croydon cose, to which

^eference itt made :u another ohaptCl That deautioo hn* now isde it clour thai ecoupleri .1^ well ;i^ crvnen have votes. In not o few eases, the most determined opposition was offered to the adoption ol the Act. nnt l dort&g the formation of the library the nv ^.t gloomy (orohfHlinys uml proguoatiiNttious of I'm Inn.' won' indulged fa. After, however, the library had been in WtftV three or tour month*, there was not one in u hundred of the opponents but what had been won over, many of them having the honesty to confess their -cnvi-ision. and W aetalOwledge flafct they bad not lh* slightest idea that a Public Library was such a splendid and enjoyable institution. The following gives the main features of the various Acts:

1. Any town, parish, district, Of union GfpartiheBj is empowered the Public libraries' Acte, 18W— 1689, to levy •< rate ocri

tceediug one penny in the pound for the establishment and lafatennnec "i bulldlngb, with the requisite appliances, suitable ir "Publii! Libraries, Public Museums aaid Schools for Science, ,rt (islleriea, and Schools for Art, or for any out* or more of those jjecL*" 1 17 St 48 Vict. i". 37)i provided that a majority of more .1 -!t;iir ,A tin- i^topayera vote iu favour id' mloptimg the dm of the Acta.

2. The preliminary steps to be taken with a view to the adoption tin Lot an these 1

(a.) In Mrsn \jeAh 13 1 lie Act iei puree that the mayor

abaTJ onvone j public meeting on the request of tlie town council, or on the request in writing of any ten resident ratepayers ,

(6.) In ThSTBicxs within the limits of any Improvement Act, the district board ia to convene u meeting upon the requisition in writing of at least ten resident ratepayers ,

(a) In pARteiLKH, the overseers of tho poor, on the written requisition of ten resident ratepayers, are to convene a meeting to determine whether the Act shall be adopted.

(A) The proeoribi'd local authority is empowered, under the -10 & -11 Vict. c. 51, to ascertain the opinions ol the majority ol the ratepayers, either by public meeting or by the issue of a voting paper to each ratepayer.

3. Ten clear days" notice of the time, place, and object of the meeting must be given by affixing the same on or near the door *»f every church and chapel, and at least seven days' notta*

I by advertisement in a newspaper published or e\FOtita&nB> to V\\<\ borough, dirtrh't. arpmisti L.

89

pubmo t.rutinrvA.

i. i with the meeting i

tar the A< iro chargeabU

■pon the borough fun bedefrayi ,,^*«7,

by ii Mipnrato rate ipcclally leried for lb to exceed ana i>eiuiy in the jwuiid.

f>. Where b i>"i li demanded lhe .Would be open—

lc,tho i-;to vote rneygo and rooui ^ _n . i. itfcheplaoei

duly announced.

6\ If the Ac.tr* be adapted the organization for carTyin^ provi-Hiunn into operation is as follows :-

(/?.) in Beaocon "1^ management, regulation, and oe ofl librarian and n unctinw, *chool* 1..:' telencti i ad art, shali be retted "I and exercnted by the council, 0* by such

(•MinrniniH' :tn Ml** n unnl 1:1:1 v appoint, and th<

of the ivmimlttoe are no; required ■" !»• 'n.?nit>or* 0

eouneil.

(6.) In DtsTBtcTe, The board op trustees noti

of the Improvement Act. ov a committee app them; also local boards under the Local ^ ivornment

(c.) In 1'AmsHEs. Not less than three nor more than commissioners, to be appointed by the vestry, are stituled a body o irporatr I'orMw purpose* <>f tin- ' the name nf "The Commissioners for Public Llbri and Muscume for the Parish of i:i the Count-

of- 7. The council, txninl, mugiMmttvt, »r rmnmiKeMnan are empowered to borrow raonej at interest, m tin mortgage <>r bond of the liorough fund?*, or genera! ill rate, or of the rate levied under the Act; and the proi 1 1 bne Companies Clauses, and the Lauds Clause* Con Aate. ]84o> an Incorporated with the Public Libraries" Act,

Thr imendmcot Act of 1864 (47 & 48 Vict. c. 37) empower* wiy anil lorltj .icting under the- Public Libraries' Acta to accept a grant from the Committee of. Council on Education towards UN purchase of sites or the provision of premises or furniture fi schools of Balance ox art.

y. VVlmn two or more neighbouring parishes nombin.1 fof 1KB purpose" of th*- \et, eacl) pariah to to appoint not more thaa three

COinniiHHioinir^ ami t!ii_' rtimmissionefh lYn l-lie .M'\rtal parishes ar# to form one body corporate, and to act together in the exeoutfoB of the Act. The expenses of carrying the Act into operation ars to lie borne by the parishes in such proportions aa they may mutually upprove.

A simple majority of those polling, whether by statutory meet- tng or poll, is sulllcieut to decide the question.

Where the movement is eueceastul, official announcement ■hould be made in the usual BOOTCes. The following will give an idea-.—

LI giVC

CM m. BOABD OF HEALTH.— DISTRICT Of PUBLIC LIBBARIE8 ACTS, Lflfifl TO 1889 : toe is hereby given, that a I'oll of the Kntepayere of tho District of tim Local Board of Health has been duly

taken, as by law required] 00 (hi- following Resolution, proposed xi a Public Meeting of ratepayers ot the said district, held m

Ith* Town Hall, , on the day

of , viz.-

That tbll meeting hereby resolved and determines that the provisions or the Pablfo Libraries' Act*, 1866 to 1889, ehalt h<- :n!n[ ■!.■(! ."<>i 'ttad W it i -it I hi;. District. And wfaioh Re* lutioi .on being put to the meeting, was duly passed, whereupon B POLL was demanded; and that the rttOU t.( bo •' iV.ll m I'i'll' ■«>

It - 'i the Resolution \ ote* Lgalitfl the Rasolntton Majority of Votes in Favour . And I hereby doolaM fchfl anid Resolution to be duly puaacd and adoptedj sad hereby, u required b$ aw, pubttali a oopy

'I .i reef.

Hated this day ot

Qhalnnanaf tbaaald Looal Board of Health,

will In: seen (hat this applies to ri ease where a poll was

but only thia form, as being one of the mod

I. need be given.

aiuountof ratiniidatioa which goes on when the rote on this

09 I being taken is at limes perfectly amazing, In the

autumn of 1868, when the vote wna being taken in Hull, it was

stated before the 9trpcndinrv thnt bhere were whole streets where

oppori' i dneed w w absent Behennei) to rote against

the Acts, and themselves aided to fill up the votiug papers. A

charge of forgery was instituted, and the case was brought homo

to tho party. It Ee o pity that the Corrupt Practices Act does

ily hi tho taking ol this vote.

"

CHAPTKR IX. PUBLIC LIBRARIES IN THE NORTHERN

COUNTIES,

>97 in m the iioithiTii and midland counties that wo hnvo to look tor the best development of tho Public Library move mont up to the present time. The spirit of emulation is, hovevar, abroad, and in another ten years the metropolis

aadaomeo the western counties wiU, there ia reaeoc I thin*, liavi- mada so much progress that tbfij ^til b& w. uM to wnrywsV with thorn ot bo north ant] midland*. Ba!t\,t'*a* »

-I

1 1 III. I- I II.

in. in it i ol Bagaind tint tii remenl first enti

it ih lioro l l hftVt m- ! .-- 1- 1. !_. [ v- . i . . 1 1. : 'i ". ..rkhaa

twcn oarriod on "'Hi i he loot the n

jr.'.i^ra|ilin-i :uv l..'i."tM'iiiiH to K[>ll1 it]- tin loi'tV COUAtiOB of

England differently t » the arrangement in the old r b i It !,,, pvoBonl purposes and In order to adjust tho length -

GUapUr* l!ii> (Ul ikiti of m . counties Is not oil a Ifcb the

I"".!:-. l!i. t.-ouuties here dealt wifj

NcTtoumborland, iJuriuun, Yorkshire, Cumberland. Westmore- land, and lytnoashlre, ">.l iu wns ere named alphabetically

when it li iiiou^hi i eoessero n c;iii attention to the work, u hiiM in't-ii iih'i'fuiv -t i .•.! Mint Mii' time does not appear tn ha\ ._ ;...•: amvnil wlii'ii liihlic Libraries ought to he made the sulv. aniparing orltioiam. The real national Interest in these institu- tion* Is an yei onlj a few years old, and whilst the largest and nf the libraries are doing a work which will bear the examination, there we others which have to struggle with difficulties kbd surroundings wlildi hamper and harass I work These hindrances may arise From rarious causes Bui H beooiuos Increasingly evident that the touo of the work ci uhicnj from the librarian unless hi* hand* an tied bj a ca] I committees It i*> not a pleasant statement to make, but nererthe- les» a Iruo one, thai eoiuu Librarians are so very unbusinesslike to their iin'tlmii.-. iii.it the wonder would be if the tfbraric* onde tlii-ir charge vrcrt* particularly eucceasfttl. These cases ever.not numerous, and are becoming less so. It not unfrcqm happens that, even in libraries where bhe mamureiuent is not quite

«h;tt il should '>'■, Mi" use made of the WiiMing and the I

grows by leap* and hounds, so that even in spite ol adverse i iivmuotnnoea the work is successful. It in u truth which cannot !■■ too often reiterated, thai the same qualities which fro to n a mat: sneoeesful In ether walks of life Invariably prodv lihrarinn whose work possesses spirit and energy. The rank* of librarians Who are deeply in touch with the purposes and

C legibilities of their work are being constantly enlargM) ;md so m n* thia it bo there need bo no fear as to tne future o/l these institutions.

It wo*! of course, impossible to mention more than a limited bumber. Some wfiL perhaps, argue that the work of many Publie Libraries differs so little that it was unneeess:<i mention more than a hunted number of representative libraries. But the main Objeet in view is the promotion of the movement., :md to bring as many side lights to bear upon it as post in districts where it ia sought to adopt the Aers the work of libraries in similar steed towns and districts to the pi ire the movement is in progress is quoted, and li is with :i li to aid these that 80 ninny places have been named in these chapters, There is the farther desire to prevent »» m librarians from being disappointed at their own place unnientioned. Nearly all th** places where the A< te have of late rears beta adopted ire named in tbt present txud ubavta i Imme-

rrm yonrjrEnN- corxriw,

following fcut all arc, in any case, in the tables of aUtiMiea end.

AeirroN-vxDBn-L\Nr.

I be library hero has for some time been struggling to carry on an increasing work in rooms which are not at all adequate to it.% requirements, The committer, howOYOr. flow sec an end to their trouble* cu tliis account, for on April 10, 1890, a letter whm read /. liie Town Council meeting from the trustees of the late Mi. rge H".r: nhottom, offering the gift of £10,000 for the erection 1 ublio Library and T. el :.;r.il School for the town. A«hton 1000 bo able to rejoice in n Urge and specialty deigned Iding.

Rurnslcvhastbe durtinffuishod honour of being the fii'M English town to aclopt the Ante in 1800. Some years ago the QUOftftoa was flrtt mooteu by .Mr, Alexander Pot arson, the editor of the •'Barn*] >■'. Chronicle/ and there was then a very arrong feeling againd ii Public LU-rnry in certain (juartorn. In January law, When the question came forward, it was entirely the other way, nod at th* town's meeting there was absolute unanimity. A publie bsl vn - erected in die town some yearn ago, and this was *to unsuccessful that Che company came ro imrikruptey, and the hall, offices, and some other effect! became a white elephant to the creditors. After various <oigge*itions hnd been udvnneed as .<■ the use* to which Che ball might be put, the whole titotik of -..iii. Ingfl ram* no i he hammer, and vaa purchased by Mr nmrlea Harvnv. J.P., who with most commendable public spirit Offered the httll to the town fbr the purpose of a Public Library, making the \xwt> pr.'Vivi rhnt rhp Acisaliould lie adopted. Tills gift represents omal money value of nol lose than from £10,000 to fel&OOD. i the local paper to which reference Iihm been rnadr appropriately remarked, at the time the question was in progress, that a Public Library "in of necessity an educational i much more comprehensive sense of the term than any •■ library can 1 , r.i tuhil c-if by either tttCtarlsO son the one band, or political influences tin the other; :hc hambleet visitor to its reading-room will, while there, IT on a footing of equality with its most aristocratic - The clubs will continue to go on doing their own work in their own way, but the Public Library will do something which thcr, however fully equipped, cannot do place the best literature of the present and bygone times within trie reach of all sections v, md that free of charge .so far as the readers :\re individually concerned. In not a few the taste for dfafl vill hnve to be created; in others it will simply need to •[ ; while many Mill for the first time in their fives hove iviletfo of familiarizing thcmsolvee with the writings of our i those works whiotl take rank as our British e for rending, coupled with the means for \U .cannot ssfef without cxercisma o W'r»efte\<\\ vrA\\e\\oi>

Nfl

pmrio htuijuu**.

mi. I I i!.':il riN-nl-.ul Hii'. x i-'.'i:. . - L».|r {VWbMHOnt

UTO :■: plVsi-iil .-Mior::ii!. u II i <■ t|.\ i-I- : . i if null .

mc not m studeni

the result will I* thr ruisi ...

of flic community jreueiully. Th< n hope il :■

ffau dej will >!' lleeM peal Ma Public Library work.

mil in which thR •■. I.nlr H QOfttlQD W6B | .1 "». | 1 up and I'.i

this. Very hi . '. tonntioni toward* tJ

an. and, immediatelj the wcrt 1 [oh tad

been -ii by the owner in trurt until the Act* wen adopted, were

handed over to the town, The committee of management i mechanic*' Institute dectdod hat the books in the circulating and n : >-■■« -i:r. iii.r.n-M- m! nil i:ii| ■:_;.. uucoudit ionally to .•rporationforthc purpose of tho Public Library. Here is an eamupl- which may well Ik- followed by the committee chatties' institute*.

IUiui 'W-i.v-I'i rsbss, A.Nr rwcarwtiui'. I'll*- now Town Mull in Whiah the library a* BltMte 1* a Ivand-

sorae Woe* "t 1. millings. It wflfl opened In .ini\, 1887, bj the Etfarqni'- "V linrtiii'/t.in riic I'uiilio Library Is the youngeei el n unjoins! IneUtnttoofl * > < BafTDW Ttii> subject \\ i- firm mentioned Reveral yeere ago, but, public (ipmiitii pot being iraffldantly ripe, the rjneetion died out, tt wm not until I8SI (tint [he Public I llimrlw' Acts wer« pj resolution of n public meeting. A temporary building wm mi truce erected, to be ueed until the library found u permai home In the ae* Town Hall. fclr. John Frowrte, of the Live

I'ublk' l_.it .<.-, appointed, _md still iijntiniie*. librarian,

i.:- .- oi suitable books, numbering 5,000 rolumes, were aele The opening ceremony took place in the autumn t.-i' I88£ Foods

wen subscribed I'm- inuring a natural history and scientific

niti-.i'uni. It. \wr. S'jiju t'uiui'! Mutt Hit building which had

been erected waa too email for the number of personi deefrouB .-f waiting bhenuielvca of ite privileges, and the room intended for iniiMciiin pii'-p'wr» wim fitted up noun additional newsroom, while i farthei sum waa expended on bho purchase of l»colcs. I i- in that time t'tr ward success was assured, and :t te . to otnto tliii Mi<' publie demands on the institution have

f-i-iw by year \ »w there arc M.iMO volumes in the Ubmry; the avcDile Motion la Bfcrong, and the average issue is about tajrhty .*ux Ear- day. Tlio arorago daily issue haa grown fron -ISM.

vcr £4& waa received in tinea for detention during the | Soma members of town councils Badly need to use the booli their Publto Ubrary more than appears to be the ease, and this

: especially \>> Barrow. A ateouaston took place ba loimoll in July. 1889, on a recommendation Irom tb eon rtee ai t»» n proponed Lnoreece In the Librariana kiUtv

trom £'b".(i u> l'i;."., The statement was made rliat Line out A

■»-ii "ii the library ooiuuiiblee who voted against the jM^powd

rt BI.IC I.HlKAlCi. '< n r. ■!, Mil,.-.

^7

increase I lo the librarv. The moral here is that only

irith Public Library worktiiould be

electa! on Ornamental n -n r,t

members arc not wanted on these committer*. One memWi

. riim ;-. rti " ,i rented for the peatuioui eta "

"i"ii-- ircrh si B lonblod Itself since the library

opened, and inthotnblccd fcho occupations of the-.!-' borru1'. accountants, chcnriet6, clergymen and

','in i !■!,:. -r,T- : i-« ax i . :.-// veil

. hinelc trod** in The towi. ..- aurvprefroutod amone the borrow on . pray, nre the " penurioun

elan

I 'ii-ui wood owes its library to the generosii y of the late Si Q

m whodiod n November, 1&S9. In August, 18*7, the Acts

were itutory meeting, and in December of the same

lie I-. -i-iv c-room was »penedL Hie library followed hi the

p .(i iftfltf. During some montiis r.he attendanee sJ the

bn high 4,441 Papers and magazines

to tin- number o1 sixty-fire nre taken, the librarian^ report IB

pithy \t Ihi end o 1888 the question d4 Sunday opening came

1 1 1> The donor was distinct!) In favour of that step, for ha aald—

red i an iraeni agsJBoi opening sindlar placafl <"i

mdajH toj t :. tnnj prevent people from attending oburoh or

I* t '!»!-. , I would oay that Lhe peoi^le will go where they

i i traded and EjdI rested Let the clergy then make their

■■ and please the people. With good

. short sermons, and good elocution, they would fill u i i

of worship— at any rate, better than they now do." The

by Sir. Fielden was erected by the late

inin VVhitM ..ill t>i educational purposes On it* coming

ffket it was purchased by Mr. Ffclden and handed o*rei

l her eoac of donors malting; their rffu to UTCepaoalblc

i continuous The late Mr. Wbitvarth

■i «■ cd LCfttlon whirii stands out among ill the

ronispieuous work which hue bean done in this direction, But the

Of the building in question for the purpose intended

be satisfactorily guaranteed bv anv clauses in local

; "ii.*- building belnff the nroporly oil use

people that this can be assuriM. Guts ot this nature should

oKuv --I "it condition bhal thepeople will take upon

the muhitenunee of tho institution, and this can only

adoption it the Acts. Mr. Samuel Kielden has

*o recently joined the majority that tin- folio winp, neuu-n<'o rron

Fie) den. who declared the huilding opan,

h* phici'ii <n record She urnd— "When Mr Fiefdi

thts Institute to th*> town neither he imv 1 ltful Die

: would he consuli'ivi! worth) of so pi. Mir :i

lis Fie guve rt with pleasure, ind thought than ad ' i the matter, My husband, however, amongst ■Me,' 'iwii ridtleH, and (me ot ,.<■ i mm a hi'iu- o.> be thanked lor :m\j n\ V\* QjQCA

rrnu<" umuai

MtlonSt ii'- .•ay* thai it i. either] [reorbladutj l

:li'in. and iliit in the one case no thanks arc ilr-< rvtd, InttH other none arc required. ITii* in why I repreM Hi- ie afraid thai I to morn tl offered to MiB,tm

he oannol wand butter. Ira I In moderation; i I

nerer \ ■- dovolopod a iftotc for dry broad. .... I thank i . ri" period oi Ufa marc exposed to torn pcetf one to 01 1 or mom 1 pen <■ nJruenoefl fortfooa than th n thstHO

up 1 twenta out, The restraints of lohool 0 ■■ ■■ exist, Ibi

i, .hi ; .. m-li'i 1 1 <l.-nee is atronff, and parental OOQ

extent relaxed, whilst on aU rioae, to say the loast, qoafttkffi

amnaements and companions present themselves to our yoxme

people, and the deatre rat improvement, the lessons of the teacher,

mid tlii.< counaels of tlio parent, nre, alnw, too of!. 11 forgo tK

oagloetad. Chen how truly valuable— nay, how IndJS]

in sueli an Institution M youre, where your lom and davtfkts

may nwemble imderktndlyooTirTOl(1n well-lighted 1

rooms, to listen to lectures, and to Join in any branch ol :•.-: 1

for which they may have developed 1 taste in their school davt.

The rite pmi u.'i - roughly £IS& but BO Eat the worU U begbnml

m-.-ii Several Liberal gifts tor the pnrrhnse or honk-; have flowed

in.

Bl Ni.l l.\ (1 QBJCR),

The question has been forward at .Dingle}- for some time, and the example of Bamsloy wa» found to be eontagione, fox on February 14, 1890, th< Acta were unanimously adopied. Heic ii. committee and members of the mechanics' institute acted w ittbily Ai offer of Mr. Alfred Sharp's of £1,000 for books a 1 Ik- Arts were adopted lubricated the matter very materially. It required rh»- consent of uiue-tcnthe of the members of the meohanloa' Institute before they could hand over the build It is satisfactory to note that 1M0 voted in l'avuur of 1 m OTOt the institute and only ten against. The mooting dec very unanimously in favour of the adoption, and no poll was demanded.

DblCKPOOL am> SODTHKOtti

These two Lancashire seaside watering-places are veil served by their libraries. Ttlnrkpool shows a steady inoreaec in its lending department, The number feoned during; the year va* \'<,\~~ ogainsl 1^,074 for the previous year. Borrowers to tin- D 1 iii' r ft l,tsJ now avail themselves of the library. II w a proportion of one in every fourteen of the population. The attention of readers is being directed to works or travel, if ■cieuce, and art. Only £66 was spent in new hook*, w LS n small amount considering that the rate produces t> November to DCereh arc the busy months, as ai other pinec* 'Vhe library in m charge of Bliss Eteson and two lady assistants.

■\t Bauthport there are 18,235 volumes, and tns turn Of these la shown ai 9QJB3Q fop home reading and 24JJG use in the reading-room. This shows u deereeae tn twth

pmr.ir i.mnATrncR in tjttc vnnrHnav .tii

Bfl

departments OVM thfi previous year. hut. it is largely nccounted far i'.v !)■ rule n:i<ir ii February, I88B, that no book be exchanged within three days, iu unlet to check rnrebwi rci Among the non-members of the conucil on the committer ihr name of Mr. Alexander Ircium i » j - j ; t r*. Tic haa ever been an earnest friend of populftj education. In January, 1N*9, (lie nan reference department « u thrown open, Among the rules

is one to the effect that a penny shall he pai<l for each

turned down. 'Hie iudcx-cataloguee quo: supplement are l»»tli wel] uronffodand w.-il printed, and reflect credit upon th..- Librarian) M: Newman. BirfcdaJe bi .< neighbour mg district o1 Bouthpotti and ;t is snid that a oonfiiderablc number of the residents hate been accustomed bo •-*<> into Southport almost daily to two the readiog-room, and 80HM ot the Birkdulc people thought thru the Umc Sod come when they should ha/ro u hbrurv ox their ova EKeOUBsiODS U to amalgamating the two district*) have tftkenplflCC, but not hint.' hoe y C< heeo donOi In .Murch, 1S90, the township was

it|;ienr«N'.| wiih | Oopy ol ft requteilioa signed byeome thirty or otty i -■-■iis, :iU ol whom, except three or four, belonged to one

Dftl party, Others not bein^ i ; I oh-tii. Thi- m it-.- ; ". .. ...

court;. ious i '•! ■■ I rwnBmeotmgWBBsummonedbythec] lr

man of the i.ni . I Board in the usual QUBdsepf snd was held in the l Hall. Thriv were five persons present at Kp.ro., which num- ber afterwards rose to twelve, and. when the mooting WUfl fullest, The promoters did not jmt nt m nppenrnnoe In fn- it Iml to adjourn. Thia was ilonc for 'i

ri night am! on the night, fixed, the adjourned meeting was held.

The township hud, meinwhile, Iteen largely placarded with a new

lam i't bi i- to elghl the ttmefor commencing the meeting,

irere twenty bo thirty persons present, and at no tfnie more

'linn forty Tin' ohairmai took the Chair punctually

i iked rou id, and remarked that the meeting could

<>NslUly be regarded u n representative one ; upon which :i

uyer proposed thai it he adjourned tine rfir. This was

dad and earned unanimously, and the business was over at

w pant eight it It Immaterial who were responsible

: DOfli ' . but it would be for better to leave the movement

•lone tlian to play with it iu this way.

Bucnuw. Th© stre< t En which the building illustrated on p, ooi* Mtuatcd :ih \y .-jill.-d Lihr..t-N Htrcet. In 18fi3 the Libraries' Act wa* adopted, althouach the Act waa not carried into effect until 1963, Since 1S71 the library and mueeuni hare been in a *ueted building. It is a handsome mtone-built and i with Rcutptured panel« in the medireval Gothic it a cost, including the internal fittings, of about «>. On the ground floor are the reference ;unl tending Ki iding-roora, &e. The libraries oonUJa

u|'' . '-' vi.'hune**: of these 17,4-15 are 'm ttve teAewiefc

department, anrf 16,077 in rlw lending department. 'Wo, trostfbw

90

niU<" lXBBA»f«*.

tft\ am purchased !art year was 79-1, at mi uremic co« of 5s. 7;d. per volume S] tlir i-otlon maim - rurlng. In II

;in ii. i bo In i '•■ eon inlti d, sad ' n tin

ifi,7Ua during thft last year. Tin- depot iter l7,<mo rolnmw The mui o ih*

HNMH- 1'H mprlHM tflPfC rnnli>. nrr:

wlinli- nl |hs*nr*S Boor fhe Souti Ftnora contains a itiiflcelb- i- collection of etlinog raphic i iuJpci n collection of pel ■■ Foreign annuals, shells, &c., utypoi

nf notes; tin' Western Room, exa nples I" mar-Me : i »i :i -.1 « -i- < •: (i fair collection or British birds; srtil

pi tii.n ijni -> it .

"■>"- rth Room, which forms ttie picture gallery, zoatalnA |

fiaiueil •■■ ivm^b. jtul |iluik*ri'Hphs, and the Kensington Collection. There is also a collection of local and i logical specimens, iunn'v;ii-. fitCi Mr D. Geddee, who bad i librarian and curator for some years, »Led verv raddenj

i.'i-t.tlier hurt. He wos .m em -■-.lU-otor for the mil

and had served the town well. Mr. R. Ash ton now occupies tin position.

130E,T0N.

BoHon was one of the first of tu« twelve places to adopt tin koto, and hut recently i^uu>«i it* thirty ixth report. In central library and tinw iruuches it boast* of (M.ik.h vols •:».■ half the nunii-'i' i»'ipji i!i iiw parent Instil ition I tin- reference Horary fa strong^t, and there ere tl locaal

figures snowing the issue for the year in the reference at

lepart-

p mi r.n»n.\niKs is rar. y^nntatx cor.\Tir.*.

!>i

rolumoe, tod hi tlir Icii'Jiuw section of 40,89?

reltUDCO. This however, must be somewhat discounted, p

magazines, given En the reference returns, tell up ;<■ SI I I

.- :ni-i;ii;*-<i :it the FMtou Vuli]).' Ijhrary about the

ubecriptioo library of any in connection iriBo the*

rato-euppnrtod institutions. The number of subscribers i* 886,

/ml th-1 ..*. in !hi depnt'tni":)! is ubout £0ft The

[■iibli'' Li "•■• -: lV«d IflAl TWff l«S0 v ■■[n:i .hi-. Hi'-

v, the value of which i- ui\-.Mi a* tliOO. Tin*

ittee in the report are content to express themselves in

-nve wonN— ;iiw hit Hi br Gleet report v bien baacomeunder

itfeort notice. The other part* ol the report ax* lull and

interests «t. There li mention o1 the generous offor of Mr. J.

P. Thomassoii. nf Mora Hall for » library and museum, and the

.■ rW*:ihv<- im . Thr-Kc pi-.- i ]-.,'- -ti'o biMiijc uttered for

tat puroosee named, cil/mu having been borrowed tor the

the central lending library is badly housed, but die

branch bulli -i anally tlie oik* i:i fflgji Street, ire well

for the work This was erected ai a cost of about £3000

■I 000 K|uare yards of land presented by Mr John

m a., J F, \ separate entrance it provided froni ; in-

level fur the bow1 readine-room ; both entrances being

thoroughly controlled from the librarian's private office, which

also aupvrvise* the lending library HodUAWapapn rB&ding-rOOIDi

■i ftooi Ei i large reading-room, aud nl^o a ljiiies" rc.id-

■[Pin ited by 0 globed *.-i'reii, louelher \\>l i j xn.ill

:"i itudi i1- basement contains a

capocioas roadin TO caretaker's apartmuii-, heating

ckuu!" . d addition to the main staircase there ia ppvtded

a U&ht iron staircase in connection with the librarian's office, tins -rial staircase giving convenient access to nil the depart- ment* of the building. Tin*. style is Gothic, plainly treated, and the mater ... ornamental barter

' hi in thoroughly well lighted, windows being

placed on all the four sides.

The gift* t" the library have been most encouraging. One, at tbo Mm eel and other valuable literature should lead

i.'iMturo iu other town t » p. mid do cwise. The presentation consisted of the books, pamphlets, per*, prints, and engravings of the late Blr. Holuen, who did i ..:i u - adoption of the Aet6 in \<>:'<, -m<l vh,» for some yean on the committee. These oontribtttions lnchulo on llhimiuated manuscript found in an old Piediuontese BBooaw*-;1;. i" "i. i re ury, and the first copy of the work

print" ... si nncient town In Gennany.at o period

:ini\s(it-i work The manuscript,

tci llent «i.iteor preservation is pntttled" Fllstorlfl

Sotoolaatlcn." and consist* of ,i commentary on the various hook*

of the Bible from Qeneaiato the \etsof the kpoatlea. M we*

v PetruM, ijean nf Tp.v. who anmH'eri V\\e CociiMti'i id iti'vtMinr) from liix having read or <\evo\vr »■".'. ^*<<

*-'

rcnur i. ma a ant*.

tii iit> i la Hi I \> "-ir 1188 The coinpcattuin of

the work m in wctraordhiBrj one, for h la tmth dogmatic and blatorlc&l, mixed « i ■■• Ith ot«*rratfona on al

t! which ol Plato, Joaephua

Dthon ore virtiti w* uutborituM, Fron no doubt,

tii oxtendlre popularity wua derived, and for three «« uj* io.iV.rd ij«.!i .ix .in -. .,-, , ( k of positive theology It

•.».:-> piinir-.; n* U73, wd a French translation

from thi I-.--- .it-- u; I !'>.'». 'I'-, t h i i wine author has been attributed mother fiiii-n-. !*>nk, cn(u!cd " Mcr '-- Hisluirev"

R illl rt IIIMlVi.il I- \S I'll .:i'p||iill ri.-M-J [S tVl.'d ll'i

wa.« ftuiini i^ i scribe, whose 11.11 in- is given, in the year l.TOiJ, Mr. Holdcn had the manuhoript bound in boards almost ainiile with the original. N" place- is so suitable for the m i v. i for public UM of ttv BO Old

opCDsncntu on the dtlacn H >rc they will be seen mm!

aUttcdfOnd uomc caretaka ol thorn, Instead of beimral.<

I awuy in «ld cnplxxird^ and drowere, where thov can only bo gnxod mi now and agon '■;. the owner andhi* »urni liat< friend* >.. PubHc l ii'ciry should :;'" without m ft a of this nature. Mr Jaracu K. Write is the librarian, and there is no doubt aV» loUdly good work iieing done. Reference El made fag anotj h

far to the storm which raged around tfc« propoee- Bsndag opard i". hut, notwithstanding the influential rneGTrnj?, ana :-. nentfition respecting the advisability of throwing the newu-rooni open -II Sundays, trie doors of the building ore still kept closed

hat day.

BOOTES.

Foil t population i ffiorae 60,000 Boot < axoaadt&a^ vrfSl off in Ua Public. Library and Muaeuin building:, but the supply of inmk*

rnii Bcarccl

■•'\ i"- ::.l ,t< h-i.ch ,i M'jiii.i.'i: .i.^Uii-. Th:* Mlillil>

.it imiI.v 6,710, and many Ubrnriea with a fifth "f the revenue from i r ereu more. 11 mad '• teifcL

howarer, 1 hat Booth? haa md ite twin inatiluMone o!" llbrej > wd

tQM tin I'm « huh : . .mil thN \> nut -it most pl.i- -

eaay thins: to aacompliah aatiafaotorilr out of n penny rc.tr for the two laatitattojiai llie building i* adiuli ncd,aa will be

Baas Crona nba enjim%ini! ihown -n the opiMiaite page

Tlnrrc i.n -tiu- rXi-i'Ili-u! frnlurr i»l itic DooUe W01 k, and bhtt l-« The cnlli.it v -:.■.< i toll by the local proat. Etoh the comiuittco i CjM.M i, .ii- al 1. .,-1 '<>mc of them, for hen- at hand

ui ,\ column and i f mattoi rol Trinfl; to t to mcatin^f of

thai bodj tn Octobc . i--1'. it would be all tbo bettor for library work fonoraHj if coromtttea would have their ohlef m-'etingB roportod There i n the report jual referred !<> v well m word "f praJat for the llorarton and i urai ■>-. Mr, John .). ( I i'i conjunction with tin- deputy town dork of Uootle, gained Iho ten irainoii i rod by Hr. )im \ i

i rn >h.' Li n Rill,

A ground flow plia 1 1 iii- I olid ng ^.u ...i p*o>

ni i i inn \.n. i . iii son nans 1 1

it:;

Tbc cirfultti' f InJ issued by th« librarian Es full of

i id in I tarn akled tuftterially to popularix* 1

iiiM-uiii. Within the compass or oight jmgCN llioro is nn

pjxtorac of vhat is going on in each department. There ta a uplendid lectuxe-hal] in the building and or tiiia goodie \h xnata tmtMtgfjoui MtoA winter. In order to encourage ayi&emaitltaVantt

M

PI l:l l ' I.IJllltMK*.

reading the committee have arranged ■■

I'niverMty to k*i«p iii<> tt< : ByTlabueeB in stock , and rot

nnly this, tut thn books reoommendAfj liave been < bta!

library. The liixl development of Bootlfl I in* own to OMII

itndeoMT room. Dr. Btrlt aai been for wmeyeaii ohniraian of umroittee, and for Che ?-:«K* >r Public i Ibra •; rortt generally it i my l>e wished that ovary eoinrniiteo bad na PGthnsleal chairman a^ he hai proved.

BllAM'OIlP,

Tin- wink at Bradford baa rapidly daveloped, and ^ compariaon between the flint and toe nineteenth report Khonld be enough bo ronviTL the most rigid opponent. Willi a limited Income, have constantly enlarged the scope Of lln'i. operation*, until now

Mi-'v hate, in adoa pi u. the oentraj library, eight

The Ohi«J library has alao in connection with fl in m u useuin.

There is a general consensus of opinion that na

agency it is entitled to rank among the grandest local ini

appealing a > the intellcctaal aenaea throughout one

its deportments. Supplied with the best literature of i he day, the

library and rcadlofi-cooro department* offer inducements to im-

IC LlBRARCtia IX TUB ■•'"! ' " UN CorrfTIEP,

M

id

prorcment, whi« :i. u - mfciafactory t-> uM. arc in the highest

rio^roc appreciated by IhOSO for win.:-:*' I>< tulii li- . drl,

Lhoadditi »o oi the art gallarj an<l muscun anvefuroj tedfl

n . an Uy matructnv, U'-M*" -. "fi'lving a want

.; was Long iolt is Bradford. The last report suites that m ooneequeii* '»i the a using of the

.■i>nrr;tl jir< n i I _: .In- Cyl'ly pfllXOl tin: \i;lii- <r j^wl nitf :ind

otaJ Dumber ol issues and visit* io the control depot* t me ir i what reduced, but, with the exception Ol thfl

,- Elbe dail, . i- nig ifi- ii 1 1 :n vnv j cevfom year Thi d : !• •-■ call attention to the taadequaci ol the

hinds ii thoiX disposal for enrrvini/ <>n the work innirr tliolr

charge. The demand for brunch [ftirarlea continues, bur it is only 1 ,v ;ri increase *<i unite thai these can be eetabl shed I hi we i and tear of tlie volumes in tfie landing librari* - is niao rery fjfreat, owing to thi targe increase in lite circulation, ami iim* the money

Intenaod fur Uio purchi m books mainly absorbed In

replaoiuu houi-ouI stock. This a eerious drawbui-K. Nit lens than t 'U i i I* alieorbcd from the rate which yteldfl

: rent, rates, and insurance, The markets committee of the i orj landlords of tlie pn i - ■. a id charge

an ex- n[. Tliie is not only unfair, but crinplflB seriously

the committee to fchelr work, flu library again bac to pay .ii! rate*, there is room for readjustment in these two depart1' men; oS Totto Council should remove part, at leaat.

( burdens, Tin ten figures here given will show the cxpM work during mm last five yeare. Of total Waits

mid :: .in-.-, tofc^thci1 there have been 1686, 1,676,480; 1886, i ,061,706; 188d( 3,115,874 ; 1886, 9,«X>^02. Mr. Butler WOC ind < hiof librarian, and in on

compiiHiii'ii public servant

OutHSBOfl *xu Uvea Dahwbk. i Utheroe library has had ton years' existence. It i& a case <•( living on * 12U nnd doing an increasiiiK work on that income. It i* open for tWO riijrht.** a week, and lh.'jivi'r:tp-i<i«*ne is a 1 1.1

indfl waa left then twelve months ago, sad tMfl

i wlndzaU for aew books. The magazines ara in large

demand foi homo reading. What is being done at nilheroe with

hi done At other places. TheprcsRinp-nccfl

;it Darweo '"i i nai premises d which to Btore tno Fnoreastng

.t if book* belonging i »the Public Library has long been

wU-dtfotl. 1 nv " ;i coiiiiiiilici- appointed

U< i iatlt'iji;-jioH"d "ii tlieiiKi'l'-'iruiiiv of UiepreMMit

dali >u, They ulnted that e^ery squai'e yard of space w«s

vt'utilation the place wa« so deficient thai

great ting done to the books, and that " the whole of

irmngemenU a! at building are, in fact, of a mnke-

; character,'1 and thej concluded with the

word* We ■<'■■■ in abort satUAed from our inapcel oa I the

ahiary that the tjueetion of procui'iup another building for it*

Bfl

PI ill. If 4JIRAB1M

A

*■«-<- i-

v nxuno tic i i> .in unrein

tfl !■< I-"'. ■:• liOJf With :! ' S:ikt tli.l. repOTl fl .1 , d

up the oil* 1 1 « i *ni n>nipliiiii>-< 'been int

book* an- conatAa 1\ accumulating and the number of borrowers i.tinually incrcasim:. LT nothing has been -I'-iie. A

BOhcnr I'.v v. liich I ;i<-;i<imii hcl brarj will I

in tii-- I v. i Council he been nrra igod, and it is hoped that the JOngcstt D referred fa I I PC '•'•ill eoon moot with a eolution, ^specially a* u row suitable Bite is nvniluWc The local pnpere help the work con aVmbly b) publishing lists of tho new as they are added to the tmrary, Readers are advised to rut our these ae they appear, and place them at tho end of their eata! This plan is dwarfing i being oopiod by ether libraries Itit this publicity perhaps more than anything etee which enables .mssioners to announce that tho Library .-<■ :ipj.in..i.

by the local public than lit any other peri ■■! ol Its OXiBtai The Darwen people claim thai for fcbe size of the library and the

Ol thC town ll:itu i )■-. ttie 'bftSt Public L:1m: iv nitlx \ COW

Lancashire. This m:n in.- a little open to question batttierai point greatty In favour ol the managers, and that ta tho aroonni

spent in new booksoaofa yea?.

lURLINGTOy.

The old adage ol its l>eiug unwise to look into the inoulh of a

jrirt-liwiso, <!(! ^ nil apply !«' Public L:bnH-ir.s which hirve bwii

>}•■• -jitt ui ,i generous ititou, Every one of tin uions

which t. wt^ its ui iKixi to aueh u i»ource may be looked »1 m a.*- desired, and without exception there is reason to think thi will bear the most minute examination. The Edward Vci Library at Darlington ha* been opon four years, and nU every book in the lending department has been, on fchcavei dosens of times in circulation, not a single one m now am i for ; and this epeaks well For the readers Hie Inhabitant* make the greatest possible use of the institution, :ta will I i the loot that 84,6*31 books have been taken out for honn This out ol a total of 10,66-1 in the londing deportment, in ehi of the present Librarian, Mr, Everett, shows a capital record, the daily average being 333 volumes. Tho jnvcnilo section c4 ih< library has been particularly -successful. The actual number of readers' tickets now in use is l',4U3, Tho gross number of volume* now in the library Is 1 1.390 No fewer than 960 people as a dm ! v average visit the reading-rooms. From the time of its estab- lishment down to now the library has boon managed with an ability that has brought the institution to a state of high efficiency. »m1 ml enabled it to perform a work of magnitude in the town. C-tradiiftlly the people beeoni" io used to privileges <»f this that they take them as a matter ol coiu'se, and perhaps seldom pause to consider how enormous are the advantages said how valuable from a monetary point of view The subject of a Public Library had been for a rnnsiderable ! mooted hi Partington. In 1870 * vote of the rat*g>av*i

ous

nOIIC LIBRA MBS I.T THE VORTIIKKX C0l^7IKK,

K

showed ft prcj»onderftDce against it of those who chose to r<

i i rote*. The late Edward Tease took great interest m the question, and in ever \\ I RtionfJ Bitten in his

nuthv toWSj And ldr bj BBS WlU tl<),t)00 I'm- n PnMic l.ihrurv, orn BtnfcAfcf Objeofc, M BOB trustees might think fit. Sir Joseph Pease, one of the fanutCA offered, through the Darlington Town Council, to build and furnish n Public Library, and also to giro a site for the MAH Is i •tnftntf poetics) in the town, if the in- l;'«i»ii:i!iu adujiied trie PubMo LibMZJa' Aats, a coaBWer:ii>i.> majority declared for the Acts. The style of architecture is ice, and is very Btrilung. The west elevation line a

r;norvr» PLAN 07 oAJlLINGTOtt PLTtLin tJBKABV.

frontage of about JOB foot, and the north elevation of about 92 feet* the Wain entrance is at the junction of these two cJcV&tfons. mid is made conspicuous by a handsome gable, which cuts olT uml thus dertroys too Berority of a right angle, tins object being further attained by !l well-proportioned porch. On the Uoystono ©1 the areli is displayed the head of Minerva, and above it the iili tta right olaw upon on open volume. Entering by tl.is iiorch, we pass through swing doors, glazed with stained glasfi,

into a handnon: .'ul-pluuned veytiDOje, and from Iha&oQ icAo

whdt Bony be termed the public lobby, which gvveA Sirae*, &&««* Co the mUnta jvanis comprising the building, The ge&e\n\ vvVaeA,

>

I1*»UC IjmL&KtBS.

hero is Tory u<»*\- The inrge urea of marble mowic parenient.iu

the centre of which stand/m white marble bust oil lltb late douor

00 ft Mack marble pedestal, over which is cast a soft, mellow, Ami

. Ugfal from the- Uuyo octagon;* ' filing h^rht, hl.r«i in

painted gloss, on which aro skilfully repi cred subject*.

in ra arc. J-uiUling, engincej'tog, navig..

tad music. The lending library measures about." :

I -it Thift in udmirably lighted from the roof, which is partly

open timbered, and from the 6ie-be;uuK of which are suspended

fi.iu v designed double gas pondonts. T t|e*tk in immediately in front of tho centre, and by u a ful ■•■' i-rcmont of guiss-panellcd doors the librarian or his nssl U oTin >■ < <' to see I'vcry person who outers Dol only tho lobby, but those going Into the )*r;i'liiiL'-p)..:nH ;md tho reference library. KinminpT BOUth from one side of the librarian's desk to a lengfh Cd l". Set, 11 'i liom the oth^r m«1 > >■•] his desk running east tor about \'Z feet, »r»' the luUOOtOra for 84,000 volumes. The r.«iii:imdi«r nt The fundi ire in thin i'mniii immkixN nf specially designed hookcaiuw, &c, cnpable of holding 83,000 volume*. Thow are arranged so as to utilize the floor space to tho greatest advantage. The general rendin^-nwn.n llnojipiirtm^nt. mea fit feet by 28 feet . OOd Is Otherwise well proportioned nnd admirably treated ::.- ivgard* iis Nlructural ami artistic detail*. It h*J l ii-r'y line oored ceding springing from a moulded cornice and fmiohed frioxn; from the cornice spring moulded wad enriched ribs, which divide the nore Into panel* and extend along the horizontal p of the Dotting, dlrldui^ It also into large luiih-Ik or lights, which arc filled in with stained and painted glass subjects, illustrating hicraturo, munle, painting, (sculpture, astronomy, and ehern The upper parts of the windows in thin room are aleo filled in with painted glass illustrating different foliage ; thisiainta lu ubviai*' tin- necessity of Minds, The whole of the fn_ii.it uj the reading rooms hoi been apeoially designed. The url h [hting i" accomplished by two six-b^ia pendants from the ceiling, doable bracket* to each newspaper stand, ami a separate brocket fcc each table. The reference library measures •;■. by l'!> (cot. it lu* a good front north light, aleo a top Ja treated structurally and artificially in tho same manner ai the

\il reading room, kit the style "of furnishing is different. It consists of I « i glazed bitokcoeoR, eueh It! feet long and capable of holding 3,000 vorames i two reading tables, U feet lone by 3 ■I acttoi wide; and n number of ebon's >f Ihi those in the geneml rcuding-room. The ladies' roadii on tho right on entering the public lobby, and is well lighted 1 v two large windows, Tho furnituro consists chiefly of two I tally designed boolfcanqe. to hold the various magazines, and

bio >'i containing 130 volumes; a tablo H foot long a Eaa . and J tal ■■ with movable back padi*. Th > room la artifi llghtcl l>y a double pcndantintheoi.iitrt.uf the room, ui i .x-.iding ■Icots from tho chimney breast, In the same position on the ii'trih at iIiIk i-iiimi occupies on the we*t,tfeav« ar a commit ree

rvnuc :j*nAnn» jv ntr. vcumiins' coi-nties.

!•!»

room. Liberal rifl turn Bowed In i be UbflBH Hw rrnvit recent of ti •- 'u.vn tlio SurteOB b<M|uofl1 ol 376 rolun

some of them of -irclueologieal and historical value. In the reference department there is a unique collection c4 hooks dealing with the eartj history 01 the Society ol Friends. Darling- ton form- itabh home lor these works, for the Friends

throughout the district are numerous and most influential. The ha building was about C&fJQO Intending donors of i!;. Darlinston building with safety Mr <;. i; BoSkins, Kil.J B,A . was the iU'ehHoet. A jjruimd phm of the building is shown.

Dkktos.

The adoption was qulekh and quietly settled in this celebrated ttrtei m Way, Iter, by public meeting The r mannfnd irew took up the question m ;i wry spirited manner. il praise i>> due to them tor taking the lead. The BABeaaiaent of jtit of the works Stands al £100 or £150. and this OBlj means 8b. 13*. lor the year, Mi. Lees Broadbent, the chairman of the !. ii moving the resolution foi the adoption, said truly ttli- erection ol a Public Library, vrhilsb beneflUng the few. uM certainly U > ereat beoofit to the many, tod he beni 1 1 d that i providing suitable classes the manufacturers of that district del ive equal advantage. Twelve months— noi by say mci 3| unreason m bin - —were absorbed in obtaining subamptions d in successful bazaar for (I » r using ol

and no [i i i a than £686 waa realised. Plans wore cited, and now a large and handsome build- ing tal &< E i/.ibcthan style line been erected in the middle of Denton. The structure ie of brick with Mono facing, nnd it* pictui' bice mark :t <>ut from tho buildingQarotuid The

Liit..Tu.r con with tiic ornate exterior. Thfl rooms are

large, lottyr well lighted, and furniahed solidly and Ofltofully. Entortng from » lorgi hall, d reading-room 39 feet by -21 feet is on the left. V'xti*. ii. lent big u i . with a reading roots I ■■■ i.-oye. On the Brat floor are lecture-rooma which can be converted i ito as, a laboratory fur twelve students, and a balance-room. , classes for which 1 1 lis provision has been made are an

reature. J1 tteniieal elaaaea are certain to be of

sehnicfll ralus t<> the workers in the staple trade ol the

Inr! I Sclll MlclllK (UVOlVOd ;ill CXpOntUtUM Of IH nil y

10. AVTn iii nif m in. in I tlcti tin- ti'iwiKliip hai I popula*

.: . 1,000, i:. will he neon thai >e than ordinary

i .-I itiown by the people within the district, The

rei itnivwualn -vj<i"inii.T, I (Wtt, nnd In giving a history

i ineulsn Denton, Mr. Thomas Woolfenden, who Bated

i |i ihl ii i Unite Ui the time and att< ntion

"■i'ii ;• ren to the mutter by the prm siornl committee.

il number of \oluiiieft is ulioul 1/rtXi, nnd the lit nary baa

<red "i i '><m <i usefulness. There arc M5VCW\ -uvwuuwV

■/;///■'■ ".it--hi;ir tie MteeeH* i .V U\C \\Umvy \tt

HOI

II.O

prauc unmaina.

Denton, anil It Is sure to exercise a wholesome effect qua place*.

Thin Im thf iitii* i'«c litmli which VrtrknhlM luw provided to

adoption "f the Act* bel ween January, 1887, and Qm end nf law. A public mooting derided the question la May of 1897. The

triwtww of the Mechonira' Institute acted lu u very v. maimer. A promise of from 4,000 to 5.000 volumes was mad them, nil) several gentlemen who had Iwon leatu

In Iraepliuj: the Mechanics' Institute from suing to pieco* took an part m tho movement for the adoption ol tho Act*, ( toe iri thcftpcakcni at. the statutory meeting said that when the * tin.' iota was list proposed, some years ago, he opposed fl

tio thought I id) « mid ho ahio to make the Meelui i nt i- ;i i i . hut he now found out that it could not be done. Tbo i; v r WbitD3r.M.A.. dear, put the issue very clearly before the meet Ug a*h< I lio said that in Dowsbury they ought to hare s I' iMm; Library «o as to *nvc to those who Uvea is the town 0 i Opportunity to consult works that were beyond their private B to purchnae, und to advance the education and inteuagexu I >i their Important town. About £1,000 was raised it : iini« in Doocrabor last a temporary room was opened b Old v\ boobrrighl 9ohool, Wellington Street, by the Mayor, Ifai premlsefl bare at tfiuall oo*l been rendered puitable for temporary use by 111'-' library conimiitoo. The newsroom is commodious ami well lighted, hid Mm xpacc fur the injury m insufficient, and ii will ho tM'*'4-K4;»-v for tho committee to provide new luartors as early a* ponaiblc. The Library contains about 7,300 volume'-.

do Up Ol the libraries of the Mechanics' and Parish Church

|n..(Uu!. j.p :t 1 11 1 Dip hiirary wlneli )\:\..\ I tei-«n c<I:i hllHhcd ■>' ;l local

Inn tor iiinr mplaytt. The Mechanics' Institute and the

trios were presented to tho town, and the library ol thoCl Institute wai purchased by the members ol tho Corporation tor

' m.iitai b E £40. * Suitable premises will be erected 01

rim trite of tin- uhi Meehanlos' [ftstttnte,

DONCABTBB-

I h DCOatcr rejoices In a new building opened on Ji The new quartern are the outcome of n Jubilee movement, and tin niniu'.v i"i' i' ' *■■»»>» I wu* subscribed bv the publfi II- former history of (In- library may bo told in a row worde. The nuclei the iiin i , wasth< books which formerly belonged to th< Kjriptton Library and the Mechanics' Institute, bat when Mi.

Ivoraotorn of tho movement proposed on June 15, 1868, •• That tip tanHe Libraries' Acts be adopted," thev could not hare i * *.vh:ii e handsome and commodious building w>ui<l bo tho utcorai ol tin- propoi . i Ion, or what an i-\iei ih.u of u

twenty years After be placed at the service of the people DoBOSStor The promoters took up their alwrlo !n the huildh flttW* t)uf church which was built tot the Grammar S<

Flfll.lL LlBltAKLfc* IS SHU N»KTtfKRN i.Ol MIF.S,

101

■nd it would probably hare had to serve thai ptupott for many jrenrs to come, but for the fact that the citizens of this town, b "iiitnou with those of other town*, desired to mark in a IMTHMtitnt (n.tuuei the Jubilee w.u -\ >\ :ndeed :!i-it bctte-i nr< ' I -li was not needed ; the 7,000 Ixtoks which formed the

nucleus of the library had doubled themselves, and the number of Tota ;>K-<I inane year had nearly trebled itself The most

Important part of a man's education is thai which be (rives h£a> .1. and it in that reepect that on institution like the Public Library it* of priceless value. The works of oerv age ami < greatest intellect* ..f all time ttro freely ;>! '■ »1 the

lode il In ''K'O library ore e«>>tl_v it:- yeU»p:edtaa, State

papers, works of art, gazetteers, <iictionariee, and all that in

QOCds for thai higher education which is no

essential to his i •,'"■, ii" information is needed as epeolaJ or

.<' rasa subjects, there <>t reference :n abundi nee, wallet

in the lending department will be found most of the best literature of the day. Altogether the Library contains Jo,47U volumes.

Ill . - nii.iw that the library is thoroughly appreciated, and ^ter may claim the credit or being a reading town In 1670, the ftrat year <>( the library's existence, 10,688 works vera leaned; m 1878, 10,262; and to 1889 the tesuaa reached 84,1 fhe committee have been constantly adding to theft" store of book*, mil', during the last tan yean hare a in average exp udad £80 1 in* i .i ye.tr upon the purchase of new works of a dard diameter. The school nf art. on theflntl lloor, in approoclied by a stone alair- ',:imii ■, . : -i mii* elementary itrawiugJi,aai and modelling rooms, ize, tlie Itrst-nainod being specially noticeable Cor Iti general suitability; likewise o master's room and ladlea' etiriag renins, All the halls, corridor*, &e\, have

Orei aud l>p" filing-, ehiiMiicypiee.-., &e , 'i;i\r Uvn >nade

s]»Ti.i! ir— .: M ; and the building generally is niuet appropriate i i both in plan and appearance, externally and

internally, and reflect* the greatest credit on the building lie. The architect ie Mi*. Henry A. Cheers, whoee i ii s\. - .m. i .• '.-I ii niit.in. competition "»it of some -sixty design* submitted. The ceremony of opening was worthy of

Kiwn. There it* annually reeeired from outside borrowers 17 or X'lb in BUbecnpUona. Tlio laet report nhuw* a I "!:r in Favour of the hhrary committee. Mr. \\ . Dinm* the: librarian. It was proposed to spend £3,300 the bnildingj and after allowing for a donation from the Department toward* the school of art, the rtooK to make themselves responsible for the »ncc and Art Department promised a eubscrip- I ' to bo exclusively expended upon that particular

t.l 'iu- l.udd:ng. :tnd \h>'' hhvarv eon unit toe-, HlXfOQJ Bhftl t'" : ; im 1*1 My nhonUl fall upon the Corporation, ottered to tafea.^ mg and fnrmshing the library, w\\\c.Vi fcwj\£\\v A oabor/r GWO The i wilding is in the Tudor wtj\o ot vwcVaVectoce,

•dhenawc to It* perKi, <* thai *-hr*»hr

aad ample fcfelt

fl ■!—■ a> u<-Tmt

ItttEfenrjai

3 a t*tt wstabCe and oxnpict tcifcfinr. otto* wetter** visit thrrr •>•

* ** l?*** "* ***• «Ww«^ the rt*lbg crowded, there was a verj ■hot the whole iciaiiiui. TSi -.uoftawd

•, IS*S. From that ttm« down to th.- middle ol »S.I»I ndmmw* rave* been km*, uhI oat of (bit L ; oedjr h*r* t»#a lost. The t armorer if

Toku>« th* mcb# in :h* on* yvwr in the t*o departments h*» beet «*V« vomanes. fat the jureade taction *V*tt i a*d th^ i* a departmewi to m-h»efa *pee*al at:«?ntkm fegi'*-"- ^»* b*aWaia;i»-4m«WTj4an^e.i»»hlKK«^h:h.n. more «pwr*. On th- gT**t*d Icht tbereorv imrj,

the roajiaxia* ami reference nadmg-focm, and the roeat and ladW roam. In tho mi.*tt*> . e IwOdter. t*4

aloaed for three week* f.;*dc«uf»ta)aB^ret*tYarion. Tho opeeaf- aac* now i* decaae>l is decidedly hapfij <*» w mate four and the ffeBtlesneti** re*dinjr-r«w»m have been eel jproen and ervaro, whlfcr In :! .no rrrain* an.

tho prevailing tones fhe wall* of the fct*hva&* I a ttalmon tint, and whea hronght ii decoration^ pon t the ,■:( .

whoir i* highH |ilcatfiruj Ihr eyi' Ol

the st-i-Tirc and ail rlasw* the uia ha* received a colour*

4 :i very pale ahartecrf green, varied with dark tutu on. nwl te lecture-mom oppudte tlip decoration in n haniMtij wtth tin' general {Ann, although of not unite mi elaborate a rhn Iimiip-.'. trl.v on to reopening (lie institution was patron ;

QfOVlb '»f viKilnrs, rvidmlU uanJOUB to IU&k« "j> for 1* < t

It ni;iy be taken 'or granted that the bright and chee -,i t ii* whole 1 nted for the quid bnsincxt-IOos njy

; boul the place. There is no doubt that visitors to ihcao ] :,i, ■!•'■< iv fniluci ced bv their surroundin;;*. a U-'vA.x ;md( I appearance cannot fail to produce a dewcanoui tn keeping xtHt it. ' kuaahead Tuny well be taken us a model foTaamall

.: v Interna] Bjraugunionts are concerned. Mr. ! Mi.- librarian. The Sanaa) opening of the r< --m i%

,-!, 1 1 mnitv ae l"" penona using it durtofij tht honxj it rot Ive o dock una aix till nine o'clock, Tin can o Uvtion the ppemisca, ia able toexexdae all the supervision

which requisite

Uauuooatb.

J),: i] inland wuU'innvi-v'

PITH If! UBSt4U*S XS THR N-OBTHEHX COVSTIK. IU3

Tory few years ago. With a stock of 3,998 volumes they succeeded

in last year having a turnover of 80,19fi volumes. Not only tins,

but flu- library premises have been crowded every day, and n

want w:i.s tor wmiii- lin i' 1'i'li. for increased nminimndntion,

which haa now bean met. in the course of a tewYears wosiia.il no douhi -• . i Harrogate i suitable building specially erected for the rapidly extending "work of this institution. Mr. C. F. Harrison is the librarian.

rTrNDLBY.

Ii wm i gaffe prediction iii ili.» last issue of this work that 1 1 imilcY would bring its useful Library under the Acts, This they did on May t>, 1887, by public mooting. The building, specially

» erected, is a very suitable one Tor the work. Tin- donor of me building, the late Mr. Levtaod, J.r., passed awn in IS88, but he has commemorated his mime by means of the Public Library and a park in a way which will never be

effaced. The aphorism that Knglund's greatness is due to the nobility of her eone has been repeatedly proved. And, to apply the. simile in :i restrictive seueo, it is as true that tl < mooiUnonu of a town's greatness are duo to the liberality and largc-hcuricdn i: of her citizens. There la iuany a town in England at the present nn.' wIiobo inhabitants remember gratefully the beneficent -gifts me of the citizens who, gifted with remarkable foresight, left donations Cor the building and the working of institu- whieh have been the turning-point in the career "of the town. Tins park and reeve rift groundi i re situate about two miles from tlie centre ol rlmdleyfan2 cover nn area of about twelve statute ol land. They are fitted up with a gymnasium, bowling green, cricket and football grounds, walks, &c. The library ana museum meftuated in Market Street Fhc building oontains,on the ground floor, the lending library and newsroom, ol feet by iM Mil, w i'li cloak-rooms and lavatories adjolnunr, and a stone i siaa which leads to the committee-room on the first. floor,

^v Ifl teat, with oriel window nt the end; and the rcfer- llbrttryand museum, of similar dimensions to the library below. The work has been executed from the plans and under be direction of Mr. Thomas vVorthington, and Mr. John 0 Elgood, architects, of Manchester. The legatee, Mr. X. Eckeroley, expressed the wish that the Acts M be a ! opted, as the local board could not maintain the library without ihi* bciny done. The building is in every way suited for its work, and haa before it a useful career. The rule produces £90.

I

Lbsdb,

The people of LccdH arc naturally very proud of their Public ry work. With n record of nearly twenty yearn behind them tney may proudly turn to the vast extension of the Public Library system in Loads, and to the imqunetlonablc progress which the work baa made, as proof of the, fe&VroAta *^aM& cm thaw meutntiom by the citizens. Leecle uot Voa aX to

104

iTiiTURrra.

quarters a op-lend id collection of works, H ir-rcnco deport-

ment llwre is of auch i *■!■. d 01 Be ■"■npri'hpnmve nature,

lhar ir i- not oalj l loura of pride to Leeds bal to the if Yorkshire. Tin.- niiiii; tin iln- List Off litirnrka

throughout the country for the extent (if iix reference *. . The mimlier of volume is 10,801, iumI ilnrinj? tfu Invt library vear the number ur issues iu tliis dopaiiitu i i were . „_:. h I The '.»■ xr as Kilo,' I'm (h open. Sunn- 14,108 works m

tin orb ■odiolenaeKweri' aiiiAultcti. i i miscellaneous li »i

and magazince the number was 38,090, and the next Lt

ii for directories, dl heraldry, &c . the number I

;_'. Ai'tis.iM* i'i-|»i ivm Tit tlio Iai '

milted the works in this department, and profcMioDjol men rank about the next lancet. Yorkshire ladies are uoually uU>

their own among uk pari of the country, bad

II,.;, do -l >t rcpiv.senl ;i Ur^r p-vpm-li .u <<l lh«.:.e who made Use

<l the reference departmeofc. Tha proportion fox than was only

1-39 of each 100 volumes ; and nliopkccpere show nn a

EorccotoffOi IVrhnj-B the main reason why Lgo of

i.i\ neitort 1 1 talc Beotion the numb r 'frttep*

v, liich I hey hove l" 'lniih hefure rcn< I

nlng the handsome pilo of municipal buildings when: the

housed, it is most uafortunnto that both the l<

. rtmente arc ikied and it la an even praatw caloi ■■■■ the goner:ii nevKr(H>m U ao far away from the library, havti

< iiti'iiw'i-, i:nl in a different part ot the bulldlift 8 ime bOQJ MUst surety have been .it fault in the mapping out ol toe original plans, and the views of the commit i appear i" h-ivo bean overridden in the Town <.'"unril,or to great a ko could Dot have been made. Tho estimated cost ot1 these municipal hulldmgN va* to have lieen £75,000, but through some breach of contraband extra

reached tiftmately £!:'jm**'. in xo hirjje an exneru la greatly to he deplored that the Horary port ion nhonld ha . e aacriflcen to the otner parts of The banning, aa ha* unmiesrionahl y l*«n the owe. The work in the parent institution at Leeds, pjew and developed in an old, adapted building, most inconvw In every way, and badly lighted and ventiliited : and n;itiir:iiiy have been expected that some marked advance would have been made m the miivenient arrangement of the new ijuurter.-*. That the new premises arc of course better in cverj way than Ilie old In admit Led on all hands, but thepresaiiiy ffal the library have certainly not met with the careful coll fmrn the Town Council which should have been the case. I

JKirs to come, when the Beit move becomes necessnrv, it li to be apod that the library, with its twin institution of artfcalltry. will have a building: ^neoinJiy const rudetl for their ever - rc«.(iiiivnienta. Psram by thai tone the Nitrate Kin*, who hae done mi much in providing parks for Loc<U( will sechw way to do for T-ervfa whatOameyic nafl done for Rtlnharffh, AUoghairy and I*itt*burgh.

PI-RMr lii'i; iPtRK rx THE MOHTHEHV COCTfTIBB,

]r,r,

The lending litirnry of tlie parent building represents a fttrong ahin*. Hie total t*sue reached 884,647 volumes for the year, or i imragre of 1/2A7 per flay. Fiction, pi etry, am ilram.i i-- 'j >-■*-_ if lun/cxt jui.i1, us is Ihe vase, at all libraries; but history, ngraphy, travels, science, and art represent a vory reapo ct&lne laL

B»tV«

vcuacniade of the Board Sobook in Leeds is the

i lias brought their work moat under the public

town of Leeds covers a wide area, probably the largest

country. It was early seen, in connection with the Public

', that if that institution was to be ot advantage to the

of the ratepayer*, and not fliropl v to a section, it should

over the town. This has been done to tho tsalwstA cA

r - brunches, each with a toirly vel\-aclc*AeA ewwk

1 1

fCBUC rTBJtlBTBS.

of book*, and alJ oi them in populous n*ighhourhr»->d<. rcvnlt of thm arnmaromwit is that n is only <->n r*ro occasion reader* in the districts so provided need to visit the main a: wisdom ol opening no i

broncho* fus boon seriously que«tioned, ami It nifty

■, as said Id the chapter dcaliny With tlv use of I 80000I1 aa T'lii.H.- libraries, thai M la to (>o hoped ol tar towns win not emulate the ••sample of Leeds, wnh rcgar the number cM fftools in a town used In thia way The

aim c»f having a library within only n very tew roin iIk* i!iH<r til i-viT.v iMnisohnldor in Li*d»iK no :"i DJUnixei It pro on of work In large given oenl

no extent as ii.i- been achieved is other towns, with bruotcd branch huililinjr-.. N^enl ol Luebnu in Leetfii have bad to be closed through lack <>i rcaders.a&4h e«1 iiil.v appears a case or tiaving t*><> much of a good thing, These various brand Lending libraries issued in the year Sfi volumes, and the total numbej of bosTowera' cards issued waj 0,827, Some of these branches are dolnfi an excellent work. 'IV one at Sheepacar had 190,490 viaitfl tu it in the last year, and a daily avri.iL'i of 187 books issued inthelondina; departmeat The branch os :.t Not Wortiey and TlnuMei ran* next with a very large turnover and a use of the rcading-roome which mm

tfina to the librarian and committee^ The Town Oo i'-i"'ir-!i..r I'nr rhc ifn'trc nuiuhci* of those branches, but u don I ■•(lin.ir oi them Mr. James l'atee, tho librarian, hai had t" (Id. With the numerous branches nndor his oontrol ho has, cour Foundhifl] andi foil, but %\ :tl. i J i - ii i 1 « t hH< istiint

thotriivadsol'tho. work liavo been kcy>t well in hund.ando thoroujfl

oversight has 1'tvn kept over these numerous branches Bu Vatee baa twice visited America to boo some oi the librari' that CM i i.iiy.n.i with almost a lifetime behind linn oj lil work ho has acquired u very varied experience. The ostu)

o the travelling ibrariee 'n Leeds Sa largely lue to him. These contain about ioo volumes each ot* pood and instructive literature, and they pass around among the children cd the School*. Thlfl t net hod which should be largely copied

fit her districts. Books of travel are the lavoiutfieey and all fietioi Ui exclnd *<i. The Leeds report is packed with statistics, and ns g oul

touched Me lllghvwatcr mark in this direction. The whole worl aceoinplishi'il every year w. very risinu'liw, >i:<l It would be

im|Mtwihie for n.ii this educations] machinery w be In a operation without yielding more or less of beneficial reanros

LtVXBMOL

1 Ine "i the kings oi Pablio Library work has gone over i majority ioc ma Issue ol the previous edition or thia w -mi' ramei A.Uanaon Pioton was for the bed part of fori\ earnest an : it friend of the movement, Foi tl

FCTOUC UB&AHIBS EN THE KORTHBR.n COUNTIES.

107

i>i i:n; period he had presided over toe deliberations of the

library committee with very gTent credit to himself, find certainly

with advantage to the whole of the Liverpool community. He

M" inn of his death i which took place in Jul.y, 1880,

!•: -In \ - win- yean old, but, despite lit; udviilH-cd ii^-r, av.i. »fl as ever both in public and private matters to the Lest. II 0

bcfc'on life ae n poor boy with litt K- or no 0 IttcaUoXL und by dint ■in'»nl'-< i-: wnrlt r;iiHorl him noil to I'" ;"; llfcMteei of the

i:_kI o dtoti igi La hod scholar. Ho was masft p of two langun^rrj-,and partly nogoointed With three thou-, besides being m minority on antiquarian, pbiloa* phi( al, and social queal ■■ So v u) the author of wie ** Moi i >rial«of I iverpooV'a wot* displays inn "■<■:" i |'-i .i. -.UK research, which is now a standard book. The well-known Picton Reading-room, adjoining the Public Library,

[led after Sir lai - Picton, m acknowledgment of hi* long

i j.'iii i lUnir-i .in behalf "i 1 1" spread of Public i Fbrariea and

rton among the people, He waa one <»t the most easily

understood of men. lie had live pli tily and simply among his

follow II Kens His industry was tremendous ; it run Into every

di p:ii 1 1 i ii o] hia life Ilia reading was vast and voracious ; hn

u'lw iii the an pi fait loii and attacking of languages <raa

1. Tlie Aral occasion on which he presided over

i tnmittee was on Juno 39th, 1862, and tin* hub

. .ii wan "ii July Ulh. only aome four days before hietdeathi

iTim i> u i \[\n- ami uin-v.iupli-d in (In- 1 1 1 .-^ I - 1 _v of tllO

•iii- 1.- Library movement, Tim whole library community felt the

ogi i Poi hoi lag i b one of its leading lights the late .Sir Jam

* Ilia life was long, happy, and useful, beyond the ordinary

(xmr*c, itnd it wa* hi* «<«*! fortune to he able to .show to Che

/i how a young roan, by cultivating the talents with

h he ha* been endowed, andby perseverance and upright

ict, may rise to u position of great eminence, aud also how

im us itmn tuny ki-i-i> i innric in touch with younger gonenuMose,

andtbv .'i just appreciation <>i tin.- progress wnfah Ik oi ex g< lag on

nrounii ns. bring the fruits of hut life's labours to the highest

ri] p. rleetioDi l le was a mber of the Corporation from ad took an active interest in nil the affaire of the Town Council; but it was as chairman of the library and museums with in* ripe experience and warm and sympathetic with the reading needs of the people, that bia public uf\s w:r- ino-c :iji|i;nvtit. In the l'ublie Library roll of ceupy a first plnee. With nil who knew Iiiin

v ui 1, for long years I me, be green, and the record

of a lot career in the service of his feDowmen to

Imjrn muted In the >rpool jieople, and in the

large and special reading-room bearing his nam*1. " The Pleton" cut it i livl, is r Tucli frequented ronni in toe

i Hi" buildings forming the central library. The en

Irihuie to Ii m and tn Mm work. TTr never : i' hair's-hrouttl) In hta devotion tn \uh YAw.wy A.w'w-. i i was ever Awn and buoyant, arid Vie wsMSdaA xrtSfc

1(*

PTBI.IC UnaAEIES.

keen interest the bc^inniriK*. formatfcffij und powth of Library work in Liverpool

Tin' lato 8tr W llluun Brown, the muzdAc ml donor to Liverpool oi'thr l Ml I -■ Library and Museum Mnlding> in W ilham Jtrowu Street, eouM not Iiutc perpetuated liie name in n IB"1" priato wnv. These, with the an Gallery, mo, wtthou lin- i pile ol liulldlnoi it>r tins p the whole I

km.< nd if wo except the Btate-eidcd Lnctltn

Bunding in the ];u- ro in the elty ol Liverpool and

elevated from the rtreel below, they h«ve contributed - n for i Iverpool a moat Important place for The mnjnity nnri architaetnraJ beauty of lr* public hmMrmra in 1N0, when the question dI totmdinjgn Public Library was first fn< propose] ini't with cordial support, but Mime oppoai'

afterwards the Council obtained the Art -i Parliament authorizing thorn to levy a library and museum rate of not exceeding Id. in the |miuih1, mid in the panic year, 18.V library was opened i:> bnike Sired. Tlie following year kiw the

eh!ilM:>l Mli-nl Ol the m:I1l mil ROUttl |CD( :- : the

[Irown Liii.iM ran opened In 1860; the Walker Ait Qattea 1877. end the Pioton Reading-Boom in 1679. Whilst, howi these buildim.™, thus gradually erected, form a -splendid irr> Institution! toetihiua to n-gard Un- education ami b>r :i I, ll.e pn i io rate oul "i wnich they have to be maintained ha* 1652 remained the same. There haa been no corresponding i .uni cd re* in- est and in tbia respect Liverpool differ* from I of fch< other large towns, wine the rateable ralne

i M'd jm> much. The une made of these handsome buildingn is unmiatolie The thirty-seventh repi rt was mode public on J!.

1K!M), The cot ii ii iM. lee note 111; it Hie )>:i rli:< ltu t; btl'V pOWeTUObfc

n* ur nig the last soaaton now enabled them to admmistorthG Library and Muttoum Act of IMS to the ftilloet extent, and frees it Prom ninny moot points wm*oh heretofore presented themselves^ noto- i»iy mo, that » doubt h:i- heei dispelled ss t«> the lending libr terming a part of the corpus of the main library in William % '*n street. The exigencies Of Liverpool trnde and eommeroc

i srlng necessitated the migration of n urn sad Industrial sec- tion ot tiie eomi&nnlty to a residential neighbourhood from the eentre of the city, it was deemed desirable in thei terest to extend the area or the district libraries, resulting' in the eraetton >f one In the township and war d ot west Derby Tim extern to which district lihrarfea may ultimately lie established will trreatly depend upon the financial resources of the committee, and upon that question the dictum of the ratepayers most MViner in- later be pronounced. ThN question of branches has for time been b sore one En Liverpool, and many columns <>t* I is I-", i press have been devoted to If either o the form of leti report* of discussions of the committee, or leading articles, .Mr. Oowell, the well-known chief librarian, has advanced the vk-\y thnt it nnuhl better Lobui\dupagveu\.e«aVva\\\N«n.rswU*i

PmilC ITBSUftJKS tS TBR H-'"«rJIRRX rY»rvTXR*-

1W

ttH

live books for nteen C by Eho working men whleh Dot Obtain for themselves, rather than fritter away

librarfo* Tlii* hie*

le:

s

the fc#rjnote "i tin* work Ed Liverpool, inn t in not. r.lmr Uiai it ha* been ritogsthei nwc wtf rl. Ttw rtntlatfes ol the rater- eucv librarv >liuw iluii Ifcerehs* sued during the paal paw

Compared with the i«*ut» of the previous ti

:i-;t.srol 17.019 rolUIDCS 'iMM- .lrc|t.-:i.Sf 'i:i- ■■

proportionate in the several lAascsof literature \nU which books are divided, except I-otin ami Greek classic*, winch ethJMl crass* of i The volumes added during the year

cr 2,404, The effect ol good arid bad trade upon employ- ment is always Apparent in the work of the library by the deci or increase of tnc books issued to those frequenting the re.*l- : :hc prrscut improve tnont in tn ■!<* i- ; <> doubt the direct cause of the diminution <t books issued both this year i ltd last ; and the books borrowed from the lending libraries also show a decrease to the extent of ii',106 volumes, due no doubt to the Airae cause. Tfae&nmborof books referred i<>. which have been classified, by no moans represent the whole or the wotft ol One hbrnrj. The issues of «Minrti»Hy, month!y,and weekly periodical, which are placed in the 1'icton reading-room, are estimated at

periodicals are nil of a scientific or literary olinr- Jn the Brown reading-room, whore the literature lamed

la of a more reeroative and popular kind, the various periodical!*

lent, in addition to the volumes of prose fiction, volumes of the

•ated papers included in the table, numlter 1 1 .'.U'W To this

046 directories lad 17,18* volomsa of

its. A. section ol this room forms the newspaper deparrmont,

in-! various countings of the readers hero present at ons time

gtvaat average of not less than 7<X> i*»rday,or lM».7ln iliirui^

ling figures combined make a total of i0O|dN

liook* and periodicals issued during the past year, and this apart

norraous number ol persona who coma tooonsultor rend

(H the 444,649 volumes issued from the refer-

ibntry prose fletlon appears to have been the class of lilrr.i-

aosl :;i i smand, 171 ,097 volumes having been applied for.

i aud Greek rhixsirN v.uuiv ;it the other end oC the list with

'i.i;; -,i l-mic3. The totnl number >i works , ..i.t.ioi- \ m ilie lil-Mn

wmts to 94,749.

iiic total Dumber iA \ tames lent from the north and south

dtnfi .■.-''.' I' whirh !'»•"-, le'o w.-i.- iwued li (-in

i ranch and Ift&,841 from the south branch. At neither

W0H >■■ lost. The Volume,-- ;nl<ird or lent to hull

counted to 300 The total attendance" at the branch

< during the evening only, tuid held in

rooms, were 116,915, being made up as follows i Ohnta-

(lev Utnul, :u>,r,:\*>; Wellington Koad,

ad. 17,833; LowraU 14.S80. A 0%

was opened onJanunrr 30th, 1800. This « rtuifasfc^eTTw^

room ami library combined tfc&tuaft ^jet Veen

no

prune rntKAsite.

cotaUlishedinthocity, As to the need for the now Is here

con bo no question, In the thirty-aix years which ha\

og i] thd north ana ttouth londin« i ii 1 1 i>v,ii up n the outlyln i ixuti) of Kveri an artisan poimliitii'n "t ii-.'iii ,0,000 to hnt,(HKi pa i [o, t i wh< m, t-v reason of duttanee, those libraries arc of prooacally u<» I „■•

Ac :'.'"'! Ikik king ,v,'« " i'"1 " .."ti-i-l l.v the lun-nn •«. ■nn ittee, mid

doubtless hid luees resourced k.<»i>t pace with tl

mandi an 1 1 thorn the present provision might have been sooner. As it is the new library come* just when Q most needed rhe >at has been aboui £3,000. It occupies on

:' 100 wuaw yards, and >mpriseat reading-room w by -"-' (set. It ts of one storey only, and flu feet square. Fh€ greater portion >i Che ntorior is ocenpied by the library and reading-mum, a work root xnp-

ported itv pillars Around the walls on two sides are place bookcases. On the other sides and in the bays of tin- window are the newspaper stand*, whilst tho floor space is oceupli tables for readers o1 hooks. Triere is u'comraodiition altogether for about a hundred people, The library is also provided v room for the assfe an s. a librarian's room, and 1 1 ominlttee-rc and has been fitted throughout willi tin: latest Iruprovemi About 7,000 volumes have been provided, and within three month* after the opening' 2,307 borrowers' cards had teen Issued Tin- question of decentralizing the chief library is occupying c Hb sidcrable attention, not only from the committee, but ;n the jgeaeraHyi and the development of tills step will be watohei . interest. Probably as one means of carrying this work oul the fivn evening reading-rooms, open from 0 Lo 9.00, will tilth: a- ume a more permanent form.

afanoHWTMa,

Taking an all-round survey it inns I c said til it Mauri:, •!■ - lm* never taken a back seat to any town or cdfcy in I he wor d Public Librarv work, and probably never will This, pet appears s rather bold assertion, hut it is one base I upon what Manchester has done, 2a still doing, and Is prepared to do vitality and energizing force throughout the entire v. conspicuous that the statement jnst nude is more than justified

So eagoHy desirous have the Ineinlx of thix mo\<iiH'!it DO*

having a roller aeeounl «>f tho rise and progress <! the Pi bh'4 i irarle i this ity that the need toi a littla nandho ■: a descriptive and hiKtoriiMi Kiccrvh . . e iii( ? . it.wn apparent

\n«l to mrrt this demand for information a panvohle! ol aixtj

pages wns written by tl hid lihrarian, Mr unai'Ics VV Sum m,

and the deputy chief librarian, Mr. VV. R. Credlund, and \m in in*.*. The aide work of Mr W K. A. Axon on "Tho \ (theater Libraries," published some years agi bj Messrs i He/wood vV Bona, lad prepared the way for this atioitor which brought the subject down to date. Tho rcadej knows thai the Manchester Public Library was the firvt

JTHLIC LIBRASIBfi t* THE NOHTEEKM COUNTIER.

Ill

iblished under the Ewart-Brotherton Act of 1H50, and,

ITiOOBW *hown, DBAbldiatety thftdf the pasting Oi Hie Act

Stops were taken Top the adoption of the Arte and the u n m mn

of a library. The steady progress of the work from the beginning

down to the present date is n record which Manchester men look

npon et™nfl of the many to which Manchester

\y and justly lays atafra

in tiit? looonnt given Id another chapter of fctw opening of the

flr«t. Public Library under the Act of 1830, a nnrahor of names

an* mentioned; but there kk others In tlie Manchester roll

of honour who have done much bo help on Hie popularizing of

Institutions In tliai city. Firel and 'orexnost among tneea

i> Ml'. C'liilMi-illiir Tl.ii'i v Kiwwm, J.P. This "rMli'Uiail i\:ix [JQPQ

at BCinohostei near the close ul 1820. After l; brief svlwol life, and before be had attained lu'et eleventh year, he found ".vmeut in the shop of a well-known liookwller and printer in Market Street At the termination of lua apprentice- 10 remained for five years as managcx, ood then, in cou- junction with a fellow-workman, beyan business. In 1853 ilirv quired tlie praniseswheTe their apprenticeship had beenpnesea. Be, the real education of the subject of tola bogs n with the jeara of active work. The desire for km w- odgc found further encouragement and outlet fit the evening of the Mechanics' Institution. Here he took an active part thi >M8 of the Mutual Improvement Bociety, ana on

in i '.nt (4 his majority ho woe elected a member of the rd of directors. Amongst nis many services to the instit n~ n •! the least was the prominent part he took in the establishment v classes for girls and women. Mr. itawson hue been eon- eerneii :ii n- government of the McehnnicK' Institution aincc the i:-ii. i-'ivr yearc ago it wan transformed into, a toahnloaJ "I. and he was elected chairman of the council, lie is also s mi'jnbtr of the Whitworth Committee, appointed by the laaYatfVY o3 the Sir Joseph Whitworth to mkkwi in their greut Knemo for the establishment of the Whitworth Institute <>t' Ait &n<l Industry in Manchester. ]n 1860 Mr. Uawson was eleete<l ' i> < 'iifjtive of Cheethum Ward in the Manchester City »nd, with the exception of a, slight interval, retained ■unnveiloD until 18W>, when ill-health compelled bis realgna- I - tub ' ; ■■■ in 1S57, of Sunday bnnri.< in the public parka itarlan bigotry, and an Ineffectual him at the poll. As chairman, in IKCX, of the Libraries' Committee, he was mainly responsible for '" Uullcy i>t c*tabllAhmg branch lending libraries In the I'ipuloiis district* nf the city. In 1884 he waa solicited o of Kxehatige Wind to become again a ■ante fur municipal honours, and waa returned i\y a Hi- resumed Ida position on the libraries which In- \> the deputy chuirmun, and in this red iiiu.-.i valuable service lo the worV. ol r Ut-niricM, A* ciudrmtux of tin committer, AWe.nn.ui s\ '' -

112

prBLXO UBiARrn.

Smith ha* done n work for theae i»*ii atSonfl worthy of high praise. There >TJ»er riamw which could b< mention

were ! 000688811 tOdOBOSl till |'ivsp-nl i mm: unit, <rf lino.- WQ0

by their enthoRiasm and lut>our helped to

[ Institutions. Butttlaonlj rendering a weD-menl i

ti» viy thiil in uo pldi'f 1m* iv- work been more ttbl) and uurcos-

ilUly t I !>• l-» ■;.: [»i i-v:, lli:i!L ;m M.turlir.-,|cr, FnnTillii'

■<r\ biitnol Uk* Idea to the inesmi ti nc the entire local ham riven the wtigtit of their vast influence and adv->

il the Fublie Libraries and the rnnvoment ttcuera-lry. Daren lies, as much 00 in anything else, the proud position Mancht^tn Kbrariea now hold in the library wo: .

The roll of chief librarians is not by any means witln.ui mi- if ■■• Edward Edward* was the Bat. sad held the position for six Tean. followed ]u>lv<-t't Wilson SitiiliH, lu-othcr to tin; genial di : _■ saroc name. In 1884 Dr. Crcntodoro woe appointed to ihis tilHoe, which ho held until his dcutli in 1379, after fiftoen jcars of mithlul service. Hi* R-uecrxwor iv,i- Mr L'. W -Sutton, who hod been for some yeni-v in the service »t tho committee, and wtfll holds tho some office, lie is deservedly esteemed V; committee, the public, whose servant he is, and hie brother pro- fessionals. In hi* hand*, nd vih Mr, t.Vedland as lus able deputy, the work to receiving all the force which can eomo from practical experience and sustained enthusiasm. The present writer remember* well old Ur. Orestadoro when, on a lad, li<- -.-,:■«. :i ivii.i*T sit t ii> old L-amptieid Library. The reputation ot the old doctor will ever he associated with the prepar ot a memorable eataka.'"'-' Issued in 18ftJ. It consisted ot two

parts, the Brst being « list of authors* names in alpha!* order, anonymous works being placed under thou- subject! the second an index of subjects. His lihrury work is known in the dtefirtet, lie wmh rather b recluse so fiat asothi HbrarfasB were concerned; but one gentleman who holds hijrh post as chief libnrlun In n large northern town, nnd wh< catalogue It* one whldi lus received unlversnl admiration, t< how as a young man he sent some MS. copy of hia first imtaJogna tn Dr. CJreatadoro and sought a personal interview with l um the DQoal k i i 1 1 i i v u;iv the old doctor looked through hie abeel made a low suggestions, .md chatted pleasantly with the chh librarian in embryo. Tlie first yearn working of the Manchester FubUe Lil ,.' 3, showed liiat 01,080 volumes were used by readers Ei iritTi.-iu-.- department, while 77.2.1:.1 «eu- i»ui:owed Prom the

[ng department, making a total of 1JW,812. Tin* i i li rrary jonfcoined at the end of the first yaw 18,104 rolumee, nnd the lending department 7,195, Thus it may be said hai L'o.tXK) volumes proi Ided were issued Ave timer* over,

of 1851 #ave the total number of the inhabitants of tho as 808,3*2. Making every allowance for women, children, and adults m\:iMo l..> iv number, prohahly between 50,000

and fiO.OUU persona, WOW I Mill remain, who Toight i n dirndl v have

pmuv LnraAanes in ran yowntvav couimw.

113

beta expected tu have availed themselves of the privileges pro- vided for them. Leas than one-half of the rising generation of 1851 WM therefore recetvtDg the instruction necessary to fit. it for

it tie of life, and of coarse the proportion for the previous ■ii 1 1 would be less still. TbB nee ol the libraries has in TateT years increased out of sill proportion to the men growth of the population, and this Increase is largely accounted for by the strenuous educational work which has been earned on since the passing of the Elementary \rt n( 1870. Since that time the proportion ei children not apparently receiving education has steadily decreased. Id making a comparison between the past and pit* sent work of the library, Mi'. Crcdlaud iwinted out, in a

e delivered name time ago, that the results of these enhanced educational eflorte might naturally be expected to show tliein- aelvee iu the increased OM of institutions having for their object

ilorgenient and extension of adult education, and it is

EstuV ul that the figures showing the working of the

rarles undoubtedly point to this conclusion. Between 1852 and 1370 the libraries received their fullest development. The patent ioc i - amptield gradually increased in popularity, and demands began to be roado for the establishment of branches in other parte of the city. Accordingly, in 1357, two brunch Ubrari* b were opened. These were followed by the. establishment Uvoscy Street branch in I860, and of the branch In Raeholmc Road in I8B8 ; thus, before tho end of 1870, the whole of tho present library aystom had boon brought into existence, with the exception ol the Chootham branch, which was opened in lf?7:?, and the reading-rooms at Bradford unci Ilurpmb. v, I in 1*37, and t ho roading-room in Hyde ltoad opened m 1988. J- pom i -70 to the present time trie efforts of tho LibraricfiComniitteehave been confined principally to the improve- ment and extension of tho bnildmgs and privileges already provided. By the opening of the Cheethara branch in 18712 tho ohoin ot libraries encircling the city was completed, and it was not until 188(5, when the out-townships ol Bradford and Harpttrhey were added, thai any necessity was felt for more

Et In impowiblo within the compass of a few pages to follow

op the steady progress of the Manchester work. Thiring the

but twelve months the number of readers and borrowers »t the

various libraries and roadJng^roomfl (i.e., the nuniber of visits

have made) reached an aggregate of nearly franr millions

8), being over 70,000 in excess of the previous

ye.ir. The numlter of homes used for home rending and tor

iieniKil in the reading-rooms hue been 1,649,711. The increase

aj Uiist the previous twelve months, la 12,867.

Hm ii - volumes used in all the libraries won l,7no,

Of the volumes issued to re;ulers at tho libraries, 330,068 wore

b the reference library, o07,96-l iu the reixdm^-T <y attached to the ' trTT0 in the Bradford, Rar^jweVvwj,

mad Bjda flaed lvadlug-rvwub. For home reading, l\\e uacatiaBC

ft

114

PraiJC tJBR.VHTBS,

for the year was 740,949. Out of these only 10 are missing. Oi Sunday*, 5,843 volumes have been used by i,!^i adult readers h tin: general rcadinjr*roorafl .:i tin- branch Libraries ; 18*619 volumes hare boon used by 13,428 reader i in il r •■ 'imeh reading-room*. In the boys' room 115,245 have been issued. At the rofon Library ii.ojm rolumoa have been issued, the average being -'•-

eu*:l Siui<ti>, .iL'iiiii-; -Jlti in the prcv ions year. Tin- | i vendors of magazines and newspapers al ndsvfl

haa been over 160,000 The total number of vi»its pai-i libroaiv mid roading-rooraa on Sundays baa boen

..■.._<■ ol *».•■' " eocl Sunday. In the boys' h arc

i pan ererr evening, 136,408 volumes have been used, being on increase oi Lir668. Ihe number of volumes in the fi oov l >7i947. The number in the re i ranoe Library is 00 the eli branch, libraries 104,842, and in the three reading i •:. - 12 volumes. 1'he addition to the stock is 5,WS0 vol ID number oi' persons holding hmTiwrs' tickets is ll.Si;.':, muI .in the yew they have made 703,79ft applications for books, show big that each borrower has boon supplied with books, on an average, seventeen times in the twelve months. The chi •: additions to Hie i.-t irenoe library have been two valuj ble collections, m comprising l.olo work* on shorthand writing, and the other S volumes i 1 various editions of the writings nr Dr. Thomas lniLiei\ mirl u! inioks relating to him, and tn ntl er anthon ol the same i me Amongst the additions to the lending libraries, special attention maybe called to a selection of ttfty volumes oi the Braille type for the useof the blind. There are besides ft br amah about 180 embossed books iu the Hoot type. The In the direction of providing books for the blind were takes 1868, when the committee were asked to buy a number ol b< printed with the types invented by Mj'. Moon. About I it was estimated thai their were about 300 blind people in around Manchester, most ol' whom were ol the poor* r i unable bo purchase the books, which were ueceasarilj price Since that year addition-, han '"■■•n made to the liltr ;;iul there is now a goodly list of book* .i hipte-1 for the usi those who cannot sec. The books deal with all kinds of nub from the '''Sinner'-* Friend," liturgy ol the Church of Emgland, to " Anecdotes oi Two Dogs."

Tlio committee express a regret that the limited rose their disposal prevent the extension of branch public reading-rooms, which arc now b< nig demanded in nil suburban districts. They trust, however, that the council will enable them to take the nooosBary measures for gtvi i!i> resolution of the council passed unanimously oil December 31st) 1887j with regard bo obtaining Par i imontary powers for removal of the restriction of the rate to bo expended foi purposes. The total number ol borrowers whose mimes w< then enrolled at the six lending Libraries was 12.604, 29,035 lived within the eitv of M I L3,56U ol

lonvrmTG resided beyond the city bousu

ithi.ii! Miiiiuii&f; ix mi: nojithkiin ciumik

1I.>

wh

i; isquaition od allowing non-residents within the borough to

v.- boo).* h:r- ill-en rat her ;i hum inn; >ne la Mafloheater, m U

other places. The ratepayers oi flajiehesterw*re astounded

(hat one-third Of the numbi-mr ni<mbei'*ot their hbiaiiOl

resident raembamanG1 thai sue] persona havo the use o] lea five oi onsf. There ha* been a natural Icpling that i not under any obligation to grant ilia use <>i the librae to persona noi renmanl within the City boundary Thohye- palate that non-elertora can have tin use » the libraries their i I mining I he applimlion-l'unii sufiied by 0 person on the t nuxiiotpa i -i. I'll Uittl surely qui only mean ooDpStaatoru living v u in the I'i'.v boundary The matter In a rery Important oni ool enjy lor ahncliefftei but (or other places. In several targe ■■ where forrnerh nuu-reMileuLs were allowed to borrow, the gnivikfj : a teen butcn away, and reasonably so in the present writers opinion. It is ecwueb tab* to axpeol thai residents aad

i iyi s should I'l-nviiii* books free "I expense to iIium- wluj do

Dot contribute to the support ol the libraries. Furthermore, us lonjf as these large centres give unlimited facilities for non- resident© to borrow, the inducement to adopt tbc Acts in the rarios ctein which they reside id miuiniaed. In one or

two "i [the district* around Manchester, governed by L«>»-ol Doar«K the question of adopting the Acts bus liocu under deration, but owing; to the liberality of Manchester in reading free the Act Jtifl remain unadopted. ac districts may soon hocomo incorporated in Q«ter, and bo the difficulty will, bo far as those placet, arc concerned, quickly disappear.

Mnnehoetcr boa thus owvy reason to be proud <>f its Public

Library n one proof of thosatlsffiotion thai is felt ie the

continued demand for its oxtonsion. The lending cituens of this

-....• citvlong ago recognised t hut the elementary education

given in Board Schools :* not the end for which thai education la

The Hiii of clemeutary education is to provide every

mom bar ol the community with the capacity for :i<-»|umng know-

and cultivating the mind, it La clear thai this capacity

cannot Ne exercised unless the melius of nhtainin;! ;nnw lodge out

•ctnal enjoyment Is accessible in the letan hum* of those

raona who nave -<> empkvj tholr days in aiming' n living.

upported ml o1 the rates are ii nly means by

tab thiaean he provided Their eostisatrlfle compared with sty may save by I io comtuquenl mpruvernent; In the members, and from wlaxi ii will gain as the result 'in re universal intellectual effort

UnmLainoxovaB.

The Public Library and readiinj-rouni form part of the hand-

inir pih- ii mi:nii'ipal buildings situated in the main street, The

nni J* on the ground flooi a" tin Udldiug, and the lending

n are on the second AWr. Che pteSesn

r, 186"; mit.althougU thb\u30tatf \a

II*

unn*a:E5.

now bctfc i houn d, the drain mi the change hnn been cxccmivc. The income bas been crip| heavy rent charged by the Co moil f"r the new Public Library in tho municipal biiilcltiura (£150 a year} And other •' i a rjrett incidental thereto, having repaid to the Council quite one-third of il - (mint made to than. In confluence of this the oomn i inly been able to Spend 2k, IOJci. jwr pound of their income upon i,,!- , -i in***. 7«. l'»»«i ni icirold labrtstion Added to thir. there liuve been diffl&Utiea in other directions, and th*,- iv report is not inspiring. Tho result of a specie miD-Gomniitteeshowstiiutn I urge dcnciein \ ol 9&5 volume* lion been loun<Ifof winch twenty-seven wore bwks belonging to the refer department, whilst there area rnnsideruhlc nam hero! pUDpl Itluu Flocks etc, iii the cellar "in a condition that rol utmos* dtftgntee on those who have hud eh urge Of thfflU " I OS W6M pnotiOAlly useless for the work of audit until

I -i i; -.tIi "1. :i-,il Iliri',- in tin pnnMbllity ft

*.rantial proportion of the 908 volumes missing from the < library being recovered. \ considerable number ol tho boo the unary are quite beyond repair and unfit for circulation, and the' committee cannot replace tfiem for want of fUnda. The committee appointed to Enquire into the matter dealt to del tit how this defldency might be partly accounted for. such as lite substitution of one-volume copies when replacing three-volume novels, and said it was also probable that tfir mnnbtir worn oul and withdrawn wan largely in e.ve*s of die reported nam The committee had only to look at the enormous olrculttttan, exceeding 1,100,000 issues in seventeen years, to be assure the wear and u the lending library would account I

much larger deduction than the librarian had made, The >u!»- committec regretted to mey that the number of ins tain n the* h.ul met with of groat carelessness m working the h . and

of negligence in allowing book* Co remain in the h<uu>- borrowers f«»r hcvci.i1 mmitlw, i>r<o -«i vi r\ -lradythatsonir pi rtloB

of the deficiency was due to thost muses. Ana they were entirely ut i low to understand how it was tlmt O* erimpk course of <:ount- intr all the books on the shelves at tho sir. h taking in I 1888, when the library was closed for the purpose, nnd t DO Longer any wont of space, qh mi^rht have been alleged in the old pfemiB68j wae n '>t resorted to, and tho deficiency ii not. have ui-iaco oltogethcj - he hit I yew's -f >ck ti b

thereby discovered, and reported to tho committee. It : of the duty of one who seeks to record the work being done by these institutions to simply piofa >ul the parte suitable to support th«» main nr^nmont tor the extension ot thuxo libraries, \ I li;l hlstorli n must take facts as they present themselves, and confusion worse confounded nt Middlesboroutfli will serve a pood purpose if it makes other librarians end committees exercise greater oote Bie rooke upon which both may be stranded rm new indicated, and wine men will take a lesson fi'om it. i fpponentl Ol Mi--- in ■-( it utiens should hesitate Oefote xAiev \wut then* finger.

pvulic iJ»n-iWRe is rein NnirniiuiN counties.

117

To say that cho work at Middlcshorough had l toon a failure would bo untrue and a libel on the library and town. A new lease of life. has commenced. In October, l«^tf. out of 111 applications (in it -i. Wv. Baker Hiidsoi m accountant rmm Ke<iear, wai ti'iitu. There Is a Urge collection of natural h. specimens which would form an excellent nucleus of a museum, bat these are :tt present housed uutof sight in rooms of the municipal

building. A largo piece of vacant ground is nnlv divided from ilcipal buildings by a street, and It would be gratifying ..ok from the present roomu ot the library on to a museum building erected upon this spare piece of ground ; or, lietter still, perhaps the twin institutions under one roof. The matter hits M?an3 Ufata bees under dfaouaston, Tlw temporary museum bat hopn fitted np, and wns opened to the public in March, 18W0,

Bit* library nil good friends In Messrs. Hell Brothers, and the il ore baa la u ^Ic'ims of promise.

MlDIUlTON.

A statutory meeting was held iu 1887, at which a poll ma

'llic ir.sult was a majority of nearly thrc»* to one in

i the adoption. Iu March, 1989, the new building woa

i'rofeseor Boyd Dawklns. The committer, in their in-

I toting architects, trave the key-note as to stylo

by eyVKWting o sixteenth century style oi' architecture, n rusl i<"

i : n.i i i . and the vestibule is oarriodupto a con-

w<1ctj height as a town- ,n- turret, which forms the principal

external feature. On tho ground iloor there two largo rooms

the one to the front being used as a reading-room, and that at the

back as u lending library, Tin; upper floor is of similar h\z*\

andlaeo arranged that it can bo used as one room, or that hall

o\<r tho reading-room may bo divided into three olass-roorne by

moans of sliding partitions'. A spacious staircase with stone step's

to floors, and this ib lighted by a large mullioned

v. tilled with tinted glass of geometrical pattern*,. Tho

floors are all ftroprooi, and the upper are carried on iron

joists resting on rolled iron girders. 'Die principal rooms have

-'law in the lower parts ot the window*, una tinted gliiss in

ppei The subdivision of the total area into rooms of van

- quite discreuoii-.n'.-. uud on iu< varied Iroro time to Unions

ces may suggest ; and this elasticity in plan had great

vetglit with the committee when considering the competitive

design*, Tin' hi n n-y began with 3,223 volumes. SwfflcJeni Mih-

SCTiptVms were given to erect the building, and asMinVlletoii had

anljr just, before the adoption of the Acts been incorporated, It

was looked umn as a very happy omen that the library should

be established so early In IU corporate life,

MlLLOM AND I'KNRtTtt

The oouuti'y is watclung with considerable interest what cao.be done in this movement in small di&tricta ;ux<\ w\Ui a nv\\ \y\i

Iff/fain Ims u population of about r n*\. -w<\ /■

118

KTBUO iiwiiiw

li.WJ Both plioes are :n Cumberland* una ut present these witli :• -haven and *\ orkfn^onaretheonbi whew

ihe \ . t .n idop* -i Hi*' •( leeti n

I id in On Etl« library

apefttd rif i u ahnosl i^od in mining,

and for the l**nefit »»i tTic** more partfeularly a newsroom hail beea opened al i el !»"■ sbowl two miles ftam Mfllom ftw

E.ilnccK CSSOj which Is much better than Penrith I -in with t,ooo volume*. It i* particularly tost

Milium should show i good example erf what ran be don.- district where the chief population u ity rnnnosl

toft Some S39 Iwrrower* urn the library, arid the -"-v.

pupilliil. Thry -iiv ulli'Will|f till? privileges Ol the |

persons nrH residing hi the Board's district by a psvmmu

v;i|i-nl tc wlial the penny rate wmiM be.

IVuritli library lui- Iktu "pen •miu: 1^--' The ijuainl "1*1 boQd< in^in which ii & situated wai from I853tc 1883 a working . ruidhiL'-i ""in, ,:iiit i lie library of the Mechanics' Enatil ateeamaalw ultimately U> thli library. A jrood proportion of the books are represented in the 6,500 volumes of the library, and are nut of a class writable for generil circulation, There we seme, hoi hIu h might be useful in large town libraries if n system of ex- ohsngOCCUld be adopted an with museum spednu dot-

I \i- bhe library, and the averi m sixty-five pet

The rate produce** Llflo,nn<l P. ' ■-! ~ l = is M-mri-i*; mi actual ratac of it which it scarcely measured by double that sum, The foUowing irnatfee expenditure in i ahtishmcii chi

855 10a. 4d.; newspapero and pcriodi< ills, E36 10s. 7d , books and rebindinjr, £42 Ik. ad.; interest on loan and C5rci M total £134 6 3d. 635 new rohnnea were added the year. Thorc ia a Mnull museum. The museum 8] < cimoa wore the uift ot Admiral Wnnhope, and are of n ve Character. These are nt one aide of the lnr£c room - I which I he building chiefly consists, with one or two smaller to* i ti md : attached for the librarian. Ot daily papers taken Hum thirteen, twenty-two weolclic«, and twenty-one monthlies in 1894 there was a bazaar Tn aid of the funds of the library, and itv.-r £400 were rawed, the interest of which is spent upon books Sorely u partol the principal would not be ware

it Kpcnt f of library piu'poses. There arc several hundred en] In the librnry which came from Profeswor P. W. Newman, li a friend of Dr. Nicholson in the district. The workisgro'v and the museum i* capable nf being' made more Rttrai fclve i m fi salary of £36\ sad house, coal, and gaa, the town is being ran served by Kr, Stuart, who wan connected with the building ftjr mow year* before the \ets wt»re adopted. "Hie present writer has a vary tender regard for the welfare of these libraries "'ii'.Mi'iiii i small run'. Mnt iiynn enhanced Interest on the pari 5l the Penrith m pie, and another bazaar for the pur] nf raising funds to place another store} on the bunding, Pel woititl 1'vsfin agntn soresh,

rror.rc libraries in thk southern corNnss. 119

DB MD >• ** TOPi lli.vni.

There is oo •;< ui the Pul lie Library movement in-iug u

real infection, I ■treotly libraries become eatabtiahed in one centre,

- . 1 1 : t- 1 .Liv! i-it-t - BftOil g I 'n-ir utility :ind 9UQC6M, UK DOt lODg before

they wish to possess tljc •:iiiki facilities. 4mong the uumarcnui districts ground u meheater goremei bj loci I boards which tiara adojU'wi tin- \ck aw the two named ftbOYe. Bfoss Side did so In 1887 The population in 1^000, una tin- rateable value cro.mn. uiilch will produce £42."> a year, so IliHt the prosper:-.. whfOl once the library does gel Enl m ip< ration, Bliould be hopeful A techi [col

» difficulty ins arisen, Permiseion to borrow for the purpose o l.mldiiiiV whs .IfSH'i-i!, Mid !ln- LOCal f Imrnmiriil tDSpeCtOT ■'*'' down to nreattgate wnsol opinion that the poll whichdeclded (di the adoption of the Ads was not takcm in accordance with the decUlon in the Croydon case of lust autumn. As this decision

» given many months alter the adoption of .in- Acts in Mom uting of tJie inspector to difficult lo understand. There has consequently not pel been mi) progress made towards Ihe ii -.i ins ol ;t Public Library* ana toe inhabitant* must con- to use t! i Manchester libraries as they have hitherto ae,

Newton Heath decided in 1887 that a pafce-eupported library Mioukl be looked upon ils an essential part of the civic machinery The -' i - ie woe part ol a larger one including baths. These we La course <>* crectton, and it ie expected that the Hoard will be ; with the erection of the library and reading- Thc i iluntnry subeoript^ou towards the Library have been generous.

U F| H WoOT,TOS (VKAIt IJVRRPOOI,).

'flic Acts were adopted here on February 17th, 1890. The mooting was held in the Mcchanica* Institution, There was a and tlic chair was occupied by the chairman >i the Local Board. The Ttcv. Q, Beaumont stated that in 1882 a Puttie Library was fori icd )■ fthc township, and rested ii the trus- tees of the Mcehonice' institution, on the trndcMtandin g that it' at any rutin, time the Public Libraries* Aete were adopted the I library should bo transferred to tin- Public l. ihrary. Th\* amount ot' money npent on the hooks orifdnnlK was £238. \ tetter was received from ill'. W. L). Jamee, tho do WoOltOU Village I tub, i ffering to provide ii room in the club for Tin- use tA the library Tree of cost to the ratepayers, an offer which was very warmly ren-ivi-d, It w;ik then ivsolvod, on the ion ol i ie fctev, 0. A. spoonor, seconded by Mr, Holbrook 'i adopt the Public Libraries* Acts. The memorial was >i\ ]\y ins rate-paycm, which was not an insignificant pvo-

E-n of n populate -ii oi 1,641. Nelson. Mi- in another of the smaller places in Lancashire whero rramenl guJck^ took root, and resulted in \Vv«i aAo\\Vsb

ISO HEHJO r-rnjiARiES

tin- Aotl. Tn March or lsM» the vote- w.i- taken A tot a 4,<W papers were sent our, and there was a majority of 490 tn

i:iv of ill.- bbI hbUshment of h library under the condltt i

the Public Libraries' Acta, iii December tomporanr ro« )' rj n.illy opened by Mr. Ecnvd, wlm expri'HHrd tin- mpr lis youth oi the town would put to .i noble dm that library and erery other opportunity offered lit them, and show in llm coming generation toafcrTelaOE contained an iusUucted, orderly. inU'lleetual, aadmorA) population. Alluding to the which stood

in the way of realizing: the ideal he had pointed <>ut, the Wp* said he was disposed to regard u the moot serious the prom* oj tin- country it-self, the rery munificence with which in this age tl.rv had liccii endowed with ll io means of living comfbrl lives and enjoying themselves. History shewed them hlut wherever there had been a groat nation which had fallen tVuin it* hit'!; position, the cause had been its internal decay. A roan could not look around tho country at the present time and c tho great changes for good that lie might have witnessed without rejoicing, but he would also hive apprehensions thnt those th (luniselvcs might seduao thorn, might weaken their fibre and moral strength and character, and that they might be drawn tho easiness of life and a continual desire tor amusements, which would prevent them using their advantages with success, greatest difficulty they would have to contend with in that institu- tion was the subordination of so-cullod pleasure which would be placed boXort* their young ix.Miple, and which would lead them astray, and root out and destroy all intellectual seat and cap i It is very satisfactory to note that there has been some very generous giving in connection with this library. One anonymous donor gave £600.

N r. V C AST1,B-PF0N-T?WB.

This large northern metropolis was twenty yearn considering the adoption «T the Public Libraries' Acts, This was hrought about D 1874, but it was not until 1880 that the lending library was opened In 1882 the newsroom was ready for the public, and in 1884 the reference library was first throwu open to readers. It is unriwt'Ksyry to outer now into the ran urn of delay either in ihr adoption ol the Aci.s or the opening of the libraries, for du i. in1 eight years' work that the library con now record, wrutava liikewuuuuess ou the part of the citizens had been present m the pnst, has been wiped out by the spirited work which is beinfl i and by the ever-exlciidinjj use which the pcnple

Ubran The last report-, ratified by the Town Coun October, 1W89, is n partioulaily encouraging document. This report states that not one single volume or pamphlet is mi every individual item in the stock book.- being accoui u either as (1) upon the shelves, (2) in the hands of borrower*. Dot baYrag been returned according to rule, (0) in the handset tho hinder* ad patterns, or to bind, or laid aside preparatory to their being despatched to the binders, and {-i) withdrawn from

FTOUC LtB3LASXX8 IS THE SOBJlLtRS COUNTIES.

121

tion by order of the committee, imperfect, or so -worn and dilapi- dated as to require replacement by new copies. The total stock of volumes in nil depurtmrnts im June 20, 188U, was as follows;— ■i doo library Ordinary stock, 24,407 ; patent office publica- tions, 3,751); Thomlii iry, 4,803— total, 32,648. Lending section, 29,323f juvenile section, 2^75— total, 81,007: grand total. 6I,&I5 volumes. The issued during the year ended Juno .'.', i *-', w. ro as follows: Koforenco library. 33,484 ; leading library, 256,54(1 total, 29-1,983 volumes. The total issues i . Li _r : r . - 1 rafaronoe libraries from the dates <»t tlivir ii?h|hu*- tivo openi:i-,'* vw... September 13, 1880, and August 20,18*1 havo amoiii . l7oy K :>:! : flumes, and during the same period only twenty-two volumes have been ln-t. (he cash vuluo of the p-two polamec being £2 16s. 7J., wiule (taring the *&me 01,870 7s. 8d. has been received from readers tor Raft incurred by the undue detention of books, op sums received as damage* tnroTJfiJi the loss, or injury done by borrowers to, books lent tothsm Oaring the year 1,030 volumes have been bound or rebound tor the reference department (including 70S for The

riintnlmsori Library), and during the same period l.lril have ] n

*o dealt with for the lending library, making a total of 'J.Im ... inn) \ ::t kOOfltof £174 I0s*» being an average of Ik. 74d. per

■C-fH wiIuino have been replaced in rim lending lib

during flic year, the old copSca havh g 1 eon round fji be so worn

nr imperfect a* to necessitate thalr replacement by new or sound

.nond-hand copies, aud of this number forty-aix have been paid

fur by borrowers or their guarantors, at a cost of £0 12s. 8d. As

lo tlie oompleteneflfl and comprehensiveness of the reference

ui.au interesting fact may be mentioned. When the

British Asset Eati n iraa in Newcastle last year, the chairman of

ograpliical Section, Sir Francis de VViaton, sent for ninety*

i booka for reference out of the library, and he got ninety-

oi tl em. lie stated himself to the librarian that be Cud

li.it oul of London, if in London, he could have got

fiiii'-iv-thret- out of ninety-seven boohs which ho might want.

ays that the n< waroom wa> up i, a total

of fit* *itcd it, giving a daily average of J ,963, Tho

[g inr.juvcniently Nnalt conmdcrinK the crowds who use it,

it Is Imperfectly ventilated, some who would use it were

the ai^ more inviting are prevented from doing so horn

the «uuw> stated. < ta Sundays this room is open from two to nine

.. .1 36,08*3 per as visited it on that duy. This lor tho

ae BnndajB on which it wan open gives on avoragoof 707. H

ia not unlikely thai the defect in the newsroom will be remedied

before very long.

Ill* juvi-nilo library ma very strong feature in the Xeweastle VOlle. liming the year 38.584 volumes have been issued. This i^ on mcrww'of 18,182 on the previous year ind, let this fact be marked, the returns show that the entire stoek of books available for the reading of the juvenile borrowers under fourteen. \jeac& eft . ia boon turned over sixteen times during the 5 ear. «<HoAt«

I

rmi.ir iiroumw.

motion to the ptweut time t he ieeue ha* b«M :.i"»m 500,000 ^^: i «"v, &] lent, tfararooci di

i:unoJ of r

oaetle paj>e ■• 1 1 ■■■ v l'.tni Society " wiiii i Uo

■nrliVt ■- -::i •■■ |)

ir 'I history, Iruvi Is, and b -i »ry I

luvvmie iip.u'v The books are w»ll cared I

rule wo not k«p1 boyond the I me all< wed I lav*)

■iinnd

ff»r wi . ■« |nw d biography, Momentary

' . : -11.1 ii M'lt'i'rl Tlh* '.'IlK-l \M

prRLIP UB1URIR* IV TUB N07lTHEn\ mrSTTBfi.

193

=

0

1:1

u

the gratifying Increase in -he issue of books in the general lending department fnr N>mp resiling, and it. must lie acknowlcdg' ■• :

: JTI oiinpi. vni l:i..h , lli:il, :w minpHivd will) the gross .1 -liiiMMUIidii rtf Hi H'V rent, hns lnUen phre in the issue

nf works >i pure Action. Hie presnmptlon is, irom what has occurred in Neweaatle nml other efties* that Lho reading of mem fiction often impels peX8OH0 of capacity to liigher kiuds of i Lb -i' i etl \ng, therefore! i<> V»e able to boast bliat,afl I- th i-Mii- ol works of flotion.Ncwcnatle-upon-Tyne baa the lowest percentage ol [Hants u compared with its aggregate Irauo, and (i tpared witto other Public Libraries Uo* average in

thrnt Eb 39£7, i "»■•'> h in that «-ity, whilst during the

tarn* period flu lowest ol -lie other libraries is 69*94) and thr highest --O-01.

.■>«> innh f<r the work of the library', which has gone forjrii>£ aloes; at a trejnend >ue ratoi Hie success of fcho library is due, to no small extent, to bhc librarian, Mr. W. J. Hnjjrffereton, and an efficient staff of oAMsifmts. After seventeen yoara1 Ifbrarj work. ho lion become one of the moot efficient men in the profession. i :c aware thi ( m^v have a good publie servant, an<\ i J i ; iii i -'i.i'.iiiiL'lv. A few months ago his salary was raised ir -in eSRG to fiJKXi per annum. Will other committei i

aTcnraofitlv, Nottingham, Birmingham, Muncheater, and

•"I- .i'-(. l mi 1 1 _c :in- (mining Boh e for librarians, ana tin.'

ha' one from t ho' two fiFSt-named nureerfi

theii mark in library work in many parte or London and

'ill'V-

Newcastle, in preparing a report for the ;i, (iiv.-i nxloetion of the electric light into the

It is prop sed to two Incandescent lamps, Newcastle catalogue i* known as a splendid example of ibllography. and open 1 t'n- reputa^«n of the librarian stands

, that at the Uitfpodes the system i |i. I It is on i i iini, 'x aynieni, hnt very fnil entries author, tltla subject, and numerous cross references. There nn- al*o In i: mtnenoTiH from contents of serial publications.

H -. that It shows at it glnnce and

i moment everything In the library on any uriven Hiibjeer,

,l! ihsl to in the library bj any particular author, editor, or

liltc the crow references ire so full and simple

tltnt tlic work heroines ;i readable and iiiitruetive literary

Where there baa been a joint authorship this is not

only csj nul y noted, but each given in alphabetical eei.|ueuer, ho

:■ oslng the men <n\ retains only one of the writer*, both

▼ill in a moment be discovered by this excellent index. Not

bu1 while the nom tic plume of an author is given, the

petaoi the writer in revealed. This latter runy ilinost be

oomfdereda work of ■"Hi" vex '^afcioii.for if an author prefers to

hide his Identity under Borne meaningless uom <fr p/ume, librarians

should, na a rule, take him or her at their Word, an«\ ndt troche

tmc.

1-JI

pcnuc MBIIAPX1CS.

Tho first bequest lias jutt come tu tii. .ami

Bf there is sonic little interest attaching to this, i few ; will not bo out of plow. This oM Public, tt Towns, Library was ■■'|-i. Lthsd to the people ol Newc -h.- by the Rei & Thomliiiflonj Ki>., to Kit, and was open tree to tb undei

Q6Xt* n ijuaiut and curious n unlit ions. After the i however, it soon foil Into" disuse, chiefly caused by the eari oj the Authorities; and after many vicissitude*, U trans! erred, by order ol the Charity Oommi <

o the i-ustoriy of the Public Librurioi I anmittee, Tn«

i Icn m. their transfer were round to be m n very dilapidated

condition, sad the City Council voted, out of their su hum of B8O0 i" prcn ids dots shelving for and to rcblnd the bo in IA29 it wan estimated thai there were etween 9,000 10,000 volumes. The actual tmmber received il tin- r. ojtfnr only -1,300. mid llu* number has since readied . i L\ :i few book* having cilice been traced, Tl is to be regretted thai a ceutury mid i half "1 ecclesiastical and official blundering and ne has eventuated In losing one-hull of Uu.- ui.ijue library, wtd tu lc» or more permanently damaging the remainder; eaa be done to repair the past is now rapidly being dune. am hoped, in tin- murse ol, -; y. tw year*, tlmt the collection will bfl OUOQ mure available fur public reicrence. Tlic Thondiu»on library

specially rich in seventeenth century folio o itt I Fothera in the theological controversies of the period, including the disputatious ou baptism, papists, the Solemn L< i WfiKir.t, -i*il kindred BuhjeetH. It also contains ;> fcw rare ill early-printed books, such as a first edition of flak \ pjngea? a Tyndnlee Biblo, Poynaon'a bookc called th "Royal,1' "Mirrour for Magistrates for Cilice" &a

There lias also been recently another iMNpu^t, which take

form of a library of between 800 and 1,000 vuhmira "I ni" and

valuable books uealing chiefly with the antiquities, nrehwoloiry, M

iy of India and our other Asiatic dominions. 1 '

aealolLy rich in complete sets of the journals and :<>ns of

the Koyal Asiatic Societies of Bengal and Bombay, an cxJiuiiHtivo

!i>s of departmental reports, together with memoirs o! the IDOfil

eminent Anglo-Indians, military and political. The citv

Newcastle is Indebted Cor this valuable bequest to the hit

Mr. n. r A. Buehannan Ridded, who was foraeonsfderahU'Titu^

t!ic lkmgnl .Service, am )a memlierof tho Legislative Counc oJ India, The local publishers present copies ol all the hooka they puhlifth Tt may al- » f»e nienrmnod that. ;lic i-ol I rcrifupr published In the four urn-Miem emnitiea roadie* books and 1,000 pamphlets. The date of the earliest of th h L630,

Kven Chose who were the most active opponent* ol the i>i iIk Arts now aee the folly of their action, and arc among the be i! ends u! tin -si- iiiMilut.ione. Tin- work in Newcastle has 03 warm supportcrawrnong the leading local men, hut there oono more §0 than Alderman Henry w. Newum. the ehmViuan o

o

runi-ic unriATiirs i* ran tronTOunv corsriEp.

125

the PubHo Libraries' Committer, who, through the long v.-

. n d nciv through the eight years' work, has takvn '!»■■ DBOft lively interest in the institution. It was his father. Dr. N< « ton, who, in 1851, fir*t brought the question of a Public Library forward, and although defeated on Berera] oeeflfiiolis, the

•:.-.•!, i i-hued with tit'1 ^mim; .-pint, saw it hmught hi u siuvessful

As fa

t .1... .

>0RTH SHJTH.PS,

The library was opened in 1870 with about 12,000 volumes.

* (:it back, cowever, a* IcVSft* there was some talk uf a. Publlo

Library, when even thus e;irl> in thehistury uf tin: movement the

town clerk proposed Ui.it the site of the new Mechanics' Iiistituh:

should be conveyed to the Corporation as trustees for the

i!*er». One of the committee eutfKestcd thai such an

arran would facilitate the formation of a Public Library

,it some future period. The town cleric replied, " That were a

consummation moBt devoutly to be desired." That idea was never

lost Bight ill by the committee of the Mechanics' Institute, and in

-r.-i - w.-ir tc.l-<-n in thi* direction. Let it he recorded

with satisfaction that the then committee cheerfully invited

their membera to unrrendor n building which had cost nearly

£3,000, and about 6,000 volumes of books, to the free enjoyment

..f tii*- whole community, Without a dissentient foSce the top-

r wa«» made, and the members of the Mechanics* Institution

deserve no little credit for their prompt and cordial response to

the mayors invitation. Will committees of other Mechanics'

ntions please note? It wus no effete institution which thoy

r, for the Tynemouth Institution was known as ft very

sful one. but the managers had long recognized the

i and greater possibilities of bucccj-b if it was under the

P&blic Libraries' Acts, and in July, 18*38, the Acts were adopted

nt i statutory meeting) The stej> has boon more thun justified

irk since accomplished. The number of volumes is now

..and there is an average daily issue of 6fi9. This is certainly

creditable, in the income and expenditure account £219 16s. 4d.

U set down as heiiu? the balance in troasuret1* liands. This is

providing the library receives the entire amount.

Thnrv is a Book club managed at the library, to which there are

121 subscribers at hnlf-a-guinea a year. The revenue from

it. - to biry new books, and these come ultimately to the

public Library, also d'l the monthly and imarterly msgaxtnes

[ -n by the i>ook club. The reading-room and

lad ng department ore in a spacious room, with n gallery

running round three sides. The whole building greatly needs

redecorating.

OLDHAM.

"Hil* thriving manufacturing town rejoices In a special Act, : which the Library, Museum, and Schools of Science and Art .ii (i-'l. Allh nub the rate is m limited, <m\^*2*\. \u tt»

pound is levied ttad this affords another lnstuu«e ttwfc wwmV-

iac

HUBUC UllUAHIKS

r.-.<\ be ii dated with regsn) to the expenditure tea

lu*titiKii'ii>. Tin- olttweg "i tins special Act re

Iibrnry an- iiHercatiiig, &ndurtM|ii..u..l. It wo* pate l on .!■"..

1865. Thu throe Kctlona referring to theet iastitutii u- are ".

If II and a.'., ;mi| ll «■ !■■■ in.- > ' i in -ui ;nr is fcikrWB :

The furpomlloa Iruia CUD? to time ma? ftpproprtAte inj- Ijuwi« v*rte<t tn

tl .i 1 ■, v [wocoattl pnnruuw or tuku ut n Kent any Land

IViiMiniTB, mid utjori iiny IauiI* r>u opyiuprinU'd, purchased, or Utk*a, *rool wij

i/» aurtnhle foT Piihlir Uhninc* or UwwmmH, or both, m I /or Brimc* and Art, or cither of Iham, tnd upiily, lake down, alter, and exbn6 •07 BnlMinfi for mcJi inirpoww, unci rebuild, ropnlr, und irtipruTc thu lAifl' rewpeclirelr, and At up, furoi«h, find mipply thu umo rapeatrrcly with *1 mmlAlL- rilUug*. Furtuturv, *u0 Omfyolcueea

The OnnorBl Munaowitmt, Itetjiilntion »nd Control of moh Iihrari**. »n4 Miwuiiii, and Bchool* lot Bcicuco trad Art, oliaU be reeled iu and axerr-Iied It; inn Cuur.ril, nr such ('ummlltee as the Council tlilolr fit froi Una '"

appoint (the Maobcrn or norue of tin- Mcintcra whereof acol not, if tie Go think tit, be Merobci* of the rouncfi), who may from time to Orne parch** ud provide the nocfMiiy Fuel, Lighting, nod other xitnilur Matter*, B00I&,

Nowqu.pciw, Map* ia4 t?pw'i <• "' F* i' ■"'•■ •!•' Art i'i tiu of the TJbrsi!

cr M.iim*um or N"hnol, ind cum' ilir num to te hound or repAiivd when ■MaNCT. M. -l 1 nj-.j..i?ii -tftlnri^'l iHll.-^m «md Servant*, aod dimuH the mcu, uid muke Rules and P-tinilHtJoun for Die itafety and tuevl the T.ihmncs AOl Muwuibh mid 8eliool«, «od for thv ubiiiaaSoB 01 tni Pobli-:.

Tit? Lmdj and BuildUiKB »u apinijiii.a'.d, puchaetd, or t-»Vcn. «ud oaf other Real or PerwmJil Property waiiteo^vr prwntod to or purohmwa for »ny «url. Library *nd Museum or fcohool, «hftll ho v<«t*d in the Corporation.

The entire institution is doing u solidly useful work. "With a total of 30,yi:»s volumes, there is an average dnilv issue cK volumes. A bfttWT Heloctorl library it would b€ niffifult to tind. Fiction .viancis at 50 per cent of the issue Hie antire building h&lfl lirlghT. and prcpoKseaRin^ aspect, and will benv nnnp:i wi;h any institution of strniim' Rise not only in rne Pnlted Kingdom, but In any part of the world. The work is tinder the able control of Mr. Tliomu W Hand. liming the winter, leotnrea are delivered In Hw building, and the«e have lar i-unti iintiiMi bo direct the attention ol the public to the wt

PnnMv>.

Honpy Preston ! With it* handnorae new buiKiiui;,ih coniplytic-n, the fultu'o library and rauoeuiu work of the town are well a.MMiuv.l Two liri>thfv.s i»r Mir Iciral profewion had ajnawed ft IViiiiitic oi BOme ^85,O0Ci. Tlua tins um-ste<l in the natuea of four truntcca witli discretionary power. These trustee* the lost of the twoeurviTiogbrol htsri), Mr. Edmund Robert Hi to eootfider the odvi&abilityi»r lihing n ^r»od portion el tin amoi I i i : the purposes ol :i Public i-ii rary. M tseum, and Art (<u11ctt. T'm:-. in l-riof, to the early history of the munificent beonc C105,000 tor orootJng and funitenlng this building, fli« brotherB had shown no marked iatoreet in tl"1 welfare of r 1 1- 1 own, and the pa Mi.- spirit ol thu trusteee in directing the aUen- tlo 1 if the surviving testator to this channel should not be looked. TheBito,valuedat£:*J1(.K.«.i, was jranted by the Since i> loinineaoeaiant oJ the binlding, another wi..iiiiiv r toolaZL itr Richard NewihaiBj has baqneathed to towi tmo collection ol t»U i-uintjiij-. wi t-?r-eolour di'awin.:- ui,. ,

pi 'Bi.tr MniiAUtK'- rv ntF \<>UTiiRn\ roi

t:>7

I

v»Inri] : i opwardAOl £30,000, Thi» i-oili-ciioM will form part ol R

:i!!< tv At (in- museum, The next large bequest is one ol

2100,000 to the Harris Orphanage, which to to provide tor the

maintenance ami education of upwards ol eightvjyiildron ol both Tii- building in also nearly flnishea The trustee.-, ori- Kinally granted £40,000 b* an endowment for the Harris Institutes * School 'I H'T it :u"t?, art, hrit'urt\ ;iml technical education, mul h.n s . i'-l, made a I'li1Imt tT;iiil i»l' f;lO,000 fur tin.' hiiildimi aui

furnishing of a tcoluiioal school, to be called the Victoria Jubfleo

i ■;.! 3ohooL i' i s Corporation have obtained power:-, lu £runt

troxth £10,000! and a sum of money not to exceed £10|00Q for

ame PWpoeOi T i roaidu i <-i the bequest was disposed ol' as

follow.-- . CBjOOO foi church huiidmtf una improvement* .l'3,000

or ochi>laiflhi|>.-* .j1 the grammas1 school} and £2,000 for charibabli

and religious pur|)oees,

S-ene ■■:< .-.]■:■» -v.-n ;-c:ir- nvlmi, al -.h.-.i-h('t-l in the erection of the

building, bi cud i.v I rte o ognltndc that is not too Long!

ulth'ti invc been many impatjent erica nd to vhen it is bo be

■1. But there must be wisdom in having the work card nil)

d well .;<)>!', with ample time for il- building to thoroughly

'j'lnH i- q oonsidering too nature of the cod

Eioh are by and bj to be housed in it. The building strikes

toaturo lor library und museum purposes

farad this country is concerned, as will be seen on reference to

ongraving forming the bYonliBpieoe. The designs were pre-

ared by a townsman, AmI->:-h ;\i; J;t.mes Iiibb.it. wi > was eoin-

featianed by tho Harris trustees to visit several buildings of a

Uar ■■• in this country and on the Continent, the result

Is visit and report bein^ that lie was appointed the aroWtect

to prepare tl i Lies i#ns. Too building is of tfio Greek Ionic order,

and has tour dial act I 'outages, being completely Isolated rrnm

the building* an mtvl it. The principal elevation Is on the nrcal

fie, overlooking the market-place, and almost At rtghi angles

ih the ""I'll ;r., ago oi the To wn HaH The height ol" Hie

in riii- parapet and (lie apexed the portico is 80 feet.

d the extreme hoi/'hi in the tup Hi" ihe central lantern, 112

& The i i consists of six massive fluted oolunins, with

U it Is surmounted by an overhanging cornice, and

npanuuu Is filled in with a group or figures representing

HUrroimiled Ji v liirral arc, si ictice, -tad the art*. Tile fit.i.l-

130 fact The liases of roe columns t>\ the portico and Its level are about lo feet above the Blreet level, and the ea-

* to tin lit Idiug is tinder the portico by flights of itope on tbono thsidea. Liwnedlately under the I rmpanumof

the portico Is tin* c&rred ascription ta large charactcrgj "To

Litcr.i' are,fi i co, aj -1 Ai i. ' foe i asters eh ration •<■ I \B b I

aces Li-uiwwU-r Koad, n line lliui'oityl.t'are ilnxit tif* led En

out of Cljiuvh Street, the principal street in the

town. Jt is uniform in length witl the SCarket riaco (itmtupc.

The not th and i.-rjr.- are each 170 feet Is len.jrttwKnA

will face twx> now streets, each SO reel In width, vAi:a\v ate

m

pt-nne i.inn.uur?.

h.-lHJ I ■. I -M i •'■'«: -im i.CMIOOuSly Willi thQ IMMw 1;

building*

T\w ooUecttOfl "l models connected with the industrial arts will ho placed on the grmmri-llnnr portion L with

the object of brining them under theds niton

passing to and from the lending department and rhi» arti reading-room and newsroom. The nuwrntxiiii on thn south *■!.!.■, :md thercadimr-rnom on the north side, are each 2fl ft ■•" one of the Irnding libraries IsfiO feet square, and the ottusr -" by 29 feet. The central hall i*<'i r*>»>t .si|ii:jir,:unl hrontlmu the staircase, on all the floors, being lighted bj the lai ti rti ilinh'lv uvi'i* s central well. The principal flooi contain] onet Bbrajrlea on each wide of trie central hall. They an 30 feet in width, and 120 feet in length. Tlie centra] hall portion d the principal floor will be set apart as a mitte in i I casta acid re

tiroauctlona from n e antique. Tlie whole ol the upper Boor «ill ii- ileviilcd to mibi mi and fine art purpose*. The museum jralleries ore arranged round three sides of thi ■■ Qtrnl hall and staircase, one side being devoted to the fine arte, the '-orrea pond- ing side to natural hStoryand physics, and the remaining bei ween theec to the depnrtment of general archeology, cor .*. and the finer kinds of industrial art, and illustrations ot ethnology.

Tlie building appears well adapted for the purposes for wl it is intended, and tl la opinion may be adhi red to notwifahataaut- hUE the fact llmt sMinc -Vracrican visitors have been disposed t<> criticise, sunu'vlni severely, both the proportions of the bui and th( general orrangementa of the various departments. I onl the internal fitting arc in place, it \* premature to spenlc so

Sositivcly on this poiat, as one or two Unerfoan librarians hare one. A deooVSpnon of the decorative sculptures alone

WOT pages, and this would he out of place here. Tlie librarian, Mr. \\ . S. HramweU, and his staff, have been quietly pursuing their wort for some time with ;i view bo ti'" tnuisforcnoe of the work, at -'» date which must now be getting nearer, to the new home. Mr. ISramwcll is a master ol details, and this faculty will booi Immense use to him when the work of removal and reorgnnlntloz] begins. The present home "i the Library i* in u large room of the iitwn Hall a building designed i»y Sir ( ; : Bootl During 18SB, the library and news-room was closed tot seventy-two days, owing to the prevalence of small-pox In the town, ao flint year must not he taken ;i* :i criterion of their work Mr. Bramweira tograralto displayed itself ai this ttro< Ii

I'niistrni'Hnn of a book disinfector, mentioned on anol Tlie reopening of the library had a great flea] h do fn n -storing the confidence of the town that tha epidemic had spent its strength. Ont of a total number of lfi,R87 volumes, the turnover Aandi it I08XS& That is, tin- stock circulated six-and-a-half times flaring the year. A mong the l i,ooo borrowers, there bi .i.ii j oj telegraph toyaasd policemen; but Urn hbi i nut only popular with these, but all classes.

wm.ir uwtAniK* r\ nm warn iw cot ■■ 129

RO HI u.r.. ■("■ration BVOT DlghtOOl \r:ir.. : r 1 1 1 1 I m H

now 11,317 vow no*. Fhe hwtitnl as I p] n dated to a I Iff] dtgri is - I "it the incidence ol 'tho

■. -111(1 there in-..' ii;ci\ ^ lie none whUe tin library] used ■o 4-jct*nwv*ly u It ID now. Tho crush onS:i:m.l:i;. m>..|

notwithat P oneon Co-oper: !.:i rarj

in tbftiown Hi'1 11 amber* wers counted for the wecli Bn< mil , r—'i, and 1 1 was a%oertained thai S,SW i at- 1 1 !■.■!. ■!'■■ ofl I !■• ladles' room, and 686 1 h< boj ■•'

i-y, mnldna I >■ one week ol I.47B Tlilfl unrober,

. \ i- ar i w oul •■ i '■ ■■ visit . i, Mi.- i.

I ■nmixf ill t i ; en l'lii- ivil. vi'.-IiIk £957, I 'if ol bhil

haornod !n Intprrvit mi mn'iri"!- lour .-. rtsilrfiw inml,

: income tmx. &e. Thlw In :i hmj bimfon, and nal orally

In* expenditure for new hunk.-.' The mm building for

i. thta expenditure wuh made, wns mmipleted In ISM I ram

Tin- Ihm-" llbrar) i.i.'.'i i ii'iiiiin'f* were i*suetl during the year, Tbi*

depart m en 1 .ii Rochdale. The percentage ol

(V tion M h.'-'li, ,1.1 I tlip. i'. r;ill:i i nrju i--iti,\ e. niMdi-riuK tl»u

rclnle< perutin i e usually looked upon .11 .1 sort of hard-

J |h-..j. .1 . in v% ! .'in he* liij-pv- -\ .•; -;,n «-r " lala would uot

.-niii.-iriiUv solid. rBtill wenxusl nope foi better days all along

tment, and there 1* everj prospect thnt tho

I decline rtlwrtlv. li.ip-« iiupi I'cejitihly, and

isaeeof orien<v, hUtoryi and the more solid intellectual t i

idily up, The cross n ; ad subcttrfai ma En Hie

! umcroua Mr. George Hanson is the librarian,

Roman

The Aotc ww idoptod al a meeting of the burgooBcfl bold as

tho 18th day ol fcbruor) . IW*#. and "n the mIj "I i >ctob< r,

n Hl;nl IVAJ made v Hi .1 .-I ick of ftDOUl WOO TOlB A.| lit 1- air. 0 rr< m yci 1 te year, until in May, I8K>I, all tlionludf h nm been ng point of the Kbw

.lit quartern was reached during tin- next autumn

ul uniii. :ii m which period to the end of 1887, 0 oontinuoui

plaeo, until they had dwindled to an

p day Meanwhile the dtlBenlHoi besetting

■11... ni ielr efforts to obtain more suitable premises

L'ir.'.l. ami, in eonju union v, th till baths committee,

i in! I ding harl u-ru ernetnd, the upper storey * »r which was

nad tn the library The refrwrnrivrooni is ronvonfsnt 1 1 > the

n while the Interior of the general iTadmgyroam— a

, in in. -in 1- mil in the view >>(' Mr. John RIdal, the n The flour 1- minimised of wood blor.ks, and )inM the

. ul Two kinds of reudfag- i provided, namely, flat and uluplny ; and to Uv.\v lai m, Lin room oei pari foi ncwqiapc^ataftaaottt&X&VraXta luuuoV 'jecn pl&axl . There ' vw.vWwj-

w

\tt

1 1 iti.i. i.iun.taii:$.

roam A tataro of tho *b omsisthe neoUem

played in tho election "t the ittmi and maatelnto ii ar*

artiitio, :t ti. I i.-Kt-.i v r.) tho good work KotlM hi whoa the oooojIoii roqntraa rha general tunning armnge- monts'areoa tho hoi water system. an i

,i ,,t the whole ind thi parch i

jmyj books has been defrayed without making a apfleiair:di the raiei. Iln IUB0 net* led, 1:800, has aceuinulntert through the . nir riiri" n»i having nought volumes in years gone by Thort n ,... -;.,(.!•. ■!■ i-:»p:uMiv "i oo,in«> hnnkv Work began in The DOS

b lildtngm Karen, Ifiw, Mid the average laity issue has re&olted

\ short while ago there was sonu* frietiun hutwrm tin'

oomroJttee and tho lovra Council, and this latter bod* retaliated

. il Alerting any "( the nM nit'li.bers i;vmi ill'- nt'wYuimiilMre.

S\t kbioi

Then' in ;i uioee link between the Museum which s ni.ii-ti print tu the Act o1 l *io and the pawriog of th< Kv m i Act, Peel Park, so called In honour of Sir Robert Pool, 4 ike

nights -I Manchester, and formerly, before pa 'Ik museums wore *«> plentiful s* Ihej uom are, excursi miles round tfanchcstci uid Balford did not coroddcr thai bin [eked-ofl the main "tent of all unless Ihcy had vnd ed

Park .nM tin* Mu- iin Tin- hiiiidtHinic pile <•' WiiMin^ )\>n

Che Public Museum and Library arc moat beautffull.i ituatod on

.t i,u ■■■• •.'phuh! ^landing much higher than the root of the

park. Tli m if thus \<r\ picturco<(UC It li Eo facl donl i-

in! whether) Public Lit irary and Museum in any port of the eon ini.r*' |»lfi»-cuii surrounding* than the pro up ..t build :,,i mi i-' the p iron! Institution hi Balford, Thr p; rl« to tin' people of Manchofltor and jalford :-i h.i your - I

tin fourth i 1 it in used as a playground and erickot ground,

and there are large lopnrntc gymnas For men, hoyi, wo and girls. Tho museum and library were originated in leMOby the i. i . ft L&ngworthy, who was then mayor, and the lob

Hrothnrtoii, M.I'. The first purl of Un- l|i»r:irv. tlio

department, was opened with 7,000 vol*., on January Bth, ttfftO.ond no room of the museum in the following June. Then

•. ..i.iii i^.\ i v wing, containing a reading-room, ■■■

i, and :< picture gallery. In IKf>i n lending Ibrarj

■i Thj*M years afterwards mouth wing wan added, and n I8&1 :i new portiVd v it built, and ut u tut •-- dote, the! tngv Wlna; won aaded N itwlthntai *o various extei

whole forma s ron attractive group - ►■ butldfr.

in i-;1.'. Major John Plant, F.O.S, was appointed llorarfffl onratorj and hold* the sarnr appointment nt the present d OTiU long service of forty years at the emu library givca Major iiii the seniority among public librarians Re in m oinar reapectflvery fortunate, for, amidst his professional brothreo, he

uiiiv one who can afTunJ to keep a yachl tfajor Flaw has written Ute ?e£ter-prwM fur ;i beanUfu^ i»«iW o" lUlvty-rtve p

I

!l if,., i I iHHJIltl&S IS IBK KUHIHJtRN COl \ II 1- -

131

Im-li

abtiahed i>v the li'1

,IIH1 IMUMMIII. r '1 III i CI',

he library and muttetan In this li .. En in book there are .< eeriee oi photO- 1 r :!.i i •_■ . ad ■'. I uc In the pai It iraos •. I hi beaut] fu] < nc o\ the late Jo* i»li Dn>th< i Eoi ,3d 'V »i the Publft i ib ■■• iovi

,-i:l Owe M i IUCJ] .

I othci man lie died

1 M ported iwiq 1 1 !",-■<■ the

Old boiioll

i to be on. Tin- statue id 'I mzc, and Eg ■'!■ ft blgh.

it ik :ipjir.>|>i'i:ilrl-

aced new the entrance

the park, il I

it',1 r i Mi,' (hi on i -i.ic ill tho .1 urn ionic v ii i Icon I'V Mr. Broil ertou,

. , h i:i tin- Il,i!i-f

Caramons "Mj pichw

timihI DOl :n Mil ftXTtftttOf

my |h»v,i >-iuus hut in the fewness nl my w mis." The Lord ftishop >i Manchester, :ii the taanguratiun of the ittatue, alluded to Mr. Brotherton** devotion to the causa of education espeeiaUy in the

lir.ivnliinr of piibliV imiisciiiii*, li .H';iriiv% i;ul paTKG 08 pt&GBfl Ol

re people, iliat the hours gained /rem lalwur migbl nelf-instruotion, Belf-intproTement, and wholeaonus I ihy, and aiuelEoral iiig pursuits. The Manchester Vcgntiirion :. _■. hat kiuillj leul the portrait

U is with ii" desire i i diamuut tin' excel Irnl wmU duufl for Uie tnovexoen liam Ewnrt that the a totem en < Is made of aii

.!. .t eoi greater, place which Joseph Brotherton occ Uc Erased moel fully aJ lie advantages which in course of tfa&o Mir i" the public fn in an extension of thcae institutions, alfai l Museum and Library may largely clain to bo Hi'-* n from which ail the root him grown, .lorn-ph 1 >i < >ttif-r1 <•;! ornmtiou which ia ciulxxii'cd in tin n ports of tho i. and altogether rendered a eerrioe to hould never be forgotten. Moiichj tor intftitutioiif l>j i linjf, the Aral lo i \-.u-

)r*r>- and availing iteolJ ul tho Act ol two bui thepJoo ol : i| final objecl i son In reference libran :\ important. The borough Is laturoUv ol what it has -lone for the movement, and wqU \V

IS*

prm-ic in»*Ant*«.

1UT

Thoro ore fow preJiminnriM about tit" Bhofflold report. .V a few brief paragraph by the ■Iminnan it daahes ut once in ' ' record of the work. This at ohleflj devoted bo Bgurei ■>•*' [J ibr. operations fo I year, tun

1 in- work : i -I - --•'.'. i»neit\ - in-! it- to i! branches stands thui 93,124, o: HIH-. dail; Lorpo .

itafdc i '. BO, vrarj); HighfleM, 1 1 .- i 'i '' '■ itterc acq daily, it if* cheering to

from the report tnat n sutMsammittee nave nnder coneidera£io0 ;' scheme tor provldi j iceornmodation for the nnmeri » r/s

■eiders who frequent the central library Tin* need dm nf*1

d Itself for a least twenti years and the question t»as ■oiunierod urn! been shafted sgara and sgah during that Mme. There In Bcnronty another Uuw* town which nan tocondnoi Its worl In its central library under such ndtvr*** conditions u n Sheffield. Year after )rear the banding becomes more congested 1 1 1 mere ract of only an average ol 149 volumes lx tilted

per day iu the reference department in •> town of close upon 800,000, ahow* tli ii there is something "rotten intto i Tien

mark," and there i* clear proof Unit :t li»-'r> in Ui<- <livu<il' \ \\ moon niodatiou provided for Hie work in Lire parei t in Is it safe to hupc thai he deliberations of llii» sub-cojiuuittee \\\\\ Lead to a ae* building being erected* H is checrhuj U

plana have been drawn fur an additional ttuttding to md

lentreJ En its work, Out of ite nimble penny Sheffield B <niir.li l.t'inry, four strong and licnllhy l-i-ynrlies, and i rnftgnincont innaenm. There is use an art gallery vi would do credit t--> any town to support, bul bbu ia not unp-

forted out ft' IV I'iilr. *\>uM ■■ -< n.'ulc unvwhrrc '■

urthorP Tin- museum and art gallery oughl unquestionably! ii.iw q . i paratc rate for them. They are an ornament t<< i ho town and arc of large and hhmv:i.7iiiu: uruluhu- rin frmirr:- <1 the to hlcoly did not contemplate that u would aver be i tod Ic do as moot in many Uivmas it I in 'wi<-< <>n pli - 1 1 - - I . Hut the time is now within moasuronhlo distance when Shi field will, i ;, an I i proveroonl \ftt, idjusi this matter for Itself, and p I extra i'.«ii:i> )>i thr museum and art galloTj, the town b

SejBS rates l* ranch bcl'^v rlio r;(t>> i » n numl« i "i B ^ote have been idopted With its Firth C illeoeund Boaril Ufa Of which any town In the kingdom mlgl t I Q proi 4. mrolv in this liU'ary department of its educational work She Willi-' ake i back seal. The very mention of an cxito p

tends to prodnoi i breeae in job artors, but is i ruh It it

found to "-■ in limited circles, composed of peojile who would

BT oeorv.nn?.1 tla- i*.Mitiy ainl -| " n. muto <m poUeemfin

Thepenn lerl wns enough when there

w-.is only the centi'sl and one or two brunch I

die tbi '!"m u D ai thi t town ^>> \a

i

PI :u.H MKftLItfRft I* T1IR VOR Ti

l.-W

hungry for additional food in the shiipe of new I < ! "i- the ubrarta and addition* i irthe museum that, at the parent's

■i- \h oo&y if fche same ra&e as ii was shirty-four vaa ai»i>. wtua tots were adopted, some of those cLtildren

sritfl tic. i sfasff mart nwccesarily go short In cur depftrtmeol m another, [lien ii;is. i/i' course, boon an luorease In the mloable vnltu , ''in ttiisisnol pominenaurate with the additional outlay.

Tli* i Ill* ii mi branch litw u •■■ in 3heJQald ud the

buildings u, which that work is carried on (sol tie most excellent

description. The town, in the operations of Its branches, fully

niakco up Cor the defects of the central library aa a building.

The fow branches together i^&uiii^ an average of 1, lot* volumes

pei d v respectable totnl, which pore than retrieves the

I i o ^licfneld. The branch buildi igs are models of cou-

Tcnicnci tad genera] arrangement. Well situated, as each li In

Its thriving suburb, there is no wonder that they should be well

popular, with the people. Mr. Thomas Efarjrt is the ohieJ

idxnJxuatrater,

Soith Shiklus,

3Tiq most uotowortbj event ol recent date line boon tho issue

" a new catalogue, the first sine.' !<::. i he oumbor of volumes

1 1 1 * * lending departracB was then beiow S.000, .,m< - now

'itii "»,!>/<» in the reference department. make8 a

i til t;.r < "'. rolumea (Jpecitii ii-r> .1 1 k- -uituhie tor the.

:.is in the science ana art classes bio displayed, and it la

t<> note that 1,000 volumes, out of the l\iMM volun ei

Well were consulted, were Issued during last year '•> these

nudi i in These - lasseM are particularly *trong al South Shields

nut the wiirK "ci'iiii-. :iii ] n|i«iri;ii.i port of rh:ir <>t Hi-- hlir.iry.

i- lending deportment has an fnorease ol 663 readers otot '•ns year. The total issue in this section was Hrt(W2 ifumes tin proportion of pure Action being 51*47 per cent j Tour yoni'R not a atnglo book has been lost The number >f vlwi ru to he newsroom is yearlv ineiv.i- 1.". and, notwlth- arntions.the room In often Inconveniently crowded, 11 d tlu sitting uucununodttUuti for all Llmae who attend.

ii U provided with twenty-three daily, sixty-live wocklj and periodicals:, forty-seven monthly magazines, journaJs, rveiii\-iive uf the foicgi i ig m presented- Tho moftcuiu, in the same building, attracts .1 large aim bi r of 1 bttora, more especially strangers who have been staying in the owl :. the Bumtuer suusuUi 1. 1 "> K 1 . the present hecietan and librarian, wan

tiry for the district union of Mechanics' Institutee, and il< li ig of which he lias now charge waa the old Mechi ii. L.ecl iri a it ven during l.lic winter months, tod I ion 1 onsideiable 1 ■•■> eaut I rom lie rent oi the

more the 1 pays for the interest and redemption of The report conniat<i of four pages, und yet covers the 1 tin: work, lln loeul prcee is tavjvmvVaM to

:i

Ull-IPIK

noties th. operation a formnrij

grther thf wnrk ll hefl 'h;. ud pTOgNI

SrAunvxi

I h. o I M vrn* I!..

tUlOr, 111 October IHMrt In Mr \!.,rk hVlll^m, l

t i- 1 ii pp<ivWAT»al i viu formed Tin- work .i th£ coiamtttexi wan performed * .in uJralrablc maimer, ami In the earl) iu»t*

meeting dec! ired n favour ol ilto rn ijori £"

A i.-ili !■ i i wan rlemamlccl, whlrh riMiiltcd in hid ■m i I i. :1 iiiavt s i inn; 11.. upmed i I'nlill

eatabllahod in some of the rooine - 1 the Town flail. . ii ii conl tlned tome 7, <■■. > * .-.-h :..-■

works »i (lotion. 340 ellglous book*, TWO historical works.

On <• M p •"■• In i u< In- "I k ii. ,-, fi'O Oil lit* Kit ill/, i. . _ -

. n i Mil- Lftei kl Mr. . ::;mi on biography, an< newspaper i' w tag-room la provided, the opinion '■< ing held tfast ilu various piilltf cat ana other clubs net'vi.lo I.u ^<-l\ for the : >ubli< ll;. rc i ■. bowcvoi , i i ooi i Cog 1 1 ■•- iri.lr.' ooku o reference and other worka Tho nu;

the course I R h " i '■''. Iwell lip n t hi idvnotac

UoA&l mii. I nil 'wlflOj 01 Public l.il'i'.ifi .* ', ami OXplV wed lh< hcpC

ih.M i he Qi w Inul Itutton would prov< i g i <i<- to the youn .. t hel] to thi in'1 fears, uiul n LMinfort to the old nnn fcebl<

ll. moved i i ■• i of thanki* to the gentlemen who had render o*! i ti : ii< i.il aid U ii" lormatioi ol the library Among

. | iv i > r » i won Mr. T, n SMolxithum, MVP,

i i .-;ii:mi, and m. ■■ .i Summer*, each el whom gave E500

i. Knot! win auvc (.'l(>». ilboul 1,750 I lu per week n

ttelDoi Lai iod, and the library in Blinking flown lab olid work Mr, Thomas Aldrod is the Ubr&rfan,

•'I I f nature sugge Uwl I tin work h<»ro is th.

iiici.i o i rending c b, andertho conduetorahip of i

man, The olnaies ore free unci open to oil, rhc gcwrarno&l >1

ii. i ioi la mi similar lines to mnr.us improvement stocletieii

i in cow* oonaUtnol an openmg lecture hy aomo omuaenl tn

..ii thQ \' I ii»- ol books; followed on other night!

M ii.!' :i rrin. i.i ol' ilii* work nr works of o pertain utrthor,

iKowln | iii" itvle, merits language, &e., and u pubu'i d

InllnWM,

St. i

B1 Helena, u a towu, would uot be deecribod ae a benu plane. Tlw chemical and Erun-wurk,-* in Ihr

■■liMii- in Mimm'I uri'liHiTlun- lit. in holdl) ii.wrrUn

[nil in ii Ifbinu-j « irk there hna been an extrnord

frowth. The Mbrnn wan 1 I ander the St. fleletih

tnnroTi mi ol \- 1 ii I "-("; bnl wne bo t until 1 -"" ]

utock of books and n the attendances al thv ttwUa

KDUC U3ftAVtK£ IX TUG X"HT1II

:....

tlUT* iliiulili-d fli.'iiihi'H'i's !n WVl'tl years Munii.

rfeaWtothe tvn-liog-room marc t71iM8, Thastomcol books th* central Icndmg department is I S.176 volumes: reference H s/>a-,. ;m.i tl s Button branch i.u:; »tots 17,014 Tno number of hook* lmrrovred from the eent-ra] Leading department during the 307 days on -v% l i « -t books were lent oui wa* i

Sainst ftl..'^ showing an mere/we of 3,001, and :i daily m R SIM. The week-dAj attendance during the year van 227,8m, » again. st £4f\<30&, ind u daily HUeiiduuce of 742.3. The ilirrcuw io doubt uvfngto the unproved stale of Lrade, irhleli \gn " 3 aJTecte the etleauhuice al all da' IibrarSee In the inanufoclariitji districts. Tin- Sunday attendance ha-dincrcased from 10,147 l is; to 18, <'>."K iui inoreuae uf 3,482, the arerage per Sunday beta

From a persona] kaowledi oi disti ind h >m Drew

repo 'mi that thi members o( the Tovn Council ana tiic

l-hii miitci' ) :im- :>i time.-, it it ;i litUe oat <-i jolnl wftfi each other. I '"":- some yoara tho council baa crop are 1 to think that the a rnmiUec v.-.-n jpendf&gniare mono) tJuui vaadeeLrablei It « o ui. i iImm.ni ftcorn advfeaJble that Instead ol batfcna these diflbrem ea amittee and the council, tl« latter

Iihould do« Edc what tlic library ought reasonably to coat the town so mneh in tho pound per annum. Whili undei tb< i.llly :i I'CMlV run In' ]i.-VJi'<J, St. Jlclrtl.--, Willi Ufi apOOia] \rt, WIIM not sgx iiiything like that sum on It? library. SUlOO thru

the expenditure ii-i* hecu decidedly increased, hut it in Mill under :i •■« iiny There is no Bpeoiol rest riet ion ;ti the borough as t<> the i ui to be spent on (lie library. It would be will that the eounofl should deefda what the maximum amount spent on the library should i>ef and, having come t<> this dotielonj the Librflrj < '"tnmittee might reasonably he allowed an almost absolute veto- es to BOW the money should be spent Mr. Alfred Lancaster Es the librarian

S'tfH'hl'KKl

!>..-\ :ir<! progressive town Is rather unfortunately placed Ir has .in excellent museum in a large public [Kirk; Sal FM Public Library la .not try any means ;is wall placed mm could ha desired Its quartera arc tn an old market hall, and on Fridays and Saturdays the ground Boor underneath the library and

ih used for tin- nale of rliceae, gecae, and oilier commo-

The building thus .em:- a tltiuhli'-hairrllcd piumosc li

ding food for the brain and the stomach. This duplicate

. in wever, bad for both Die library and its viaitorsj for

j !.. defective ventilation the smells ureal times [nauffcralile.

of the able librarian (Mr, .1. D. Ruckland) and

hi» o^.r.t.uitT can scarcely fail to be Rcrionrf) Impaired. Che

Acta were ndopted in 1MG0, but for the maintenance >l tin*

inuaetuii, md i wasnol until 1875 that the Public Library rru

d. I'ndcr the ynvit djiiicui! i<^ >\ im-ii die work encounters

<■> fbcb'uJdinjr.tliclw !■ -.\< w .u.;

i-i di.Ii LiritAiUIM.

and roforcni osectii i i. ruble,

mode tor ncdy those dvfeolsli) mprovotlventihi ion. he i

:ii'i ';il'('lil JfcJO ]»•■!■ i!:i_S. :.ml :i!l tj .;el : in' :-< !;i, ._'

Dl dopfl 1 tiM-iiI i u: ll .v. I I

has now hoon oponod, and which i* another p

il ommittoe novo made judieiooi purohaaetf of acientin.

technical books, The committee entertain the bom

ookport may meet win :i p,cu .-u- i «. i.. tactoi' audi bj in townaol fur Lea* importnnce presented loble pablti literature Shall such wappes remain unheeded? A* a hi -in ifeeturtng (own, Stockport oeouplea a poaiti< d oJ it* imiiisii'.r- art .1- ii imen i - iflinxnoal planes and ahaU U be »ald that Stockpeii laekii ivhal Northwichj Newark, i \\ in.-.' i gei . roi - di i or, who. i. i tin* iimik anil rcrnii'i '-rinmi Lei:- of Ihk town, will perpetuate hi* name by building a new home for the Puh]l< I I Stockport iii- nol .< tea puhltc-apirttecl ritizma, and th< may Ve Iwpnl. -uine pmtspret of 1 1 1 ; . hclnj iioram^lahad filoO in paid mil nf Uiu rate for \lm pen! uf the pres* > t lib

and I'iii- l : 1 1 - - :n:«l l;iM'> L J I. Tilt? fir*! ih'in i- i< ■- crshur, . .

liiii il i> [mid l«i the Oorporatiou ; luu) Hh* areoiM Mem i

thai ua mi. ii ) libraries we exempt from ill local rate

surely he remitted. The Uilm tn»l ipcnt ia t

rnlUoe should we that they have Lhla l*Uauce,and ho ii does

not go bach Into he general horougti fund, These ha]

connection with Public Libraries require watching,

pennj should bo In all cases received and expended i i the

library and ita twin institution when tin 'c is one. E i. It ii to

be hoped, there will be another pennj allowed Cor museum pnr« pose The >um of t'lt'i was spent "i new book* Ti. capitid, and in ii _'l ,: '■< i v .'Uiu i..- :->i i |" : ij ■".' »,.";":;, Stock-

port compere* in this respect very favourably with other! The sincere tope may be expressed that an inep i real

will be shown In this institution. Public Libraries art boa as needful aa fresh air and good water. The town has r*pl new bathe, n magnificent technical school, a museum, to vhieb the visitorf raaahed Laal year the total of !J©f3K> durint: the week daje, and 14,672 on Sundays. Shall it go crying aloud tor a\ mw library for an Indefinite period?

WansHavBR

The Am; report haa just been Issued Tha h irarj La ill Mechanics' Institute, which was gencrouif y offered to the ]■■ if they would adopt the Public I Ibraries lets I he - Bom of the local pren tn helping to bring; about rho daalred change lamwledged, aa indeed theyonghi tube im Fohmarj the vote wns taken, and allowed 1,382 for the adopt Ants and r^t against, No time was losl hi In ipni n \\a c«f a liiir: i Ian, and the work of organization 'oinuiciicei Oi aa !-;-• irn" iiiii\ wasonened bj the Archblsliop oJ Vork wb< tin- .- I cm i on a ■! <■■ ening uf the u[)enh ivered iutoi

[•I I JO MlUlAMfiA IN Tttli NoIi'JH JiJtV C(ti:rriB8.

137

ddrettn -. which did much Ui cmphaaiac in the public mind !ii<' s-sini ii tin- institution as un edaoaiiona] Eorots and no u

i: ].: 'I rational toi < ill ion. \l ,.- advised lli. 1:1 1- mw their Pnl lir

Library for amusement. Him wanted amusement, and ha hi t h i v would get tt uttbat building rather than by keeping a iimnlL book m'li roui 'i "'I i orners in which they calcuiuted the odds on a

v •■ j _ -_■ 1 1 thi'V OaVBt -a>.v ari<; pW lobly ihy< r wouM B8f In

their Public library they hail u place 01 wholesome recreation,

Kid ;' place which would visit them with neither remorse nor

lica.hiclic-, uttorwanK

l.i-:iir Wai j.\.:. by in i h-.m, > - nr i ,J lh<< l.-i.-al « I'm-i-nimen:

d in Febr larj 1882 to borrow EiSrotostnicturalattarfttdoDi matees wished to malca i: £500, but tha injector suggested

tlia i.i -".I"- -.inn in order thai the Hbrarj mighl have h better start

*' Tln'xr lil.t-ini's." he ftald, " :n'i' Vi«ry useful YOU WSJll \ 'fry | i I |

r.-'rii'iicr hooka ■un! yon want honks for the people to rata iwaj

vail i ii nn." and no tha Eflfirtwas banxiwed. repayable wltri rnteresi

m iIm. Thnnapulurltj ■imih.i bythclfbrarj inafully

equalled Mi.- :iMiic.i|>:tii iqh "i i - if n-nds Since the opening 1.-170

borrowers [cket* have Iteei Issued. The total Dumber of tl

now in farce m |v078. The auinbei ol nc^ borrowers steadily

With the twofold objeci of extending the ueefulneasol

the library and augmenting it* revenue^ tin committee, whet

1 1 linn:', the kvmiI ii mr.N, provided dial uon-ratcpeyerfi rcetdenl

A* bul within twenty miles of the Whitehaven improvcmcnl

district, mighl borrcru l»ookfl ":t payment ol an annual robaoiin-

lion od 6e Tlii-; privilege baa been used to a limited extent The

DsaucBamci !'•'• opening amounl to 11,440 rolwnea. The ie

:t i<:.n from fiction liavi reached the large and satisfactory total <>i

10,471). 1 !n reading-room baa from the tiisi been larueiv U'S,M'

byallck 1 *.ily strengthening it* hold upon the class

lowhom the faeilitice \i oflere, no teas than thoea of tho library,

_■: .1: . Immhi. ]'!:■ I .ill-hourly conntinira madefrora time

, tahei bo baata for <-4i.iination, would give at lea I

i- id. average weekly attendance. Th< order and quid

•■■•• prevailed in the room ire worthy of aotOi it

insj»«,«'t i'"' ol the catalogue shows that the selection od books has

Imtmi 111:11!'' v .Hi cum The works in tha historical .section are

j oomprehenaive, and mob as art suitable Cor general

na; a< well as for Hie Btudent. Some 343 volume* ware

..ri rroro tin Kvoord Office, and are worth alioul C130, Ur

A'lUon, who has talcon a worm interest in the movement

all through, u the honorary secretary, and Mr. Simpson, the

Ubtnr

a 1 teelteni remrd '«■ ^ive ol every departinenl ot

■I- w.i'i. 1..1 11. |iu|iui:iunii ni fi^OOO ii has the respectable

nl t,4,illi» viiliinii'M exiMiiMve ol uaiupiili'is. Tlie additions

ii-.( nn m M.n rrariinl 1,019 volumes. Tli«' boba\

wl £}4.4W,nnil in addition to t\iia aura ^nefcaic*

tJttKAKnm.

atA boM« to U* ralw of £675 have- the laic Jowiph Ta*V»r

the bulk ol lii« c»r Nit unfortunately, owing to *oaic n the wfll

whole of what the dVoKn

l**n r*i ol iL'.f

Tin* M7\« !in nnou rany proof* why intend

shonM make then - Pnhlfe TJhn

and not giv* :\ pj- >rtunltj for port hnmou

and c ii wrif-mc ry. \i othei

'.-.! thu latter plni Mr Thomni Taylor, who rtfll tnkfiflB warm Interest in Hie work of the IHirury purchaarOtlii i i! i . r:i itifn ir School In flu* emit ronl tho town, ami tnjfll Dpfjiil the [iii'sj-ni l:hr»u So rapidly linn tt* work r

■i iii i -;- th.ii nlrcndy thi! newsroom and th< y need m - ii -.i« •■!. urid n spare piece ul ground In Uii (if the building will In* probabh hood uwd for thin |iui

llir official iijN»f|lllg ii October, 1-77 ..

I ..ii i -nahlrr people never do .1 m thing l>) halve*, an odd re* crteuted to Mr. I'uylor. Tliih add re

with the following sentence; " We accept your gifl with m reelings "f pleasure find reaixmaibilityi >Vc

powerful i:ir.m- i»i aiding the groat forward i

(An ; pi i :o iii our midnt, and wr hope that li

i ■• and lanting pleasure t<> yourself. The Public Libra id ol rln- round y are dent m d to till i lri;rh place in national edu indwi toK< thb Public I jbraryuan precious tru*t confided b a

promoting the mural .mti material progress of an pt Mir lopftfulni i I h wordd ha.-, been mon tl , and in the immediate future the library is destined to fill n mtill raor i iportftlioe puv i \r thing* token into conaidc.rati >n, the reference library i

i: MTanaeroonl md the selection of i Ice, the finest In the

eounlry of any town of its siase : ami -

kOpuLation of Wigon might well be proud ol that depart- ment. Wo arc rapidly reaching tho day whon In no n Ub 'arj will tho rotfi rooco section tnk< i second place, bnl wi oonnidcrod of primary importance. The the book* in

i md it« organization we very largely tho wor! o iiir librarian; Mr, n Tonnyaon I'olkord, who baa brought I to culture and practical library experience to boor upon hni work in v OOmmcndable to aim. ami which has done much to giro fit Mv the place it now occupies among these Inntltutionj \ sketch nf the reference room on the Brw hi ihowr in iii. fuvon pi nyii p plotnro, and w the hand room in tJio bn I ding Pnc room nccupie.i the *nmc area ru flw lending Ubran and rending-room helaw, and ine Is struck on «m i i . i.. ii u b b !' i resenablanwi 1 1 Home »f I ho oli i.'> iv pi to the pt rahcufl ot thn hooka from the \Mniuir«l

in

i'in: NoitniKJts o.oi «n« .

130

piallsft in ttv mrloiM dAportniPhtx tii '. invrledgo w«ro uked to paw up lists of riif boel hooka in each of them. In &tbtt divifton I <*aiv wa« tnknn to fndoda only hooka of high mcrfi it would hare been n source of rogrel 11 Uin cnfailofftic <<f -;., j ■■ , , collection had not been bo Formed ostoentitteSttoB oil Uog up

I »'i ii the librarian and his cui uuittoe wci c cans] i<»

i'i ! rtif <■; tnlojRie cif tlic iU/XX) hooka n the refci

! t\ v, hen fini I . <|, tiiio "I I'm mm. -( ounpl t< a -1

I itn kind which has y i been published ii will

cr nlxmt 80,000 entries, and ta being pu%NWnft&

no

pi -»uc ueiuvni.

£1. Mr <; l ' v\ iinn eorau:

ha* written and rroMwhed i verj <

the method i ipo i •-'iio ha* tm

•f. prtncrpal heading, the authara name, or, it

ici.ii ig word in Hi'1 Mil'*, e ich work h i^ ' i

\\ tun praot < ahlc i ho Mithor'a i

i|c:tlli '::..!■ l-'i'h HiVPH I". i.-!i Wcil'k ;1JiI»mi- II. ill lic:nllMt/« ol UtlC I'l-l il.iv.. IM'l 11. :

i. in ,\ Ith whtd

i.i i i i one, ii - 'ii'M'H1- i i I. eon . In i nurtri i i j biographic*,

iHniil. Nl|||l4'Mt(l.S lilt I.Mi'M.H lltU'.I.I"> IpplMI

177 cloneh printed pages.

The .• LI :i B uccuntee .1 book

I | | ■;. o| [KM'lRiHJ

.; i;- I . i i . .• imuH ('Mil I

■len and, i M ipparcntlj ii onl i R igl &1 w rl

n i k i ■■ i - ii,.. lupoi iii in dust ] y. lull.' atnl .. . . -... i >n to l-'i ad bound in cloth, » \i i\ book or paper mention '

hli I it i ■■iit'Tcd l»'lti "in-1 iln- D&DJC of \'i<: aiUlh »l' and nmf

the norm oi be eubiccl 1 fu i nva , havi been m

divided In order to |»fin ; the work catalogued, when . anoV^j

iln-'- trv, h ., i, or ithcr locality of which it titntrt. vV<

. i rebtina to -■•-.. I, although uol -in.-iu ... ;

have I w< ullynoted, Article** relating i- th< folk-Ion m .

tin i , m rk tn atlna el the IoamIa, & ol tin i

rxteaeuri ..:>!■ or cur/iona i k.' cc i

•■villi the subject, aw Included, Collateral branch - ,:

. lenee Important t" the. mining inn rest hare beej iasei led, mh'^

.... r i ri laJ i ■■ to r< ll< f t in -^""~(:

r. :i ciSHti i •■ ; !■■- w Iffan tin i !■ :it ?atuc rl i i iod i ol mining booh . tvhfoh con nt aUtimcaba consul i I, can >t bo over

oititnatc . Ttu? other | ml ratal nu Lhii departim i I

the eatnlogue of w i>! on bonkn, the Mi

u.< Ol laV LlOOKft. I'll'' 111'.- 1 li::iil 1 iv . :

04 what should hi lone in other i> ems. M . i ■'■ I . ir i hi played oonedderabk industry ui collecting the publication* of Ui [i en] proaeei and ull boolc pamphlet* and manuKeripti h tonnectloB, no matter how remote wll i tin own Ph - catalogue ... twi t»s must have come an .i aurp

the town •;■ * inl n i nl « i om proliahlj i

ii n! b iui h oollti i '"-' i

in Other tOW im Vhnulil ,'-U" lit - pl:ri llli ir

. ;i:u.]ih- Pis kiiik rhc n\,]\ mi.ii.- l.iSrary i it r*-t whirh i;:> :t Lord upon It is thnt ;ii V ItH honorary or hurgc tentative* hnn Hip Ftlghi

Eari il i r iv ford, LI I in thin miw rnc ij>

[nvoribed Some nl the en ■*■« i in :i nn1 vrn '••■■ ■--. and

.livj.i.iv niih-ii reaoarch riu lattei atatenient tan ilao be aboul the *:ii.iii.Mu- ui' law UkiU.s Tii.- whole ol theae wjn

i ataloglUB should ti*nd :.» fivatc .1 1 u*e »>f thl> Inoj

Eepsrtment of Hm Pnblie Library, if the town I ury surroundings— for \hc pri'scmvi.t ••••:t\ uiiu «'i>i mngnatUM piny rox its Isnmty Wignn has in ftn

library Bii oasis which cannot I i too highly appreciated

ii. in no al repori eon atafl 11 1 welcome feature of the librarian^

r&POrtj "'t'V'cr l" live p:i»r> The TOpOPtH of lulliliiiU.ri'x jut ill way*

=i .-» .-_»! 1 1 >ii- inn i. ,i rule no our can speak so mihoritaiivi'iy npan tins working <>i the library us Uu ruau In charge, and the ■rreator prominence ol librarians reports in these annual pulilini- Bcnui if u'i.-» desirable. In ihr leading di-partim-m the jrrona

JMHiir* were tH,4.'l0. Til* nCWSrOom JS TCrj popular, Sfl ii deserve*) l<> !».*. Tlir .-inula;, .n iii." bin i\* for the year reached H.9G&

"!'Im- ten faaa Sunday opening of the raadinrooaui on been cm uu^ualhn.i [a tin* general reaaiDff-room there

or*- ibonl i"( volumes for reading and reference The public are : » 1 1 * wed to help themselves to the bcoka, which arc i^pon )|.:-;i ihehree. lii'i'1 i- .i notice hung up thn! no hookn nro be takei oul ol the room. No BupervieSca la required beyond .jin- i!..- booke early every rooming. In. twelve yean sb -K been taken :iway. For sonic yoaM 0 voluntary

I a halfpenny in addition to the penny has been paid In D itin bcr "f ratepayers, as the le^^ penny waft onaafticlencior y extending work. Last year a Koeeiiil lorn]

£ivoe the power to levy a rate ol twoponeo ntho

uuhI. Lectures uivo been given during the lent &V9 yean b

mm ti-»n with the library, and these lire beaomingmoxe and more

ihir with each vi.. ■< eecnng winter, rhe local ores give oapttal

ip. A* new and inpoi-t-jiii l io<>ks u re added in the reference

pftrtnient, short noted written by the librarian, epitomizing the

mtcntA, ore publiehed. It is impossible to pass on from this

lort ■ketch without heinu; more Ihan ever r<aivineod that the-

. u vVigan ix a live institution, pregnant withuaefulnaSBto

bi entire town, The necessity -.1 r museum for the borough ia

1 w 1 eiwwd, and under the now local Act this will no

>niit 10 m 1 me n reality

VVOWCIVO'ION.

in MnvMiin Ift39, the sanction of the burgesses wiw obtained

the adoption of the \>- - The example of Whitehaven wan

in. ' ii be Infectious. The Towu Council ae a body tools ;t

Lead In the matter, and this, aided by the stop taken by

it •■ <\ ih" M 1 inics' Institute, greutly facilitated

:: ['In i ommiUo; had pa.wnl 1 n sol itlOE to ih< offc ll thai

!■• 1 witli approval the proposal loeaeruise the powers

nu 1 1 H- Town Cou 1 ! hj rarloua statutes for the estttb-

i;i in the "it", 1*1] of .1 Public Library, and thai U the

> now "■ Lipicd by the canunittee be required for such

v, 1! - v. ou -i 1 '..■ ili 1 uch .1* wiw in then

. .iiiv.-n ■, i.t nf the Mcehanln Institute premises by Town Council u other committee* ol me&uafifio1

d, 9 id ..i similar re*oto,\\au. Kx

PCD UC UBBAUIK-S IS TUT iftrnrT? \ CCM 'in

111

tho -tntutory meeting < I preaent, with only w

lot tiin adoption, ind no poll von demanded, rbi

produce abonl C'J/iO fier annum h KehM

Wl'l'l' ill ill'. i 'iv:-v tin- tilt" .iri|tlll« lill'llt <l( till" XT

the pnrpoRN i i > puhlli library <»n the Sundii prior !<■ thi' |" 'II ; ii t'jut'llrnl <M»riih<ri w:w preached by the U . i-r ".in i i nl he borouich uu Ihe usee uf Public 1 the purt tlieee in* to i"': lei m<

CHAPTER X.

PUBTjTC IjIBRABIBB in the midland count™

•ubuq LatfUBiw ■■'-■ eparaelj scattered U ■■ th^

Mi*il:i*i*i i'"iii«ti.--. Italy throi intiw t< without at

no "i thou! inatitutioE i. these boll ntJ ukd, i ,. Bin 1 1 mil inn<lon > counties i

to tboae in the North, \Vo*1 infl s.n didhmd* am Leicester, Nottingham Iierhy, Chaster, Stafford, i Worcester Shr-op* lire Hereford, Hertford, » h Bedford, uid ( mbrlugc Five ol liese counties t <hh

i' le~*upporte<] Library -«» thai (he work yel to lie doi

fHdely Vnsrrihtili'il.

Vi.VMsVliAM, NaNTWIOJI, ATTD MlDDl.ltWtiTIT.

Theac Uiree Cheshire town« folhwAd each oilier very ci in the adoption of ii"- Arts. Nantwlch wn i.

:iini then followed \ trincharn. Thin wiw tiroiiarii nboul by it

•liMit and sharp sjritulioii In September. I**N the \ showed i aajorfty of 73n\u favour of he adoption, The w of i in- arrangement* for Ihu taking ui ho poll w irecarrli n by Mr ,1. fttnkoc, clerk of the Uieul Uonrd, v i nfllelo n man mcnl nl' ii work no full of technical and lejral difficulties

bhI uatiaTaetiuu. Acting under the advice of the -> ■( i in in- Board* occupiers of property aawewed to the general district rate were looked upon as being entitled to rote on (ho library tton wLi-iliti tin- rates *ere unid by the landlord ui tcnani

fivwyhooael i « bus enabled U exercise thi pi

vi 1 1 mil- In the, Tiiinr.i 1 1 ol this very impoi'i anl question.

i ii.. u . . too tin Croydon dec ofon, w hfch ' uall) dijj ui' 1 1 1 :■ point. Foi w >poi the library s ill rely

opoo •■ ram "i 6900 per annum fn tu the trustees of •"!.■ M i

Liml < li.irit v, whit Ii 0 « rah ]•■>., i ■■• ' mi!

unanimously dccid«] should bo applied to the maintenance of a I'uhi i Library. Hy the order ol the f:harlty CtoruiuieHionera

i'p'n ft tin s the I aid i ol the C luril ) . th< mono be. m i

it ie ub3oliil« ly Erm , so thi Publii Llbr - atenayort tan at lu

b«aontofth< Incomo. Uoaide thio, tin l.lbrurv C'onan bu i Iron "/ ■< d fcho Local Board to lu© cxtcutoS ftttf v«f am

n uu<- rJMfcalBPJH I D >UUm OOOVTCMi u::

Another important fact which must DOl bo lost ftfghl of la Ilmt iliv- directors ol the Literary Institute, who i D library of

3,000 volutin , ■■! -.* j.tm «!: ui- li.-sv!- mm. m, at id ;\ luru'» hall, en pal I «-f accommodating "00 persons, bosidos convouioiH cli ox pre will mgnaiH ;<» band wop t.» tin; bowa the whole

of their undertaking, providn a irrangomonba are m tor eon tinning th< eduoatioj i i s w lot connected therewith, Tho halt n1 | »i-> -- ■■ i - yields an locome of KI50 peryear, which m.^'hl also Tie made available \»r the supp -rt <«f tho library. As :i sample of the gross misstatements frequently made about existing libraries a local public man said that, although ostensibly tho Manchester i i u'arv had an Enoome oi only :; penny Is the pound, thoy really cost tivepence in the pound. A snider and ta ve

inaccurate assertion ebOttf those EnstltUtlO&fl Wl - never muilc.

it required only a post or two to show the ubsuniitv of the

■.i-x.'iii.'i:!. f of tirrpi'iii-i- In 'hr ]niiitii! in M:nu 1 |i >st .•!• would pro- ilui-< :in : n I ■■ f EflOJ O i .i year— n sum which COUld 001 pOSJiWy

be upesii on Uio existing libraries In Manchester IWfl men

ti.incd n* an tlluniraLlon uf the stuteincnLs for which frionrta of the raavemenl must be prepared. Ail through the disouaatana

.- n •■■ in" iin- adoption uf td" Acts, the sdYlanbMtv of an

i.ljoiiiiur ji.iti<li (Bowdon) WJtll idcii Uc j| J II I I'H'.il 8 also :idnj>l "."

' |i* \.i i,i I ,iin.t.;..iin.illii^ with /Vltriiich.iiu, WAS Ui pi in view

.tin] reference?* were fr**i|uciitl> made towards thin desirable and.

i takeu witli a view of handing over the Literary

itution for tin purpurea of a Public Library.

II e advptSoD nl N'uiitwich w;» in AiiKitM, 1**7, by public

meeting. Not ' single hand woe held up againsl the propusi-

tptions flowed in Tory freely, and 61.000 WM

quickly promised. Thin enabled them to erect a building, The

lilinin fi well and mbetentially built, but ia not, from cnttcrai]

mince*, citenrave nor very ornamental, If it is, however,

Ailed with all the hoolcn it is capable of holding, not many ten

than WOO cun bo shelved therein, its utility and real rahie will

an tfir.it t-ii, foundera ould reaeonsbf> hop< loi undei ..n

M, i .i ■>. ■■■>. Vnd. i i< tho reading i'oom, If bhert ia any fear

*i all, II iii" r v II bo Pound even boo largo for all the papers

that they can afford I i lupply regularly in December, [6

won op n i bj Mr. Brumicr, » \\, who contributed lai

toWurOH Uix firat coal Mr llnma-r mid Uhti had nlm Im-.-h

.Ii-mii oi Public Librarios. Ho hoped tho County Qoi r&cnt Hill would i" imendod to provide for the araatiozi

. villajjo, lie was convinced alargonnmbor i. ..-I (in uooountol 'ii- ■!> "'H'ool' any dulyconirtitutrtl

|j ir.-riVO llH'lll.

ii, a district with a population juht over 5^)00, : quietly adopted as in the other two places named. Thai nothing euccoedn like nueeesii ik true, and in the Pulbbc i.ihratv movement as n other departraenu ol life A ntewtinn < Id in the oarlj pari 1 1 i-^». M waa OQ\nAAd 'v\xv

tbat Mi'M.v-'iv;; wnain a naueft better rj aacnA.^M arfaX

:

144

ur.R^Mr.v

Hi. ,M nu:iy olhci ton n . ii.- i had no land to tmlldln erect. In addition to having: o capital Imil

thej had ;i balance left from the Jubilee fund o! toraoi 1388, besides which lliov bnd the promise of some very im ! ..-■-! < i i ' - r i ; Im Ing EIOO front Mr, Brurun r, and '.■.' .1 year for l m Mr. Mono, x*io

tad m my ethej "i Hon . i o thnt presently thej vronld bo as riehp ownparutivoiy, as tin- Soli Cm I to i"i ':'' Am lota wn m n I and seconded.

llrnim. r, M.I'., lUppOTtod the motion. Ill the OOllfeS

peoen no ioJo Choi through tho land-heuru-l public ..pint <.,f mI'i.i-. tins lud :t very fitting homo for their library, and ho did bo1 think thoy could pcoaioly ninka . better aeornerof ^ * i .- t hall than l< aft in it a LfbrarrfoT

the lihabltantn, To hlsmmd there wna nothing so cheap aa Public Library, lor In Mich a place a working-man could foj 6d, i 1 1 ■■.?■. >r i penny In tin- pound, procure for his household- and .n.n-, particularly for it* children a *orfeja oi weekly ■■■ troni oiii- end ox the yo u? ••• another.

WroN M ■• ■■ r

Iho vast borough of Birmingham has l>een making municipal

|or> Ul Ita Utile nultflilMtnr Asli»n. :'iicl Iris uicd to Induce

[ da io become merged in greater Birmingham, IJut Kstarj

tlurulnea with thunk*, fur Ulev havu long seen Hint all the outlying words i if Ririulughuiu have had t<> five wav tc the huge »c for ha Improvement of the centre of the town, and so tha suburban warda mnal wait. Aston Is wise in ita day and

i.i'ioii. and iiit'uiiill.v feels thnt it is strung enough to tlnuc running alone Ami certainly, *> far oa the library la

:. \*|oi ha* hiTii ln-itri nerved l'.\ itself b> bel *opar i I tti 'i would probahlj i had

iom< * i t njro been annexed to ttirminghara. The i of -\\ il hinl'.'il iTi th< Load Hoard offices, md i

in-.- i-' ■•!' -if.nlj und useful work ' bono, The

i - 1 Tin; additions

to tTM) books last year, especially in the tending dcjMiti

ent in tmalUY.and nearly every taste Iml-een kept in *

ii ;i' Vmon iks in all other

manu! injr good the

- ul wriftriight).) hcfcr* thai of th(* previous year. The news

room and refer sre eomfortablc and attractive roumx.

Ttierv Ii a go :-fnl Mirnwaniinff*, with a \ \

visqve art potter) hen- **-\ there. The furniture wa* to MBit the Moms, :»■ ntly pfa>-

n. II:.' »**t pcasabto enapofad ia

jno-Je c4 tl»e sPttoo, sihl on aduutaoool nxim fee reference ban

■••ly Imxhi »VJ, >l \ *trip of oar4 dMi 'sorrowers

... a».l th* I he valient

f.^turva of tlir Hm penary efas.-

an- "*eW eucn|Mied the boorA Scfcrate e5oM b^ the

PUBLIC UBTUttfgS IX THE VIMJ.VD COtNTIBS.

U6

library ik Died for Lectures during the winter, ami the library lecture* hsiVf :i].i !c \>r«n i|tiito a local reputation The hvttiri'K

( :i Ugh-olees character. Mr. Robert K Dent, author <>i

■■ < Ad and New Hiniiimriviin." the genial l in-anim. i m dona much to develop this seodos ot si i*- Aston work.

Bumbo.

The comity of Bedford has begun to establish its Public Librarfe*. It was appropriate that the county town should lead :ln- aav, and lhi.s il. did <u August, t8£l.», by public lueetj tg.

T)u' Mayor, In explaining Lne object of the said that

El had been advertised in the legal way. flor some time net a

uood number of people had been anxiou* that a imi*cuin should

be established in Bedford, and he himself though! it absolutely

ju order to compete Trith the educational institutions Lq

iwn. In addition to that it was known that the ArohlBO-

! Society had a greal many tiling which it was desirable

to have in .1 mU&CtUQ, und the Society wished theSQ thiugs to bo

I'll -im.K of some responsible body ; and, seeing thai

the i t i [-« rnt ion vm a l»dy whose continued existence WM <n-

Luii, it appeared to him that the Corporation should become

■•linn* "i the artieleh imw in p^sai'Mumi of the Archaeological

..■.'i:n,\ ni'iieloB which weronowplacodinprivato lihi'iii-i>' .

b> pei'AunK who were anxious to hand over tbo treasures thoy

C"\v.od tu some rcMpuiifiiblo body, who won Id hold them fan t | !ii of the donors and of the public generally. Fooling ho V important the matter was, h* made LnqofiSee, and found thai Itr i

ioitablo r is for i SMiseui i could i>e had at tlio BcdJord Kooni*

n of something! like fit) a year, 'thinking that the timo bad arrived tor* thern to take some initial step in the matter, he brought it before the Council, but was 1**1*1 thai it would be imprac- ticable i' r any pu >lic n oney to be .spent in thin waj unless they availed : " ■■••■'■ w as of tno Pnblic Libraries' Aeta. Feolingtben the Imtwtttpoq oi having a Museum and n Public Library In the town.

which should be * ocnti E education and have b beneficial

influence, ",,1 ;i,-r feeling it was n matter that should ;»c brought before the ratepayers, he had taken the liberty of oalMna i i

PLnfffftJid he trusted they would ahow their apm*eaffttion oi >• endeavours that were being made to benefit the town by ailing themselves of rite Public Libraries' iota. Thi* was dom- ariv, and Bedford Is getting Its museum Into shape and ii tlien esiabltsh its library. BxurroN, BmantKY Hiu, amt> Dudmby.

It la becoming a fortunate tlii_ny m the history of (he Public

Library movement thai m town or populous dist^ct governed by a

ii h< i traaidered tobt con pleb without a Public Library.

Iston date* ii- adopl on from L872i Ita number oi volumes

| \rg . and it should to loi &er be poftsihla to lay to the

the large employers of labour in the district Hint the

rv ia l>> them -> Bomcwnot neglected institution Ww ^otV

F'IMMjr I.TFIltlUlM

1 1 w troon i the plgI that o& o 1 1 1 ici'hoiu visit tlie variout fcpartracnl day, The number of borrower* 5.78(1 to extraordinary

KNirini". thai I ""«' -tie uiiU 0,-J)0 books, ami \.'i;ii :iiv .

Among 23,000 people \ \ fow twenty guinea gfftn for nea to fruni the liir«t» Arms in the dtataicl would tand to plftM 'in Itfarar/ on a macdi better footing. Tl urd i cIUm

;:ill i i lu'iiviU U) ». I'"'- OQl Of a rata "I" Z\ l&l "

i'7 1 i* < !•• v »! ril in i:n- i i-|i.t i men I if iIk- loan. ('nti>M'i|iii i tl |

HIiimi'.mi iliss I'nx !m* to In iWnl with i *ftli m ol t&pM

week. Bflaton wnuto a refresher in the shape ol

_r 1 1 1 -s . and il la to be hoped thul ii will not sol nig » itboul Lneoi

\i i io doea Brfei lei II II f< r during if- I waive ihr i'imiiim. u oi £10 iii- becsn contributed by a aaptnc publii toward* Ite librai \. This iHadiBgracc which rarolj the ; i >. i 1 bhi district will ti<« longer allow to exiat * Dm dation of 19,000 Ea n Btraffgliner ooci > i t ti< r reading proclivities oannol certainly be mot by I.eWJ volume* :' two n) -ii1 .i weal* w ion the lending [ilirai , w ipi u un

r< Lent. Our tendercat sympathy .■■ ou I >r thi Ubroriea ibrugglinff with very irnitou inc i

«'l:t | DOOpIl ;in«l liltinl' Iritlll ll, ,t» ;i]i|)r;ir:: i

.i! Briorloj HIU, iho difficulties of the work aro incrci & Two

ro < i aJ ttod the Town Hall buildingn for tho wurk, :md

year lb paid I" the Local Board for rent, hooting, ad ■•I.- Mn. i-.. vvn the ■-•■',• I.' < i " lill allow u thai

;,. I, f H snhaa i ed Latere I in lie Pubtie i.h-.

ii-y hIiowh a bettor state ot tiling, hut aero they luvro io tlii i "i io thing; on .i larger i nolo on | roi on ably expected Chero «raa an inter <■• i wi<ei

Hie adoption ol the VotaamlUn ipening of thi liui i LTiorc are two small branches, and the groati use >! the chiol and tw ofl ioo pery considerable, liaro again the paucity of jrifta edit iblc to n ti v :i like Uudlcy. it i pai t tow *et the presenl Karl of Dudley to take too load BJftd »pnre ftorne trifle rroin his abtindnni means, which are la }-y \]a- people of the district

I iim i:n IK.\K

There b v tal u ii the work hi Bl 'keuhead, - [1 1 to

be after an existence of i ilrty-threo yearn. Birkenhead used he a botJ ii' Iti'i; hton for 1 4v«rpoo1, hut the opening ol n U Tiiiiiui and other drawlaiokw are said to have lofi tho t| i ir what n waa. Bui al all eveutw the library is holdlnj

0Wnvf0Ttb< •■■ <■■■■ i--ur IV I .■ n- u;|.- Uh,7ll.'t '<i! ii'unr iiMfHriR,

and IO6\410 f"i pefBronce. TJie work lias grown .>ii'-i.Hl> micd j : ii m ii iIm- Dpi ,.,-. in :>*rii7 the liooka uwucd ii: thi two i !•■ mrtmcmtM were -;.''i ;. and from tha tliej utve grown to i aqu.r Ulioni oli ansa a year. Thi» Itto real argumenl

d I <\ >ui "i Public Libranea The nv: >>\' i\ < ,/'ri ••/. /: i J BO ■ii!iK|)i'ou:u ^u^u\n\ i\ \ \\U>. -w\,

,

I*(.~BUC LIBRAMBS IS THE NIDLASH rut STIKO.

117

no looming ; but for *olid frrowth they j.m> I"' wry i-nlie.illy

examined. 'Hie report ol the librarian, .Mr. \\ "illi&in May, is

altogether a wry hopeful one, and porhrij" '<• (ho committee the

aheeri&g fcta Is that they nave been enabled to pay off

another £800 Of thi debt on the hmldmjr, and yet they lmvo a balance of nearly £300 in favour ol the 1 1 i lmltteo. It a to be hoped that they will set- they got it. for the^e balances to the

ol the working of PflMtc Libraries were never intended to go hack into general borough fluids. Mr. May Ifl *i UbrsrU D with ideas. His renewal .sliii, vhicli is given among the apjiir.-

seeras t-» hare set the ball rolling in this direction on this

•le QlC AUantli Tin1 ii:un!-;iMh nf new additions to the shelves

cap : ^ii For three-halfpettce there is one of twenty-four pages, i |g :i little naodel ol its land, Birkenhead is a frreat

eering district, and - ic pages in this hand-list are devoted

t> the wunCHOO engineering and mechanical arts. This ha* led to an increased demand for boofcs on these MihjerLs. The Birkenhead committee and then librarian believe bi the virtue ol printer** ink. Thus haveieauod a four-page circular ol informs n.-ii . oni ei aine lh® librarv. With one or nro trifling alterations

kr * a-. ;i1ni ^ivni aiming the ivppendioeSj and other libraries will iio well t" ndopl e atratfii plan. the idea fa Mr. Magfe B&tMXfVQSAH To ahv one unactraaintcd with the L^bhoLibrarieaoftheoonntrr, a vifiit t-» the Bnrmuigbarn ftiblio Libraries Es s libera] education (

. thou- l:i-h!li:ir :t visit t«.i tin >e m>tilid] >iis m tin- rapftaJ OX

i w aidumote ie a source of inspiration. The Ihrming-hain Publie Libraries and the name «f Mr J. i>. Mullinsare inseparable, :m<l it is only B matter of sample justice that the man who has dono

a* much for this movement as any other individual niun,

idd have that work fully and universally reengnized. Mr.

Mniim- i* one of the most modest >! men, and ha* a drend

Against the chtal talrin notes; but his professional brethren are

hsposed to let him off so easily. It Is not a settled Question

it to whether the large Bonstituwicy which he serves, o otn-

hose servant he is, or his brother librarians esteem him

the highest, i ertafn it is that, during some thirty yens, few

fare* have been more f;iniiii;ir to literarj Birmingham, and to

rhrwe who take an Interest En Publlo Library work, than that of

rhlef librarian to the Birmingham Corporation. He embodies

within himself the very essence ol tpriet force aialuarnot artb iiy

1 1 v at wurk, with spectacles on nose and skull -i:itp on head,

he Is the centre and controller or a vast orjRiiiixatioii. the oon>

[ileiit;. and details of which are known unly i<> i hose behind the

Vlr. Muffins is not s Bh-mmghom man hj birth, this

I.- taken place in London. Ilia first beginning in

lilcsry work ww - . when he wan chosen librarian from one

led and twenty-aix candidates for the old Birmingham

ry -i subscription institution whicl has a very mleTcft'lVns,

hiircrV. but Into which tins ,.. not the place to euwr. ttere\w

14*

PCBUC UBBAtIB?.

remained »ereu yw*, ami in inuft lw no* clioem chief libra

()f !li»- iy l.l i.- I I i 11 ir . Ii. In - new IitV Mr. M i. Miuljr

i i :i ii 1:1 the i'uht place. Ilia knowledge of I experience In oai meat,

were of jrreat value. Il<- bad little to learn, and hod on! .-an- v out in* rien on d i ■■ ir scale. His greatest merit l" blM

..i.i cnloroaoopiti power. Xo detail it too cotnpl too minute to be dealt with in eome practical way. Be- lie U remarkable for life rx.1 rem* sadunil inn oonrtoey and pi! coolness. The ninvly business management of eo lar^c a library und rou;. branches IB most extensive, us nil fibl

; the hours of dut\ >i the parioue officers are put in a tabular term, and their attendance* are similarly recorded, rhe men', of salaries, vanes, and account* are all roe

Llent order, duly checked and certified in business years in a large subscription library, and his two years io Public Libraries, haw afforded ham i larger «i enoe than Ealta U) the Lot ot ra •-: men in hi* own profeecaoo. KUUttlti book, now out of print, and published some ycaroaflo> entitled H»es Libraries and newsrooms," has been ft capital pioncv»r Farther than tills, Mr Mulllns has, by li and ;i.|vieo t.a niiii'i' towns when 'in i ilng their HbrartasL often hr.ii i»r moot valuable service. For a long time he h:i^ i*<ii i -ii'iiily shattered In health, and while still maintaining hU »M ehi-orfnlneas and vigour. It Im> been [intent that advaneing years have meant the low of some of his old ehislielty and buoys But there- are still Ml fur hint, il i* erea.iy tu he hoped, many

years of work tor Birmingham sod the library movement He is B bom librarian, and his whole heart and soul have BV0T in Iub work. In the growing popularity and extending useful' new of the Institutions under his care lie has always taken the most lively interest The wish may be expressed thai . In course of a few yean, when that restored health tor whiuh all bin friend* hupc for Mm iunv come, he will have time and OppOT- tunj *, tot writing b book on library administration. Few bus better qualified to undertake such a work. Mr. ITuHm- vf whom llii min^li.ini i* pnnid, ami his professional brethren

have an equal pride in him. Acting as the mouthpiece of the Kafrtsj ii>i the rone beino\it may be said that they wovld grre Mm three times three and musical honours, and t - ease

it would be a very genuine display of the unirereul e which ho fa held Among them* Tli'* ai r-cxtondlnfi work at Uimiingham is tin bcel of aU

Col the utility of the libraries. This could i ■•( n bettor evidence than >■ ulT"rde«l I y the decision of the

Town Council in August, 1689, with a unanimity worthy oi thcrn, to i ■"! iIiivmii'M' branches, On nnly question woe as to -w the hranehen should be placed, foi nil the out] are claiming to novo them established m their midst, who has visited either of the * I U'mingham til

ii iii.;i UlUIAUlKfe iv |8K >III>I..*M> COU STIRS.

149

: Oonetltution BilLGoeta Green, or Deritend, who lma

■JGfln the crowds of quiet and orderly renders in the rooma, and

::.- .i Ixtrrowera at the counters, could nol come amur

without feeling thai thcao taatitutloni arc douuru valuable and

trnportai I - I work. The use of such libraries and ruocftnff-

;-. i .in . ... p. ti.i. largely upofl the l.i'-ility of access. The w<-rkm;m ;illcr hi- «l;iv'- l< i riuiiMT travel (wo or three inih'.s to a lv.wUnflf-

room, nor tend hte child the ionic distance to fetch a tool l" be it ii a. All ratepayers bare i< contribute to il«' ooel

ofttica i'l^'il .ri«»ns. and ull nhoiihl na far OB pOBBlble have emud

opportaoitioa ol enjoying their adrantugea. li ia nropoaeq to epend between C15/)00 and £10,000, and the branencfl will be

doted withoul delay. One of thceo will be ereetod a1 the oornor >t Spring; Hill und Eokniold street, from the deatesns oi

•a, m iii-mii and Uharnberlam The prindp ii Feature wfl] he a

I«ilt\ :i.u<l 'VL'11-liL'l.t-.'il hnll, servLUg; Ih>(1i l'nr :h'\vhmoiii ;ind landing

library. The tome department will be aeoomrnodated in ;> ffaUerj on tha Brat-floor level, and approached by a atouweaa either from the reacBng^rooiD ot the veettbule. There will alao bo a librarian's room and a lavatory, Ttie entrance will i>e at the oorner of the two ncpaata, and the bulldinga will have exterior elevations designed

I In inooorn Gothic, nnd constructed ol red bt'tckwith torra-ootta nga A small circular ventilation turret alao forma pari ol the iIl'-.'mi. The plniisi for tho Unjrard Street library alao Bhowa am rhmuon i brick nnd terra-cotta, daafgncH In tine Renais- sance style, it if. treated very roeeaaafnJIy, axtd baa a good deal of i-nrietiiiient of an etl'eefhv character. The moat sinking feature la m semi-detached tower :it the angle, which is to ba fitted with ;i clock; and bhe mala room wffl be Halted by b . Endows Tin.- architect* have dealt eery skilfully v.tl. .t [ueee ol Uitd of Somewhat diftleull lorni, innl (he building improve the appearance oJ the locality. As bo many misconceptions have, from time to lime, orlaeo and been placed before the public it will bona well to state what lathe hut with regard bo Llio rate. Ia one town where the movement was in progn i. Yemeni went i'mili that the

I rate waa threepence in the pound. 1'iitii rerj recently from Bh« prawn I date, the rale haa been but one penny, but by of the ratepayer* power was obtained by meani of a . |/rovcment Act to rajae it if accessary. Tbii wae !r ted by the demand for new hraueheB. The limit of . of the Ewart pennj will not provide for an unlimited numbered brancboe, = > * l it [a to meet the needs of these new broncho i tJon of another i>< nny hi - bi ba found occca-

In ikrmintrharn. There is no town where the Horary rate* i more shoenully poid than in thin large midland centre of li. « uiui. here ia a remarkable record of rapid growth and - I" 1861 the library epraug into life with B

ee lection of rather more than fljfioo booka. in four yaara the number of books had eonBldcral>l> move tl\w\ cm\\\V\<-A,

and they were H-rrov '>d by over MiO.OOO moVv*. V^k"

fT**.

1

Ml >mcr was made. f«r the refrxrnt-e hl*rarv wa* _ W » cn»»rth<n4 |fl,IKtwlM»J thcrotuxm^ la :!.. l.-r»drar library were aaereaaed fratn m*drr thirteen to irre? t * nity-iT* thosrawl Year by rear the tree which had been, in it.-v t-ct*io, a eoanparath.- cram «4 aaaataid iLtd, waxed .. Uat end of 1*T7 the rrfrrracr library contained 4 ; » mkI

the lea-hxg library «|ffiflR. a total of86/»7 Tomn* h do

leas than «W,0» reader* made uae, f. *■ recreation ■-: inM TVs: eaano the cttaastrosB fire, in wbuh Uir reoan rear 1*7K vara Uat <»■ that January morning ia Birmingham ariad to be atandiag in o kind ol while it* goodly r*)amo* were 1«W to .uric*.

great a* wa* the dimeter, it acrrcd a lavful energy and prnroptitaoV with wh;. to ratriava it* lea* are a memory which mar be lauuk- i prvfe to auceoodlag reneration*. sad, at * . . . Itotfri

from the sacred aOic* ha*, •tarll i

■ueccfMor. \ ear t>y year trw 111 ran

r the aoowMstlori of valuable and tutoreatloef fcatnry appr^-cued by an i

oa the reference hhrarv eontaaih Uj the !rt»dmg llhrary 5i»,K*»— a total ol* IK number of the irtcek ahen the Are mrageil th

The average lumber of rfelc* eaeh Kbrarie* uw ft uttng-roi am may h than llf.OCm a very revpectaU

rn fart thai thousands of in. the rear

:ir thnmgh reading the mtvoi IwimMiu i i iiinlM>ni of papers lo be (ootid in (he newsroom h;<i ntoc otefatfc any morning It is moat DM men *r»i Hfruficlit rn lews bill lo Hie jiliertl

p Mil. -II,

Tin- rofervnee department ia « tery

Birmingham work, the catalogue •! which will I'fiiiuileteit, ;i vui of top-stone to Mr. Mullins'a reputation. Th ia has many details of special interest, uml affords furth BJJUnpK' "i Hi" >i nniliin> of tlir plan in) whicli it is compiled, i,i tin- ! im! i i -. .1 «il usefulness of tin? work n> .i " finding index In tin- in hundred thousand volumes which the Ultra

son i "ii.ii.r-, and whicli are couatantly uteres, i th

munlfiocat donation fund, viuVli h

the purchase of high-cls^s bonks, Id.- form - f tin- catalogue ia practically alphabetical w ;i list of author*' name*. But out)

iniportanl beading* the principal l>ouk.< an licit ii duriflea catalogue for I general x

Tin- - ipcrlosoo of yean hi shown tint not onjj rot the refen ni the Htudcnt. iiut for fch« prompt delivery to i 'wok

or ijojiijtlili-i, ti'< ' - pniwd ' I »« - i i . mark J

m|ilo< f Hi" del iil of the work :t may be mentione ! il .. I- rcii ' ii.hI'-i.im Mi-irll.i'iv,'" in ten nunrio vuIuiucb, ia fal 1 "ii cloven pofcai tne oou i nU of oaeh voltuni b i

r ia

pr i IS TUB MIPLAXT' 00 n 161

tibedi thus enabling roadere uid students to look up

IiiaiiV l-:ir<\ ,:;■!, !-.:■■ .i BOglOCt&d pQSBphlll , whOSC M StGftOQ U

little known, bv wbow content* n historically valuable, and

ofton hiphiv interesting. Ei m unall a subjeol of 'Hate" Id

reproeontcdbj mm pamphlets i while "Heraldry" has more than

two and ooetljworkft, Under" History," the pri iolpftl

hirmi vim \m FiKFJcnxKOR t ma un.

mi general history ire classified, each country hoinff

nwn pi'i.i] . idiujr, to which

i wnolri naturally ln%l

i linu'3 al Uii nitiigham i& noted tar and wide. -■ k---l with ■■ b in English, aart VQ -.A\ . ivIui«7j thfphtya have I D :i; 0&\&t&&, TtoS tafttt

l.VJ

PTT5IJC LtB2AAlK9.

Dumber of Kngllari e liti inBOT selections ie l'.okj, and of separate

.■■■us 811 j Bhe*1 Ina." naakflup SjDOfi rolumee. i )-t .-

urc r iniplrtr edtl inn ; in I'olish, Russian, Hungarian, and Spanish :

. Portuguese, Finnish, Qroatfan. Frisian . Roumanian,

ii -i.. i enuah i kraJne, ;nui WaUachtan i t" i' are omXy sop

1 1; i tarraan editions and selections there are no f.-vwr than B31 volumes, and the other fihaJccxpeariun literature in «. numbers feD rahtmes. France has uuly one-fourth nf the number ni editions sad iB|amtopublip»tionfi Tin test news with n t<> tiiis sivti.n i was the offer last year of the collection ol Sh MH-arlrtii raril lea b> the exec u lots el (lie laic Hidliw ell-Phillfpp* foi £7,000, Opinion « tat vary much divided on tlit wJadom or Other- wise i t ill |.r'<i'"- ■■.••I step. The "Daily Pust" dimmed up .n .

iwwerfullj : ' tenants agsSnsI the purchase in bhe fulluwimr sentence; 'W« enapbsticaJJyconteud boat the matter [a a u ki

i i'l not ■> -n'.v mean* of a local character. The ratepayers

m( tin would haw do adequate return for tluii outlay.

Thr-v -would pimply be Pftyuuz for a treasure in which a fen scholars anc1 students woulcTdolight, Hie 3h ikoapoarlaai collection In "in Pwl 111 limii'v at present lies useless. The early <-• lit inn* .i ad i thcr highly-rained treasures ulike unasked for and nopta The artisans of Birmingham have no time to pore orer old fcrpc and manuscripts thoy eannol understand. Thoj derive tittle pleasure fron i icroVj Razing at book-bocks i pon which a fancj price lire* boon net by bibliographers." Aldcrimm Johnson, the ih i 11111:1 oJ the Library Comrartteo, ind who ia one of the friends which Public Library work ever had, ohampioncd the osuee <>» the other Hide

Tha catalogue, of the Shakespeare Library will ever be opiu 1 Sir. M illins. It not only catalogued what ha

hud on the ahelvee, but what he wanted to possess 111 foot, m*u« ■1 (;ii ilogueol all Chan known ;o exist it gave the titles

n.' works tlaeainad under English and foreign, and under the handbag of each play the title and date and siae of 1 editions, thus forming a literary as well is a library ol Shakespeare Rim catalogue was a labour of \< as a Ubrannn lu no way required ao elaborate and learned u work, it waa the outcome ol ins own knowledge that no work had been done, and of hi* own i«Tiortr> : n«i I'dusti-;. It should be done.

The iv;"rivnrr lilir.iry n\:(.s lii'^L iiju-iinl 1, ! -miiii]:i.\ in

order to -how the work being done on this day by thin depart the tnbln which follows Is very Instructive. ' Altogether the use nnule of the librarv on the Sunday is moat encouraging. Bet ween Are and si\ honored orderly readers visit the reference library mi (ha d:iv oi' the week which, as much as any due, should i*e devou d I 1 Intellectual pursuiK rhcir demand i>. in the ma ol cases, for hooka ol an instructive ctinruotcr, and wh< »:t_\ thai m the quiel reading of .1 N»ok within ton four nraJh ol 1 Public Libran on thai dayiss violate t Ihc banctih ui

•t :: ' I.MH-4U1K* IN rHK MnH.ANI

m

VOM'MKS IflSUBD 08 Si \iiAY8 IU'RING 1**3-

Junuitv F*>hr iiaVv

Marsh '

A |'»i I Mag

July 3cj»U'iiil'fi

IJacviriber

> 42

a". r, n

88

23 '■ 30

v'.u 7 HI

in

20 9 IM

20tt :i- MS 190

4S1

Totals ...03.394 5.H21 21!)

It? a

501

aso

437 3d 18fi 180 275 197 338 BBS

132 1SS 135 134

74 B7 43

5a in

70

203 131

296 130

3,677,1,207

142

81

100

262

133

01

L6S

131

164

SO

231

187

1,8)0

1,839 1,411

1,640

1,502

825

734

l,0ift

5flN

1,180 l.MU 1,272 1,268

I4,f>12

140

111

113

133

SS

68

61

41

8(1

w

77 I2y

1,284

3,678 73E> 2,824""

3,004 1,660 1,428 2,110 1.310

a,«7a

2.S80

2, Ml

2 ESS

29,024

700 20 001 IK' 3G7 42* 329 474 571 63G 506

548

The number ol -rises of misconduct ou the part at assistants is rery small, a year or two ago the authorities of the Birming- ham central libraries discovered that aboat three hundred boo& io, been stolen fipora the reference department. 'Hie thefts vm'it carried on in a systematic maimer rjp twelve nnimiis, imr. rhi'v urn- iitii discovered until a junior assistant disappeared. VnM iil tin* hooks missing were duplicates of expensive editions of Slr.ik>*H|iH;ii'e( and ralnttble tomes Oil history an<1 travel. The

duplicates were not stamped, as were those fliNt in the library,

sum there ww ooUiing to render ttoem unsaleable. Ore* two

hundred id tin- bonk"* were discovered at second-hand b<>.>k-

ops in the town. The assistant was in leceipt of sixteen

sJuIliL^t. u week as wages. lie produced.it appears, when selling

books, a letter purporting to be written by his mother, who

she wim selling her husband'* stuck Tho stamping of

hook and regular and (systematic stock-takings should be

the rule at every library.

It is frnpossfble not to feel that Iiirmiugham is certainly a model

i [In matter <>f Ux>k*. The annual report of it* Libraries

aet proves this in every way Bfr. John Morlcy. in his

on the atttdy of lOn^linli Htcrafcnrc, said thai u,- &Rtjt*0b

*-nt ..I -i ., ! ui KiigHfih libraries is td'oul "V> yw «v\\«o\ >X>«

I

i:a

PI BUI MI;r.i.*irK

whole Rot at IMrmli i porcrml ige vela la abort hall

.Mr. Morley'* eathnate. I :i! fv real and ra Com I

which one naturally irrlvi . mil I llw h'mmwI ra <• \

in:iim;iini'ti nii; i he proper is will bo Ed another haJ

« ii . oan predfd r

Boron urn Cm >■ atiw d

'lln-.M- ore tho onl) two placca In Dcrbyahirc, In addition to Derbj . whii h have » far enfranchised thi The beaut Ifu]

watering-place of Buxton haa done ;redlt bo iteelf in ita library raorement. n w 10V * J i-«t 1 1

oloa and bracing u could poasiulybe dceired tfo mental air boa bocomonnprcffnotoa witho people's collection <>i

l.lrnitiirc. and the 1 ckor* and pleusui ra who go

EromaJ parted tho country willhavo b chccrfi I -.room

bo which thej con resort The pil in which the

Public Lfbrnrj Ic housed ia wall situated, una fo m -, In a landmark for tho whole dwtrict. In plai i inn accommodation for tho niuiiii'ijtui offices iiiv loaders 61 tin tbrary movement

i that they .-..uiil not do bettor than adopt the AoJ providoflooomn ooftti © in tho Town Hall. Ami tin- ].-■<..(>.< showed their aeose by not requiring much persuasion. For an out! some t'l 1,000 the people nave n handsome Town Hull. [fee reading rooB d tin library ic I i feet by -' feet, and Uwre it

a Hfiuiili'i- pocini. At tin- cm.: -.>r (it* u i- iho i<

library. The building waa opened in Juno. Y$8U by the tfarqui o

ogton. Well might he say, in declaring the ib thai an admirable policy hod been pursued in Buxton in rrulbng pTOViwca for the wantu of all ola - - : ie prosperity ol (own depended very much on the support ol the rich and a ill to ic, inn that had nor led the uithortties a neglect tho othei classes, who naecsiarfly increased in numbera irt E the increasing osperity «-i the place. He was very glad Indeed they bad heir way r<> (he adoption of those wr\ uaatal Acta the Public

tries' \i-i.s. ;i id i: waa a happy idea when the town nooried additional publi< hall logs, to include a place for the llbmrv lis hoped] would Iks n source of improvement mid recreation for the people of all classes, File lending library began with over 2,000 m.i arnes, and was opened In NovemlKir last. The wori ol leading went on briskly, and lias gone on increngiug since. '■■

kttractlan con a watering-place provide for its rialtorn tlum a reading-room well supplied with papers mid periodicals ? Tin- Vabariug-placc* arc rapidly ret'o^r'/iny il i- Carl, mid wo are

: rueasun ble distance of Uie time when no bland oi board watering-place will be considered complete withou rate-supported reference library, reading-rooms for tin visitors, and ilie lending library for tin n -id'1 i i, I uoh places

!;;i\< within a ;ompArotrrelj ahoii time of eacl otlici doptcd the Ar1.. Dustoi i:.- caaon to be proud oi having done no. 81 aeinl '■; -t ill. i,. . ni r..':ir,i ..ppf-ar t i Gave been a '

iiiuil.lyniftled about the I'litaloifao. ('ntal^yoeodo not

grow

i Tfl»Amv* i% riu vrrKS

m&liM*tnn\jr m<\ mature like fungi. Somo Hbn i thej

li.! \n.»:ber proof is nffonl^l at Buxton of whnt has boi Kn '. theec Ibi *r. - gel tni oper they orK'niiraye gifts, Than i* &1 once :' t^esponalble bodbi t" take charge -. Buxton has aaver hitherto had :■ public local

museum. Antiquaries and arcIiaMo^riM^ haw pflnged m:m%

interesting relint, and added their Anils t..» dbtant DoBecttoaa ficologiafc* have punned Iheli iutcrextui;; researches, but with* out giving any 1 *'--!■ interest to sermon* Ej si oes H has often

arked tl s;it the natural science* have row devote Buxton, niui the (net is eoaroelp ont for wonderment whan we

i irian collection open foi the

i and old. and wtwrebg ecthunaani iu ihe

pursuit oi science mfghl be ruuhed iu receptive minds Gross

ish hankering Em utility alone, hovi

destroyed many interesting relics, and there b, therefore, the

>^r<n' wfaj juefc as inftj yet be cacued should be

ill :; |>kfv .1 RnfCtJ far publir :iiMpci'tit>:» Willim

iir. It in |»i-i'IiV.h|iiio Ii;i.- rot -en, ,. .

ijrcut impetus, and tin town evident!) pose* ica one nntiqu in tin: person of Mr. William llfllett, who has intelligently and thoroughly oxamined the old DeopDalo Cnvo.ou(] now offers to

ihstOWB the ValuoUo 'Cnultd uf lln<r urns' Inbiair, :iii.i flu-:.

are to !><■ pla rod in cone* in the ncwBroora. The librarian receive?] I' 10 .i ;• RV B I -Hilary.

Chi Arnold la rathci reeling the ptneh of having to mulct bricks without -dims- Ont pi n rate wbaoh >niv brings in £100

:iro making the von beat use which can poesfbh be oi this sum. Toe iibrorlnu has to he content with &$&, which i . Looked upon as a princely income, but lie to devoted to rhe shoe pinches in the repayment cd loan, th<

ii sinking fond of which « unu to £64, The expenditure

for newspupcrtf an*l periodicals renohofl £30, and rho bookshelves »e content with their present furnishinga. Now, Je ;i Brampton ind colliery proprietors "t \\ In ton l *th all this useful little Inattention starve In your raids* ? The tntnl bontc of vohimea during the past year was .V2,7ffi for tin- 6 for the subscription library, and 75<) for the roferenoe library The rinwrified summary oi rho year's from the lending Library la Interesting, aa showing the kind of ii] food cliuAeii by tins Ihktuwcis. l*Vlion lumil* tin- Mm 21^815 roluraea having burn lamed. Of works of a theolQgtaal

8 hflosupfliica], and educational uliaraoter 304 vulumeH were lent, nl/ fourteen voluinea in law, politics, oomnjeroe, &Cj were aaaueil Vi ratelsj hletoryi &r., proved Boxnewhal more . .«* ^012 books lu those departracotn were borrewodi iencc, llteruturc, 558 volumes were l»ued, natural hiflt< I \ -"fcJ6,i •" ' ' 371 -. juvenile 768sand rniaoellaaeouB(l|S81. tbow for au institution whiob duea uol claim . irrong. Wwj haTi recently btrodueed the ayatoni <>f allowing onteidoro i itow hy paying a maD suXac^ i

].W

I'l'ULir unit AJUtS.

These bOTrowm must, of course, be guaranteed bj .1 rntepi Prior to adopting tills plan in December last, ihej hod dvci applicant! for booka from outside the borough limits. The income from these nilncriptfonfl will be a useful contribution towards the In sreel on the building. 11 c legality •'" alii

outsiders to borrow >u j*i nt >! .1 Mibsoription wh? :m.-m 1

In Chcsterfiold, M it has been elsewhere. As stated in another chapter tli- rendering of Lho Acta is :u-nn..i this inno-

vation, but each Individual place musl ronU,i stottlo the question for It .< If Uy the adoption of the plan it is no loss to themfc pa bmt in the contrary, a benefit, and it cdionld be permitted bg thi

I AMblEIUGK.

In jjieseuting' thi'ir tliii'iv-ftmrth annual report to the Council or the borough, the committee ol the Cambridge Public Ubrarj aav tliev have lathrfaction m recording the continued moo. the institution. Thej bJjh it making the library as cfttelcnl as po8KiM«'. 10 as to meet the educational want of all olaeaea ol oon nranity, In furtherance 01 this object, tho librarian, Mr John l*inlc, addressed it rtroiiRir to nil head masterannd nitsi i of pnbllc and private school* In the borongh, calling their atien- ti..n to the man* valuable works »f reference in tlie library, ad lorlcttfno, :niv suggestions, or lists of hooka, that wnald he oi i vice to themselves or senior scholars In their achools. Is .< result, a number of educational works have been purchased bj the committee. Two further courses of lecture* and cuwkcs wwru

f'ivon in connection with the Cambridge ITnlveralta Extension (Oetares, and the library committee provided duplicate copies of all tho t^tt-booka required These proved of much service i" iho siiulents, js was grocefullv acknowledged by the wcretarj TIk additions made to the libraries during the year comprised l,£'fl volumes; of these 1,001 were added to the central Ulnar;. and 904 volumes to the Barnwell branch. The 1 brariesuuK com- prise 35,966 rolumee, The issue ol booka won again In exeat* ol

that an any previous year, being 104,908 iig.-iins! I' >: .'

The reading-room continues to afctrw t a large number of rem A* mcntioni'd un another pape there isan open reference lib at Cambridge, Visitors to the library ore much struck wtl largo number of books in tli<* irnding-rootn, which :. ; iblc to all persons entering it. Constant demanda for reference books as dictionaries and encyclopaedias, led firel I and then to others being shelved it the reading-room, no thai the readers could help themsclvca, and so satisfactory did thlsrao prove that other works wore added from time to time. Tho 0OXD- moncement war made in the yeor 1858, when n copy ol '<V. ' t "Dictionary "was placed in thr roadintf-rmm, ami nt tho end the number of volumo had increased to 822. Sow number 1853, and thoy are largely and carefully used Pour volnruex were itolen during the past year. bu1 they were i rain,', in 1991 trMjj estajbnabed b ne* role to the affect thai the

PI BU<* I.IHIUUIK* 19 TUK MII'I^Mi C01 MIH<

Ifi?

srifc "i i.l:il«l dI any burgon who rcelden witti him beyond the

Iirccinets ol the borough nhiU be etititlod to bono* From the ihr.'i . . .- •! in BUohcttS SUCA bUTgWA (SgllS the following di-.-I.r.:

I : <-■! hi : !■ h: ion to the > turner ;

i declare thfir my resides with rae at

Bnrgaftrt name In full occupation

Rued the day of Ifl fly order of

the Library Cuuuull i .

' AIU.TON AND UlttKZUM. TonKAHD.

Ibeee two Nottinghamshire districts, both under the control of LooeJ Boards, are snuking down to their work. Carlton, with its h,(vk) inlmhitonts and n rate producing only about IC50, was rather proud of having done, in the adoption oC the Aote, what Hull had •d to do. The l.ooo volumes with which they began were classified and catalogued by Mr. J Potter Briscoe, of the Notting- ham Libraries, aa were also the nooks ui lluckniill Tork.ird .Mr Briscoe has 1:1 (hi* way. like Home other lihrm-iunx, been an active missionary lor the movement. The opening ceremony took place IB October L88R Thfi building which was handed over ou the adoption of tin* \<-tswn« formerly used ns tha Local Board offices ■nana a temperance twll The >nij itruaturaJ alteration aeoec-

wefi the throwing of two rooms Into one, and the work was carried out, together with the furnishing of the room and the purchasing of some hooks, at a cost of £40. Alderman (j ripper, of Nottingham, jierformed the ojiening ceremony, lie observed that rhev were taking ;ui inrporuint step In the history of the viluHrc, which he hoped would have good results in the future Theysoughi to place before the people books of an entertaining,

ting, .mi, instructive character. That library was part of the gnat educational wave that was sweeping over (lie country. lie believed thai education was opening the minds of the people. The

rj was in their Tillage an illustration of the way iu which one step led io aooUiei He looked upon it as i aeceaaary uouse- iiuciice of the good schools they had in the village. What ffafl

i^eof teaching children to read unless they provided Hunt villi the means of turning their knowledge to account P If they wished their children bo retain their knowledge, it was absolutely that they should find some way of gratifying thou tft«te for reading- He hoped they would supply, U I pomihlc, books of a healthy description, which were likely to Improve bhc foractcr, lie had no objection whatever to fiction, led i wa* of a healthy kind, but many novchj now published aticmld not be road.

Huoknoll Torkurd, where the tomb of Byron is, there in a capital in w building, presented to the town by Messrs. J. E. Kllis, ALP., and II. B. Paget) two of the proprietors of th': Kuoknau ]')>■■ hi.ilding is well situated, and is built in the Renaissance style of architecture, from the designs of Mx. K.^5. Bromley, ul Nottingham, UoonmBte of a library naving^toNvsvot*

1.7*

PCB14C IJBIUatftS.

lor I.'.""' SkIiiiiic-.. n ii| cii| \ U i- .m , 1 u' - -

room, u reference i kin#-i mm, : i « 1 .;

The Ubrarj ti placed in the cent] -I the buJldln thai Uu Ubnuian Iim Nii|iorW«c|u!i over ' wry rotun. Die

r I (0 !»vt bj 52 :■'.(, anil tli< :

feet. Thcoponingccremony ofthc !. ri»i(OL- library wan

■■■''. i y<: i ;■!(■"• ilc < « 1 1 1 o r jmrtrt < 1 the library had heen < ■>< nco\ Mr. -i. c. EUIa, M.i>., nan =• 1 1 Ihrotyrh Ifarovrn a pood deal .Hid [fttarofti nit.) iin work of the library, lie might well my nt

"i i the oponlng mcoHrura that thaj hud aaweanlried . >

» i ■< i all mrui and eond now i I men, differing in rcl

political HKltf el'", :i:i.l llilHtiminiU'lil V,Ti' lint . V, nil in i| ;i! .il! !■

inn <>f Tin- community The rate will produce aboul tljft.

He p II) lllllllL.' tin* ^IX'lV- tl.r l.i-i-n .liTM'C'l ll'.ui .1

■ouroefl 1 he e immil '<■•■ ol the old mechanic*1 institute* h i Dented fine library with 888 rotumea of their beei hooka. T

ro-oper.itlve >orici\ foi v.nv yrtn'i'tiii*, m tn] :i lni'/:uir lir*M \ c

months ago Kam aim aided In the nm IfrcoMon. i nrlto

rTuaknall are typical cave* where p Rovermiicnt granl ol <:■'>< I k :i year would prove of material help, and would in* mon «rii and legitimately spent.

* 'OVTCNTIIY.

During the m'ilI y years' working here .■ total ol 81,163 lw i. has heen acquired, which Poi 12,111 people is ctedltublo. The

1 1 N ir> 1 m: liiin-' was erected and pi evented by Udcrmnn ' hilaan. This gentlemen w now having a new refer < ^ the original building*, and in addition I" thin uboul L:.'.inx> ..,. been given, The estimated coat of the extension i* i'C.rxw, The

i w buttding occupies the racant land at the back of tin- librai •., and the style of architecture is in harmony with tru structure It ia Intended tliut the present entrance ahall be

i erred tor 0"- twerp of (he readinfr-room only, which to i

i tcnte and purponoa will be separate from the Hbw and a oovt antraneo, of noble pi'oportiona, Is provided for Ehi library on tho north ride, in the centre of the block. The i bole openainte t lar&o waiting-hall 30 feel by 98 reetiuad tin . leads Into ■■■ new r-eferenee library 64 fool by 58 Foot Tht books - | laced >< and tho room, and some <•:' them in palleriea ol he rddofl, the galleries and roof being supp

Vraplo lighl li admitted by top li^hd* and thirteen windows. it ta propoaed U tarnish the room •« ith tweh ml I x and all the Sttingswill l*'.' of the moat modern and approved doelina. Other parU Of Ihfl additions include a conreniently situated lihr:- n i in, :i book itoro, .^''. The present reference library will be nbaoTbed in the lendlnff department, va well aa Hie Public Librorv thero i-; managed rrj r.he same ataff a subscription library (rpon thi lasi report It appoar* that this nook club azpoi ooarrj EOO In iw»ks and magaxines during the year! circnrntinn for I time among the rnemberN, the bookaare nil added to the Pab "v i>y purcbfii* n i ne-e&tf^ rf the jutiliahec]

I

It l i.iO I.IQRAILIB6 IN TUB Mr Or. AX p COCXriKS.

159

EC. The Iftsue in the lurt library year Wttfl B 1,401, which glVQi books ["I head of the population On Buster Monday tin* 1 1 1 •!•:« i- \, '\:i"|n-i to tin pubilo, but this la oot put forward una plan to copy, out rather &o oppoeito, Coventry nil] have reason to be proud oi ifp lihrary buildings now that" this exton * emplSted, I' UlUfilUN A.M» Ol.IHU l!V The Town flail, Pnbttn i library, and publlo offices o1 Darlaaton foam ona block oi hutidtru'x. win.-h «.-v <>:>-• i<«ii in October, The building* are \rarj handaoroe nod ion pact, and Mand out prominently ta the town. The [town Ifnll is nn- mbtedly ftie largest In the district, it being "n1 feet long, i Side, ind SB feel fl Inches hlah to Che wall plate, bne ii :i,r middle of Hie roof being 84 feet, ll was i i.i-lii l < v some Unit n too iMWtly anil elaOOTate rtmotUTA hud

i recta I. but i bi wrtl Co prepare for future growth an wall

i present needs. The entire coat waa £6,000, of which nearly

i i i- > liinii.ai; v enbecrlbedi A little temporary difllcuUy

ha i*\|'i i !<■ li-rd. I'm this lui« liwn met by the generous act on

1 Mr. James Slater, the chairman <i the Local Board. He

ti muted ihal he was prepared to furnish and provide the

(n;ii i;ii-, ilir tl.'iil> .ni'i weekly :* »iN|,*t« the monthly periodicals,

areU aa other conl hutloiv. .>- !>»_■ a.** the present d<?M «;i«

Ining "a this pari 1 1 the pub] ( buildings. Tin- reading i

InrjQ readrng-deaRti, .* y ».ii >1< -<i S i .-^j - 1 . « >- 1 -■ i«,i . M -ported "ii single ttandarda with foot rails, At bn top t bare a moulded rpao which la to tear the name of each i Txiprr, and an ornamental can lag oi brcn d oak, with Itahl scroll Ul hoT thoy arc pretty and substantial desks, re made from pitcVpinc and brown oak.

is held i December laat in the Town Hall, und this

*«i taken it], i . .;■:>! v by the ladies nl fchi town und

* fl.al the Incubus of the < hi A tIJiOOcould

Ik* v. py j, combined effort, and at the elo i I to haai

, jOO waa in all received, so that the library hua ni

i m M career w It] every proer* 1 1 ol Be* \

rii.' KetB vera adopted tn Uldoun in July, ins**. Tha move-

i, infoetio i-. and In' i nl the .Veto or

m library in a near town at once causes the

t.mt-. nl" lowna not similarly favoured t-> lock around

win they should not havo one ol tlw v

itituttons oi their own. The question was deeSdod

■ting, nnd tin* requisition was signed liy 174

u< Kuhjeei -I n Itiblio Library had h i

ted in Oldbury several times previously, and the j>reat

to operation l ief i e I been Paelin \ thai tlw» rateable value of the town wna so small that lormt raJsoi i penny rate would not be Buffldenl

oorer the cxpeaaeB, Sovt thai dlf&eultj hufl been CNexustDA, nap ' 'A1'1-

]m;i

WWAG LIURABIRS.

township huii boomed very considerably, the obs In&an ot the opening meeting said be felt satisfied that the penny rut* would bring In na Inoomc aufficienl to meel the expenaee of

n library ani reading-room The (JUOetiOD wu* brought f<>v-

ward iimro particularly in connection with another for QTOOtmg pubUc buildings and public oflcos for the town. It was felt that the most economical way of putting the Act . into operation would be to join it with the scheme for public building*! as >' could be done at a ie«& ooat. Iba resolution vu carried unanimously. Mr. A. M. Chance, n member o4 a In m m Oldhury who are very large employer* of Inborn, n. moving ;i Vote «i thankft to the chairman, remarked th.it ho eoul<

reooUeot $&$ meeting i" I Kdbnry where there was men abc

iii.ttmiiity a* there was upon that occasion. The things vluHi caused Uldbury to be a bye word among their neighbours had now

SiuaeeH :iway. und thoee people who spoke disparngimrly >i < H-tbury nrgof to rean to the fact ttiaJ they had no educational "ate In the

low II

1'hMlY.

it. Is alwaya i ptaasnre to turn Into the handnorae blocfe r»f

buildings forming the Derby Public Library and Museum There in no public institution in Derby that can compare inonj waj with the Public Library and Museum, which, ut the cost ul a fortune, was presented to the town by its lulu representative, Mr. Mh h.i.-l Thomas floss. H was essentially a gift to the working; ohutaea. and i* a more genuine mechanics' (neUtute Hum the sota I'ht.Tblislaneut *nich arises In immediate Juxtaposition thereto, which jb ti mechanics1 institute replete with everything but the mechanic* themselves. Hue has only to watch the stream of working-men visitors to the lending, the reading, and therefor- nice departments of the libnn y, autl l"> the nuiseuin, to ObeeTTC the extent to which the majmificent generosity of the milHonai] e brewer i* taken advantage of by bis whilom ■"iiMUucmv There is one matter of regret about the reading-rooms, and that is, that among *dl the costly fittings, the ornamental 1TOD screens, the (uned glass, the oriel windows, and the polished granite, the light is defective. Half the rooms are in a state of perpetual Kloom, and, unless the reader have the nocturnal light of the owl or the bat, it is almost impossible to decipher print, The name fault should be avoided in the many now buildings HO* being

erected. At Derby it does, unfortunately, detract from thai cheerful aspect which the rooms otherwise have. Thin onl^? applies to the duytimo, for in the evening when the gas is might there is brightness everywhere. ' toe of the most notable features in the Derby work is the enormous number of boy ..ml who B Sqaontthe library. The place literally swarms with _- pooplc, and on each visit which the present writer hnsmndo to the library there has been among these perfect order and silence, Mr William Crowther, the librarian end curator with Mr, C, Courtney u ehlef assistant, are regular boys' men, and are

i't Mil M:i:tADlUa IS TUIl M;i-i TIF-6. 161

i.-nlv in i..n..h with theirvi»itow,Kivinu'ov<'i v :'n<-il.ry for rending » the future men and women at Derby,

TIm: eighteenth rCpOTt departs, mm.' wisely, Imm t)io usually

fliATViityprd ran of nidi publications. It lends »tT nlni<>bt:ii hum to .**.'iV that ■■ tfaoro IB nothing -[;- riling to chronicle respecting the last year's history of the lit cmry and museum. The institution stands as high 08 over in public estimation, and its efflalepoy in all its

1 ii.'v hag been tiuJy maintained. A larger sum «.i tnODeytban i has been spent by the Iwok committee, no fever than I ,*i 17

nnving been purchased. Of these 798 are replace* &W are entirely new. To the vigilant care and

of the hook I'MiiiMiiti'- ilu; general hitch

charterer ut the library." The lihr.-iriuu's report give* the stock, whh-h Hands nt 14,&3<3 in the lending; section, and 6,625 in the department. In the two sections the issues for thoyear •rere 1 -i 7 .7 r -> This sbovs u alight decrease, but it is Accounted l'm.IluiI elimination oi' the three-volume novels, ami, &fl iud additional cause, the librarian is of opinion thut the boolw ire Vej* longer tlion formerly a*d changes are lea* frwvwnfc, TY*v»,

162

IJUIIAIIIE'S.

hs ihiiik:-, point* to more thorough and [on desultory reading.

Dnrhiguut year there hare been 1,00 J non borron

than l.ooo books wore beepoken at the coil d one potmj par

I i , i post-eerd being sent to the borrower when th< book 1a (a.

Tin.* poet-aard simply Informs the borrower thai "the boo! (giving title) it QOW in, and will be retained in you until t<> morrow evening. 1 'lease produce this cord when you make appheutiou for the book." This plan la In operation at other libraries and i* well worth extending atul further, The iiin-iiiLiri places on record in the report his sense of the high servies which In rendered by the entire newspaper press of Derby, and thankfully acknowledges Its hearty co-operntion in all that tend! to the Welfare Of Hn' institution. Will other librarians

EVmsi* c.opy thin jiiiiM^rMpli - Newspaper men are liuimin enough < iv for a worn of thanks tor the aid they vender in popularising these book-homes of the people.

HaNT>8WOJ. i H A> little reference has been uiude to the im,nir, of the LOCS]

GoternnienS official where a loan i* deeired, it will be oppor- n. i. to here mention the case ol Bandewortl] Hub will serve in show fehe method of procedure, and the opposition which har» hi bboea to be mot, On February 25, i^jo, en inquiry

was held by Colonel Henry board, ft.E., on behalf of the LoCM

Government Hoard, into the application of tin Local Board foi powers to borrow t2,000fortn< purpose ol extending the Publii Library There was s large attendance of ratepayers, md b strong party opposed the granting of the application. Th< olerk to the "Local Hoard opened the case for the Library Com- mittee, TT*" soid the Public Libraries' Art- wore adopted in I ro, and Troiu that date ap to the proeant the movement had been most popular in the district. Evidence of the public Inter taken in the Battel agisted m the met that upwards OJ £800

labsoTihed towards the Libran when it was lr I opened. The

lending library was opened in May, \SHO, with 6,1U0 hooka. there were D.ias in this department, while they had :< refai library of 1,888, making a total d 10,468 volumes. In I £82 thev Lntroduoed n musical aepartmenJ into the library. Sandaworta

being the ftWt to adopt the plan Of a. I'ublii Library of music. At the present time they have all the standard works in the musical library, md they add b> them yearly. In the year there were 41 ,672 issues of books made, xrhife lost year there were rti,??A r.i:.! :is m;iny :>^ »»<m> issues have been made in one day, Iti 188fi the committee organized a series of lei -t during the winter months, all of which were well-attended, and have been continued up bo tin- preaent. In 1886 the dance averaged 800 per day, ;>t»*i the Insufflolencrv of the

iii-citintiiiHliitinn i-i tin n':nli iil'-i * N it) I VOUld he Understood WllCB ll

ia stated thai the room was only thirty-one feel by twenty Eeei Since then the average attendance bad Increased considerably Witli regard to the shelves fox the books, tliej had i more room,

m ill l i.iUKAAlBS IK THE MNiUVI" COUtrttBQ.

m

,uid iii"i" were 3^900 boote unsoerved* Che newsTooni was also

too SltiaU t.*r the in.1 wnptporx, It would be submit lo<l that tho large a&tiemhlyroom in the buildings should i.h? uaedaa a reading- room, hi the original plans it was Included U B reading-room. An objection to tbii was that it van npeti [fee, nd consequently not on the same level as the present library Someol theoppo-

oentAol Che scheme ohjoeted to the extension upon thegi nds

of alevAtiOQ. The architect, from whoso plans the buildings

were erected said (hut the Hev.iiimi would not suffer, nnd i>

-; !hc Idim. it £2,000 were borrowed at sj per rent., both

fijpfl] and inteivsl. mnM In- ivpnid in fiTty yearn at the rate of

1 ftn. 2d per annum, it was proposed to make a new room *. -four feet by thirty feet aaa general reading-room, and in .n!i in i iin new plana also provided foi ;i ladiofr room, and a i -i ii ii in which students could use book» out of the reference library. The rector of nandswm-ih pre^rim-d a petition signed h\ 85a mtepa yera (n opposition to the scheme, ri i * prim t*

vr\i ra'iirlv OPpOSed to the whoinr.aiid t I 1 1 V ! .-| 'finl fr)£ OfSOlflTgU

;i sum for ilint purpose. They oonssderod thai the arge room urs could l>e altered at a small coat, and used for the purposed of a reading-room. Dr. Randallj tin- rector, who led tins oppo- sition, said he considered Ihc proposed expenditure altogether i ii 1 1 « - csaary. At the same time he believed that the member* ol i i 1 1 . i Board were desirous of promoting the wolfon •! the parish He believed that thoy wore ill-advised in intending thin KTcat outlay. This fityXW would faafo t* I ,ii "*( > bo repay it m Mt^

a, it was "K'l the extension of the library thai ho nnd those

who were with him .<jtiH.-4.xL Thcv protested against the Loon] making the extension while they had pl<' i' y . .!>.». m at their ■il which oould be utilised for toe purpose at a cost oi about

Dae large i m •<:> used foi all sort* of purposes outside

'.iirac;, h: ttors, d I i be denied the right of the Local Board to use purpose than as o library. The Local Board had

gouty - :' work to di by attending to the state of the road* uid «o rtb. The Inspector But, Dr, Randali. you oould i ol spend the Lte on the roads. Dr. Kandall : Hut 1 want to know where the extru ea pendrture wi I >ome from. The chairman of Highways Committee said the >xten&ion was i public There were over 80,000 people in the parish] and the >ec was rapidly Increasing. Permission to borrow the amount wa* grnntr" I.

Hereford ani> Ijromxnstcr.

Herefordshire contributes two towns to the gross number of

mas. The Hertford Library is now iu ita eighteenth year.

i »tfce are given in the report, but in place of Liu usual

then . i" given some intereating particulars about the

museum and the lecture work in connection «ii;i the library.

Over £00 volumes were added last year to the lending library,

making the number 9,447. These, with 3,511 in the reference

o, bring the number to I2}Q58 lor a pov^UUoiv o\ Va^i*

151

til .1 r- UHHiRir*

\e \<mi tho lumen writ- .::*. ni The Income fan \tv i I 1 .1 i'i i i- •. continued I i time \ -a. ... ut U<

pub k incatxngt in the rmiaeui i liaa be« di

tumbled Hi" committee bo proi de icme new -■.•■■ _ no

altogether I-rll-'i- ..p]ir;il;tH<T In llir lilll:-'inii OctlUU Phi

ii'. department hoi up to the dote of the Iwl ceporl been ujjen unly mi t a ■■•■■ dnys in th mvi k, but the growtn A the * it necessary to open ;i on each weekday. Do

iigilation for thv adoption of the tctSlO llOUCOdtei 8 D30 ' BXtrn-

. nil i i; v -t:it-'.iH'iit WOl in, Mr 'V U 0 »li I J 01 '1 il '' H\ EC

i Beoi ili.it "lie know that in n neigl bonrins itv, Rcrefi i< I, wherea gentlemjui of extremi i >i CG,00

iih -l" Hi retard :il.i<> Htiliwnliin>r a Urge umount, ii oUninod whal might be termed n Public Library. Bat wnal tho result! That, after taxing the eitueni one pomw in pound, fchea mm nol in u position to carry on their Pi i, bn i ) i '"' > i ' ''"ii t -. o al vi rian w th

wonders how anyoi uld make such a gev [01 Du

peed in ■-- ioa coming from tench p source, and I lock of or^ranizuti'm, coal (Jlouoturter Mse? failure ■! tinn oi Bhe AoU The incident served to show thai

\iu'in.us tppnsitlon in-v from those who Rhoulri b<

pnolic opinion instead ol olng draggedtai the toll «>i the move

iin -lit. aethfi ex-mayor ol i H ster will sure 5 i.^ i1 ha iiv»«<i a

tow yean longer

Leon mater afford i useful example of n recent ndopl considerable lUflletiHiea, Mr. Ilankln, Mi', offered «:i.'»»i 01 condition of the let* ■. ■■■ i ipfcod ThU uhrfcated hew . uid tiotwkliKtnndfng the beer trtule opposition l»d brewer, the fiirreN or protrresH Mere ton i

nfjr puwi'i'H rwrywhiM'o a* well as In Leominster Mr j. it [Xiwdhig rtkllfully organized f.hc provisional committee He aided In this work b\ the ex-mayor, \l Irnn.-ni lifted (,•■. ,... and probe Is due l<» tniBhody far the dogged nrrcriKtaTirj which ;.c<i Thevute waelnkcu uttheeudofSepteml er, i--v, and proved Miccesnful in wearing a nine) Iriumpfiaul mujo

od a total of 1.2(H) voters 1.07H returned llu-ii p. |m::-, :i> .1 (In* ■hows the wid< tntereal which had been created. Then only 198 ?otee against the adoption, A leafli 1 givii g the e 1 for 1 E*ubU< Library fei hhe b wn byw me leading Local men did cxcolloitl crvii-f. A [jronisncni LceuMcman from Hereford n that the Public Library in that tovn had bee 1 1 .: 1 The rate «ill produce about £S00, lA-omin&ter, in its adopt ii the v ttt i;i bo plucky a way, will have ite « ffeci up< 1 tin .1:

iv.urii ; t< w 1 '■- .ulfi.-iriil 'un. I :„■ ' i>(;n .-uUceteil U

tiittco iu dooidimr upon u site. It Is vcrj thai iiir bifcternosH of the tpposition - dying iwai there ie n ^o iopo I dot tre 1 w< irk tog 1 1 - ■• :

oxporfoncpd nl h 1 a< with rujyard to the" rating of an out-ptu-iah. which forme part Leominitfr, but ttue ta IflMly ic be latisfaetorily setUod

Public libraries in the midland counties. 166

Hertford and Watford.

r^-^rtford occupies a rather singular position. The Acts were S?T*ted in 1866, the town being

^^T>ted in 1866, "the town being about .the first small borough to ™^^ advantage of the then new legislation. But for twenty-nine CSJ*"" the Act, although " adopted, as the Hertfordians pleasantry ^**X5ed it, was a dead letter. In 1884 the intrinsic value of the ♦2?" was triflin&' Dut in 188? some 9,000 volumes were got to- R**a6Tf including some of the very best books in the language. ~* these 5,000 were contributed by a local institution that had j*^:n forming a library since 1832, and during the three years ^"fc-^een the periods named above an altogether new life was P^I^rienced, mainly owing to the enthusiasm of the librarian, Mr. *^"*ie8t LawTence, who, it appears from the returns, is rewarded ^ifcli the princely stipend of £30 a year ! In the Jubilee year it J3^ thought that the best way to celebrate the event would be to oaild a library and school of art. This was done, and there is now for use a new building, but which might have been better designed. For a population of 8,000 there are now 11,000 books, MKi so the point has been reached of having more than a book per tw ?^ °^ ^e popu^fcion. Many of the committee, notwithstanding this, naturally feel that their book-buying is a long way from being ^raplete. The gross return from the rate is £124. The ltt. **on, a. J. Balfour, M.P., opened the new building, and made an ex.g€Uent speech.

-_*or public utility the Watford Library has a capital record.

j«G institution was built by public subscription nearly twenty

Jf*** ag0- There are fewer books than at Hertford, but the turn-

ftjer is good, and fiction is kept down to the respectable figure of

.. Per cent, of the issues. The Watford Public Library is a

l *nctly educational institution, and to so important an extent

J~* its work grown that it has been found necessary to enlarge

Co °* *ne room8» am* a student's room is now contemplated.

»-Q**iderable attention is being given by the librarian, Mr. John

^}*°lrnan, and his committee to the organizing and developing of

~-e r<sference section, in which there are now some 2,440 books.

jj e committee wisely recognize that though the circulating sec-

dem ie now mo8t P°Pular' tne credit of the library and of the town

"^aiids that the other section just referred to should be properly

(P^ged and accommodated. For years a charge was made in

.. r lending library to the borrowers, but about two years ago

JJJ8. charge, which an impartial critic must be compelled to

S1&nate as illegal, was wisely discontinued, and the forward

°oyement of issuing the books free of charge resulted in almost

. P**ce quadrupling the number of borrowers and the number

' books issued. For the 6,797 books in the lending section there

r~_ly717 borrowers. In appealing for gifts of books in the

JS°UB departments of literature the committee need not

P^logize for asking for copies of the ever popular novel, and all

2J lovers of the best English fiction will agree with them in

wyifcg that the novelist is the accepted teacher of the nineteenth.

It*

II i;n- LlBBJUilE'.

century. A private 6ulit.cnption room has been m operation for dome ti 11 !■_ . tor winch there s b charge - f I0& per yeur, Mit v. .)■( in-: that owing to the advantages offered i'.v the poli efabf >! (In? tOWO tblfl now hcing conducted at r I06&

in the educational sections the bcJ ool oi an ifl strong, and the day and night alBaes arc well attended, in > school ol music if perhaps uiiKuvpnased for Itesltfl md vigour byanypuW m the ootmtw. Tbs Income in tin* department for 01 1 tear E888, bill the expense* ware of course heavy The school of literature 1- popular, nod in tins department the Vm\ Kx tension l/M'inres ami classes continue to be wall supported. Not content wllii ill Chess various avenues of work, tire com- mittee have considered whether it. wan practical to launch con

GtaUStfon or nii/lti scIumIn .'mil reereatlvi rl:i»..rs. In I »< n nU-r

iii.- [/km] Board discussed whether the town should not avail liienwelvefl of the opportunity afforded by the Technical Instruction Act. They unanimously uaini bo tin. conclusion thai Bomettung should be done at tin close of the financial year wltft regard bo this Act, To Qlustiratc how the town das grown It ruav be mentioned that in 1^71 the penny rate produced 680, and

.-•.•-■ '-.:i'.. The last report breathes altogether 1 spirit of work, With a local press which supports them, ;i rem nun rr who have peal interest in the « ork( and ;> Local Board ever r:i«iv in support them, the wonder would !«■ it it were uther- wtse llieec t«" hudicfi aet largely uu the principle in educiiiliiiiMl matter* the supply often has in these thin.L.-. in , m the demand in v.. ad of waiting for it.

Him cjjbv 4Nd Loroufioaoirafl

These hro places with Leicester ar< the total nun bar dJ 1 &o] iu Leicestershire np to dale. Hinckley drew into line as a .>.-i ol Jubilee movement On May 8, 1888, Use building was opened by thai warm friend of this movement, the Duehei Rutland. A special building 1tqs been erected by Messrs. Atirin . .;( < . ( 'i CljGOO, En memory ol their brother, Mr. Arthur Atkins, who for many years had taken n warm interest in nil that concerned ttinck oy. The Ecclesiastical Commissi* n< ra. who bobetho most aWquitoUB of all ground landlords, .solaapioc** 1 1

and dv fciVSU, and the furniture and HttingH were bougie 6

general Bubscrintion hud. \ local patriot bequeathed &S0Q for books, &-• altogether Hinokley holds up its head and feels proud of

its Tui lb' 1 iin.i ■,, ; nd 1- i-.iig tt well. The architect u v

idnh«, nt J.( 1 -. 1 . ud it i.- B pretty BtrUCttl 0 i I TO

,i flemish : re] itectmr. Tlmm^hout there is ncutnesi and tat it. library provides another of the ik»« rapid ^ neiva*inu or of building erected at a cost of rrom klfibo to £8,000, haes are the sort of placaa which ail fnnuiH ni" tin- n wish i in\ srow -i plentiful that n may be dtfRcnll to r.mnt rhrni Mil. rhe Ductless ol Rutland always I write* alxmt tho^c institution*, in a was <*ftv\<?a Naaa to

pi urn uun.UUE6 is rue uiiu^vno cnvwrsn&.

167

Rood of sunshine

d»\. H

jllM htvr

*> 4 noon or sunsoine on ;i spring aav. j< * is yw iit><-

liBtiBgnifihod lady t»< bi 3 ho she fi 1 1 the pea or boa should

like to hare 11 readuig-mnii in every village with which the is in

anv way connected, bo it lurgp or -email. \\ «>uld that the mime

mrtl animated enow < >i rim repragaatatives of our btgftM inn lUies! Umekley is in a rather singular position. The Acta btWe been adopted, hut for live years a "committee hare guaranteed

I that it shrill Etbl be I burden to the town, and have ninde them- salves rceponalble for IBs maintenance daring that dine There ware toOCU TflBflOM wtn this wa.v pmcti. -able and easily adjusted, but it is not a plan widen should be copied. The catalogue hu in i: n page <fe voted to fine I I *or Uuskm's many pithy ■sayings about book* and reading. i.un.'i borough I1.1-. for Its population of 90.000, hooka t.o the number of rt,000. The rate produces £2fl0, and the library knaps 1 to notion down t- U per cent, of the Issues. Books and binding Bfltnorh 650. Only recently the Major hid offered » collection j]' geological speeirueu& for the library, and thaB is an example of

I 1 >w l )n- 1 Ul'loUHOf ;: ■iiMM-i.iiii-iHiirs In )»e «'NtH.hlbthi*d in miinivl ion

with ;: Public Library, The ratio of borrowers nnw about one in

'<ii..nid the ratio ol atsueoi huuta tuthu populutiou is J'61. An

ocotiiprfouig member of the committee calculated that had Hie

lurchaeed thu book* they have bad out during ihe year

would nave cosl about £#,0U0> whereae, after deducting the

the rending-room, the. eoM lu ihe. rairpuuT* bar. been

Qnclor ti*>. This foot Illustrates the gain which accrues to the

'<• %\- 11 !>v co-uporation. The local pre>.> *uppprM the library well.

tfoin Hiai Loughborough is Incorporated the irork wilt occupy an

''Vf"»Mii"p' Liuportanl position than it beta done in the past. A ■t'tlccrei twelve months ago an intelligent working man wrote 1,1 t he author from Loughborough. He commenced by stating ,!'= it they were then governed by a Local Board, and the library toarj 1 ndttoe (composed in September, 1888, of members of the Board :' ' i ratepayers) hod dceide-d bhat none bub direct ratepayer* vote 11 Qpible 1 > ftign giuuuutec forms for borrowers. This new regula- tion » wne rather a hardship on the working men, whohnd been good W *-» * id.-- ol the library and hod contributed £60 towurds ite first MSt. The men felt, and hit nnturulry, that an they were on the and mtitled to rote for toe members of the Local Brjaww and Board ol tiuardians, they wore ratepayers although 1 pounded. Many ot these direct ratepayers wero i t- (he establishment nf the library, and bo ihe men relt Indignity of going about asking for guarantors The line i& a fas one, and it is onlj mentioned now ss a. guide to other no) to run aground on this little sandbank. To ■•>■ on the liurgess roll should he quite sufficient for any guar anXofj and is eitl :M Loughborough, it is always besl to take the public int^i confidence iu library work, and to have confidence is

I'll.- If nl; Hie losses of the Public Libraries throughout tho I Ki L'dnm and Irelaml were added together W wow\A muVe

Itovttrtwj trf&e \'ot only should the signatatte o\ •*• VAxtsyw

18* pruLrc LXWM

be good enough tor I jimi-ini »P, Ml the production Of bb

) itr ">•< '<M|'l )"■ - i'l;< i.-nt t<i rntitlf the owner to l*ecnnn« u

borrower, the catalogue compiled by Mr. Maori, the 11

very neatly printed ; and it contains a number nf local adv. raenr*.

KlIiTHmMINSTEIl.

Kidderminster am! Worcester are the only two towns in Wor- ii sbii ■»■ which have up to dale adopted the icta Roih pine**

lia\e i - . f _ tliebcuiimiug of their libraries had 1 nun jm: (heii wnrl

under considers fig dnuvdraatage. KidderminBterhue now entered

OD it-, ninth year, and the unhealthy condition of Hi (-room,

and Lhegreai rn*Bcomfort caused to frequenter- of the horary by tl inadequate KpaoOfl naturally hiudov the development of the world

Buttln- pTOtSlM i'l bottci tiling ir-ah M'ly- ;i->t .m; it.- -.li.uhiv, n tin foreground, and an offer was mode in October. [889, 1 1 m nious donor, to contribute a large aura towards buildiug a nc" library tor the borough. The need of euch o building has l-i been felt, and ft site has been preserved adjoining the schools art nnd science, which, when the new library ia erected, will form

lOmplete block of buildings for Boienoo, liten;tmv.a-nl art. There baBivOOj been another drawback Tho amount roooivod Sr

POTTO OOQPOll M £340] and the actual amount to which th< \ are entitled ia £300. Surely this is strange, nnd in thin respect Kidderminster hue furcc Kirailar to tsomo othor plaeoBi The committers of Public LAbrariee Bvcxywhore ibnuM ecc to II

Hint where (he penny in levied, they have thtj ml. UllOUnJ

credited to thorn, and thai tin \ use it. it is nianuToaUt ml nr i>

the Itbriii'v work chat u penny should I"' rawed for Hie hhrarj and th:it institution get only part of tlio amount realized. A penny, the whole penny and nettung but the penny, should *«t«fi

committee**, and there should be no balance permitted to go bael

into the borough general fund. Tlie gross sum raided n.i .; . course, have to bear itM Hhure of the eost of collection ol the rate. Oil question "t : ^enarate bunking no eon lit (or Iltblie

has been dealt with In the chapter addressed to coram OOaamiflMionerSj nnd this is a matter wliieh may be urged h >dqs upon thene governing hod i.--.

For population of 36/100 Kidderminster has 4,68} roh Tlie members of the Town Council can at once see what the difference of £fi0, which has gone into the general borough fund, has meant to the library. The shelves have been »r .:■ ■ad further than this, the spirit, of the Art of Parliament has been violated The entire Issue of books Cor the .year ha* been 40,140. The 1,790 volumes of fiction have Ix^eu turned cnrei 86>811 tames Some of bhem must certainly lie well thombed Kfadermlnster lia*JU>t e.uiiinleted itsuppi,eiiti..,e*h.p in it* library work, sad it ir. huped that the Town Council will now rally i tlie oommlttee and Mr. Fenny, the librarian, so that within another, two years there anaybeanew home and a vastly enhmond i

public ubbabibs in thb midland counties. 169

Leamington.

^jnaington present* another case where the summary of the m°?h y ant^ 'ne annua^ meeting of the committee are reported in SJ*1 press. It is satisfactory to note that the daily attendance at the libraries and reading-rooms is becoming larger year by V&2 ^^id last year reached the astonishing daily average of over UKN persons. This gives the enormous total of 280,000 persons frequenting the libraries during the year on the 280 days which it was ope„( Thjg immense attendance ought to show how neces- ^^ *t is to provide adequate accommodation. The public at present suffer great inconvenience for want of light, air, and space it, an departments of the library. The reading-rooms are Jw 8r*»all, and are for such numbers quite inadequately ventilated. ine premises upon which the business of the lending library is J^^tl on are too small, and occasion great inconvenience to the Py^^ing public. The room in which the reference library is situated is scarcely large enough at present, and there is insuf- ficient shelving accommodation, and no room to erect more. It ?n^°*1 be long before better provision for all these departments rauat y^g seriously considered by the Town Council, and when it is, ™e hope may be expressed that they will see fit to provide a P****&Bjient home in which very ample space shall be allotted, ^S^ther with abundance of light and air. £100 was spent last J™JJ for books. The average cost of the books for the lending ™?*on was 2s. 7£d. per volume ; but for the reference library jlJSf expensive books of reference were bought, and the cost per rj°« reached 12s. Mr. D. B. Grant is the librarian, and in ' u8ust last he had to report a singular but most unusual thCtlrrence* history of Stratford-on-Avon was abstracted from ^ reference room on the Saturday, and was returned, in just as „ysterious a way as the purloining had taken place, on the

ofJ55S' T°e8e case8 are M rare that tnis is about tne °nly case

. *ts land throughout the country which has recently occurred. £■■ *own councillor eulogized the last year's work by saying that , 8Peak upon the advantages of the Public Library, would be an ca *?* P8™*; the lily white or to gild refined gold. Town ^uculors in other districts might be frequently a little less ^Paring in their adjectives when the work of the local library is ^aer discussion.

Lbbk.

.Leek has acted wisely, and given the fullest scope of usefulness •j* j* Nicholson Institute by adopting the Acts. This they did J November, 1887, at an enthusiastic statutory meeting, without . voice of dissent. The requisition was signed by the Vicar of *?*K a Congregational minister, the Wesleyan superintendent, a 2P*fl Catholic priest, several other Nonconformist ministers, ■J** those representing the various sections of politics. This is 2*?8y as it should be. A difficulty had arisen as to what should "* done with the Mechanics' Institute, and well might one of

the local paper* t*j thn

thoec uoD**nfrancM»ed institution- political ^

[i - v. a in bring lias und ?r the i. Sic loleui [aslil uie * * .1

lid i riff, I'm id*tockingil \\ itn I ksnnd Frarla "Cr* « ,t

art. The donor >ublic» aYfa

b nil . 11. 1 I i:-n:ihn! f:: il mxl ittit l«Mi H ^-_ ,

i the founder n. ..-:•■ ctl the openraj ^ \v onj. He '.-.I.! •* i li.r, lea fwn what ic io to Btruggie hoc m life: I hare knovn what pr:\ ..,,_- ....

: ::,'i i * ; n. f 1 ..n ::>i no -

Otll'.M-Il. 9 Bui t

>>iit od tl i ta i ponoMod J oonld not aflord Boxm -

ofa L'lf.o." Prior to the adoption of the Act* sorr- difficult ic ©n as bo Lhfi obtaining f loan* Eton Suuhbm '.

Isi'iiMiiirturi. The*1 will ■■» Iii iiml Io ■ml 1.' the Act*, and w 111 nil Ira

affect hnd rotxha tho .'■ ' - ■■

for ii ■■ foui 1 t v. ere !>,•■ ,.i h.. 1 1 for

irm ol poai \ ope b the Town 1 Jou . i«l

1 1. 1 other loads!* od public opinion foi .1 1 *T1-

r,iiiy in a leu reflected the highest credit upon tl.#*i"i

Tho spiril which porviuSed the whole ><t the ricgutitttioxM w 1 I lent iwd RI8.3 well be mplflri Fn otln 1 1 1 ■■■ .■■-, ini a Ic jiT«m by private 1 dun 11 1 dor the \otn. \r 1 1 •- Ntatnt< j n •• d ■-. '' ■**.

sri the 'v-;nh rion •• rijnt nurHiinm u I n 'nl 1 n«.|ui\ii him, and iii'1 public notice which ban been irfvcn fw nurpo&p; ii la tin- opinion of Lhta iiuwtlnjE thai l)i< Pnbl _1*^

I il 1 .1: K: l I '■'>'}, ullv'lil hi lie. kill) till' Srtllic l> lir i'l

tor the dtatrk'l governed tiy Die l>ck Imp rove mi "■**"

M 'v -.1 He! vet onded by large employers ol nbour. and auuu

i\\ sevural working 1 ieui iu wi uder that il alu

been cari'ied n ii b 11 ifioj 1 hew*. Mr, Joelius

close of the meeting, Hummed up the whale >> ttattna

1 ih- tav« 1 had done thai onon . elre^

« \. 1 ill-- Institute Sol enlj h& ratcpajreie . aifi - .1 •■. .11 Im n.-iir mi then I

ho hail noi ■> ■■■' 2?

ih.ii !!• i.i inly are *titl lur^o impporter« "I the in t

l'}[r 1 ■i.ii.l as 18 of b lingl.Y approprial

,.,..1,1 ,A d< l?nl I; 1 - 1 < ■! 1 ,i:. ii ' v ". nd

\\ il i nn . ■ii.tr.-t., t I .

islated m producing in artutlc building, with exoeJI

it*. ^

'I'll.- work 1.1 mpllslied bj i"< rapid*^

.;. \\ id. a total n al 1. *

PrS&I'-' l.IBftJOUBS IN THE MIDLAND COUSTiaS.

171

UDail turnover Qf nearly 08/XX3 VOlUttW, A series of lectures were gfiven last winter, some by townsmen j ami m tin- winter

Of 1x88-89 a series of six Oxford" Extension Lectures on " Repri -

Mutative Englishmen/* mid ft furihrr series ln^t winter on "English Novelists." llv- late Wi likm Hftl was librarian for [ret four years 01 ttu I to of the Institute, and had won friends in the profession and in the town He received the. Appointment <■! chief librarian :ii Croydon about the middle of 1MK9, but ho was scarcely able to enter folly upon his duties, as ri«* died 'ii D a bar laal Be was raooeeded at Leek hy Mr. "M oLeod.

Lnicaerun.

Alter a trying experience extending over some .years, the

tb ;»* Library Sere seems to be again in the full enjoyment

>f renewed public popularity. Tin- central ttbrarv has Lte

purten In i building irliich is well situated, but which from

Uttw points of view ia not well suited for a Public Library

fcWg and mportanl town like Leicester, li is an adapted

ug, and, tik'.- muM altered hufldiuga, II can never meet

h requirements of an evcr-widenine; sphere of work.

is such a progressive town that in oair^e of a few . reasonable hope it will have aa a chit f library

building worthy of the town :in<l of the work beSUg dOUK

! my m « bi udlngx hi r< been erected of late year* in the Immediate neighbourhood <>t the library tot business purposes

<t the modest structure tiaodne a library and reading-room falls >":«eii.r flat in comparison with them. A public building which *-'»« »ni>i bfl indi aJ rvc »f the intollectuaJ life of tbe town, ou^ht not bo ■.' placed in tin ihade bypreiufeee devoted bo ooramoroJal por-

Si taaeaa. The newsroom andlondiug dopartmenl are on the ground ■■« »r,:mo the reference room it on the Brat floor, For the lending <l»*l»:i,-tniont the books arc oil Blocked on wall shelving, and this to :t height <»f tw.'iity to twenty -four foot! This absorbs u i ount of labour and time in finding the books, aa well -jh ively dangerous to the assistants who have to raee up ■<\\>l down the ladders tor the books. There can be no wonder in! a leriouj accident should have occurred u few month* ago. •tiei 'ii» i tdder fel while an assistant was upon is, and who

rired that he had to be taken to the hospital The ladder in

.in iek mother assistant on the baad,caraamg * raw serious

it U almost erirninat to place the shelving so high as this

JQ any Public Library Thn hook* r«r«> iVslroyed BOOSO by thr

'^at inn! \iii:i!.i; :il moil phoi'i , :iml Only thnsr WhO h:tvc hfid tO

the work know what it means to go up ov*n fifteen or sixteen h ii room where the gnN jets are all lighted, and which 1b full

)]»!«•. Some h thr I >t.-r i.nvmwors have rushed into print

( jOniplaiued of the delay in l>eing wi-viM. Ls(l f:(r ;)S tin- writer J^ud aee at the time of hi-* visit there w«* m> imnM-Hoiniiiir delay, ich had been I locasattiere could benowcmAec wotf&ss&Mi '■"' noigtjt (him which tame of the books towl to cft(Wa«£.

la

I7i!

PT-RM"- I.TKBABnW.

Mr ( \ Klrkby, WhO wax rlnrf assistant \) Bedfl I'lihli-

i Jbrary, was igmolnted *" = i *• f librarian at Ejefceeior aboul rwi

pear* ago. I Is has do 10 i -it to restore \t tb

position ii should ocoapy, and i<> bring its work Into touch with the people, fiie committco. in their last report, my thai ;i bhurough tu uniusUon <<l the l>ooka li <'<n> i ii ban been observable the apirll In

which the stall hate n rfoi i ed thi du A . uu i lauj

expenditure has, In conacqucncc, been incurred in hi renewing books* but the result is teen in larger hubs am

ised pi W The creation of .1 i ivi

i .i.- - ; 1 1. ii.- 1 v, .-ii 71 j lo-.i-pitii' Mir .-ninl:> tret.' '-"in interference bj tin yonngtT readere, nnoT in living tin young n more* and ai !-..•: i . « selection from boow exclusively provided foi Uirm. for which a Special catalogue hoe been issued at i

. :..- .„ m ntai . ou chi age ' •■'<< led bo gi i r r order m iiu administration of the library.

In Hi* central loading department the is- vi I tines, 1^8,801, againsl 110,688, shoving an increase ni vallum »• 11" nun I., i .)' works Kssuod ifl 14*880! against (U.Ttti work* last year Thi Bhow tmincreas in bo number >f wori ! iv, i-1 . AJ1 olnasos, with tho oxcoption o! tnl oellaaeouB

literature, nnrked impivvcmont, 'I In- !:ulm .1 nrrOfiSC

in in the juYon |c class, the issues bcin^ !>,>'IH rulumc

lost year. The number uf borrowers, wl ither rone

voucher i or •" I- out now i i efi 'luring tin

1,0] i I;ihI year fth iwinp an inoroiu-o "I */tf Thin w the lm

numhoi nl I irowora since lHr& Tho total tumbor oi

entitled fr tako out booka m 4,701 Tho improvement In populoi

i i u tuu enabled tho committee U reji 1 i nomc book-. ^

lost theft attractiveness The teem I > «hoe 1 1 t -

an laoroaaad demaud for booka ol a serious and Ins

hut llctiuii '-till fonnn ihotit uni'-tturdof the total. Tho «

do m ' '(.".ire to o with this demvii.

i elves |u»tl led In i -'•■■■'King a r popular taste, bnl thej eud< to exclude wh nornl

t(l et.< i -n i :•■ *- ; ■: :.!: UlSl - h..ulUlY

and Instructive. In the reieronco section the tasuaern mluirjee mn been year, showing a decrees

l^SSi v.Onnic*. decn i inlj ippamii as the mmiix-r of

year— aa

his two hranchoa. nrol i » "twn«il is

Muni Public library ^nxiW

i'T Of lh#

I'laii t«» jctven, wai iilale liar .iii<i

t!*P ncixWHKirli. h aa can hunlU (ail loanwl tho all the mtmiratkm ut *\>zU>r> to ihv \.v*Vt'.>.

PI-TU.rc l.ntBARTKS in tick \um.A\ri ror^TTFS

L73

with white itene dresataga, md oter die main mn-nnep is a low

p m.i spire tn planning the various rooms, oars haa bean

i-.t M i<i tnak(j .'in-ill i--i^i% acoeasllnY, economically managed, and

bundantl) lighted The principal entrance is through a saal Ibn a,

which given naoufci U i inMnfnua hall, oul & wnfoh opona, I

the doorway, the landing depart mem, with the nawarooni nu i he

fi. ;i tadlea* room to the right, and die librarians room or refer*

oa i»ii i nn:'_ the lauding library. Those rooinaata

\iilnJ from .h<- n(! Iij j!:i » partitions, and -• twanged thai

WWTCOTttS mkaM'ii )*i lO.n: UBRABV, WttCHarMR,

i n have supervision over them all, v hi Isl ■'■an tmpoc >nyunc to i mi. r or leave the building

•ttfiftUt pjuutfflg lii:* liti. i 1 Sight, Tin- newsroom it V) Icr-I long

foot wide. It hon a lofty open ceiling. splendidly lighted,

ed in ii manner which gives it a moet ehecrlu] and airy

|.;i --r .;>h ;ii-t in-.i»p?-I round the wulle, nna

v Hi rackx in thu middle for Periodicals uj»

nQeci the room. Hie circulating librniy is En thfl wrote*.

^"ltcwtftj we provided for upwards of 6,000 ta>oke,auA*.Vw>v\V>

174

PI H1.P I.lbKARSU,

j,i>»i hare already L>een either puuliiiMrd ►-; the committee ids, TIk- other rooms are amiably furuhdn-i Qg Ea 'v. noons of bat Wftler, the ventilation ha* il.irlv attended to, Mid Ihoft \$ oven onvenicucc and

oocoromod i, 01 rlsitor* 'i be c ml "i the building vras about 68,000, and for fittings C400. Doth the Westcoteo branch II and boo oatsJofnu may bo token so excellent models foi

libraries. The Ubruriau ;ia- placed a few pots ibout

il . rooms, snd Chose gfoc a proposeeeaing finish. The work being dose iU Leicester >i >i its tvo branches is thoroogM n i-'-'H

Mav-i'! srj>,

Tho question las been soosidered here for three ycj statutory meeting on March fll, I- "•. -■! led the ijueKtloii wit) acclamation, and no pull was demanded. The probable injur* which might rcsull Ui <!>•_- Mechanics' IiinI UiU* * di.-M'iis.-*ed, 1ml it i,-. deserving of note thai II"' incmbci Institution, .ii .i li'«ly. would not oppose the | do what tliey could lo carry il throuttli Bucxcasfullj A

mendablc local ipirii displayed itwlf. :-•> ak I. i -!■■ M had Htoml still long enou h. and il nt Lhi* « i those questions, the tarrying through oi whirl would \> il r\ verc in tl,« Parefronl prog

Nrwakk.

The (iil-.tr:ip Library is very beautifully KiMialcd n 11 gardens, with the ruins of Ihc old castle Vorminp; :i ,„u ,i tM,<

ground t* rlu» lili Hid "touii I- 1 In . |

■i ; .•- ! :n-1. til i| .

nUcd «iti j ti

liii- nuclei

ihileO by ardin

Wulhey in .

Jaiue» (. i i UJOi ?ay to

ii Lake i the English Sir (then Mr.) Wfl

Inm GUafcrap bui handsome, library, nnd

idoired U ran an

nioin which pi- £00 8 3 -ii'.

The

proridcil ii on thmr, and ui iiat8 of

oe, and ladies1 roftdinff-roora UbrartssVa

roi ii, &o. Tin.' public entrance is in tho centre ol the tnwivda Castle Uatc, and gives access to a well-lighted hail.

GHQUMB

PL AM

rrnur unRAiur.* :n ivr mii-i.am- C or* TIM.

J 75

>-n . h . i and iii«- Ijbrarj are placed lie ibrary indicator .in i the borrowers* counter, with the rcadSna btheriifhi

xa<\ left, in arranging the ■overa! rootofl care Um been i ihtit each ib wall Ugh ted, and no placed .1- 1< be «.: il> upi rvined

bythi librarian i Mr. Kill: i_rN_v, formerly one of the ruuristaj

the \«>iriiiL,'l;r,ni Library Tin- BUmbei of VOJumafl i- *, H30. The

.■ii.-iflAp public LiiiitAU), nhwahk.

0ft o i tin- building in every way reflects the highest credit upon

donor it would, no doubt, ho gratifying to tin- 2,000

borrower*— m which, "i eourae, additionB will be made to sea

.1 books grow siomlily to at leusl [0,000. So

besot ;i :i 1 building should be the home ot u good ttook at

tM l|U

r

11 I 1. IIDRARIIIS.

Etamta move ilowfr In tlic Newcastle d1 the Midlands September I tWU, the lota were adopted, and* the Pablio

l.ihriry tltB IK>t Vi't lie. mi riiiiijtli'li'il, :il!lnni;rii the building* 1T0 nnw pPOgPftfl '-iii'.' .MjiiiMy, Mid protmbh will be nprn t,i (lie

public during I860. (Trio Rename which nad to in* <? .-:i i aril 11 large nil'', ruid this, ocj doubt, accounts for ii e neomlng delay. It BoxuprltMS Bouaoll 'liamber, assembly rooms, school of Art, Pabhe Library, am readuTtt-rooms An offer o( £1,000 towardi Chess public buildings gave Hie movement a start -«< <■ yoanago, mil oiin-i suras have been promised nt latci dutes, When com- pleted, the town will have ;i very hundsoine pile cif build The Ubr.ii.v depart meat will comprise library proper, or I stores, -4 ft. by to ft., divided into $ ft. Icugihs by open Iron raUeriei round Ibc walla, connected h ron stall

thus dispensing entirely tritfa [adders. The reference, reading) and general newsrooms are each 88 ft, by 80 ft., tippivoched by

.in .(ii pie corridor, and with 1 1 1 « - 1 1 ,-,<■>.-.: m HwSB

gkmd - i o divided I'.v loft) glared screens, which denote at all - the extent ot the apartments in this connection, nl affording facility- for ov< raiffhl . Ther< is ;i rapacious ba* for iiio storage ol useful bat seldom studied literature, an other rr(|iuiviiii:u!.-i are fully provided for, The architecto arc Messrs, I igden & Son, Look, and othom

NOIITJIXMCTON.

rbte progressiva manufacturing town, which adopted I

in ih7»., u»ny :i,iiu uiitffm hi available for library as

museum purposes On the building cri I ia uutdaaroe noa hull, the olu headquarters of this ancient municipality wot) i i ned Into :i Public Library and Museum in 1888 ii wu rWidi

tO liinl.l :in Midilldii, :r:nl in Septi i.ituT ul lh:il yc:ir Mr I 1 1,

Codllngton, of the TSwiionnl (natftnte of Civil RnginaerA, held an inquiry, an behalf of tin* Local Government Board, Into the appUcatiou of the Northampton Town Council far powers to borrow, oo behalf of Qie i iuboooj Dommibtee, £600 for currying uut the extension necessary to make additional acmmmod; tor the lending and reference libraries. After the town clert bad read the notice announcing the inquiry, it wan stilted thai the tender for the work was £580, and it was estimated thai furnishing of the building and the architect's coiumissian ooold not be less than £'100, which gave a total of £686. Toward* thai they had £130 available, which left a balance of £80G roqn They applied for power to borrow £500, to be repaid, principal and interest, daring a period oJ twantj roarsi It waa oanlaf&od fiiii..r- 1 matter ox form, the application irasfoi i nret Co bowow for a term extending over sixty years, but it was undoraUtod that the application should be for twenty years, bo as to make the repayment no burden upon the current expenses of the institu- tion, /ce amount of the annual repayment for twenty

r.TSAIUE& IN Till? MIDLAND COUNTIES.

177

would be £88 I . Bd li i Oommu^ner suggested that thirty

year* would bo a reasonable Utdi. In answer to hie inguiriett, it

was suggested thai the ratable value of tiie borough on the

its <>i ti !<■ borough Pi*! »■, upon wbi i the loon was to be ohar&edj

li:.",,->. 'i'li'.' borough debt, oxolnaiva oi the water under

which wus rovrocented by feBI/Xlu} was £QQfl&7. .Mr.

igtau inepectod 1 1 . - pit i, and nta visited thoeput Ear the

ill permission to borrow was granted,

.M-. i.ii unouni wj »bta aed p >m the Looal Cloverwoeni Board.

IIh' oonMalttoe tewed, i i Jtmo, 14*88, ft statement through the

hi wbieh ire il important feature* at interest in the

Kdition -" E 'in- qoMtfon. i 'i''> tel c I thai the r ■- : . penny *ate about £720 a year* Then follows the Information thai ii-> havenodonbi thm it was the intention ol the framers ot tho Pnhlic libraries \<-t thai thia penzn rate

ice rate, and that the Bite, building*,

rthi I'liiii! Library should be provided by the municipal

itrtliorltfea In aupnori or this cm) ilon, the PbUcnrfa g towns b ive

Ivwi attei for the Public Library - Liverpool, Nottingham, Swan-

'.i Cnrdfrl ' Wolvarham >ton Derby, mul S'liiihuorf The

Corporation of Here ord made ntribuUon "f £1,600 towards

!<• coal ir their buDdlnga \ i lardlfl, in addition to the site, t ho Corporation lun e awumed tin cost if i reel i g Hie building with* miry rate. At Swansea also, in addition to giving the sitr. the Corporation hare granted from Was ordtnary yearly kuih bowanb paying the Interest on flu* :il Ira-rowed fur the erectinu uf the bunding. The Corpora- tion ol ~\\ lu in all* 'i tve granted £000 for printing the reference library oatalutfui Tlieeu are only a few instances of who! hae done In othei towon, Tna library committee, then ford, i'i'Ii

:rMi:.il\i\- |lll r |lJ [lifted ID .i:-ki<t _! I'm|' flU'tlll'l' ftflp llulil ll|f

ci committee of the Town Council. The membere ol 1 1 it*

ci in i ivei very favours! ly dispoa d - do I tiio, but,

tf o'uik. had i" I"* guided by their legal advisor, il town cleric.

uini,;iii'i i ' «■< l lii- ruling by some very eminent

.iinimi iiic .. tha ii N iruiampton, at oni i tte, whatever mi > be

. other town*, they could not have anything from the

borough fund* over and above tho penny library rate, fox fcbc

Eon bhal they have no rents of Dvopertj . or pronto, or any in* il what in honna to be need for the reduction .. still, feeling that although the ruling of thr town k in. iv' n strictly according to tho letter ol the ta.wfycl U la according to the spirit of th< Acl th< committee relied upon the ueaietuiice ol i w-townemen to help them out

of bbfl Lifficultv, rem nhoriug that thia difficult-/ Ea uaneed <-, ii h fa ■( thai In Northampton they had not onVj to provide

.ibi m ii'l ivh ding-mom I -\>\- in:. line ^rontfl

•nil] art Bohooltt, but alao have had h ps*j for the building "> Guildhall Komi, ill" convcreion of which, fromaF''' '"■' ' auaaum, e*w.- coei £3.500. Thia entail

mi i ittor- :i henry annual chavae ot acsn^ V:"*^-

]:■

PUBLIC LlBItA&I£&

ih.i- taking »waj more than ono-thlrd »!' tlw U to!

[>urpOftu of i '.iv ir: foi and lTiuintAiuiti^r in i«r« j ir, hail

which irr i : n ulutely !'■ i ! I LVrpuration aa the

awn u i II, 'in police station, or lay othei public bitflduijc, Thi* .iii\ i ftv, , thcw th -mi; ol E I7U I nil of il Is i tin i fratd .''.-■■ I ■■ o mniut.-iin the libr irj . . mi

help the adeno nod art echoola for a town of 60,000 inhabitant*, thej haw the mroon*c«nraoi B4S0. If it had n* or thi

' «• 1 1. -i. q trw gentlemen who interest thcmaeJvci in the work, thi: comraitl c ffoi Id hi I fiavi l«eu uble to struggle 01 .1 ;ll

1 -I to 1 yean, from >'•''• 0 ! ,;. thi total u ml meal hi

buying books "wua C00,bBl thanks to the foratfcoughl ol 01 1 01 two members ol tho committee, the giti ol tho late Mr. Cho 1 Markhana ha* boon now rrnnt.toiTed Ut the honetSl tho library, litis grroB £50por annum to purchase boolca, Injt tin

•UMltlit'h'Ilt Mil I.

[tv difficulties in Northampton AreUluatratJvi ofthediffloi w hio!) are heiniE BxporioB.oed elaov in- 1 < , and hone* 1 fv going rather fturj Into thorn. [tiflnotunrcaaonnblo h oxped town 00 tncila and other governing In >■»>- should, without taxing fchepenny rato.do more inthopro\i(li igol ril •■ ind >uildin#i than \i w |.r, »oni iii.< . >o. Tinx is ;i matter ol serious importance 1 the iniiiiv 1 I'ii Mi.- I.i »r;irv work, and one to whielnnui will i.:i\c to iiwi.ti in tho future considerable attenti

-iiiii o1 adapting building**, except in vori t ci m ih shown in what has resulted ul Northampton. I'h .in: bow better suited than ml ire for the ibrarj and museun . inii it i* safe to pro 1 ,; that the town will require within ton year»« entirely new building Kpeciallj erected for the pur] \r th- |n'..-.'iii rate ol proflpeM m (he work ol these invtlti ti mi ..-. placing the novitabu? nl a later date than a II | r.i »bij -■ austaftied by events There is life and exrxu use made 01 the 1 brory and museum, una i hold ichema and public Bpirlt, encouraged iy few generous ll'ta, would bai anftblad the eonnoil and committee in arect premtM&a which would have met all the requirement* for thanoxj twenty years ielei fcfon oi l>ooka Is adn irnble. I »

a ed many old book* wen* weeded nut "y Mi T J '■ cultured Ijrtrurlun, and 11 larjfe ruimlKT "i hook* >( mo< literature took Mwlr place.

LltH'arlana often make Intereatltm < [aco^erle* when on b 1 in 1 iin^ cxpediiiinis, and manylmllvidiiHl liltrai * lave M*neftted !i_v the acute Right and practtcii ncpcrl(*nnc nl the Hbrarln knowing tlw value ofiildrKioka and immphlcb*. \\ .1 i«.i. 1 \ ir i- 1 tgu Sir. QuarlU'li purchatted a tra by ilif committee of the Northampton Public library. Tha (Ir-LiTipiiui wfw fflvcn :i- follows:- "Ilamor (Raphe) \ It. turso nl Ihc J*i'c»en( Itatuta ul Virginia, and the Sim of thi then till the 18th of Jiun Ifll 1 . 1 ■-

1 Lation J be lerera] Enjlleh 1 >v. n< tnd fori Clu-istenlug oJ Powh ughtei aud Uer tiarriavc wli

[I MBItABJES IN 'UK MIl>I,AM' rot'X TIK*.

irs

-

:

!

Snylishfnan. Ilf.-bd fine and pcrfecl copy, rexj ran -in. 4 to l,Miii. John Ifoata tor William Welby 1616/ This tract was found l>y Mr. (leowpe between iIm pages "t another boolc. AM will I* :n the description above, it was ol little lota

irthamr'ton. and the committee are to be congratulated on receiving ao bandaomc :i dihii ns L'ft.'*. KK (V>rit, wlm-h was n pent

v, books.

library Lots ten fb existence bohind it, and the

ind museum grow in favour each luoceedtng year with

old and young Here the issue of Rotten bi dafiSoaig and has

touched sixty pw •••■lit \i the same time the higher classes of

Iterators nlmt* a i increase The number a( borrowers, ;:, i:»:i, nut

t :i populi tfon of 14,50ft, is good. \n Interomting tinlf-psgs

f.i the report fa devoted to n BlnterneJil ol ihc number of Omen

thai (-ri;i: works l iu v > - been Issued tdnce tlie ojpening ol the

bran to the middle uf iwwi'. ^s a sliailar itejn of Uitormatloa

no] 'ivfu in many reports, the issue of these cine-volume

tuk.s i'i well known literature foi three yean to qootedr—

Unold "Misti Esmya,"*: Waited "Hated HutorrofSal Demo,' - | K. Bsokott, "Bnildw'i Priw Book," B| Kpurgeonfl "flop. m >!ivp J- Hsadol'o " Ueaafah/' 18; B. Srnniiaoad, " NoiumJ Law tn

Ithfi Sniritml World, ' 22 i Fronde^ » Oceana," "<. ; Shakeonpare'a Work*, B7 : rrocior* "Other Worldj thnu Oum." 26: Smiles' "Dutv." 31; >'. Word, PsoiphleU ou Salt," S3; Rev. J. 0. Wood, "Natural ," 36; *'•■ R. BCina, 'Poems and Ballotl*," Stf ; Maun lay 'a Hi .-".iv of England," 36 j Darwin's " Deeoctil of Man," M i MeCarthya '• Hutoiy of Oui 0 a i- 1 Seatou'i lltar£n< Bogutoorina" ir> j

* ic I .!«■ i-iui Farrar, " Life of Christ, " 19 : C. Pannal. '■ Modern Pftetieni l.'.iiti.i - 'History of Krod&liaui, ' 55; " LoD}_'f?lIow's Poetical Works, " .'>7 Lord TViinyfion, " Fauna,'' &*> ; Violet Hugo, " Ni'ti« Damo," 67 *, Beethoven's "Sonatas," 7s ; Gilbert and Sullivan's ; <_• . \V. M. Thackeray, "Vanity Fair. lOf. : C. K n^il.y.

N' WutwardHo, '124; Lord Ifltton, •' La«t of tho Batons," 127 ;0. Ktiot, Tho Soil Uuseuin i- unique, and there arc in it numerous ol salt from Vraerica, India , and other places. Tha of £30 i yeai is derived from the rent of shops adjoining ibrary, am th whole of thin with an additional sum goes for . . The libran md museum have boon founded find are klr J T Uruimer, iLP,, who defrayed tho entire ooat tic building

NctTIINOHAM.

rheri u in oft i I •:?.*■ iliai he vater is not mfaaed until the woll in . .Ii'\ \inl tin* [wnpli* i if Nnttdijthani UHVsr sestowl i»» iiiIhh h'ir renlral llnur^ -<> mueli ■■•■- during the time I *asclo

ccteand usettlejijenl in the building, H WW I i dour the lil 1. 1 1 j to the publi during ejgbtasii i.«:r,lr.. and turn il ovei to th< mildei 1 1 ;- re rtm, iti i I SUtaiil vrumvur. In linvniu'v. \>-vv>'aa\A \\xn\

160

I'l : i.i' i H-.IIAILIRK

prior to a meeting of tin B( Leonard t*own Ooun U, i tentative of one <>f the warda utartod Lite report that the Sot! ogham end l 3erkenwel] Libraries had boon oloeed by the

ffilhOl ttW "■'|'!i-- Hi' ^.tt I I»_tii:i 11 whe Wafl t< bring the

[on forward n [rod to the pros- r to know it this wei

OT not TUl h only one uunplc of the ninny mothoda ad by thoBo who oppose the Acts. No statement about the** Enal - rations sould nave been further Erona the truth, n hi no imueunl tinny to bear 1:1 >"iii]ig!uuii thai the people would rather be without tho port office tli;ii diapenao witn their Public Lii < for m bo town Ei Uw work healthier :m<l tih.iv vigorous.

There van grout- rejoicing when *«ii New Year a clay, 1800) the building was ignis thrown open to the puhUC| and the re openiiij ceremony was c4 :i very pioi cter. 80 many 111

ad muses i! bullcUngi arc being erected in different ports o1 the country thai .■ few perticelaTB of "Jk* mUhap nt Nottingham i

.■.i-. -i ^niim r.l ul;;il Mm<l m othetVpllCCi VbOUt fiP

years since Uw Itown Council received an offer from an bogbj^ moil- donor ei -i »,000 if they would put up bnildtnas for educational nurpoNON, It was astern lined by the Town Council

to •jpcnrt t"4(),(KX) tit putting up the buUdlDgU. KIcvcn firms

«pTit in tenders for the erection of the Imildmge. Nine were Local oontrsctors Two tenders were from firms not associated \M-h Nottingham, and one wan from Swansea. The ii>«f.Ht tender amounted to £41,500, and the highest was £51 920, \ - m mi of £10,000 would, of cowae, make all the difference between good materia] and bad material, and property paid Inhour :in«l poorly paid labour In 1*77 the plane were sent in, and the appointed builder, whose estimate was the lowest, proceeded intil June. IH81, when the UuJldings were supposed to be completed, and were opened by Uw Duke of Albany i" June 11 fchnl (rear. Thej hod good ground fur believing that t\\c\ were in poBseseSon of n substantial imWIiu:,'. i»m u inriic: cut. after two years had expired* thai there were very grave signs of decay and defect (u the buildings, and before L6S5 the committee

ii thi ( orpoi it 11 d appointed 1 special committee to tnqaire into th " def< ' its "i the buildings. Thai committee aaked 1 1 ««_- ran ayor to look Into the rna&fc r and n porl upon wliatdefei tahe oheerved. lie g 1 ie very startling stafcen eutetseeing that the bufldinffi

had been completed only two yearei En one of hia paragrapni in-. :mmiI, "Oorftcls in liltrjin .ind museum, Signs of fra were rodble En the plaster and brickwork under the corbi the north and oouth and* o( thi recess in the pnblii Kbraryand muiieun . . ad tb< >orto 8 showed thai they were by some means being tilted orwavd,and the whole *upormcunibcn( weigh

trough) on bo Liu toei of the corbels, thnH caoafna nracturnto the wnlW' '" another place he raid,'* A departure 1 0

[flcabion waa mad' i'i tit nenrl} nil the mm

on the bcl, us oing three leet .sis inches, a* wpci .

range* from two feel tbur behes to two foot ten inohee.11 Thr committee vrlm had charge vl that huilchng found that, m-h

1

i

llir

rrnur i.nuuniKN r- in.: \if>i.:\\< rovsvzw*

[81

i on ng i us people wilh literature they liad i<> servo bricks and mortar, ana for long time thoj osrpcndod fchoif resource,

M for 00 tVy pofttfblj "tare, in remedying tlu^e 'tclWts until .it

; .i thoy went to the lown Counml and suited that thofcuHdicg \vii-. in sucb d dangerous condition that they could no Longer

■m apple Willi ir, At thfl time (h;tl (ho building Wtt olOSWl it wn*

Stiwly unsafe. Tin* trains acratm Hit- iviling, whicli was kuji-

i hold up the floor :ii>mr, wore rotton, and it they had

at lo inj wry uu luurh lunger tue pnof would l*ave fallen Id

and iiir walls gone out, oud they would have Jiad uu enormous

ir iii< v iiuil put a few thousands dmfcc too *Owfc

i-iui.l i t/we it wnattvitUu] fchny would n,Wi ! toWOT

fl~-'

ri iii. i* in: \h\ i

Lhediagraoe thcj had incurred bj patting n]» a lnnMuii

kri'l. ,u.«: .1)-" cloning tni p . •■ lor eighteen montha. and n

flu |n-m|i|< U rrOI 1 till ion III ^ m| :h«- i;.-

1 on 1 ) - moral la thai I \\t lowc* u 1 dci I - uol bj

Id be token ;•> ace that 1 1 pari of the v 1 Alderman Barber, who all fctar twenty-two rear*'

histor.v "f tip.* library work inNottintfluKOjhaa bcCl ..i thew iuHtitatioiie, look port in tin n ■■'■•:.■■• ceremony, and called attention to the old \rtinana Ubrarj o1 the town

icd tin- auclouj of the flrat Public Library. Thi 6,000 volumoa belonging to this otd library wore transferred c Ante being adopted

The educational work being 'inn ed on hj tin- Nottingham Librarta 11 of no Aid and real n nature that itmnychall

(■■II wild the work ol any other town ol a corr mpond . K.tli in 1 1 1 i - - country mid in America Vol n i v -id regard t i

the library, bn I in other domirtmontK, XottSnghuiii is rapidly becoming oaoot the mosl attractive odueattona] tentn ontiro country, i Diversity Coltego, the name ^iven to tin group <>t buildings 1-. (or "it- various '.rimni/.atkms, the hri gam in nil the public building! whioli tfottinffiuun antaina. Here under one fool are the ibjrarlee, natural Malory museum, literary mid scientific doae-room*. and the technical ■.-iiii laboratories and Lecture theatre*, whin- m > 1 1 - 1 adjoining ore the trado schools, whi re engineering:, earpcntoi and oilier : 'I-- can bo learned. In do town fa the country the esse at the duties md privileged I cl Ixeaibip 1 ate v felt than a the capita ol the lace trade, and tb ;> owing to the Important place whtcri I'nlveralty Coll wuh ita rael ramifications of work occupies n the municipal in- ol the people, Nottingham may well Ik* proud of these InitJtattoni and ol the unrraran] Entcrcal whJcl the eltlxen* ahov m them, 11 Is impossible to vUdt the central librarx or nnvol

the branches and not reel convinced that M nrfr* wi r

pregnanl with far-reaching utility if Nottingham originally

mlSROd W w:iv in the itlons run! erection ol the (ml a I Irifj 11 has

not m ns wonc, The town In fortunate In having on 1- tai IfbrarUn 11 man whohultlm distinctly prominent place m the

Irrofesrfon Uthough atUl a comparatively young man. M" 1 ■otter Brfaooe has had some twenty-three yearn' exi»ei library wortc, and haa thrown licarl ami wool Into dr\ .- and popularulna the llbrerlei and reading-room*. In Mm the N'ottfnghnrn public oh well aa the committer have .1 1. Korru 1 .

So many application* tor a record 1 Hie work I e art

reaching 1 ( * vi here the Vet* hai e n<

adopted ha there lion been foi - . ..

for placing In envelope*, a brief epitome of the world 1 il the central library and Ita branches \ copj of Lhii card u ■■ tho^nexl page.

ES i> thb 3UI>lamj ronrnr.*.

183

i Leading Til.i-i.i. ft ml. Btonreod Bb ■!■ ModtrHjDM . ■:■. i»..i.

','.-., . Bto*l !."■!■ '>■ nail] S »•£• (aVMH, *** vol*

i il . i » . tttoudanc, ?.5SI. i in |j< uvamgu M'.tcndi niv, ! T Mbinry, -ili'tlx ipftui BO i i n>l . l>tlly

... i- ii... loi

ifaag Aoom, S< nil Ettntt fhiabitoti. Stool MB vqw. I»«.ily *w»g<"

:■ WUUW, •!.'.'.

.... ilulm I L'liily u-.i-ir"' '"it.«ii....n *, 189.

U«1*. .'i""1 -•!«. L'.iilv »%ei'*go ieaue- | I

kwWj). ias row

liriiuui^c noon, M.iy'i.-M Oi it*. Btuclt :..*.". w... Duly avtug* lmi(3>t DA <

-. i.'t. 1! ii'.inir llwm, tium* Agun (Mjfl I •■•<!•. Dally ftVOMlgt U

iviuur all QilnEK . ■'<» la Ufamiy, C3iahr>a Btnet, N<m- BaafoH Btock, MM fob tHflj . ,. .

- ! ... (h .' I , [> ' \VlMg1> Jltl*ll(|tl1IH', .111*.

iDe Uoom.Uoutl M">ii, HHIV..U, Ijuily uvcrofc

- :;._ .l*'i ii'l il)«t' In. lUcJinff Bow l" Slotik. SOD vob Dully »vorjg» In u

i ■•■ ill '" m •"'■■"-

ItAuUnj; If'ttm-. Willitiitrbbji Ktreet, 1 .niton. Daily innrivgi' Janet, M mil

ll*Uy »Ttr»JT n't. i.ilnri.-i . I

r^niHnc IJhmry, WfUonfhlry street, Luilon.— Stock, I,7ftflvola, tinilynviviw

UHK«. 12.'l KM

it-nllm.' Bwiu. Onifl Stn-'t, Kywiu Qi*cn, --.., ..<, rob, Dully uvcmiro l«ll<*. *<»!* I ■tily HWrMjH i.C mlmr.' KM.

Bcfcroj Library, Mriogtoa Stock* 870 rob* . \AX\ Auric §1 hnota i m -■ a SB, LAN) . . ... .A.'i,»n vole

Annual iaruc* about 160,000 vol*.

i.'nllvavcmsclMuca ........ ...... ibcnt UNO ••■-.

Annual » natulan..' at [.ihiuria* »l»<] Roadino Itooms 9,000,000

I til. u I'-inltiicen Bbuul •..' .- (

Rf«g h i ii(i < - ... . ... . "I i

Tin- i'inMi(M> I i.i.i;v h excellent ii. cverj watf. Hers there about :i.'i(H) book*., all corefulfy selected to null the ratidiv- <>\ the juvenile*, located in very eomi uleiri quarters in the

Tiiniiv r, lehiul rooiiirt.elo.sr-' rr> (lie rcnlr.il mulitulioii.

Tb.lt Cbi'arj wan foiimlcil ii 1882 Cliruii^h the IU>eralIlj ol llic

IpV, M.V. Itfl pOnltlOB A Lfl "i ijiini ly Oil OUC,

I'm th<- i xi ni| Le has tiince been fouoved In more or lc*8 detw Ui :-«u-. pBjtfl "i the kingdom, since th< reodina of a fapci !>.\ Brie a " Lil raries for the ^'<u^nL^";^l bho Library Aia

ion tn. .tin.: ul I'lvinoiith. Thl8 Ilu.iry fa OMU IV«<n: four 1 ■•

ivhen the prcsei I writer arrived there shortly

fop mih ■•■ !.«■ !"immI i Ik' liSi ;u i.tn ui lady) l>efliegc<] bj

a nam I- of i or< r boj ind pirla, who, with clean faces and clam

quwificaiTons upon), werebenl on seoorlng

ii' i" I'M-! al pleasure, Ooh two books in i.i . re allowed to I i di'cnfwj thai they maj ao| -■

1 1 neglect Ii < h »mc torn . - even i- the 'niiiii.nitn njcc, and the children proudly designate it as "our libr

Iren raafee ubc of this library, Bone interesting ire hutif; ui Hie walls, The pooir) catalogu ol the cbil'Ir- i lni.li.pj library mni a*oII bo CaUoo at n ffuidi For uilier : in^ajuvonili aeetion. 'rin- reteraooQ til

Ssta pnbUshod .it a penny up to &YcpcilC& ere? >%.■■•■

184

Pt'TtUr I.TB&ABIXS

^ iii i lists iihould ie Section 1>, which y veu tine nti-r**

Bare cm toetology i the reference library •■■ particularly eorni Tin1 subjects are elasaed i uler r itnmem*, education ei

mil il< mi i:i 1 ftffftlrS, jurihpruili'iuv ::>i'l l:i\v, ;> ■', i|.ir:il irniin.n :iint lit ..iiu-t , politics, nubile henllh, hoitI I mo vera CM iOd

(general), and HtBtfMtUi. in Hi'* isutrloi oi tbi book* erring

IM ;i complete Hynopls of Llic HUbjeats (if ill*' a

irirea. Music and the special literature to Liu Mini, nasi Lue

S'o U*4 Collection »r« lf|Wrl * i. till.- in which Lite \< 1 1 in- IlitUI I .;hr:if,

ii ■• ku -■ -i tin :i v strong, in the Ponnei wrllon the Kottfngham

Collection comprises JfiO volumes, of which more thn i

tffl iHiMimtly in llie hands of borruwers. These

booke •' music consist of anthems, ballads, rajnifis, glees, luaetfm,

operas, songs, ind symphonies, uwl an noi nf m

rhui i ■■.!■] Tin' Xi'i ii.l.1i;i in CflllCCtlOn, Which AW < ..irl'iilU

Penned, n - chieflj mane up "i Booscys and Novello'i ■■ editions, and Home nf tin* v-nhlo-ation^ . I ..i.-n. r. i '1 . I'l.n li *Msder. Tin--'* booke of music were obi i ced En

' is civ ipset form, Before circulation, ber carefnJ con-

aide-ration, i Im-v were newly liound in ii style peon Ita <

to mu.'i' . ..ml iicinp half-hound in hog-akin, arc mad* M liiMiny ,i- .iinl ii-j. I'jtu mnki' them. The Nottingham Collccticn of LOO Tolumoe cost, including aubtrtantia binding, about £90, 01 ii. average of la.6d per volume- This collection may i»<- taken as a basis to other collections. In trdcr to Facilitate the forma- tion at such, (in- names of publishers iwr indicated In the I mustc In the aocond aupplorocnti n catalogue of tho Nottingham lc Central Lending Library. Tim Inrge town is well supplied n tl. public roadinflT-rooTOft

ih'* potterj towns hare auitc t cluster of libraries. Longtoi I., hi last, the only oue of tho pottery towns whloh hat

J el reached the educational level of :i Public Library. I5w«lsm, [onlay, Stoke, and CunAtal Ulliavo their Institution*, the Brat

oanaod pi I i ling the way by its adoption of the \jsU in liWS.

Tii- working potters are politicians and renders, and n sight pi

ttu BursleS i bx m ra tl raniag la instructive:.

vi Hanley n I8w there was an attempt to carry th* lets, bul ih. people gave :> rery emphatic •"No," and the (russtton lay dormant until ISR2. In the following year a manor I tanrtnj :. ) »i lignnturen vb i presented to the m ay i requi ate

t public meeting to aiseusti the question of the tulopi o

1 1 . was nni the atatutory meet ng. or this did doi i »lli * ii ti : ii Hi.- middle '>r 188J "Sr-.n^y eenoci n Ruhacrimtom nromfaed In advanco, and by an nvarwiielrning majority n I iwm ti . qn cation wa« nattlod. Ancfforl was soon nftarwnrdx to urrnngo with the triniUvK rmtl committee nl the mei mini tnstiti tlon :iii'l govern or h ol the w irking mea readlng-roi lbs two <• the U irary and readtn s-r«om fu Pact, r<»r tl mycfi <i tile same to the library eom\n\VK/>e V\w

n mi

.mi fen ■■I an wo*

I'l RUI I4WURI«H 1\ V! V. -MIlH.AMi COINTIKS.

w

MinVtoiii for the I Ime I" pivvriii rim :io uppmndi >n ;it mTiinp*-

innii. and N noon becann necwmry to incur :i considerable expenditure in adapting the old borough offices 1.0 tho purpose*

of a !ii ran . which wut* found ah < \i tvin.-h ^'^ i ~ one;

kcoonimoualion has been provided tore leiufiu^r department, a

H'ltTi'Mtv rci.|iii^-n>i>i]i( ;iii] ;; -- 1 1: 1 1 1 T:nliruj-nH.illl IttW Ih-i-ii *i-I .'p:ii| faf l.olirn, while I'Iiimmuji - i!m ruftdc 01 : I limtiii, In

April, 1687, the building was opena b) Bar] Granville, There

»r«- iiu h ." visitors tie .i 'li.!> average to the nevwoom. In connection Mid he ecieace claMea the ten ohemioa laboratory ii.i- been eompletolj fitted without encroaching on Hie penny rut«, ao< i. ia now the u.-t appointed room of the land In the . chemical i.i--..-. ;;t the Institution hi

i i k ;i- Mind, '..i jitii-. niii'j- m-i'ii' tion in chemistry,

it Eb Btteduu - 1 (hi I thirty itudente on vrorb in it at the sanu time ami M n lent* on awoimnodati d in all togi s, from elementary fce honours. in u i llhrar) an decidedly going, op. Mr.

A. 1.i;.!.m' H tl i. lii i.irijin.

,608 i >V , A which 1,686 niv for rcfe*

'"- For leel year in the lending section "tob835, With

cnnll stock and only •■• moderate rate the turnover is com- U i:;i i ■.-. Mr. a. .1. Coddle Ih the librarian. The foundation-stone of tho TungtaJl porraoncnt building laid m May, I860. Oil library and rondiug-room two upon llio firroirad Hoop oJ tin boa tawnoffieea in the principal from. The Bol^ col "i arl rooms are on the next floor, and the seionco class r i -m- .ii the top llarisj) the prettenl year the buildings ore lomploted and open to 1 1 - public.

i.i . ions Atro IVxarBvoxo (Ornwnnui).

Ftuncarn vonthi Brut ol tho group of Hmall townsm Cheshire

» i > «). adopted the Act*. IWa they did seven years ago, and

co maple had proved contagious, leoingthat mix places very

'i ICuncorn hove within the Inst tvo yenrs followed suit.

1'' u '..ini-.- : ii. i i :i ii. -i,ii i it i.:i\< t»acii had six adoptions of the lets

diartng the last tnrw y< <■■., «o both counties have contributed

. i .r.- t<i tho pronroMi ol Mir i inwmenr. II e subscrtptloilfl

from inin-iT'.i.i.' ! only reach 12*., so tiiis is; not an important

II people nuteidi the nron of the rate really wish Co

wnii iiu'inHchrs hi the library they would d*i bo te B larger

ol thai thfa PIoMon In i*opreflent«d by :i third ol the Moejc.

\oo ftp n:-c the pi lpp well.

r< i i.- adnpttcm ol the Vrtx through n* :i lahtlcu

ol i or (ti'K[il.* lo iheiuRriYi'K. N " i'i"' |i.i|ti-s wwu adopted,

i i-i'.i.;Mi\. T'u.' local bpiril ever the

■, I'lit.liiiMfjiHtJr, mill tho IntorrHl cvolted wan con-

WliiKfonl m:ik«* iim li\iup oui of Hilt, and i ha*

little i.Miinr. In it> local lii'o. Tho mamifaoturerj"

whom the rate i.ill-- hcavical .mum up well. Mr. T. T.

iI.P., I 1 1 i/ifl (hen i iUut 'jSUv, am'

"i i/V m. mlti edo B/iori "J1 .i thouAoad oovitiAi uuli

166

uraimim

irew enal <!*•<! t.> otieii ■» DoeemUr 1 i. free of

'

•liiiractor Willi :

1- j: tl ! ■•■ :lli -!«!■ ) or

f.»|:< i <I:tl lr, April. I -*V . ' li-- I VTCTi «\>>\'r-\. find b

»one<l Uu-ir nev .,■ |.iMi.-. I'Ijc |"<pvlii'ii; l- 10,011, and ilie rato h -.■..!.- ..i phu'fH - H h Hi unit t."i i iDii

|>. | |, If, :n,.; | :iN whirl) WOUlCl pTOdUO 1 1 r - 1 1 ne :r. ir Win-

I'lii'v. .h-tii.i- oould not do i ■* r t « - :■ lhan take tiio VViuaford ptai Mid build i :.■ si I n'> i

w INHKOlLti ri BMC L1BJC mv.

The rool at tin1 irorti htu been divided into Ihn two ou Bide ouqh being drawn toe i i to turrei Caehion with ;>

!i n:tl tMiiip, wllilh! Ill*- iiiiiiT OB-fl lfl thrOWJI Im.-kw iunv.

tO :i-.V: ! 1 1 : i . - 1 he IVi! idgO I llW, \HttU I doOf

i- :. \ tfltlhulo some mi. w ido w ill iiinor *u ing door, i i i ,-.i . . ,,i ■■ hedrtd and I tasted - -■ - Phi

t .».■.. n. i vestibule u* it were, mm which are i strum

room and to the aide rooms for the librarian iu

njM »f>m L'Iimm Rid* ri i-. are .ilium ifift l v

dy tv ...'■■ v ndom hi

(foor mi room >■ < inilarl

main hufldhijf \* •> nmiw 3 vrhibn

f/|£l /. , .. .. :lw i ■,.

.■I 111,11 i i ,i. i. i i -. , i. mil i.aM' ui .i r.9

187

i). Thti i.i'i.ii i i:i> counter [a along the Iefl hand aide, and tiding iic.irK I In lull length . i ilir luiilihiii . ilf I "U pji ! i 'I'll ti u i'm-, .in, i I i,r, it g accominodj lion for »oun thousnndH oi bootai On the opposite side ol the ctHiru ie the new6p»i>

the papers tho reading tables hew ttie bndi i i|i< 1 ; i1. I !.- h-lit ii tlic l.iyliiin i- iloi w d from 0 mi. wbi< Ii run- alone tho full extenl cl fcru poof of lh< main •;,:■, ii> lij-iif- having ornanx a I irchi . i i d i>< tap ■■ h lift ii -i>. The tannic n hj iv. h :, | pa hi. tl icreci

rt cd bj maroon, « inl.-i th< iri ■«• \ an ;i i fed rooJ boohm arc Mn). is k-M, rtninoa and I The tic rod* Acroi the

building add '<< Eh< appearand of tho roof rather than defend

■ni of ii i 1 1 1 i i I < i'" 81ft. by

1 7 i with i -■■• i wv vt\tr\\ncp Tliii room ton* boon built apeciallv

IBll MIV

>\ the art cIom i adcatn, there being fom mii light gn&tightfl in it. llic (loo 1 1 i (■■Ihiui are composed of wooden brick* w w duo the 1 1 i - to i i ini nuni, and torn whole baildfn

pitch-piac lojr»j :-" thai if BuLeddei ihooJd

unfort d iti way to this port ion ol the il ial ■■• i. h cm

bo a ill uli yi iili.

\n . ..ii\ itatonicnt vn msi Ic diivina tho mtcat, t-

;li> m- win. .1 ■'-■■I Ii- |mi|1 ni the Btcktutorj

vourublc to tin udovtion. Then the mow r sue] it,' powor ■...:;■ dono i w .v wil h in can

Thill ;VT I > mo . I:< i III ) ( : \<\r h> t',i\ Lllll. in 111"' i"v-A tf L\lW\\V

laj i n tl mi onn where.

IW

pi our tinn-mir*.

ontafda tiio district are allowed to borrow- for a subecrtpi Ion per year for each pea-son.

>A1.I1;1 .NT.AR MaXCHJBSTBB.

Tin-, little Kiilmrt-iKj i '|i.<kIihv inwo-itiip uifh l> &O0U i>ooplO . . 1 llii- ijii.'sT.ioii of i'vi:ili!iKliini; i ml fr4lTpp i .-. r.i I r ff iry OJ

public' meeting on February ih( [890, The Rev W Edward i di ick, the \ tear of Sale, vigorously ub oatad he adoption of the \'(i- He pointed oul thai the population d tho<

is rijiiill#y in •■■cnMiitr rhnl the proportion nf tin1 ]MH)iiI:iMon who

read Eb also Rowing; ""' thai as long as men ana women ire content i«> raoiaiJi Ed :i condition of ignorance It i* well fiopotosi i' Lttempl to rai»te their moral and social eondlrJon Tlie taste for knowledge. Information, Inquiry, thought— in one word, fur light In a UiKtc which those having the of 1 in- common! t> :d heart muni do all iu their power i"

I'toh-i .i-iil iMilli\ ilr. .-\ jiniilii- riHulill^-roott) in :m Ultold b009

iu tlic rtoiKioy ri;iss— ;i place, that u, where iiu'\ can read the daily papers, tbcbettl magazines, and whore, free of i-uM, in ta evening when the day's worlc b over they etui inform them- wlves of the current rnoreoiento of thought and life, and where, free from the temptations tm tdeot to some other places of public resort, then can pan many a pleasant hour in the hnproveiueni ol their misas. There is no more encouraging feature >\ than the evidently widespread desire to continue the educution after leaving echool. The hearty welcome given to the "Natioiud rXome Bending Union," and Hie rapid success with which It h 1- me! .lull;, attests the truth of what If i<v Public Library provides the meani and opportunity for thii satf- culture. It rnnnahea a wide choice of il»'- beat titcran

1 ntifie woi'lcn, hnth of ihe prewiit and of the past Promises I I

tin* extent of 6864 were made, on condition thai the Acta were adopted. Dl this .-in n 1 3ir William Ounliffc Brooks, M.r,

firomiHoci k'JfAK and a jdot of load for o site was offered bj W r 5. W. Jovnaon and his brother. This adjoins the Local office «, and bo will be rery central. Every facility waaglvi 1 the demanding ol n i»'ll, but no one availed I I tl

offer.

SiacEwanuRY,

v.'sbury hofi not made much noise with Its library. T references 1 1 It in the local press are not numerous, The i were adopted to 188a, and the library was opened in |m*5, The huildtoffj which comprises library and mum-um, H admirably adaptea lor the purpose. The sum of £2,000 was ibtamod on l»:in lroin tho i i-^t';, . ind this i% rather a burden upon the rata whiel produces £476. Kor & population ol UB,4?8 the number ol bcoVsfi noal , reaching ordj 0,796. rheaversgedi i

I borrcra »r 10 1 s 300 volumes. A glanee at tlie rein rua anu

partiadarMffiyon in chli volume will show that there are towns

uTer neon 1 vhle.riha.ve ^\arger ^octecA w^,v.g,anda

I

n DUi i iuu.wmi 1 J mi. Mil: a-.i . 01 JSTtU . '-"

v. i v n.tuii forger turnover. The difficulty of maintaining two i library one1 d museum, on ■•> penny rata i-1 penecfcly

i'li':ir, mid ft permj for «Wlh ahoaU bo permitted vi.-i-f there am

u n ioetltutiona Cfaemnwuxn is in the mind-* <'t honoraryonrntor i, In take ii VGBy active interest in it8 work. It is visited daily \ \ large number <>l" people. Thi> i* the only instance in the county M,>. ; rloptiori of 1 1 n.i Arte tlin.- far, and it would he •■' i.'orJn^LT :m«!

loourajrmg tosee it in ©very way u ancceai. Shrewsbury has such a good record behind it oi earnest municipal life, that tho lack of public interest En He library and museum in thcKoeduoutional days mould ""i be eontinned in mob wealthy town Qicre bUou d be Mini 1 1 \- about clearing ofl the remaining <i«-i»i , and so hit tin fncubu* from iif rate, n annum won" for nan vigour being infused into the work, when it i* seen thai within three months

ind up to id i ■■ February, 1890, <>i Che debt <>i £2,000

ii much a* £1,600 had been promised in donations, and the

Iroiulae* <-i annua] mihscrfptions reached fist). Many methods :i i- iirrii adopted for augmenting this fund, bui few of them ,i boon more pleoatng than thai employed by Mrs. '•. B. l.iov.i I'm-. 1h\ eoncelved the Idea "i giving n eoneerl In Buppori ol the iHirury, and so oblj wan the Idea oarrled oul

*l :ii i Eanh1 inable aufffeuee Ailed the Eflirowabury Music HaU, and wcTf rnini i ned with vocal and instrumental music of the mod cnarml on disaoiiptlon. The proceeds of tliia eoueeri produced ibonl toO. Willi more hooka and the use of the whole inuume, i!r present turnover shown very clearly what could he done. Viie 4.571 volumes in the lending department were lent out ten he 'ii m Eseaefi in Ui&t section being 17,044. Tin* can wis i iiteritiUy aid the work in Shrewsbury, mid

; i: I - i mid .ii once be secured. An enhanced public i.ii CTWl

auld be aire to Inflow .

SMBERWXCCi

!j.i. ■: ewhere there ia i - vy tor more space for tbo branah

adiif i"1 present nuartere are an many occasions

-i Dnrlnj theyei '•- volumes have been bought, at

.mi averagi Goetoffla 3d. pel boot II. vpori reem-dH that four

i i . were lost. One went amissing under exceptional eireum-

" l i" man to wh<un il w:\< lent havtag accidentally fallen

t.i the .'Mind daring n dense fog. The oomnal I iriderately

detcrrn nod not toenforee replaeeinent in IhiNease." ii Ib t>> t»c omed that 1 1 1 - pom man managed in get out olive, If the boolc

i : recovered. The utlin ihr-i- !k mica were poid 1'or by

i- borrowers. Tin's serves to llluntmte the erxnd hook^lcaafilng

. oat in al i mat* ratabHaliinenta. Tlie rujxirt given a Iwl m

bookti added during the year. Ttiia i-. m improvement on

i imi-I'm: in he numlier of HtatiM i<-> usually give i to annual Mtiiiw iik w .iii ;N riiirriiin.uv ;inti two branch rem in t> [ionny rate, The sixpenny inn:. Lc dvci -'(".' nugee, and ih bound in *till

u in IIiiAlcrn'A in"1 R. \. \^r«\Wa\wuY* AV-

tec

I'i"Hl I' r.IDftAKlBS-

cateloKtu i>i ■■) - i I- 1 1 til i.i . :>ini Mr. B&ilujr, Ihi lil>m n, into

ujErutulati d upon 11 . aot onlv tor the ijw 111 j >l thi bat E n ii" "in ibex oi c w ni i

W AI.HAI.I..

WhImiI! h fortunate The profit* on the local (pwwrrrki!

property "I bfaa Corporation, paj Mu'ir Sc1i<k»1 BobiO rate. Ifn

town k comparative^ IWtfly taxed, and the people are wilUn pin more than the penny rate ft»j their Public Library, hul ill

1H-H i\ iImv muat remain until they girt thcii Local [mpr ivpmenl nil passed. There in >ue branch (ibran bul more hinnclio

d, and under tin pruwsnl income tlicj < Lnnol U- provided One of the local newspapers ecentlj put tin in tt« plthfl) ami there la reason u LblnV that ti expressed the riewa ii-i\ large numbci »i the people. The paragraph in uiw rtntcd .— 1:> express rcatrictiozu of tfti statute the Pabll I al ..iniiutt. i can tuki no more out of the borough rate foi Public Librart purposes than iL d the C per annum, Thiaha 0eemen li im mi arbitrary, an Enjurfoue, and on an i: mi i.i aa prelaws then is no restriction put upon tin- council in i! matter of il ordinary > xpenditure for purposes Minotioncd by law, excepting the expcnditnn incurred for the rpeoift oh i d - E lb< hioh'r i.ii raric lei Ltmaylx I ial 1 1. .

Hid nnvf;i|.nr WCTC t'rii\ fOftt QffO, looked UpOU UkIuxui ••

|>e hiUri: iii moderation. But booki nod new paper i i

i i ;, ui cm <.:.i!;. life, and i librar an holes n mu u h

position hi public estimation than i taitehor or n cook, boj

cm ling i. Ii Erjtimuti and honourable Rnl an m aj ha rolntcft to looa] luxation the peopli un nxc I n Iw ii" Impoj m M- »im « irfiont, then i m i u on wlv imitation to the ponding tower of a Public Library committee,

o Ctovn Council for Public Library pnri , houK note

There ' consensus of opinion in Walitalfthat ii" inotltuti the town ib o J greater benefit to the public than the li

room, and thai benefit is inoal mi^ii) unci unobtrui !■■ i:i I •■)■!( <i und sua quietly enjoyed, r - is proved t\v the fact thai ;.(»n borrowcra, on< ibout J.OtKi poopli vi I tb> Hbrariei uxd bo* It will i

rii -I friends <i this movement ' digest thai tot no

-.mumIci- Hiniir iin.'i' or four mi: io ild I * u

:i branch to be c tablwhcd in their midst. Tho librarian, Mr Alfred 3Iorgantsendan copy of the i '. roll printed

an<l in clou type

\\ i i TSABUBV.

W i ■■!!.■ :i'iuv v, hated . mi ti d

With i i - ,:<i on ol orj . ! i,000 I he i i irnitti c irr d il i

bi ' •■• h'i o ''.it.' which brfnu i i" : ' '. ^'J".

l!uv. 0] : hOW li-' l>00n .1: i I ' i I.- i.u:-<- .ill : i|tli(iiH .,

'i'T dui'iTin th< In \ hofw I t

PTTlI.Tr r.TTmtniB* IX rilW Mlhuvn < v,i NTTFA

101

.tni; | ;») h b [he very success of these libraries

uii; tnslcvs It dlfllcull >• keep pace «iiii the InoreaalnK

i|i-|ii:M;i|.s lll.lllr lijmti , \,r '. . I is . In- Ii'i:i i.il :u:il t III' Hhfih i'.s

which Iibvc i" Iwh* tho brunt hi the poverty ilia in his

and il her in tho loss of new bookM which would

otherwise Lvxnu i<> theur Ai SVednesbury, ihe librarian, Mr,

Thomas Stanley, has tab ly begun a subscription library. Forty

ii icra ham joined a( a guii i i year, md the

1 «■ '• « U - wtD, aftei twelve months' use, come to the rublfi Library.

The tlbran forms u pari of .1 prottj block of buildi igs 1 oraprising

una library. Those wore opene to B78 With 9,007

rolwnee tho turnover readied "COTS volumes. Thv committee

1 for gifts 1 1 books, especially those that bear upon the

u 11i.1l pursuit* "i (Ik: neighbourhood, and topographical

works reJatans. to the town of Wcdneeburyacd tht isi.h k Country

generally. The repeal bin ■<<■•:<■• md art 1 nam shows thai

1 of 103 ttudent* eighty-seven irere examined, who took, four

juo n [tIkcs, 11 1 1 council prist e, fourteoa tirat-claea ecrtifi«atc«,

b id 1 1 itj -three Mseondn 1 iah cortdrlcatcfl,

WOLl UUtASKROXi

in 01 <■<••■ .-' da] movement, WoWerhampton exhibit* s detox

i; t . Lcoop abreast > 1 iii" times. \ rooaonablo hope may

pre sod thai !.■■"■. i. many yean have passed the townwlD

handsome1 new building adapted i" the growing requiro-

' the library ITiocaB upon the newsrooms Is especially

1.' and frequently there iv. not » vacant chair. The reading

il»|i-' woi'O : •■'•i;il.\ dOflig LOd I \ Mr. John l\llii<t, llir CQUrtOOUfl

1 1 on« ibrar on. Those or 1 abi u1 -■ fee long, with tnd "ii those is the periodical in a fixed poei- >n i.v moam oJ 0 brass rod running down tne middle of the bUcntlon, and nrev* uting the reader from removing ii \ *:i!jje he cop of the tnl Le hai painted 01 H the name of \c tenodica This fepa be whole room orderly, and the J g tables n led by readers from end to id '■ trig This part eular form ol 1 ible d< eano doubt

[he reader from hitting from paper to paper, but perhaps: little Trying where the sipjhi is nol particular^ g iod -1 iii.tn.:ii] nev borrowere the ages were distributed u follow* i r< 1 1 fourteen to twenty, W6; Prom twenty- one to fifty, -Ji.">: over fifty, 37 1 age* nol given, R*. Three 1 iod red '.1 : !•'•.«' new hnmiwers were mMianfos ind ari Two special features of the work .it Wolvcvharnpton are the irt.in-> and ilii'i". .-ii ; i' rlssscs. Thrllhrary has w>- ! <■■ iMhllshed position w n nantn il e fnlnircthioatlonal work. Its olansos 1 contlnuutiou srlmol. and Die eomjnvfienMlve aliaraotiar of nentlonal pitarnunme ol ^ach winter tuts well earned rotr i(.

ie liner till l'i ( : |'I> ■'• '.'lil'i >-'<■. A iIku; .li( I' t'MUt fl'dlll

\ c Plowden, M.I'.. and one ol ei-V) rom thcli Mayor,

in Jnarpli .1mim->. aiileil (<> e.sUblitsIi l ehon *' « >.■■.'.' il ■. .

wtitoh in- been iv*«/J i/-.c'/. A metnllurglra\ V-i\hivMhyn Vhtvtsw \o

193

ii iii.n: i idiiaici i'.!

rds whiuh tin -iiiii .i <; ..mi in ... [j , , i,,.,.,,

? remised i'v :> local jentleuia i I ' i i I thai iin-

lyunotl will nndur too i""-. ■■■ i>l too Technical Instruction \<t,

I --!'. m:iL< a I ii'h'.h.! | |fl a pftHl I' 9 B 'd tl Q > IV d lOO tUld fl

kOOl ■!■■.;. . which WOUld 061

practical and beneficial bcsrSag upon the trade* d

district rheee evening * J :t- - « - grow in populaxifcj «uii each

j u inter, and En *■■ npli hi a i of i verj

faction diameter. More than ordmarv Interest :)- shown in the operation* of thin Peoploi College, oniefly owlnn, to fth

interest ovin I by the ibrori d mil bin committee In their

extension

h \ti.;:i-.. last ho rubers el the Public Lie all

and archaeological departr: dean ixaursloi to Laploy, 1

pi waul ido In brakes through sylvon Manary.rlou In i''»iiugo, .mil rnddj wil i the I -;i I •;•< >l uitumn, brought the part} to I destination. 1 he Ural \< he el urel .

til the hmrl.Tii:!i ri'iiltir.v The party WiiS r*OUduot«d th; ■■ it bj tin 1 CI t B i I I '■" '■< talli DJ H..

tnd history, : ' -1 also mcI II died tho | or ol

t! i ctn pel . written upon parchment. and "liifinjr from » d 1688 Other places u Interest were visited, and the taken on

iin lawn of the vlea-ra^e Vfler ti*a a i>h|»w upon tho M flora ol the Mldlanria" wan rend to th# part) rhe paper was I

with Home fifty s]KTinitM)'; id plant*, nml gsvvr Bl lOCOUnl Ol the

principal Howertow plant* or crypto rl An* ir da; plan

phsnerogain*, mel within tlie matrlcl <>i theMWlanoa \ ten weeks aftcrwardt the members ol the clasMsi In mi

ppUed mechanics, and steam, ar np&nied bj their

teacher, visited the piirapl i i an fines of the Mines Drain

inera al Bradley lboul Rfty students avalta lalree

( f he privilege gr.uit<--l

The Siiiunhiy < wrum- i^ikvi^ in connection v.th hhfl I b

are becoming ijuite an Institution, \ uotniunl < li: i ir :m

admission, and Infill tho vocal tuiil instrumental music I

of i 1 1 1 t-r l order Sia hundred in i u uvenuie attendance a-i I

The series of Qilchrfal Bciencc lecture* have been verj NucceMrful

during tti** past winter. Lord vVrwth»lcy, In prerfdlDfl M

te iturebj Profeaso M . ll.-<m the Life :i

hi hope* he would !"■ permitted, as an outaider.te n

moment in (in- Public Library oi

wa died « tl at ich interesl bhegrcal nroKrcec and development

which that Institution I A mode, awl he ventured l<

tn

think Che

audience present would, ii appealed to, by

m tji i .: I pTi In h* '■ stimon) as to U - mln. w.n. li ihc . .^.1 ftrona it, n hon flit the < the Lihrar i

ased their claim tipon Uiclr in'atiludc fur idwi \Syiujt tiinn-

>i-lv.-.\ witl i in important educational trcate - . tad afforded

through the course of lectures now in profireaa.

X-' wonder that the work i Wolrerhampton ihould liarc

caught hold of the people, percolating us it does into their

nmi.TO MHUAKEKS IV THK MIM^Mt rOlWHRS

19?

cnt

and rdiic.-iiiinin! life to so large an evt-iit. 'I'lu* Improvement Bfll about which there was so much discussion in Wolver- haiiipiuii. ami of which such a handle wan made hi aoma towns ■gidxwt the adoption of tiie Public Libraries" Acts, referred chiefly bo tin Municipal School of Art, oiul Art nailery. Pictui'i'N t.> tiie raluiQ of 620,000 were bequeathed bo Lhe town, and it was to provide * suitable buUdiogfor these that an additional rate \*:i* iiMiinl necessary. A pcnu> is ntill levied f»»r library purposed, and an extra halfpenny, under the Improvement Act, for the art gallery. Unfortunately there are many who object to uU rates ou prtncipJ ■. and who. when a library rate is proposed, pour out the rials oi their wratn upon the proposal, and frequently tlie most untruthful statements on made by these Opponent*.

YVoactssnsit.

Tlic work horo has long; boon erlbbod, cabined, and coufiw sd lhe present rooms are much too small, and great difficulty in experienced in ttorlngUie books. But after much discussion'nnd rery sarefuj consideration of plans the oonamittoc are about bo sreet a building to accommodate the library, museum, nrt gallery, and achools of art and Science. The whole of these institutions will Im» under the control and management of the l'uhlio Library ooxnmittee, and antroorted under the Libraries and technical I Qstrnetfon Ants. There can bo no doubt that such a combination dueational institutions win be of the greatest poaaible benefit

tha «'Uy. and the Town Council of Worcester have acted wisely [] deciding to curry out such a scheme. The librarian, Mr. Samuel siiiMli, has been, with hi* cintiiiniioi', engaged in forming n

collection of Worcestershire hooks and pamphlets Mr. W, A. Cotton has greatly assisted them In this work to presenting to

e Library 71 volumes nnd L4/J pamphlets, either written by

Worcestershire authors, printed In the county, or relating to w nreeatershfre. Some of riiese date back to 1882. Collector* of literature En oilier districts might well follow the e sample Mr Cotton. The number of local pamphlets ami hooks in ' wis all over the country must be considerable, and the

fid of these to the nearest Public Lftrarj during the lifetime of in- owner, could soareelj dispose of them in a more useful or ppropriatc *wi\. lit Worcester there are 23,000 books for a popu- lation it la.om. Tliis is good, and still better that fiction stands at i cent, oftheissuec For the year the total issue was 79,000, . gives about lj books to every inhabitant. On one day .( September, 1,373 people visited the newsroom, library, and muM-nni. These institutions have many pood and earnest friends in the L count il, and among; those there stand out promin-

. nth Mr, It. W. Btans, F.S.A., of the Worcester Poreeliiin . . and M:'. I. Corbott. The latter gentleman, speaking laid that twenty-five years ago, when scarcely more than

i v, Ik made up hie mind that sonm day or other. If blUnaB

effort could achievs :t, there should bo a Public Library in Worcester. There wore several defeats, and it wra^ol>a&VC£vgft

ii hi.i- nisnAaiB*.

Lett were adopted Wetoeeier in iu^ev home, whicl

wOl »i)on Im-c <• .1 n.ih(\ in ln'icks ami in-i\ Ear, has a brigh

ul future before it, and it* present Sy600 borrowei j vil] then soon swell into u very muoli larger numl«

CHAPTEK XI.

PUBLIC LIBRARIES IN THE EASTERN COUNTIES.

IIK work is <I<'v«.'l(»|ii r\ slowly in the Eastern

< Viuiiik'H. Lincoln hoe Dot :i ein&lti one in the entire

county. Norfolk has two i » n.v. Suffolk ono, Ease* Irwo, The other counties, Included in these briel notices under this chapter i»' the sake ef simplification! ore E

K< til, SUftSeX, ll:ini|)-li:rr, find IJvrkuhiiv. In k.-i I .i;n! Sun .

liar, the movement make* but very slow progress, and ih a mountain ol work to be done before then counties are v eg over Co the movemem

TUiekim. Bssjjt),

Barlring, with it« population of 12,000, boa the distinguished honour "t being the are! place u Esses to adopl the A. I ■.. At tlio end ol 1888, by o majority ol four to one and by means of voting papers, the question won settled. There w* ro manj tuvnoet workers) and coo gre i\ success in securing the nd< ption wo - ow ine to the excellent organisation, Messrs. W. Beavcra. PP. \V. ci.Miny, .1.1*., i j.- . •■■■■■ JaokBon, and Mr. Mi boh i torso tiled theh forces w I . and thfl town was divided into district* and acti <-:imv;i-. ad. Hence the reaeon why more than tho arorege nn

ut i':ite]vvy.?rs v.ti'il. In .March, LtWO, I :■ mporoi'V rei OCI ■_

com! >ri:ihi\ fitted up :mri furnished, wa« opened. and baa boon

Open M nil Week «l:ivs Iimiu ten a.m. to elevi'u :r nL-M. i

iii\ now Homo 887 in the lending section, which was opened En

Muv last, \\iih an ii me "i C275 there is every proapool of

useful work. < oleheeto? and Chelmsford wfl] now novo to set

Ihiur Imim' i i nrder.iir rlii-v u ill !«• left hi'hlnd in this riwiveiiient.

in both places the question has been cHsaossed.

Bubstvouk a iplendtf owprniiniton brought about the adoption ol the Let* herein therolddlOQl laal year Mr 1 1 W. Williams, with asti aonnnlttoe, had no Intention of permitting r.he question to

.,i meeting* and arousing public Interest. A little legal

dlUiciitiy W iftfl pri »r Ii llir rvrm Ig of I 1111 NtUl I'nh

iiir i totofthe public notice ualu'ug the meeting wiw an Inttma Hon thai compound householders were not entitled to i thta woa the question npon which the last movornenl In Bren ford f vi I mm:', came a ffrlef, on eminent Queen's Counsel was consulted, who said dial the Loon] Boards advisor was wrong in bis & o ; "i ol the law. Tlie learned gcutlemai: \ a .

pruur irnnsniK* tv thr ttarterv ronsTTFS.

1P6

engaged m a e*ise of g BlffliuU nature two years ago, in which the authorities of n resti-y «»f the City of Loudon refused to receive the rot* of b tenant te the. cfty i ecauee ie compounded with his land- lord for lite rates. Despite the (act thai bne opinions of eminent him supported (he action of the authorities, the Court of Queen1* Bench held Ghat a man waa entitled i<> a voir if he mM rates, whether directly Ot through his landlord. Ah reported in another chapter, eminent legal authority laid it down that com- pounders could not rote, and in many places the question lias been on tliia one point. The I Iri ydon case solved the difficulty in Brentford, and the town rink -•! (hat place eeut the following letter;- "Town Tlnll, Croydon, June 11, 1889 hi reply Io your

letter of this date, the case of the AttoPney-QeoexaJ v the

i and Corporation of Croydon is to be found in the Law Reports. The decision <-f Mr. Justice Stirling does not ner.es- aarilv : pp \ '•-> place which i- mil :i mm iripnl borough, but I should think it quite likely that when the attention of "< !<• -.-:.! adviser of Tour Board is called to tho case, he might modify

opinion winch, in the abaance of the case, he might hnvo

formed. ITooifl faithfully, 0 M KuSOBOOOH, Town Clerk." When QueenAa Counsel and the lesser lights of the legal peo- li'.ion give diametrically opposite opinions ordinary mortals may be expected to lincf Boxna difficulty in interpreting these l>:i'lly VOfdfld Acts. lne Arts ware oantfod with enthusiasm, and in January, JW*),

ii pening ivreiuony took place. Tho conversazione tor I his

pleating Object was in every wny successful. Mr. James Jligkind, M.r., performed tho ceremony. M:<ny Liberal gilts of money and books flowed in, and the library il now Id fall operation

UniQHTON.

Brighton hafla local id dating back to I860, enabMnff them to h \ \ :i rate for I brary and other purposes. This was amended by another Act In 1876. The Pavilion rate, in which the library and museum nre situated, is id., and this produces about tJ ,.".!(). Pot sewn! .\i;u>. ;i I n-;il xturro has waged about the Public i ,ibrary The reference dopai l ment wan opened i'i 187S, and some of iln more active spirit* of the Town Council and among the residents have ever since that time been agitating for a [ending section. Thin, however, did not become an established foot until but October. * '< i unns upon columns of matter have m eared in tin- ticii! pre v. respecting the library, and the reports »f several of the dl Kmsaana in tho Town Council as to whether there should be ►lending library oc npy as much as four columns of cIomIt printed I type It li dountful whether another town, except perhaps a id comply such an example of two opposite con- tending foi'oca vigorously fighting the mutter out to the bittO] i ii. celebrated watering-place, which boars the name M ii'o. But the principle was worth fighting for, e Is due to those members of the Town Council v^aa championed in so ablo a manner the cause oi the YCO&nfe aftcjAwk.

196

PCBI.IC LIDRARIE9.

of tfao Brighton people. An argument very frequently M forward at watering piaoee, whore it ifl sougl ■■ the A. te,

is that u Public Library weal the private Bubecriptloo

lihmricK UliS Statement was ndnuKvd in r.righrnn, and in n |-i\

bo it Mr. W. J. .Smith, the ha keeJlot >i North Street, sna a

memhor of tho library cummin. •■■, nn\,\ : "I hnvc --nt down a

contribution d! L,900 votanec bo the library! Bnd if it once started tod placed under propei ■• _ -in. i.t i shall do what I

en for tho library in ttM future. But the primi i\ i bjeot musl not bo lost sight of: that is, tho provision of literature, ir we cannot dispense honks in e huildmg which wo should like, wo must do wwb what aoeonunodatSon we can get. Tin- nun ol £3,000 would purchase lfl,UX) volume*, reckoning thorn at !&. 6 volume, Thia, with the books we have, would form n wr\ serviceable library."

"Mi- D B Friend, the well-known librarian and txM.ikRellor.ot \\'i ntern Road, is another member «»i tho trade whose duly avocations do not narrow his opinions on a subject where tin- benefit of others besides himself is concerned. " ' h course there fire BJie BQbacribers in private tftuarles." he unid, "who would take advantage of the opportunity to gel their books for nothing", when i i ■■> i'i afford to pay for them not of their own parse, Rut, I don1! :iuiiri|>.i.u' thai the establishment nfu Public Trending Library would have any disastrous eituuls on private enterprise I am decidedly in favour of (be movement myself. \\ hat traders Lost hi one way they gain in another, The tierustd of hooks leads to adealra lot Lhe& aeo^alaitioa, and this desire once implanted in oat often eliminated, It Brows by what it feeds on." On September L2, 1*73, the building waa opened to the public by tbe Major as ;i library, picture gallery, and museum. The back- boni of ii"" coHectioo was 3/XIO volumes of tho ISbran of tin Roy. II, V. Elliott, presented by hih Hiirvivmg sun, and ",000 rolun t< B of the library of the lloyal I-it -m;t r* and SrientihV Institution, presented by tin- pvopri^rary. In the sixteen years wrrtco elapsed stoee the opening many donations have bea mode, both large and small, and of very different value. From the dny ol nvenintr till October ln*t, mm nlro;u.lv Muted, tl in libmry

was cxehiHiv.'l\ a reference library, not as containing only booVfl rtf reference properly so-called, but from the fool thai the public

Wore privileged to read the books only in tho library room* and not to take them away to read at home. Within mere r.-.-i nt vol db it was widely felt that this indiscriminate restriction of books to the library rooms mu prejudicial to the ii bott library and readers. It was not only inconvenient to numerous habitual readers, but it deterred n largo nimbi i i wo ild-be readers, who would have h«on pud in take books a* in to rea) si i oiq*i from malting use ol! the library *1 all; nnd ft lao fell bj those who wi re Loquainted with tho oonteati Dd toe library and the wants ol modern readers, thai i the i eaec library wore to be transformed Inl n tending library with /'/i nroBpeot of succetw, it would U* uecmtarj |.« i i 'hose

PIULK; UIIRADII-h IN TUU EASTBUN' COTWIES,

197

oontonts, i i uabh udeod &i hoy wore, a lar^c supply of modern

literature, and itpeeinUy w 1 1 1 tctSan, m which the library

of the past was sadly deficient . for a library which trusts entirely

I i | . -i I dOH ■»! iODfl :m<l 18 not . ri'i"i*n:torl la i Kyteinafie pUTOhftU

di bookfl Dp to flute, necessarily stagnatus. During the last three years more than one lending library scheme, involving either import ml standard alteration* in the profienl tunes or :in entirely new bonding, baa been suggested, discussed, and Hie I silent ami iii.jmI ntaWtloua of these scheme* roe tha Jubilee Schrane of 1887. Tha Mayor of that year asked

tin* Brighton public for £10,000 or the erection <»! :

m. -I .»riil building, and tlie nirnHhing it with hooka; hut

in answer to the appeal onlyaboul £3,400 was subscribed, It

whs none the IfiSH I'dr. by the Jubilee committee that it would be

(i pity Co law the opportunity of pn riding the nucleus of i Public Lending Library In the town, and the Mayor sent to each sub- scriber a letter asking whether the MibHcriber was willing that his sabscrfpLion should, under the circumstancea, be applied bo tin- purchase of suitable Liuuk.s and bo providing littiuga for their

reception in son I the present premised. The remit of the

ofayoife letter and »»( serine subsequent negotiaftkoie of a Jubilee

sulM-oininittCf1 wa,i This, 1 h?it I ho cummiHcc w; ..*• ennhlrrl to hand

to the Town Council about £1400 to defray the cost of

.■- ,. i l the i i i- hiiEM oi i ooks. This sum did not include Mr.

II li,n k*B subscription of Ci.000, iuasmuch as he had indepen- dently and previously, at the end of October, 1688) oenununioated

to tfle liht-iu-y ■■ -mtii itt.--- hi- intention (if applying bjs -iiiKseription to the purchase ol books, n id his desire that the committee should at once make out bata OS books to purchase. The library com- mittee upfioiuted a sub-committee of selection, composed of Mr. VV". J. South. Mr, F W Madden. librarian, and II. J. Mathews, and the work ol the fonnation ol the lending Ilbrais wn.* started. The total number of books hi the Brighton I'libhe Librutv U < tit these, \7fiU ore in the Victoria lending library. The whole o the old library, comprising; forty cases, woe examined book by hook. Books which belong properly to the referenoe ere removod to that department : a load ol useless books was eliminated and transferred to the rooms upstairs: and the and review*, numbering 1,500 volumes, which WBW chiefly In the "ooms, were brought together and placed in the lend- ing binary The ntimboroi book* In the refers i ■<• library is 13,244, The few month* which have pawed KJnee the lending library waBOpuUed have iimro Minn justified the prophecies ul tfiOse who havetaki n iij theijnoHtinn. About 420 nook* ar^ distributed each day, .irxi he i for borne reading. The number of actual

4-(>rs iimik' the lending section in 2.87J Brighton baa now .; Itself hi line, and hue commenced its true Public Ubran : i-iv he vfuh'.i wiri confidence thai a few years v. fi wUflrr to UluNtrste to tliM gentlemen whoopposed thoscnenie that > 1 1 m » weiv noting prejudicially to the real weNiaafcdl

!"-

Kl'UUC L.IBHA1L1KV

f-ASTBIlDiritY, I'oLKBSTOSK, AXD .SnTtN&nOtTlNK.

iii library nl Cantab uv dates back to 1835, but II ma not

until I&> thnt it was taken over by the '. irporatiOD. I:

museum ami library combined] and hence the reason why the coiuiiii: i' » have not boonnbloto provide the ieto< w Hi more Hi hi ."v'tU) volume*, I'll*- -iii In issue aliout ]oo, and I advancing. In the early part of lost year an offer m ret from an old Canterbury resident, l>r. Ik-uncy, of M< 3

for thy I'oblio Ubrary.and i&clttdi a working-men's institute. In March, 1S8U, when the quo

discussed in tho Town Council, it was determined tlmt a [otter should bo sent to it, Beaney tniggesUna; that, oj | no need f<>r iin.iriicr institute C&nter bury, the oily would be ii ii benefited, and hie namo brought into permanent conn v iii tho place ol nil birth, it ho would awe thorn .< turn ! ii i i. The entire loiter Best to Melbourne Is a piece of the coolcal presumption that ffe think i>:*h been ever known In o w th Kucii a proposal, a distinct offer wn« mado for one thing itl be done. and this offer Is treated Indifferently, nnd sonn-thi quite another character is pat before the gentleman mnktai , and the offer b now withdrawn, i - I deserved to '«• mere D old mi -ii ii m charge thai tho cathedral cltle* are, in municipal And educational luntitntionii, far behind other towna, ami thnc ia much truth in the statement. Canterbury, in it* action oTor 1 1 ■. i ^ offer •<> build u Public Library a* s new l Cor tlie BXlattng our. iiluMrutcn this point very clearly. TV nd- dent will serve ;im u mwI'iiI lnwM>n to other places, when then offer to build them j new Public Library, to accent ii. ux spoil the in tt_*m jul: donor'i mind by foolishly suggesting soine- trting different The Corporation evidently thought tfiat b

ling for their nobli nerves was of inJlmi'-u mo simj than a suitable dwelling tor books and museum objecta, There should bea little library education infused into the mm ' .' ; 11-1117 ' '"i i"'i >ition, and if tin < > N-m t>ri< -- .it the cathedra -will Idndlytake this matter in hand they will accomplish b necessary and us* ml work.

Folkestone rejoices in .i new building, which was opened bj 6li Edward SVotkin, M.P.. In Ipril, 1688, Lie remnrkod, In the course of his nddn -. thai when Lord Jolm Hussell introduced what was called tin Mnincipul Corporations' A.-r ii was ould that ii would Ixi inefficient, and thai tho managcroonl ofevcrybod everybody rdinal »i<<! radical mistake, He (Sir Edward )

thought, however, that they eould look Ml round the municipal boroughs of England without Basing, except in on>- »u- iw< mhy.

they, as human bsiogn, « '- i i sonu ti i <•■- rnako mistake* i i noent monuments of Bueh popular institutions as th»- i : o the' wore oponiag thai day. win would have thought ii po fifty yeai o that an effort ol u :•■ kind would have been

uised by a body oJ '.own councillors sleeted by the pee G the Vablic lAbmj uud \luseum tlie sum

PUBLIC LIBRARIES IN THE EASTERN COUNTIES. 199

£6>SO0 was borrowed by the Town Council in 1888 at £3 16s. per

cex*t. This loan has to be repaid in thirty years by means of

****xual instalments. The penny rate produces £641 13s. id. The

'^oixnt required annually to meet the interest on, and the repay-

™*eot of, the £6,600 borrowed is £364 lis. 4d. There therefore

.e?**a.in8 annually only about £117 to defray the cost of main-

^*,r**i»g the building, providing newspapers and periodicals, and

Pv*5"c™8m8; books for the library. The committee, however,

utVesaw ^n'8 ^fl^'ty* an<* from the first recognized the almost

SSr?** topoaeiWlity of maintaining the town institutions of library

*■»?*■* museum on the one rate; and, under these circumstances,

r*»*? "Town Council have sanctioned the collection of a voluntary

a*h*^ °* an0'ner penny i11 the pound. The building is a great

aZfcl*action to Folkestone, and will be well used by visitors as well

2P Residents. Every watering place might do many worse things

-j?**** imitate Folkestone, which is ahead of Margate, Ramsgate,

0"Ver, Deal, and Hastings. The gross issue last year was 26,197

Plumes, and a large number of new tickets have been issued

*J*J* the new library was opened.

-, q'-^16 Acta were adopted in Sittingbourne in the latter part of

^^V, and in October last year the library was opened. The yield

'^rn the rate is £103, and they begin well with 5,000 volumes for

J^.OOO people. A neighbouring township of Milton was invited,

^'ier the Act of 1887, to join with them, but resolved to wait

jj**"til they could have a similar institution of their own. It will

remembered that, by this Amendment Act of 1887, the public

^?«a.rd8 have the power to establish and maintain lending libraries

. ^tiliout providing a separate building. One of the local papers,

J* referring to the opening of the library at Sittingbourne, has

a*^"<i| us a somewhat new argument. The writer prophesies

j ^t the Public Library will be a great power for good in the

£k ^n. It will provide a fund of pleasure for all who use

£_" It is to be commended, says the paragraph, on "physical

J£* "well as intellectual grounds. Medical experts tell us that the

r J^^in requires light and exercise, and that the state of the mind

l^~^cts on the state of the body ; hence it follows that that which

(^^nefits the mind must also improve the bodily health. To the

t J-lier reasons in favour of the institution of the library, wo may

^*Jerefore add the argument that it is a sanitary measure of the

*"*ghest order." A library on sanitary grounds is capital.

Great Yarmouth.

A three years' experience of their Public Library has made the Yarmouth people regret that they did not avail them- selves of the advantages of such an institution at an earlier date, uie new part of the premises, opened in January, 1889, pro- vides additional accommodation and was erected at a total cost, including fittings and furniture, of about £2,400. These new quarters are very conveniently arranged and are well lighted, warmed and ventilated. A new reading-room 60 feet by 25 feet, has been provided, affording extra accommodation for 100 adult

000

PUBLIC I.IBRAIUKS

renders and shelf-room for 4 ,< x K J more hunks. The lending department is also utilised as a readtag-rooin fop boyaand Rtru between the ages of twelve and sixteen. The people Aetna U v ihm. no oilier library iu the kingdom enjoys the use of *o picturesque and delightful building— to those of an artistic ami aiit-ujuariantuate as that of Great Yarmouth. TheoldTolhouse.in- telligeiiily restored, is nmoM Inspiring place in which tc read, Bail

early in tin- thirteenth century, it liar- served as uoUDCiWohflDlbei

m ip since, save in Later yean when it did duty aa a law court The ancient hold, ox gaol, of great strength, lie** beneath, daily visited as one of the moat interesting Sights in the town. The del "'toiV prison lies just beyond, and both are now dlftWflA The principal entrance to the hull, when? the library]* established,

ies hy an open external staircase, which with its covering of quaint old timbering leadefroin the street rot he first floor. This oXTfl mentis all but unique in En^landj although ii Is apparent by bb »tttdy of other ancient buildings that it was of corn men n- in X trnian and somewhat later times. The fine 1ml! wit i [1

wainscoting and Steal timbered* pointed roof, and its rath&fl wiadowSj ii huttfsnedas ;i reading-roorni butthoal&nosl grotesque

old civic chair el ill stands in its place, together with man} a i

i'iirji'(-ity of I hyjrnne a.u'(\

The official opening "'" ,,,1R extension at oneo orootcd nu immediate increase in tihe number of borrowers and In Um atUii'I:iiH'" :it the reading-rooms. In fact, so heavy was the droll upon the resources «»f the library thai the permanent stall glad ol the help of five townsmen, who, in the evening gave their a^sistanee. In one year there have been added 7,084 volinr.i-.-,

more than haU the number being giits. The total ozboofca la now 10,017, and the issue last year wax 110,438 volumes ia the len

departments. This 1s almost phenomenal considering that the pjipnl.it ion is only 60,000, giving over two hooks to every inhabit- ant in thai year Klghty per cent, of the rending was fiction, but the v i n outti people have not taken fright at tow, tor they seen to be believers in Tennyson's saying that

1 . . . . truth in elosc«t void* Oiall Wlien Truth embodied in a tale Shall entur iu at lowly dootS.M

fail.

The librarian, Mr. Garter, who tame from the Manchester Library, and the committee have devoted special attention tu securing of books relating to the town anil county. H all

miller:- vmmiM do ( In,--, y.> -.u^yeslcd n aiiotber place, UlQ would

rendei a national ai well ae a local service. England Ii .i i -o country, and there is scarcely a towu or a village in it— witli hue exception, perhaps* of some of the recently founded centres of

of industry—which cannot boost of being the birfcbplw Individual or the seem- of some event which entitles it to share d the heritage oi the ages, The volumes issued bj tii* Historical Manuscript* 0ommioaion( and the annual rep rtsol the Depatj keeper ottlto Public Itecords ahooAdbc caxcttuiy scanned bj

1'tttLiC MbBAIliK rfl . -V^ikio i'» MIW,

201

lo<

bo

Ibmrloas, who would frequently find En than compilation* rofer- enceajto matters of antiquarian interest which have escaped the attention '.-von of the most painstaking local historians, ,v gmid [ocal library, in addition bo works of archftolorfcalj historic, and rapiii interest., should atao contain u colln'tani of the bast lUoatrative m the local flora, fauna, geology, agriculture. an<l meteorology.

^The .juvenile deportment bids fair i<> "kvoiiic very popular BO r na the reading-room and lending department arc concerned. -T w i lis, w.n'4.it ■-, unci the watering-places on le South Coast should observe what is boing done ut Yurraouth . 1

IPSWICH.

The adoption of the Acts hoiv took pktoe early in the history of tin- movement, for it dales i- far baeJc as insy ; but tin- library was

BOtOpOOad QB til \pril, 1 -■->-. Tluve separ 1 1 •■ reports are aubmittod

■».> the .'oiumittoe, dealing severally with the museum, lending

library, and schools of BcSflc* and art. With the first ol those

ij i^ it naaaaavrj bo deal ai preseut, iieyond s:t\m,o thai th.>

onfng attendance ;.t tho mnsouna, which Is n particularly good

«»ne has greatly increased during tho past winter. During the last

library your 1.000 volumes wow added, by purchase 761, and by

none, B59. These pnrohssefl had bean chiefly made from a

fund «|n'ciali\ rained for the purpose. As rhe demand for books

far Axeaedea Mie Mippiv, and .»- \<> funds wore iiniilable from

ordinary sources, the committee had ondeaToured to raise £200 i

Seatf for three years tor Hie purpose i xelusfrely of purchasing new aoks, Their uroeaJ was generously reepondei i<>, fnany gentle- iiu-ii promising £B per annum for three years. The number of volumei noa iu the library is 4,071, and thenumbei of readers f), so thai there arc nol two kioIc* for each reader, Some of t he hooka have bean issued Bfty times during the year. Oil m ige twenty-five require rubimliug or repairing everj month. in Jinn.-, i-\-n, the annibei i>n^nk> issued «iw(«ii) yo.'i. in June,

ie 1 i'.'.wj. The l.iw>t number issued ia Hig

oonth wjis En M.mii. 1689, when the books borrowed were

v C.000. The total number of iswea for tin year va« 4-J,oJ4.

inunittec express their regret that the demand For novels

•i largely in r\n->- of other and more useful literature, hut

ilK deluded all worki* of fiction, which, in their

neat, woul< nave u teudency to demoralise the minds of

n order to Increase the attractions and usefulness ol

M irary, the committee purchase all the new books they doom

C "tillable oi. rtoon tun they arc published. A catalogue of the vulu- ii i. ol books in the reference library has recently been mated. WO then was n parochial library in Ipswn-h, of es. chioily theolntfieal in thou- character. Many low valuable as being; first edition* ol oX)\orvreM '•• books, Topcgruphicul and ontiquniian books &ko.Uww&

ice:. I |i:ijh<) - : \\-\\ \,., | Mil *gt\ * -mi. rl from

'. hop " 11

ring :r:

'

prsuc uBiuftxu ix tiik easiksx corsmna.

joy

i: I? easy, hi remarked, to conceive esses where It ould be hard to «aot a peoalty . bnl sue! sxtrean ion tagencics bile Libraries ihoutd riak, which after all would bo b very t srHing oost without abasing their power and Becking bo mnka

l**;iIliT.< mil'iiii* And UncqUIU llGtwixt nm :i atid man, Til*' taltfk ot

' "1 >t!iini]iL' gUi Html. ■!■:. i- ■■■;illv not i hurdi-n.iuiiio one, in. <l il would

i bromo ease wliero uuyone desiring to doc* Bio ;i !■■ i-

r-* »wv oouid not n i 1 1 i ha requisite requirementa m this dire

! 1 1 ill fir time ih fart approaching when the production ot a rain

onazon to oil the privilege* of a Public

I -Ibrary, sad guarantor! will be the exception una ool the rule.

'1*1 il- three departments are atrong: and healthy, nnd the work

»*,!. together Hi tpawleh \a » -nnd biittrowH ot the Public Library

i »■» <.vr>iii 'ii( in 'ho Kctfltern Count ios

Nonwi -ii.

\ rovnamar! wrum^r from Nurwirh *a\s ihui he ran ivmh ial>or

til,- cfanewhea the Norwich Library seemed the At haunt of ghoala

"! -hi m i. Hut now, lie Bays, the place to seething with tlfi, and

^vcry i ■!.■ ,.'.'ii:n;r \. ■: .! ; ie people of Norwich, are learning more

* ojh te appreciate their valtw ifc iMioknrio Till** in a well-earned

I, for on the evening or the present writer'}* visit the

fill .i peopi In every department. A little wh b

**f<<i the eoTiunrUee net Khemaelves Urn t;isk of obtaining wnne

"SOo i for the juvenile department. This the) accom-

(U ii September, 1880, the work of distributing the

■I I fa among the eJernontarj ncltools of the citycom-

i! Tin* riuinlw of books purehaaed amounted tu jliout

JO . II i j ! ted »ilh a snevial regard to their

tircnoHB and intcrcii for isehool children iu the udvan I "*irnla;'i-. The loicest work* «>f [in- world's authors are re- ed ii the rut itiifrne of the library— the modern mil Un- bare alike been laid under contribution. The

"'"' i. v books aupposed to enforce some sickly attenuated

'Tens hare boon rijrorouely banished, Works of action at* Ifl

k| *"<»»! | ice, history, and travels are not by n iv

ireacnti d. 11 selection U an admirable one,

?**<! itn power of meeting the must likely demanda upon it may

ed by the fad that il include* no fewer than twent)

' 4 m * if « i .I'M.- Lord r'auntlorov.' The work whioh tho uompara-

II outlft} * l! i mill tic Public Library to perform will

:'i the fact thai the hooka which are Iteinur put

list ion are sufficient to mamtum l"»r oaeh »iehool n in'-'i

' *l five year*, and I hat during that period uviiry

jilmve thr l'niirlh atandurd will hnv< an ipjurtumty of

pi-i'iudienlry o frenh volume for peruanl. liy tlw exptro-

*-»0 ol i '-in drei I any eehnol in and above the

mi i ! ^'-iii have pansed out <>i the Bchool, and a new

;v n In \. iii'.rii. rhereforc, the library nas sVik\

wcJi adththmn u* oeeuaion muj rcopfttt- TO*

204

wi*lh; i.im?AR.n;,s.

axraogements made Cor the dradatloi] of the boofcsj and Par tin

safe return, liave baan carefoUj thought out and am of the mo

complete character, The head teacher of andi school hi <<' i

tli

i tl

miiiiin

the contents of eoufa box an enolow tl with each consignment, and issue books ;ht provided. Per flu- purpose of forwarding Crum iltr library to the different schools foui boxes have I (ecu pi 01 i<I<M, two foi tbe use •■ the. Board Schools, I 03 the Itoai

ami fri 1 Em Ihenoe of the Voluntary Bclioola,pruvidod bj 1) library committee The books are apportioned to each <i ruent -»i' u srin-i./i a<-ti«ii:i- to the average attendance 01 |" scholars in the fourth standard and upwards. About Km vol urn or 10 an retained in hand to moetany unexpected demand which may arise for aroatar aappUee, It in pleaeuu; h. or from M

QOOfgfl Kn^t.r, (in- liln'iirian, tlmt )t in found these jmcuilc books arc lurffi:l> used to nromofo regular attendance, bj issuing thctn on days wln-n formerly the children least attended." Kurrln-r tlnm thia, t-hoy allow childron to take booke, or to ohoost boos when taken, hy the number el attendance* made. Thin u- work wlu< I' should extend to other libraries. Norwich i& about the library known to tha writer where they are bold enough to co b spade n spade. The room I v the gentler sea 1- deesatnotod tli " .-. , oxen'c rooffli*1 ■•not why xlmnid it not bo* Only we are fright iniiv punctilious oyer those frequently meaningfeai phti Kth-ii as " Ladies " and " gentlemen. Tin.- plain Saxon ' man ' "women" is rnflnitoly better. New departures, especially II tli Bra gocdand deferring of imitation, an* helpful. \ x*.m«-««u i .1 m minister, the Rev II li. Snell, has beea on ng 9 - ice <\ pfa talk* a Tew months ago ii was on "What people read.0 Lit called attention to the fact that " it was n coincidei w thai on Om very week df this plain talk about reading, the annual report <»i the Norwich Public Library should have iwen published. It Tint n large library, tin* lending department only conslttlxig Il'.ihhi roromaa; butaomehow or othoi the rtghi uptrl into the library, and 11 real effort Is made to put u taUy a) foe service cnMta members, mid it cannot fail to effect great educa- tional good In the community." Will other preachers plei -< iiiis method of taking occasional opportui life* of referring to tin- elevating power i>i Public Libraries? NorwlcJ) lnul Corporation Ihil j:i 1 1 *_- House of Commons during last clause or two "I which affected the library. The Ishuhi a books In Dxeditably large. Ten yearn age bighty-*is u da) uram issued. Kow it has reached 349 in the leuduitf section alone. Norwich baa .1 barge subscription library, well Managed az

efficient^ officered, it dates back u> 1784, and oontaim

30,000 Yolumea, The iacomc reaches £700 from nubecriptfi alone. Other towns where the Acts have not yel lieini ado owing, perhapSi to the fears ut the existing sulwt rlpti< 11 librnrk should note the fact that the Norfolk and N n'wirii 1 he.'/ltliier th.irj :( ovi.-r wtio,

-I.

f 1

IM BLIO LIIlK-Um:* t-V THR RASTMiN i'OI M'IKS.

■J06

I\i:aihnu.

Tin- nuiv idoptioi in Berkshire up to the present la Hie one ;ii the counts town, and so good an oxarapfo i* being sel \<y (touting that tin- wonder is the lnrjrrr towns of tlio county

iiwly LnlciMi up tin* i|UfFtLion. Tin- adoption wits In

unl tiie library wavupcuiud in 1882, Tin- ritdbof the AjbocJ&>

i i'-:.v loWll uC Inisc-iiiL ;iimI m -■<•< : tAlU6 En 1880 will iihUiwI).)' .;:ll !'■•! Ill .1 i . I -i li-l.lMr .till" i : 1 1 "I .it! eill H.TI tO 1 1 if 1 i I'l ,.i ) .UmI

miiM-um, and tin' members wlw nttend the mcetingM vil: hftV*

ty of visiting n compaol Had tety useful twin

I atlon, Mr. W I Palmer hoe long boon .n •■ann-xt friend of

moTi Tho librorj md masonm arc honeed In i fwa

bandaomc block of muniiipal huilcHugn, towards the erection of

uin.ii Mr. Palmer contributed about £25,000. Aground plan b

phown in the nkefah Mow of the library wbicli la well mid

i;iMU NI. I'UX, UK\l'IS'(.i IH lll.H IIMIMItY.

i onn in- : ily planned. One i f the main features of the work i* tho juvcniK - - t i - 1 . and it one t<> whaaa tli<' able librarian, "l . W Q. Qroonhough, the librarian and snyorintendent of the orl Mm. * in j, Ium riven his special attention. Tin* won opened in .■■. , I "'.i, mid was set in motion by u timojj rtfl of CI 00 from the M rvor, Mr, <; W i'nh>i< r. There are aow 8,137 \ alan un«l it i held En a room of the vfoarego, llio library is open from

f* .ii t i phi in [!.<■ evening, and on tho data of the lasi returns

rnodo there were . i';i borrowers, ol whu*h WUfaro boys and

i _-iri: The daily average in I no, In five month* 20,000

vst . lormwcd n this department, and aU were aoeounted

.1 i ! <<• Btockl iking, The Reading School Board have granted

A rooma ut two of their Bohoote as evening readin*-

The rooms are open on weekdays from six UVV teu o'&WlV,

206

r.rntiARivs.

And about *ixty -laity, weekly, and monthly porlodii l>uvci* ;■»'-' proviih-i.l. 1'i.r a pnymcnt of S&. Si I v."

nts nro ponnittc I to borrow, and of these there ore a! ISO, Two thousund visitors u. day is a very -i ttonduncc

at the library ood novHToom, Tin. - rMfaizu

the museum, Thore is no d<>ubt uh.nn Ucadini.' trettiiu; sjiluc- of its library, : 1 1.- 1 it is to ho hoped that Xrwbui-v. where the question has boon forward for diBOUBliODf and ofhox tuwna, will quickly B66 their wfty i'lc:tr 1 1 adopt th6 late The c naittofl hairs adopted ftlootrlolty for lighting, and the are an incandescent lamps art used for the library and roading-r-oi

South am nox Southampton i> proud to be able to isaue its first report. i- -• ^atisfaotorv that it servos to prove the libraries hflTfl root great want, and would have ' t*-*1 n established years ago bui tor i Bigoted opposition. The Acts wars adopted on Jane 13. i :• in 1 the library was open Ad in January, 1*89, nt a town'*.

Ti Bgantastnon was well planned, ind many voluntary woi

placed their shoulder to the wheel. The fcfayorgave the to the meeting in an earnest speech, In wl toh hs referred t»» t question before them being an educational o&oj and Is any mov

mrnt for I he :ul\ Jilirtrnieiit nf knowledge, and the i rpruwrm

the -.(Tnh'tiori of fellow-creatures every one should be fnteram The Bpe«oh of the proposer, ao army ^urgeun-jreiieral.wuheuriir

::iifl to I he point, He said that the nineteenth renhiry hud NO (•

advanced tiwu it was rather an awkward thing for hi;a or aqyo *>1*h to speak on such a subject ns the adi f kii< wleu

pi which Bacon said, " It alone doth clear the mind of all pertu nation." There were some people <>f whom it might he said th.i they could find sermons in stones, books in running brooks,

I i in everything, but probably such persona were only ii ll

proportion of about one to every 20,000 of the population, and ti 1 i ■.-.[ in search of knowledge had to po to books for it. lie hi found in the limit of their own language nmi Literature that ther

waa a ma^ninVcully rieh Hold of knowledge whirh in suoh

library as they proposed would bo accessible at all b i at fchctr bidding to sSng bo them on every subject within toe coi past if human experience, in thought* that breathed and wor that burned, and suitable for over} varying mood f thi They had also in their literature historians to toll them hiHt-iry, and biographers to tell of the great mo* who h ■' their mark on hwruturo, science, and commerce The/ had nlno IrnwIliT-i h> ii'll ol their adventures mdbtntit Ian. Ik, :ind men of Bcfonce addressing them as to how thoy had extortad nature Beerets for tha benefits of mankind. The seconder, among oth advantages paid that i'nblio Libraries created a feeling S fellowship among all classes, and in times oi distress ■•■ n BJWommon thing to see men out of work wait-tng oi puhlfe newsroom for fcho doors to be opened, so that 1 get an early look a: the advertisement* in the morning "papers.

MD] 1:1 Hi TUB KASTRUN OOl'STTOS.

m

(t WW Mt bl any moans a far-fetched argtUbQDt to say that when iiu ipolity hud dono right to those Suffering from w:mt of

work, ti p was a fooling of brother! I botwoon nan and man,

mi boao oul >t' employment felt that they wore not left out In

bat that there was a plu<T wioro th<-\* could go for

information . Thin i-; do small matter, The proposition wan

carried wii an, only about aaosea bands

d up against it. I'he astonishment of local amateur

laments a few years ago was quite universal, but the ardour

: reg rd to there keeins b bavi cooled down, The one thou

existing at Southampton rendered good service when the agtta-

tSofl w*8 in progress, The proposal was moved, seconded, and

dieonaMd, with the ultimata remit that In i rail house there

ds^entfents wheu the question was put to the

vote, towns do) treated ass party question, and why should U

vi the opening of this Public Library, Sir. W. R. Darwtn,

:i ion (>:' t in- famous naturalist, recalled b snytng of his father's

thai u wa* wondarful wrmt reading a man could du if ha only

cd i dl i u i r a day to It, Eat It all deluded upon his

i dol f. ::iiii that he believed any man who had

read hall ai lioui a cum regularly, at tie end ol b year or two

have read extensively on :uiy eulijeet. There aienow Homo

md the demand for these reaches an average in" flflO

a«la,v. Mr. O, T. Hopwood* tin- librarian and secretary, naturally

:<i - * iii ihelTcs tt the ttbran better idled. An appeal

i.nlr for gifts oi money and book?*, aw! in iln> (JiMir was a

good response. Mr. J. Pussm «•.■■■■ Kdw.m.l-. -,^o a thousand volumes,

naked the librarian to indicate win kind oi -^ dts were

most vmntedj or most in demand. This is a kind of gift whicli

. . ,—. i !i.- hr.ii i uliltri ;»ii ,mk! ciimiuithv. "Will nthn plca.S)

councillor offered to lend ££00 free of interest for

i t mthfl in order that bo< In naighfc be purchased. Mias

Gordon, th< end Cfcrdon. has presented the

whole o4 hii library. The British Museum would like to have

A 'o wo an Lppropriatonetis n the hooks reman i,t Boutharn >toa, un*l the host homi for thorn vim the PofaUfl

rh< huv i <'•:■: i '■ i in looking out for a

for ;i narmananl library, which it is hoped irfl] soon be

oroctod.aj tno temporary promi Iroady congested with the

anon al tho work. there ire <• iiio out) visitom daily.

\i ikly organized and in operation, and tho

Irendy iisaliaed what a useful institution they have

. . ttdat.

ruu had, since 18112, the noble Hartley Institution.

'.i'Ii Hie Hire mi which ir «tnnds,C08t UpWOTdi OJ

ml iMimprUi'H tin1 lulluwiiitf drparlinautt ■' 'n-fidvti [Qg

library, reference lilmirj ividing-room, museum, the art gaUerTj

tacrtu hull, icionce m<l engineering (including the

ltd physics laboraturipa, &c.), atihool of art. depnrt-

i literaturv, evenl \.- classes, and the reading-room

of tt»*f Snuthnmrjtou Chamber uf Comuiereo Uk votVVw \>«»itv

9QH

I'lTiur iiimAnn:*.

real and useful. Hut it was for main Llml tin- Hartley

Institution could not supply oil the wants ol n Publio Library under the rates. The educational departments are very strong, and in i'vitv w;iy possible tbe Public Library is doing all it can t.> help and appwmeni the work at the Hartley. Tin* landing depart- ment provided books for the use of the students at the institution ut the science and other •'Iiihbw. The subscription to the library

and reading-room ik half-a-gninea a yvu-, but OB I declaration

i - ,■■ i un!i' : ii : r i. the income of the Intending subscriber la u&der £200 per annum, fas in let off by paying the reduced rate of 6ft, 8d. annually. The council have latterly adopted the plan of allowing the tahabftanti <>f the borough to become free borrowers from tin' library anon presenting a guarantee form, duly signed, according to the peg ilations. it is noteworthy mat tneoounefl of the Hartley Inst itution aided the adoption of the Acts moat miili rially. mid it la a pleasure to record the (net. The Hartley Institution in well known to the present writer, ami there In tha oamesl wish thai it may have before it years of anch useful work aa it baa aceoroplishaa in the past. In these progreeBlve days there need be none hut the must irieudly rivalrj and emulation among these institutions of simitar aims and works. Onh there - ii: Ihe conviction, which becomes deeper tuid deeper, thai foi far-reaching utility, and value for money, there IS none whi( compare srfth the rate*supported institutions.

CHA1TEK XII.

PUBLIC LIBBARIES IN THE WESTERN COUNTIEl

| HE old adage, that " Westward the course oi i mpire I its way," is not. yet fully exemplified, ^ o far aa this movement te concerned. Dorsetshire ia still without b U^jJai" single adoption oi the Acts. Cornwall and Somerset have only one each, and Iievon is content with two. Gloucester- Im.

\u,:,<:-< imly ui run.

Bbistol.

The present writer nww en tern the Bristol Public l.ihrarn without being slunk wilh iln- cosmopolitan eharnctor of tl frequenters of tlu xiewaroonaa and libraries, An active hnsinaaj

nriii. drsii'ou.s of Mfiinfl Some of ihe lining ucwspujierii, « ill \mS a

dose nroxlmity to tlie boys who frequent the room, and who diirt themselves in a very orderly manner. Near to them ngnln will he some ladies quietly perusing the papers, and mo Lliro hiii ihe ii nans there is au ail' *»t public utilii v, which is commend Bide to the city of Brintul. The history oi the Public i II movement hi this lurge centre of the west is deeply intern In a local pamphlet, dated NovcinlxT, 1871, cntilled "The i the Etor" Doing :i Letter from sixteen working men ol Uriitol the fii.\ir<:n aldermen "1 the city, there in named A* 0&e six

PUBLIC UnitARlBS IN- TUB WBBTMIN OOUKTnW.

'209

prrMUB.tf rcjuircnu'riU the acenmnnxlutin and newsroom. " We Efeoold bOglad.ufl

I Public Library any the petitioners, " to i„ Jala to sit in onr own room and road b bx1 out ol anintereeting boolt lo fur wive* nnd families, or t" gel one ol the children to

rood to ii-.. 9ucfc u I < woaW keep our boys Eroxa idling at

v learn b > end ol in i -•*« i n* » and wfcjKed-

hc«b,ju"mI would, maybe, prevent many "i them from going to the

j.uliii M-. .md to the had. We wish our

*lii].Irrii \. °s you do yours, ;> mi hlimild ho glad for them

ii deal more> and to make t better use ol what they

u vi' haw dene, ku thai if thev have got the :• I »jlif v they"

i my qo1 all of thorn always iv>in;iin poor. Ignorant working: man. Nov hy the nowspiipiM- . •vmiiitR, we find that Bristol is. Car behind buob towns as Cardiff, m > irt, and Hereford in t] is matter, to aty nothingof Liverpool Manchester-and BftYnrngbaitt, which were little villages, we are told, when Rrtfitol merchants

lirorj ni»l Us tor the una of their poor fellow-

me fit; ''i in. mi. though we work for our bread, we do Dot

believe In fgnor&DOt am mn ■.Inn «r (In in bad air in* in dirty

MklnH, sit wo ask that Brfctul may in- placed under the Ptbnc Libraries Act." This request oi Bristol working men pxoctfcaltj i poll offe i-\ he adoption in l*7*iof the Libraries' Aets in Bristol, tin1 present ehi Lrman. Sir Joeej i; n Westuu, bains preaMenl of the public meeting which sanctioned the local application of the sm,-r thai time the iM'iK h.is mur ii'i-nm .iii'iiji, nail .t> Bristol dates its earliest Public Library t" ltd.'!, the city, eof.u 14 tbe ad ifll work acconspualied by the centra] Library and its fire 1 truncl 1 h .r< concer&e !■ ie determined to mors than hold its own. Tin- building* coTupriainp the central library are quite historic,

1 ii< I t .r 1 I ii. I .in runt 1. 1 this old struct mv il i> a pleasure t<i turn

to a burton of th< Briat* 1 Library by the lutv Charles Tovey, published in 1855 Inlt worthy Brleloliao died En I6881 after icctnjl the fifth ■»' the branches tpencd. Ria Interest In the movement never llaggod, and [••rig' before the adoption of the Acts, and down to tho timed hie 31 1 th. he never «*euaed to take mi Entereel Id the work Ot the libraries. Mr. Tovey was us a propliei 1 1 ii.- wildor&OM, foi tils little book 01 1666 woe

red v. Hi :in .ijntiliv nut l>y :in\ meant) creditable to such a

city oa Briatol. Ue say** " the citizens could aol be LrouBodfrom

100 I" the advantage* ivxulting hrom PubHc

.;:.'-. : 1 i-l mj hook remained unsold." He wms; before bia

. and tlie n-orld will never »\-ertake its indebfc di M6 to the

men who an in idvunoe .i their ncc and generation. Chiotty

:irion the Town Cotitn-il n s;.;: iipponilo* :' wi I-

;■ in innnire into hho Hiihfecf and negotiale with the

1-uis ann oecnpanth of tin* Htizen*" building, culled the City y, and now n*ed ;i« iln» I'cninil lihrnry. Thirty-five i"o : go Ml' Tun v v\:im told thai, hr floufd do oothtng with inn. Their habits and uiannere, he was eon- aMeratcly i«ld, wore formed, tmd they would not Uft» WWAe. irteM and muaetzms it* they were established. The ovVlA^w

•21 < I

PITRLK LIBRARIES.

Baffle tuna those n high authority, ami when a rornpamon [| mods wltli tin* objections raised la Hmtoi to Ifittflio the yum ass

iii" j pis ara no* making of liicir UbrarfsSj t.ia> gain i'i the

lilgtory of the movement is at once apparent, a inure powerful

B|)peBJ lOT H city or town In adopt tfu> Act;; ual lake under it-. municipal wUg 11 library building wue never penned. The v.l.oi.- pamphlet I n*i*;i'.h'*s :t sph it of curliest pUTpOOO, and when Hrlstol

#eb» it'* dot contra! library) .1 conenjnooation devoutly to ha

wished, the committee will aeo that there ie placed i:i ii :t btisl <>i Charles Tovoy, and. if possible, some room or section »r the library bearing (he name of tlii* warm frieud of Public i.ibi and their work. Ii i.i needles* l" remind the reader that in IfiOfl i" i-.v, rin- movement was a mere bantling; but even then some eleven i< was had adopted the Acts, and most of the libraries were then in operation,

The old building of which Mr. Tovcy writes so eloquently, and known as Gas eto Ubra*y,naa, as alreadj st btod, a quaint luotory, There is no dount that HriMol dates its earliest Public Library from 1€18, Mid the present central library is in promises] part

of which came down tcotD thnt date, Additions have. 0] 0OQVSO1

ijoon made at rations timoB] and it ha* now somowhoJ toe character of n rabbit warren. Hut, with its old oak stain boO&COSea. and a marvolloiiBly lino old carved mantel, it It 1 build- ing m winch the orchj&ologuit would linger; and when the time somes Eor a new boms Cor the central Library, it in 1.. he hoped that something will bo done to preserve this old huildingasa library. Perhaps as a separate juvenUe library and reading- POOm, and. say, a patents lihrory, it would Inn it.- I . ;-t mid tne.-t appropriate use.

But we oars Bean that Mr. Covey bad to agitata for nearly a quarter ol a oenlury before be saw the Acts i dopted, snd now

. '..>ih in Bristol who knows anything of the working of the llbrarlei is asking why were the citizen- bo toohab as "to shut thomseive* off from so real a boon for so many years-' Other towns, especially tfis majn towns 01 the West of England, may well look closrl y mid seriously at The long fttrngftle in 1: and put the <i1"" ' "■ ! ' '" wii.-thrr ii is worth while their mittinjr the sains mistake. Taunton and Gloucester may take heart and gather strength trow the experience ol the carats] of

pest ii* operations >i the Libraries i* of 1 very solid nature of the branches is well situated In 11 thickly-populated suburb, and 11 Is noteworthy thai each of these onshoota from ths

parent hIchi has Mirpa-xM <l in iIn operations the work Ol the

centra! library. Very full statements ol their working sent periodically to the local press by the *hle c\ly librarian, Mr. Ji I.11 T.uior. who haa done u\\i<]. U develop those Institu- tions in Bristol. The last annual report shows the wi up to December dl, iw, and Is worth Mooting:

PUBLIC LIBBAftlKS IN THE WESTERN COUNTIES.

Ubntrlci.

^antral

§*. Philip's ...

gorth District

gedUnd ... **«twells ...

ToUIb

21,235 83,587 48,187 32,826 14.578 17,832

218,185

41,633 59,123 74,085 57,770 129,369 54,438

416,418

210,300 306,000 202,700' 256,225 416,400 160,650

1,552,275

fj

670

881 1,049

539 1,760

524

5,423

£63 19

65 9

76 15

40 1

145 10

59 10 11J £451 6 4&

The following are the classes of books issued for home heading:—

Libraries

Central St. Philip's 1J. District.. Bed minster. . Kedland .. Hotwells ..

769

629 1,039

433 1,760

506

ToUls ...'5,126

3,020 3,570 6,376 8,314 7,038 3,321

31,639

*5

7,947 15,642 13,102

9,518 20,278 13,728

80,215

24,709 32,641 47,550 36,659 84,161 30,961

256,681

2,115 2,316 1,889 850 4,915 1,853

13,938

II

1 2

1,135 1,753 1,008 358 2,406 1,161

7,821

1,938 2,572 3,121 1,638 8,821 2,908 54,438

41,633 59,123 74,085 57,770 129,369

20,998

416,418

The average number of visitors to all departments is about 7,727 a day, and the average daily issue of books in the six libraries is 2,151 volumes. Nearly 19,000 of the population are actual borrowers at the present time. Fiction stands at a very respectable level, being, in fact, much below the average. The aggregate issue for the year was 634,603 volumes, which is over three books per head of the population for the twelve months.

The first of the branches which was opened, the one in St. Phillips, has long ago outgrown in its work the accommodation provided, and the people in that district would like to see a new and commodious building ; but the claims of St. Phillips are not so great as is better provision for a central library, convenient for city men and others who pay a large proportion of the expenses incurred in relation to the Act, but have neither reading-room nor library suitable for the centre of the city. At the central libiary

J] J

WBI.IC I. H i:\r..:.<.

there arc a oonsxderaM number ••( fuveoile books wined) are lent

QUf lo boy* !o read ill :i lo.nit by thrn»rl\»_:- Vnjom - -pi :rji| nf

whether ooyi really care for mm* an advantage u thta m i : mode i convert by looking in at the room on nlmoat any week- day f\t nnig. Tin- boys are orderly, and require i tl le

Mii|ici'visiiiii. They quietly go on wirli their iva.ilin;* ami iln.*

from n class of bookfl which nave bean idectod wftli greal osra and discrimination.

The Redlands bnmoli i* the best of the branch buildings. The cos) ol tin* ground and structure wait £8,000. The dral in.- 1 west in the lending section at Redlandaoi boj ol the branched

Some fcwenfcy-five young ludicB find employment at the various Public Libraries, and give the utmost satisfaction. Mr. Tfiylor h a great believer in (he humanUlnjj power ol the gunUer 1 to ii'i.iv work, and he Is no doubt right. Tin- salaries paid rarj from \'2». to 31& per week, according to the position,

One very important feature of the work at Qriatol 1 1 thai at the centra] library e wi of each wecMy, monthly, and ojaarterly h tl bound up and kept for reference. The more popular 1 arc retained also at the branch libraries. But in caoh ■•■ the ill duplicate numbers are utilised by being dissected and olasstfied tow distinct volumes under names of authors or eubj 0 that the special contents ol Home torty or fifty numbcrt Of hmcK of periodicals can lie consulted in eueh single V" thus treated. Anout a thousand volunieshavc beei wruadc ut>, the content* of eaah of which i* entered in the catuloan library. Mr. Taylor is the first to have adopted this man, and it is one which has been of much service to his readers. fhc 1 riumoi

rover a lar^e vnririy ol' RiihjceU, and are in much request. QOO

inay !"' taki 1 as a sample of the* re&t. iii the cat:dn<j-n<» it appear*

1 raw " Evolution," and the article* on the subject I'min review* and magazines bound up in tibJlSvo vol. arc as folio ws^—

liiuwin's 'riie"iie.i " Wr.stmiuster Keviiiw." Dtmwuigiii " Unitarian Review." Deweotof Man— "(Quarterly Review." ^iiatrefagwuh tin- Ha- maa Species— "Catholic World." Human Rewmddaneca to Lower Life " L'jiigiuau'a." Our Origin as a Spociea " Ibid." Danvini*au ami Kvolu n.--n of Man (Dr. M*Teh), Philosophy of Kvolntion— "Quarter); Straggle of &hmcu--''IuUI.M Pl>sicnlandR«Iig[uU8Kiiowloilg-« —"Ibid." Kolitiiuli and Science " Ibid." Deeoueration— AdiUhw Wilaoii. Fis'i to Reptile "CoTiihill." Animal Development— A. Wileon. My Coa»in the QoiiUs— "Tinaloy," Oerm Theory "Nineteenth Century. ' Origin of Speeina and l~?nera "Ibid," BvoltltiOB V. SOOislism— " National Re view." Nature ami Thought— G. J. Romanes. Man's Piatt u N " Nineteenth Century." Animals and Haute-— " Contemporary Ru- view." Furra and Colours of Living Creature*— *' Ibid." Relation 1 Darwinism to other Branches of Soienoo " Longman'i." Roforo llioli

11 Ninotconth Canturv." Evolution and Ethioa "National Bo view,11 Theory of Huri'dity— " iVnitttiaporary R«view." lli-rwhtury Oon ; " I'li.l. " Bvolatfon and Ri.'Dgion "IhiJ." Xatural SolecttM Natural Theology " Coiitciiiiwrary Review." Evolution of : T. H. IIuxlcv. Darwinism and Religion "Maomillau"-- ' Bvolutiofti Ethics, mnd Religion— " Church ^uartorly Review."

PI i. n i ICKADlca i\ iui '.Mill:-. eo u

1'Ki

Tin' inTtT.'si :hhI v:ilu».' attaclltOg to iln-vi- VOlQAlOC '"llu* essay

uriNT. iiri.nvp, preacher, author, and general reader isincalou- lablo, and iitf plan Rheum be extended to every Pnblie "Library in this i;nw centres* n the publishers nnd printers ol mngaKmea nod rei awn would make the articles separate one from another, in their publications, mutilation r»f context would be avoided

(_'hri.ti:nham.

TWb in i;i;'iii inland waterintr-place [a u town iii i nvied En

us pui lie Library. The nov ba Idlng, opened in April, L889, Es

the result ol .1 1- »*-;« I effort to commemorate the Mij yean

ttatkn bas. The library is one of the finest building* tin:

lows of DheUenhain possesses, and being' spacious and commo-

- \> exactly the place for t Qourishiug Public Library, and

schools of science nnd art. The Architecture Sa In the Italian

Mvle, iiito which has been imported by the architects a consider-

mi.i. general detail Ed the Blizabtthan style. The

building is I M feci in :< ogth, and the height from the basement

t*» the parapet is iti feet. In the centre rises ffh*t may be described as 0 pubic, unci below is un arch terminating in plain pilasters. Beneath too arch Efl th« portico with thrccfine entrances ■operated by Ionic coin ana, and surmounted by a balustrade of

1. which in the future it is hoped to place some statues.

* >ti the extreme right of the front ol tho building is i\ handsome

!■ WhiOh y-r\tjs to L,nvi-;i fi: m.kIi ti it 00 the OJM Bide, while on

t lio left hum: ifl a pinnacle which nerves a eimilnr purpose on tho

othw ~Kle. inside tho promises, the whole of the ground floor,

^ ifh the exception of the entrances to the schools of science and

-; devoted to the library. There is a fine vestibule with »'ou-

\-.<rni<i:-'<:h Of )m:i n y kind;-, :im.t furnished witli OlOOk, barometer,

- » i id 'uist:. of Shakespeare and Milton. Passing through awing « loora, conn imrieiitfon is obtained with the ret'ei-enee library, the landing library, md the newspaper and periodical room, the ! ...r whfeh is :i most spacious room, and admirably adapted i o the purpose, for which It Is Intended, The library departments

nv also well nutted to the requirements of such rooms, nnd axe wreJl Lighted and ventilated. Xear the reference library la the

. room, ;imi] pner oftlie basement !h intended lo be set

■aside foi the use of the caretaker, and for the reception anil

;.■. ,ii i <;ii>i tin- iew books. With regard to the science and

;iit Boboola then ai e entrances in the tower, and (tie

nAairenaei lead to i Boor on which are cloak rooms and other

,.i( schools contain roui claan rooms which are

iii('i .i bed by a corridor, while the school ot science contains n

pnyaicnJ aboratory, a lecture room, a chemical preparation room,

I'H'l a chcmicaJ laboratory, all of which arc tilled with tin latest

: this class of .study and for the convenience of

fireeeptora and students. The entire cost of tho new buildings, about £16,300, and to meet this there in a total lie loan, of £10,000 and Hunisfrom various .-:..m-e. ts

I to. Sd.j or a deficit of £1,712 odd. \\\ W ^v>tY ^^s

•Ill

l'l m i. r.rnrttnrRs-E.

tattled out locally, the architect being Mr \v it Knfght. n itaj BQoat BpproprlotA to uk Str Bftchaa] Hicks-Beach. Uort., H.P., to perform the ceremony of opening. In declaring me tihrary open Sir Nfichncl «jn.v** ;m it*M 'orh rin the ivlvnntofies of PuW1( ' Jorarae.

Th086 blSfiltllHOMj he lAld. Wi»I*C In Kml'I:i!hI <Mnn>:ir:i! i\ . Is i

recent outgrowth of our moclprn ftfvffiz&tion. .mi tins bmi was ..i,.

with regard to which, ho thought, wv might take some little shame to ourselves. It was an axiom amongst us that orcr] chlW ought to bo taught to read* But what were the children to i Were they never, oe they we* upj to road anything except Which ww iiupruvinf to too mina ! Hedldnol «■<■ rhj [n thi* op any other matter they should expect the poorer > hate

different tastes to themselves. On tlw contrary, he should

t

PUBLIC LXBBABIB8 IN THB VBBTBBN COUNTIBS. 215

*H an undoubted fact that the hardest-worked men and women,

W their labour physical or mental, were those who stood most in

"wd of mental recreation. And what mental recreation could the

Poorer classes have ? What were they tempted to have ? Look

a*the floods of vicious and socialistic literature, unhappily now

to cheap in our country, which they might be tempted to poison

weir minds with if something better and purer were not offered1

"teni in its place,. Working men had now more leisure than

WQerly, and that was another reason why an effort should be

raa<3e to elevate and refine their tastes, so that that leisure might

J devoted to something better than the gross sensual indulgences

the working classes of former generations. If they wished

PCot>le to become good men and good citizens, they must think

n°t only of their serious pursuits but of their pleasures as well ;

an^*» to his mind, great as the good might l>c which was to be

S^ixied from the solid and improving literature found in Public

Lioi-aries, there was also a good quite as great to be gained in the

m°i*al and intellectual recreation found in the writings of the best

**V el -writers of all the ages of English literature.

. The paying off of the debt is at present rather a tax on the

tocome, but the ratable value being large it is not as great a

hl*rden as it would be in some towns. In providing themselves

**th a handsome structure for their rapidly extending work, the

^neltenham people have acted wisely, They have the finest

J **olic Library of any inland or seaboard watering place, and this

18 a. fact of which they may be reasonably very proud. The total

fruiter of books is now about 1 6,600 for their f),119 borrower*.

^>s is a large percentage of the population, and the class of

**>oks read will compare favourably with any library in the

?°uthern or Midland counties. Fiction stands low. ( >ther watcr-

inS"-places like Malvern, Tunbridge Wells and Scarborough should

2|* the fact that some 1,200 residents and visitors use the institu-

JJon daily. With an existence still short of six years the library

j*^a.y veil be satisfied with the position it occupies, and its popu-

SP^y is not a little owing to the librarian, Mr. William Jones,

*>o received his training at Leeds. Gifts have flowed in, and

n°Dg the official bodies from whom they have received books

of *»k^e '^^fcees °f the British Museum, the Lords Commissioners

. the Treasury, and the Delegates of the Clarendon Press. There

gj also been a gift of 1,300 volumes, on Fish and Fish Culture,

OIQ jyr jYancie Day, who spent some years in India as a Govcrn-

pQt official. Outsiders are permitted to borrow on payment of

th billing subscription. The report in Cheltenham is that

-^y would rather be without the post-office than without their

*T>blic Library.

Exeter. Exeter has a beautiful building, as will be seen from the **ompanying sketch. But the library has to take a back place 10 the museum and schools of science and art.

The charge on the rate for this building is £225, which greatly impoverishes the work, and in few places is an extra penny for

VTOMC 14BHAKIK* IN THE WK«Tttl:\ i-ors'TIE*.

217

museum purposes more needed than in Exeter There are I 4,800

i.tiiiiiH-M, i)ni ;in- 1 bin v Issue of LAfl books out of this number, snd

population nn exceedingly poor show. There arc 1.C30

' roweri Exeter boaataof n rather pi»werrnl literary «aocicty.

wiiii : 11 in.- true "i ova r £ 400 a year The number of member* la -«i?, and they ii:t> a library containing » maaa of old-faahioned and obsolete books which miiy ourabei the ahefasa. ir the mem- bers nf this society would throw their Intereat and euthusii-.ui tutu the w<nk of (he Public Library, they would jM ;■ belter return tor toe money iii'-y now spend lutuei] declining society 1 1_> RO-opemtinA; v* it K Hie library committee they would i- themeclvea nod what should be u strong publu: institution.

Vl WPORT (MON.).

Nt irpor i.i m»w hud seven ycars'lifo in ite now buildings. These

\wi. taooetol about Cv', ">»>•>. It El doe ':;n.--l IBS t'vr

rtj to of English i: malfleonoo, and has a frontage, on one side, of M foot, and on another of LQ8 foot. On the ground fla r, a reading ki i di w pupej room, 58 feel by 86 feci and 30 feet high, is

(centre of the block, Ughted entirely trow the roof, 'in- room hiu> placed on the loft, 90 feet wide and Attending nearly itn whole length, the lending Horary, designed with shelves to aoeonuin dale 5.000 volumes, nnd with the side next the reading room Qtted wilh xiii Iltiu- sashes, malting it accessible on this aide to borrovers. The aouthsldi ol thin room extendi to the lone, from wWch light is obtained The curator's rooms are placed on . right "i the main entrance, ind eompriae Hvirig- cu wbili 'ii tnc left of rbe entrance comes first a committee* hi i feet, occupying th* eorner. Between thfaand 1 he end of tho lending Iflwary la the reference library, 2C feat by ilettng, with former butldinga retained, tne whole of tin1 ground Moor accommodation, The first floor coven the whole am of tiie rooms below, except the newsroom, Tin* Boor te devoted entirely to the accora nodation of the science and art in-, ni which Mru so unwigt*], communicating with other, i-; to l)i! throw ii open as ii gallery of art on special ii ii'ijii red There & on the second floor a large uaet

->'"i modelling ru and a suite of ro s tor the curator, The

ontranoeifl Ranked with red puli.-.hvd ^nin^ti.- eoliuuiiN, tinted and

Ided. On the left-hand corner if placed a circular turret,

'""ir.|im tin top, sad covered with lead, which aesEstfl externally

sharactor of the building

l tic total number of books Is not vet large for a population of

" M h 10, being only 16,18a Borrowers t«. the number of 8,600 oho

'/!•*>;,. 'Die run upim fk'ti' down, and other class* ol

****iu<ire an going Up, and the use of the v i'« -r--:»vi- Ubrnry ir.

iv on the There is a strong j ivonllc section i t

J js « Literature to the extent of 1,100 volumes. Newjport, En

'"l > torn i h Miunv other towne, jp extending its bounds] toe, and

i in tlio IWoiigli There will in I'nturo

it- JJ850 at present jftftdfiA tefl \\\^

318

I'lHJJ I.IUHAUIRS

rate. Other luwus bag liNjiiiug iii tin* extension of I ovotwii

ln»uiif]arivf> lli likely to Bid them lin.uii'iiillv. At the turn uf the

nev branch library and reading room for the FUlfwenlh dietricl wbi opened For many yearn it. ha* been om of i do leaa- bng aspirations of the district to posses* a branch library vorthj

the iii QC; and the resident? . ie now place-J in pi m I of a

building which i< in every way creditable to all oonoornod

lhrrc-nt<»rryrd Imil.iiu^ nOS 0 fri »nt:i».-- <»1 ;; I lVci, imd ;ihul* Oil

fomple Strootf the thoroughfare In which the Sailors Homo and

tfBWrOAT POTJLIO UliIl.WIY.

TiiMtitutr i.nvf lUrn local h.ii station. The roof line ie broken bya central pedi nont,the tympanum <>f which ia enriched by earring, and the panel below is charged by the appropriate motto. ■• Kno* l- dp In power." The front ierod briekj with Bath Btcmoaroeelnea. On antenna; the building the raoffaxino aadeheee room, -.n 03 l ir ,, i. soon and on the opposite ride of the entrance is n itaker'woom, no placed thai he maj command the entire building. The main stairway nexl adjoins, Leading to rooms which will probably bo ultimately used for science and art purposes. Then, in the rear of the building, ii utoated tbfl general rcfldine-i-ooin. it m ample in every respect, being 16ft.

rt*Bii M \i ir» in me wbtc&bn <A>esr«!a.

219

bv 83ft , .i:i'l lighted by windows at the side, and fay a large l*;iy ,n tin- end. The Mayer htus expressed bio intention to provide a iUrin'ed-gluat wind* w, and other gentlemen are inclined bo follow

. | i roue example. The tutnleoal, inrhnlinn nitirjus, wm- about

1,800, Mr. Janice Matthews hue boon librarian tor ovcrfourtcon

The museum and school ol art and Boienoc are dcpnrt-

■ii. -lit-, the work of win.'h, like Unit <>t the library, i* rapidly

extending.

Plymouth.

l! i;j always a pleasure to taken peep into the work at Plymouth.

With a live librarian, en earnest committee) and a constituency

who bsurv how tc ttflfl their Public Library, it could indeed scarcely

be otherwise In Inguat, 1878, the Horary waa li rat opened.

and autee that time Ltnaa grows rteadlhr iii public favour and

neefvineaB. The work la boused tatheoldCruildbfill, and thirteen

this t'U I ling .ii- tvererl Thu purpose fairly well; hut

ra rementa of The library have long since outgrown the

tj nf the hailding. \t thepreaenl it "emu ;iius nearly 30,000

9 i an cs, in ill hranehee of literature, and not only so, hut the

ding-mom « arc rreu.ueui.ly rrowded to innuivenienee, ami the

rk ii.-i- inin parried on iniW considerable difficulties. Another jectloo to the building la Unit it .ibuts on one of the noisiest ui i-i % of the town, and the squalid appear* toeol the -*n "round- added to the dmgiues* of the building itself, render it getber en undesirable place foi a PuuUc Library iu a town Plymouth, Pot tlic ered.il of the town itself, and for the 1:- sake of those who ierve,aad arc Bcrvedatthe library, state ot thu--. «;ili- i<i* - ;m iv nin,.-,iv. Mr. "\V. U.K. AY right, borougt librarian a good, deaignatiou, by the way, whirb jat fall into general we ho* long kepi before hie coruniittee Med toi ji new library building, and some of his townsmen C kind enough to any that, like the boy in the soap advertisement, <i'Y<\ (ill he gets it. A e there is some corporation y m the i larkct, some leaaiblc plan for securing the cling a building may be within measurable distance. The report covers a period of fifteen months, nn alteration in the of publication of the report necessitated by the recent .change ti m <ji Plymouth, ae acounty borough under the Loot] "'•n.iLu.'ot Act, Tho femes in the lending department and nation of books in the reference room comprise, during the naraod, an aggregate of 251,739. or a daily avenge of 7 ltt. lgorea en themselves ax^ sufficient -to enow that there in plenty vork toi hfl library atauT, and that tho desire of the public for Dg of ail Icinda keeps up steadily. The report of the librarian [G8 oul "' thirty-two, and Mr. W right has mmh '. i*yi -i ■!!" and instructive character. Perhaps the **t- Interesting par ul rlie re|aa't U where he gives, [particulars *o«s conditions nnder which about 1,000 volumes hnri Icon Benl ^^* OB perpetual loan to deven of the Board Sehoola of the town in continuation of that report he stated thai the new

°PtU7ture bad given thorough n.ilisl'aelion He \v&\\ sAh'y\va\a\yv

-****»

*ll

\ run Mm-.

whole od the i la hi which these branch libraries warn p

and Found tin* boola b anffbrmly good condition— -verj few taunt injr. and the privilege highly appreciated bj ildrra tn

::.n j i".ri\ case the teachers I >iv :■ warminterem In iho matter, and ware doing tiii'ir oUnosl to preserve the hooka in good ortici ;niil to encourage the children i<> in- punctual Eii Elielr mum. as well He careful la their nee. Vft© careto! observation aud oou< saltation with all the head teachers tie was "f opinion thai the experiment had proved n.- -i -u rejrful, and that its extension would prove a boon t" the town. Mr. Wright ia one of the pionoora in tii:> nee of Board Schools foi library PunioeoBi end Hi-.- | iii if Icatincd to he univorsalh developed da m Mediate future. The Plymouth School Board ma l>orto<1 tin Hii^-soRtionp, and the mcu&crn ;irc to I"' concTBti (tn the waulta, so far, ol their effort* Both it! the I oyui ad girls' schooln substantial ttookcancehavc been provided, nod the librarian Iiiih prepared n tial t I i - i Bp dn [y suited to children "i aohool

IgC, lii < vlii. h t!i(Ti« in no n-itsoii to d<ml>l will |>q rfi*ely road by the y»n:i'j 1'Mj.!- .n whoso intciv-siM tl i- new dopartun

boon made. 0a certain days of the week the children, both and girls, hare the privflogo of hiking homo d l»ok each tram the library, and when (these have boon rend :m nxehaTiiro of hook* talcaa place between the different Softools, mo thai the children nve always having some new and fresh, with which to interest t nornaelvea Mid odd to their stores ol knowledge. Con observed in the ohotec ol books, the object being to comWafl

iiettrnelmn with aninxemi'nt, unil the System la DOl to I"1 Confined

to ii e Board Schools alone, but will be 9 malrj it rhs service ol I'lininntury BohoolH in the town. II is" anticipated thai graal advantages will accrue to the cause o1 education, .is a perusal of the books provided for the children pan *< nrcely I prove ' valuable adjunct to the instruction elven In the schools during the day. It Is auggcaW that In further extension i I movement ovunlng readjn^ruoiiis should be started it tome of Hie Board Schools, ■where working men might have the opportu uiiv ol' K|H'iiiiiim ;i profitable hour or two in read asj Ll e daiU oowsnapers and magazines thai could easflj be provided tor eucn it purpooe,

Mr. Wright i* an enthusiast over luml literature, imd is IlimseM un antiquary of no mean quality. He lias lately written published -i work on "The Blue Friars," which gives .-t vwi latefeating aketoh ol the saying's and doinge of i little fraternity who gave themselves this designation, He baa tbua added ^ new chapter in the hi tory ol old Plymouth Ed bifl resort ho atatos that the extent ol Devonshin and Co

lihTiUUre 1H MO great, and its ramifies! I'. 'Ii:- *t e\te»tM\r Il.it .i

muoh more liberal BUpply is needed. The ml yields about

Cl^OOQi and the library nnd all its ramifleations »f worl threepence per head par year forth* sntirc population, Lnwhal

other >v; iy could '.he Plymouth people or any peojde ■.< \ [hiiiiy wovth -I Niieh escollenl valuer

l-llilli l.lflllARIRfl IV I'llt- U K<1'KIiN miIVTIKv

•_':?!

&1AUUU ir..

< m May A, I8d0,a meeting o( the etttaens of Salisbury, oonrenad

1 iv ri ■< p n-til in , \\:i> In 11 :il I in* i loimcll 1 fuitsr, for 0)6 purpose of

i'r.t!"ii|ci;l,;: tl< . .■ ! I i:. 1 1 illity of EUlOptJUg Mir FUDlJC 1 &\ " LI l6

Ant* iii the - 1; v. He Mayor oreaided, and there was n large attendance. Tin* Major explained the object of Khe meeting at soma leujrth,uud also tha steps that would be taken if a poll wans duinauded< He said he J -i* 1 beard something alioui nolil iceia this er, bill it seemed to him that politics had nothing whatever tu do u iih it. If it was an advantage In hn\r a Public Library, ih.it idvnutuge would I* shared by al aarUesi Lb wan entirely a question foi the atepayore to dot idc weather they would go bo i hi expense or not of establishing .1 library. A poll wasdemaj

irUI betaken on June :'.•■ date subsequent to fchbportioa . 1 the present work going bopreee. It la to be Hoped that Salis- bury a .11 do [teoU credit.

Tnuno.

nw whole county oi Cornwall hu# only one ratc-aupported

: ) ind tin- cathadral Oity of Truro may hoist ita lihmry

1 indard an 1 call upon tho towns in the couuty to sat their houao

in order, Hie library was established in tho beginning of 188ft

coato! fitting up the room-; was C36. Fhe nucleus of tha

l i \ book« was presented bj Mr. Norton, who took 0 leading

.Mi in the foundation ol the institution. About 000 volumes

sure purchased, nt a cost of C$), out of the fundi it: the committee's

osaJj uad upwards •( 1,-hmi volumes ware presented. The

1 ite I eost of magazines and newspapers to tho readinjr-room

: 1- y«w la £23 (Oa,, and many are presented. The rent ol

tha present room* is £2fi per annum, and the accommodation baa

idy become utterly inadequate to the requirements. The

iv in £30 per annum, for which the service* of a

11" iiMiriT my srr.iuvil. The i-ohI *l" roitl, gns, and cleun-

- per annum ; printing, stationery, and pontage, £6; and

"finding, repairs of iviulvs, furniture, «c., another Eft mi*,

r'*vi^hiv. is now the Truro Library exists on £-|ifi a year. Tha

'' Oh dime with their l>000 books is not by any means alight.

*-. Pi w more Edwards, the proprietor of th« Umdcn * Echo,"

: ig the last year or two Ixxm showing bis Interest in

*a 1 lie Lib ary work, \moi.- some thousands ol books which ha

Baaa |(f -, -,i, ,; r 1 v.n i ms Public Libraries were 960 rolumea to tho

*~» ire Lil in y. These included seta oi good stan bird Literature.

J '«- lilit.u \ in t!,i-. l 'ornish city Ima lia-l a struggle during ita first

;'* •"« 1 ' Oornishmen arctoo ejcatlorera oi progress

•jot ii Laaguii h for lack ol support.

the curly part ol 1887, an effort made to get the

tti-d in Peiuonce. 'Hie difficulty winch lc*l to the

'j on tlic pari of the ratepayers to accede to the proposal,

iprobnbilil} uf boing able to rnaintuiu alibmryonan

iictirueof t'f.jO. ft't-iizancc hoa a. PubUo Library, but not under

Here there are Hf'XXl volume*. Some time, perba^,

*<• »ban have this n raoJ Public Library, It wou\d\in\e a^tv^

222 ratii i i"n \i. 1 1 -

^li'»i.->uiin: iritcc! upon the movement in Cornwall i i 1m i

town VDIlld I 'la.-., itself in tts

WmwoR :i r i i y ■■ uii Tlio PdbVo Libraries' Aetc wotq unanimously adopted 00014 time ul'<< 1 ■■. M 1 etimr. An ample central »lto he* been pur-

ahasea nt a cost of U500, partly by subscription and partly by rote.

It wiw intended Mint Iho rato kIiouM be allt wed to aoournnlntCj an li> form n Ixmd for (he oreetiou of aHiiratriebiMUnn;, bill it \\ afterwards dift»'^< i"'«l that the amount ot rote ovied da ring year must l«> <»x ponded within thai period, and the sobexrieioi accumulation had to (^abandoned This h w caused considerabJ

Tin- Tows ComraiMionerfl have recently covenanted with th* lord of the manor to rent on perpetual lease his lute ri*mden«.'< " rtteOxove' estate! ompristna; it mansion beautifully - In about eight acres of finely wooded grounds -the whole boi Intended as a parti for tree public use— and .*i portion ot thi mansion to tie devoted to the purposes of a Public Library it is hoped thai the neeeaaary structural alterations will '»■ plefied, and 1 newsroorn ami library commenced early in tht eozntug year.

CHAPTER XT II.

PUBLIC LIBRARIES IN SCOTLAND.

|HK operation or the Public Libraries' Act <>i I860 wa» extended to Scotland and Ireland a lew years afterwards, but the power of assessment by it ana the subsequent Lata was so limited as to Karaer its provisions uracil1 r:ii]y -imperative for small towna inles 1 arom

benefactor came forward and prcaented to the community .1 sui hntldmjr. equipped hi whole or In part with n mffleiei ey «t

BUbaeqoeni lPgf*):>Mnn has modthVil ll 1 mdir.ions iimler whit * the Arts may be adopted, and also the procedure. The ruoai important amending let* art! thai »f [BOA, applicable to Ifoffland and Bootlttiul, and tfiut of 1877, applicable to England, Scotland, and Ireland. The law, as it applies to Scotland, b««a na wll \rt of lw.r, ill*- previous statutes of I8o4an<J Iflflfl having bei by ii repealed. Bj the Consolidation Act of 1887 the Act 1897 La f884j bo faraa thev relate !<■ Scotland, are repealed. this Act, anon the requisition in writing: ot ten or more to holders in m\ burgh or pariah, the chief magistrate ol burgh, or "i the case of ;i pariah, the sheriff .4 In- com which such parish or the greater part of the area situated, shall ascertain tin opi none ol the householders d burgh or parish as bo th< 1 loption of this Act in the manner >ct 6 ri 1 in Schedule* A. or D., which will lie found in the i\ provided that where in any burgh the nui ibci 1] hou exceeds three thousan< trie obi E mo 1 hall adopt ,.-■... . .lur. , by way ol vi tin paper 101 forth In gi w any »ilirr . - 1 >r ii :-l'all Im iptlonal to the ch - 1 n

PCHMC LIBRABIES IN SCOTLAND.

928

hoxifj, as tho Cftfio may bo. to adopt such procedure faf w;ty

ol

the procedure bvy

»f puhla

tone,

roting papoi forth in Seneautc B. When the Acts have once boon rejected in any place, two whole yean most elapse before the proposal to adopt them i?aq be renewed.

In U burgh the initiative rests either with the magistrate* and OOUncfl or with any ten uousehouldars, either oi which I todies iniy present to theehiet or the uanlof mafrtstTeW e rex uiaitton in wiciiiL', asking Mm to ascertain the opinion of the ratepayers on the question whether the Public Libraries' tots shall ba adopted in the burgh, n rests with the acting tibial magistrate ately to determine whether the opinion of the ratepayers

"hall In- ;iwvr;:i 1 1 led lit Jl public, meeting called dip ill*-- purpose,

ir bi n 0 Issue ii a voting paper to each ratepayer.

of the eighl largest towns In 8ooUaad— Edinburgh , Qtasgaw, Dundee, Aberdeen, Greenock, Paisley, Leilli. and Perth only four fa n e! adopted the Public libraries' Acts. Twenty towns have now adopted these Acts, and it isinatrootive bo observe when the chief Impetus came. Between 1*<>1 and 18<K>, ouly one Utwu; i ii! to 1870, three: 1671 to 1880, five; 1881 to 1686, four; 1885 to 1690, seven. Thk ia a rei \ creditablo record, and bonsle Bootlaad u\a\ well hold up her head ami he proud of the part hIic has taken in ilii.- morement. True, there is the Bad case of Glasgow; hut . thin the recent failures to curry the moremc i < n con- fined to two, Elgin and Falkirk, But far a long* time Scotland has been better off for small libraries than any other part of the Doited Kingdom. Ia travelling from time to time north *d tin Tweed, the author has been omaxod at the number of llbrarieft, »p1cTS duba, literary and scientific institutes, bo that there is f gramdfor Baying that Scotland has held has own A cynu •, that there ia a great deal of banian nature in the rate- payers of tho Scottish towns. 1'oH a northern town on the ir Library inicstion on the simple merits of tho case, ;md 11 i;i |y KiicroKsl'iiI, lint ltd gome generous citizen present a library l<> the town, or offer to do ho on condition that the Acts he adopted, and it it* surprising how

upecdilyondunnnimouKiv the mov enl becomes an aooompliahed

fact. D&I this is only :i prool th.*it Scotchmen know how t<» appreciate a practical gut for the benefit oi the yew mi com- ity Li stated elsewhere the history of the Public Library ament in Scotland Is u history of Mr \ndrew Curuegies graemu< jrifts t<» Hickc institution*.

Moat oi the Saotch Public Libraries otoss their hmMfnjr* for Ing, and to give ft holiday to the utarf, from two o'clock on i v in the week. This is done at i'n-.l y, Dundee, and other pianos.

l: would be a good I ilng tbi the Scotch Public Librarians to form -i -uiotll association among themselves, as the Mersey and Midland districts have done. There arc raanj points oi I library son iiny which could be discussed in <\\vu-u\\\\

way :.■ ■'■'<' gittht'iini-H.

2-J4

rum if: u»icari»>.

The rojecU E bae Lota in Aberdeen vu ;t matter <•[ ooaaldei

■ii'i« surprise, considering thai the refusal came In fee face of the -ill but certain prospect that a suitable building to\ a Public Library would bo provided rent free, that prelimin u tioiiR to the amounl ol W,000 would be forthcoming, and that l£n steel ci'tiu- Mechanics' Institute Library, numbering a mttt 12,000 volumes, would become public property. In spitr m advantages, the citizens of Aberdeen, in public mooting a rejected the Acts in 1873. The meeting was attended by more than i BOO persons j bat of these litth m ire than one tl

purl m the vote, whi.-h wn*- taken I ■_> ineuufc >t' -igncd paper*.

ii u irunben worn tor adopting tbo Acta, 184 5 aguinnt, . nmji Hty ugainst, 8M1 Tin? result wee generally attributed to the opposition <>' Hk- proprietors of small house*, and of the iho] k*v|KTh. who objected to the burden of an additional rate. But among the leading hard-headed Bjririta ol the Granite ''it matter was not BEefy to reak here-, and at the end of 1*83, ©n it* |?6M>pa1infl generally known that the members of the 3d ■■ fnstitul urn wore disposed to hand over their build. ibrary

to the town, provided the dtteens adopted the Public Lil 1 Icta. a 'I'-ii'nT bnpetiu was given to bhepublla feeling in favour ol em Btcp Thus strengthened, thfn feeling found articulate sxpreflglos at a meeting convened at the Instance or a rororn rejit'euciiiMtiv.' of the Mechanics Institute and the Traded Connoll, and the practical raaull whs the presentation I

s in! lime of a requisition tn the chief magistrate of the nity.

in cocnplianee with this requisition the Provost convened and presided al a meeting of householders, held mi March 85, 1884 On ihis oocBfilon, the adoption of the Arte was moved seconded in preacnoe of a large assembly. A poll being again demanded unl lakcn, 1 v. j:- ;ni loinn-ctj thai ol' 1,1'/) (juallflci

householders present a1 the meeting, 891 rotod for 1 in- proposal, .1 in I -'04 against it. The Tublie Libraries Act* were a*vurtfj declared to be duly adopted. The first duty. 1 the . mimntt'T « .'- to enter into coaimimication with the directors 01 (he M< oh 1 Institute on the subject of theh proposed gift Mi

. >n, it wo* aiTangcd that the Mechanics' Institute

building in Market Street, together with the library ther. ..M.i

its furnishingB, should be transferred to the town for behoof ol the Public Gofafft subject to certain reserved dene, amount- ing to about U'^oOO. Viiothei thina h 1 t 1!' no \v»s 1 make an

[nation of the whole of the volumes belonging to the Mechanic*' Institute with the view of Gauging able

requirements ->t the Public Library, flu- ami boing to raise the ... i: In Hi"-' meantime to about 15,000 volumes. Of the I'/hi examined, as many as 3.107 were found to be so aorl imperfect from various causes that they had to be c-ntirei a»de. With regard to the remainder it was evident that time :<utt money would require to be uwge-Vj expended before they

rirnMf.' LnniAaiEfi in- scoti.avi>.

225

could bo mode available for public use. In view of these facte, as well as of (hi- desirability of enabling tho citizens to onjoy the privilege of tho lending library as early as possible, it was concluded that the best course to pursue would be to concentrate ivory effort on thr w.-rlt of organizing and onta-t »l ishla^ tlM latter. The number ol volumes thus obtained VM 8,237, ol which 5,370 passed through the bookbinders' hands, and were repaired or re- bound at an average cost of t*d. per volume. A* soon as access could be got to the large hall, on its being vacated by the school of art. niic-huU" of it wttfl adapted as a reading-room, the other baB being reserved for thfl OM of the b*inling department. The former was opened in August, and the jmpularity of this part of the library in well shown by the ever-increasing number of en tl tat wrong the room from day to day. The KMFtUMSDt b ufii-lighted and comfortably furnished, and, as indicated, w largnly frequented, particularly in the evenings.

Starting with Koine I.VXJ0 volumes, it wan calculated that Urn

raiders would number iimut fi/100. As a matter of fool they are

more than double that figure, which cJeaxty demanstmtei thai the

i'L'cs of the library are fully recognized and tiikeu advantage

li_\ i he community. Every endeavour has been made to

-t.se the slock as expeditiously as possible, in order to meet

tin's increasing demand. It may lie of interest to mention that

the standard of reading li WDMrkflWy high, tho amount (,f fiction

read being, relatively, compered with other libraries throughout

the coaatry. rery low; and this is all the more observable from

the fact that under tho heading of fiction is included all juvenile

books and all puetieul works. These rooms, with a reading-room

nil the opposite side of tho etreet, have, from the time the Acts

were placed in operation down to the present, been in use. There

ore no wall cases i all the books are arranged in double-faced

caws which stand in the middle of the floor, and are mounted on

heavy castors, Each cuse hold** on au average about 800 volumes.

The work of arranging and cataloguing the books by Mr. A. W.

Itoberfoon, M,V, the librarian, gave the utmost satisfaction, and

Uw catalogue ha* been greatly in demand. It may here ho noted

I fiat the fines for detention of books amount daily to ub much as

[Ofti but probably thifl mi v ill be reduced when the people arc

l"*'i< r acq minted with tho working of tho library. Jn future :i

id to bo affixed to each book, so as to give the readers an

MX'rt'Uiity oi marking tor themselves the date when the book is

uo -i tho ibrorv, But the committee were early satisfied that

•■ul«hnir in Markel Street, however it might be. made hi rueel

' Dook pressing oeeds of the Library, was not, and could not

my -atlsfaction lie, adapted as a place of permanent oeeupa-

5J*j * ti«i bad under their oonsiileratioo the propriety of selling

ling and of obtaining a suitable site elsewhere on whit fi

I' r«et >nt ipoeialbj designed for the purposes of the library. nil Inquiry, and having regard especially to considera- '"»>» of oast arid convenience of position, the committee arrV\p.&v3i 1 i rjdDfoa thnt <*/ nU the w'tes proposed one on t\\a eaattiiAe til

4 ' .

\ft

2iM

PUBLIC tlBF-lMB*.

Union Terrace combined the most advantages, and won vol! muled f<»r *uch ■* building A great point has been gained by the miiwcription of fnnda nearly sufficient to provide new Library buildings without trenching on the ordinary revenue of the Institution; and the tost report issued at the end of :i i \. n «hows that the revenue ha* hoeu found sufficient not only to meet the OOM "f neintenaooe, but to provide BDf a considerable expan- nl on of the library. The re<meat for fnnda for the new building tins met with an exceedingly good response, Mr. OUDtgfi tributes I' I, Odd, r* ml the Town Council n siiinilar mini. The committee are able to state that the stoeV td ihe library Inw boon ed from \9fi94 roLumes to 28,389"- un Increased Dotaatiuui 2,tt02 volumes. The demoud on the part of renders fur again shows a substantial increase, the number nf rob im i Ixurowed during the year having risen from L'M.ttfo to i* li Out of thi* tarn trwrtttra only lour books are for the present beyond ilie reach of the committee, riiu borrower- having left town and given no clue to their present abode* A\ howfirer, they may fbt take heart of grace and supplv Hell CODJMlGXl, H li, [X-'rhaps, too early to abandon all hope of recovery, EHpcdaUy when it li oonmered that during eighteen axontbi, when tin: total issue reached 340,431, no single volume hOfl hern lost. Whet do the Inverness people say to thai (octf

'Hie Aberdeen report always affords interesting rending, ami k convenientlv divided nndcr bonding* epitomizing in a pltrn

the work of the library

ArutmiR, To Airdrie belongs the credit ot having been th m Es

Scotland to adopt the Public Lihror os1 Ad by the nil i)ttt liiiaiiimous voice of the rotepay u. started, in temporary and inadequate proiniftt . within months of the resolution being adopted. The growth of the library has been Blow, owing to its limited income from the nit.-, which is «ml.v CU5 B year. Vet it is doing C»od work. !i_>w a lending library of 8,000 volumes. The total mini- books taken out during Ihmii win L8.7«2, of which 10 190 WOW Action.

A- LOJ

A very interesting ceremony took place in December, 1868, Then bbe building, which comprises n public hull and tfhrary. vm formally lianded ->ver tin* burgh con nussioncra bj the Mr. John Thompson l'nton. The preparation ol pi; t ione f »i- l he new hall ho vine been entruAted to Mr ^V It. A., London. Gothic in style, tlio bull, which hn boei sandstone from Polraniae Quarry, pri uicly

appearance. Th* extreme length ot the building is 8 extreme length of the front portion in s: It , while Qui breadth of the main portion, which oonriatB entirety of tiu- }mllf in .vi it. The lieighl ol the rronl portion the ground line to the rl^g* la w iv, vWto the cv

I'tBLlC UBJIAKIE* IS BCOTLAKD.

227

height of the hall from tbo ground line i<> the ridge in 40 it. The central block of the front portion projwit l'ulh s t\ beyond the general Una of frontage. The upper pari <>f the frontage, being broken tiff with piawtaret projects from the wnll Lad terminates in moulded corbels; white that »>( the centra << rmraatcs in bu ornamental gable top. Tin* main entrant ■>• In b»y a moflnifioent doorway, placed in the centre of \hr block, .■_■ Morehill, which te 12 ft. wide, and hut* a vean handsome

noiiii-eiivuUir to\). Being three IV.-! uliove tin It-vi-l"! rhr ro.t>lw;i\ ,

the trance door is reached by means »f a High* of rtcpei I ul the Hi n i- ".' I:.- hall being alrnoat on a level with the roadway, the area Eb peached by a aWontof aeveral steps, mtornollv the haUpreac in nepect of great i»r;i(it/an4ohaateneae,nnd pcrhnpe

.it haafew, if an) efvalfl in the count r v. EVoni

to ceiling the builainfl rnoasuroe 36 it., the hull |>n»|**er being

95 it. i-i length and 19 ft brond. starting from tho main entranoo

door tin*)-'' la, irai ol all, a richlyHOiuunentaJ vestibule, and .i

handsome stuiroaxe U'u<litijj to tl h < irallutK^ ;iml i'»<niis iiitovi;*, (>m

Hither aidnol thomnin entrance Mumv luv 1ml jun.i clunk-mimiM,

rotlrln ■-!'. era », an tin itortes. The hull t* also fitted with rtde

rice, with laj*ge and commodious platform. On the

Aral ioor, In the ftwit block, are situated rendtng-room, library,

nil! reference library. Thr hookfftWN are affixed to the waifs,

and nrn rani tied fron (salleries. (m tin- second floor aceommoda-

ti«.n I-, provided for an nrt school, which includes masters room,

elementary roomP model room, in: Indeed, the whole of the

i j loor Mill be (1 1' votwl mure or low to the purposes of an

iehool, Tin' hull in lighted hy fourteen windows an each

the only roof light* being those for Ktnvcce«c&. \\ \w

nnUiXo uddahie^

extreme north end bar* is an ornamental rentOatctt rising: bo I height of 86ft ton bbe ground, which will iv.W mm iiilaii- the hall and carry the smoke from the heating apparatus. The internal dccorution of the building is of a riiiiMtrate chm'iK't-T, Tiu anteaiicc tall and staircase .'■'• ela- borately finished in faience work, the arched tow befog paint i in colours which harmooisc. A maea.ro organ (ulso the gift it tin.* ildiiov of the hull) ban boon constructed u the organ chamber. Tlie library, towards tho equipment of which Mr. Patau con- tributed t; l ,<hh>, contains over 7 ,000 volumes. The reading public Ol Alloa will find tho library one of the uveatest boons imaguuble, \\sfi\ kind oi book is lonrid upon itx shelves, from those contain- in- Sght and cnt<rt;it»iiiiLr literature i" books winch require :i deal <>f etudy and deep thinking before their full content mastered, Hooks for boys :md girls have also a prominent place, and will do much to eradicate In anal district tak "penny dread- ful0 style of Tciuiinir, whtoh i* bo much sough! after ta fOtfflg people of the present day. The library committee a iv to « congratulated on their choice of books, and the librarian also for the compilation of the o&talQgue

The library w;ih opened oo February LI, I6B9 with 7JSOQ volumes. The catalogue compiled on the dictionary plan <>1 authors, subjects, titles, and crowt-rrfemiees, is, as s cats in I. iwin,'/ this method. ;i model of what a catalogue should he. Where & small library of 7.000 to 8,000 volumes is being formed the selcel loo of books made for Alloa may with every couflduncfi 1m? followed. Mr. Simpson is Ihr hlnm-ian,

Bbbohdt,

The little town of Brechin received, some months ago. an offer ol 65,000 for Public Library purposes. A iivin of Gdinburghi .solicitors, who are acting for the unknown donor, offered on behalf of their client that £3,000 of the £5, 000 be applied to the pur- chase of n site and tin- erection uf the necessary huildingn, the money to be paid when the site and plans ore agreed on, the balance ol t'i'.ooOtobe paid only after the building fa tartu1 with at least 6,000 volwnex paid for by the inhuVitr.r. Panda to be raised by them by subscription or otherwise, the

liabiuee of £tf,000 to he invested ns arrange .1, and the in«

thai t applied m purchasing now books, &c., from ton. to tfme,

In meeting the oosi "i the upkeep oi the house, insure leaving only the management ana the other necessary exp be raised bj taxation under the Public Libraries' Ad

The assessment rate produce* tboot i" 105 a year. At a pobKi moating for the consideration of the question n hunker trot i . i i enough to assert that a public gymnasium and v, i where the young men might go and smoke their p . | plo$

at dominoes, and the young women go and kntl stockings, weri i lore required In Rrcenln tiuui n Public Library

'/'/(.- iwv (cere adopted in tUeeartypart of leWX lu Han ol the

Pl-DMC LIDBATltES IS SCOTl.KXP.

22H

:;ini<' you 8 spado] meeting of the Town Council WftB hold. Lord

(Ml Mitchell, who presided, said the object for which the

meeting had been called wan to afford an opportunity for the

PllbUa Library Committee to moot with the Town Council lad

r »: i v - :t ciifcronoe on fin- siil-jivl Ot carrying out the Aelx Whifih

had now been adopted. The oonmittee having accordingly met conference wiih the OouncU, discuaied the KtepM which ft wan pedient to take Barly itepfl will be taken respecting a site

<1 ItuiMinj.'

DLUll_MiTO.\'.

The Acts were adopted in 1881, The usefulness of Public. l.iiuvuir* in .vniiiU places such ;\* tV.- imu*t necessarily remain hampered so long as there is no aid from o\ her source*, The oon> arittee are looking1 forward to better time* for this library. Lx alx>ut twelve months the library will be much better housed in tin- now institute in eourec of erection to the memory of the late till am Doony, shipbuilder. The hmldinir. (s expected to coel ut £6,000, and will be two storeys high. The library, vcading- omittce room, &c», will occupy the whole of the ground r, while in the upper portion of the building there wfl] boa creation room, billiard room, cord room, Sec., with caretaker's >• in '.'Innvh street hns hocn purchased al a cost of £'1,700. The library expect* to enjoy un immunity

i""io rent i fl ■!■ rem >val, and this will place ii in a good position. or tlie erection oi the building have been raised by bl <■ lubecription,

Dl'MiKK.

From whichever point of view the work in bonnie Dundee Ii red it comes out well. Tlie group of institutions shown in the r»i nfi represent* la fact the present liijrhwuter mark of Public ..i (I Mum'-uii] progress in Scotland, unci Dundee may be

,-< i. 'ed Willi tin- bcM iimI in wnt pruui>eMi\e iu England. I'Voiii

[oat the* buildings have cost over l'oO.UOO, and DOi i

ou ol tliM respectable Mini has i-orne oui f the porketa of

yevn. The first origin ol these institutions dates back

13, when Dundee, in common with other parts of the United

ooii was looking around und considering what woe the

meet suitable monument to perpetuate the memory of Prince

MberL The citizens ol Dundee, with that practical character

Vhloh hai always distinguished them, decided that their moim-

iuld not be merely monumental brass or sculptured

marble, but an institute specially devoted to the furtherance of

the objects which for many yearn had inleruHtad IVineo Albert,

md which ho had done not a little to promote. Tim Wftfl the

bftthof the Albert Institute, und the pile of buildings will ever

wnain, not only as a monument to mm whose name it bear*,

foresight and wisdom of the Dundee people other

munis had beon active, at a time contemporaneous with this but

lto independent ol it, to see if it were not possible Xo C£«X Xto

230

II Iil.U UUHAtllBS

J'ulil;. I.ilirn :<,' \,i> .i-luplrtl. 'IV loolutnm •<• iulnpt tli n:i.-i i;iKi-n in Ink), ami it li I" the credit of Dundee t Hut it va* taken unnnimoiwly, and that n preliminary cxponao* fund of Cl.000 wa* at ■•" Ih'<1, Tin mji\ ; ive been iln--. I

iv, 1 . I lie l.i.l I'ttal Hi ' UU'i'l In -III i(>- w.i - then In fi

of orooaoo, and thai provision bod boen made in itr. titlc-deodn for accommodating a PublicLibrnry within it* walls \ sple site wo* given by the magistrals I at * nominal prtoa, on condition that room should as proridod in it tar the Pan-lie i.ii>r:men, nut ...-I. in and art giilleries.

The late Sir u. Gilbert Beottj K.A., waa entrusted witJi the work of datigvJng * suitable xiuniniv, mi! :n 1807 the wholo of the buildings won completed, and the first use no which they

iirwnwB pitoi.ic: i.rniiAnv, MVSBVM AJTO \\i\

wi'iv placed was for the meeting** of the Brilisl ki allon,

which visited Dundee thai yeur. Tin- reft

libraries were opened In l*Hi, and in l-C.'t a lai

for iimuK'UMi and art galleries, was era led. So rapidlj has tie

Work deVCl<>pr*l m'iii'i' lli.it ( li in- tlt.it li.

dalioi wlutely essential, and it wne thought HttniK tin

new galleries projected ia thi Jubilee year, thnuld be called the Victoria Gallorles, VcrTffenerous hare been the gifts o4 the loncHng citizen* ol Dnndee. b 1803 Mr. Kcillrr ciimc forward n i.u an ofier of tea thousand guineas, and during Unit yc*r,aud since, a no lees sum than £35,000 lit* teen awed to tree Use Institute from dahc. and •<> build the hoy « '■ - <■ 1 he i

PtmUO LHOUMRS 3N SCOTLAND.

231

form a magnificent pile, with enhanced beauty and Utility. Efficiency in every department appears to be the order of the day. Mr. John Muelanehfan fills the triple capacity of librarian, cunitor, and searetfLrv ol the Dundee An I. uioii

UlC entire work of the Albert Institute, and Victoria Gallons. now comprises reference library, lending library, subscription lihrury (one guinea per annum). mUBGXXa of natural history, oitiottj art, bi d fine art gaUeriee, annua] One art exhibition of works by llTtng .irt.faui,and the Dundee Art Union. During tin* iir-i qui rtef Ol [890,64,143 volumes were issued in the lending de- i ent, and |ii,sn»J volumes in the ivferanob 'J*he Increase 0V6P 1 Ik« rorrpHponding ipvirr.i'i- <>\' tlir prennus \imi' U -l,4*-'0 volume*

Pi .\pkkmm.nk. i

To die rich, to "cui up veil," to devote u large fortune made rji a r i lib i : lion ol oilier people's work and business ability to nuudlng a family of healthy rooU—t I »*>»'.' arc the pet ambitious : nicM men who hate " made their, pile." Om.* bvllliani excep- on, howorer, ia the Scottish-American millionaire, Mr. Andrew Ogle. At a Glasgow meeting, he and his wife were col- lated on the great good they had done in assisting to Public Libraries. Then said Mr, Carnegie, with the resolution glowing in hie cyea, "Ms wife and 1 are nined that we will not die nchl" And it i& a very thing, not only for Scotland hut other places, that rnefl i w Pc have come to -< worthy a d< i talon,

rnegic Public Library at Dunfermline was the Brat rift of n. h Mi. Carnegie made. In December, 1870, shortly tor hi" magzunconl gifl oi bathe to the town, Mr. Oarnegu r> L-'w-r £.i.Q00 (afterwards increased ,000 to i >und o library, provided the town adopted the Pu ■!). ubrariec Act*. These Acts having heon adopted at n ting held for the purpose on February Jlf 1880. Mr. several gautlemon with the preliminary arrangement}), and afterwards a committee of numagottieol Lppointod m accordance with the Acts. Un July '17, Ihki, the memorial Stone Via laid bj Mr, Carnegie's mother, and u i bra to iii event ( in August ."'. iKs:i, Hk- Iruetfrni formally opened by the Earl of Roeebery, toe

number nf volume* m the library licfng then 11,925.

The building w Domestic Tudor in style, ami presents a front to

hvuHin'ct... Tiic Mihm Street pari is devoted to a general hip I

ladle*' reeling-rooms on the ground floor, and a lending library on

tin' upper Aoor. Tl lis front measures $'J ft. in length and 1s twn

Igh, with range* of Hquare-hcnded windows. The

tipol entrance is near to the corner of thin front, which at lhi« pofol la treated ho :i* t > uive the appearance of a square tower, : itorey higher than tJie rest of the building, The slightly projects, the head d' thcentraucclieiugn Nome* what 1 oted arch, deeply received, and supported at the sides

"k-r columns with moulded baaea ana nvnan aaao, csxvea.

232

PUBLIC UBOABIPH,

capitals. The FOOflftMd portion of the troll i< tilled m with CATV4 foliage, &0 . and DD the outer member* arc tin* words "Cnrnegi Fruft Library." Tim door-WM IB finished stove asapahlw. i : i ri I'll stone flnial. In I he third Mmvy of iln> part of Hip hiiXIdDXg la the imoVing-rooin, having oriel windows in the two angles, looking to l>oth Rtreots. 'Hie St. M»r^;irrt Street front is of uracil the same style as the oilier, and extends to 70 ft. This jMirt of the ill-sign i imtuiiiH, on the ground floor, a dwelling house for tliu

TC1

ftgM

MR. AXDRKW CABNKOIR.

librarian, and a large recreation-room above. The front ia divided by string-courses, which form hood* tu the windows n* in part of too north front, and in the centre in an octagonal tower rising to a height of 68 ft., and covered by a slated spire with an ehtl iron fixmd carrying the cardinal point*. The upper windows in the (southern port of thie front air Imihhcd with iruhlcto and /fear-d*-te ornaments. The whole of t«*tl 1 i i nits of

'

rrnuc Linn amiss :n 8Cotlasp.

233

the structure is built of stone conrsere. The interior arriinirenu 1 it - ha¥G hccn voU planned, Btld OO&Sist of a library-room measuring 67 it. 3 jus. l>v fle ft, G ma ; nrrLMtion-rooro, 26 ft. *J inn. by 26 ft. rt in*.: gentlemen*, reading room, m :t. :: ins. t.y 85 t't.'c inn. ; indies' reading'-room, SS ft. 0 ins. by I* it, 10 Ina ; emoking-r«<»in. 88 ii bj 16 ft ; :wni ;i beeper** lu>u*o, containing throe room* ;md kitchen with other necessary conveniences. The oeiUngfl Of the reading-rooms are 15 ft. :i :ns. in height, and the library ha* an ojien timber rod with laminated i»eam under the principal*, and

Og on atone brackets. The centre of this OttUtDfl ft. 6 tan

from the floor. The entrance hnll and corridors are laid with nqnnre!! of marble concrete, and aspatfouj atons stair ascends from the halL On the landtag of the first flight of this stair is li.- entrance to the recreation-room, and :i flight higher i* rbat to the library. The number of volumes in charge of Mr IVclili^, r.he i it r-iri.t ii. la now 13,fi0ft. Mr. Cftmegfe lias several times since fine

buildup wan opened shown his Interest in It by gift* of money. A i;uod sig"ii was (he large number of orderly youths and iMtys fa i ha newsroom at tha Mme ■>!' the writer'a v mi

A portrait i* given uf Mr. Carnegie, who is netting so worthy no example to other successful men of business. May he hare many imitators!

EltlNBTTtOH.

■* Auld Reekie'1 has now its Public library, after the third time of asking, and the entire library world will attentively watch the bejtfnninp and progress of the work in modern Athens. There is timi Hi rr was in iMinburgh n small Horary open to tin atUenflfta m.Is as l&K), and the fact isoi bibliographical interest It is unnecessary now to do more than glance at the .hi. inn history of the two previous attempts to adopt the Acta The movement of IflBH touh practical shape at o mooting of '- held do Piovombcr ID. IBW7. The attendance was small, but it was ■•'-■rtainly inflncntiaj, and the spooking waa admirable. i: . Lord Justice-General was in the chair. She resolution*, the .■I in- 1 al which approved of the proposal "as a means <>i promoting '-iiliffhtenment, recreation, and general benefit of the com- munity,' w are pported by *orae of the leading cituem*. It is worth imtinw that, one of the most ertnu»*t promoter* of the si-hi-iue was Mr. 1. .1 Jloyd. who, aa Lord Provost of the city

thtrtecDi years afterwards, did his utmost to induce the citizens bo adopt the proposal which wan then rejected. The meeting re- ceived unanimously tO present a requisition to tl"1 Lord Provost. in terms of the Act, asking nlm to convene 8 public meeting of householders to deride the question. Opposition to the movement

wss at once organized, and was carried on with greai vigour,

I'lii.'iiv by ii e Bni plceepers of Princes1 Street and other lead Dfl

i res.

Tin- statutory meeting was held on May IK iw, and the

vasa crowded and excited one. The Lord Provost was

chair, but it i an scarcely be said that henreiaAet^tcn &a

2W

r-rnu: r,raiiA.riiD-

I I

meeting defied nil restraint, and gave itself up to most a dm red disorder. It wat i vfd< nt from the Bxet that tl e oppoi enl of tlw [iin\.-ii)L- 1: had tikni possession ot the hall in force. A discreditable mooting' hon rarely been hold in Kdinburqh. U hen the names ol the Ice ing rotmiKitii'niKlR worn rend mil by .Mr Warwick, iiw Town (.'lerfc, they were received, tbe report "with Wsatogj hooting, and groans.' Thai was the I which the mooting conducted itseU throughout. The ohjoctore made littio use of argument i their strength lay in qaeiwlung al]

argument Willi lidwiuig :md groaning, In1'-' or fair difteussiOU

th. re was none; and probably it would hove been thrown away

Oflfluch an niulicnco The resolution in favour of adopting the

A.cts was moved by Mr William T.wld In an earn - i, and

seconded by Mr, w. u Ehtulr. When ; in- vote was taken, toe 1 1 -ill; Showed I .lOti against the proposal nnd only 71 in favour.

An interval of thirteen yearn passed before another attenanl wan made, and to the interval ilio law had been altered, to the I'll feel Hint the vole might be taken by a poll of the whole

Of ralepa vers, : ml i.il tui't.- \ Of thOHC ftho WOTO able l<> attend :r

public noeting, The electorate hud .dsu ben -mlcd,

none boSnoludea rery laree proportion* of those whom the Acta were designed bo benefit Moreover, mai j . rgi towns in England had in tlic meantime taken advantage of the Act*, i.m bheee grounds the promoters «>i the movcroeol were hopeful of suoces*,

S public iincot.iij; «'l -ili/ ,-. nabl. [■• ilie proji'i-t wiw held

on January 16, Lo81. Hie reouiaitiou having 1>een presented to ;h. Lord Provi -i on 3 unary L6| 1881, ii was reserved bo inkc a plebiscite of the ratepayers. Voting papers, in the shape o | cards. Mere issued to the ratepayers, taking the "Vee" ami "No papers which wore duly signed us the test of the opinion o ii i mi payers, thia vote showed o clear majority of e\Oe*fl ;i-t the proposal to adopt the Art , and tho re a LI wae,o

eouiv.e, it«I>i|itfd aai-H.tih-lnr.ivc. There tliomattei' vented in I The Miird ;imi final attempt wnn >r"i_;lu ibout :n the autumn

i--'i bj tin' i.iiniii. -i-nt offer ol bEi Andrew Carnegie o £80,000 on condition that tho city adopted the Public Libraries

I i I paw i- < ' tho adrtitioiiiil moimy required fur maintaining

the library Tiu» enthusiasm with whleh the la*t attempt war oondaoted i"i unaa to wipe of! rim stigma <<) apotln vhlcd ittended the two previous efforts. All classes Joined togethe

in pi'iimottng the movement, nnrl bo Koeiirfng for thn or

- ilendid i gift. The main \o\ ••, however, eame from Dhe

" SriitMiii:in " rin.l teVBt -.in.c I h,- K,W:ili. \r\ nf I860 WIS JHldSed

hfla Mil' re been many newi™per articles so Tuingoet end so ii w ribten, arglng upon the rlttxemi the advisal lllty of adoptu Acts, ;i^ wero printed n thto welUknown -nyrtcli paper. Colucn

nf ntrtfiri wen 'ivrM ili'-.n -|| nr<- tin- work in varinliK ]t;ir!* Of IN

country, and Miese were aceon hanled with rorceful leaders, wide masl have aided mosl matoriaif) In ed lea <■•>•_ pun] i upon

i(ir>.ti'ia. II was also a noticeable t.i i tl.l r-iune who Ii.mI

/•ecu figorom appoomtB In the two previous Ltlempta, txn

pimr.ir una Antra tv scott-ast.

LhaSr aid, and worked heartily with the promoters if was stated thai i ii- 008I ol a plebiscite of Edinburgh would be £600, and

fn>i (here mill' doubt* u> hi ;li.' wif-dum u|' deciding

the question by ;i town's meeting^ it irai ulthnatei) settled to

adopt this method, W( tin- nppoM'iiui » Ml of BO trffluig tmd in-

>iir:iiii. trader, Tin* meeting wae called fur Octoboi 20,

' 0, and will remain us hisl n*ie in the annals of Edinburgh. Thomas Ohurki r.,iii.. the Lord Provost, presided, and it wan estimated that some ifiQQ people must hove been present. The Erie, of wnicli the meeting waa the outcome,

brief and to the point, tic Raid; "I should Uke i" d j

pari m .K.<. ntj to the numerous attractions of the superb metro- polis < f my unlive hind. If its citizens were1 now <f opinion that :i PttbtiC I,il»i'i»rv WouM hr r.f '»rc:d good to the * it.V, as I ln'lir\ ■•

men tactitutiona arc wherever established, and wore they t»> cdopt the proviaioiii <>i the Library Act which provide Ear

(iroper mail Eonuuco, it would give mo ureal pleasure toproBext in magistrates and town council with (550,000 ror such a into spoooho vara made. One gentleman, referring i" ihc large percentage «>t' novels taken out ot Public Libraries, n marked that no did uot see why e poor aaafB hi" should be one srhlt duller than Ma by depriving hire o! that he fihouJd not Like U bo deprived ol himself —a volume of Walter Seottj or Woltens, b? ..i rtu •!': Moreover, he bod noticed thai people who learn perhaps the iabli oi rending onlj through :"' Interest In romances ii\- mi! i.\ iiv:n team unfit they rnusi have lomethlnn deeper and mnrp solid to sntfrif) them. It. is the wnv in which if though) are opened to the reader. The Lord Provoai put the qnestlon t" the irole, colling upon those 'ii favour <>i the amraclrnent to stand up next. This call wan Iimi i< h\ alioui twenty I u all, moat of whom quickly re mimed ill- i sonic contusion, caused by the outburst ol

ler with which Lhej wore greeted. The unnl Provost then (■ailed Hjxni i in.- i»uuuorler& of the motion, am! immediately tin iiac n a body, wavjiurkabs and utieita, and cheeriuy mottl i nthuaiaal icnlly. A cablegram woe forthwith Rent to the gencrouc

i noun* ii.:; i!i»- .i i tost unaniiu m-. ..ilopiion »\ Hie Act.

la briefly the history of the three occasion* when the rot<

on this oucstion was taken i Edin nu'cli, The purpose wfll be

Buncd i:' it ihoutd stimulate the rrfesdn in other districts where

bos l"'i n unsuocceafn] to bjo oa until they

uitiun.iri ;,■ carry tht adoption of tin.' \

The denign for o mitahle building was thrown open topubUc uompf I the one Bent in l>y Mr. Washinfpton Browne was

i I in- plans oi thifl were tuihjocted to some modificotfone tor a : , euel i furtl i v tnsiderntion on the pt ii- ot the

nrehitoel and eemmittoa joemed '<' render dostrable. On July 10, 1887, the foundntion-etone was laid unid great "I popular approval. The day selected for the ■■..ii. I.:. ;. . and this enabled the uioa itrni i - 0 i inizo and i u tnu^nfficout proectrtnon. !SskQt9i

L\T.

PI I H MDRAniF.?.

Ian! the Wone, and in doing -," said thai thai wu the fifth Public Library which he hod been permitted to found, find he could wi«h for himself no happier lot than thnt he might be permitted to add in6nitel%v to ihr number ere his race was run, and In- In'

down to reel open the bosom of bis mother-earth.

The total height of the Structure to the top of the laiiu-in, moaHurin^ from George IV, Bridge* is 118 ft Entering Cowgrile, the lirwt floor it* occupied by the bMfcmg and electric lighting apparatus and genera stores, engineer's workshop, house*

.-. ml

i i \ vriitv 09 I'l.ivm itnw PI inn linnviiv.

Sec. On tin' second floor are workehoue for bho e tail, bookbinding,

repairing ri»»in.\ ami Muter* tui N<l.- previous to their I

catalogued. On the next floor, which is the faafi below the lew ol George IV. Bridge, fa the newsroom, 90 ft. by 79 ft., with ,i ceiling -'"» fcluch It !a of cruciform shape, with shortened anna*

iiTi.l ili< ■■:! •!- "I ciii'li nf the anna Wing filled with large windows, abundance oi ligbl from four sides is thereby obtained. Iht BOO] above io carried on u aeries oi pillnja, which form IC HSplefa

.•"/wire in the rci; tic of the room, oi '12 Ct. These pillars huvc aa

prni.ir cmmniKsi »x mott.sxt*.

•SW

ooro. and are encased in tarra-ootta, and a dado 1°. ft. high, of ootonred t j : !■-. i. carried rotnad the walls d i terlej oJ ornam< ntal panels rate aiumn - tiio walls of tiii- room, wolon Bathe meal Frequented of any, nlwuy* haying a cleanly aapeet the i-«>ihngor the newsroom u deeply panelled sad (hushed with ornamental

Ideate? work The landing Library <i the Qeorge n Bridge sveljlsTS I teaSnlnrauti totheroom bohrs Hand

tiii* reference Library above it being smaller in eoiit.ei|uenee of :v leave deduction being necesaary to provide Fox bhe onireiiec hull, which i* -i* fi. by 17 ft., with a 23 it. ceiling. The appearanee of the lending library, ao far an tha is affected liy fine columns carrying the Oooi above, i* much the same na thai of the new*» ruiJin. In thi.t iMM*. however, Mil* ruiMsing material [a oJ wuod. Tin' pubUotsouiitartakBsthcMhnpeol threcsldeeofu panillrioyin tlw area between the unes Doug-M ft, by 30ft. It gives about 110 ft of length for the display of indicator* and the rrrms- j;< tioii of the public busi- nc»». Tlie shelving is arranged on the wall, ua also ;'f> right 3itglca to

it, in oaeaa 7 ft apart a p&wage botog loft be- tween tlie counter and the end ut the hook caeca for the aooonunodati >n .'i the attendant*, In the lending library there will be accommodation I .i n *i | , imi:. me

book t'i <:\-'l'v live nf the

population being consi- dered a proper average: ; n.i provision la m tde forthe addition el a hook

BtorO :it tlir Bortll-WeaC corner capable Of holding nn nddllional >.'»**» volumes. Tlie raftarance lihrnry on the top flnt is a very haadaonii- ap: I'lnii'iu. llu« MO ft. hy 72 ft. dimensions being hOfe

resumed latere are three deep alcoves on each skid, to the ends ei which an- the windows on which tha hull depend*, to i con- siderable extent, for it* light. The hook.-* mv arranged En three ■i ipaUerlea, which are approached b v elreohir slaire al the four ii ^N"- 1 if the hull. Over tlie uraidiug there la a moulded and iiaiirlif i lrr.e with fluml nmunicntetloii Eu i In* panels, and dee

relopGtl from ;ln> Is tin- ilruiu ol Ihe doine-thapcd roof. Tm*B

drum riaea rcrtlcallj bo u height of 7 ft. 0 In., and Is broken Dpljy pflaatcra a to i v riea ol ircular and wctanffular panolei m which ■ioUoea»dci Icoe, or artistic symbol* will be introduced ltacVn>yiav& icu >pc rcoftht tU nut are thcrttjbOf U\i;\Wn\\v» ta Wv

PUN HF REFERENCE LBR&S* FLOOR

Ki'iNBtTtioit i-i at.ic :.:nn\RY.

28*

in nM' Mtuunus.

« troamfereoc , tod tbea ega a iroi uiaeof

U LfbD am « biota rises from theoantroof thadoxne, Tin * paces between the riba are panelled, but it is yet a moot point whether they will bo used for lighting purposes or whether a r « l Light v J] onlj hi? gives by tin* lantern ©1 *'"- dome. The heigbl from the Boot t<> tlie apei of tho dome is ir ft. 6 iu., anil the bail altogether im one which present* greut possibilities for decora; m- Shelving Will be provided for 75.0U0 volumes, and that mar be ln- i. t- I. when the rerjuiremenuot the library demand it. by 8 9*000 mini- I h'- entrance. Imli ih hncd thivHur.huiit with poinding :ivhl:ir, imd lighted with leaded glass window* n tinted coloora I inlonnadJng of double pilasters gives variety to tho wnftla, win nt either end n set of doable aohnEnu Bonn flu opening en the one in 1 1 hi tiir grand BtaJHWttj and on the other (ai 1 1 u< bouUi to i he public smir lending down to the newsroom. The heating is affected by muni af miied .si cum pipes plumed in ra.i

whle.h also piny aii important pact in c-oimeeLun: with the vcntil.i- I ion of the liui'-Iin,'.'. Frrsli .iir Ls Uikrn llinni; li I'mm

n.i outside, but before ii i? admitted to the different rooms ii w 01

be oondojued through the r;idialoi> ami vanned l\ contact With

Hi. hoi i'i|"'. For oarrring v* >y the vitiated an n powcrfa exhaust shaft will w constructed, into which tho spent sic from the

rari >us departments of tiie IjidKhuir will [iti.ss II .is si Kill i* curried

from basement to roof, over the latter of which it riace In the shbpc of .in ornamental tower-like structure. By thia - estimated that the entire air in the building; will be changed {our of five times an hour, Larjpc firoplaooa have also bean introduced into the chief apartments, the Hues of which will be utilized foi vi-utilaiim; puipoM^. An umtallation of the electric light hat been fatrodnccainto the building The plant is in duplicate, there being two euginoe, two honors, and tour dynamos t>l ial b the t'\-i Tit of any ovaakdc wn I bore may bo 1 1 oatinotion of the right. Complete provision hn/* meanwhile been made for carrying pipes through every )>oi'timi of the hnilding, hut ii not into that tioy fitting* shall be xuppluxl m tliu uu.'iuitiiiio. On the soul Ii east angle, with an enj ranee to the Cowgate, is a stair raaa tor the dm ol the utofE, having in the centre ii hoisl for ■■■ -i ig ls I

tag i let to the various Boors. lioouis for the members of the

open ofl i "■ staircase Sir. H, Morrison baa boon appointed the chief librartrm, and the building will ba opened about the middle of 1600,

Ant only Kdm burgh, bnl the whole of S

time been discussing thofutnrA of rtn Idvneataa' Uhrarj library has long haon the Scottish counterpart ol tin- Hiiri*h

Wuiienrri, l.ilce thai valuable iusliiuimn. it Ik til

hi. i.iry lore, aid, like II nlnu, nijoyn the priillege ol |s*

copy of averv book [aihlWied In the I lilted Kiogdom Ii i»ne

nii|Mr;;itil p;tr: icnl.i: , :1 gh, till* AflVOTl .■• Ihr

British Museum It tanoiu publu institution. There Ik farther difference; ihat bhe r.tv aud eipi im ol hoi mnfatmmng the mtletlion have uoi been \»\d uu Uio publii \>un>v.

PpBLTO IJBRAMBS IV SrftTt.AXn.

030

hut have fallen open the l'Vn.ry of IdvnoatM. Pahtoble to Sent- I ■ni.i f ondoubtedh ba8bean,DQt fur thai advantage bhenatSoD baa simply lo bhank the Faculty, whOi if it ehoaeea angeneroua b courfie iw right to close the libran to the lay oonsultaxit is n matter of fact, it is n fear t b:it, tho closing of the Inal itntlon may ultimately become nroeenrY, that baa ocoatilaned, In the first, place, the action ol the. I-Miuhnru'h Town Council, ami in the second pUev, of bbt 3ootcli newspaper press generaUy* Tin* i<'Mie beyond the Tweed is to see it become tli< aofciunal . of Scotland. Ami in tin-, vji w many on thifi ride liio bonier heartily loin. Such a collection of books should not bo

OpQB EO the pOJbhl ■'-: niiiitii <>. i.tvM Imt of riirht. IT Scotland ron »ei'iir«- uti omiiial ui'.uit I'm- tin. maintenance "I Lhifi tibr rj, id .n-tli.it it i* thrnwn open to the public, there wili be room lor congratulation.

VoIIPAB A Oil TTxWIi I.

I'' r a snaull library Forfar is doin>r fairly well, in throe uqdJ b i iiu Increase of over WOtoIuDIW teenown in its issue, It in also worthy o1 ait* that whenem owvdoor labour is -topped i'i- issues nt once go up. The library at Hawick recta mh eta i I lii^h :n Use world, for U i< at tho top Of the municipal i : : It is rather a Ktilt climb lo get np to the lending department, inii i.).- Hawich Btooldng weavers do not seem to mmd that, for they :i- Library.

(iALARiriRIi.

i bi Jubilee w 18 & small windfall for this town, tin- reputation of which rcsta on Scotch tweeds, and its close proximity to sford. Some £1,800 was rained as a Jubilee fund, and what better war could there bo of spending this than on an extension Of in.? Public Library, proviamg a bow readmp-room and an WrtynrfflB Of the tenamfl library? Tho new reading-room has a ' i ! ft., equal to 1,582 square feet. Its main Nature is n very large arched wimtr.w 'ii the end of the wall,

which, rlong with tight* on each aide of the roof, Roods the room

tight. The wall*, up to :i height of ■*> ft above the floor,

are meed with glaxed tties, disposed in :i good and ohaate pattern,

and topped by a heavy cornice. The celling is of n great height,

and dependent from ii are four Wenhaiu gas-tights I?ie public

h to i tin room in \iy h lobby oil, wide, which has been

i off two rides of the original Horary room. Title lobby, both

D .v.ihs nail cutting, is lined with wood painted ;md varuishitl.

iiu- library room haa been greatly altered. Forraei'h it wa* I u Hi|ii;nv. of which two Hides were occupied m \> book- shelves, and tin- floor-ajiHce w;m used ai .; reading room. Bui to 8ft wide lohtrj from the staircase !<» tin new reading- room it ww neoeaaary to put up new walls for tho library proper

tai diatanM inward from the original walla, This bee tmctetl tin sice of J io room on two aides. fa the intodioi awn the back tvnll, or the one bo^mA.\^\\\«Tta£tofr

*m

pmr.tr i.ibbaiuks

room, 30 ft. But tins dinunuiioii of wulJ BpftOfl (Off books (MS been m«. iv t in) compensated by flic new arrangement, and by the erection on the floor of the 1 thru ry room of ri v-* si;uid:mls

tat books. These are tine gift, of nn anonymous contributor. Booh of toe standards is 10ft In height and ; j to in width, :nnl :m eoctl onirics eighteen shelve;, this is equal to ISO lineal feet of vail RHce loft, in height far books. Tlw lineal wall spaee, when tne library was closed, was rt<5 ft. Now, along wiiii til-* standards, 11 is 200 ft., so that, while the orbffual room was somewhat overcrowded with 0,000 volumes, the library I

hnprm '<[ condition will give LCcoiumodBtion for about 11,000

rolumes, The assessment yields about £226, ol which £00 goes for rcudiiux-ruom literature ami from £30 to £40 Cor hooka. The work Lb decidedly growing. An Interesting ceremony took ptsoc

at Hie icupcuuu; in i M.-. ember last. The building .'[.nub well un an eminence, and the view from its windows over the tfelrotc valley and hills is TOO picturesque. Within the shade of those hilts Adam Smith lived and wrote his " Wealth of Nations,"

frRANURMIM'TH.

Another of Mr. Carnegie's lifts helped to living about iho adoption of the Acts here. An oilor ...I tfOOO quickly awdatcd to decide the mutter, and on October ], iVUS, the memorial atone was laid. A temporary building was opened until tho now structure was ready for the public. Grangemouth is somewhat

£roud of the tact that a raodost seaport town of lead than 6.00C ihabltants should, with practical unanimity, have adopted tin Public Libraries' Acts, when other towns und cities of greater pretensions have hesitated to do so. It in a matter to be placed to Ufl credit. The mauner in which the promoters of the Bobotne curried it oat Supplies a worthy and inst.ru. -rive example to other communities Whose reading facilities are as yet undeveloped.

The i posaJ tor the adoption of the Act originated among the

■commissioners of the town, who chose the mods of public meeting for obtaining the necessary approval of the ratepayers The meeting Look place in the Town lhll. and was presided ovw l>,y Sheriff Wilson, the proposal for the adoption of the Acts being warmly supported by th« chief magistrate, Mr. Efugb Mac. ph arson, and otluai leading townsmen, Coming hefon public for too first time, little surprise need have been Cell had

tir.mtfcmoulh.iike oilier places which need not be named, n | i

the proposal U was, lnnvi^n-, nl'i.-r voine discussion approved

by a substantia] majoril ?, und held ;** the manner in wtuuh the townspeople elected to celebrate the Jubilee. The building now eomplett land occupied ie of two storeys, designed bv Mi black,

architect, Falkirk, in ;> pleasing style which resembles most the

Italian order of architecture. The luwei part of the rn»utoge

ts plain, and contain.4* the two doors, uuc at *ch ride of the

niildinai which rive entrance it.whiU be! sveen them ore three

mndowe, iwo giving light to the reading-room, and one

■'/.'. ■'.'/, 000. '\":u: upper pftTt t>\ iVw. \ -"'V ...■■• L% hi'/hl>

MTBUC LIBRARIES Itf SCOTLAND.

241

ihiii.i1, chief features iu the dftfaQfl being four lur^e tlueiMmartcr

columns, two at each cud of the storey, while stone baluBtrading

W introduced at tho baee of rhr rohunuN, and the top is

lini^Iir-" aviI. .'.i i-nluhlatinv having the wurds " Virtoria Public

blbraty," above which is a stone balustrade in front of roof, and finning the summit of the frontage to the building. There la dear spaa all round the Bitot and this ground wffl be laid ouf

ornament illy. On Hie -'piiuii! HOOT if i-' libmry, y3 ft. by S9 ft.

ft, and librarian's apartment* al book of building. The stair 10 spacious and very handsome. On the second Boor there

ia an art roc ii, •_•■„' II. by Itfl't.; rcading-rooBBitt ft. I»y 99 ft, \ lodice' n :i'luiL--vi>oiii( 17 ft. liy 18 ft. ; and •■oniruittoo room,

At tilt* opening ceremony of the temporary promisee, air, Carno| i ring to a little episode in bus history while a boy

in ilie any oi AJiagbony, said he would not take a fortune or give fortune to a Boy any mow than he would leave thai boy u There \vys nothing in the world so grand a legacy ai hono*t poverty, lie next told of n Colonel Anderson who had lent Mini and other boys, from wool to week, Volumes from ins private library That man, continued Mr- Carnegie, would have ai monumeni & the Pnblio Library, that he was building in Alle- ghany, because be hod opened up to him the mteUecftaui wealth

world, lie learned from the book* what he could not Imc learned elxewhcri*: niwl mi del they wonder (hat, when lie li;ul

wealth, the noblest use to which he could put that wealth was in

lmit.-u.ing Colonel Anderson and establishing Public. UbrorieeP

Tlie first lessons he learned, the sentiment* that were graven on

ills hoartj were tboaa dial came from the bmui Into the heart.

mii that '" put an enemy into his mourn was to

v his brains, and he had never entered a bar-roorn.

ion learned the grand sentiment, "To ihine ovDBell

lie," ;md .t uiu/st billow aa night did day. *' Thou can'st DOl

Ne to any man." Another leBson he learned waa that

lu> man can be cheated out of a reasonable success in life uulem

bimeeif.

Already about one-sixth of the entire pomilaiim are enrolled

** ttcrrowers at the library. The coat of the building with fur-

ug reached £3*189, and on going OTer it, the present writer

**ae» surprised that so handsome and substantial a structure could

built :<>i so reasonable an outlay. This was the total cost

j being for the building, arid JJ107 for furnishing and

;. A* a library for villages ami small U wns the building

Ofongcinouth would form on ox client Model,

I.NVKUMf&a.

\ Las J when « i toueh Inverness, we touch a perj sore place in Public Library movement, is there an Bnjtieli * I *>'\' which di 1 not announce in the autumn "I l->v that Iho .-. i'n .. io laiirarrand Museum wore to be closed.* News- hank the gods of the Court) estate toon em ' ^*" and insignificant -tool: up tho matter, au<l powtcd ftvc I

1%

243

rrBLICJ LIBRARIES

of ecorn at thj» " glaring " failure of the Public Library -y-tcm. Softly Meads, Dot bo tan ' In August of the year jusl named the library committee appointed to inquire into the position and finances of the library, reported thai 811 volumes were iniadng, and tli.it the overdraft on the batik, which in I #83 only amounted to £98ti amounted to £7:2$, In addition to this sum, there «/h the authorized debt secured by mortgage upon tlie library. It VfM obvious, the committee stated, that the eyaten, i manage- ment which necessitated the incurring of nn increasing load cd debt every year dui'I cmntj Go nn end. The Srst charge upon ite* revenue* Should be reduction uf its debt, and It seemed DO tt impossible to reduce the present debt and at the wiroe time carry on the library as it fia now carried on unless Borne hddition was made to its resources. In view of the state of tlie library fluids, the snh-cninioiNoe saw im course open but the closing Ol lb- km*! iriy- room department and maintaining the library for a time as n lending library, to be open for a few hours every week, until (ho debt wan paid off. Tms is now being done. Rut better II Knight have been expected Of Inverness, with iis Ji'»,lKK> inhabit

and Its tided chief magistrate, it i* noi credltahle to the Highlands that everything uf an intellectual churact.iT ha

go .i-begging tor patronage, while amateur concerte and the like nourish perennially In every countryside. The library coram runst surely have been Dttpping when they have permitted HI and more roiUDM to 00 BJenlBg.

Kirkwall.

In this far northern district the Acts were adopted ho March, 1890, by means of voting papers. The voting was U folio* Qui of the h)3 napei** which were issued, there were *J{>| tnr

1 1 to adoption, and only -i> against Five papers were roti n* spoiled. \t this rate of rapid i>rogress Scotland «iii soon he honeycombed with Public libraries.

1 '.IIS LEY.

Uthongfa Paisley cannot claim the distinction of being ttsl to adopt the Free Libfafioa' Act, having to give precedence to Lirarii and Dundee, the enterprising spitii - I its inhabitants und the naimifioence of Its merchant princes did not allow tiiera to >o let! vovy far bchfnd Simulated by .in offer by Sir L'eter Out*, then plain Mr. ■'oats, and who died in the spring of isuo, to provide suitable building, the rati p Che Actv by an overwhelming majority on March 38, I*tf7? with the result that a substantial edifice deAigneil to aceomtnodatlon Tor both u miiKoum anil n library n ni High Streetj and opened in June, 1871. Rifts ol antimaitae* t'ni curiosltiefi poured into the museum In abundance, and its possessions soon hreurne suniricnllji cvii'ii-sive and valuable to make a va\'y lutetcslJiig displ.iy. The nucleus of the b'tulfiiuc /fbr.in wm formed oj ribaui 7 .TV* volumes, presented '-•. the

PfBMC UBBAHIE3 f.t HCOTbASP.

243

on of th< Paisley Library, which vu founded to 1603, and to this L48] volumes were added nt the opening, making

o total of '.M'lM volumes, which number liu* hecn augmented fr nn

time to ti 1 1 .m d theloncUngdcpartmanl new contains about S0.000 rojuxnea. Tl: formation of the reference libra \s \\a* luidertukrn by the local phUooophlcol society, the members of which obtained •nbscriptione to the amount ol £1,61:?, which, after furnishing,

wl them, with the aid of tho library they already poest i. to place in u 6,087 volumes, Although a sum is annually rotao i.\ th< society for the purchase of books, the reference library has

riot increased very rapidly, and does not yet ex> I :<.<m volumes,

rhii department was originally on the same floor u £he lending 11 mm ■<- ;-.i reading-room, but tome years ago the space all i to H was found to be rasufficientj and Blr Peter Conty again OS I e

rd,and nod in iddition built on the higher ground behind.

exehudvely de-voted to the reference department In all

I w.-r | :n n ...I hftre v \i! Icsfc than CiO.OOO tOWfll'tlfi ttic hhrrny

and museum, This is one of the cosiest reference reading-rouui'* In rho whole of tlie north ol England or in Scotland, and nIiouM be the paradise oj the Rtudent There is one peculiarity of the

work :ii Pawlrv. and thai in.-nt QeWSpapeTfl :nv taken. The line \B

drawn al weeklies, of which seven are taken ; <>r monthlies there are thirty-nine ; andoi quarterlies three. The library reading-room i studious appearance, Ituf thin does mi deter ths working

dittos from lining it, for, on the morning of the writer's visit, a Barry In corduroys sat at the same table as a young miss who had apparently ooraa to consult some booi before going to school. Tueentire huJldlngaare convenient^ designed, The rooms ami i pen out of each other in a way providing convenience and effect. There is a splendid lecture hall, and all through the mater lectures -ire Liven, which frequently cause reference to be nia-!' to rhi-. books by thow who attend the various courses.

\ curious nml Interesting lind was made some time ago. A tm ■■ of bundles of manuscript were found in a barrel, and presented to the I*ublic Library on condition that they should Mm Inspection the bundles turned out to be the crl >:.■• of the "llihhothmi Britanniesi, ' by Hubert Watts. resided in Paisley at the tiau the work was being ben. The l«u Thomas Coats had them hound in sixty- eight volumes and placed in the reference Hbrajy. A wry ml i jo M* woi . presented by -iv Potor (.'oats is Audub

la al Vmcrlon." consisting ol four volumoo of llfe-fllzc

coloured illustrations, nnd five volumes of ornithological litem -

. the whole raluod at ±'I60, These books, being very

. are kept in kpoeially made eases i it. I>y '2\ ft,, with sliding

i.ki'- on which tho books are placed. An interesting ivhe

i i':. men! >k of the P le y for the Reformation oi

. - i. i i a- hiinidatiiui in 1757 tn rlie final meeting ol l>7i . Tin* was the year of opening the Coats U >rary, bo evidently ■Id Society for the Reformation ot (Paisley) Manner! tho work and objects ol their socievy mv^tJvX N

244

LIBTUniK*.

In-.l t-. tlir Public l,ibi'-nv Other towns where

these old societlei tor the Reformation of Hansen Sadat, where there is not u tibrani under Qu Acta, pleaee act scooanl ol (ho rapid BjrowtB of Paisley'.- p..j»ui:ii on mro the Pubho Libran wi rounded tin uaou v p ahaod by riirasnesimcnt inercoacxffroirj aboal £600 in 1871 toeJmoel u.ihm. it, 1886, sad i' ia ntill goin^np. Mr. Morris fonng i *!.. bnufen IM curator.

Pi KBHB * Pi

Tin- matter wns raised hew bj sever*] reportew ol the Dawapapera writing to Sir. Carncgli to ask hta aid He eaibled back to aag that he a ri believer in helping (hose who help

themselves, and ttun] if Peterhead adopted the Vcta he would far i in-iii monetary ;i ii. Tiii.'- eel the ball rolling, although prior to i te action 'I mo reporters othei tad I n some inonrtia beenol opinion that the tune bad arrived when the kcie should '*.■ adopted. In January of 1890 the plcM taken. There

were 1,673 ©lector* an the roH of iheoe l ,350 answered " ice/ and

"(1 Ni»." tfunir :Ki-| wnv al/.M-nl nr ilr;i«l, aii.l ■!_' w < rv neuuil,

Si:i.Kinic.

thia town haa the diatlnctJorj of bcinjr. fcb plane ol

Mango Bark and Sir w alter Seoti it haa the further <ini motion of having I louoty prison Into a Public I n raf) . am In thin

. r the spir i of era t nation eannoi be carrli d to far i :i:h i mi ol ih.h«. Mr T Craig-Brown offered the buildings I bad undergone alterationi with the vlow of making the pi available av i public Library and reading-room, caro having

-. . preserve as far a* possible the features of tie architecture* In aKerinj tin prison \> a Public Library and reading-room care lias been taken to leave untouched It* original architectural features, the only alteration an the out- hkIc wall being die at Mil ion of an oriel windoit with corbelled Iwro and root Thai window commands line views of the raBey of Ettrick. Hie interior wae orlginallv filled »\i Ii Dhroe storeya d arched ci ■u> c 'Ml rut ted <>; stone and brick. The upper Boo

Imvii roiouvetl with the exception ol a portion at the wcAteni

inible, which haa been retained to form a jnillery overlooking the reading-roora, Tbi | bllery will havi an artistic appeal [testing on three ground arches, it wflj be idornod tn Eronl with moulding**, cornices, and panela, and will ban n hand tome baloe- trade, the reading-room, which la on thi leeond Boor, wfl] be lofty, symmetrical, and Ex every wa$ w table for the pui Nhicb.i1 was designed. Tbt normd Boor, which ■■- meaoJ need as the library proper, line boon treated In i raiou original mo i icr By removing the* dirirdonoJ vails ■!' the cclla id effecting other alterations, this lower part <>i th< haa

corn a U d i"i" ;i ■■ i s ol crypt, will a're pilfan, ii will afford firoprool nocoi n ihoBMwh ot volumes, for which rcaaon \t\\B* hce-n choaen Jt

u auras iv t.-oTLAxri.

245

anticipated that, until th.- BpftCt It entirety occupied by the baok»t forming the lending i. a in .■ |>»ri ■. i t.\-\ \->' imed >* :< ivbr- i.miiv library and ;vriting>rooro. The rooma previously asad

■■ by the prison omctala hnve been converted Into house- aceommo- delibr iian Wieej ice *twocatbe 1 i i m- . .

snd EttrioH [VrrHca in ocmpiod by n narrow lawn or shruhbary.

IB I li.r!. ..r,-i -■ ':i[:- ni:iy U- phim! . mi ti : n:i ml ! tig !i I M'.'Ult I t'l tl

..I ha hill* and river. Mr Crntg-llrown stipulated In his offer that the "nblli Libra vt£ Acts should be adopted, or, if they wren m»i sueoesaft] In carrying the Vim, tin- Provost Bhonld».on

Iu'IimIC of Mir I(i\\:i, tiiidti t :iKc l<i iii:i i nl:ii: i Mn- il>r;t;'y for IWO

In Octubcj ol the ycai nam I u statutory meeting was in-ill. raid a i unanimous w lsIi that the Provost, who presided, auid

that tilers watt no occasion 10 ininil tl r vi-lei. To Mr. Andrew

Laatfi hi i ■■ ,; R -■ - 1 1 . j j i - worthy, was entrusted Mo- duty oi de- claring theii Public Library upen to tho public, The honour was » r'.l deserved, and the dot | was jrracefulfy dlaeha-rgcd at the end <<f Maj bat year, hi the aftoni'"iii of the same day the freedom of the burgh was conferred upon Mr. Lang, and hi acoordafloc will the nn. nut old Scotch ciihtum, he was asked to "lick the ." and so was initiated into a "aoutcr11 of Selkirk. The rate prepuces about X'OO a year.

TaKVRS (AjBBItWBKNMilltl- ;.

Taive* is a purely rural pariMi. The only village i* the Kirk- town, with about 160 Inhabitants, it. h the onlj rural pariah thai bw a Mbrary under the Acts. Au old pariah ncliuohiuuiter K-ft u fern I; "unds and his book* (-• the pariah. A hall wan

built with Dhe money, and the boos* formed bhe nucIoaBofn v. An attempt was made to keep up the library by lectures und by kvyin£ n small luhscrrptioin. Tins was done for about seven spars, but the income fin m bbeei sourcea became gradually leat. Soapo of those interested then bethought them ol the Public Libraries' Acts, but doubts were expressed us to their applicability t. rural district.*. The opponents insisted on thin point thai too Acts were merely intended for town*, a- they had no procedci I of a rural parish adopting them. In replr,the Acta VSN quoted, and the promoters bravely said that Mkv would Gedent. In this way acrersl meetings were held to ditfCUKK the roai left m<l t was agreed to take the vote by votwg-

Siapsrs :n tbo legal way Some time before this, tho" existing v committee issued tu every ratepayer :i printed oironlar oxptaining the state ol mattera, u well as showing tin.- incJdonee $ the rats I flfl population of the parish is about 2,400, and they i :i little over i;jn i year, For this purpose, and to make i :r\inff, they limited the rue to two-fifths o( a peicn lint when f ha Tots was taken tho adoption of the Acta wan carried ore iIkiii nix to one. Tho actual number* were 176 for, i sat— the whole number of ratepayer be&an tiocnO Wtt m m I'i'rembev, ItfKi, 11 the aruownt \t',ut\\^\ \o.TCO.ftw

•J !•:

PtmUC T.mttA&ISS.

(who are atmoei the sots ratepayers in won ^ di-in..

pared), H will lw? found that they pay quite OB WUCh SB Olastei wiih the name Income do in towns. Km* example i pay.

nn/ t-'v m i iif pent, lias iiis Income reckoned si £ioo per nn

Sm.-Ii i farmer pay< five shilling .if library r;ir*\ A person wiih ilw s:i:tic incoivu' in .Vbenleen, wlii'ii tlif full ifil.rt U taken, does not pay nearly BO uuieh of ji library rata Some have

donbted the practicability of Public Libraries in rural districts, mid the ground ol objection it. that they could not be managed economically to aoob plaee& This b quite a mistake They can be managed more economically than to larj i Por instance, in the to* :i of Aberdeen there ie just one-fourth ol the income available fbr pure library purposes, viz., for hooks ad binding, the remaining three-fourths being required Ear working expenses; in sonje large towns the working expenses ai u in jeven-eightlis of the Income, in the tase of Torres, the working expenses never exceed one-fourth of our income. So the argu- ment outs the other way. The Acts were adopted in Tarvea about the same time as in the city of Aberdeen. Tarred having the priority of a few months, If efficiency may be estimated by the rotative supply of books, they can compare favourably on tins bond. In Aberdeen they hare about one volume to ever) dI* the population. In Turves they hove four vohnuoe to every ti\ e df their population. Two adjoining parlsl cs have bi an th alt i following their example. In the parish of Meldrum the vote taken two or throe yean ago, but the adoption was 1< : votes. Another parish elope to Turves is contemplating taldng the vote. Here they have u ibrury, but like tli*' one whien existed

ui Tarvee, they And if very dilltenli to keep i- ap on Eta pr» rooting. Me. George Argo, M.A., farmer, b:i- taken n warm Interna :n tho welfare of the Torres library. As othor dial in Scotland possessing small libraries may be anxious to these a new loose of life bv bringing them under tho i in.v address i- given should further ion l>e desired,

It is, Braeside of Tolquhon, Oldmoldrnm, Aberdeen,

TsUBBOi

The Thurso Library, after a considerable number of ; work, seams as fresh and vigorous as ever. This no doubt arises from the periodic additions of fresh literature, which from time to time the committee have been enabled t'1 add to the

literary bQl o Cure <> course, In each a small eei i aa tho

Thurso Library , with imeircuroaeribedlncomej the© mmitteeare handf rapped by the want of funds : but in this case it i* to report that many Mends from time to time have given of tnotr abundance, and the*, in n great degree, helped those who, b case, have been endeavouring Co help themselves To outsiders it Is a continual marvel how aPubtto Library in any form or with •"'I mooegfi can be & rrled on with an Income of £40; but * ri/'tt rim Thxmo one manages to »t tf \\\v\\M\\\\v'\ve-\\:\e^ a

PrBUO LIBTtABIBS IX RCOTLA.VH.

317

OOflj years on this Blender income, the wonder is increased. It in conducted perhaps on as rigid lines as any that affect the most ruekrented crofter in the county, iluaigh Micro is no elaim for a n-y commission to adjust economic, arrangements. The £40 ik utilized to the best advantage, and toeauso it is not n squeez- able quantity matters must remain til) a wider area be found in which to tax, or better itiii a Government grant, tor the support t if* this much-valued institution

Wick.

The extreme north of Scotland is not going to be left out in the <-ul«I. Thurso adopted the Acts fa 1678 Wick followed a, long

win behind, foi thai event t-jiue about in 1886, w lien it was cd unanimouely, This i> an instance of the Aets being adopted in the midst of a nc«t of conflicting authorities. There they had the Wick Town Council, the Pultcueytown ComtuiH- aioaars, the local tnthoritics, and the parochial board !<> wto over. Ooxxtribnfcione in ensh and books quickly flowed in, and within a ihort time three local librariea were handed over. It wna opened in November, HW, by Sheriff Thorns, the largest con- tor 1 1 the library. Ho pory neatly ex] reesed tho end und purpose Of the building when he said "Completeness in a library . he perfection of humanity are two things that will never be attained while the world remains as it is. So long as Micro 06 to think and a press to print their thought*, books will multiply; M*d there i* :i blank in the shelves of the largest Ubrary under toe sun until the latest best book is placed upon them. Dm Wick Library i^ u yet like the small stoue of tlie prophets vision, und as there will be no miraculous attaimpejit to magm- ' -. Kii.'h human efforts as are possible will have to be need to tiro its gradually iiu'iviumg growth, ao that it shall l>o slowly Bg towards that completeness and perfection which will DerertaetaH « always ;m indefinite distance bevoiul Itt reaoh." Fo refer »> the Wick Public Library and not. no refer to Mr William Todd would lie an unpardonable omission. Wick owes it- Public Library, not to Its own wishes and enterprise, but ro the rhless zeal, the unswerving faith, nm! 'lie untiring and almost unauleii efforts of Mr. Todd. The Public Library in to a extern Ins sob- creation, and for what it is and further promises to be he is entitled to the cliief credit. No movement r\er had it sturdier champion than Scotland law had ia William Todd for (he extension of its libraries. The parish of Wick runs sixteen miles by six, and they purpose serving the extreme limit* \-\ fortnightly boxes which an* eiinii-d t,- and fru by the mail coachoft They have a library for the blind, and a fine museum. The total number of books issued during a representative month was 2»66S, or' wliu-.h l,H»i> were works of fiction, thus ghriQg a pcr- n'l'i'i.: ">t •"■ lor thi* cla.-ta <>1 Ltei/alurr. Tin ilaih u\eiut'i' of I over 103, and there can be no doubt that th-c V&fror?

£4g

£11 LIC LIBRARIES,

I Hlier places whore the question of the adoption of the Acti in

now iu pruyress m1' i! <■ t'oiluwini* .

Arbboai -ii Arbroath disputes with Kdinburgh and Glasgow the dUtin "i having twice rejected t li -• proposui nd»pi the : The Brsl rejection took place in 1878. It was preceded Mid led up to by effort^ to gel ft robecriptSon library, which bad existed in the town for raany years, popularized by n roduetion - t Its rates. These efforts tailed, km NMO it waa proposed to obtain m. consent ''i the ratepayers to too town's being placed under the Libraries? Aota The proposal wae supported by the lea> manufacturers, hut the opposition wis strong and well organised, ssd at the puolia meeting catted for the consideration el flu nneetlon the opponents of a library rate were triumphant a in mi ftj too waf trabgeribed by the lending citizens (or Cne purpose el Increasing the itocfa or the .subscription library, ana toe snn serfpfcion wan lowered froan naif a guinea lo half u crown. 1 1 i iuce.eee.oi which the sohezne at firsi gave promise w>w of short duration, aa has frequently boon the oaae to ofliei towns. Die number of subscribers fell rapidly, and in 1879, alter the experf- uicnl hod lasted four years, the memberr n \ •■•'. i ■• ippe.d once an it hi I tie r:uep;iyn>. The promoters Uie movement fell

warranted En repeating Efts appeal* because In he oieanti oe the Act i'i l*rr had allowed retina by signed papers, it was nooom-

paniedf moreover, by 1 1 ic offer of udraniairc.t which "nr m>i forthcoming iii 187a. The whole collection of book,* hi lb* SnbsoriptSon library, reaching 14,000 volumes, wa* to b< I (erred to the rate-supported inetitotion, along with thi remainder, d1 i lie sum of £l,KX> referred to above. But the citizen.-* of Arbroath wore indifferent to thcec advantages, und hardened the against the appeals made to them by men on wh.au tin burden of the rate would have fallen They : to be

guided by agitators who told them that, in spite of the won I " the A.'f, the rate could not Btop at one penny on the pa md, and WOuId certainly be much more than that in \rl roatii. The i woe that, when the vote wa>* taken there wi ■-.- ,i;:;i' ruicp yi I against the Acts, and only iwis in their favour- -majority again it,

806. I t;it was in 1H7U ; and we are not aware tl t.

time, the people oi Arbroath have Khowu any signs rt repentance

Eluin and Faljukk. trnong the failmrK to adopt the Acts are KU?m and Falkirk. Early laat year a public meeting was held, an* the matter was

iliMiisse i m.s to whether another attempt should not \tf ms adopt the A em in IvIl-ii \ local bookseller who tool*

pad in the raovemem referred to the pr< m ma Lflure, bin thai there was nothing o i 'Ighum I hern from trying agan . try ai?uiu they pluckily didittFehruai-y, Im:i,:iikI w /ui Tlir* rotmg atooa, ooea 419 ; aye* ;Vt2 : majority agxlriht. *7 Out of a constituency of 1,318 over »EO voted. Through no I

nr.ii' rua ii n-:-; rv srori.vvn.

249

of Mr. Carnegie's, an offer of £600 for books from liiin. i»n condi- tion of 11. *■ Acta being adopted, came juai after i-iic poll hud i n

Another vi*ui tiiusL elapTC before the vote can be again

taken, but Elgin will no doubt Ems Hum added to the li»t.

The attempt :n K'lllurU would appear I" bare been u liLtK'

premature, a* it came at a tfine when increased local taxation for other purposes am contemplated, By die munificence "i1 Mr. Etobcrt Dollar, of Maruurtte, Michigan, U.8.A., a native of the town of Falkirk, the burirh has been placed in possession of a library of considerable isnienfiioaB for the free use of the in- habitaute. Two pears have elapsed since Mr. Dollar intimated hia desire to present hii native town with such on institution. i a the Young Men's Christian .Association, he handed over bo be administered by them En thai direction, Tin- foung \]m'' Christian Association reserved, on the failure to Garry the Acts, to assume the responsibility <f cunying on the libl i\ ■. :iii'l. with thic object in view, n (subscription was set on tool \< fund.- r<> exiiugiuah i debt Of £600 whi»'h

ro tod on tinir Institute En Newmarket Street, o ml bo enabla ihora to dispense with the annual income derivod from letting the jfrouna tloor as business promises, the intention being to devote the space to the library. indue course tibia object wea secured) mi<| :i -mall committee were entrusted will, the Uiruishing ol the i _v. Under their direction a collection of over o.UOU volumes has lieen brought together, lie i - I -• :uv pko'e.-l m :in up BMBBt on the street ftoot of the institute. In rionour of the donor,

Che library has been named the Do-Bar Free I Ibrary The tfbnunr to open every evening (Sunday excepted), from six till ten o'clock

:ui.l hunk* loaned mif for :i f<"-rt m »*"*ifc at u. time. The OOimnltta to be able to carry nn the work with an annual income of vm). bat as the <i^<- of the library will be free tins sum will require in be made ap I \ roluntary subscription, The committee of

gan cut mnststs of ten members of Che association, and ten

lemon representing the public, mid in future It is proposed to

till up viieiiii'-ii's a (a Lb committee i>y the rote of ra iaenben of

UUni - annually.

ft i.\ s.ne to predict that Falkirk will on the next occasion adopl

the Acta, whei the period stipulated by bins Acta '.lull have

expired.

i liaeooYi

"Fallen is Carthage - Tin- »bm-i oi deviation hnujca over the

defeated, and the unquiet spectre of Public Libraries has been laid

for a time. Tnrei j <^,\eo we stood alone amid the proas

In cm n, o the proposal to adopt bhe Aotjandthe pro-

i defeated b> i mi Utantial majority At this trtrao it was

ii to oppose, in the interests of heavy-burdened

,thc Public Lib rhua wrote tbe editor of a

kvery Influential Qlnaei . ei tag paper, ou April J", 1888, the- day theroeulr. ol il.. pi tneoJtewa made known. In no town or ia the entire i nited Kingdon and Ireland ban the orgonmtitan ttrongor nnd mmv cfJiuprehcasivc, and \\\c ^«x\\«l V»iftX«c

ago

I' 11 1.IC LfBBABJXS.

marshalled than in Glasgow, and yet in no place has the result been more crushing and disheartening. Every point of detail had l>een rao»t earel ill) studied, the ground ao<l plan of operations exceedingly well mapped our, a vast rcpiment of friend* and Workers putting a band to the wheel, with all the rigour Which characterize* a Scot with :m eye tn the main chance which i,! opened to thla eaee to be for the good o Mm eomxDunSty. But (. aegow again refused by a large majority, to adopt the PubUc Libraries* \<t- The rejection was more emphatic than It was throe yean prior to tlmt time. The number that took pnrt In the. voting wee mod smaller, and the majority against Hit propoanJ oonafderabty more heavy Those who took the trouble to vote ngaloAt adopttna ilia Acts were 7,(xio fewer than in 1888, and yet oxoeeoed tin* number ot those who deatred to lee GHaegow enjoying, like other large cities, the advantages uf a Public Library, in l lie proportion of about five lo tlu*ee. The Hgurus appcarol In make il i dear that, the movement i* waking the

reverae of headway, ami that the interest taken by the ratepayers

in tin- subject ib dwindling:. The actual inuuKi.M'o were

EOT the adoption of the Art . . I ::.".< >

tgadnei .. 83M?

M.-V-ritv against the Act .. .. fi,437

The total number "'I pout cards sent out was S8.8S6, but oi these (j,C'2"j papers were returned, on account of the parties not being found One of the moat .striking features about these figures i< the aniiMinl of wKtilTercnco manifested upon the question. Nut half the people who received papers took the trouble to till them up. The neutral people outnumbered the voters lor and ugninat pui together! The Rffll attempt towards the adoption of the Acta was i it ■>! n 87 i, the prime mover on that occasion being Mr, J, ClOland Knnis win I. with many others, hus remuinod a firm and oonaiatent friend of the movement down to tliu present time. I'imih 1874 to April, 1 H80, the supporters were quietly at work aduoatitag the people. 'Hie decision was to be by statutory moot- in jr. the voting power being at lhat time limited to those residing within the l*arltamcnt:it y iMiiistitueney Notwithstanding thfi the meeting was swamped with non-voters, and there VU altogether a lively time._ \t tin* close B rote was taken, giving the resul( of— agu&Btj l .779: for, 993: majority against, 78o.

For sigh I yean little was heard <>t' the Public Library move- ii i t t.but early in 1884 some ninety gentlemen convened a me

of citizens favourable to tin adoption of the Public Libraries' act*.

to consider the propriety of forming •> society for promoting the object in vew The signature* m the document oonveoing tfata meeting included the whole of the city members of Parliament

and tbe member fur the L'nivLM'Mty, ten members of the Glasgow '/"a/i (.'uiincil, and many utlier iniliiiniiial citizens. The moe was ftfl/d and a constitution s\umu\\.eA\,\\ut,out of deferenc

ptmuc r.rnnAiup.9 iy $c<m.\Xi>,

25!

the opinion of some present who were sanguine enough to suppose

eu duous campaign wan doI required! the idea of a formal

iation was abandoned, and the mooting thereupon resolved

; into n genera! committee (or the purpose of promoting the

adoption of the Acta An executive vu thereafter appointed,

who mot fortnightly and devoted themselves to the education of

, bj the publication and free distribution, of Btal

'ii ants, tracts, and leaflet*), explanatory of the objects and operation

A •!'. ilc>\. Iiowever, found (he work to bo nuioh more

■.iti'-.iim firm was at tiis! tMiiLi'inpIaUnl. They hod to contend

again*! ignorance and annthy, and soon recognized the* fact, that

without extended ward and district organization it was hopeless

to make an Impression upon bo vast a community. Funds wore

given freely to tile fullest extent asked, am!, in addition t<> the

Inned pnhlieatfon and distribution of literature, they org**

n];trl central and district meetings, which were addressed by

Iriidim/ citizens and local gentlemen. They aim set on foot a

I o\ ward organization which wa* mosi micocwful in o&Utag

forth iini ufiiaatlc ind earnest work on the port ot the various w:\u\ committees, Following: an enthusiastic public meeting a requisition was presented to the Lord Provost, which, instead of the statutory ten najuw appended to it. contained no fewer than

i . 300 names. In the meantime Ihe Association laid, with the aid

::. one of ili'- repreeeotetivoeof (•la.sK,,w, promoted

and placed ipoo the statute book the Scotch Aroendmenl Act of

lull, while tin* Ai: permitted a plebiscite in Lien ot'a public

meeting it did nut provide any machinery for the taking of a

plebiscite, The Lord IVovost decided, after taking loyal advice,

- each householder a circular enclosing a poei

I to tin. Lord lYuvur.!, which, after heme; filled up in tin-

;il!ir»urttive or negative, should be aigncd and pofltod by the voter

1" el curd is given below j

PUBLIC LIBRARIES (SCOTLAND) ACTS.

VOTI NG PAPER.

As to whether the Public Libraries Acts should be adopted by the Burgh of Glasgow I vote ^.^

Ratepayer's Name.

On (he Official Oard Sign here.

A* there ww uol much sign of opposition the yvotnotet* Wfc

'.?.*>•? I't'Ki.ir' UUUAlMi

confldenJ o success, but when Hie poet card votes were counted the result stood, was 8^,766, and noes 29, Nothing daunted tbc old committee re themselves, and

i: Ma vh. i -'i... .inn- before the local publii the Glasgow Public Libraries' Association, OC this bv&f Mr Kii-ii ml I'.mwii has long acted as the houcrao lecwtary. The unoertaintlei and omissions of Bbfl Scotch Acta were felt to be a grave hindrance to the progress of the movement, and Mr. Ilrown was asked to frame an \nu'iHlmenl Bill. The bill thus dr&YQ up was in May. 1680,

dated amon« the Scotch members, and iu t!i*r Session ol ii was introduced into Parliament by Mr. J i ..,-!!, DO*,,

one of the vice-president iotion. 'Hie bill pa

i 'iw on cVwatnber l,;. 1887, and ie now the ruling statute for Boofiuuid J' wiB bo found amouj? the Appendices '•■ worlc. The main ehongo effected by thiw Act was to ffivc to all householders, xunlo or femule, and alnu to all citizens paying rates £10 <<i rental, and residing; within seven miles ot any pari of tho city, a voico in tho Question of the adoption of the -Vote.

lbs result ot the plebiscite has been alrondy 8tau-<i, and -u faos ul tho fact that there wo* a powerful incentive I Ola wow to adopt tin- AotS by liequests to thy value of over £130,000, « would come under the administration of the Town I onnojJ Com- mitteo immediately the Acta were adopted, there wa* utter lailure. The large amount named la made up follows:—

Mitchell He.-jut*t £66,006 L0 S

Bal ie Bequest 36, 00 16 8

Stirling Bequest (maludfng Glasgow \ 1TfVl, n ,, iblic Library) .. J 1-,UJ ° u

Moir Bequest 11/160 B 9

Logon Bequest 600 9 a

£131,806 B II

The value of these handsome gift* is serious); impaired by many drawbacks, wllluh would lw removed when once Uiey come under bos Public Libraries' Acta, uh will he seen vu reference to the chapter on ( fojeut Lessons,

The cost of a plebiscite in Glasgow is about £600, mo thai on em i occasion it is not by any means an uexn pej ding;.

On February "i. 1690, ;i meeting of the Genera] Council of the Oisegow Public Libraries* Association was held. Dr

the cJiiiu uuw, -:ii I tlul duriuy llie hvo vmh since I'll- \i cite was taken the association had done little except ko uu eye on public opinion, and trying to dire< f t as wt o told They had also had the Biuibition, and tho disposal oi bfau Burplns had created ■• considerable nmounl of inquiry endowments in the city available for certain parposcn. I been tliut a grout art ir.dlory should be bull iu the Wert

l.iul. where the nrt troueures should bo brought Mr. 11, En tho secretary, ask) that the prop<»sal of the Lord l*rovo«1 eon- tfinpiatoil a mnJdmp: in the Vvest End, and the |U

deration MM whether fchftl >vv» a ^awca\ta aito foi sucfa

PUBLIC LIBRARIES IK IBF.11M'.

1'W

linildmy; and whether, J an ;irl ijallei"\ were to be erected ttl all. there snould mil .. - » 1 1 . i . 1 wilh ii i Public Library— at all events the oentraj premises ol ;i Public Library and Museum bo Mint, us in other hrer HticN they would have the three combined, a.s n.iiiirmi i i-.t'd in the Public Libraries* Acta. Another scheme was that of having the c entrul building in George Square or 01 1 I6T central situation. There might also be district libraries, and Rentlemen mi/nl begot wlio would found these, conditional on txaDg adopted to revenue purposes. An csacutial to the DC out of such .i scheme was that the Public Librai icV A< t* should be a-i. pi. -.1. The)' had been twice defeated on this matter, but he frosted that thfl rit&BODS would 8»on repair the error, mid

£i:n- fehetueeWee on a level with the other large otttfefi of the iojn Ue bad been informed that the cost of the land ft&d Dg for n district Library was about £6,000 or i'7,000. Stovkhayrm.

No practical rtep bas ae yet been taken to regard to the Public

Libr&nes1 Acts. It hoe oniv been spoken ol bj bbe Debatma;

! v, or Good Templars, who have put themselves in oohudqzlI

cation" with Mr. L'artiogie, and they have bis reply. YVath whaJ

local matters there an* now on hmd tin- PTOVOet lluuks it will

sometime before the - inject can ha taken up,

There are in Scotland a very large number oi iustltationi called

" I'uKio Libraries'1 Which are really subscript ion libraries. To give anythi'iif h ■nvin-Muflve hat ol these would OOOupy too

much Space, "6ut particulars Of n few maybe given. .Ayr has a ].n .Ik ld>:irv wirli m income f< r hist year Ol i"_'H">, with :m

expenditure of £170. 01 this £90 were paid For lecturers' fees

Rntherglen, a suburb i i CHesgow ; Knock) ndo, nearEtgin; Smeil-

i Etelsoj ibid*.! i".i«ni, VVJHliaw, i mi nl ii Mill ; tfewAberdour,

in.-; Bridge uf Ulan, ami Inverurie, ;<ll posseaa their

He" Libraries. Keith has one with over 9K) members

ncomc i.s about £120 u year. Kilmarnock baa a library, which

l.iiniN to lie the largest of its kind in Scotland] but it, has tn

erdse the greatest economy Lo make It Belf-supportinff, and It

reaches thai point. Many of these institunona and others

tcil tliioughout Scotland would form an excellent, nuc

ng themsulTes iuto Public Libraries in iho full beune ol

t: icnu, uud securine; the inb>pt ifu "I the Acts.

CI I AFTER XIV. PUBLIC LIBRARIES IN IRELAND. \1E general awakening with regard m l'i I n\arli

has ipreod to Ireland, and the Bnxe U rapid j approach- ing when t. * * t tarest in thene institutions in the eoun n wfll >o i Iteen and universal sail Is In part of the United Kingdom. TWs is as it should -i education and social progress ^S\\ t*?$ta&

:,-]

PLTTLIC LIBSAHIBE-

ili i -tich ffl the ease, no matter to what party they belong It bus been the present writer** privilege to travel rrpentedly ironi ivnl in I'tnl i)f Ireland, and the raSnt and desire lo ham every Bdacatlosn] advantage in their midst which t* to he found dii the Opposite sideoi the Uriah Sbb to their own, is permeating nil classes of the community. The grmt drawback is that, so many towns and district in Ireland hare a rotable value Insufficient, with n penny rate, to stock and maintain a Public Library. Tlii** will prevent foi h I me nay wide extension nf these intuitu Hi ion; but Mirciy some moaetarj nd from Mends of the country among all

.shinies uf opinion will be obtained. A lilt in starting a libra the Act* arc uduptcd, would bo to many mi Iriali town it windfall. If those wh«> hare the Enu ia * rest* of the country si heart]

are able to render ii^iMiunT, will remember llu.v, and do wh&l they can, thej will rendei a useful service t*j a part of the r> where it ia greatly needed.

Irish newspapers have from time to time expressed a desire to have some authentic information En regard to the working of Public Libraries in Ireland. Unfortunately, do formal rc| i r i»abii«hed except at Belfast) and the tact is the m ff bo l">c regretted, since, if they were anti , the operation of the

Aote under which they are oonstatuted would bo likely salutary extension. TOcre i.- no reason whv weekly or monthly returns should not he pnt before tlio public, snowing, ns In fchs uf other public institutions of the kind, the number of readers in oomparofivo tables, mid mieh extenisionH a*- may be provided in the way of literary opportunity. TiuB is n matter worthy of careful attention, for unfortunately the particulars at dii | ore aoi to any moans ns full ns could be wished. In ovary v ty one would like to see the Irish Public Libraries drawn into touch with those on tola side Hie I tunnel, mid whatever tends

ill thifl direction w:II j>err«»na a enry im^mi-ml md

service,

UKLFABT.

Hn> people of the city of Mel fast, twgan to get the Impression that they never would see their Public Library in oc rap

lacl In June. IK^'i, the council wre memorial) /.<-d in I

i>i the establishment of a PuhlJe Library, -md they deternitoed to take steps to ascertain the views of the uteitayaro i whether they desired tlie adoption of the Public Lifirarie.s' Voting papers were accordingly issued, and remitted In rotes for the adoption of the Ads. mid 1,425 ugulnst. No i was, however, taken until 1884, and it was then resolved Lo make the contract for the building lenninable in lH8h\ The builder are nol to blame IW the delay; the waul uf isympnt-h(> i Ihe member* o] the Corporation was the eh a I rlein -n about the unreasonable delay. Loading articli b uud encc in nbuadaace appeared b t ie local pavers about but i; woo nol until October 13, I&8S, th it tut unci took j'Imv, which was pertormeA toj| ttw Ura-Mctmui I

prune lhirameb rs ranr-iNn.

'255

Marguls of Londonderry It was a Tar tTy from tins to 1861 when a deputation, headed by Mr. William Gray and others, brought the matter Orst before the Corporation Thin body wry ably look up the mailer, ami have not allowed their interest to dt d i <\ notwithstanding the long delay, and the manydfaappnint- miMiU which they have experienced.

Bw appointing of » librarian landed the committee in a perfect sea oi ontioiara and strong language. In the early part >>f jflcw they had this task in hand, and they hud no reason to com plain uf any luck of candidates. The Ii'hI of applicants contained 10U - ol ixn'^ims, ranging in age from 34 to 48 years. They er.na- from all parts -A the funrkiniidum*. The nceupatiousof the appli- cants were varied, and the qualifications relied upon to secure tin: appointment wore of a still more miscellaneous character. There were graduate* of Oxford, niu^ow, Aberdeen, London, and the University of Ireland, There was 3 modioaJ doctor, a dispenser at a hmaiie asylum, a confectioner, the son of a news- paper correspondent, several schoolmasters, a retired head con- etable, a eontraetor, a nueaionary, a factory managorj a draper's assistant, an auctioneer, several authors ana translator*, a oQptain, n colour-sergeant, a eornoral, and n canteen steward. One can- didate bad travelled in Europe and America, and Wflfl accustomed tit the ru.uiageroent of men, and as those nre more difficult to manage than book*, he apparently bad DO doubt of Jus 81100888 ID any position where either the writers Of readers of I>ooks arc concerned. Another was a railway and steamboat clerk, whose command of facilities of locomotion may have helped him, lor he stated that he had visited the principal librnriex in the United Kingdom, and was acquainted with their management In theory and practice Another gentleman rejoiced in the varied expert- aneei appertaining to a graduate, sin tidjutant, a parnuutar, b chief constable, and an utRumnea secretary. A solicitor laid stress upon the fact that he had been nveyearaln Africa, one of the must juvenile of the applicant* was the younger son of an M.U. An ml venturous spirit who wrote from Ycadon evidently had but fague ideas of the philological nod social aspects of the North ill' Ireland. He slated that he *' could not apeak the real language; hut if correct! v Informed, the people to gonara] m Im-iui>i spejk * i Lit wr it-ji : i jii-ii- ' broken English,1 that he can understand." As there 1m one thing at home that he could under- stand; it would have been a pity bo transplant him. Amoujc Boob l choice (election of would-be librarian* the committee wlseh and well determined to appoinl a man of experience (u Public Ubrvj work, and the choice fell on Mr, G. II. Elliott, of the fJnteshead Public Library. Then there hurst on the heads ,.f it < committee a most terrific storm for having gone to England for

;i public librarian A public indignation mcc-tim; was held, at

i two reverend doctors, and many others, made speeches that it iei hoped lon£ before this they have i vrnncn. A deputation wuited on the Town Council to inctnsma&ztt Vkw

mi', uil.v ol their proceeding, The Tvi>vv\ ^'.wwieft vo.VN.toV

PTTI1LTC LIBDaMB*.

[he appointment, and any other course would havo been unconstitutional.

Now ilio worli ia in full operation, ami everything huibfair to go Qlou^fiiuuuthiv and hut iHi'nct.n'iiv.

The huiUHiitf, which cost about A':?0,000, in u 1017 handsome structure, will bo gathered Erosi tha now 1 u ma d entrance opens into a wide corridor, tin: opposite end oi which terxninatee .■; tho rear of the building. To tho right of Uua Lob lorn

n .-.it 11 used as the lending department To the left of fee mom corridor is tho reading-room, which ''an be entered from t afreet hy a eepttttta door o4j0w£ofl the main entrance. The first iiooi' is reached >>y a broad sumo and ■caw . and here tin* refei

un

sairAsr pmi

1 brearv le located. There fa one grand central apartment, ligl tod rrora che top by :r beautirally cnrVod dome, through the k\hb» of which n flood Jt 1 1.-' 1 it penotratoe to every nook and corner oJ th< roonii To the loft of the doorway leading into this portion

odSfl •■■ ■' nail been Fitted np forth avi ■; ih<

who wish to »■ uoro secluded while heir hoot

after knowledge than thej possibly could >cm bbi apart

in 1 ll'"-. «g gentlemui eiui retire with tho books whl hoe selected 1 1 unable him tu complete liis exception oi a tew others similarly li

1 itonte ind purposes n his own private library, Another flight of steps brin 0 the other floor, which is divided

i.TDrtAiuEf-. is im:i.AVi.,

2«7

. .n.-l.iia-; :i am riini and the other .111 ;ut {OttOy It Efl

;i(li!,tho roost perfect hunting, ventilating, and: anitary

amui- arc boon made thrtnurliMiit the entire lai.l.itng.

inane the ladies been Forgotten, for a special r a hubeon

provided for them in eonnection with Hie reference library

■.. Dartmei t.

the reporl of the ftret years work has been published, and

bowi :i very oacoursmng state ol things. Some 8,50(1 readen1

wore iasaed daring the year, und the «iie of 5,7tfl

•i].'- 1 lllKli-;itrv hftW \\-]-k'-s|.JVlli! is the )-|'i'l'.>l III tl.e

There ore ld.000 volumes in the lending library, and the

~ i w jiv.Mi .v* fifW. which appears nn evtra- ■■ v large nu i er Trie rate yields £?.foo m present AfltmtBeim Lb dq course "i formal ion. The Beirixr press have given i ren p ibUdtj to the work

Oounuxna. Ihi tots w ire rioptcd her ' In L861 ,bul bliey have not yel been .open Won The pemxy rate would yield only an Income

»i I'M), :nnl ('iilri-.iiiic IV.-N Ui:U il. nuiiinl StATt « ill BO limited B

aim. a email urant would lubricate and make the carrying Into

rftl b w i4iee of the c Itlaccna, expressed nine years ugu imw,

■* !'"'"'"iii.\. i. i- v '■ ; i. i...[ vi'i "i Mi'.- ere ol these grants

i reality, is there nut some friend uf Ireland who will

epaiasd Ml the breach P

Ooox Tin- '"'ii.iir Libraries' Acta wore adopted In Cork many years ago, I in aid of the local School ol An. In 18*3 the Ael aended in INij, s< ec to include music, was further adopted,

and the Corporation has since then l n allocating the proceeds

jimn\ rite Ui the purposes of science, art, and music, for

school* have been provided, partly bv the adaptation to

purposes of the old Royal Cork Institution, now (he nro-

>J tin Corporation, but mainly by substantial additions

>v the late Mr. AV. II. Crawford, of ( oric, to the

providing ,i Public Library little or nothing has ye)

The rate yields only about £<iOG a year.

Ddbcbk

1 '"' i nnstanccs of Dublin arc a little peculiar. On December

*83, the Municipal council nanW a libraries committee to

Car0' ' the recommendations of a special committee on

JJj- nbjeet of establishing and maintaining general llbraridft

"'ervDrtrt upon which this ailggp^tion was ivisod wln nne wl.ich

'l out that while the City ol i in Mm pesaesaed some valuable

i ctiona, the fadlitlea for reading for the general public

n>i ineient, being limited to the libraries in the eastern Aide

' J -H' -ry li wan recommended that in the west of the eitv, in

Facilities existed, two general libraries should he

IMird and maintained at nn annual cunt, of 1: 1 ,000, which

i d be allocated from the borough fund, So ttafe ^\V\W

draft if* peanyifi not levied, which would produco t&croX

U

m

n nil. MUnABIES.

£2,600, the two Public Libraries are rate Bunpcrted In I tet< tx i . 1S84, these two Itbfatiea, situated in Cape! Street and Thomas Street, were opened, at which the members oi t in- Library Aaso* cialion of tin' I'niUxl Kin^dmii were present, The acquisition of those j.vi mUo* wu-h approved by the Treasury I should

be noted in pawing thai flic Pnbllt Librm-ie* a<t irclnul) of 1855 WW; on Was iiti".i:iiivc of Sir. R Dwycr Gray, adopted by the people- of Dublin in March, 1877, una1 was also, owin^ to his exertions, shortly afterwards so amended a* to giro powers to local authoritu-s En InAs&d ibnil&r k< rhoao enjoyed in Enjrluud, sueli as the power of horrowinff the 0044600X7 capital for buildings, fittings and books, ana the power of forming committees which might m port consist of persons not members of the council, No BtepB W6f6 taken under ""' Actio Dublin until last year. This delay may be attributed I piiKsui^ m IH77 of the Dublin Science and Art Museum \»-i. Which transferred to Ml- inipemi i wn-erninent the I.U:u\ - 1 the

Royaj Dublin society at T>jn«ter Souse] with power to - in Dublin a National Library sud Musoiun.

A very interesting1 ceremony took place in October 1881 v the Lorn Mayor declared the building open. Hi- remarked tn ins Mp«wh that the Itbrarfea were Intended for every [Haas. Tho bumble workman and tlw .son ot \)\>- wealthy merchs chose, oonld irtt Hide by rids while Improving their ratndu hj I 10 study of the best authors of all i ps Slnne then, Bin wort gone steadily along. Primed reports have not been Issued 1887, bnt u large number of staUBtlca in monnactipi hat* supplied by the courteous and able librarian, Mi Patriek Gn Jtoew were, dnring 1889, no fewei than 238,7ft risltsto lii iug and newsroom In Oapel Street library, or an aver ige of about 1,000 a day. The retunip i' <v the lending and reference depart- ments for 18BH and 18S9 came out exceedingly well. The Aral three and the last three months of the year are u i Hading

raontha in Dublin, In January, lyfl©, the number of books lent Cot home readme wiu* 9,968, and for the whole year the total was 58,046. In the reference library, 10^80 volumes were during the year. The largest issue woeof illustrated works, and next to this class fiction is the mosl largely repress nUxL & ience and art were consulted to the extent of 815 volumes. Tin* Was .i r cry fair turnover for 3,067 volumes. The cirrulation al the ThuniD« Street liin-ary ie not so large as at Oapel Btrect n aha city fathers could sec their way to levy the Cull rate, bhey would ihcii have an income which would enable them to build mon ooDTOsient and eonunodioue njrc i ieca, and bo pjive Dublin n better opportunity of doing greater justice to itself in its Public Library wdffki

The now liinldingy of the rrci-n.-e and url dens Hi ad of

the Crieb national library in Kildare Stro . are now all bul ready

for opening, and probably before this edition is u»uod the

wojij' -•> 'detrfftrtnfl' the bn [d£n{B9onea will hove taken piaoe I at

JjvJau'J the event will bo one ot Ww \nyV:A an^QRaaoe, and,

prar.rc i.tphajcifjc ix ibei.avh

L'.rjy

ulJ cla««e* of Hi-' euiiimtiuity will agree, ir is one that moxt fitly should bo associated with s BpedaJ ceremony, worthy ol no occasion no signal nn.l remarkibfA. Tha stSTicturea grace the noble nreo upon whlcl i) v stand In the heart of the <-'ny. md w Qwl i fresh b i a uty to Its rapidly growiiur architectural munii- ments They will hs the property and the pride of every iiMzwi. The National Library has long since exceeded tiu> limit* o1 accommodation thai Lelnatar House affords, and now ranla ui collection equal, H' not superior* to that poB*eHAcd by rii, great* r centres o1 population In England. The museum niii ii.so be a boon. Ii> objects have a national stump, and ii srfl] be admitted that in no part of the world will there lie bund .in institution to -ompare with it, an illustrative of Irish art, history, and archaeology.

i»i mux, This town has the *Us iortiuu oi bc'mu the that iu Ireland to adopt the Aot«. This was done in lft»y, irnrucdiut J aftei the extension of these A. is to Ireland. The stock at present is 9,000 volumes, and although (ho income from the rate is verj wnall, more or leas arc added to the >t*«-li annually, a penny per week subscription u charged for 1" uc reading to help out the rate. A amnli grant would Dl once remove this necessity, which is at the

name time an innovation.

Lnomiox.

In May, 1880, a motion was ujotjted to she Eosra Council

■.«■ effect in the <-ity ti bha I'nMie Libraries1 Act*, unit

to provide B rate tuwuras the working of Same, villi o

tion of it to be subsidised for the benefit of the school of

art, und a strong oommlttee wai appointed to oawy out the

ary airangeraonte. En September of the same yeas the

i referred a1 a council meeting; to the tcrnw of the tide

uiulcr which (he Athemoum had been held, pointing out thai the

lcoec under whJoh the committee had taken the place from the

i lorporai Ion, ftt a noniinril rent, hud been non-oxiah i t for o nuni

. and that no representation was given to the Council,

wordanoe with the original deed. He further pointed out

that ths objects i'n' which the eomnnttee bad been formed i<>

u hieiuivM and promote* schoola of an and soienee— had bean

i- Aenettllj Abandoned Die \ orporntlon were now endeavos

to avnll i ftemselvc* nf the Libraries1 Acla.and had set aside n son

OOUl Of tllM rail's I'm* 1.1 in purpose: ImT. it u i ...■■-

Ihey should clenrly umleratanrl what wa« thftlr positloi inU ths present oecupirrs of the Athemcmn, to mi-

ad they were quite willing to enter InUi my ami i ternent i h i in- place could be utilised for the benefit of bho< itfoens

lj :i ".:r;il Opening !■ 'I1 KUttll UI) itisl itntimi III l.il I -'■■

nd :u the commercial an<1 artisan eliuv*o« En particular I •Ai'l he an hnmenne advantage. The rate produces £340 a year. A nucleus to a library is found in She eu\W\W\ cfl nearly ^(XX) vuluuii-sat thv Athenaeum, winch i& thfj memttft] *A

•»*Hi

iTni.ir i.ihrakif-.

the city. Th« .Mayor ftOtteipftted that "'.■ project WOUld l«' U frreat R 10006*9 m'Liiuenek as it has been in other CatSe*, and there to not n»' ilighteat doubt that Bach win he the case. 8ei Influential citltens and gentlemen cnnnaetad with Umerlcli rum

warmly t&JfOO up the Idea, 801*1 hy-nml-hye We Bhftll BOOT UmoncJf i'i the lull .Mijimiu'iit Ol :t .-:t i-/.i«iimv Institution In May,

1890, :> deputation waited upon the Corporation to urge the ftdvt*-

nhillry of nt onec pi tefng (hi \i tH ii Operation. liAnrarsas and Ratboaa. This [< ;i township ad]oftl!ng Dublin, ami r 1 1 ** Libraries' lets

1 ecu d operation since lew. Tin registered attendance for [flSfl was n.ifw, and the number of borrower* tor home reading

wns (MX). There are _MKK) volumes in the library. Only :i half- penny rale is levied for its maintenance, And litis yields L.'WK) h year. The supply ol' newspapers and books is not large, but there is a useful work in store for the Rathmlnes library. If it seta other township* neat Dublin todctciiuine Unit they also will have uiie ut' these mslituliujiN :i good end will be served.

Si.n 10, There was great difficulty in iroltfna the people I" adopt the a.-i* in Sligo Had it not been for the deep totereel whid tJ e iii< Alderman MeDonough displayed in the subject the Acts would oarer hare bees adopted \ww. tie waa at considerable cxpe&ae and loss ol time in Mc-cnriiu; the mean* of having tin- library opened niah-r the Libraries' Vctfl It is m>w tDttoh appre- ciated by the public, ami as Boon n* the Corporation are aoU to

a>siM it a little better the library will flourish, jml be 0 touch usefulness to BUgO* Here is u can© where heavy taXOf alt already imposed, and where, if tho Government could by any mesne be indueed toae9iat,n would very much help in forward tl . movement. Those who know tho town well wy thai II i* b laei thai the Slip> library has done more to comitcrael crime, particularly drum; inaesa, tban any other influence The number of voiumesia i.too. a pooztj la the Town Hall Is allowed foi (mi up to the present books are sol Lent for home reading. The reading-room is open on Sundays from •! to 7 p.m. .Mr. David Sauitry is the librarian.

Dovolab (Isms of Man). Tho Douglas Library la the only ratemupported library ander i be Aets up to ditto in this tight little island. The let* were adopted and tho library opened in I860, II occupies the first flooi shops in it central pari ol thia thriving watoruig-ptace. The isio

i.i Han las favourite resort for Lancashire and Yorkshire i plo,

nail as the denisena of these counties know how to use a puullc library the reading-room is greatly appreciated l«v the vfclttira With .t total of 6,000 volumes there is » turnover of about Ml' per , mhI there are some 2.4U0 aetunl borrowers, The 9< book* la probably as good as would be found am

I'L'BLIC tJBRABlES IN WALES.

y«i

tty where, fill tastes having boon consulted. AS new toolo Mtt added Mr •' de Maine Browne, the ooarteous librarian, intimates tlii'iu in the public press, with some notes of his own as to the vulne ot the IkioIcn lor reading1 purposes. Kamiey, Castletown, :in»! Peel should not be long holt re they adopt the Arts. Fof iiicii- nu ii pleasure and advancement tbi« should be done, hut. as !h-c reason there ti no doubt t&nt rtsltow to wateritig-piaers In largely use public reading-rooms, ami in not a lew cases .select pleasure resorts where this advantage Is afforded. St thai U an investment the adoption of the Act* should he attempted imme- diatelj ;n f\->-\y inland and seaboard wateJing-place not at

pir.st'lil possesMiiy Ihexe iiihttUil ions

CHAPTKR XV.

PUBLIC LIBRARIES IN WALES.

W.L.VNT little Wales, considering that there an mi many large towns in the Principality, does not come out :u:h"s8 in its Public J library work. The total

i;iiii ii-r Of a40pti071§ Of I he Vets :- eight- Wide* and

Scotland had a national system »>i i-iim-nt dm u.ny in lore in England we had reached the same stage, and the people of

both ••iiuntrles have lor generation! been known :is earliest and Pti [er friends oi educal ional and soeiFil progress \s will be seen :ii Mie eml of this chapter, the movement la spreading in quite a number of places i-i \\ ales, and in course ui a 1 an few years tfac Dumber ol adoptions will bo more like eighteen than night In no j mi t ol the united Kingdom would :i Mnall novenmirni. grant be more acceptable and useful than in Wales. The penny p-it" in ilie small districts is not auffldeut to stock and maitilain a Public Library. Wales should agitate this question ot s state sub- , and urge the point upon its parliamentary rcpresentatiYaa

,\ r.KWVHrwvTir and BAN60B.

in the ormer place they eon only boast of 3,640 volnroeSj bu\ as the population is only double &e number it is, in comparison

vith some libraries, a fair proportion. Hie rate yields A'loo a year.

Bangor adopted (in* Acta in 1871. The library U open on

Wednesday* and Saturdays only, From 10 to 19 cm. and from "

tn B pjn The number >1 eoluraes is less than Abarjstwyth, for

there ore only 1,ftO() lor 10,000 people. No wonder with so poor

I Dumber the average issue snoutd only be Sfi iM-mkn. Surely

some Loudon or Colonial WelKhiona will remedy this defect, noi

ii Rancor but at oilier places in Wales. The rMnclpall^j

acfted gift* foi it* Public Libraries \ 'nnV -.\tm\eA grftasj

ri be mom cnvmirnging.

268

T'UTUl^ MHHARTR&

1 1 If ln.'ii- i.intiiiir tin- Webb tow n* thai «i' .'i ■■■ I lie lx",l r\ .i!ii|> V ol \v!l i(. i* being dooe. The wui k :i; tlie present lnuliirlil in ill ft

ital 'i u.ih.-iiiirii. lor .ii ''Mi-iisinii ol tneouildings has long bean ueeeaeary and hua now been decided upon. The quauuon of altering tlie present building, op erection a new bolldinn; and banding over the present one entlrelj for auueuna and science rt purpose*, bus IW tome i oneuiernble thine been -i burning ani in w& l-.wr* depeitaient of tlie Public Library worfi bu outerows the BpaooilhaeatdiapoeaLiwidUiereiB no i foe wonder thai the ami eal tendency of ooiuioa, to te the

library committee and town com i., MmuM lm\e K-<*u lor ;i

: og. An adnnrable and moet convenient ti i waa available adjoining the existing building. This forma part of one side of a .»iii.ir. -, tJl6 filiation and diape of wnich an Well -niiiili i handsome building being erected. In July, 1880. th* Local < ha voroment Board gave permission to borrow £10,000. v this cxtoneion is corapl ited Cardiff will hare its Public Library housed in t|uarter& well qualified to moot ita growing n<

The town woe* the Bret to adopt Qui Ante, wnon fron 1669 dew D to the tort report tha progress hoe been stoady and i factory. T i two itj -seventh report shows how avery noetic the institution has been largely need during u*, '"if. the

crowded itnte ol every department prevents urn

development, although muoh iB roquirea to snpplv th« i <i* of

to largo emd cr< w an ci town. At the bogitimno ol tho \ mr tlie ooo au tee olXered nuns of fso to tho district!* of Koath.l nthnya. Canton, tho Docks, and Grongetown, for I mt ol

ich rooding-ra >ms,on corn 1 1 ion that a comroittee wai fined in each district 1 work them,and, it necessary, sin-mli ffani bj i ivste snbaoriptwna Tho districts >i Raath and

Cothnya have availed themaolvea «>t ti \a offer, and iu< utful

i wHrooma hove been established In these districts Theci ending library wae open 302 days, and the reference Ibrary on

aw «i t\ -c during the year. Tne number of i ks Issued from the

Lend n1-'' library waa ISA nurabar tor the previous

being 126,618, or an Increase foi the year of S,1P4, The anmber

C TCRiKter :-".;fii. Tlu* nililir Ioiih to the

library amount to S,704 volumes, oi which i,;tfi volumes have been placed In the reference library, and 2,31a volumes in landtag 1 brary. The donations were 308 volumes and pampbleta; theremainder of thenddJtiona, viz., 2,396 volumes^ were pun I In order to make the public better acquainted with recent added to the lending department un< ■■■■ toi leeue, an

Migeumiis ; i r.nii.'Liiiriii ha* \xw adopted. A boai I i- hmuj En the library, on which i re placed ticket* tntaining bias nut In n-. title. :imi uitiiiiirr <•! uuch books lb 1 lav) l)eenadded durhag th* preTkme

three trtha Ii i borrower winhce t" obtain vmt ol theaeplM

the card and bande it to an jwm'-hh , who, when b found t!ir book, putfl the ticket in a box. The entry la thne ■<i ihmi the notice bouidi lo \>e wj\» s" ■** it1, boofc i>

rVBLlC LIllBAaiEa IN WAUs

sea

n itornod, end BO on until the book has taaun circulation thro* vin i; it ie altogether removed to moke way for more recent additions to the stock.

The question of branches has boon a burning one in Cardiff. The borough coven :* large area, w\ mhiim .>i the suburban districts are very thickly populated. One el the local newspapers printed a eerie* of art'ieie* going minutely and taBy into the subject "i thoeei tral institution mmatsbn acta libraries-, and much -mil for both side*. It was pointed out r.h:it ii brand) ;. library as well as reading-room was opened In one district i is other suburbs would naturally cry oat to toe similarly erved. The matter of means entered, or course, fully to the dis- Gumion. The muds available are something under fiis.ooo a year. 'i\u> penny rat* produces more than tin*, iwt. a ants has w be deducted from it towards the repayment of the loan. Of fins sum the ordinary current charges of the institution, includinjz museum ami art gallery, take up liy Tar I he greater pari Imleed, when we place :i rery moderate sum ttnide for tin1 jnir- ehaae in nea hooke for the library, and a still mora moderate one for the purchase oj Decerwarj articles for the museum* the la* come la whollj swallowed up. For boom yean past, Indeed, a i .jriiii.\ ti-oin the first start until rerj recently, Uiey were con-

tinuwlly la'lir w.il'-r. hut tiling .w- l''j n^ (>- look more

promising for the future. It wan ivii timi, t«» em-t hruuehes trould cripple the central institntion, and \mm-Iv the decision has Iitii .ii i nvil at t<> uvuid so undesirable a result, in another part .-1 tin- w>rk tli. question of branch libra tea has been dwelt npoa, i . aatural that outlying districts which see the utility oJ Chess Institutions should wiali to sec ''in1 of them placed in their midst, i i:t the ability to maintain one good central library and it number Ol I -ranches, inn perfect state of efficiency, out oi the nimble penny ahouldbe looked tally in the face, At present Cardiff does not quite hoo its way through these difficulties as to branches, Itoath, a 1 1, contributes some i'-KK» towaadt the penny rate, and olnimfl mora than a small grant towards its mtdiug-rooro.

The | . :-'ipj , i tin- l '"uveal lnatructiim Act of laaj, yea* gave <'.»MKi.lr. ::!»!<■ ,;i(i-;;h'(ion in ( ardifl", and Cpnokly after l"h

place i on the statue ImmiI; a committee was formed. TheeiCeet of thu Act will be to relieve the library committee from the ni

i maintain i l H- ^oionce ami ait seho-uV livm the Public

Llcrorj rate Cos committee eeta illshed these Bcboole in the : -i- -. and they have steadil) risen in public estimation up to iresent tunc. .Many of the students now occupy important

Ions, in consequcm : the instruction m<i encouragement

ed The coma Ittee fools that its effort i supply tech Instruction, which haa been siicv^esafully carried on for a « pun I a centnr; is now justified by the passing of this let, and hopea

tlint under the aew o..iidinnn« tlio sclu-oN will enter upOl ffl ided rjereer uf usefulness It is hoped thai < 1 1 - Sooth

i'! MnTitnuitth^hire College Will pvoiide aee«\\H\\\nCi

hnieal hcIhhi]&

2M

prm.i"; unmnn;.-v

Tl 10 work in tho reference library hi of a very solid and uaeful

tiaiure. During- 1888-39 1 1 n total issue WO* 13,217, mil of

total or 13,824 volumes and pamphlet*, Thta is -i section co which the able librarian and HCorctJU'j of the other Institutions, Mr. JoIim Balllnger, glvtfH bis careful attention. Mr. BaliingerVi administration of the library l>a^ contributed luryely to develop it* w<>rk. flistorv, biography, and travel represent tin- Largest issue In tho reference library. There, i <• In the reference room four of the prettiest and mtwt appropriate stained windows which can be found En any Public Library. They Were presented byMr. Jamte Ware. Theyrepresenl respectively

poetry, fiction, travel, and history. For the first-named bhesul j

a Milton dictating "Forachflc Loei to hie daughter. TTw portrait* are nl S<-ott, Uulei^h, and GibbOBi A set of nimilar windows in every Pttbfio Library In the country would l>e a decided ptiin.

The Public Library committee have u separate banking no'ixiiit a step which should bo taken by most conuattteea. The catalo^uoMiirc very carefully pi' [i.ii.vl For n penny tho borrowers In the juvenile HocUon— which in largely need have b twenty-four page catalogue of hooks selected with grout discretion, and a sixteen-page supplementary catalogue IS sold tor halfpenny. A ug/m catalogue of the reference department ho men recently going through the press. A local printrafl firm underfoot the enttra responsibility of nrodueiDfl it, having the pm liege cd taking advertisements Cor i*. 11m catnioquc molls for 6d.. ana copies are

paid for pttri tdieally to th<> printers us sold. Pie cost of prll

catalogue? ia so grew thai flic plan is deserving of being eoptait

There are separate catalogues ol the book* en music, bj d books

for the Wind. A glance at ihe lrtttor shows that rifty-hv*«

volume*, in the Braille character, are at the dispone! of those to whom Kitriii denied. Printed In Moons tyj»e there ore nbonl IfiO volumes, whilst, seven are printed hi ordinary Reman embossed type. The different hooks of the Bible can 1m* had In oiiher Moon's type or in the Braille character, mid In the KeJectton ol other work* on the list care seems to have been taken to secure

only rhuse nl' an elevating and enri-i-.'aii in;: character Altogether

the work at Cardiff to in a healthy state andu Itha growing r&tetiie developments ol the future will no douht be more marked then during the post, in seven years the yield ol the n to h is nearly doubled iteuf. Whatacnpifcal thing it would have been for th« Public Library movement if tins could be said of till towns of equal sisss to Cardiff,

(XuutAimnr.

Tin Act- v, i iv adopted here in 1*87. Only a Irndinjt library up tn tlw prudent btcjj established, and in .this there u volumes. Through the exertions of Aldcrmun Lewis, who inil the movement during hid mayoralty, n eomrni ' its and linnd buUdiag was erected by public subsorjptioa nud batidi the adoption of th< Art-. Tin. rati COO. ai one of the

PimMC LI1UHK1KS l\ H Mi B.

96A

meetings for the promotion of Hie Acta Rome good apeectii g were made. A clergyman who mode a strong appeal for the adoption

suid . " I do not cure for a penny rate, but I do cure very much for a Public Library for Carnarvon ; and let mo u*ll yon \vIiv--wIkh a young fad in Liverpool, a Public Library kepi too from Ifce theatre, ii».- public-houae, bhn singinfl saloon, the gairibUng hell. A Public Library supplied me with food for the mind made me * reader, a thinker, a public man— a. preacher of flod'a Gospel. I ""_o n debt I can never repay to that Public Library, and rli.it i* why J Lin: her6 tonight.1' thou- are many others who could render a similar testimony.

OSVBSEBT.

The ouestion has l>cen several tiraes mentioned in Oswowtry, and on May 19, 1890, the adoption of the Aets WBfl unaniraously eanled ll ;i lown'e mooting. It is very cheering to be able to record tWs in the present ealtioo. Th& friends ot education in Oswestry have for several yearn had their i*y*s on the establishing ni i Public Library The loco) proas rendered excellent aid. Hie Bei ,1. ,i. Poynter iTirl others look part in the proceedings \

I:mm town libr:iry. which 1 1 : i .- been under the control Of trustees,

vmii novt u* handed over to the Town Council, ami provision for honsing it will 1* made Uy the OounoH the now municipal

buildings about to be creeled.

Swan: HA.

The Act* were adopted here in I870i Some boll spirit* i few

years ago urged upon ti>« Towa Council the need or new and

more commodious buildings for the Public Library and Art

iv The scheme wns a large one. The building, of which a

rlew ft erven, is an exoeodingly handeomc onO|Ond was erected

wt ill" e-_'<MKK) iii a control par! of the town, rVmii the designs

>t \h. Ilnltom, <A Dcwsbury. This was opened by Mr . Olodstonc in 1087, Owing to the henry drain upon the rate r<> pay the interest on the Toon of 4'l^ooT, too small u balance was left to keep the twin inetitutione in s state 4 efficiency! A temporary Rnani ial difficulty presented itself, and *ome papers took up the null- r i- ii" rt spelt ruin for the Public Library and disgrace i" the town. More gloomy prognoaticntions were never in theae institutions, but allnav* l>een doomed not t-> be realized- The enemies of the movement made great capital out of the Bujrooeed Failure at Swaajen.

the history ol the library movement in Swansea is inti- imh.'Iv connected with the name of Mr. G. B. Brook, the late onair-

in:ri , f the lihr.irv 1-oa;iniU0C, who laboured :OWk"Illoll>!y for

ii i i - 1 > years for the adoption of rho Public Libraries' Acta by the borough, and, ,w«UMiod by Sir John Jones Jenkins and others who .nice Ailed the office of mayor of the borough, was aoeeeofl ol only In this preliminary step, but In rabaequentty advanc- ing tbe movemenl to Its latter and oomplete Btage— that at \w«- :t huliitalion for /he iristffutEuii which *\\unluY Vje ^NivriSn^

:V iSSMA H III.K UllUAUk, AJLI (J A.LMUU . AM' I H-<. '.!>' AM.

long n - (1^- old institution, contained 0

■-..-., .u.c hundred* of rare [ximphlcts. The oollcotii La [in- department* oi poetry, the lite rnturo of the drain, and biography, ami Wolsh netary and topography. Thou there ia in connoowon wilb th« Inntiuitiun the llowfand Willimii*' Reference Library, Full el rare works in Welah literature tad theoloffTi lK^idw a general reference library <>t ;< mis o ploo cbarac With pi ■_■.■! I tbc building taaitf, tne ardiitoet'i own

PCBLIC UBBAIIIKS IK WALE*.

*>7

Bcrtption, as being most 8iioviii*'t, in given. Tin- extreme leugth ol the front of tho building shown fn the sketch is lflu ft., :m<i the extreme depth, to the Duck of the circular reading-mom, 9] ft. The front portion is four storeys in height, and the iwk portion throe storeys, with rite exception of the olrcular peading-room, which is one storey only Tho style of architecture adopted ih ii. iii. in classic, tin- Front being divided by projecting bayi .-it either end. and finished with pavilion roofs. Ylw roam entrance is in the centre of the Dioade, and the interior in reaohad through . vestibule 17 fl wide, witfo an Inner hall of tho suns width. Both these are laid witb ;i mosaic flooring 1 1 a beautiful Bora] u. Tiie groiuid floor is devutcd solely to the purposes ol d Pubuc Library. Right and left of the Inner boll is a oorxldor 8 ft. wide running the extreme length of the building', and comtnuni- i .ilhiir with the «1 <de ■!' i i iomius ou the BTOUSd floor, On the right of the inner hall it- the newsroom, 01 ft. long and %l ft. vide, and to the left of the inner hall la the nia^azine-rooui, -<) ft. !>v 39 ft. Adjoining this room are the' librarians prirabe rooms and

COMraitteo-roome At the rear of the inner hull is tin- rcadhig-

.■'II and reference library, which ).*• circular in shape, and 56 ft.

Id diameter. It Iihs a domed top, with outer and Lnncj lights,

whit h i 26" ft. high in the centre. The presses and Bhclving for

book* arc arranged round trV walls, and divided into alcoves

* centre. Tho room in capable •»!' Mormg S'>,000

volumes, arranged in two height*, with light cast-iron

•■n.: un i iv are i id for nccesfl. The gallery is opprouchod

hv geometrical stairs, Some <»f the prossei are fated up with

loov I'll rollers for the Larger and more valuable works,

rllindi are u ud in all ciihos to protect the hooks, rhe rending

re a Tanged in tho centre ol tho room, nnd si t he entrom e

ik u cutulogue <lebk. All tho wood fittings urt "I American

ie<t The mgiiia» recesses ol the room are

i and used am apartment* for tin* attendants. Un elthei

aids ol the circular room is n room measuring 10 tt. long tty !R it

One :■ wed as the lending library, and is fitted up In t

sfeailsr iniifawr to the reference library, with the addition of ;i

aook-< ttter or wrrower* with Indicators and the usual

.'-•ements for borrowing nnd returning ' Icn This room

r oas book spaces for nl ii nil l'o.ih*) vnl rne* The second ilnor appropr Sted to the Use of the science and :n-r department, Ii

►reached hyaseparate Ataircase nr the QOrto-wesI and of the hnildlng, and com prises elementary roomSj painttSMoaniB, modelling-rooms, a large antique room, and u rassters room. [base form the art department The remaining rooms are for the M'iruce department, and ooxunat of ;< tool I a- rootOj ''i:i>oi-i-oom, and laboratory, and balance-room. The art kcUod Is fitted up throughout with desks and diagram boards. aud the antique room is furuialicd wiili drawing tables nnd curtains, with pedestals ior casts. The third floor is arranged aa AH art and picture gallery, and is lighted by top \\fcW- V\ \W. rawmLUlcliidn^ (In <-,/r;(ioi\-., are rn suite.. '\\\m v*v!\ t»\toK& \wt

96A

(I lil ]i I MIllAUiKv,

pictures Is about \2fl0& it & sepoiiMtt staircase is provided fox Hits floor ai the south-went up of fcfie building. There is uTt,unl\ nothing to equal this puler) Ed Hie Wed oi ESngiandor Bon h \Vate.

The reference departmeal lathe strongest part of tin workal Swiuiw-'-u. line there an- ^1,801 volumes, with an avenge dally Jotac of 34;i volumes. Eo the lending section 53,794 rolames were ioeucd during the year. Swanaea rejoice* (?) in <\ committee of twenty-four members of the Town Council nod fourteen members from outside the council. The attendance of these thirty-eight ffO&tlemen i~ i^iven in the report in tabulated form apian which is adopted in so exceptionally lev reports. The figuren nrc inwtnu-tive, and illustrate very forcibly mo absurdity °f having l m gc coiDJoJttces. Of the thirteen monthlv mid special mcctnign, Pour "ii,\ ft»oBD out rids the council attended twelve, and one from the council attended ten of the meetings. Eight members of the council did not appear ut any of them, Pour shoved up

oner, ami Others two, throe, i>r timr Li raw. From outride (hr

council the btorIIobI number of attendances vraj tbroa. This was In one case only, and tb< atheft vers presenl ai from seven t«> eleven of tins meetings! There is evidently something wrong about these oounoil members of the committee] some three-fourths <'i them might be very reasonably relieved of serving;. So large eoramittoo is, in 003 ease, uttorfy unnecessary, and theexperiance at Swansea 1^ proving this to be so, The prospect in swn ror tin- Public Library work at brlghte] than if has been for timr, Mini Ms Future will he watched with considpr.'ihls Interest.

Mr S K II ipvmi \x the iilii'Mi'ian funl -ceivhiry. Under a Local

[mprovemeni /Let n slightly Increaoed rate Is levied, aid this removes the congestion which has been experienced.

Whi.« mi..

Welshpool bos, and i*. doing itself credit. In September, I w, ;i public meeting oC the inhabitante was held in consider n pro- posal to adopt the Public Libraries' Arts. Theft wystodClub, of which Lord Powys was the president, hod offered bo transfer their library and museum, the mosi valuable in the Priuoipi lo the town as a free gift upon condition (hat the Public Libra Acts were adopted. The Town Council undertook to limit the to id. in bhe pound. Lord Powis warmly supported the proposal, which was, however, --! -i -i ■- 1 by the residents in outlying agricultural parts of the borough, and was defeated. A l«)ll wri.s demanded. On rhi" bring taken 11 few w< < l. ! 1 < r, and

1 t< 1 there bad been time to bring the question prominently I .. the public, the majority in favour was 201. lit the foUowine; N'ovember the annual meeting was held. Mr. MorriBC Jcnee.

to whode service- the institution was BO greatly indebted, and

who for 1 weal v one pears bad not boon absent onoe st the minimi

meeting of the institution) hod moat actively supported the pro

■'/' banding eve* the Institution te the town. Mr. J. 1;

Juorrltfj the Mayor 01 thai year, u*o tttws in ttw *«atgM cd bis

I'IHM<' I lim.uni'..- iv VAT.RS

20»

inlVi'-i ■■•■ At the cudol lrtus.aud after one year's working uuder (the enlarged scope, the increasing amount of BUOcetni which has attended rlie .>)>< -i msr r>l* the institution to (lie publk can be I>ohL

juil^fi.1 by the mini l>er of bookfl Issued and readers' ttoketa sold (luring th-' period of nearly live months— from Jum: 1 to October 22, and this was greatly in excess of any preTloua Tear. The rem ling*- room fa wen attended, and is supplied with newspaper* and naijfafffrftpi The nroseuni has bfl m netted by a large number of

S'i':.uii.'.. A eoiiMilerable sum viw ubtuined from ;i fund raised aring the year for defraying the- cost of fitting: up the library. Tlie towns and villages in the? Principality will receive, it may he v I ihedf quite an aeoaeslon bo the Qomber of adoptions el the oota from institutes, eueh as the one at Welshpool, being handed OYW for the free use of the people for ever.

WaexHAjr. Wrexham adopted the Acts in 18711, but after twelve year*' existence the number el volumes reaches only &361 for 11,000 people, ir was nor mnl lajst year that a lending department was established, the hunks being bought out of £-100, the nun received out ut the rational Eisteddfod. The £180 which the rate yields In heavily (axed by b rent of £40 a year repaid to the Corporation for the use of the mums in the (xuildhall. This ought not to be An odd £5 or £10 at the luoat.ua an acknowledgment) would be ample, Two ladies oJ title are on the committee^ \t would he : viii^lu nci' Hit- work al Wrexham making more rapid pro- gress. So many town* in Wales are inquiring: about the Public Libraries' Acts that they want all the encouragement they can get from existing successful libraries,

Bareitectwefft and Llandudno have made .itu-nipi- to carry the Acta, but without success. The vote was taken in tbe former place in 1868. in Llandudno the vote was taken in 1889, bub the whole attempt was htill-born. The steps taken to bring; the matter before 1 ie people do nul appear to have been uumerouB, The ftttei dance at the statutory meeting w m very small, and ihe taking of the rote wa> ;mMp<med. At a later date twelve voted for the Act* and twenty against. A poll was demanded, and the of this showed "1 against ami iSi.v. in fnvnur. An institution wirh ;i library worth altogethei about £:.',0<X> would have been banded over on the adoption of the Acta. With some organization, Llandudno should easily now adopt the Acts, but it is unwise to bring the cmi"»tion forward anywhere in a ball-hearted way.

Tli. following arc the places in Wales where the question has less w more to the front of late, [neoreral of these districts the veto will probably he taken before long-

In 1KK7 the question wee mooted in Aberdare and 1 "iir. 1 1 _. 1 1, hut fell through in each town from hwk uf support. In Mitreli if the ;Ih ^ii'ijci-t was also introduced in ('arnairthen.

towni should bave their Public Library. V.Yja\\:'*\v-v. lias a library bul not under the Acta. It in&y naeAft cbSswd*

m

pnu.ic l.IBRARII^.

i hiring, and tin* (»«t should Bet an cxumple to Llandudno. Merthyr Tvdvii hoi; heard something aboul b proposed odop ]• D of the Acts, but nothing has vot como of i' In Mountain u vote was taken some four years ntco, hut the reAUll wa* OH

bSTOaroblo. Binodthes thi [rfeetion tnui been rnontdonod 4

EUDMBj but nothing Itiithci- has been clone. Other place » are BhOBada \ lUejr, isfcr&dj I'onartb, and IVt«irky.

Wales requires a little spirited eneonrsgenient, «*iNiit by or b>wnfl like Carmarthen, Llandudno, and other places ad* themselves t^ thi» list..

CHAPTER XVI.

CRITICAL EXAMINATION OP THE PUBTjIC XjIBRABLBB.

WORK OP

|ROM scmio point* of view it would nppcar that Public * Librarian tiflbd suddenly emerged out of the long clothe*

PJM of [\h< nursery int. tin- full li_<ln if public BJ&BOi

j^g) t&inly thil would bo gathered from the Aoodrgal criticism which have been within a yoar or two b upon them. And tiu-v have some out of the ordeal remarkably

well, and there run f»e no doubt thai in nearly nil the p

Where they have been established the ratepayer have very inexpensive tnatttutfona. Pnblio Libraries will challemre oom*

inn-oil with Board Schools, and all other puhlie ''Mjn-mliiuri- i.ut of whieh the people get Twenty shillings worth of real ralW for every pound Sterling invested, it nil other public money were equally woManem* woahould haw lose rates to pay, and it would ht; better far the penplp nil round Tim amusing |ort i* that an attack on the expenditure for ttrcct clcansm

police, :ni<l DffSem a iiinlliT of r:i renee, und the

o) , f w inn ii.i. .vii res round this nimble penny or the School

Board rate. We bta b nation of small eoonomfHOi, and meekly swallow the huge camel of extravagance

I'uiilic Libraries do aol shirt erltlnlam, snd, like all other experimental national efforts thoj inuei l>ear with a good deal ol tin* r'niiiiinxiiiy n will do the InsUtu [uni » i: nt bul on the contrary will bring the more publicity to iholi ipers clusi' Hands sod rasa lo take aides.

One thing the crilfcs should bear in mind in making cono-

I orisons In the working of Public Llbrj oarueu^ any tu"

iave axaotty the precise method ol tabulatlo . and mora

unifonnit.y in this rCflpeot would be .-crept. tUe, tail lo dial we

shall come all in (rood time. A ayetem i-. not built up In a da>, whether it be a Bolai : library system. There are fea

bofwnaexaeth >n all-turns with regard tothi people and u- needs 0* ireraal trnitd <■ i ;uv to be

everywhere, but there are some local idiosyncratic-- which for something. The present viiieY.uVAvouKU accuatomed move

i RTTIfAI. HXAMIXATIOV OF THEIR TVfiliK.

871

ihi.ir rhe country from evrremp north to extreme south, haw not-few 1 Miih piirlirnhirly vvhwi .-»■"" about the libraries ol tin- wnmiryduiing the taet fo« ro< otxw Home libraries class Nt^'Thpr Bctloa, poetry, and the drama. Some are open longer hours than

mIIicis. -r linvtt mOfC branches. Some Ic-liei Hinv-Yoliiiiir ri.ivi'ls ;il a iinii' and count each Volume in the returns, while again ih.v may lend for seven or fourteen <l;trh. The condition of the lowd jjn.ltisi rir*. nearly nlnay* materially affoote the returuB of (he ttbrarrfor that period. These fnstitutiuiip an- in IVI MTvin^** useful barometers of the state of trade in uianydisirici*. Etei al towns have finer, more centrally situated prenrisea than the rest ; whilst in some cases then* i> rimyr*tio]i, attributable t" an mi workable committee and chairman who have been placed in their present position for political purposes, ami who abominate the ribUo Library and all ita works, Thi* a no pun, bat sooei fact, and were it not for the force of public opinion against them bnoy wo j hi throw every possible obstacle tn bhe way of the library's work. As it is, they starve the shelve* and bully the librarian. These arc u!l factors which produce their effect ■ad while the spirit of emulation among Ubrarloa ihonld be eBoouraMdj the plan of roaldng comparisons In favour of on© ot muiv ana against others is n method whirl) should be PWeivt I

MSSj t/rtuto Hnti/*.

Th«' following towns tuv taken u* illustrative of the rest, and w being van i' iniv scattered through the (wnjxtrv. The figures glvon are for twelve mouths, but no4 always for the same Uwelve months, They are placed in the order ol population, adull and

iwniic;—

■1 ...

rnyliixui

Htnfhflatar Loetta

i

Mitel

KiiUiiiplitin ,.,

Utto-on-Tyae

tafc««r*r , .

Rfrkflnhcnd ,.

frftftou

Xonrkli

Wolverhampton ..

tenth

Ule

igtoa

p

linn, IftSl

662,426 400,757 841,5 tfl £00,124

2(H ,503

181 ■■■

. I

10U000

104,000

87,813

. .

lis. BOO 80. : 04

No. of i ■. idem Vol*. Iti

Tickoio iu, Sto«:h. in-

S.Sf.f.

ao,ooo

11,803

10,608 13,664

11,06ft ! . 51 5,310. 7.-100 1,660 2,000 g,48S

. 3,000

140,426 L62,S01

r 97,943 161,749

91.490

74,181

u-i.OUB

;;•■ itt

42.ru> iu,oi;>

30.390 26,883

■i'J.Oil

35,011

Total Vi-ur''.

[■mi

Turn, fwrlirwl

ovor. of Pop v

lilt int.

820,076

i 849 ; i! s<v: om

803.171

,.■.1 60B 1&0.000

1

203,116

B 1,082 96,102

r ,<w

5-9

r.-;

S'll 5-0

-1-6

:-•.,

7'0 !'|

t;-4

80

I-: 2-Q

'-■■

-. Q

!■'■ 2-3

4 -a

2 fl 1 IS

■7 .' 1 ■■ (i f!

0 D

i-o

.:■! S'fi

Library ffioafd for a year and a half, 1S&&-^ .

S72

•rm 1 1' MBKARIBS,

There \h :\ marked disparity among some of these BgUXBS us will be seen. Wolverhampton haa a little higher population than

1,'uelnlale. mil w\ I In.' latter plaee Ii.ih three limex a* man> more bOTTO Vent' Ottldfl in 1186 j while Plymouth, which i> .vlmut tin; EMWD0

in population, standi between the two: nn-l Darlington, with hull' the population, lu- half as many again m Wolverhampton, and not ipiite *»> many as Plymouth. The foregoing applies to the number of horrmveiv cards in ueopfind in this the disparity may be accounted for by the method of renewing the tickets,

\ -linilai' dis|>anty attixoheci to the numher of volumes for the slxo of imputation. Leeds has, roughly, one hook for every tiro people, while Bristol fc not quite so well off. Manchester 2s even

i o£| ;hn.n Leeds, white PrestOD fttS only 0Q0 DOOlt ftjr 6V0TJ four t«> live of the population.

The aume marked irregularity En the figure* may he noticed in the other columns.

The total cost ef the libraries iii thcho sixteen towns last WAS £69,5 18, for a gross population ot '!,(»'"/.- 1- on tho basis oi the last census. This works out to a fraction less than IJd. per head, adult and juvenile, of tlie oOXabi&Ad lmpulation of these si' towns for the maintenance of they-' obrarfes and their bran last year. And what had the people in return P

I. In considering t he erwt of Puhlie Lihruries.it «hmiM in fairness tw» reineuiltercd that rho I'xpeiuliniro meinred is not exclusively spent in providing honk* r.> rend at home. Tin' cost referred I include* the provision of an mvitino :md itgreenMe place to read in. Instead of the more expensive and less military places whtoh have atjaortoed so rnnch ot the time and money of the working and other nlniHTin

3. Than, besides books for baking away, there it associated with the Public Library i reference Uhrary, :i Newsroom, rtr, containing the hest newspapers and periodical* to he found hi this Important branch oi literature, much of which must hccrm* aldered an very solid reading.

.3. There are. in addition, al many of these places Uvlurea,

science and aft clasaow, museuma, and art galleries.

This simple fact alone is worth volumes of statistics as bo the i lasses of literature read by the [leople, and a host of other details iu figures. Friends of this movement may fasten opponent* to

this simple Fact, a.ud challenge them to produce another deiW ; ment of onr national expenditure where there is for eonniuli pel head of the population bo much far-reaching utility nnd actual value for puhlie money .-[iciit,

Beforepasstngon.it is worth whUe calling attention to the wide difference in the ratable vnluc of these varlou* according to the population. The penny tor Birkenhead produces £600 per year more than in Preston, and yet the popuintii

larger in Preston l»y 30,01 X). Norwich with o population of S\ producer only n little more than Rochdale W it!i I0|00Q iGBS An I ether example.*- might bo multiplied.

' nun ai. j-;.\.\M:mnoy »>" thrih work

878

Taking1 a few towna smallm- tShftD following table is instructive :—

those already pivwi the

TWRT.vk

9X01 B Of

\in\THX

ZOW9C.

I'ill'l J.VUON.

BOOKS*

I88CB8,

4rton

' o.(KX>

11, rW

'Hi.XH

Ashtou-undcr-Lyne

, . ■57.027

11,980

70..W

BariOW-in-Fui 1

.. r.0,01 x)

14$40

i'3,y^

Cambridge

.. 40.4 1 A-

36,9ee

82,463

Cheltcuhnro

4ft07S

I-Vjoo

L:m,oi6

i;;.J7;J

52,418

Dudley ...

.. 4&S53

8,300

62,400

ttacaleafleld

.. 37. -.14

16*49?

4fl,7L**2

.\rwport (Mini.) NortnampUiu . .

. . 86,882

1&186

77,668

. . 62,000

wm

:>'.' ,'•'.':■

Kotherhmu

.. 86,000

0.HS7

58^09

Shrewsbury

.. Bfctffi

6,799

47,044

SOOUl Shield*

.. 63,876

17,703

0K881

Southport

10,000

HI.K85

03,804

Stookport

. . 50,653

10,89!

«.::.-:■_■ ;

worth . .

83,000

10,833

88,640

WaiTinytnn

4K.1M'

sagoo

1*>.71<>.

W est Broniwieh

M

l^l'til

65,416

Uorv again there are aaoinalfea. While oootown reqpjrefl three

books per head of ii& population, other lawns are satisfied with

lew lludi one. Take the average of the towns Miroiurjh whan

tie «' are Public Librariea, it h about WW book and a-lmlf tu each

Ih'isiim in Om area they cover. Moreover, ti it* reading fa done 7 per cent, bj the independent and professional duwon ; 44 per cent. 1>,>' tmdeame&i students, *huj,t assistants, and clerics i ami 89 pec cent, by mechanic* ami labourers. It vouUl be eaay to examine Ubrarj statistics to ottaitc length i buti after dning deeply among them for some considerable Mme, the present writer has come to the ponoluaton, thai for tin purposes of com" paring town with town, or groups of towns together, there are »o many differencce i tabulating and in other dlrectiona, net already Indicated, that the plan requires adopting with caution, loyond the broad linen ol work no two libraries are alike, and hence the difficult v of comparison. These arc bobs which ihonld n- K, j i very distinctly in mind, and comparative tables should not

li;i\<- ;n;(v .special wiUh1 utrnelied 1 1 il-ijj. Had liiide in D&S year

mi m certain trades will ut once affect the returns, and good trad* leaven lc*« time tor reading. A soriea of loot urea on special subjects will even afifeot fehe retnraSj and aa the weatherf like rhemtoaffij isal the bottom ol a good main LhingBjthe stub* of the elements uhouki not i»e loft out <.-f consideration. A wol season ^ ill keep people indcorBto read, oraesdbhain to the reference library, and a dry season nunds the people to tin- Ereah air. Returns may go op or g<*dowu, and all the explanation! which OOiild be great one way or flic other might not abaolxxVviYv) tttncft rrotaiu. n t& well to have statistics to ne w\vav ^a«\\ \o^a^ "^

L'7l

prBLIC LrBItAllIES.

dOSUg indi\'!iht:tlly. our COjEsir emnparianng must be guarded

against, and Mils fad especially should be kept in mind b,* newspaper writes. In course or time there will he uniformity In statistic*; but at present that a much more riinVuit matter ihnn it would tppear, as bsfow into can he done severaJ radios] OOflOgflfl in library administration will have to be made.

it m around the head of the Luuee t »r Action thai the storm nigra wiili the greatest funr. When this varies Cram M) to 60 per oent, as it does, it shows the wide latitude which exists, oul here again there most be caution, Some libraries bnj no nan three-volume novels. Others enter them in the returns as mree* volumes, and nut aw uue work, fiv that the *0 percentage ram i i i ;uised in thin wuy, and being lent for only seven, instead of fourteen days. It in admitted tlmt the percentage ol Beaten is i i -■_■ in .vnnr i-.wr.s, ;«.ud th.Li the amount spout in new books baa been too lavishly spent on novels, but there is ample room fa the conviction that we have reached the high-water mark lin-n circulation) It le on absolute (not that the proportion of job" I Literature is steadily on the increase. It is again worth, rcniem- ! ingthet all magazines and periodicals are invariably clawed as light reading, and these include papers liko the "EngincM*." *; Buildor," n Eiigli»H M<.-oh;>nii\" nuJ many other*. If the fairest 1 1 1 taificotlon was made, Scott would be cussed with history i i I '-Lone and Thaekeroy as moral philosophy. "Ye Night Thoughts" and " I': i»<;i^.' Lost' have hon melud ■• I .; fiction in soiiie libraries. "Under (Janves/1 a book setting evoagonstu work in i tent, has gone in 'lie same category^ ad

tinni roue other instances OOttld DC quoted. Kvorybody 0X00 pt the ft i lest prig reads some works of Hot ion at some tini< - >r . thor, the time has passed when novel reading need be defended, seeing

that bl*hnpv,:ix wi-11 Bt pUbllC8BJI mid BtnneVS lti-iii r;i I ly. all plead

guilty to the practice The mistake lie* in the individual p doing too much of it, and so weakening his taste tor the BJOM lolid WOtki, Che beet ot OOC English novelist* may be reel. amongst the chief henafactora of mankind, and nothing basooa- rrihtiteil ho much to lighten the tedium of daily lite a* romance Novelist* claim that theirs k the most important, branch "i literature, considered as a factor in the education sad in incut of toe masses, and tbej have some ground for the statement Public Libraries will pass through the stage ofcil Ichun which they have now entered the eyea ul many of the public, sad they will come oat of the ordeal none the worse for (he pi< The essential fact remains that these institutions, if pro] managed, may bring advantage* ' ' ",r bigueel order wlttim the

reach of wen tin- | rest classes ol the community, Nowa

wr :t!I proieffl to be anxious about the education o the n.i the people. Bub real education can only be begun in i Icmentarj schoola If the children of the working classes arc I educated tiny must do something more than pass the four rftr dxth standard; 'hey must learn, o* they stow to manhood Bad vromanhood, to take an unafiectc d interest in things of the

TOE PtTCTlB OP PCBLIC UBD-AJtrBS, BTO.

L'76

mind, and to carry on their studios not merely tov iho sake of material profit, hut because they find fointeHeonm] lift the soaree dt one of their deepest and purest pleasures. If this ideal Ei to 1 < attained, there must be libraries where even one will be able to find tho kind of books he or she may want. It is HometimoR said that there is too great a " ran " upon novels, but the reading of good

(novels should be encouraged rather thun discouraged, and there i* not the slightest tear that people who delight m me host writings of this natiu'c will confine their attention to fiction,

CHAPTER XVII.

THE FUTURE OF PUBLIC LIBRARIES, AND WHAT REMAINS TO BE ACCOMPLISHED.

HE future historian writing upon the present decade will In- ,■ i»injn-lli.'d to take. inU> account the part which Public Libraries are taking in the education of Che people* And It is safe bo prophet that .n the rate or progreee which is being made, the historian dealing with the Bret part of the twentieth century will acknowledge these citijscius* institutions ;i:» iH'cii]iytfig a very Brat place in the nations life. Although much good was accomplished during the first twenty years after EwarYs Act, the real impetus caruo with the passing of the Element;in' Education \<-t of 1870, and (li< next hound forward will be when Free Education, aou withta measurable dis- i.u:. 0| bocomofl the main pivot upon which our national hyuteni of education raste. When that desirable lime is reached, the position of Public Libraries and Museums will he as olenrly defined in the notion's shaft ae the pn^ms nud policemen are in day. Fi'on. present indications the land Booms to be in the foflity that both political parties will struggle with each other which ib to place upon tho statute l>x»k the abolishing of DtBOe En the 90h00l6 Of the people. It is now u plank in the pro- i. iiiiTjOi-1 the two great sections,and when tho decks are elenffl I for :t"tion, and the means by which the comparatively small sum now contributed in the form of Behoolrjpenoe &) tn be raised, then will come the tizac fox tbaqwsttonof State aid tc Public libraries to bo alao discussed. It leneeomlng a well-known fact that the COOR wir.ch are no* paid represent only a amnll proporttofl of the amount which the teaching costs. Atu\ not only so, bat the (atanee tit these fees is a oontfnual hindrance to the working of e \n ol 1870. The effect of the fee In to keep out of the Board hoolafihoiLRfljids of children who ought to bain them; and the ttampl to i nforce ltn payment lucreaaea the odium which almost

nlv :il(i'nds upon compulsion The iviiitLtiiiL' i if fee* in u proved inability to pay thera is demoralizing in ils "act, and a waste < I Unaonthaport of the officials and teachers. ip annua granl ol £20,000 for elementary education, wUw\\ -%■&>» menecd in !•■ i. awn ' \ L vpe nnAtaunfta. \n sv\\s\V

iii^H

I i in twca i half i, nil !i u

I a thil I d '■;• eioeo

■:mt qU*rt

I;.1.-.- niilli- : I I !i n BUm, 1 I •'

rat grunted froo

itea.

II ,w fM . nli:.'nc.>.! in. v. ,:il !:■>.: H..-I n : I! till lOOBl

not vol I m - r »

i.u: fo 'i ( parpen tmpenoJ u an d tc local

I- belter plan lb* pr i ml >\ five

■■

till- rrsl ll llll I I Hl'd K. : It <j-i Hill ll'HAMl, Tlli'll will ll

iiu- !■<■. i reign of power trl Public Mhrnrlea. 1 1 . \ nrtll I

|il U3C,U 111- | li LVfl iiivrr yet ileni . i i I In rllll

bhe Gounlrj. And for thai wurk lliej art i".

« tiicli in li tabic (»> the iudii rdunl in&lii a

liltl to 111'" »■•: k r- UOW f«j 11 t i:- onr h l£V u I. olr, 1 1 j:- ui

1TC !tl rUgfl i:i:. I I m.'l nil' v !urli

to keep I he w If from tin door: tb for ri in i \>\t\\ nf '

Thoi (Bent

in for thoic inntitutions of the runic and flic. It i .

one perpetual attempt *>• (pet ;i quart into ■> pi I'.ui oven i tolr future ta nol by urv a i have rrii-ii to make out, and anyone looking a! tnab record

< inch* cannot fail to conclude that the Uc I mad? of ovcryti

it ik otoar thai second onlj In u»i><>i't;i!ir.- rnonteJ food in the catobli those Public Llbinu

thonood for wrac means .1 utilizing the books whi

Bveri Mio h:i" probably he irJ oi Log ladies wno undertake to qamd a certain each day In the perusal of :i literary classic Hi gronpii of people are i very general wymptom I i waul all] nt some direction, wrnn* ■"'*> ice rad *u|

(.' tiic ri o?ta which on many are w i . n i :

Won. According to llaeon, " aome hoolo

t(. he swallowed, and moiw few to hn chewed

Then? is no section of the work i I

more careful attention will have o be directed than tixlK.

need of I brai j luaer-poat* h n

nf the liiiiiUH-- llir i'-.i ll iiik for one seeking some aa to what to rt;.'l Ib to attend the eluaaei <\ or i< enter ae u studi i i foi ,nt i ode to " ''"in i;< n her i ItC] natii i ie pot

rin tiiMin- Reading Circles i ' don, .i i nca Pu n

ecJaUy designed to supply the want. II if ; ,n of 'in- studiee "i any -i i ill jjro i;- o

i . :;■.•!( :i [a intended l< the members ol the the |>ci*unal mfl

men, who havo etudiod the special -uhjcot, t«» trsl tlu- v. .

THE FITTI'RR OP PUBLIC J.IBRABIR8, ETC. 277

and issue certificates of proficiency, and finally to arrange for summer gatherings of members of various circles similar to the recent meeting of university extension students at Oxford. At present there is no doubt that many busy men go to the Public Library as a distraction from the cares of life, and as a pleasant set-off to the toils and troubles of the day. The choice is not be- tween this and nothing, but between this and something worse ; between harmless amusement to the mind or fancy and the more gross pleasures which will come in and take up the time tor which no other occupation has been found. A Public Library may be started with higher aims and may serve higher ends, but it will be of most use to its neighbourhood by being so furnished as to meet all tastes. Works of fiction, and travellers' tales not always to be distinguished from fiction, and so much the more attractive on that account will always form a great part of a well-stocked Public Library. The purpose of its founders may be to instruct and not only to amuse ; but if they are to do either effectively they must be satisfied to do both, and must not look too curiously into the proportions between the two results, for they will probably be disappointed if they do.

At a Public Library the great body of readers are not particular on the score of what is called originality, provided they find the style pleasant and the interest sustained. It is to be feared that most of us read less in order to improve our minds than to occupy our leisure hours. " Happy is it," said Goethe on one occasion, " that we do not know who those are for whom we write." There is certainly one class of writers who seem to know very well the class for whom they write, and those are the producers of the gutter literature of which there is always such a prolific stock. With very many thousands of school children, all that has yet been placed within their reach is the "penny dreadful," the character of which does not improve one iota as time advances. To follow Dr. Johnson's plan of taking a walk down Fleet Street would reveal to any observant person, if he would take in his perambulations the courts and alleys surrounding that street, what an enormous trade is done in this class of literature. This would be driven home in his mind by seeing this filthy stuff being devoured by scores of printers' boys during the dinner hour, usually spent in the streets. It is in combating the influence of this class of literature that the future of our Public Libraries will be very largely occupied. The mountains of gutter rubbish issued from the press is so great that its influences for evil have scarcely yet been universally realized. Useful as Public Libraries are, they have as yet only touched the fringe of the working popula- tion. It is the poor student who has chiefly gained by the publi- cation, now fortunately increasing at a rapid rate, of cheap editions of standard authors. This most deserving class of per- sons has too long been forced to regard the books urgently needed for further study much as the ragged urchin regards the tempt- ing dainties in the confectioner's window as treasures beyond his reach. Who knows what the loss to science or literatoft x&t~

UTS

•■ ■"HI T< l.IBTI VHIR'

ncd hflVfl I oea owing to the practical scarcity of booksr What with Public Libraries inn] 'heap cIukmics, hotter times are coining forth* poor i-.ln.lcni. bat the retormtitiou needs lo go nm.'!i lui

i tier Itw U »or i nd the tens of thou i

chlMri n require catering tor, and that has as yot only I wen very indifferently dona in the future od Public Libraries the juvenile section bene that will receive u maon attention us any part of the work, This has been ftlreacry done at soma ol our feeding libraries, tut the real work in this direction has only juKt t* If the *■ m»nny dreadful ' li ever to be supplanted, it "must i

hooks 01 iv Minii" mk! ftwrffcfug character, Wirt1 Ol Which tli'i'

Interest la bo simple thai an untutored Intellecl oau grasp It with-

nut rlfml. W'r li:i\f (11 iilni';ili inn' mush-ex, :n:il wl)il*> DOt

fearing detnoi THry, our beat, truest, and wisest policy is lo con- tent, e«iiicaie.;ind guide the people. Misery, viae, and crinw them must always be, but education and Public Libraries bare already done much to flimfrrfA them, and wfll do wiill more la tlie future. Bcarceh secondary to the planting of one uf theee libraries Ed every dbuiet where una dooa not already exist, and sustaining it w.th efficiency, the most perplexing problem with regard to future ol these institution- baa reference botfaeeupplyof fiction. Many Ibrary cenznjttees and others, who take ;»'> interest in the » m k uf these place*, have been miuh i ten iae i »u mind of late with regard to this ijueetion— Should novel* be provided . i ell, and if so to what extent P Some years ago a report of the B Public Library laid it down, as a rale, that "it i* 00 part of the duly of a municipality t»> raise: laxi-a tW flu- i. nm.se on-m -I th<:

c< ople aniens the amusement Is tolerably sure to be conduct <- | i the higher ends of good citizenship. The sole relation of a Public Library to the general interest is as a supplement to the school Hyst'-iv seen Instrumentality of higher instruction bo all classes of the people." There [a iuiK,titruthinthi3)hutitmaviinl|'r!l-lll,1i'1> be *aid thut a Public Library, supported out of the general Kmtt to which all contribute, 000 not fulfilled its functions until it ha-* sought to the fullest, extent Of its meant fco moot the reasonable ahunui of all clauses. The phrase "reasonable claim*" la advisedly, for certainly there does not come under this head : b I supplying of the bonny novels or books of a vicious character. Some of the greatest geniuses which the world ha* ever known i v. devoted then? talents to the production of works ol nnaginu- tltiu, and there nro lessons to be learnt from these which cmum fall to have their influence upon life and character. Then again below these a real store of excellent world ol i - Hon which iif wholeeomdari(i pure, but. winch iu'ver claimed to rank aroonffthe ehissie works of the imagination But below these two classes there is a sea of trash and rubbish which ought never to be fonnd on the shelves of Public Libraries, and (• me librarians and committee* comparatively little ol ll Is found The preseni writer claims do position as i censor, bul titer war i in m cii i I ii p number of catalogues found not » rdngl< ffhrsuy Pinrtog in ;is catalogue the wotnx ol iwo ci tfit<

I

run rrTniB of prone* i-ituiarikr, etc.

279

Continental writers whose productions arc notoriously vicious in taste and demoralizing in tendency. Further than bhia, there never

v.ir. :i him- iii the history of Public Librar-ieM when 00- much 06X0

van exercised in the eoloction ot boobs fid at the present time, This uugurs well f or tho future o J Public Libraries, and it ia the writer^ lirni conviction that the question one which trill very I I take ctnv of itsoii ii due discretion in the seleotSeti Of book* u exercised. PubUo Libraries have a cosmopolitan constituency for which to outer, and their supplies must bfl Of n cosmopolitan character. h< greatest good of the greatest Eumbot should be in this, :ik in other departments of h>, an elm Kept distinctly in view. The inveterate and insatiable hunter and reader of the latest three-volume novci.no matter ol which sex the borrower m ty Ih>. [s beginning (<■ be more sad mori cBw - oraged. Tho di«- oontrnn&noe ol Public Libraries pnroha&iiig these has been almost universal, and will soon become entirely go. As pointed nut hi Mother section of this work, Miesc three-volume .sets are nearly the most expensive Da keen going of i ny hooks in n library. The binding to which (he work i* Issued is of ttoe flimKieat, and * ii ix necessary to have them re-bound the cost Is treble whai has to be paid for a single-vuhuue novel, Ami, moreover, the best writers la the world oJ fiction now publish their taluks in mi g]e volume*. Library space Is too valuable, or should he at Least, to And shelf room forthreevoloinesste,&ud the Library which occupies

oi and inflate! it* rel urns with tihera i* rather to be pitied tfotwUlvstendioa oil these admissions, a may be Mill held that there w a class of fiction which is elevating and educating iu its character, and there iano reason why the reading of this should

bcouraged Sir John ticrsc-heil, in an address which as delivered In the Windsor and Eton Public Library (winch i.- n< i under the Acts), said: "The novel in its best form I regard us one of the moat powerful engines of civilization ever invented." The writers of ' i 10m BirJohn Sarsoheil mentioned were

rentes, Goldsmith, iM^worthj sad Scott \ and since their bhne

have hod Dickens, Thackeray . Ge< rgc Eliot, and Charlotte And if that were true" of novel* of which Sir John

Uerschell epoke, it must) A/brrwrt.be truer now, it the splendid character -<\ tho Botion of the last lmli'-c< mturj be considered. It this fiction, so healthy in its character. with which we havo t i fonn snd train our youth Into a teste foi rei (Una But It is essential to go i step nuttier Fiction is not ;'",»'' ty an an

meat. 11 is, for the lives of a. great many of our |

nacoasary OOUnterpOiaa ha the monotony ol mere mechanical employment. They want their imagination nuleke&ed, and the

ilornnd monotony ol their daily fives glorified we may even dm thai word by fiction, such as thai of Scott sad the writers who have been named. Ouec create the passion for rend- ing, and :t will not) it cannot, oanfrao ItscM to reading for amuse- men) only. Many opinions could be given >i\h>n novel reading, tun Hie;, have been bo well and universally reported i^i the i

. i < i«tsary 1(j iln more th-.m juv-\, rvVr Vu\\w.tows*i

■»-, ,

i-i d . 0 i.iniiAiirRs.

Hi. general consensus of opinion shown that, like fill other f

in life, there is a tisc and an abase ofitj BBC too frequently fane

tatter rather than the tomtit is the Jtate of flii tge,

in the Pnblio Library of tho future the reference department will Im lu.ilit.'d upon as tho chief -ic-tian of tho work ol I places. By this it is not mount that they will become solely the repositories of soazee books, but where works ol a valuable nature, too ©xpenaive tn be uuivliosod hyordmury mortals, witt1 find :t plaoe, This is tho most expensive part of Public Library wt ik to main- tain, as the books are among the moat expensive published, Jtut Chat Is all the more reason v/hy every Iowa and every extensive piiiags i lentra should have one place in us midst where books on every conceivable subject can be consulted with equal facility by young people and adults of both sexes

Uo are now just beginning tho last Mi year* which will oomplete the Jubilee ol Bib Swart Ad of 1850 The total nun

Of adoptions up to the date of the i.s.siie nl ihis edition is ovi»r 200. The large number of adoptions within Tour years is a Vl.j.y rri*iitify(nK rate of progress. Bat Instead "( mi avenue ol toy urteen -I year, w'iy should we nol have, during the next ten yr.irs.Mi leasl twenty, with a sound opinion thai twenty-five or thirl j should be the number ': This will give u?> oe n goal, whan the [ubflee > reached En UKXi, a grand total ol 400 odopdons oi' the Ante; and really, considering the rate ;tt which the whole UUffltum is advancing, and Hit* Impetus which is being yiv&u to educational movement ^cnrrally, it \> not too much t* » Ml this

number before ns and work steadily with that object In view. So, t lends of the moremenl everywhere, please buckle on your armour, and let there be a long pull and a strong pull mid n pull altogether, and this desirable end will he accomplished. Ills ground is, in many irii mtry, cleared and ready tie be

Occupied; but m other counties there arc difficulties still in Mo- way which will make the tusk a very laborious ond arduous one. Again, however, there OOmee bhc OOnsolaMon that the movement

depends, in ovary detail of ita work, upon roluntarv effort I [orein lies its chief success, for only those, as i rulo, banc up the question who have the nccescury grit to carry the natter to a naeesaful isaue. Friends and comrades everywhere, who are Interested in this raoveuMB^it is a grand euo.se tor which w< in working, The object is no less than the common good of the whole people. The charity which begins at home us here true la the fullest and most comprehensive sense. Every man and woman who places a shoulder to the wheel to establish a Public Library, and to pur it In BUOOeesfnl operation, help- to start tho i Ipp i i B work which will never cease as long ay time la§t«: but which will ever become wider and wider as the generation* to come develop and extend the work- Here ;* a magnificent rlsl I

I lor thoxe «eeking a mission. It is not, o work for eivtt- izing the desert planes ot the earth, bin one for the filling I the desert, places at home with that whteh can alone In this life give tho most solid and Lasting enjoyment. The plenaur -

THF. FPTVWS Or PUBLIC MPHAHIK5, HIT.

S81

live we fchoae of the mind, ami the em Ironing ol the lieart ami mind with the wisdom of the grani intellect* of bite earth should be the aim of all, It is the supply of libraries in nil directions wiii.-h I'lvnif die demand. This is om il the mast convincing proote of the utility of those Institutions, aid ii Efl i vita] factor in the movement. Wi i! remains to bo nocompHshod is vast, and as widely wat-

loivd ,i-i ;nv |ln> OOUntl'e« and -iliii ok of tllO whole United Kingdom

and iivUukI. To do Justice to this part ol the hwfe would require each county being ufoeusHed woparately iii full, but linn would

r.Hjuiiv ii -ji'.'.-.ihI or third vliruo. tti fcnglund tho county towns oi dii> following I'lHiniii's are still without J*ubhc Libraries, and m immy comos without any attempt ever having been made to adopt tne Acts: Durham, York, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Lancaster, lcutkuui, Gloucester, Buoka. Huntingdon, Lincoln, Surrey, Sussex, Wflts, Doreeti Somerset, and Cornwall, This a lut whirh teifa up to a larger number than the oounty

towns whii'h have adopted the .Vers.

Taking the great trunk railway Usee ol the ootm try as one of She orttoria which oould be named; seeing that tnoy pans through tin' iiiomi populous towns, the nakedness of the land becomes terrtbh apparent After u oarefnl xmdy of tin- maps of each Kepantte large trunk line, it is dear that ftfty, sixty, n hundred, and in some obbba a hundred and ill'tv miles of dig country are traversed by 1 lie railways, and there is nul ihc hliybli-Ht vi'^tiyi "it ( Publie Library. This i* U.-plunible,

Lmong the places where attempts have been made to adopt

:! i Vj >, bui without ^uccew, the following may in- given. H is to be hoped that Home of these are again ready for S trial. Some places named have not previously aUi-inptrd. but the movement is ripening for bringing to the vote,

Rath dm several times considered the Question. A small reading-room and library wore kept open by a former parlia- mentary representative, but closed on his ceasing: to represent

tin; (■"'it.-tiuiouov. itriti-r a *tnall library than tone •< alLtml are \ Bew boota and newspapers among ao many f Bath should not longer log liehind.

IJmirpAMi at present is dependent on Southport for its books. In Maivb, 1880, a meeting; wee sailed bo consider the advisability or otherwise of adopts g the Acts, When the chairman of the

II. i tl Hoard took the choir there wore only thirty present, and he : l od whether it wart wise to ao on. Tho meeting wn« adjourned Mtu 4ic Try again) Birkdafe-j and educate your loeej pnhlk >n, i: atOH Latimrh, noar Kettering, w a village with a population ..t toflOO, and a ratable value of B8,000,and would like bo have u Public Library. \v hat a boon i small Government ^mut would be 1 1 ra I w iifi mi Income of EflO, the dUBonlties are tmrreeB) knv abh -treat. CoLCHwrrRn.— Then* was a distinct leaning for a V\\\A\o \ Sen a* a movcmeni m \B8?t hut then were tor. rnauy RtibMOAl vU w*

:•!'.. M I MIUAK1KS.

Held, ud tola, with other plan?., went bo the wall. A town of so great importance in the Eestern Counties should not be behind two entail places in the country where the A^ta have been ud< pb d, Many leading men in the district arc in He favour, Cold i> ,suon likely to try again.

i ...i.xn took a vote upon the matter in April of last .year, and failed to carry the Acta upon B demand fox o poll. Tin* vol a Utile too hurriedly taken, and with a better attempt t< >docnJ the constituency a bettor result would probably come about. Now the statutory twelve months have intervened, try ugain, Culnc, and follow Nelson.

I rvnn,ru.\H had a MuggeHtiuii boforo it twelve months ago that the market building should be nequuvd, and turned into

l'ublu- Lihrnn in 1 Mumuui. Some obstacles are in the vtt J

therein Likelihood that the visitor* who winter tl this delfgbt-

fill place will lU'go lh< adoption of the AcCk Ktnmgly upon Ix town. Cheltenham tindv tho library a decided boon lut it-. visitors, end those -who frequent Eastbourne would find a Pontic Library b einailai ttdvantafle.

Evm'.i rii, init at b i> little Devon waterln#-]»>acej wans n library and reading-rooms. Many persons appear anxious that the attempt should be rnadefwhlul othnrapomf at the absolute uiiinv win. i baa speedily OTBcteJceo every rentuw [n that direction which naaneea hitherto made. But one Important t:ii-t litis ben forgotten Tliere has been no Institution nf the kind which lias been absolutely free. The admission foes lmi been low, but current coin of the realm has had bo be parted with before n glance at a paper could he obtained.

i uamra&tH near Boston, Introduced the subjecl aoiue twi three yeara ago,bul nothing was done, There ire several i of oon«deral3e huh in the district, and a large 9 irking cum

qIj m.-nt

Buablbs has several luneahad the matter before .t. but Share la nf.*.! di' a provisfonaJ con mittoe tu take the uuosl ion id .iin.i ur-jni/.i-. Hit- presence ol the Mechanics1 Institution La the principal argument against the establishment of a Publh Library, ami had this institution not met the want of a cheap resoj I Cor connuitiTig' hook and newspaper literature, a Public Liorarj

likelihood have been established \< ngago, Vhe Mechanics' Institution of Burnley is a strcngthencr of all that is good m tin- town. It la the popular resort of the reading _ public, and oa a democratic institution it has no enoniio*, Any Public EJurolcy ought to be a some way associated with the Mech \ Institution. Mny such a desirable com animation soon be brought about.

Qxovonsx&l tools the vote in March, L887 Pin I the

promoters of ;< Public Library wore outvoted, notwithstand m that 1,<WK) parsons ha<l aiprncd the requisition to the \l >\<<i the preliminary meeting. l'or adopting the Acts, VJ6:

Hje nwij v 'v igalnsl the ad »pt oi oi the lew was i,: 27)0it» oan bo uo doubt that the '"aus&d l^

Jr .». *-

iiC*"" -ATI— .t_* . ...

BUS '"" " "Is- "■_.•■::. I "a "*? -r rf*-r ~i- . "* : -

i?XCT T^rr*- :>*"" ". - '. '. ■- """.-12 -"• ~ lz "•* *"■: jj$>jir*Vjt -.-riT'T^.-r : -. . - ■— * _ 2i :-r_. .:* -*:. ;■ ::■•. ttojEvr^nr*?: "/flj"c5? . .:.- ;..:.-_ , i_..— -.:_:- -„*-

L£*n£? n ^I-tf:-*-.- -v.. .,t~': 2.*- -_ -. .- "--. -: tz -■-; r.r.'!

excit:.** -• : ::-"v >■•— -•'•'-■"- -t:--:-.-:' ^i- > >.%i*rv

Ek*> v '■? i.i. v-- : -•;*.:.- ::,- v.- - <;■ ■; . -j*-^, ■£».. l^&e&t-fct ii.--:-.::-. ■: " '•.•* v. ... *■_.**-..-

I -'J '•* ''•:-.■'•" ":a* :. ■" *-f' "■•' - :.*:ir iiVCC.*-I * zitt »..•:%

demsi' -" i y ''■■ ' ::~* &<}""* v *-'* "■^vru-i -^xn_i.*.x.i".. .--.

28-1

v\ Tit.rr unnAiuic-.

Una, K.vdc, BhaokUn. and VentorhaYoalso discussed the subject] but th« liti U' island fill! stands where it did is this movement, and lias not one i.-;tc->in»p, uitc<l liU\iry. lly-and-byc, no doubt, the good people of the island will come to see that Public Libraries

OH BO useful us fashionable yacht clubft

Ut«BwoaTs< In -Mmvii, 1690, tho Heston and bloworth Local Board affirmed tho principle of a rfttc-eupportcd Library; ratable value is set forth as £ m.thi in Hestcro and t: >._i:: in Ulcworth. making h total of B120#SS» On this basis b penny rate would produce about fi'wt. Una is, Df course, a vcrj modest aura to distribute ovei three townships, if ut there nro some ap advantage* Islowortb has the Public Hull Library, respectably stocked with beds, but needing ;i n oca fuller supply than the existing funds can give. Honnslou till recently possessed :t nanption library at the Town Hell, but laclc of enterprise on the part ofl bhe owners caused il tone discontinued, There are, however, two church libraries which circulate pretty freely through the town, and Boston has nleo u pnbft mstSttuaon. it will M seen, therefore, that Che encouragement of reading In the district,

if cramped in vnviniiK ways, ins n .1 Iv-mi wholly Irist tight o!

TliN siren weight to the argument for the Public Library 8ol> scriptfon and church libraries were very well In their da) The} met a nee^l which emild be supplied then in no other way, Hut wiili the creation d! the larger, more popular, ami more t'omiirc-

licnNi'vr in.sl.inlioiiii, their work attained u r.unvr :uid individual

perfection which has gratified nobody more than their promoter* these districts will, no donbt, be noon added to the list,

Kksuai., with ItsSl/KX) people, is still out il the hunt, hi ISS7 the question was well to the front. The " Kendal Mereur) " tiai ably advocated the adoption of the Acts. Surely Kendal will not lake, a bock seat to AVorkingtou and Whitehaven. The bOH D has always displayed a oomoienuabie public spirit, Why should this

nut he the ease in this movement r

Lwgh is another Ijancuslrire town which has touched the question, but has not yet seriously taken up the matter. With i

very large poptilutinu, and numerous eottOD mills, collieries, and machine works in the district, and a large ratable value, Leigh should be one of the fiwt towns to now place itnelf in line.

Lonoto.v. A Public Library greatly wanted here, and tho pi. .-I.(ii linn hi'cii Mcvuml linn's niunti'd, Thi.s is ilir noli' whirh hu» been recently Hummed in the borough. To an OUtsidd a matter of renf eurpriso that a town which posses**** so much public spirit, nod which ha* in several important matters \tt pped m adToaes of its neighbours to the Lotteries, should In thJ one rasped b* - i ,»rreatly behind tho time*. (Jf the larger to* the Potteries tad :t might also he said in this part of North '-'tLttbirdehire), Longton is the only town which has not adopted the Acts.

Lowasrora, The lute Sir Morton Pel i was een oloaslj soci*t&i \\i\h Chic thnving watering-place. S<i much so, in fact, that the Haver has deaersi ed \\\\w .■> ■■ ' - cmxetf

IBB i-'i-rrm: OS itau" i.nii.utn;s, HTO.

986*

s

lector, and the founder of ite prosperity." A few months ago a frefi-ottendod mooting wok hold to consider the deairabDity of

porpotuating his memory by the erection of a mutable memorial id the U Wn. A Pablifl l.ihr:iry l<> In* known by In* niimi» h;^ mot

with very warm aapport, end the scheme is being well and favour- ably considered, 'itie sympathies ot Sir Morton wore ever with the people, and ii" better n - matin] than thw could be established.

\i(\v:-.; P', i I ;rps :<}.— The <|Ui'Ktw>n wns bfOOght forward BftTlj

during 1889, bui bafl been allowed to slide. This town, of oral Mn thonsjind people, Lrvently needs provision tar its hook-needs,

and the anbject wili.it is to be hoped, soon again come before the people It should hi* the first town in Berkshire to adopt the Vctn after Reading,

pBTBRBonoi an has ones or twice had the subject introduced in The town. The Young MorfB I -hristinri Association hns expired, and 11 wbg ttuggeftted (hat ii Public Library won Use beal bhfngto lake its place. And so it is. Try it, Peterborough* and see if such

ift UOt the r:\yr, Tin: old rathcdrul Iuwjls do iml so far sllUlO par-

lii'ularly well in tlu's mi ventonl . A Rood frlendh lead is wanted, Uawuarsh wa,« again, thus lu#t January, thinking about the

question* Many of the jicoplc here use the Uotlierham Public

Library. Out why (should QOt Rawmareb he independent, and

h.iv1 its ..ah institution r

roHHBoran (Tlyuocth).— A movement in the direction was

adc a abort time ago, and a committee of the board called

gethcr, but the preaanl iim«- is ">nadorcd inopportune, in con-

. oce of certain financial bni'dona which have bean incurred

l»v Hi'- bownahip. The matter is therefore poHtponed.

Tai trroir. The county of Somerset docs not yet possess a single lop tie work in hand on the occasion of a further attempt \o carry tb<

adoption of the Acts. A ^fronjj committee totiti the preliminary

K<A m the beginning of I8B8. Aided by the " County Ctantte, mil other l<»nl papers, they did their beet to educate the local public. But the fa tow with sadly n^mi'i rhem. Probably the Baoat nprearioUH statutory meeting which ho* been held for a tOfitf

ii took place at tnunton in Jamiary, two years ago. On a poll

being taken there was a majority against the adoption of fM7. Tin* number of abstentions was large, but it was satisfactory to UOt" that B?« years previously, when the vole was taken, the ninnher against was marly treble whal it was on the last occasion.

tfnscranmous opponents had frightened the poorer people Into the belief thai their rants would Be raised by toe adoption of the Libraries' Vets to hucJi a fabuloua amount that they would be unable to pay them, and tin* warkhaiuaa would be the only place, at refuge irnm the library rate. Thai such uigumeuta were used

ivns evident from the unseemly demonstration thai took place a'

the public meeting, and one can hsrdty be surprised thai these deluded ratepayers did vote against the movement. Tile cfppoei- Hon had been vrell organized and well convatssed, ami on polling ire *as taken that very few of them neglected to record sir voir (in the other liana, the promoters tfeoweA conaVoftra^ft

SN

PUBUO LlDBAltlEfi.

indifference in the mutter. ••)■ trusted too RlUOft m the BOB sense of the rotOTS. Tiiinitnn \m|| he BOOH ready (or atoll.

t.i ti--n]»i . whei m o. hoped ft bitter result will be aeon.

ToK<ii-Av.— Lu the anrtrtcl at St. Maw Church there has I i

carried on for more than a year. by the aid of voluntary BCriptioOfi, B Public Lending Library Though nn a small *e:de.

ir. has bees rn 10b appreciated, and the committee have beffi Agitation with a view of adopting1 the Public Libraries' tcts There is opposition, hut. they hope to succeed, smd there hi <r\

probability of their doing so. Toro*SHAMfMiDDiJ8Kt)refti6ed che lutein December last, b

Iheie whs :i lil.lle limine hash- in lniit^itig tho mailer ;n a v >le. The apathy both for uud against the Acta was great Now tin- question has made nnch a distinct advance tie \ is v Y no d<nil> he adopted at the end of the current year.

avkvmoci-k. In Apcfli 1*90, the vote was bakes bete and lost There was, itn orfcunatelj, no lerious attempt made to educate tin people upon the natter.

Wrinirreroa feoueoJ the suburbs of Manchester, and some flu: leadci> •>)' local pubtic opinion donot we why they should be dependent on Hsranester lot theli supply of books. And quite right too. Ai'i'i i>, >nd so inany other suburbs of Gobtonopotis, purely the time for \Viilihi</ton to enfranchise itself has now been reached.

York.— in no town or city has the movement had more sai friends thnii in York, and yet it has been terribly unsuoees rful, At'rer a prelim mmy e.niiiuiitoe had earned on an notive en the statutory meeting wan called for August, 1887. Subflcriptions to the extent of WjOTOwew promised, and o largo and suitable building e.inid have been acquired on most advantageous tonus.

Kxcollont BpoeahOfl were made in favour of the motion, and throughout there was a high-class tone. Tho opposition was well aued,flld carte imni YeTY intlnnntial [UftTteTft The resolu

tiun ws$ lost by a large majority, a poll was detnanded, an

this being taken the mSjj Hlty against stood at 817, r< years previously, when the poll was taken, trie number against «tood muoh higher \\tin a population of nearly 7Q,000, and n

city noted for it* mleliii/enro, the result *vu- - . - i \ ■. i . lj. if ■<! .... the friends of I he i : : hut the defenl was liken with %

good graco, and the time Is now wlthn mOSfiuroHfl di<iance, when

the deotston will be reverft d If the clergy nnd others wl i iu forming 1oon3 opinion! while ready to raeord their rote Fn ur, will contribute their active support, and work instead of

Ig a merely nominal allegiance, sui mm will be as

Sooner or later York \< sun- in he added lo the list, and thei are evidence* that it. will be su»iicr rather Ihan later 'Hie e >unl town of the hn'.'iMi oounQ In the country should A be

die rear In this question Theque.'-iiori tuabeen broariitfurwardlnthe following, among

1 i overs! of I In tnwi - named -*ti nn.

Xkpi bu been made to carry the Ai

1

i

pi'titc rmRAniBS xv lopji-os.

■>:

msforri ffranthoni, Ituddersfleld, Hull, JloTwicb (Lane),

ni. Ilkeston, Kettering: Ltneohh Luton Honk

Brelton, Newton Abbot, Penzance, Pocxhlngton, Rugby, ftugelev,

Sutton Coldfleld, Stonebridge, Tunbrtdge "Wells, Tylaeetey (Line.),

Windermere, York, &e.

CHAPTER XVIII.

PUBLIC LIBRARIES IN LONDON.

(HE barometer of the Public Library moTpmo t Li evidently located in London. In no part of the t'nited Kingdom has the progress been so rapid, and fche developmcnl bo universal a* in the Metropolis, For

thirty-nix years the I;n'-v provincial towns bad br.cn pointing the fll _' t ;it London, and consoling fchemeolvee t!mt in this movement, at least, they were not ue the sluggish folks in the Metropolis, London might, they said, bo the hub of tho uni\ 80 far us wealth, size, and tDftpOTtttna Wftfl concerned, bat in the Public library movement, tho capital was apparently content to i very hack seat. Londoners who had drifted up from BOnX of the lar#? provincial centres, and who hud been accustomed to

u -.. Hie li>>rane« hi -|>*> tnwnK tliry had loll, wen1 often >>tiing lo

the quick when reminded in their old haunts of the dearth of Public U warieain London. Place a iter place in the Metropolis had, up to 1886, tried to carry the AlStftj ami had met with failure to utterly disheartening that the movement seemed to have lost ll] ttfl n-H'ueU. tTp r.n the end Crf 1WM3 only tWC partShSfl within ilir noMinpolitan area had adopted the Acts. The number at the tfms of writing; (June. IHflO), is nineteen out of the sixty-seven paxiaheain which the metropolis b divided In addition to this, m;my London parishes lfmbh have '"it. .yet adopted thi> A.ete given some thought and attention to tho ciuestion. It lias been to the present writer a source of inspiration to compare the tatters bearing upon this question received by him, prior to 1880, and those to hand since that time. The tone of iIiom ul b few year* agn wa> in B0DM caSCS Unit ot ullcr hopeleSB-

Tiic MM-ea of ignorance, apathy, and the utter imliil'erence oi the average Londoner to anything outside bla wry limited circle constituted obstacles BO great, lhat lo attack these seemed b i tost like a forlorn hope. But the vorJi ol the Board Schools

itl in the iiKniilinir Irt/en gcing steadily I'orw.ird. Aii rsli'iisum uf tin- n;i ;■!.> i\ locomotion which had enabled many Londoners to see provincial libraries, and especially the increasing power of the newspaper prete, had been SO thoroughly preparing the eofl, tliiit when t ! i c movement did once take root itu growth wot* rapid, don, so far as these institutions are conc-ernea. is like a giant Oliver iv 1st unking for more. On all sides then

mcy and hopefulness, and those who have stood bj !'• movement all through feel that tho battle has been worth 1 us helped to place thene UU.Vv- o& w\£ev

•JHH

PUBLIC I.rBRAniF.S

B footing thai nothing i-an now retard their extension und ikwlnpmont The number of tho*o came*! trienda who, through evil nnd good report, have for b long period heon like prophet* rrying in thewfloerna6g,la large; and now that success Is assured, ibi' mgheet praise wh..-li OftD S (JonneotfoD wim the movement be bestcroredj Ji due nnre»orvedly to those who have in the various parishes held aloft the torch of educational advancement. They ric witnessing the remit of ihrir hihours. mid 0 is something w which bo be proud i" have borne ;i part Iq e uanae winch has brought flevattog :niMK-rnr- r and solid Instruction Into thousand! of live* find homes.

The pariah *r Bt, Margaret and St. John, Westminster, to lie

i w i l.iMinu iTedii. wah the first to adopt the Act*. This it did m

. and no further adoption took place until 1883, when

YY;uidsworlh followed A lapN1 ol" tnrnt v-w* i;n vcar> iTpr»'scnt*

.-. i,n cry. and during that period there "ww ranch quiet sowing oi seed, tt hieh was of unquestionable benefit when the break did come in 1RW. At iho end of that yean Lambeth and PuJham

followed mcli other (prickly with unmistakable VOrCiicle, and gate OS the turning of the tide which will ultimately lead on to thi* fortune of nearly cvovy parish in London adopting the A. is. Tlic

(ffOffreaa baa been rapid and solid that it now requires but into f ores bo help it onwardH, and a few mow yean will .^ce the* circle (airly complete. In the two former editions .'-r' tin* hook, a chapter on the hondon Public Librara '-va inly practicable by K"oinff outside the metropolitan area for examples. The extreme suburban dietrictB, fuoh as Richmond. Kingston, Twiek- enham, VSTmbledon, and Baling had takes bno Lead, and had adopted the Arts, These places, in order to lu-lp oat the arithnietie and so prevent the barrenness of the land bona being too apparent, were included arnong the London Public Libraries. jfo* H Is no longer Deeesaary to do this. Credit is due to the pis i -en named for having been in the very front rank to more in tbo matter, and their example had a most useful influence.

wiiji". nowever, there w mueh Bo ind satisfaction

to the friend* oi this mOTonsentL there is stCU much to bo d :ui<l it u destraole that all who have the iniestion at heart Should do wind they can to ronse the districts where the la h LVU BOt

yet been adopted vVc stiii nompare badly in point of ninnber with Paris end Berlin. The statement Is made, on the authority of Professor Paloczy , thai there are in Berlin twenty-flve Publfc

Libraries, with more than 100,000 volumes i\mh. I'hi.s Live? .1

proportion of over two volumes per head of aeeeaal de in- future for every man, woman, and child in the Prussian capital There Is not! ilng corrjwpoiniini! bo this n London or Parisi Ttx Library oi tin- liritisii fffuseom oontalni shout 2,000,000 volume*, trhe ■mimi National Library in Paris over thai number; hut 1 in- Forracr. though Coirly accessible, i^ not so in the sen* thai n Public Library b; while at the latter the facilities Cor ooncmltation snd reference, even when the neceasor) credentials are obtained bjr the uppUcaat, are \ in rtteta lory, The German* bare

rriiuc MBnaarx* is i.onijov.

g«P

loUf «':i.i"V ! li ■■ n -]-i (ill mil nl U-in_: '!.!■ mo*| " Mtrkidl " people

in i. .! it \> )lca*aal to know thai even amid their

present devotion ti - miiit.iii m they ore not disposed to lost this reputation.

Paris is equally well ofl m Public Libraries. There are bo the French capita] some oigbtj popular librar uted area

various parts of the city. Many of these are nnd arc located in the town hulls or in schools, and are Mpl by rnunieipal funds. Xbe more [QtelUcenf of former scholars of primary Bohoelfi oouatitnte their due! readers, <>f tbo

i named there are nbout fifty-eight municipal libraries. Seven di-trictsor arrondis^niu*at* possess twooi I :>-n, <i!:i I have three, and five four. Thi« mo«r populous districts hare the largest iber. The cttyapenda yearly c 1,1-0 ri 13,000 francs] in pur- -.iks and in binding. Tneaaiarieaaw£8>8o0a jear, ITat }$47 the number of books consulted ..n the preo 1- ■■.-■ > 1 ken home to read is given as 1,094,000; in 1686 it w.-f- ;d»«tv.. Millions; but I 1889 there seem* to have been n decline in the number The establishment of these libraries hoi been rerj rapt odei the Empire they da not lean bo have ntietea Between 1871 paid i>r* ^i number <rf libraries vera established, hut it was not until the later date ;unl rhe years imniedl

pring, that the municipal aalfaarjttes itatermined to plant libraries in rhe rnriinia district.**.

Parts nml Berlin have tiiua taleeu the lead, bat neither En the

tot.ll numlter of these Institutions, nor in point ol the 11 rn; of them by the public, .shall we, after n short ti.trrval, be behind thes* ritie*, We need ask I'm nni\ very limited g]

id ere shall be 1 <U' t 0 dn>w :i better md more extended use of th* Public Libraries than is the ease in Paris, II .< . bfsrlea in London are diieflyson Eo course of ereotion.bul wc rftall not require to add di«" r turns of elghtr libraries together t«» reach a total hi' two million Issues in the yeai foi referenoi and tend ns

\Y<; 1 -■! 1 :■ ■.'»«■ of great tiring 111 Public l,!ir;u;\ work In

LoodoDi ->nd all arreoTB will be quickly orcrtalccn; and, if we ttrt not sreatrj mistaken, both Pans and Berlin will he W1 very

nnifli in thi real Qi h ip ol U as ta*l lot do< 1 b<

ra appear to dcYclop, nnd it mny he eraveli doubted

in- tl.t-ie i> the Mnie universal interest in those inMiiin ov been awakened in London.

The vnst lift which wai given U the ra inlelpnl 'iiv of London in the passing of the LcwftTGoTftrMnejit .Vet, and Ihi tra

1 1 a a 1 -\ Council, cannot bo orer-catimated< Thi Dttar absence <>( intoresl i" looa] affairs Ifl London up bo iin- 1^ of that iiiciiHiiro was tha despair ol all reformers, Now, while there is >-'>ii 1 mountain o1 apathy and Indifference to nae, there ii a spirit ol incjuiryand mtenr.r m ih.f work id' the Oovntg Ooonefl En the weeurinjr of open vpaeoSfand ths administration of th<? public parks, the Ponntv C 1 inefl hava dun.-

rtofi Those who eapttoualy critic a aevotk

. 1 1 . 1 1 have reaily not gone mimiUrt v :

Ve

i"*:

pcwr.ic i.inttAiar-s

they would reeogawe that out of the pen or talk there hue been a solid residuum »I niefuJ work which is quietly revblutioxiixlng London municipal life. The most pressing need which im now i'.»it ai ror tiif formation of districl noondle, ami thou will begin the real municipal Wo qE the Motropoua. Such :i bill m now within i. UM- 1 ":('■:.■ <ii ■dunce, unci whon it is placed upon the statute book it will mean tin extinction ■>; the veatriM

m,i Loud I" vestries have b**en the butt of i\<i} revtler, So many metaphorical brickbats have been thrown fit there that it i- Lraposslblfi for noree of them not to bare had a vaHd (mdreasoc^ able cause for such castigatlon. But the Intelligence of the i is&rymen, and the quality ol the work accomplished, has taken

i step forward n maybe said with truth mat, as governing bodies, they have caught the spirit of the - lay, and are determined to lift their administration into a position winch will prevent them dying the ignominious death of the Metropolitan Board of Worta when their end eomea they Been to have determined

i: i the branaforenco <>( powei shall he done with d:v iind a 1'ottwinuMue.sti thai Local public spirit in these hitter daj baa not Buffered Ln their hands. The Formation of the dis ri ■■:

council* la perhupfi yet several yearn di*Uuit. li nhtmld be

urged upon the menabote of the reoGriea in parishes where (he

Aute have not vet been adopted (m yi\ e thin ijitentiuii of Public

Libraries their serious and earnest conAideration. The restrict impiify the whole process of adoption by then* action, and in

ao movement for the well-being of then* nejghbourh 1 could

bhey bore usefully devote bhoir remaining daw bhan to thin of Public U variet it would bcwell If we could see one-half the remaining forty-eight nietropoli an parishes adopting tin- Acta before the diafrii t councils are launched. This ouqht to }>c pOBBJblei nnd it ccrtuinly L8 most desirable. The district i ouncilfl wfl havetotata H)i" liorarioeos Uie.v find thonaland indlvidua] parishes arc likely, in many instances, to be bettor served

inirtoioncrs elected bj their own vestry deciding the pre liimiiarie^ of where tin1 library or librorioa i << to be en [This if i matter el serious Impcrtaaoei and if the attention the members on tiio vestries can bo secured, and action t< a

the putting in iipiMMlion of the \cts bo decided upon. :in r\<Tll.-:ir purpooowill mvf heoii tinned. A very earnest appeal El made to thorn to move i" this matter al once, and io Bee thai the library needn ol their Immediate <i strict are net.

I i | limited few of the London vestries there ha* bean the ie ii" iofll i o-operation In thia question: but in othe ol obataele hoa been placed in the wnyoi gaining the adoption;

or, where this has t n vermeil, everv niist-nde

I ii raised to thwart th<* wishes of the majority, This Rpirit of

Itfon is clearly declining, nnd thnt it may speedily disappear . levoutly to I"1 wished. Hriw much Mill remains to be done is shown by the fit'lowing

A;/./,-.—

rC l.IBHAfllE* [V IONIAN.

Summary of a Return maitr \\)ih Ajuit, 1889, to the I£tni*c of Cbmmows fly t/ir Lrtcal Go94mmati J>'-<i,tf, showing the ratu m the pound, the f/upulafioH, (tu'i the ratable value of the m i ■■■'

G-it- /,'- of the Metropolis, Tim qoioqueiHiial valuation <>\ I860 EUI Bomwh&t altered tint* Uil K\ hut il ih<- Lime >!' gQJDfij to Tunc, 1800) the Parliamentary return pfivim? the amount 'i i-6 of caeh parish Vflfl not published. The amount given as the yield from tho rate is approximate, and may vary from tho aottt&J amount

{!'•■ .«■'•/«■ >' ■' Milk a*

k»vr f/.r'./ Uu .Ufr.)

st Mary, Strand . .

St. Junes. W i'-nnniKri't

•si. Mai'tm-iii-lIn'-FirliK

>t Saviour, Southwark. St. Georgfe, Hanover 8q.

in

si rimmiii, Southwark. Si Olavo, .Nailliwiirk . .

St. Clement Danea ■si Margaret and St. / John, wentrainater \

I(<i>'M*lydowu

" igton . . .. . .

'enoinffton

31 John, tapping ..

Etofac

St. Paul, Coven t Garden St, reiievo-M .. . .

•Stoke Kevington

Morylchi-ne

Ratcliffe

•chmi Ch.P Southwark

"( '; niii w well

Sboroditch

ILuupBtcud

"Stivuf ham

st, <; ge-Jn-tmvEast,

*( ll'Is.'lL

•BftttoTBen

llnekney ...

EiolDon i .VM.h'fw ,v i ■v.'-i le-Mrtyr > \ K ul brook .. 'Waadsworlh .. ..

|BH7

i see

1687

I6«)

183G

1KS0

1887 l>-*7

1883

lis

sal

in1

as

1,989 29,94]

17, '.us

I L99fl 89,573

mi

l\247

10,260

59,983

L02B 07,218 163,151

2,225

16,008

2,919

-.';;<;-.-

83,761

154,910

16,107

16,663

186,5 ''

126,591

45,452

21,611

17,167

88,128

l07,2tf*J

I '■■■-' =- 1

stsjsri

E

: ■: I . .< >

222,168

1,743,30*

1.618,866

I 1,962 102,407

I7H.O.M

74Q096

TBytOl

1,276,024

1,846,64?

B&979

117,387

91,794

1,007,663

184,062

1,431,719

65,06:2

103,17ft

1,018,461

042,640

076,699

. isl.i-s.

HIJJ.72S

.:!,;.,-

937,526

St|

a ins

§13

Mb!

-

:. IC

a in

a ii

a m 4

4 V

4 2

l

4 n

3

1 i

4 8

i e

! Id

I Hi

i 104

I II

I 11

h 0

0

1

s

-. ..

^ ^

e

106

I ^53 926

..■v.;: B.74B

m

m

70s

3,060

814 5ilS

7,(Hi

237

!-<;»

382

70(i

271 129

;._t.:

i.-'M 2,567

.' ' PTBt.tO T.TBRAAXX3.

Pimi. 5

( 7*» P«n>Aei wM «i* a*

■3

«1

- - j j»2

;?;

£

i e

MInmnicnmith .. .. 188?

(::^»

-|:M,-.":-!

5 i I'.nl.,

Deptfbrd [S fcwil) ..

76,753

B i

1 ,888

■:•;■ .<;'.*!'

i.i-:i,*'flfi

8,151

Bio . an -v ' kmi) i

46,382

. »7« 6 o

•Wliit*ehapi.'l .. .. 1SP9 i 90,709 176,325 5 6

l .i::l

•i;.'nn"!fi:-.'V .. .. lK-7 Wi,tV>2 ' Jim,:"*; -"' tt

l,ft*4

'Kothorhitiio .. .. lm? 35,02* n*-..:: ■> i fl

KU

I»c[iH. r<l (N. Si 'iiclri-")

./m| 62,620 o 6

Foplu

, ,

55,077

806,145 S -

•ClaphRm ISS

\\ oolvlcn

:;..;>.'

2fiO,20G 6 6|

. i* !

;«,!,.-.

I43J0OO e J

-,.1

Christ Cn . V. Inr s t|il. |

(otherwutt Spilfliw >

00

5 7

•Pntnej left

0 7i

•ciri'kniu'.'ii lph;

59/17(3

.', B

i 456

Mil. Knri (Old Town)

. ,

lofi/na

5 8

,-,;;!

N.'\vin:'t.t!i (Surra |

. .

107^400 I-' ,.'..-

5 a

sniiv.Mi inn .. ..

:j,hnu 77,159

6 h

Plumstead

.:.;.,(( 113,172

e e

HIT

Mlnorlu

-I 111

.-. e

.1

S,7ft4

131,980 57,063

fi 9 5 9

SI <iro,i:«'-lh,-M;u!K, |

Sottthworic . i (

067655

WjAOfl

o 10

i.< wttiaam . .

468,767

5 10

l£8S

.-,.01,-

.."J H3

f> 11

li-7

..■;'> a 0

i KW 1

400,985 6 3

1,070

st. Sepulchre (Ilolbarn)

;

70 8 -

i;s

Lee

l 1,1.".--. 10,675

:t0.s:w i; ■_>

Mil.- Bnd (New CoVB)

■:■

1^580

-.•.vj.-jir. 8

1,050

M-TGO a 1

208

.

224,465 8 1

<»::\

1 t fee, 1 ':u ' ■': '■'-■

«6,840

203,7 i"

I. :

:V'i"

a i .'. •■

AnaJjnb; LBOO, one; 1883, one; 1885,two; 1887, tea

one ; Lo69i three; L9B0 (up to June), one ; total, nineteen.

h? /; 7*.'t.' iverage of ihe rate* li\t\i* VtaCcoojftUA, exolusffe of

Uie iXty, in fa 2$d m the pound.

prill IP MHInniRS IB LOYDOS.

293

Thf pnriKhcvi tire mentioned in (lit- order in which they have adopted the Acte. As most of thttll are only just beginning iin'jr wnvk, feif BtaUsttoa have beet quoted. Within b year or

two : separate volume will In- mv.p.sKary to ivcord the Work Of the London Libraries.

Wkktminktkh. 1856.

Tin.- parishes of 9t tfargarel and 8t John, Westminster, moved in the matter immediately after the passing of the 1865 Act, Mr. W. ptoo Wood, after wards Lord Knthexlfly, took no active part pi the formation of the library, and acted as a commissioner until Ms death, E£o gave considerable i:d k gel the bin through the two Bouses oi Parliament. Then •■ * i n Sniggle to

secure the adoption of the Acts, and the public meeting called to decide the question was a case of confusion worse confounded.

Thlfl oaiJ C * isfly understood, for ev< n in.. 1. Inter than May 11',

ltv3ti, the date on which WofitBuaster aettlcd the matter, statutory meetings railed to decide the question were scenes of rowdyium and rascality let loose. Westminster hua been vara modest over being the feat metropolitan parish to carry the Acta, but now that the turn of the ado bos oorno, oo stinted praSes should be given to the place which, first in this largo city, lined aloft the Public Library banner, Thin is no light honour, and is one which redounds great)} to the iredit of the parish lying under the ibadow "i bis two Houses of Parliament ana tSgtaiKTfl prido the mcomj»erulile Ahboy, Tin* library had its origin in the local one rounded In 1840,

'•idled the Westminster Literary, S< wk hiKti-

luiion. The history oi the Westminster institution Is not unlike that of the ftirkbeck Inxtitntiuii. It began with a view Chiefly to the improremonl oi the working classes, with whlcl Westminster waa densely populated before the middle of the prewnt century. B srtlng with the co-operation of AH classes, who gave Bubscrip*

rtolift ii :::i'i.'V :• rid t\ uti :i 1 1 1 MA I it 1 mi iVfl , IiM tl I H \VB?$ pre; llftSS v •< t<

n i n lr Smith Street and an assembly room in Vincent.

Square. Tl stablfahmeitt of reKdlng-roomB, class-room*, and

lecture-room followed. These wens 'maintained partly by volnn* i-!i_\ teachers and lecturers, and groat Barrios wai rendered to the working classes, Co* whom it wuHi-hirfly eNiuhtished. Pruwieiiu was liefure it, imd further efforts were made, resulting in mi abandonment of the forma premises and securing a double house at the south-east corner of the then Sreat Smith Street, adjoining i was piece of ruraul ground curable "f Hie erection thereon it ii liuyc kvlui e-rwuln with i-Uw-iueiii.s under it.

There is some appropriateness m the fact that now, when so many new libraries are in course of construction or contemplated] vVeetmtnstcf should just be beginning <<• build a new home for Its bead-qua so .-.ill by-arnvbys hare something to

show instead of the inconvenient and overcrowded preraJ whore they have lieen for no i On Au^wv 3&A3B&.

Mr. John ThornhiJI HarriBon, O.B., Lttal ttc/T«rW0S»fc WuNtc*

294

revue LiPBAKrra.

inBueotofi loldan nouiry ^ to a proposed scheme to erect new public baths and wnan-bouees, md n Public Library attached, on .u steaded site in Groat Smith Street. A good lool of local interest was taken in tin* inqinv, ceprciolly n* the Rutopuyon*'

1'wi. . tion A s.«.riatioii \\<r the united puristic* decided T" oppose

ii;< scheme, ii n- 1 sued notices throughout the parish to that efleot. I : mrge attendance of ratcpuycre. The removal

of the library, it wins alleged, had become imperative, on account of tli* Church House Committee berSoA expressed :i deefre to terminate the present oaee and occupy the premises thcrasolvoa. ..:. r.'.j urod lor the purposes ol the library Is 6,000 square toot, rod is sddition 800 square feet, which ii i^ proposed to

throw hltO the roadway, thus utfectm^ :i public improvement, the thoroughfare at present being narrow and dangerous The baths :iri'l wash-houses were the first erected under the Act.s -im- tv.rty-

BATHS

WBSTMINSTEn SEW PITL1C l,tUUAUY.

Ore years ago, and had bee me, i ^cording to a rej>ort submitted to the Vestry,* dilapidated :>< to be unfit for the preeent require- ment.-, ol the inhabitants. The Ecclesiastical Commies expressed their willingness to dispose of certain land un< I pr< to the Vestry at a lower price than they would to B pri Individual, as it was for public institutions. It in impos ill lo her* to refrain from expressing u. wish thai the Kceiosiafltical U'ora- Uisalonerfl OOUld see rlicr v;iy to give eitest Cor merely nonuiuil ronu for tin' purpose of building libraries upon them, She Commissioners are tho ffreal ground landlords <>f London \ large proportion "i the I i ids tdrn i [stored by them are puhllo funds, ana there ire no Institutions so thoroughly public mthntr i-h.ir.i.-n r i ■- Public Libraries, and tin* rift td d site, or events - i i edui! Ion of llf$y oi seven y-llTfi pet cent from the market mfuoj wuujd bring h great uuouni of preMfyre to th

he

PI-BLtO LIHttAIUE* IN LONHOW.

295

ComtnissionerSj :ui«i tnej would be adopting n commendable act in uppiymg public moneys to public uses siii.-h u iimi Indicated.

\ii Sevan i tii.' new baft fag is lihown. The Frontage la

savarely plain, ill that is Deeeesltaied by the street not being adapted Pops large and showy building. Utility has been oare- fnlly kepi i" rtew by the architect, Mr* K, .T Smith, and nil thn rooms for library pnrpoBBS will be on the ground floor. The first Boor will be occonled by the Living rooms of the librarian, Mr. Henry E. Poole, who ham been al vs wlmiuaU r for some ten y an*. A DGLSfcani stream <>f people goes d and oni <>i the library and r.M liuui-ii't ru, and i. to iwj satisfactory to note thai the bettcjp- alau \VfhiininsLcr people are beginning largely to use the library. ii:" expenditure for the library portion of the new building will be about 212,000. During 188&-90 the number ol books issued to borrowers was 108*868 There are nvw 22,3£7 books in ibc u'lirurie*. unl Lin- tUiil\ jttemJjni-f averages 1,850.

Wanmvobvb. L88&

The library wan opened two years after the adoption of the Art-, and has axbiblted o rapid development En ita work. Its Bucuess is owing largely to a fooul grand old muni Dr« Longsl n. who worked vigorously for the adoption of tin Act*, and has all through boon a good supporter vt cbo inatitntion, both UnanoJaUy and m other ways, with ailvorod boil mad the weight of »vor

j yours, lie still possoeece imnicnsv energy . ind When en 1 is

irite topic if education for working man, in* voice rings out ue loud and oloar ;ih it did fifty years iigOi Baa uni orttouue aide hi the Waodflv »rti srorfc is that to the Bret instance a building should have been token for the purpoea d adapting it :i*:i Public Library. This is not very centrally situated, and affords another of the many example- thai idaptod laulduigM are rarely ever

itsful when viewed from the standpoint <>i convenience and utility. VVitrau & comparatively limited tons liter opening it v :iv booo that an addition was necessary, and Dr. Losgstaff, i I U own expense, bulll a now wing for i rcading-roorn, bearing the ol rh ,. ranerabli donor A.1 thi end ol lew the same -. : tleini n promised i.' give £2,000 towards the debt *'i doul Le

thai mm on the building, on c Utlonthai the balai vos raised

by a given ii:ito Wandsworth b likely to see this burden Ii to

'ill then have the full use of the rate, which produces about <;:. Mr Cecil T Davis, the librarian, has charge ol 10,822 volumes, the prfiwait stock of the library . and til these titers Is an annua] turnover of some alne w ten times. There are frmmentty »* ninny ;i.n I.NX) reader* vit*'n the lil-rarv i'i .i .sirij/lo day. The local press give good publicity to the ^ rid

Kvluah Dncnnn u, 1866.

1'ulhuiti led the way .timni^ i he London parishee, preceding Lambeth bya ten days. Cntcrost centred in tnolargci ludbettor known peiish. but II is arcatlj Co th< credit -,'t FuJham thai it honld aavct ikon w fforthj dload. Tbcuvv»\vY05r&\.ve»*Aa^\rafc3ya

■2Ut

[TOM'' LIBPARrRS.

generalled, and the votes in favour were nearly three to one Oti October ■-'<», 1888, n»- dot building, erected -^ •■» oei of 68,000, was opened by the Bienop <»f London.

The new iiuiidi u i> on iIh- lu.iui i-uinl to Putney and Richmond, in the r.iilK' <>! Full mm. Mr. J. <i. Hull was the architect, mid Mr. Charles Wall, of Chelsea, the buisleT. The reading-ruuin is 70 u. Iong,3(rTt wide, and in height 22 ft. The celling was beautifully decorated by a firm of [tauan artiets. Ju the front of the building are the lending and reference libraries, the ladies' reading-room, and the commi&sjoiiera'rtiran, an bhe first Boor . the remainder beinjj nn-iipi.-d i-.y Mi ii r- in-, tin- mi.- liu-.-in. n. The number of volume* Is not yet large for a population of r~,<XH), being under 6,000, bat this in defect with which the commissioners are uedvlv coping) seeing tin 3 Spent nearly C'UOO in one year on booke, Thr ieeuce reach tbout KXj per day, bo thatftbe itodb fa turned over every fourteen days. The Fulbnroitce arc ovtdcnJ i.v i reading people, and moan to get then* full pennyworth out ul i he libmrVi lad for thftt decision they are not to bo bluined. No

fewer than q thousand people visit the varum* depnvtineni: daii.v Xhifl m by no meane mi mdifforon' record for *o short n ttnad Somo importanl Bitorationa owe become necessary, and the iibrarj wul be doted tor b tune in the middle of law.

l>AMuimi. Deckmoeh, lt*b(i. Tiic success of the Lambeth Public Libraries has exceeded the nosi sanguine expectations. The struggle to saenre the adoption

nl i he Art* was rviTcilili^lv arduous, and i.olhing bill the

Indomitable energy and determination of tin- promoter* carried Kh© question through. Lambeth covers so vast an ami thai fchla presented a serious obstacle, and made IB difficult i<> place before iii** ratepayers » scheme which would win Hie- sympathy and approval of the majority ol die people. The promoter*, however! wen* brave men. and after the queHtiof j having beau low on twn previous occasions, El wax, on tho third lime of asking, carried through bo a satisfactory ieetie Within reasonable time, il ei ii c adoptioa oi the Acts, commlsslonere were appui.i:ed, with the Hon. and Rev. Canon Pelham, the rector of the pariah, as chairman , and who all through has taken the warmest awl meet earned i.

tCWSt in the development of tin wort The i.-i»mmi*aiont:rs early

called to their aid emoetesperi need librarian In Mr. i . J Bur- K»vue, i»f the Newcartlc-on-Tync tnd Darlington Public Libraries^ who has done himself great credit in hi-, administration.

Lambeth has been exceptionally fort mm tc in gifts, ami the record of thorn will pc rbaj'.' -.-nxtv n. little licart-burm*n£ to

!iATJahce> A.1 the prceent time over £50,000 hae been fflvcn for ihrary buildings nnd sites, and about 6,000 v.. Hi mee, Tin: nwe than justifies the stub meat repeatedly made in U i i , that

the generous riving for Horary purposes if wisely reserved by the don era tor raTe-aupportod Ubrari* . where the •• in the bosl and :n ■.; *eeuro prosper t oi thoti gift having thewideataad fulled I 4ad rrharo the continuity in d '"d.

I'l I Ml' I.I11KA1UIW IS I/iNUO.N.

297

1 1 July, 1808, the tli'M of tin? libraries was opened <n West

Norwood, by the ICurl of Xorllihrook. The elevation presents B very attractive appearance, and it has been erected ••n a afte given by Mr. K. SettteJold Tin- front i* fr»«*rd with red brick* relieved with etose ami terra-cotta, tin* avohca and other porta Lrinff of gauged work. The root's are tiled. The pilastcrft over the iKiin entrance have busts of men eminent in literature all the other earring being ambtomatric of the 00a for which the building u' erected. 10 the basement are lavatories, a Uu'i-m; Iviok- atore, Virfltii.T chamber, jcc.f and over the front portion is a librarians houc. The fitting have all been specially donigacd by tin architect, ;>nd the book-flholYOfi aw adjustabn itoanj sise

book. Every book in the library ih yhowu on the (.'otirivave indicator, which id on the counter. The floors are of wood tnookflj unci the ventilation, wftnmng, and Ughttng. have been carefully

ooneldered. Thearchiteel is Mr. s. 1:. j. Mmth. a i: LB a. There i- :i i'i rferenae room JO ft. by S3 ft,, ami a periodical and nev snap a? and reading-room of a similar 9310, both top lighted ; in addition r 0 winch there is a Iodic*' reading-room and u boos dcparl for Leading1 library Capable "i holding Kt,000 books. The general

<}■]• <A llh- work :> I'leiiiNii, :tit<: -uiim what Miiiilar tu building

which one tees in Bruges, Ghent, and Other Belgian towns. The architect selected this style on account of Uh plcttnTO^ueness and

adaptability In the MtO Oil Si hill.

A most i-iimuraglng phenomenon waa wirnewed at this library in AngUSS, 1889. The huildiiigH had been dosed for a week for the ordinary purpose of (.'leaning and arranging, so that renders bad been depr ved of their privileges for thai ahort period When the day of re-opeaing arrived the doors wen1 snmumdi'd by "> eager crowd. \r West Norwood the road was Mocked hyan expectant throng hi three or four hundred people, loug before tin- library m ipenod. All *\uy tons the people came in to burrow books, and at nightfall no (ewer Euan 1.148 volumes bad been laken out, about Oue-ftfth of the whole stock the lending' library possesses.

in Do wmbei of the same yean there was opened the Tate Public

Library} erected In South Lambeth Koad, the site for winch was

purchased for £1,160 by Mr. Henry Tate, who also defray- d the

)t the building, which amounted to £4,800. It ie very appru-

1 that one iH on Lai beth libraries should be placed En the

.. Lambeth Rood 1 'lu.se to the spot where the late Library

. ..4,1 Jolm Tradcacant, fiunlciier to L'lmrle.i i.( established

I the first museums ever formed in England. The collection

«r enriw^itie:- [nnm-d by the Lambeth gardener paeeed Into the

1 ■>; Bliae Ashm tie, and ultimately thJa collection developed

into the Aaihrnoleaa Mascara, the pride of Oxford. At the opt 0

1 this Tate Library a letter was «^ *t *- 1 from the donor, who

■\:i- oaftblc I" he >v .n! i( the eeivnumy, in which ho iviVm-d

I ii. greet ised which existed lor a library at Brixton, and that the land and the building* would cost some £1(^000. IK offered to provide h 11 thai tan LI the remaining bulf was prorltted within three >r four montlip. trom t\\uV tmw.

386

piihi.k: i.jniUEtJM.

in November, i*H!>, the third of i in- Public Libraries a/as opened l)_v Lord Roeebery, Thih bolldhifi ta situated la Lower Kenning* tou Lane, ami lias been erected man bho designs ol Mr. S. K. J. Smith. Tin? whole cost of the building sad u&e (about £10,000) li> I>cen defrayed by Miw J. Darning Smith, who related t * > Mi Edwin Laurence* one of the Lamta fch Library coxnro f swloacre, The front of the building is faced with red Fereham brioka and Portland stone, with granite columns to the porch and lead glazing* hi windows, several of the architectural features being in terra-cot ta« with izrec:i slides to roof, ami tiraberwork in upper

EoiIkmi ut tower. Tin- Inwmeut oontajnc a large book - eating chamber and coal 001101*6. On the ground ^oor are ^nc reading and other rooms. There uro magazine und reference rooms of similar size, each having: hatches for inspection in direct communication with the central library, bo that the librarian baa full control over these rooms. There it- .ileo the lending depart- ment, 31 ft, by 55 ft., with a borrower's lobby cosnmnnioatrng with the main corridor, whltA ia aread* d and with glazed bit. and fa 8 it. wide throughout, Therein olaoa women** reading room, i -J it. by 28 ft., f»minuriioatingdiroctly with loading Library . The public rooms have brick &unage in the interior. In the front part oi the building are the librarian* apartments and oonun

n-mii Tin' liook . ;e-e littjlnge ;,,.,. ;n WKjttois woodland WUl

eoooramodate yj^OOO volume*

A further gift followed of a library BOW vorv noon to 04

opened, the pin oi Mr. Minet, which if referred to under Camberwell. This will he under the joint control of Luruboth and * lexnberwaH

The use of ;dl the*e lilnimeb, ever shiee they were OpSnod, tUtt

grown roo.1 rapidly, and it ih doubtful whether another pariah in London receives ho many tangible benefits oat "i i hnltnennj rats \t< Lambeth. This Is all that the promoters of the neheme in IBSQ mked for and all tin \ vers permitted to upend Tin* very success of the Lambeth movement brought Rucn ;»n InAnv of gifts thai ll « u patent feci ;iil win. hake an interest in Mm move* ment ibat the halfpenny rate would he Insufltelent to maintain Uie libraries being erected :<i ;< rate ho rapid uidyel graJ ifylng to the autumn of 1889 there was an offer ul £15,000 frum Mr. John Noble, of Heoley-on-Thainesj foi a greatly needed central library, und there was attached le ii i a lac condition, that the ratepayer* won W sanction the full penny rate for themainienaii iof thia LLsuuinsroua branches. The issue was placed very clearly before Hie people, and "< DecexoDOij L889, the poll wa> taken, but w> ijonto '. i"- It waa rejected. Tin.- dcdsloii vae tt» be deplored on many grounds. In the Oral place, the Ubrarica

unlike Mflne other [nH><<*U, i- •ne h-r whieh vi visible mid tangible

equivalent is secured, and the urcreasa En the Lamboth would have been - asti bad the proposal been carried Too many ratepayers, rendered bus ifo-ousby tin. extravnganco of the public bods r >.■■>• u to forgot the Euet that the

ia t/<r pound £0 tht uhuoat allowed bv the \<i.- .1 Ltolianienl

1'1'BLIC LrUflAiURS IN LON OO*.

299

regulating the establishment una* support of Public Libraries. In ihiK way, t may be. the Lambeth majority regarded the prop sal

fur tlio* hnilpt'uuy LidiUtiuu to tlit* ran OS only u forerunner <>]

future attempts at further tocreaaei. It should, however, be borne in mind that libraries cannot be kept up efficiently, even when built by private- munificence, Without sufficient funds. It i* :i grading spirit thai accepts lands and buildings, and then hesitates to maintain thexe institutions in a fitting manner. It was to ensure that the proposed central library should not be starved for want of funds. th;it the gifts wens made conditional on the ratepayers" approval of the penny rate, lb is noteworthy iivit. in the districts where 'in* libraries nave been already placed there was a solid vote iu favour of iiu.- penny XWa is decided 1 3 instructive, and when the question comes forward again at the end of the present year it is to I >e hoped that a different result will Ije seen. Lambeth has done .ho well up to ihe present that llift-r jh too much wood sense in the parish to spoil the ship for the proverhiiii hii'iK'i"1'1 "1 teP< Hothzugeen everrob the parish of having, with Fulham, been the first^ to give Kilt new impulse whkh came to tile movement in London. Every one of the fifteen other parishes which has since that time adopted the Act* owes something ol its iinc.ceHsfuJ movement to the noble example set

by Lambeth, it may be again said thai tin- best educator in Favour of Public Ubraries is successful rate-eupported tartifcu- lion in the near neighbourhood, where the pcop|< ran for them- selves see the use mode of al) the department I whieh il pTd Idee, T.;.i:ii>eth bid* fair t«> be a Public. Library school tor London, and it is essential that the school shall be well equipped, in order to set an example worth following. It can only do this by taxing itwlf to tho full penny in order to avail iteeli of this very liana- Home olt'er of hi to anil building, and in addition to this to have two as three other branches ereered in varioia purl:- of tho parish, it ii incumbent upon those who know the pleasures of books tuul reading to perform their enure of educating the people upon the pressing needs of this additional halfpenny I thousand people viMt daily the three libraries and nevaroonw which here been opened at the date of writing. When there in a central library and two or three more brunches opened it. fa not Improbable that, when iiiev gel ni thorough working order, no Sewer than 10,000

C»ple will visit the libraries avevy day. Already the number of rowers using rhe three institutions is over 10,600, and there is no reason why, under the bright prospects in store for the perish, this number should not roach 30,000 actual current rwers a> tiling themselves <»t the advantages of the library. 'I'Iii- following scene took place at the Norwood Public Library: —Enter wonder! ig ratepayer: " Anything to paj ! " Attend. i i i "No, this Ian Public Library, to which entrance la free." Rater payer (>n amazement): Good gracious 1 tad can you read these hooks tor Nothing f ' Attendant: " \Ufornothtng.*' Ratepayer: \m; to think l was fool enough to vote against the libraries'. Why, I don't believe hall the people wuocrp^owA ftw Y&stexHa*

eoo

' AIUW.

had nn;r idea what t iiocurt/ T

parishes wh< lai

!i..ii v.!i ; i pPOfing rii< m ivcni

ii . sad Q -ioada * .

idi i -«•, who

r.rnl !! oUjfhl :nnl |ft])0 IT ■■ the Dl < I

old frfrndfl "it tin- in |r .'

1 . Kiii'm:!, ono Dg parish,

iind mniiy other*. hiw through ill tho ) m the time the

lOd 81 radfu t to il

motto --I all v> b

I..tinl>cth ! " Tin* ;>invh n <:\ . 4Bw

mcodubU tx\i

rJUl ' "ho » i

vnh run'vi arable fi i.'i-pwt.

M- M-MtTINIX TlU'.-riUl-I- I

I i |iH A Ufl PTJ i|*W^

i ! W7. Til ' pcill v w*aa .in evident on the purl oltl

! queattou, thai & pariah - aaj historical Dwuci&iuua

rtionld nol •;<' le*a than Fulhuiu *ml I .1 thrtii, wliicJi had

CaI ri. the I'l.-I 1 teTi 5 lc Wi .; mid he BID I Ql 1 .

MM)) nnd I acj i:i ratable raft*} is Atvil

. rdfi. A !< 1 ooni «.i 1 >\*'m I a i iOJ g \

PTTU.TC i.mn,\Rir.s IN wsimx.

301

January, lNW\ rwn yaus after the adoption of the Acts, The attendance luie boon conBidcrnl.il'* at tins temporary room. On March 18, 18(H), the Prince of Wales laid the foundution- Ktntu- lit tin- ru;w municipal bufidttngSj Sod (fas memorial "i"i)0 of

the di w horary and reading rooms.

The library portion of tau handsome pile of buildings ie shown in the sketch on p. 300. The building will consist of four storeys. \ ii ill i >n-..- ii i-n i , which will contain too lending library : :i. ground il ■.••»!' room, 60 ft. long by 10 ft. wide, which will he the reading- room ; the next tioor will be devoted to a large library of works of reference, rooms for the private peril' udy of Biioh books,

offices, ud s booM-rooTDi And the top floor it w be fitted asi residence for the librarian Twelve months will be occupied in completing the building. The cost oi the library building will bo about £'/,ooa Mr. rbomae klasoo la the librarian, and is un earnest worker in tin- morenienfc,

1 1 vrmnsEA. March, 188". Within three years after the adoption of the Acts, rhe Battersea people 886 then.1 new centra] Library completed, and duly opened in too public, in 1893 a committee eras formed, with Mr, George Harris as honorary secretary, for the purpose ut promoting the adoplion of lie AiIn, and in a quiet way (his committee rendered I service, by bringing the iwealioii before the constituency. \\\w\r imi leading to the Immediate adoption <>f Che .\ii.\ there is ao doubt iimi ii contributed towards twri desirable result in iyd7, when, out of a large poll, <t very BBt&aractory

i majority declared in favour of the adoption of the Acts. The commissioners lost no time in apitointuig a good practical man u i ttbrartan, and in July they selected, out of a large number of candidate*, Mr. Lawrence lukatcr, who had been for BUbi years librarian of the South Shields Pabli* Lihrary, The of the OommUMixmers was for a central library and two branches, £n October, 1888, toe first of those branches was 1. Prior to thi&, a temiwrary reading-room had been opened, and was much appreciated. At the Lainnuu* Hall five rooms were rented by the oommitfaionorBj and about 1,600 books, wiiii ffhiohthe branaJi woe opened, collected fi i rarions sources* Xhs i-in-iiiMii, on thai occasion. 8 roll Imown. local man, said that :iy oomd not understand how ;t was that London was so much behind tin* provinces in the matter of Pttbtic Libraries and other forward movements! while nhe provinces were in turn far more backward than America, Cannon, and Australia, where almost every \ ittngo or hamlet hod, if not a library, a reading- room. He regarded the l'ublie Libraries law tkelngestabUshadj aj not only us< ful ae ihv i - Instruction, but as affording mean i ut recreation, ac people who have been working hard all day, might be more benefited by reading something light and enter* ng, than hy perusing more Hoholarlj ihSB branch b

being axceadftign well uaed< The number of rohRosA Li a&wasfc

I ir Khurl ,n l.,im mrl ■>:>• .!■ .- 'v 'i..M\.- >■- .'\..v^^w\'^

:-VL'

PDBUC |,[01lAi:»f.S,

the .;.r;i actual borrowerb using the brauofa library. In January, 1869, permission wiih given to borrow for the purpose of building and stocking. This was followed in May of the same year, by flw Laying nf the foundation-stone. On sfa?< b 1!*, 1890, this building was opened by Mr. .V. J. Mumlelhi, M.I1. The centra] library bat been erected from the designs of Mr. E. W. Mountford. There are on the ground floor a newsroom, magazine room, and lending library, and i>n the floor.-* above ji large handftome reference library tad book stoves. The two reading rooms will aoeomraodato SOO persons, and the reference library 100, making n total of :«K> readers for whom provision is made, and the lending library i.-> equal to the wonts of 5,000 borrow era Tim total coat of the building and bite ib about 1*10,000, which sola \v.\x burn

other with £2,000 for the Lurline Hardens rnifldtag, noffl In course of erection, and £3,000 for books, making a total debt of BlijOOO, The total number of volume* with wfiioh (in. tlbranr Opened WW lfl/iCO, Of wbieh 10,1 IS arc io the leuding and 6,435 in the referenoe library. The newsroom has 1,031 tt. super., Q .«■

_;izine-room «90 ft. super., and the reference library 1,900 ft. mi jut. "t iinor Kpuee, iiie Meoominodatiorj ifl equal to 150,000 to 1*00,1 tfX) hooks, and 60 there is room in the library for growth. The style is Renaissance, hut so designed that the building does not contrast in too marked i degree witb the houses around the library. BatterecR ha* thus now fairly begun its work, and means to hold its own in the library world of London.

Pctnsy. Mahoh, 1887. Putney early caught tin* Public Library fever, and declared in

favour Of the adoption of tin* Acts by 1,004 a-jHliist /i72. The temporary nHHiiH were opened iu March of the following year Since then the number of volumes baa been steadily advancing, and i> now about 6,000. The f i rat twelve months* use of the referenoe and nagaxuM room was very encouraging, Between

forty and iifty uiayaziue* and periodical.-* are taken, nnd in the ncwM'ouin there are about sixty newspapers and periodicals. Tin- vferege daily number of visitors to nil departments roaches about 750. Mr. ('. F. Tw coney, the librarian, issued hi.* cobalogoe in August, 1889, The gift* hare been ove* 9,000 volumes and about j£l!00 in cash.

Coklsra. May, 1867.

The provisional committee who conducted the contest meant to viTi. In no London parish was the issue placed better or more dearly before the constituency than in Uneleea. Looking baek upon the literature distributed md the abls advocacy itfrea by bfioffWeel London Pwesu and other local papors, it would naVB been strange had BUOQeaa not attended efforta so well planned and so rigorous. Politicians of the fighting type Oram boi h sides Mo i on the committee, and rendered excellent service rho roquMtbm va'i .■.u.ri;eil l>\ 1 ail Cadogan, Lord Monkoj-vi-ll, the Bjgbl Htm, JoSm MrTL\v/M.P.,ttieROT.G«r,aVV tAnn^lta <

T'CBUC JJHIlAltlR* IN 1.0KJ>*~iX.

:aw

i>l Ih" p-M'wii. .nhi ntliiTi. and the majority in favour WW 1,01*1, tar ill :i \nrx» poll The number Of DlanJc and unsigned papers

mu ratlu if targe, bul tftifi oould aoareaty have boon from a (lex o1

instructions, »fl the friends of the movvmmt is^uM a fapnrd areolar, wwrinff the way plain. Mr. B. \\ Radon, Mr 0 J Oorloraa and Hie Rev. F. Uelton, rendered excellent service. There were some talttel dlffieultfee over the eoUeetlon of the rate,

which led bo the Amendment Hill oT 1889 being brought forward

oheuska pvauc uhuaxly, cjiiound floor.

id fcfterwftrfa pa-ssed. Thih Act clearly lays down thai I he tin v library rate cannot be Charged WOT the poundage for collection.

A temporary newsroom * a opened En November, 1S8L in fchc Vi-Mir\ i hill, .in. I booln were allowed for reference . bat bo JcJictin?

rucnl i 'i th< central library will be opeuQOi >\\\U\ v\\c butidina U completed. The foundation *Ume o! Wvc ^ttoaayaax

an

PTBtjr LXBBABIRK.

building was laid by th©C«»unu^ duJogan, in February. [800. The ling is in Mhnrcan Hoad, King's lioad, C'licbea. The entrance in through u handsome atone portico* supported by four coluiuna, ieaJn h Ida corridor, out of wnien there will u . i inm. ,■-.

to tho prtctdpel dopaxtmenta on the ground floor via., a general roadlng-room for 330 reader*, a boys' reading-room, n Iodic:/ ivipliii:<-r""in. und n lending library with shelving for 80,000 volume* Some modification with regard t > the indie** nnd boye'rooQM will probably be mode. A wide staii : i.-n.i

up to the inference library on the 6rtt floor, where vh accommodation for 60,000 volume*, and a reading- room, de^ipnod for a oni.'f «riiily, fur eighty reader*. Tin- front i.|i'v:

red bncVi with white none drowtngs, in tho stvle of English KanaiwKPiea known aa Queen Vime -. for which Chelsea enjoya i reputation. The designer and arrhiteel is .Mr. J. M. Brydon, who was iIbo toe deelguer of the now Town Sail, Chelae*, iho con- tractors jbeing Moa»ts. Hoilowny Brother*. The total re

climated at about £10,000. The freehold Bite, valued at £2,C00,

nor wiih the adjoining piece of land upon which in to he inn [I the Sooth-Went Polytechnic, was tin* jrift Of Earl Cndogan to tin- people of (In1 district. Tlir Kiirl bus also Miown bin interest in itit- libriu'N tn i.i further fiU't of £360 fur technical literature. Sir Charles Dillce, one of the Com mhel oner*, has. given fifiOO nid a numljer of valuable book*, while Ltidv Lindsay and kfl

Councillor Gh \v. Osborn have Bach given suras of money.

About four mile* from the boundary of the parleli in an out- lying dlatelct known w KonwJ Town.and here a branch library naa been erected and vaa opened in January, 1k(k>, it \* under the charge of Mr. Preeoa> irao( nine from the Barrow-in-Furnoai Library. Ou the ground floor are (he newarooine, and a reference room, and the lending department fa on the Brat floor The elevation is very utrikinff, and the future f the library I bright and promising aa can n I II be. Here there ore about 0.000 volumes which is a #oo<I beginning tor ci small library. As a London brooch library. KennoJ Towi has aomo Foafcoroa worth noting;. The flite coit £3/XX); ond the boat has been mode that wub powdble. Where it is a choice of placing either the lending department or the newsroom on the ground floor, and the ofther mi (in- iir,-t Boor there can be no two iiuaetiona t hat toe in v .mhimiii should be there as at kenwdTown.

The attendance of r^-me r,<v\ i day ut the tenipnmry roading- room in the Veetrv i (.-ill, te an earnest of what will be i tho now building fi completed. The chief librarian! Mr. J, Henry (.lumii, who was for many years at the Liverpool Public Lti has Ins time well occupied in buying and cataloguing b Chelsea mentis to have a good round number ol volume* on the ahalvea by the time the doors of the new building ore thx opon t.o the public, and in thin decision the} are acting wiaeljr, The i:«\ p Relten baa rendered oaeful aervlce to the moveme I Qjidon i>v vhdtmo; various part* <>r the Nfetropolia^nnd expl i point* gad giving lugoeetiona to other \.\w-.w\ Cotnmiat

PITBLtG UBRAUTKS Iff I.ONOOV.

305

KRN*iwrn\. Jink, 1**7

There should be indelibly inaurllied on Hie records of tin- Public Library movement in London the nam* of Hr. James Hay wood, FJLS. VVhon in l^n be opened hi* Public Library at Sotting 11:11, the GfaSldbflDi ttritish Muwuu, and Westminster Libraries were the only Librarian open fin- to Uw public m London. In I87H tin* ratepayers of Kensington refused tu adopt tbe Acts, Mr. Ilcvwood and those who favoured the movement resolved to wait till the ratepayers w i< better infrrnied. The Hotting Hill Library was kept up by Mr. llevwood ;u hie own expense, and in J'etM'tobcr, 18S6, a ucw movement fox the adoption of the Acts was set on foot, and probably one of the most influential ud representative committees that has ever been sot together in K ending ton worked until, in June, Ou Acts were adopted by a largo majority. Tho opposition at the loot woe very stroiur, but having been practically without loaders could not do the harm that was Intended JVlfiv llerbert Jones, who for fourteen years bad been the Lfbr&rianat Mr, Haywood's iiin-;iry,:iri-.-«ri a* honorary secretory of the provisional committer, and Dad boon ai wnrlc lov nvnlti*. II" h:i'I *'.-ured the idhesion of ovory

leading man, oi by showing tho itrengtfa "i the ■■■• i mirteo, dot srred waverew from joining the otbwauta He collected £1,300 towards the librai1oa;octeluaivc of ttr. Hay wood's gift. What vu

moat to be feared was the apathy of the ratepayers ind thocxampla of i'addintfton, the next parish, Mr. JoceS was an admirable

organizer, utd the success of the movemflDi was largely owing to hih cratfrfng efforts. The appointment of this gentleman is rfbrarlan o1 ths new Public Library was r> most arwropriftts one, and there is ovary reason t-> think- thai ha wffl do nunself and the locaJ public, whose Bervant he to, great credit by Ms administra- tion, In January. t88e\Mr Hi-ywond'n library, \idned nr fiflOO, was rormalVp handed over. A committee was formed bo consider tha deairahJlity oi acknowledging in some suitable wa$ 1 lis gift, nnduhuM. of liiniKcir w;i.s decided upon. This is ;m 'admirable Ukeneas ol Mr. llevwood, and ha* been placet! in the Vestry Hail, which now forms one of the libraries. The VeHlry null win declared open la December ]--». by H.IMI. tin- Uarobioness ••[ I ,ii j no, ;il a very interest! uy eerciuoiiy.

The first rejpurL presents .m cneninM^iii^ statement of what has been done up b-tdstcuml Kensington bidarair bo get out of its half" penny rate dot year! which produce* £9,^0,ari excellent example of the multiplication ol the infinitely little, the selection of books is admirable. Every taste has been carefully considered, and ultimately the reference department of the central library will be a strong feature of their work. The commissioners reel fchej Kensington has a n-pi.tiitnm '<■ maintain. With South Kensington Kfaaoum and (bo Rational History Museum situated in tin pariah, it is felt

that in library work Kensington must in course of time occupy a prominent place The two branches end Ihc central library arc DOW getting fairly under way «irh their work. The number of visitors daily to the various libraries and aowarooma is swg \axvyt.

MTHITfi IIHKVIJH'- I . , ;u

;m7

it pravente the borrower from taking out the drawer entirety.

\ 1 1< 1 1 1 Hi- contrivance u ;i litiie im*s imme ' ntain nl oda

and the movable types (or dating the indicator book*, find

at llir other him! i lead [tendl. Ml. .Junes im c\ idrntly :i in in « \\ b

many ttbraij Ideas.

CLAMIAM. .Irt,v, 1JW7.

i I ipliani wisely decided nob to open temporary rot no, !»m oa

there iraaa prospect of being- able toniuneduftolyiacnxaaitCa

for building purposes tin good folks of daphain had to Doaaaaa

on b M i aticnce, and wail until Miey bad a novr building to

ouU then own. This was not until October 31, 1889, oa -which

data II WBfl Opened bO H public The whole matter was

BoTtngin the jpring ol 1897 by the munificent offer ol £2,000

towards I budding it the A.N wnr adopted This aflat oamc from iui anonymou/i individual, nnd to-day the name obecuritv am-round* the gift thai Ivw prevailed from the first. Only OD0 ol tin- commie ■::< ] < ra la i « ar w lotbifl anotij mouc friend tOi Bo whom Chvphain i> in' I j»it"i. \\ uiii'i iimr I'vci^ pariabin London hadaueh

i Iriend. The adoption of the A< ts at * Japliaia VU Carried vrftl

IB very largo majority, and In dm- eoiirxi the .'run i n v er<- ippi'in:*'.!, wliu went .pik'Hy mid elhViently i-> wmk. I lie mte con £1,100, and vrhon this * d decided upon the commissioners did not iwuo advertisement1* for designs bat Invited as arch! - in.L' -mil in nuder n niotto. The m tmianionan arrlveiiat wat that the plans of Mi E B P in* i ware most suited to f.heir pum te, and w.vr aocordtnglv Choaan. Adv<»rtiwiiuMir« In' renders lot tin' erection ol Dai inUdfng were subsequently issued, and n local tirm v.tis aucoaaslnl. The tender vrai £o^6fi Tin- . . externally composed of red brick, with box-ground Bath at draaalngB, the ground ima occupied being tOfifl bv flOfl The elevation* are vary nluealnr, althouffh til m particular >tyie, and thehberal introduction of hay-window* adds oonaidenil ly to the ire ue m I effect The Eront Eaclna tin- common has an aaienalvo

lon-rimil lnjumlcd !>y uniami'utjil imn i . 1 1 1 1 u ; ; - .snniiouiiliny a aopllUI ami intei>pii>L'd with i'imii!ii*iit.il red hncl [>lrrs. A

moaazc pavc<l pathway lead* to ;< pair of maasrra polished mahogany and plate-glaM doorai throujrb which <* spa* roetlbule of an oolong ihepe-ii cached Thia b alao paved hi

moaofe and lighted by a hnndcionic lamp. Anotl i r pair i I

in;; diM.rv l^ad to tin* « utraoofl hall, frnin irhlch I iSl b

the targe room above. This entrance ball baas irood block ii ">r, ■<u.i is v.-, taatefullv decorated. From the entrance haU the int. » what la called the borrower*' lobby. on the back and right-hand nidea of winch i* ranged a Bubntuntinl counter in polidlicd mahogany, m ith asec(nola toak,ftnii deal Dm over which booke *ill bo issued: and this counter i* aunooustod by aa badHoator. Cnii bonovan lobtobalae aatad with wood

bio '■ i r iticinUy b'ghted With A \\«x^\~-

;in.| thia l. ) ii. nod -a, Sa ^n^

308

prix i libraries.

feature <») the institution, the issuing room or lending library, wtth aecoaunodatloa for some 27,000 volumes. Thu receives Etd light from above by throe oblong lanterns, while all around the walla are s3 Jlvee, Bod u the centre ire Bpadoua book* ceaea, ni:ii!\ ni which are awaiting die bnrdana with which, do doubt, many genen in Sodom will lade them, under the dire* .i! i in- Orel librarian, Mr. .1. Beed Welch, who brought bo the poal all ihe various qnallflcatiarui gained fe) :i l >u% uoe in the

DOfCll of England* From the linrruwt'i^' lu!)liy 1 wti Ijii-jr HWlDg

doors open into the newsroom, devoted to tfie reading <>f the newspapers and perlcx [i i . Thi,-. la the largesi room La the !• i Ming, being 67ifc. by 87 i'i.. and oooapJes the jreateei space in

the building on thegrovnt Boor, and will comfortably hold ovei

150 persona i he light, in the dry ti , te derived from a

window to the front, nnd tw< bays, and one othci atom

I'Ih dOOul*:itjunb id rills i in arc tvpknl of DlOUt ol tliij oM.m...

The ceilings and walls are coloured crcam-whitc, with n ej coloured dado surmounts i by MoncU ornamenta The Boor ii covered wltl linoleum to leaden tho sound ol footsteps, and1 the tables, chairs, and news-etandc are ol polished oak. Artificial 9 riven by twelve Wenhnni IfyihK und u •■ in mgoi i rentuutkm sru both ample in qanniH\ ; ndra idem in churn ■!• r This portion, and alao the resl of the i eateri by i .

<" ftppU Ml l!

I'l lii.li- I IKR.VB1K? l\ i.'iM'ii',.

fXJfl

At tlic ivar < -f the newsroom, and lighted to two bay twe from Orlando Road, md one window frora the back, le

I.. reference library. This is approached through the newan i

bj i: i! mm- <>i - > [ag . i ..--:■-.:>; i < i ,i]h,i commuoii ateedireetty with the i^Miin^-wom by means of ft c&dina Bash, through which books will be suppled for ret'ormce. Tlie decoration* arc similar t" Mm* iiewMfunTi, nnd artificial light la supplied bjfonr Wenhaw tempo. Behind the .. rain#-room in a commodious office for fchc lihrarinn.a binding room, a file-room, lavafc trios* &C- The staircase in 11 ic ciiti-iin.'.' liiill air- il \ m.-nti nu'd. i- nui>.>ive ut Portland

i MXOj v -ith ornamental iron rnilingsnnd polished mahojzntry wood- work. From a spacious landing: an entrance is obtained through

irgo swing doors to a noble room 46 ft. by S I ft whioh extends MM the onaro front of the premises, suitable for ;i lootoro-room

CI..U-UAM PVBT.IC LTUSUaV. OROL'Vli )<■■ i

i other purpose*, Th< decorations ore .similar to those in the rest

the rooms. ' ml paten) mtflau>r* .nv med in thia ease, while

in powerful lumjifi afford a beautiful light Ample acoommoda-

on w provided for the librarian* and -y suite of rooms extends over

binder p"- Eon of the premises, with a sepu te entrance.

ff a bUudin£ «»!' tlic dimensions i tin i i i.'lnphaffl it

i wa/cely"bc possible to put up a better planned or move able building. There aro a number of metropolitan pariahos where the mi brings En about £1,000 * yew, isal C lauhom, and the vi«ry h'.'Kt pi:ifi which . an be adopted will i «' to follow i lose!) the plans for the ground and upper floors »( thiaMbran Tfce total e di u B4,000» and another £l/)O0 wars

■pent upon » Curaiture, It te a building whlcl refloats

t he higni ii erudti upon all r.onoerned, and ninpham la reaaonahV I1: i p ad of Its library, and > mafclnpj a usq q1 lflt.'N*\Ajfe N»e»»

310

I'l I'l I' I.I 1H \HII>

maidftWe, The total number of roluriii'K ;.h Hixmi 1,000, :in«i taking b .;. i>'<-. ■] v- pek since [to opening the issues -t ind as follow [crone ireet Thealogy.phllosophy, anrteei leeiuutical history, 40; history and biography. In.". . ir.iv-in .md topography, 73: arte and 1 Bti, 93 : poetic and the drama, 49| prceo fiction, L017; mis- cellaneous Literature, •■*-■• tarenfle * >rks, 310. Total, 1,808 l):i:U ;iseiagy uunie of volume*. 373. The total numbtl td borrowers i8 rapidly going up to -i ,000. There is every appear- ance that Claphazu will more than hold its own in this move- ment.

The aim roissioners have all through acted with zeal. During the progress of the build r.il public meetings wore held,

tor ;he purpose of placing before the people a rioumi of what m being (few by&e oommisaloneraj and of raising additional funds Cot the purchaaa of books, The Rev. '.'. r. Greene, tlio

Rov. >'y. FtorCBter, the [lev. J. Chuimoeo Rogers, and Mr. 11< im Bolcroigjdid excellent work in awakening public interest in the

library.

Beuwonikhbv. OiToiiBB, 1687.

The majority in luvour <>!' tin. Lett wan more than two to one. The chieJ era it of I fte movement and its muweas wai dna Dr. George Cooper, ol Bouthwark Parle Rood, who, with Mr C3i 1 1 hrer ud other triends was untiring in lu« efforts. Skilful tuetie* throughout were shown, especially tn the distribution ol weii- compiled i -uvular giving in ji tornc form a few landing tact - :i oopji ol d .li.li wflfl Ii-i'i at '-very house in fhe partnh on the day befon thi poll was taken. This circular bore the name of many !< residents of all shades of political and religious opinion fn parish there are two loeaJ governing bodies En addition to the vestry there is a body » :iUo*l the govern")*' mid ilirecO.ii>' u >anl which is [lit.1 rating authority of the parish. The vestiv icsuhcd to liik - ,i |" I "i ill- parish, acting mi tin- mlvh'r of their clerk, who maintained thai Lhe vestry, and not the governors' ami dl reel ire1 board, wag ii*- proper authority. But while arrangements were being made the governors' and directors Issued the usual notice to the effect that they would take the toll, and according)) thi* was done. The vestry were duly informed ol ftria by the clerk to the Eovernora and directors, with a view to the n proceedins with the appointment <>f bhe lib] irj eon missi But that body, acting upon the advice of bheh la* clerk, tOOS objection to the governors and directors h under the Vctvand further raised tin- 'ideation as to whether the Aci i lid ii< t tv- 1 -lire :\ n ; jnritj of bhc whole of the ratepayers ol the pnrinh, and not merely a majority of thoee who ucl the trouble to fill up and return the voting papers. The thoreupoi d< > ided to submit these two points to < ounscl, and the opinion if Mr. Lumlev Smith) Qt_.. wai obtained On the first point ho said he considered the governors and directors were the authority within the meaning i if the V<t. On i

be mcbxad to the view that a majority oi those ictuaUy

PUBLIC IJlOlAJirKS TN LON'W'V

Sll

voting*, and nor an ahsotatfl majority ol the raterjayera, was nil thni the Act required

Ti was somewhat unfortunate tor (he movement that (here should have boon this Saeeo in Its earl y stages a mass of Matter Hfw :it hand referring to the difficnltieSj bnl aa these muv be now retagnted to the archives of unolanl history, nothing more need be wlu. The election of a new realty In June, 1889, fadllmted matters n-nhiderablv, and ihcy Forthwith proceeded In elect

iwnmlMinnftM.

At the Town Hall, Spa Road, Bcnnondaey, in May, 1890, 1 ialoool Hasted held an Inquiry on behalf of Hie Loral I tovcrnment Board, consequent upon it proposal of the library commissioners t" borrow .1 sum ol t'H.iHHi for the purpose of building and furnish- a library. Mr. Harrison, the clerk to the commissioners, >rmed Colonel Darted that a site, which had been partly given by the vestry, hud been chosen contiguous to the Town Hall. 'li»c coat ol thai portion which would have to be bouitbt up would amount, for the purchase of all intercuts, to £3,006. The buildiofl would cost some £'4,000, nnd the balance of the loan of £8,000 would be spent in furniture and hooka. The population of Bermondsej wan 68,000, and the rwtftble value of the parish

£l01,o3fl. A penny rub- Would produce £1,460, Colonel Hosted

pointed out that the eommissionori bad left themselves a roij email margin Eor furnishing the library , and, after BomcdiseuKKi-ui. it was resolved toayptv for £10,000 toeteud of 68,000, There wa

no opposition from the rotejmi t-

HOTHXIIHITHE. NOVEMBER, 1887.

Rotherhitiie has been rather long m putting rh<* Acts in op tiou. The majority in favour of the Acts woe 7**0, and the cot oi the poll wu B96 LOs. toJuly, L880{&1 Che mooting oi tho London

County Council, the Ananec committee reported thai they had

i torsd the application of th< i inaniisaioners I »r Public

ties and museums for ftothernithe for in advance o ' £3,000

Tin* iMunmisnioners hn<l agreed t > purchase a freehold aU< nawi, and to expend £':.VJ0O in the ere.ti.ii <.| .i hl.rarv. a a. I f '■!'■

tor i Kings '"'l furniture which they proposed sht ol I bo repaid in fifty, thirty, and twelve years respectively The corns ittes there- foro recommended that, auhjeoi to all necessary consents l>e£np, furnished to the satisfaction n n solicitor, the appllcatioi the Commissioners for Public Librarian and M isenmc for the |i»rfMii of Rotherhitiie for fl !<>:"i of £3/100, to defray (tie cost of

pnrrl::i i i*f ;m<l civ.'iintj and lilting ups bTlfldrcg tohsUSfld

as i Public Library, be grant* l .

This building la now m xrarae of erection. A Ubrarlun haw been appointed, and so there In a prospect that the parish will aoon be In line s Ith Its work

on May 20, 1890, at the meeting rf the \ eetrj statement was •iii i \ <■ to the appointment I /. the Lfbrnn Co an .-.-.:« nemo J

a librarian, which was to H Bool thai after the candidates' list

had bei i tin inuted bo that *ii oah ti m-.eu<«'- onSb *>\ »\araa\^

:J12

pi-Bur mbrahie-;.

iimip nn1 l\mu mission or kcciuviI the insertion "ii the list of one wbc had not been finally seleetedj and who was aubMquently sleeted to rill the pott This led to th<* formal resignation of M< Smith, tin Srunrt, who now naked the Veatty to accept

ihcir resignations. A vestryraau moved tout the resignations be aooepted Hi* did so wiiii great regret, but raw no cftfter couxse open. This vu seconded, Mid a long discussion ensued.

ttWKUVWBl.I.. I>JSrKtfKttna I *K".

wiiat one pariah refused another parish gs nedj and bo the ClerkfiBweJ] people wen* disposed to use the oM proverb about

ii^ being an ill wind tl»;it Mows noimdy - i ' Mr i: \i

Qolborn offered Islington .1 uil'L ol some 6000 if the Acta WSXS adopted, and on ite refusal to do so he transferred his offc Clcrkenwell, which ultimately took the form of £'-!l(X) in cash and fver i.i.nHi volume*. This excellent offer, with aa additions - 1 C600 from Captain Ponton, M.P-, practically brought about the

adoption Of thd Aflta, aided by the efforts of u :tlnm,'j mil earnest Ci nmiittee, who act themselves the task of educating the con- BtHuonoy, The majority in favour Wflfl 321 , timl it was worthy of note that thin wiu- in n parish where the rates were twoshflhnge in l he pound higher than in Islington. Tin* movement tor the adoption of tho Acts in this parish was inaugurated by Mr. \\ in. Kobeon, who secured tho co-operation of u majority oi the v oh try on u proposal to celebrate the Jnbilvo by the establishment ol a J'uhlio Library. Only two public meetings were held m ClorkenweLJ, for the opposition hud determined that these should bo made so noisy, that tho frionda of the movement would per- haps become tired of their work. After this, active canvassing WAS adopted on a larger seule than previously, directed princi- pally ta Mf -'• Johnson and Mr. w. Rofcson, oofl among Die commissioners. They enlisted the aid of the clergy, ministers, representative working men, club representatives, teachers, &o. iy the whole of the parish was canvassed by volunteer*, ministers were asked- to aonotmoe to their congregations on the Sunday prior, the fner that the ]«>11 would be taken next day, leaving ft to theh Judgment as to whether they enlarged on the theme or not.

Some litigation followed th*» taking of the poll, and On June i 1. 188*, Mr. Justice Field and Mr. Justtae Wills wore engaged In the Queen's Bench Dh Isfon with the case of the Queen v, Morris and others, which earns before their lardahipfl in the form of s mol km by way of ouo warranto, culling upon the corniuissloners appointed under the rublic Libraries' Act for the parish of St. James and John, ClerkenweU, to show cause why they should cod

lu uet.lt Willi; .i.-M-ittvl Hint ihc jjull v, Inch v, ;i,> liken to decide

whether the Act should he adopted in Clerkeuwvll was invalid, by reason of voting papers not being delivered t< some ratepayers, and of their not being collected, and of betas improperly oeall with. Qn the other haud,il was *aid the poll suhstiuitiaU) 1 pfeacnted tin; icvlmn of tlic parish. \w\yvw«^^^*.™

w -m.il* ubtmuihs ix i.ovnow

313

papers vera taBued* of which i.riH wen- ninnini n r:iv>nir i»f the library, and 1,030 against It There vers l/KBSfl|icilled papers, oi which 880 were blank. Mr. .it'll', Q-G, and Mi stokes appeared tor Hit; opponents of the Rbrary, whue Mr. Chinnell, Q.C., and Mi- Spokes represented Die* cotiniiinMioiicrK, In support of Hie cute for a y«a warranto, II was contended that tho faces sot oul [a the affidavits were sufficient to show thai bhc opinion of the ratc- payera luul not been properly ascertained, and tli.it before this new rate was imposed tot ever upon the parish, the parish should another opportunity oi expressing Its sense upon theeub-

ject. Mr. Justice Field, to giving |udguieut, .vuM the fiti't ques- tion raised, whether the commissioncre vera the proscribed local authorities for carrying out the provisions uf the Public Libraries' Acta, hut tlmt being a very complicated and dilllcnlt qUOetiOBj M T>

CLSKKBXWJBLl. Pl'BLlC LIBRAiO . SJCOVKS i umik.

.leii had very properly consented, in the interesl d Bhe pail las, t<> alien it bo pass la the present ease lad therefore the osjg

SiestianB remaining were auto i.i i Le in vSticfa the sonaeox I parish hud been taken. In tin- ca.se n tluvt

voting pa pern were not Bent to each ratepayer, that Ihev \

Sropswy eoUecled.and thai e scrutiny wae n fused; ana chat even uom coiiditiotis bad bees properly complied with, the result had not boon properly aeeortasnec. llis lordehki then reviewed the facts of theoase,aad said thut uxioiu i be w$t always t<> si i :■ p u iv of election, he could act some to the oenelosloo thai than vas 003 improper ox unfair dealing on the pari of tha

promoton of tih< Public Library in tin 11 I iec 1'liore v substantial majority of ratepayers in favour Qt tita yv \<*c&,VC<A there VBS ftOtnUJgtG show that the election \\tv\ fcWft WBWS^Ka

314

PUBLIC LIBRAE IK*.

than fairly arul ln-.iiminthh conducted Mi'. Justice Wills con- curred, Linil the rule was accordingly discharged.

Thi* settled 'lie litigation fn* tin time hcing, and on Noi Iit :' >, !>>>.!> |trcmitictt were opened in Tyo*

Those hare been well n»c<l, ami will, jiu doubt, continue to bo weO patronised until the completion of the new building nuw En course of erection. The foundation-stone of tfcit permanent building WBS laid on March 8. 1990, on a site given by the Skinners1 Gompany< The boiKnOfl ifl being erected from the designs of Messrs Karalako&MortinoorbyMoBBre. J. McCorn & .Sony, mid is estimated to cost about Utf.oou. It is situated within the most thickly-populated part of the pariah At Che laying oi the stone, the Rev i fit Rose, m.a., the chairman of tin? roiimiixsioni'rM, Bflid that somebody hatl complained that

OI.RBKSNWBLL PTBLIO LIUItAHA*, FIBfiT I'l.ooir.

the number of \olumea oi' poetry taken out I'rom the Library was v iv Miuill, and raised a laugh by saying tliul, whoever hud made thai statement, if they would gu dial lire in Clerkcnwel) it is

Kububle they would have aome ol the poetrj cruahed out of em. The work is in charge of the energetic libra James D. Crown, and the organizing of the library lui> exceedingly well carried out,

TIaxmbs8nith. December, 1887.

It ia cheering to look back upon the attempt to get the :niopi-."i in tins parnsh ol 100,000, The" West London Observer "■ and other papers threw open their columns for b full discussion of the subject A.pjrovSstonal committee, with an axco)lenl h 1 1

fiivrvTaiy in Mi*. H P. l\dw-ir.U, was l..nm«il,:iml The whols jmrlRri

war mage a wars tl what iram going torwaid Man? iimuwunU

\

PI UI.IC UBHAH1KS \y I.'iN!»>\.

315

til leaflets were distributed, nud when the vote was taken the

in.ijr ■ritiy in favour o! I lie m 'lu'iiio u .:> inm v I 1.1,1 I «itr ah lar^c a*

the minority a opposition. During the time the question was [a

wrogrew refeirncrs were m;i.i. |-.i the hcuw iu Et&TQnseoiirl Park. Flammersniith, being suitable tor a library, ami, after an Interval of a little over two yours, this has become an accomplished fcu :t. Th. time between wu* absorbed in tbe acquinibion of tlie park by

the London County ('<iai.il jis u park for the jx'oph: for ever.

They then (jfovc the commissioners the use of the house as alibrary aud rendin#-room at a nominal rent, and on March If', 1800, tbe Library n n ideolan dopei by BfrJohn Lubbock, Ml'., who has bud o im.iY tiinr n ii i i m direction of late. The lino uUi mansion where the ili:);. ifl housed has (juite an interesting local history. Tho original munmon in the park seems to have dated book to about the fourteenth century. This is not I lie place to enter into il- riOiiattudee Sbioe then, bttt it lias fallen to a happy uud satis- factory use at last. In August, 1889, several rooms were opened reading-rooms, and have from the first been used by the public in a way to gratify the hearts of all who have taken an interest in

iir n..viaina:t. Bar San I Martinis the Ubrarian. The chairman

of the cornnriflsfoners is the Rev, J. it. Snowden, and among the rare Mr. R. P, Ld wards and Dr. (rood. Tho prospect* ol thi Unary are decidedly bright

SouTnwAiiii (Cumsr Umritcu). Fjumwaay, 1888k Tills Is one of the smallest parishes, mid the majority III favour of thr adoption was 234, In April of 1888 the commissioners were appointed, and on October i. 1889, the Bbrary and reading- room were opened al the Albert Institute, Charles Street, Black- Wart Road. The library rate, however, only produce*, about IMOOu .year, and this was ml her a Miiall amount to commence operations willi, seeing that premises had to be found and n slock of books Secured. Tlie eoimui**i(>ner* fouud some difficulty in getting suitable premises, the i-iuesiioLi of cost presenting a ureal obstacle. Ultimately the trustees of the Albert Institute, which is an institution intended for working men, offered a portion of the i>iiii<ViiL' and (he lower portion of the premises bos been obtained for the purposes of the library at a rental of £oO i year. There is a well-lighted reading-room, which is furnielied "with current literature, including the doily itnpers and principal magazines. kbotrt -.-">'> volumes >f varied literature conetHulfl the Dhrary. Tho issue is at present small.

('AMBBUWEI.L. .lAVHARV. 1889.

Tlie question was introduced here by tho offer oi Mr. Gcorjrc Lively, made in Marcl . 1888, ofo site and a new building in the Old Kent Road Thirteen years previously a vote was taken in 9 well, .1 i 1 the question was answered ir; the negative by a considerable majority. In January. 1S8S>, when the matter OMBe again forward! the j>"ii resulted So I L407 rato^avete YQtfa&tfft Q&fl proposal, and 4,357 against. In artditKi Km -\ v- v:\tov\yi w we

sie

rrnr.K unn mmi-.

question, the retcpoj 101 oted for the ad tj.tion of the Actt vert naked t<> state whether they favoured a mto [cried a? W. * -si., or Id., "i- <i in the v, with the result that 909 voted for the M. rate, 1,7*3 rortbs fcd, rate L4Sfov the ,m rate, and 9,g«7 tor too Id rata ho latter <;"ne outturn luring the opponents of the

proposal i»; ".-l." I'll-1 "South London rivv^ ' ,]],( it | siTvitrn

En bringing about the adoption <»i the Acts In i amherwell > It has done in other districts. Tn Novembpr, i -:*!■«, the advertlRprnwil

appeared in the usual ■iomv.vs lor i librarian. There wcro over

.**»() applications, and among th>'m one from a member of die Camlierwell Vestrjr. Some of the t»'*t known ami moat experienced librarians in tin* count?} responded to the adverttao- merit, and out uf then the commissionere sent for fourteen. After the intervlewe had token place the company were regaled with ten while the cominJsBioncra were.it wut thought, uioking their riinii-r, in due course the company were politely informed thai a gentleman had l»een appointed. The choice bad fallen on one of their own number, a veetry- num. whose name appears as a member of the vestry in toe report of the prooeeain&a of that body at their meeting on January 22, 1890, several weeks after bo had received the appointment. The library movement is young in London, and it is most essential that every library should begin its work well. In the organizing of n new Public Library anywhere, practical training and axperSenoe ore necessary, and due Ifl particularly true of the London libraries'

Lambeth and Camberwcll have combined in the working of the Miiiet Library, the gift of Mr. W. Minor, wliuh st.cidn on the coufincs of the two parishes. An agreement has been entered into between the coiuniieerionerfi of 'ho two parlehee, the chief features of which agreement ore that the library ia to be used by the ratepayers of both the parishes of CamberweU and Lambeth, and that it is to be under the control of a joint committee, hall' to be sleeted I j the oommUsionera of Lambeth} and the other half by the commissioners of Camberwell. A separate hanking account is to |>e kept in the name ot the eommittee. Mr. Courtney is the librarian.

At the time al writing1, this library, the Camborwell aen i:lnji\ n old Ken. Itoad aud the library at Myall's Field*, :nv in course of erection Tempi miry rooms have been take High Street, Peelchara atr. Foskctt is the chlel librarian,

STftEATHAM. PECBMDKtt, 1689.

London parishes are very much like the scotch burgh*. K a

id ntfi'v is made toward* liui'din^' ;uid ln»r.);s, Iheiv u un

Iculty about adopting Uie Acts, Mr. Henry late, of Liver] I

Streatham, who has bees one of the princerj givers to Public Library aud other purposes, offered to erect, al aoonl ol £6,000 i butidwgfora Public Library, and on tl i era being;

yy/ifthrr (Jiry won- willing to incur l\\e w*\ o\ UWduWUttUtM

PI B1 1 I.IBH MiUBS I < U 0TH0H

317

windy asid "ye*" wii'i alacritj— thai i*, !\v two ti> one, Mr. Tote Kresat tin- [«i|. .a sin- a i no < ^mmon, and Ms handsomo residence Command* :. line riew ol the Surrey hills, even as far no Epeora Downs. He ie rich andbenevoka^anddititribateBhisbanefaG^ianB

with wi-i'l-'in. tnd in the m***t wnistciitntion* muuncr. The inM

that a rii h Londoner thinks «>f is to make a toncfoction in

In', ufoti i o to tin.- public. Mr. 'I'll-- In surrounded at Strv&thmii

by merchant princes who have n good deal to loam from the eea 6 1

od - ' ''- Me p lUanttu1 >py of then' popular QSJgBtbOUg. VOKJ

Mr. Toto raado It a condition ->i hje gift that the Acts .In i,I 1 bo adopted for mm n ten one e.

The now hhniry 1ms been commenced. The style of the building rt t'ioek, and the whole ot the facing u to he Portland hi mil', the most prominent feature being a large cupola (covered v.fl. soppor and supported on an arcade) over the main entrance. The Soon of till the public rooms are to be of wood '■locks. and the walls planter 6fl sod deeorated. end the coved ceilings In fibrous plaster. The lYmtmctnrs tor the building and nttlngfl are

Ueurs, Hiirgt. & Hill, and th >st (excluslv site) will in*

abort tiflSS,

U'lnifi ii u-ix. DBOUCBHHj I 9SB

Well done, Wbitccrtapell A short, earnest ud splendid agita- tion, followed bj success as distinol as ii was eneoitablo to all concerned. 'Pie totes h Pai »ur were 8,558, and the votes againsl

wtrii.- 't-'i'. Tin l!»-v. s. A. Beraetfc, B. A,, ono of the wannest sad raait deroted friends the people ever bad anywhere) ticked the public for £<5,000 toward* the formation of the library. pr< \iding 1 1 u- Acta were adopted There viwa jyooxl response, and tin-. doubt, helped the movement most materially. The main strength, however, came from n system ifcic onDvass ol the greater portion of the parish. Thte was dona before the Noting papers had been distributed, and ngain during the dny on which they wore iictiiilly in the houses of the voters. Nearly u hundred men and

i on were working hard on that day to eeoure n Bntisfnetory

|p«ll,:iiid :l ua> greatly ovsiny to il i !i ■■ - .■ vohml try

workers that the jn.il was*., biry. Hi*.- elfeeN i.f -\>tematW and vigorous eauvass were never better illustrated in the entire

I history of the movement than in Whiteehapslj and to offfuninlnff this work Toynbee Elall rendered :i valuable servf ce roe little parnphle! specialty addressed t - . working men hy Mr. s. Hales, thoubmrios "i the Toynbes Students' Library, pc4nt£na out the apodal arihty of those Institutions t<> working men contributed, no doubt, to the encouraging result of the poll. There ire bo many misconception* about Public Libraries thai a hnufte-to-honM canvass, where these Institutions are uuknown, and in u large parish j isvnv advisable i ►Wool lone can I* answered as advanced, and altojteUn i I lie plan tends 1 1 1 loar the six and to excite nubile Interest in a way which leads grcatfy to the mot ess of the bora j i he i once established. The commissioners were Immediately appomte I, and hare bei u uble to report ptogcea«. \\ a a \\>

31*

rt'BUO LIUBAniK--

to commend the notion oi the Whitochapcd Veatay, some time

fTior to the poll a sjii'i-.tiiiin It tee of tlif vestry li:ul Iwmmi formed cr the purpose of inqoMng and reporting upon the adoption <»i the Acts in the parish. \eting :is :t l*>dy the vest ry h:nl rendered every facility, and if the vestries oi n<> forty-seven purishes Bti i to enrol will follow the DhUl Of the WWtechapel Vestry W8 $haU sfion see London with ft network of Pnhlfc Libraries. Plans are being decided upon tor* building In the High Street Tin- Rer. Dun ftrentorex, B.D. rloar of St. Paul's, Dock Street, ;i memb r of the Wrdteehapel District Board of Works, has offer ed to the Library Commissioners hiaci>Uection of relics, fossils, curios, works uf art, &c.j if it £■ intended i«» have in connection with the lihrarj a luusemn or art class. He hue been collecting Ms mnaeuro rot lifty years, und his exhibits would make a good beginning.

Storu XiiwiMJToy. Fburoajiy, 1*!X>,

This was die first parish to London wnich adopted the Ann in and b.v fcbc Marnier in which tin: [Jiupusul v.a* taken up and carried through did itself infinite credit. The statutory mei was largely attended, ami in every way was representative m .ill classes sod sections oi the local coxninunibyi Only a few hands were held m> against the proposal thai fcbe Acts be

adopted, Uld DO pell vn« demanded. The Rev. ,1. f'art:rirl lLubinAon ami others rendered excellent ncmce in preparing the way r«.»r the movement, r.mj'.ii; to j head, The commissioners ! wer< Mr. Joseph Beck, L.CCL Mr. J. 0. Collins. BIr. William Eve, .Mr. rhomos Greenwood, Mr. J. J. ftttnte, Sir E,

A. EgagG. Mr. John Bamson, Mr. Matthew Shaw, and the Rot.

Prebendary Shelford, rector, who was olectcd chairmen. Theac are all keen]} in boucn with the purpose and usee of b Public

Library. The eonamisdoneri are in the early stages of ouatng plana, bn1 win be able to render on account of . ii'\- raTdsl i[> when the Ume- comes.

The GtmaoXUaL Pcblic Library. The handsome and well-furnished reading,-iiN>in of the Guildhall Librarj Ifl »i hive of readers and students Erom the time ii is opened in Hie nipnniiLr iinl-il ft p.m., the hour Of rlnslnjr. The total Dumber >■ relumes in now about 70,000, am I as <i reference library 1ft stands in London second to the British Museum, All libraries hare a history from the (act tint they are the %n » h "i

('ears, and never ceiwe to grow ; bat the history of sonae Libraries s esceptionalry interesting', and that is the case « Ub library, Xh< first mention of << 11 trary al the Chaildhall « is con- tained in the records of the Corporation ►! Ihi year 1436, w ten

ihc ni:r.i.i_-i.' in <>t Kieiiard v7hitttagton*s library and the

bo tding erected for it waa placed in the hands of the executors oi William Bury. Whittington's executor, John Carpenter, moc clerk, '■»il foondei oi the >1 London School, st/ppnrffti tin- *ii -r ii i ■, and i<. mi lihrari t i it, the

books to tx: cfaainod u ttic library, ^ nna^Vj wA ft '•

PUBLIC MBRAIIIBR IS E^KBOtf.

310

collection ri.'mLLtiift, iuv, according to SUiw, iii tho reign of Edward VLt the iVotector Somerset took away the book* with a

?romise to restore them shortly, but they wore never returned. his act Of rnparjty pn-ihnhly happened m 1669. VI ;i volume or i v. ta s catalogue it Known be preserved, but there is yet room for hope that sonic may i>»* discovered in the MS. stores of some other library. from [660 i" 183J do steps were taken to re- i.hsh She Ubiety. Bui to tne latter year Uie Court of CcHiimon i louHOil unanimously referred it t«* a npoeial committee to consider a* to providing a library, and tho rooms oi Hip Irish Society were adapted with : tin object, 6500 wns voted for the outfit, and £200 annually for the maintenance. En L6S8 il 8 library was opened* with Loo^ works in 1,700 volumes In 1840 ii became necessary

to make extensive addition* to Ihc premises In 1855 a meeting

wns convened at. the Mansion House, the Lord Mayor presiding, but the proposition to establish a Public Library wan rejected by the citizens. In !--■"' ', Imwi-vi-r, l-nj tiln'jrv was thrown Open to

readers by ticket, and members of the Corporation wen-, permitted

to borrow books tur home reading. In the year 1*0}) the Common Council carried a. motion for the erection or a new library .-mil museum, at a- COSt of t'2'»,OfK), and iu 1872 the new building wae publicly opened. In the old library not morn than twenty renders could be accommodated at a time. The new building will accommodate L 60 readers. The number of readers *1 once rose from l-MJlfl iu 1888 to 173,660 in 1874, the first complete year nf (lie new library. At the present time the number of Yti I op

to the roxloui doparta bee some 100/300 a year. All

th.it is required lor the privilege of using the library the signing of a book on entering atr. Charles Welch is Ens obiei

li'M'ii'um, and hut-. Iwon on the staff of the library mil- 1- ;i, graduating through the various stages until he ha* reached thfl highest post of all. The one pressing need in tho city is tor a lending library, a more commodious general Fea4inff*ronm. nnd better qnarteni for the museum. There is an especial want of a

1 boys' reading-room, and Mr. Welch and nil «tatt" would be glad to see such a room established, Ths anniber of clarion, office and warahouse boys who would make use of a lending library, wore one established, is legion. Is there no city man of wealth who will tat £36,000 to £60,000 BeoUM fame nnd immortality by ottering to hnild pre mines for these Sections Of the (liiilithiiii work? ii the street* ol the sacred square mile are not paved with gold, there arc ur least a large number of men WTifl to bnmneas premise* along those streets have deeply lined their pockct.H with gold, to whom such a sum as Ilia! nai icd would be but trivial. A special Act could aaefly be obtained Ear the Clter, and a farthing rale for the year wotdd provide Income enough foi maintenance, The Paibkt Office Ljbbajiy. ;

ting of about 100,000 \olame*,\t\\.Ve"V#««M«CTk>. Office buildings, Southampton Building, * A.av\*, ^ *■- -i

00

HTBLXC IJBKABIT^.

n<i 'i- ii fn to h'- I- i'-i:«-. •••■<:,•, (. , th< bettei ipprocMed Ibe : i infined exctaftivoly Ii

BnglM) ainHiM ••■:■■! en! !■■ ..'.i". r Lntcdwrfch patent*, hut there

WOtOnc ili"» ■■tui'J" "i vwIuiiki deahn# with crcry departni' I

\> n< i I Hi'-1 HIiimtv i* strong i

cmii'I vulniiii'i <■! ill'" l'-:irn<-<l i'H-lctie TOigTU

n': l!v :i !llil*.ri'Vi I tool uw:i\ iiIh! SpCCiltl litcrOt'.

ii h ii grant boon to the public. A further eoetuju ol thfl work "i thii useful library la the providing of a large selection of trade ond gIb&i Journal ol English, Unorican, and Continental Soother! brarj in England, except the Britwh Museum, tin* »o ffood i collection oi tli"^- uvlinical publications, and < ■in-.. Si i .i«' | o 'i "in i»y :i very large number of person i ii. :n;i i. imii or too library \b divided Into eight alcoves, as

ogemcnl "i the books in claases In these alcoves \h cx«vll«*nt.

m the mMdlfi of tha al sen <• 18 n table far the use .. r m [or . with

pem* and Ink. There areaJeon i-onsfdei'aUe number ol smaller

roama. Tin* readoi help* hhnaclfto ili>- book*, tnkiny rin>m down

.i' \iiii,.iii<l retaining them lo their place* when he htm done with

them. Tbl&ifl the kUftralfan plan loi reference libraries, and bo

Earna be Patent Office Lfbraxy fo concerned Ifeanpeara to work

well. 1 1 ■« Iflfl (|'v i rotkintaincd north From the onormoue revenne

ol the i' n ' ifteei and for the purohaflt i i u Teal publications

there ht a email annual grant from Parliament, But in add it ion to

debited to the Stationery Office which

\ belong to bnii librtw. The Patentfl Department ii one

i which Hit UntMi |uiMif know little W far aa BppUei to

ITio annual statement of [taocoouatt fe not seen few

wunj outidde those Lnamodtatohf interested. The hii.u-, and

mi ire nothing more than »'"'i reasonably be expected ol

« iih in.- targe Muds at their disposal The mum-,

ipen n 'in 10 it to to p.nx The attendant en moat

ear cw ee,000 people need the I braxi

about •'» haj '-"' ilaltlng it in the evening.

M"\ BBCKNT8 i\ PEOGRE8S. Daprvonn. Deptfunl refused to wlopt tht Lota la 1880; but the poll was by

Ih'ii w,*i> new. Al'uiit rwi-i

i to the

Kell w ' i1 pi mm.., in a i.-v

I

'■■ pariah, for the

art not nc« Ii large town* and, by antvenu

. ug>wi i u •« ,:-v ,;■(!,, a iKi^ribouriotf parish, wew

«r\-.| then , four

n.aiKl thcreeu HiiMrmpr '"i^^wit.liiilr. iv^ncl

r-rniiU i.iuitAiinv> in r.ONonrv.

that the people of Wandsworth know In v, toappreci ate a library P And are Mi«- pCOple of Oeptfnrd mo vci> tiillt-ivul >' We rln-ni'uiv appeal to you to record your vote in favour, so that we ma y realize the name advantage." The poll was against the adoption ; but, as the question now stands on a much higher level than was the case in 1886, Dcptford, it ffl hoped, will try n^niu, The move- ment ha6 many earnest friends in the neighbourhood.

Hamiweai>, The question is earning forward in this largo parish, and the vote wfll be t:iki?n r.'i'y shortly. There are over fjOOO ratepayers, Many earnest Ertenda of the movement reside In the riiatviot, end

it la to be hoped that these will Bet about educating the lOCOJ public upon The subject before the vore is taken.

Hoi.no hn. The political club* QD both isides have introduced the *ubject, and are tftking steps for bringing it to the front. It is to be hoped that in every way the political element will be kept out. The fact cannot bo too prominently kept in view that in this question neither polities HOT 0M6ds are known. Holbom means to havo ita Public Library.

Ipi.ingtok. Islington, with DTOr a million and B half population, has mndo Jfvcrnl attempts to earrj the Act*, luil ha* not yet Nuccfloded. The last movement was in April. 1667. Outol 88,006 r.depjyei-s who were called upon to exprex* :m i»pn ion, -".:,.'l- only voted. Of the*r, 10,152 voted fur the adoptiou of the Acts, and (5,776 against it. Those agamat did not Conn uite-half of the total uumlter of ptraotis with a vote, being really i\O50 less thun a moiety of the ratepayers Thus, while the advocates of the Hbrary had the satisuwtion oi knowing that their opponenlB did nut number a majority of the ratepayers, they had to Lament that only 10,162 of those who aro certainly not against them, and arc presumably their friends, took the trouble to record a vote. It cannot be denied that much of fcbSe apathy was due to the fact that very little effort was made to enlighten the ratepayers 00 the subject at iaane. To carry n measure such Bfl 0 Public Library requires Bomething mure than the more pr08< ntatlon of Q rOqtUai-

i r >:i to the ororeeew. Xhete should have bean an active oaavana,

I'in.'i there was not, and those who had taken an interest in fin* matter saw at'torwurds tho mistake which had booamada. The

aueatioa in again cnung forward Ofld there 18 OVnty probability i:.t when iii. bason are again published there will baa happy Mir::igu I'ltwoen tin* vast pariah and the Public J.ibrary movo-

i-lmgiMii i^ maJdngap its mind thai it will not bfl left hind in toll book race.

Lbu. In February, 18Q0>tfae ijtweticn woe introduced ia the vestry 1 1 la pariah. Tlio ratable value i.i not large, but would he enough.

3*J

ITllUC LIIiBAftlBS.

forpresont purports, Some earnest friemlu arc gathering together, and noon there will bfl nn efTort to carry the Ari Lkwisham. The iimi!<T \e again ooniing ite&dfh forward In Lcwisham.

i ri h li:i.. u ^cmkI ratable value, whi.-h will enable them t.

plant isq utrnl library and do something for the outlying pari* he*. A committee Iiuk been formed at the time of writing, ■nd Lcwiftham will soon bo added to the lint. Nbwingioit. a poU wan taken in February, 1888, with the result that a majority of 713 were againxt the adoption. Over one-third abstained from voting— flu result, it (k to bo feared, of it little undue haste in bringing thn matter tn an Easuej and an serious afeep h^lng taken t.o ediica.tr the people upon the subject, it; agnin, Xewingtnn, and next lime with :i fatter result. The one i feature about the movement was that the majority en" the member* were in favour of the movement.

St. Gkouoes, fUxovnn SQUABS.

On acveral occasions during the latter part of 1888 and I

the question lias been discussed in the vestry, but it was then

thought th.it the- time VM not opportune. In the early part of

1890 the subject waa again mentioned, and soon there is even

prospect that one of the wealthiest partaker* i:i all Luiidon will

settie t):o question in i.isinii of the adoption. An influential meeting was held in May. 1890, for rite promotion of the menfri

E I . PaN( JtAfl.

Xenr tin- large tiM-miiii of Buaton and Bti Paocras a huge notice board oaed to announce Ihe fact that a larye piece <•( /mund in rin Enaton Road was the site for a PaWic Library. >.< h .

however, the oolite luw been withdrawn, aud the lite uaed forothei purposes. There waa Founded in 1X77 a small library in tfae Camden Hull within the pariah, and this has been Mip-

Crtcd from that time by voluntary contributions. The pariah 3 a population of close upon A quarto? of ft million, When the movement waa in progress in 1887-t- a strong committee worked 1 igOTCUfily to educate the people hy mcanB of ward meet inn* nnd a distribution of litem ture. The eohemo wae for two central libraries bo he established, with n number of smaller branches. Libera! BObSOriptiOM were promised, and pood work waa done, bttl St. runeraa naa not yet adopted the Acta. The old committee orroa an excellent nuctaru for again renewing the campaign, and it is to be hoped that ttdawtl] beat an early date si Paaorae cannot afford be left i>etiin<l in this movement. The oheme for large Potytoohnice to be established in varioui i London has retarded the Public Library movement in St ('Micros, (tut the one vital difference betwuiMi tin* prno'K.wj l-'oly'oehnies ij aw ii.. ■;. ire rounded and Public libraries is, that :in« : are DSdai popular control, and the former nre not. A halfpenny

I'l ii. ir i. ii IU1MJW l> I.ONHON.

323

rait- in St. l'amius will solu- tin- ilifBcultv in a manner that the echniCH will iiput able toaceompbsh.

TOPLAB.

The proposal is corning forward here, and there is ev.ry

froMjH'.-i oJ .success. Meetings '"v '< '*' held in tlio middle W Ma

Woolwich and Pi.tnusTnAn.

The*e two adjoining parishes have several times discussed the question, and in April, 1**7, took the vote. In Woolwich 4*779 papers were delivered, and of these 2,310 voted against the Acts,

:onl K:V. in r;ivniir of lln adoption. ['himsfead wa.s almost as

emphatic In Its "No/* and tins is largely to be Attributed Do the

landlords threatening if the poll was carried fib raise the rente of their tenanta This is another of theevils of landlords paying the rates instead of the tenant, in May, J £90, a further attempt was made to cany the adoption ul' the Acta, The majority against the proposal was 5flfl. More requiros bo be dune tu educate the local public upuii the question.

The following are outside the metropolitan area;

ObBHWICS, M Alien, IKttO.

The heft r educator Of public opinion on Thisi'jneAtTon Is to hove one or more Public Libraries in the near neighnonrhood an objeet- lemoru. This was the rase at Ohtawick, end on March to, 1*90, a public meethag of the ratepayers win lieW at the Vestry Hnll, Turnhain Qreen, in order tc determine whether the Act* should be adopted for the urban sanitary district of Chiewick, Tlie chairman of the Loral Board mended over jl large attendance, I >i . I <urdun Hogg proposed, and Alderman 13. Hardy seconded, a motion in favour of the adoption of the Ad*, which, on being put the meeting wa* carried, only live voting against it. One of atientv demanded a poll, which ft is estimated will coat The poll took place one week afterwards, with a result of six to one in favour. The poll waa not a large one.

Oaoxoozf.

At the end of 188fi a poll wafl token, and tho majority against was seventy-three. This was sufficient reason why a further :;tt.-mpt should have been made in fiforeml or, 11^8. The litiga- tion whieh ensued, respecting compound houn-lndilyra baring permitted Bo vote, has been retorred to in another chapter. \M necessarily caused some delay, and it was unfortunate that following this, there should have been a farther delay, owing to the Qlnen and anbeequent deatk oi Mr. Sail, che librarian Now, heweWi matters aw ussnnring something like form, and the building was opened without ceremony on March 31,1660. The movement v Hw adaption of tin* Arts was well and spiritedly eondnetad. The leaden wore well aided bj the chut VwaX

p.'IK

papa

394

.i\niKs

Eauto The library here is now housed in now quartore, On December

Ifi, 188h tho Prince ni \\ oloi openod the now public bufldingi

nln.'li tne library forms part. The library, in ttit- east wing, in approuched by a single doorway similar to the double doofw i ii;. ma i> entrance. On the around door are the reference library, »K rc. by 291 ft, ; the lending: deportment, 39 ft. by 28 ft. ; and at thfl north end the reading-room. 31' ft. by i'<5 It. Tho whole of the area covered by these departments is ]ialf-h:i*emnnt*ij With two large class-room* Mr tin.* science and art department, the eeutre . devoted to the library, with a. lilt to the lending; aepartmenl

Tor some five or siv yeirw the work had been miried en in

premises boob 'omul in be inadequate to its requirement* 1 1 u number nf volumes Is 6,939 in the lending department, and UK) for reference. The turnover tor (lie year was 113,387 volumes, giving n daily average of MS volume* for the 247 days on « Ejie l.brary was open. The attendance .i the reading-room in Ehc old pran&ee averaged 100 per day Now, in the better roome, it is (joo. which to a stffnlncanl increase. Mi. TTioinas Bonner ia the librarian, und hu& just received it well-merited increase Jn his salary.

ItlClIHOM*.

This library trae founded to 1*81, and baa done and hi doing a capital wui\i. At tlic il.itr of the last report there were 10,030 volumes, and these had bees Uwued in the twelve montha 106,966 times, and yet out of this large turnover not a volume waa lost. An excellent feature ol thfl work i* »>,*1IH volume* in the reference section, welch, for s small library, ia rcry creditable- the amount derived from fines is over 1*70 n pear. The rate only produ moderate income, and about seventy persons pay u shilling monthly 3ub9oripiion,aplan which Mr. frank Pacy, the librarian, has organised

bTHATPoan.

Stratford, nr West Ham, thought that it had settled he mieatton i»y Hbatutory meeting lit I«ft7 ; hut there was, it In stated some Raw in the railing- of the meeting, and »u an rurntwl effort Is now being made < * « place bheiinestloD on a firmer Footing than wae the case three yooraago, Trie Ratepayers' Association hera\ .!> in manj i ther London ourlshee, is doing n most useful woHi ta educating the public mind upon the cruetstum. Kltcrc

appearance that Mm ■■■■.-. in assured,

TvflCh K.N 11A.M.

Twickenham being; the place - E Alexander Pope the committee of the Public library, und the librarian, Mr. Afaynard, havi t tanda taolleh a Pope Library, In I8& iiin.-woaa

Pope Commemoration Festival, and thin tod to providing

funds for thifl purpose, 'the hwiml-- number »f vol-une* lent to

borrower from the lending deportment was tw.-ntv-Movoi Vtuloh ffiw* a book u fortnight to each ticket holder.

hLUUi; UIHLA1UKS IN LONDON.

W IMBLRDON.

I'n m (lie iwrnurl nniii.il repniT ir U evident thai when Mr John Lubbock prophesied jit the opening eeremony, about two yeftffi ago, that he was certain the Wirablcdoniflns were thirsting for such ;ui Institution, ii" wns not far wrong. The total number of visits of readers has been l44/)99, a daily average of 4(U. The number of magazinee, periodicals, ami newspaper* hijppiied in Uie

reiiiliiix'-iouni is 184, and Hit- total number >T TOnUnea in the cdci library [a 1,502. The number ui" burrow eis' ticket-* issued in connection wtth the Lending library was '2.U7, an i or the rear of 304, and the total issue oi books or

W_asM/)!Kl, .nUU.v ■an.-u-e pf $M SI] X, EL R&bUvt fc

DHSCOOESBFUL ATTEMPTS,

Actov. In March and April, 1887, an attti i|»t wan mode, to CftTTJ fchfl

The poll was harried forward, and onwlstuj so. The i»<ll 'in April of the year named showed a decided majority against the Acts. One of the opponents i ftde much of 0 ---'■-- i "f his own, that Acton would find a good soup kitchen a /r ■.! .. r attraction than a Public Library Another speaker n>1 public meeting for the discussion of the question made much of thofaot that between lB59*ad L881 is Manchester the oxpendi- ture of the libraries bad grown from i"l,3GfJ to 1*10,000. Tin- ning was manifestly unfair. In the Bret instance it was ctnlj )i pi iiny rate in 1852 and 1881, and instead of having at tin Bml date one library there wore in 1881 a verjmucfa larger cuffiher, Evidently more light on tho question required at Acton, and the three years which have intervened »inee the last attempt xiKc.iid ;ni ka Eha nuestloa again ripe.

TOTI'BWHAM.

Iln* ijucAtiou beguu to be seriously diseuwed here In October, 1699. Early in Decemijer of Lbs soma yew a statutory nice wa* called. The show of hands was nT favour, but on "a poll the Question was lost, Tottenham greatly needs a Public Lib ' !'! reading-rooms, and will* before very long, be &U10D£ the places possessing these institutiuus.

:

Tns Chajh i v OoMamWro'OTBa ahi> Piblio IjHbakijss.

A Her some yeare of careful consideration the Chnrity Com-

nUseJonera published tho draft of their scheme for tho appueal 1 1

and management of the tnn<U and property of the City it London

Parochial Charities. This scheme first o&tne before tho public ba

September, 18*1', and must have t-een invatly li ing to aU

whi have taken vt\ active mteresl m the VuAO.v V&sceargxfi

t i:;/,:vj. not a single rate<eunpar\Qd utorcr^ w ^rnsftawatoj^ o be bonded or hWpod out of iV ml fcon&a «& ©a* WW* -'■

326

PL3LIC IJHKAiill-,s,

til l!:. ' ' ■t:!ihii>;.h:i:t-i>. Mt . i - i '_•. 1 iU> an' .1 (wvermuent *1«- l»artmeuL engaged in suh:ii»i»leriog public money, they have aid only En charitable institution*, and prefer to pauperise, SO Ear Be book* are e.xieei'ued. rather than to stimulate self- ln [Jp. The whole scheme of the Commissioners displays pro- I. and diotrttit of the principle of popular control, and in thin there seeius to lie the whole key of the situation. It is intpoeeible bo so minutely into the wbotc details of their plan, cmbi-ucluir Bj it does (inancial aid to City churches where tl 10 congregation usually reaches four and a small boy. A sum of £80,000 ia to go in founding "Free" Libraries in connection with the c-h.-iriti--^ (."'longing to St. Botolph, Bi.shopbL.-o.to, and St Q U Cripplogato. Tho central body appointed by the Beolosiastioai Commissioners and other nominee: are to pay out of the income of tho central or general fund an annual payment bo tho Bishopsgate "l-'rce" Library of CSjOOO; to specified rolytechnioa, £19,eWj to other specified institutions and evening dosses, £700; and to other Polytechnics or institutions, £5.000. A bidder scheme, or more Impracticable way of helping Public Libraries, was never launched. Ihe OommiBsionew waan their hands of oven thing which cannot be controlled from Whitehall. Surely the day has passed wliun the people need to have their honks and ncwstiapeiN placed before them by means of charity. Fifty yean ago each n plan would have done g»od; hut now, when people havu luaraed nowwlselj riir aggregate of the penny in the ]>nun(l can he .spent In well- planned and weH-flfled buildings, of which Micy and their farnilfM ran make the fullest uae, .mil m which they contribute their quota towards maintenance, they have ceased to cure rorthetnstftm i

which kindly chnrity provide** Hie misappropriation Of Old

educational endowmente u a crying Hluunotoue asa nation. The evils and abuser- which mm surround these old endowments arc traceable to the absence of popular control by the elected repre- sentatives of the people. The perpetuation of such a rotten system by ^l Government, depart&uuu oughl aereg to nave been contem- plated. When these proposed libraries reach the brick-aud- mortar stage, and get in actual working order, it will serve as n most useful lesson of contrast with tho rate-supported libraries under popular conrro 1 . The charity ^tatnp will, unlc«> we ireatl^ misread the spirit and tendency of the age, paralyze the Or pplcgntc ana Biehopagatc Libraries.

Notes fok Commissioned^.

When tho commissioners are appointed one of tholr Brat di

will bfl that of selecting a soul. Designs cun readily ' btuined

from tome of the leading stationers. Si preeepl f »r the rate will he panted by the veetry oahsae it bean the official seal of 1 1 * - ooraimaaloDon. H is cnatozaarj to mop tfo wtal m o bos fastened hv two locks. The cliairman and one of tho miadonars baTa each one of the two keys of one lo Ic, and i ///'• reiuafofng connuiBiionere nave* v»v ot the other I iok Tw ''"'' oonBoquoatiy to 1 1 praojofc^rtMSa \m otan w avewse-

ITBLIC LIBRARIES IN LOM'ON.

327

One of the first steps of the commissioners should lie to divide themselves into nui>-eommittec-s, comprising ;> bcoi committee, a finance committee, and a building committee. Tin- trans- actions of these ^ulwommitteea have of course to l>o reported ml ratified by the whole body,

There has Ik'Oij a tendency in the rertmoiiie.s *>r luyinj: inunda- tion stones of Borne of the London Public hihi-aries, t< pred-de the well and truly laying ot the *t >r>.- hy a religion* aarvit p. Thia is very good, but when that service is exclusively ec'lesinstienl and that Of ft Efigfc Ohnreh character, including a choir to gfw the MSpanflOB, t would flOOTO that this is carrying the matter a little too tar. By all moans let there be a religious service, but m that case a Nonconformist minister should be asked to take ]>art in it. Tine Pttblie Library is not u branch of the Church, even Although thu rector of the palish may occupy the posit i'<n <t <'hairmau oi the i.-omrni«uoners. The library is supported by all classes, and for use ot nil classes, and" every attempt to give a creed or a cast to it* proceedings or work is a wrong committed against The movement. The question of opejitag temporary premises during the erection ii permanent building is one which uperhapH more auutefy Celt lAindon than in tin* provinces. Where there U ;i prosped of rftig a building erected and open wtthin twelve or eighteen months From the time the Arts arc- adopted, it certainly does not serin necessary to open temporary premises, so long of course as there is some place where the books enn be iimuiinlntod. ami Hie

work uf cataloguing and general preparation be in prugeeMi Temporary premises are rarefy ever satisfactory, and they

frequently prevent that invnttge and §clat which attach to it

mw andvpcciaUy erected tiuQaing. The furnituro, moreovtar, of temporary rooms it not often suited to the permanent structure)

and lacks freshness when the time comes for removal. The expense again absorbed In the maintenance of temporary premlsefl ii considerable, and the advantages to the public are not luiiiiiiensurate with the expense. If the local public see that thi commissioners ar< actrre m securing a site, and the building ti-;n!i j in ii 1:1 si- of erection, there in every inducement to po* thctr souls m patience and await the opening of a new building

with B growing int. rent. Temporary building have very often a contrary effect bo whetting the rcudiinf apj* 1 tos »»f the people. in some pariflhec the poetries bore 1 b wi 1 onsid&tablc obetoch - In tho way i>t the commissioners performing thedr work. With i'i to loans, the inquiry of the Local Government Board should beeuffieionl without it* being ncooasary to Am obtain the sanction i.i the vestrj for permission to borrow, The Brat granting 0] the precept for n < pate should make it unneow »rj to 1 pply t-yeiirly ur annualrv for the sanctiontaff of the rate, in theae two matters the vcatrlos, a* the Act- at present exist, nave too uucb powai These Mid tnanj other section* oi '■'•■ a*** *«^\ require readjusting when the District Cou&fitt -v \*ma»v

:•■:'-

PL-ULIO LlBllAltlBb

CUAi'TKR XIX.

PUBLIC LIBRARIES IN VILLAGES.

Hi: i i<~.«.'k needs of our ICnglish villages were never greater than at the present time Much has ^^-^ told of Late AbOUt the making of village life brighter and more totereatrng, En order that the people may lie induced to remain In the rural diBtriats,and so stem to some i the tide nf renniii;'/:iiinri which lias during pi«'ii»ii yean flowed h«i riqiiiiiy Into the towns. The whole snl j * * « * i lies closer to the roots of nur national well-being than is generally thought The parson and the nqalrc have, between them, done much to choke village life, and ttow existence til many rural districts i9, for the rank and file of humanity. ?SPy dull and uniuli'm*Ling. Human nature rebels against remaining in the vtcinitj oi boredom !ci!i.'ii ili.ii! i i I'u helped, and hence one of the reason* wh> no many of our country folk take the first chance of remov- ing into lowns, 11 it were not for the ever-extending nun bei of organizations, mi tuutociittion fin* the encouragement of vdlage life might bo started, and would accomplish good. Imt a few earnest men with a given object in Tiew and nothing to gain could in course of time «!<"> itv-c as u u< li good. The multiplication <>f U-oks and reading-roomii will, on all hands, be looked upon as among the focilifcicti which would help to moke village life brighter. This is a reading age, and yet out of all the hundreds and thouwindn ot English vTllagcB 1 ic number of those who have adopted the Public Libraries Arte could nrnmM i.

QOttntcd < in the tiuyoi'H of niiu tiand. M:tnv :uv til.rugglirig with village clubs and rcoding-roomB, but the saddest reeding oi reports whieh the prcsonl writer has had for years has boon the

annu h .1 dto oooounteoi some of those village reading

rooms, A laXM percentage >! tliesi- institutions s< -n\ tu

mature to lull and useful Ii to. Of village museums supported out oi the ratoi there is woroely one. And yet .t cannot be suidthat many villages would not welcome in their midst librarit u :itift museums as tree to them as their highways, an' supported in the same "'ay, if the step were practicable. The small <>t the penny rate for maintenance present- 1 <■■ in ur-

mountable barrier ut present, and (!)■' politician who will lalve tlio problem of how r.n at<i >y fiovemment giant villages to maintain totudoJpal hbrinlee and museums will rank wtob the ftwarts, Cobdena. nnd RiightM as a public benefactor.

while towns all over the country, and numerous inetropoU districts, have adopted the Libraries' Acts during the last few yei re, the villages are being left stranded high and drj on Um beaeh En this movement Cromuo rault of their own. Thcgroun- iag of two ot more villages togevAw. in], and

potmtbte hv hro small recent tafia ot y-.u'Wawuv^-avvvn^ ragets tttit tfiiih'uhv Noarly every rMVii';mutt.\\\\v»**-mv\A\u>fc\tw<ntari

01 Mi.ll* I I MtAHIKM l\ V): ..\ .1

1

h crippled fur want ol CJoranunexil aid. lluudieds of ullages arc absolute 1 j without any facilities for book borrowing, except from the libraries ol Sinnity whind*. ai-vi Mir buoki in th.-i- ai'c usually of 10 unsuitable a ohaXBCter for general reading that it would lie well it many of them were placed in ;i dark cupboard and charitably forgotten. Could not some of the thriving villages .1 tin- Nori horn and Midland Counties tako the lend in prov-diiur municipal libraries and reading-rooms, and show what can be done in villages by these rate-supported matitatfOBBf More than this i*<i00 to £3,000 would erect a building" for a library end BtOCk :l With books. A gift aui-h ftS thlB E0 BOOK ViUsgV on condition thaj the PaWia libraries' Acts arc adopted, would give a new leaeo of brighter life to that district, and perliajps in do better way could tho donor secure the greatest good oi tho

I number. Much hfll >'.■') done in rural districts in the supplying of books by workmen* clubs, but the extension ol tho franchise to counties: cannot fad to vastly extend tho rending of books in the count ry.

■Ad this lrn'l'ivi-M'd Ct i.l;iii.: SOU 00 '\ "■ !'li-l : .l.'tj n:r.'l\ ! .;.' :i I '.I Mir

Ubrarj. Much inrcresiing information is given in the Uncheasol Kut lands ■• Reading and Recreatioii I loom* ami 1'uhlu Uhraries," ami " Kncourngtn/x Exf> •<■ nrt - n I'ublic JahvariOK K< admg iml Recreation Rooms," :|s '" wiuu has been, and la still teing done in tin- providing of village libraries and re^llng»rooma How to make irv pleasant In the oonntpy i* a problem of tar greater Importance than ta apparent on the race of u. This drifting ;iw;iv Into tho neareal large It w i, or. worse still, the metropolis, to swell tit'* millions here of thecoma "i both sexes, to fr night with much 'h:ii is qo1 conducive to the best welfare of the aatfon it will be :' wrrj day for dear old England when bhc bonjelv rirtoea <»t iis people, the simplicity in methods of lmng and In personal uablte, beeonie weeieneu and made lean prominent by tin 'ii;ii iuuting influences of life in the large towns

'l'li<- need for the establishment of Publli Librarlea Ei rural districts is a vital one, and the memb - of Local Boards, 01 i fcher aatlK>riUea will confer a permanent beoefll on the district in which iin-i reside, if thai will discuss and bring to ;< snece rful issue this question. Lifo In the country baa Ins compensations as well as its drawbacks. Rents and i b are low, but while thin la an advantage to the residents, it present* BO ol^tacle, for the i rains of most tillages is ool by any mc«w large, so

that a penny :n the pound would not produce sufficient t< ->l ---K and maintain n library.

wini-.t brieke cannot be made without itsuw. libraries oaonoi

i. i ■-.<■( and supported without the wherewithal which every

Tho ratable value of an average-vized Kngtisn

village ox . the ndnsuuKtraooa <>: i LooaJ

'. .nun *_: :.fHMi to £5,000 The itnaltersum would W

from :' iioiiny »;i" iu.< . and the larger anacAuM SWft \ffle. 8a ,v.w^\v :ii be el once seen qpin this how Lmeoec&Ae tt wcjc&& Wi «» tush >'i tin- v-.m o. tarnishing and mum' i \3tat»X3«

330

irnue Linnxnncs.

In the majority of English villages the gross rates do not reach Sa.6d.ia the pound— another evWcnl advantage over town life,

considering thai 9 me towns hnve gross rateR reaching double (his

KI1MI

The rum I Voter earnestly desireA to know how things ON moving in the world. He is not the passive sheep, blindly following u pot-house demagogue, Home think Mm. Let him have books, newspapers, and magazines to Inform himself, and depend upon ir I'n'y will lie used, and used well Ca.pt. Verney MP., whose father sai on &he Public Libraries' Committee of Inquiry ill 184SWJ0, wrote a (short tune yyu to one of the London daily papers to point out that the Public Libraries' Acta were available to the smallest country villa fro. He added to his letter 1 1 ii.s significant sentence : "To nave £ s village o Public Library belonging to the people Lheruselw-n, and managed by do section,

but by duly elected representative's ir. in itself .111 education

usually frowned on by the squire, bu'. utterly abhorred by the 1 Arson" The truth is? a sad one, but it fa nevertheless fact Jn nil parte of ;hr country regret has been expressed that there seems so little prospect of mrel districts having fchcec peoples librnrlea placed in their midst, unci those who are most ritrcnu- ously opposed to it are the twi classes Jnat named. It ik im- i itblc not bo feel a fcmj^ <rf boitow that this fthonld have sab* rented, but it i.s d matter so serious thai it demands attention. Ah lonpf ah these two most influent ml men as 11 rule in the parisll not themselves resolutely against those rate-supported llbi what can the people do bu) quietly submit* lost :t should

Hornr diiTrrourr in llio iimioUjiI of OUStom given (0 :i local trades

man, 01 some other species »:' refined persecution with which village in (,:'M ti ■•- --■• 11 jo pecul iarly famQiar!'

Bat we have no hope for any wide extension in the number ol ininptiojiH of tho Pubua Libraries' Acts i:i the eiilagea, until then is some prospect ot a small grant from the State say from £10 to £36 n year, according to the needs and work done by the indi- vidual library. When our administrators have done was money m aaeiesfl Steves and reckless extravagance nil round, ane can give a few mere thousands for educational purposes, u 1 a wi may look forward to such d subsidiary grant to village lib established under the \'i. properly administered by the local mittioritii"j, and doing n useful work. A few pensions, rarerj ever earned the less; 8 tea elerbs working from nine to ftvi o'clock iiistcnd nf ten to four— and who knows how many holi- days: less national waste, and these few thousands would he randy Is the Exchequer Cor auoh a purpose an this. Oh! miphty John Bull, how long will you quietly suffer your substance to In1 traatedj and youi resources frittered away bj the vastarraj 1 offlcemongeTs, who thrive and fatten 1 1< the lalxmr of 1 in- po< The national patience irith extravagance in high plocos In slmplj aiuudag, Here is a sample of such expenditure, and it I oocceaui^ £0 preface it by statuig tiroi wViviwxcv Ctoveninii m poww-j the same rate nl ex\asmUtxsx^ a^** -v>

FFMJC I-mnATtlES TN VTLTjAGBe.

881

There may be promises of economy but it is more show th an airythina else, oe instanced hy the House ol Lords {rotting down Ha

expenditure last year by the dismissal ol one or two inm-Kei'vunts. The report of Sir >\ illiam Dunbar, tho Comptroller and Auditor- Uencral, upon the Navy Appropriation Accounts for 1886*86 eon- teina some surprixini: briorjuation els to the way in wiuch the Vote '1 Credit was spent. Tho Vote was granted on April *27, IS8& to pay tor the withdrawal of the British Imves !rom tin* Soudan, and to prepare for a war with Kussia, winch then Beamed immi- nent. The Vote whs [or eleven millions, three of them for the navy, and eight for the army. It is with the navy appropriation alone that Sir William Dunbar now deals. He remarks mm. contrary to rule, no estimate was framed when the Vote was granted ; and he expcexHOK tho opinion thai had there been any real, even imperfect, attempt to frame a scheme nf proposed expenditure, en Bn might not have been avoided, but the causes oi it would have been apparent, and the investigations oi a select committee rendered unnecessary The tendency. Mr W'rlliam Dim bar says, w:ik " in Consider the Voir nl" Credit ion much in rheliybt Ofa sum

placed at their disposal by Parttameni to meet anj expenditure

unprovided for in the ordinary VotCB. The expenditure out nf the Vote of Credit to aconfliderable extent represents, jn*rliaph un- avoidably, a dead loss to the public. Ships have I wen taken up at a groat coat and never Qaed.anc' lbs cable tor the Baltic, manu- factured ^i acoel of £118,000, never lof I the contractor*1 premleee, and waft resold i«.» libera fen 690,000.° This i* oojy quoted our of many examples which might lie given for the purpose of doing a little, if possible, to set thoughtful men mquiruig into these

i:i iltei.s.

But surely if thcOovenuueui can afford to spend such gigantic sums oa thia, there ia some hope that hv-and-bye the turn will COmc round for Public Libraries, and the tew thousands of pounds u year will not be wanting. We are spending, not without a certain grudging, five and half millions of money on the better education and culture of our people. IIow OflMCfl ( thai the great natioaal endowments for this purpose still remain bo largely in private or sectarian control ? Altogether the expenditure for i-'iiM utional purposea is about eleven ntilluona, and no villugc J.hrmy under the Aetfl gets a single penny of this sum, which [a BOt hy any means large lor the purpuHi"* hr which it is expend- -1.

Kequeel ih<j;ivi]«-'.-ilv Diad6 Gorsifn for village libraries, Tradc*-

men in towns, business men in cities, do something for tine v.llages

where you were born and reared! Arrange to supply certain

daily or weekly papers or magazines, or to give an annua! ni I ecrip-

rion. In n'spnrme to a letter in one of the rehgi one periodieaJs,

the author received nimierou* parcel* "I* blinks :ind ii ij:izines for

■■• hi varies, and these it has been his pleasure to distribute

ICCfl when they will be used and appreciated. More pnivels

mi nr purpose will he .irtvpt.tMe Sntno of the tivmt

sucoMMfnl men nf bnelnesa ol the oreasnft tag ^nsce Vwittt a»ft. received their edacatfon in country school*. tS\« <Wff^ ^n**

882

pi I i.i. I Mil' \ l: 1 t S,

the&e do ^<>:i:(<thmg in providing literature for the districts with which they were once associated ? Reference has been made to what is being done by the various

unions of ruechauicR' niKtitatOR 11 rli<> wr.y of y-illngp lending

libraries; but It i* hoped that something may he done Id the

large number of villages in the Southern, Midland and Eastern Counties, which have nol yet been touched by these unions. Whore U the generous man who will give 6,000 or 10,UU) volumes of Hit* wmivalent in value for the purpose?

AVin k fin-ri'x clubs have done much to bring pleasure Id to the somewhat didl and niouulunuus life in many an English village, li.l it is to lie fearad that some of these uIuLk* degena ate EnUl facl ions, and have not in any large number of instances accomplished the good reasonably expected of them. The ■jeoretol il ii> lit-.v in their irnspanslbilit v except toftcommi toe; whereas, if they were administered by the elected authorities of that district, .1 healthier existence could not fail to be ftuanantood Hn-m, They cannot) however, as workmen's clubs, & under tie rates, but as Public Librarie* bhcj could cons into this category. M.my of these clubs, again, wuiild form an ex- cellent nucleus En fcM coining "enfranchised " a* Public Libraries,

ttBed SB thflJT BOW STO l>>' their present nu'inhcr*, and

by euch n §Mp draw .1 longer eonetifcnoncy. Even >viui._ this chapter in being written a letter arrives from one of such vi.l tggj greatly needing its Iocs 1 Institute turned into a Public Library. It is illustrative of many similar Oasee, and ie cones ineotlv qt 'ii ..' writer says," PPe two not progressing, 'n 1 aotle w days only 3,000 inhabitants j nod wo ore protty much In the power, ol one man, Lord . who appears to take but little interest as to

' how hi« brethren Lire.' Jn Hie present state ol the district WO oannot see bow PobUe Libraries sen be applied to places oJ the BLh of ours, and it is the opinion ol the lord, the clergy, mn . Uu richer inhabitants that the poor are host ignorant. It may be

piiwihK* Ni milliner :i I'nhl I ,ibr:n*y with & WOrlcmOU's Olttb, but

say the rate produces about Cflo, this will ant pnj nil etpeuses f < »r

:i liiiililitiL'. ilr\(i-.! to that purpose, hut, it' the [U'oepod Ol I workmen'1; club be Mlded bo 11 enough might be got log

tor rent, Bra light*, and Dttendm Only two waya scran to

m «•. first, as you tuggM in your booh thai the Go vernrcanl (or CounQ C(uni;-ib should hulisidi/.c >mnI1 towns, or thai a large rate be allowed iti towns with under fi,(KX> inhiiintaiits."

Here is another letter from a village in the North o1 England s—

"Citizens in large towns may well feel proud ol their privileges at

this winter season of the your, One of theuioM ehnnning places Iu

the country district .u summer is our village. Its lieauties taonol

be tuld for iiiuitimdr, but the reverse is the order of things i"

winter. We ore ultnosl buried oUre in darkness und wHtai

flaanieafci Here v< have no li^lii ol any kind, uu art gallery, ne

I'u ■iu Library, no lecture rooms, tw duvjYw tv&U,no entertain a

unfiling wherewith to upend t\w lung c«c i ■* ttw

monotony of the situation. Our eox» kbA •v.xnvW-v*- vra v-'w .

ri'BUr UZRAXfEB vt ruu,st».

so

sjjcnd their time as test they nay. N >rimhs*auriiaaj wr arr «4y thirteen mile* from a hinnJy exalted city, aid vlut»c tin- great ■iicnaon cirihwr eut* in twain, still »f an? vet whhuu: the other derel ree*. HoadVeds nf tripper* Iwicr arvand ua

in mimraer, hut turn aide in the bleak day* of winter, and Umo wo begin to feel as tboojgh we had no link ia the social ehain, and no share ia the great Inman heart of cintization. Oar sires tjOTfl endured this state *f t bias?* for aearly half a century, vhUst the world has been naornas; on ; bat surely we, their woo*, caonot Kpeotod in these days of adranccd thonjrht and life to lire <ra Uidi i the same rifime. Where in oar lord of the manor, so odvoi idlavrefornaacMtotlstraocUlsvl^aetof Sarerybe

will corn*? to the resene, and make aooac pronsioa foe the rs*rnlra- ments of the diBtriet whieh he owna for miles round! Eren jk.hh' -.-an: to reap in worn* ra<-a«r* the mtoUectoaJ and

[ advantage* which fediow tn the crate of this ninetaenih century.' The desire to share tn the "octal and intaUavtoal t'lvantages of the century is perfectly natural. If a nUegc should possess "ansae snub*, Lngtormi Mfhv*."»*ttlthur u so kkelyto make him speak and open the road to glory a* a rtitage horary.

The grouping of village* together for labile 1 J henry | aetata should be practleanle. Two or more sacn district* acting tcsrethrr, And pacing lac nmc hste,oould each have fcn thetrmfftaa bleary :iiirl peadfng-roaro, -lit- Ifhrarj nran certain nigrstanf the w nek, and the news-room :ng— the wh<i!e under the rhnrge of one

librarian « utter plan, which has not >*i nana

rirrird Into effect ;in> w 'mtv. (<<r 1 affiliate tlnriiiselvea

io the nenrenl hires ' Library, by levytna;

: lie penny rate ana drawing Ihrlr auppfir* >< its the parent lihi .mil these distributed from some centra] depot. It would m

?'le bj thii rrjcuns to hare a constant change of books ia In* Dutij Lag dfatriata. Beiereacfl baa been made dec ucsstLlnna

Mclboui ■in.- send* out tta Health ol knowledge and psananre I

{hbourhood; and mere seeme no reason why t hi Publii Ubrnries iAtfaeprandr^tnwiiBnf Kn*rlaiKlsh";M

ool tend out their monthly i heeta --i I h mall towns and

rulajro* thcrn, to be issued and looked after by the sehoolmnater orMifiesueh responsible person the -ehoolhoiiBc bcin# twed at . ton, oft n rcadinjr-roorn, and the wholi carnml on nl i vory small coet, snob as might ho mot by small rots Prom the rates.

In Hi Northern Countioi where tbo co-operative morement hai

akon men deep root, n large number od thoaa socMiM hart

lending liLiraricB, and a mofft excellenl work h being <U>ne by

Chean. A certain portion <' their profits tesel aside far odaca*

lout] pnrpodw, and this ia spent for book*, or in papera farttu

riowaroom. ttesidontetn the Southern and Western I ooncfeB haw

little conception of the pood whi-di i-; bein^ :KVi>nipl|dMd DJ I

n with oo-operative Roctetsan.

in no I*;"-' of the ountrj the barrier* between tlu rarioni

■. ol ftoetot] more marked than in u»- Tliere u

*M

I'l 10 I ' IJBIIAJ1IM.M.

.still ihc curUe/lnfl andscrupiug u> the vilhiL- clergyman or the .squire, or the blankets and aoup are curtailed or dropped altogether. These taalituttons, win rover ulreudy rMjiUixlir.i m villd^i'.s. ;m- iloiuu iukh- (<> ln^nk down these class barriers than in visible on tli'.- surface- The village newsroom Ik commnn jjround, where squire, unraon, and vill.rjei can i]| meet* and the more they meet together the better will they understand other. Class prejudices exist because there has been no oppor* tmiily "I getting ni tin- opinion* of often "(her, and so .11 1 1\ i : i ■• ai .i mutual onderatondiafr,

Thi* number of villages ornmull towns with fl population uxtdei 6>000 which have already adopted the Act* la rery small, Tarvee, ^berdeeashire (the work of which is described la the chapter dealing with the Scotch libraries), Kuckaall Torkard,

Caul ton, iiikI Milium, mny be named.

Uriel' inonlion -n;.v D6 nui.lc of B few OU1 of many CAl Cfl wh) ).■

viihip' Ubtaiiee in la operation, but vrhieti arc no1 under the

A.etB. At Petworth in Sussex they have an institute with a con- siderable membership 1 ho librarian, Mr. Thomas Seward, publishes a little print which lie has eetahlighcd to advocate adult education by the meant Ol libraries, reading-rooms, rauseura8, classes, picture galleries, and tu circulate extracts from tii.j works of the best authors. Two years ago a little vill ige library was formed at l.ongforgun,

1 1 u I ii. i dec [be library baa m It aboui sou volumes, t >:

od '•.■; vohunM ol Romance, Mythology, History, Biography, itn I Travel) 84 POluraes of Literature (flWy*, Poetry, History ol Literature); 19 vmIhiik's of \rt. Morals, ami Mlseellaneoui volumes ol Physical Seienee (Astronomy, ('heimstry, Phy 00 volumes <>i Zoology, Botany, Oology, and tgrlculturo, library If designed prmoijwHy for the uw of the older school <-!ui- dran and of the younger ad ilte. and care was taken to have only tin- host of IhkiUk, ami these hooks, ho far as possible, represent) i»f ihe best writers. Examination of the detsiil* of the class of books read discloses one or two striking fuels. In thn first depart- rneni surh books OB 8tOTiea from Homer, Roman autiqultfe.s, mid history generally are not much read. In these day* of plough"

.uices uiid land reform there lias been but one issue of one or nra little books on political economy ; in the midst ol the agricultural depression and competition., though the book-- elementary, there baa aol been one reference \<> a text-book of ■In Miistry, and there baa been hut one to the principles of agriculture. It is, however, gratifying to obaerve that no many of the lighter, racy book* "I srienco have been taken out, tn< doubt the taste for closer study will grow. The Bchoolmaau the village undertook the management of the library, and th- of a microscope u iv a fl ruse both in the school and by um cj

of name; r. Tl at 1 1" the i ke, bookcase, "tump, mi. n ;.*-. -f «-,

ftxuwaeabottt £60, The: uec fo one year were 1,012 volomca,

axfflaeiv »of thoes Lamed for nse duringscbool hours. It i

(hut thU U ran ho* been a sucecea. lAxe success point;- to the

PUBLIC LIBn ABIE.*: IN VILLAGES.

33fi

mortO tlmt the wealthy in anydistricthnve aflaviredly an easy VSgi ot giving: great pleasure and conferring a great boon, or that a small community itself might with moderate effort and little outlay open a lasting spring of joy and good.

The free village library at Bottingtou, near Birkenhead, ia doing a very useful little work. Etoww its origin bo tho fate Joseph Mayor, who gave to tho Liverpool Public Museum and Art Gallery hie famed eolleotion of art and antiquities valued at £30,000. Jn 18H6 he opened a library for the free use of his neighbours in Bobinpton, where ho resided. In 1870 Mr. Mayor bought an old farm-house with five and a-half aeres of ground. By additions

\ I \QR LIBRARY, BKBINGTON.

and alterations he made thin building iuto a bandsomo nnd commodious library. Iho character of tho building will bo seen

the ikafeofa aooro.

re ore in it 10,410 volumes, and the iaane reaohea 360 par Jt It open an Uondj yaw Friday evenings I -o n 0 to B

ock, and on Wcd-i .sd;iv iv >m [to I pan. The Iwue for elevati months during 1880, January to November nelusire, was IH,93G volumoH Hm to ware B23 borr war* daring W88 vi preaenl t i m- library i-.- In a tn nt lti< i state i wing to the deatn of tne founder,

Mr. M:i>er, the donor ot the library, kept It entirely ftL^ftCWft

J.WtiES.

earpei - up the date of his leath to I880»and i.y hta will it

was then rested En bfae handsel four trustee**, who, on behall of

(he lihrnry, Ac, ware also made residuary Icgati - Owing to

difficulty in the disposal of Mr Mayer's estate there has do1 v.-i

ix-rn ;in\ ^uiterucnt of account* presented by tin- executors* aad

luentlj the trustees are nnable to do more than [net keep the

librury .afloat Since his death no new lxwks have been purchased

"id uly '!' <t < i i "i binding. The isaue is rather fulling off

ownaff to the lack of modern books, A large new worka for bhe

manufacture of son; joj been opened, and employs 1,000

h poopl I; is hoped that i is enterprising proprietors of

i porta wflleec fchcii w.iy to aid this excellent village iastt

a to be made into n rab supported library.

There ia no better example w the duncurtiee which lis In tbs

.; adopting ths Acts En rlUsges than the cone ol m<.hU

Bretton, near BanuUey. n tn 1 1 population at the last census of

Under 3,000, lOOSth rn prs, and tln'si' working mnn rook up :h.>

tfon itthoeudaf 687. the rote was taken In Janunr} iii rating papers were issued to direct mtepoyem oulj. The

i i were n to see the Vcl * adopts , and b building-

Id the centre of tin- village origlnallj ei*ected ta subscription tor

odacaAional purpose u<<:>\ is a. library and reading-room. U \ ■'.. It. aoverer, before the vote was taken that there would be lilll'c

prospeel ol winning the adoption. The " persons assessed to and paying the improvement rate* only an.-, however, specified to lbs \ri, as being entitled to rote, and it was hold in this cose, though a different interpretation or the hni has been given elsewhere and was upheld on appeal, that the restriction excluded ail irho pay their rates in their rent.

lids rendering of this clause In the Act w is ^ peculiar hardship a; Monk Bretton, and the cote wcnl dend rgnin*t the proniu

Here, BA at many other places, two e£thc Iiicf oppuiicnt? ni the

aovenseni were pvbliaazu who r* * ■- 1 mid fatten on the minora1 eamingSj and wl o are too prejudiced to sec a ad Peel the importance nnd necessity of education rraong working men. Monk Bretton, it is to be hoped, will yet have its Public Library,

When tnol ran ji ousoilsarc wpplomcnted by the formation <>' District Councils it mar be reasonably expected that thej wffl turn their attention fc this very important matter.

CHAPTER XX.

THE PTTBLIC LIBRARIES ACTS AND THE LEGAL ASPECTS OF THE QUESTION.

II KKE ia a general consensus ol opinion, both unonji iu legal profession und outside its sacred circle, that the I'ii- re I ibranci' V-N ai'" vvy b; illy Iruwi To a non- Legs] mind, the phraseology of all Acts o Parlian little more than a bewildering maze ol wmtis li:< discussions and alterations when the Bill is in Committee

THE ACTS iKH THE LEGAL -kSPECTM OF THIS QCBSTION.

337

ords and sentences is (bfl anvse W* fcbJll uncertainly, nnd as as we have such a preponderance of gentlemen of the ogai persuasion in the House the same stats ol tilings will cue to exist, .short nfi the Public Libraries' Acts caropaHu lively are. ami simple :ik on* would naturally expect statute law* referring to Public ribrarien tobe,i1 has required on fewer i h in sixteen Aetsol Parliament for our legislators to express (heir meaning. Iftc need for one Consolidation and Amendment \d to ram .■in1 tliern from this slovenly state wan never more felt than .h tin1 present time. The amonm of patchwork legislation which

foes mi :it si. Stephen"** is very puszllng to an ordinary mind. i is Impoefflble not to beamazetlal some of these Public Libraries1 \ iiiriHlini'iit Acta. If the representatives at Westminster had been pla^in^ at legislation aoma of Diese Acta could not possibly he more vague tluu ib the case. In one or two cases the TUll has

I nrr rend ,i third time ,il o 0.U1., nnd SO thiTi' LB just exartly V hnl linahl he oxpeet'*«l, n ni.ts.s ..| Mi|«shod ,t ji 1 un Ulin il>- wording,

anon which scarcely two people reading them through would place the Bafus interpretation. TiM Scotch Consolidation Act is dearer, and perhaps the best worded,

Iu February *>\ Ismi a conference of i:ommiseionew from several of tho metropolitan parishes which hove adopted the Acts wis held at I 'hi ■■irti-.u. Tin.', opjoot of tht conference was to discuss

I I u- bearing of certain portions of the Late, and to see how hir some difficulties which hud orison In the working of the Acts could bfi wot. Tho collection of the rate, about which there had boon son: trouble in Chelsea, was one ol the main imesticms set down for consideration. The resolutions arrived ur on thJfi point ffeTO te theellVet that the library rate i should he collected

Bit of the poor rate j that it should be levied, if practicable, in twt moit&esj that it should be collected by the usiml rating authority, and that the pastry should have no power to regulate ii . i mount after the decision of the ratepayers- ; and That thfl oOfit o1 collecting the library rate should be barns bg the poor rate. Other matters were also considered, U will be seen that one or two oi the resolutions have been met by the Amendment Hill nf 1889, which was brought forward ami passed for the purtu Be oi relieving Chelsea o( the difficulty in which they found then - selves hv the action of the vestry

in ApVii, tssfl, a third edition of " A Digest of the Law relating to Public Libraries and Museum*., and Litsrary and Scientific

I Institutions/1 by M r. Oeorse F. Chambers, Barrister-at-Lnw, was published It was natural to think thai I fl the issue Di this work at least the tough places would be made plain, but even the

k'iml author would seem to have given ii up as •> tsul j"h. for iici.- [a scarcely a single disputed point widen he dears on, and

matters iuc very much as they v»>-ie. A small sea-of li t i^.i; i< >n

has been passed thxou£b*a&d counsel never before wen bo much consulted upon the rendering o! these Acts, as they have hero

g the last two years Further than this, diametrically oppos'M iplaiona have been given on disputable "wcuVe. ^v^a.

'*** PFBLIO LIBRARIES.

"nm.i.l ..'illwrity ,,„ Pnhji,- I.ihi'niV liuttri*, Sfr, W, F A. 4 K'H»i <»» lui us to Nj.y that (I).- niuht useful lliMikT Would be Hh- :il ■>( Tin- I'nhlic Libraries' Acta from 1S50 up to the pn-s.-nt

time He holds that these Act: do not give any power not pre-exist in the case of the Municipality of London thirteenth a Dtnjry. nud Manchester and Bristol ill the seventeenth

hlished without any ivtereii.'O whatever bo ivirhament. Ann m fat bb ho know?, there we Kfcitut*.' which took away that power ftOVC thr oorporotioi mnnldpft] rathoritioi of this eonjatay. 'Hun would seem a sweep- ing- n.-ri-.i >i~ dealing with the matter, but it has mad recommend it. Tin* protest writer quite concurs in the si m gentleman's view when he says thai "there is not the BlijfJ fear that, any Town Conn- <l <»"' I,ocbJ Board would ruin the pay ers bj i pendituro upon booke and libraries ir.

[he tnterenta i I Ihc real una higher education oi the people ii win ;i dale which those who wdohed well to thla country might wifely mil.'' Certainly the time has arrived when the permissive and local option dement may safely be abolished. It wao oomewhal

rear tted that tin- clauses referring to Public LibrarieB kindied institutions ahouldhave been expunged from the Local Government Bill, for it in to those munuging bodies thet t! ■•: power must ultimately come.

Whatever ii contemplated, however, it m _-

1 : I Public Library legislation will now be left nlooe until all i ol Lom of the friends- of this movement have had on opportunity of expressing their opinions, and of dincu£«ing any proposed solidation Hill which mny be hroujrlu fonvovd, Tiiih i> vitul Tlic iraate source through which t ho Bill should filter is fti Library Association ; but in any case th© clauses should be most thoroughly sifted, and only united action on the matter be counter! am1": Ti- MaoAUster Prize Bill ol Mr. J. .1 Ogle, and Mr. hwargue in n beginning, and in some clauses will form an excellent ground-w. >tu-

This 1-- i'V"-| t-r-livi', nml thr most that rim be dune with regard to the Act* sis they Stand ism Rummsrize the lending litlgu which has takenplaes and to note the nouneer* opinion where

available.

In September, W7, Mr. Bradlaugh,M 7., asked in Che Moum* of Coromons, whether, under tin- Public Llorarles* Vet, 18M Warrington Library and Museum Committee wen- {ustlOed In requiring and receiving subscriptions from persons borrowing oooVb from Che Warrington Public Library, which library w* nip torted from the rales; and whether the library committee were [egnUj juetUled in according privilege! to eubecrioen in reh|HTi i.r Hi.- loan of book* from that Library, which privilegfts were not accorded to ratepayers who did not pay npectal iptiona. To this the Attorney-General replied: " There in no authority under the Public Libroncs' Act of 1H&G for □CtlOB between person* who siirw^nlw and

■/> whi.j ih. not. in \wy ovMon the Act docs not contem-

IHfc ACTS AMD I'll', i.koai, AHPS013 "K rKB <;' RSTIOH

H3D

plate the loan of books out of the library, and I Lliiuk it doubtful whether such loan is legal. Asauiuiug, however, tiial under Section 21, rule* could be made permitting the loan of Ihx&s, it would, in ray opinion, be competent I'm the committee to reojujrs a reasonable deposit to ensure their aafa return."

»In January, 1668, the Berroondaey Vestry had under discussion the opinion of counsel u bo tin- Legality of the poll of the porisn with reference to the adoption of the Public Libraries' Acts. The poll wiip taken upon a requisition served upon the overseers con- nected with a l»"|y known nn the governors and directors, and resulted in a lm'gc majority of those voting declaring in favour of adopting; the Arts. Tno vestry were duly informed by the clerk to the governors nnd directors with a view to the vestry pro- oeeding with the appointment of the* library eommiBeionefet but.

■/upon the ii'lvico of their low <'lepk, tTiey took objection to the governors and director* l'Cing the authority under the Act, and further raised the question Ofl to whether the Acta did not ivi|im'c ft majority of the whole «>t the ratepayers ol the pariah, hi 1 not merely a majority of those who actually rook the croubU to fill up and return the voting papers. The veatry decided Co

submit thrso two point* to counsel, nnd the opinion >!' Mr. Limilcy Smith, Q.C-, waft obtained, QD Mm firat poult In* Bald he considered the governors and director* were the authority within the meaning of tha Act, On the second point, ha boHaea to the view that a majority of those actually voting, and mil an absolute majority of the ratepigrem, vu all that the Ad required; but in

roiM'hitlmg his olmciMilionK, lie ihv.w attention tn llir 704 voting I»iper* yivt-n in the clcikV ivl mm ua undelivered, aud to 1,099 voting pupers returned as not collected, aud poiuted out that if. the gowmua and directors hud failed to do their duly aw indicated by these figures, that might very well vitiate the pro- ccedings, Mis advice was thai as tuorc wm a doubt to what majority thePuhlic Libraries Vmendmeut Act, 1877, required, and as the lion-delivery and non-coll<ction of papers required explan- ation, it would be better and safer for the vcetry not to act, but to have all the points decided <">n aa application hy any person interested for a mandamus to them to appoint coramiwtionorB for carrying the Libraries' Acts in'.n c^rmtioii. Thin hn>

r.-tn.K'd considerable delay in putting the Arts in operation in Btn&ondft ; .

In February, 1888, the ijuestion unto who BOB rote for the adl tiOn of tile lei s was raised at Tun bridge Well*, and ti.e following

tht Opinion given by Mr. Glen, in roferonoL' to compound ho ho!.l< i . si ing on the library question : '•Inasmuch the Public' Library Assessment wnuM be levied. M Public Libraries1 Acts were adoptee , by means of a tJenoral •i Rite within the Ttmbridge Wells Improvement lei : let : and voting papers are only to be issued under tha Poblii I ihrarie* Amendment Act, 1S77, sect. l,to each ttiue^aqw \*.t Mi-h inhnhifin- would have tnpny the Free \ ■■ - MWfc*

n. t .% T am ot opinion that the occnpleta ot naB&&t«uWB*Ba*vft

310

i riti.v i imi.wnr.A.

respect of which the owner* are rated under Motion I'll oj tin Public Health Act, 1875, would not be entitled to vote.

" i cdei BeetionsU ol (toe Public Health v.--. lB7ortheowneraof small tenements are rated 'instead of* the occupiers, and u.m-i ■■■ •. although the occupiers may indirectly pay the rate-, there in im liability ft* between them and the Oommisalonera i< pay the rate* .- :md r am. therefore, oplnloc that they cannot be said to be

prlHnti- win would llflTC tO pay the FtOO Library 8*Sck-.imciiI in

tin- event of the Act being adopted within the meaning <>t Bacttcm B of the Public Libraries' Amendment Art, 18T7 w, Cuwnxno- u\M Guw,— Mareh 1, i*«*.H

\- Mr Olan vafl ii can time tin- standing counsel for the Local Government Board the opinion is of weight. This opinion ha*, however, been upset by the Croydon deuieura,

A question arose iii Augunt, 1666, in Liverpool, an to Hie legal

Kwom of the library committee. Uthough custom appear* I i vc Miuctioned it, and up to .t recent period noeerioofl (rueetiou mi* been raised ou the subject, ii baa been open to doubt whether the city lending libraries and reading-rooms wt re aetttatioaa, as each, 'li-'t came within tin- meaning of the words eetablislwnent nnd maintenance of a Public Library " ba contained in the pro- visions of the Liver|xx>l Library and Museum Aet, 1832. The Town Clerk, on being appealed to ate meeting of the (.'it v 0ounc51 for his opinion ae to the construction of the law, cautiouel? intimated that the matter was open to grave doubt. The hi i. ry, museum, and arts committee have, therefore, thought it prudent to take steps to luivo their position more clearly defined, and at u mooting it waa resolved "That in tin- opinion cl this committee it i desirable to obtain an amendment to the Livorpool Library and Museum Act 1862, to the following effect, namely: Unit the eetabUemneni and maintenance of lending lihrurie*and reading- rooms witlmi The eitv of Liverpool ahull he deemed in be within the meaning of the establishment and maintenance of a Public Library under the Liverpool Library tad Museum Act, 1862, and all the provisions oi that lot shall apply accordingly. Step-- ba this direction have been taken, In the curly part o! May, 1880, when the Livernool Corporation Bill was under dfSCDSSiotl, .Mr

pope uJd in reference to section S, which referred to ftihlia

Librarian, the objections of the LftenHrovermm ni IV> ird iipp to lie directed t<> the power of borrowing The effect of this elmiHf would he in enable tlie Corporation to borrow, Enaecurd inns with the provisions of the Act of 1862, for the purpose ■■! lending libraries and reading-rooms. The Iwianl thought, it right to draw the attention of bhe ooujiuittce i" the unsatisfactory provisions contained In that Act with reaped to borrowing and reuaj ol lonna, and euggeated that the proviftioiw of the A bul (eo&wlth

regard to the borrowing and rcp:i;. ncntol aildbcrcpi

:;.i fresh powers aori In «■ •' i.< ti ---. 1 1 m-eut leuiMatiu *nh*tittit)-<\ What the promoters pr< p< scd » order & naeel v, .(■- Hut, without vc-Ruactrou txwi powers, there a /o-'i tec that if any moneys wcxe HxJworo^A— Vb£2 '•w ',v''

TltR AC1T3 ASP THE I.ROA!. ISTBOTfi OF TUT. QfHSTins.

that they would require- t-» borrow at. the present moment such money* abotdd be repaid within forty years from llic date of bow v. mm. it wai not clear in the Act of 18G9 whether the power to borrow money for l*ubho Libraries included lending Libraries OlK rendimr-momK, and tin* Hill proponed Hint thin doubtful point should lx* cleared up. The committee fixed the period of repayment at thirty years, ami agreed that the ClAUSa

si amended stand port "i 1 1 10 Bffl.

The * l.-rlci-iiw.-ll Oafle In, witb the Croydon e:o<o, the most im- portant u liicli has occurred Hie noil was taken in December, 1S87. rii are were S, 324 ratepayers, nini 7JS8 was the total runnier of voting papers issued. i*ait of those 4,64ft were collected, arid when [In \ were I'uimtt'd there were 1,&"1 in favour nf the raloption of ii t \.i, |,$fio against, while the spoiled papers amounted do i,"-'".

hi)nn'il:;iTf)y after the- poll was taken Neverul members of the ve.siry questioned Its legality ;md look action in the marls.

Oil February 13, 1888, the question came forward in He Queen's :h Divisiou, before Baron Iluddlestoij and Mr Justice Marristy, Tin- application wm on the part of ratepayers of St. James V and St. jonxrik Olerkenwell, to jo-i rid of a vote 1>,\ moans of voting paper* »!' r;ii» j>;iycre to adopt the Public Libraries' Acl, on the ground of alleged irregularities in the mode in which the voting papers win i-.Mii-d and collected, and the votes of rate- payers taken.

Th<i j»iiri?!i itself, eonsisting of the two districts or words of St. .i. ues'e :ml St. JonrVe, with an outlying district of afnsweU llHi, several miles off- contains a populotion of about 70,<x>o, nud th< re wore al iln lad asacaBment (April, 1886) h,.'1im nnftesfnncntH or laed ratepayers. Jt appeared from the affidavits on the part of the upplicantH, certain ratopevors, that the vestry clerk issu ■■! Onh r"|9sS voting paper©] of. wfafoh only 4,848 were collooted. on which tin.- vestry clerk declared the refill :<> iv i,un tor the adop- U mol the v -. 1.660 igainsl it, end 1,036 voting papers "spoilt : inn tii is was oontroTertod, and on scrutiny being demanded and refused, thin application was made, and tho effect of like arfidavitw troM to ahow mat there were suon irregularities in the way in which the voting P*P*M were sent out and collected that it teas wholly uneertt n hai was realty the result of tho voting* it was Stated, for instan 0 e thai no voting papers were oont to the rate- payemol the outlying district oi Hnawnu Hfl^who.ttwaasnggeated,

would lw* likolv to vote njrtiinsr. the adoption of the Acts, us they

won* too Ear oft to benefit by it- Moreover it was suggested thai the miTKiviN were tho " prsserthed local authorities" to conduct

the voting. Tt w i-. stated in the affidavits tlul the voting papers

had not been properly collected . thai Home which were marked "No" were nol reckoned* V'poa these grounds Mr. Jelf, Q.C,

(willi Mr. P S, Stokes), luovod OD the purl of MYCTSJ PStCW

RN :t ii.ii/ foi ;i 'j/ii: intiHinf', to question the election, and in the result ho obtained o rule calling on the commissioners appoint show cause wh> .i writ <»f pm warranto should not issue command- hem to uov bj **hal authority the^ eaterciw iV;-: cAki

•M'2

■Mil re-

oooniafMlcfDOM uthIpv trie Public Lftnwlei ketsfortht pariah mi St. Junius riiui St. John, ClarltcaweU, upon the grounds (I) that the vestry and gaanHaiif or sovernoni <>i the poor were doI the prescribed local authority for foe said parish for aacertalnlE opinion of the majority of tlio ratepayers of the parish under i) e Public UbmrieW Arts; (-J) thai ;i rating paper was not Issued to each ratepayer as required by the Acta; (3) that the wtingpanen hvtued were not property oouaoM : ( h thai a Berating of the votes had been refuse! though lawfully demand* d . (5) thai even ii" Che propei authority acted, and tins voting papers were properh issued

Bad OOllected tins result was not properly ;wivi-i;niifil within tin.' ii .mine of the Acts, Their lordships granted a rule rtitt.

On Say L5. L888, t,he matter came again forward* and was i .inotl. Than in Jane the (vacation w. - trguod out at lenffthyaad the report occupies some six cclunina >\ newapapei " r. The case wee heard before Mr. Justice Field and Mi. Justice Willi ftfl to whether lie torim i ruling of nUe nbi should not ho ravened. Mr. Justice Field, in giving judy-menl, laid it was objected that voting papers were not Bent to each ratepayer; that they wan not property collected; and that n Bcrutlcj was refused; anil that even ii those tonditfoaa hud been property complied with, the result had not been properly ascertained in the inclining of the Acts. Anxious D wus always to secure purity ut election, tie could not eO&M to toe omeluaion that there waa any improper or unfair dealing on the pait ot the promoter* ol the I'ublie Library in tbiS InBtanoOi There was a substantial majority of ratepayers in favour ot the project, and there was nothing to show that the election hod otherwise than I'airly nud honourably conducted. Mr. Ji "Wills concurred. The rule was accordingly discharged.

It vrfU be seen that one or two doubtful points are cleared up by this oaae,

rt waa held by the Judge that raters who declared for u library subject to the limitation of the rate to one half-penny ure com

ed to the penny rate If flu majority have agreed to the hi fl#ure. The efleot of this decision nm\ l)e to diminish the number of favourable votes in Ihe first category, but it is imly rurht tint i'ir italci conditions of the appeal Sliould be understood, it ha-* also hem clearly Laid down rliat Uie actual voters hind Hie whole parish ur iliMrii-t, whatever pro purthm they inaj l»eai to the whole number of ratepayers.

The costs of this litigation were very heavy, and fell upon the parish. It was largely Hie result of oik- representative w ho had i H majority against him.

In one Lancashire district, in December, 1888, counsel*! opinion waa obtained on the levying of the rate, and Dr. PankhuraC K»ve it ae his opinion that the Local Botu'd had full power bo levi huch rut*", and i.el nil |«mrr t ,i:iV limr afl.-r tin adoption of the Acts.

On April 0, lftSD, the oelebrat.d Croydon cane came before Mr. Justice Stirling. Thin wan the attorney -General v.Mn

THE ACTS ANTi THB 1.10 A L. ASPECTS OF THR l|IKNTlr>\. &S

&c, of Croydon, and the quid luioud au important! guertkm as to the application of the l'ublic libraries' Act* in the borough of CmytliMi, H w.t.s a motion b.Y the Attoriu-y-deneral at tin* 1'rlntion of tVO inhabitants oud ratepayers of the borough for an injuuetion to restrain the defendant* from carry iny into effect the Public Libraries' Acts on the ground that a poll taken by the defendant* for the purpose of ascertaining tin- opinion of the majority of the. ratctmye.r* of the borough ns to the adoption of the A -tb vun invalid. In October, 1888, upon service upon the defendant* of a requestinwritinKbytoiirar^iuiycrN.pni-suanltnlhc. i Ni 1 >1 ir Lil ntuToe*

Amendment Aoi, I896| calling upon thorn to ascertain the opinion

Hi the majority oi tin- ratepayers of the borough as to the adop- of the Public Libraries' Aete, the defendant** i&uied voting s to the oooupiors of premises in the borough, and the r of the poll BO taken, as declared l>y the innyor, Wftfl that the Acta had been adopted, and resolutions were according u paayed by the Town t'ouneil to curry the Acta into effect lno plaintiffs contended that the voting papers were taproperij inxui'c, iDBunuoli as, iuvordiny to theroolio Libraries' Amend- ment Act, 1877. in eases where the owners of premises were rated Instead of the oeeupierH, the voting" papers KhouM have been iMsiied the owners ok the persons actually paying the rates, and ni»i fn the mrupiiTx. For 1 1 1 •- defendants it w:tHn>iiti'niled, iu the first place, that the ileclnratfon of the mayor ns to the result of The poll was conclusive, and, secondly, that according to tllfl true construction of the Acts the persons entitled to rota were those who in reality tore the burden of tlie rates that was to nay. the occupiers inasmuch an whore the rale wa* actually pan! by the owner ii «;ih charged again* L the occupier in the unapt oi additionaJ rent Tiie. queatSon involved the consideration o4 u gri-ut number o! cornplie;ited Acla of Parliament, and at tin OOnduatoa Ol the argument a hi* LordMrip reserved his judgiucnl Jttdfiment was given on April 10, lft$9, and as it is important, .i considerable portion 3a qnoced, condensed from "Tin- Times report.

Mr. Ju»tJt» StUUnf mod it itppttLm] tliut lh« ljnmwli wjuMii«nrpomn><l in Mawh, JSW. The burotug)) <ind p»n-li HW 1 1'iiimniuMM, A rwaisihon wan a short timv *gu matte by certain ratepayers Of ttie borouifli, nddiewea ta the mayor, r&iulrintf Itlni to «wji>rttio Cbo opinion of the wtepuyo** m to wliethw ><r nut Um Lihr»ri«'« Ait» tlioaM l* adopted. Accoidiiitfly. the inny<»r i'mumI totiim paper* bo the rnto- nd wh«-n Uimo ipnTPOtllfti'trd Un- iviili ftppflftNd Co !«• tlint the™ wr* «,iHS >ot*H in favdui' of I be aduptiou of tl.» Aotn, .»nd -1,796 ag&iiut it, givine a majority of 1.74(1 Id ffivoiir tjf «n<h adoption, Upoji that the major and corporation had acted, and Unit nation wn* brought tu restrain them (mm prooi>c^irtg further in tlto mattor. Jt appon/i'd tliut tin; MjUiitf pupem liii'l bwi luxtictl to tbv occupiere upuu iht* rutc-

twtk, flltlnuyi fsn ihlni1 lii«1 i- d»' Itj '-In? I'roydOB V*Htry, datnd thi> JWth of

Wovoinber, IH0I», directing thnt the owners of all mtable hereditamonta to which »cctiou .'> ad 1 <>l :)>•' Poor HkVi AuMMnont uid Cxillecuon a * -■ itionawl wiUitn the

SiirMh «hould ho i«to«j U) flio poor m'j.' initeni of tlio oocnplon, and it *i« edited I'll ' iJji* nwneit Iir4 bwru fumlnhcd wtlb voliriK paper* innl«o<l ol Ihv th»n would hnvn }>>oii a diir<'inrtci<i In tht» coiiititiioncy of about M.O'Hl. mid tint ilm

••in ii "( tin- trrvuua whoso oplJiluno uo^li1 tlw \ '- '■■ Kivc hwu wcri«i awl hoj

not he*n oMoi'rt.Liiwil ri.aT qiHWtjoo dfp'-'udpd upon t-bc omiHtruoUoTi of tht'VuTloun l'ublio Libiwno*' Act*. »i»d in pnrtioular two Ant o( 1^T7. Thv Aot of lrtW> provided for

ttM B ul')i-l»'. i ..I riiMk> I.e....... - in '! ilirforvm jIomm il (IfatrtoU r:i.. A.-t ot

lVir. wiii »moin!<-<l by «tn Art <»f IW'if!. wlin'li i!i«! rn ■! Uter U\* MwiAut tes\t\tA-v«v^\i--*V adoi't Oit' Aol, but uuulv vsiinliuiio iu Llic mudu ot uixiYuitt V. ovi\,— V»< v^xwoc^^^-

:M4

PI I.I W I.ir.KAlilK,-,

tb* mod" of providing- for fcV prpenaoof esMOfdnfftb* Ai-to. Th^n at«cfOQ

vi< led thai uanHliet adjniiitog a bonmgb, dMrut, <ir i»n>h niiyht unite m adopttaif.

tho Art- Thvi*? wus aootlivr Apt In 1 •*"-" I , wbn'h enuhlvd Im-t' hoard- t . put ' ' principal Aot iiit<< cxecutiuu. Thai was iJiv 1**1. Act pusm! prim- to the Act. of 1917 wtii.li tt would b# oaoowary to cooaMar In detail. It Appeared. fru?n. tit

fut.i alaMOa *«f public Authorities which woro entitled I J >i«i the Lfbnvioi' A*r*

|ii iminiripul boroughs in 1 ho cnM Of which th« ronstttiicnry to iletermti' iin'tiiiiu "i u.luptiini ooarfoteo1 -if tho b\u,go*eo« . ;-j) dutriot.* a&dor Lo ii la\ nii-iiL Act*. Ok countHut-ucy bt-iut; Uin i«wn* aswwcd to unci tuyliur thi' (JDpRmsma&t ratna; |Jt) hwnl hoard*. fh£ M&al iln.'in-j- bofog tbn peraona paying the general dl*TTli-I rate; and £4] parish^, 1 hr determining constituency being the pernnu rated to *bc

EOT. I'mlPi t)ie«t- circumitaQM* tbo Act of IH77 wu pawed. It war* obvioui That ? preamble w*a not framed with very gnat aarc It omitted to mention the ■■ lM6fl f«ir England, That, huwevrr, win nuL now iiuiitrlul, fur by another AM pitnfcd

Inll*!7ftwiu doolarod that the Ac:. Of 1M77 ibmiM ham •fleet U if the Art or 1SU

Lad been therein recited. But beyond that the langiiHg*1 wn* uot very preebe ax

rate. For UiffUiDce. it Mpoke of the "opinion of tin; ratepayers," It la erury

cnac tbo ratepayer* wuro tho pereons entitled to attend the mooting, whurtua that wan

..: i.i. .■..,--■ in mm i. ...... i !..-f. >ig\ » -: . i-ini .1 . t-hfbuiseawa.il

aula* not eo-^xteariva with the ratepayer*. Then by the Act iteolf it wna provided (tCvUou 1) <>bnt a lornl authority h»vin« pom-r I" nd'ipt !)»• A' t- mijtlil «-.'i «u. i).._ nj nw:v,\* of thi1 tnajority nf Kbfl ratTHyira «tbpr Uy Oie prntrrihwl pnXAU tfifrtiny or

l.y :];. i-i.. ol . v.Hnp ]i'i[.. t (., <.,.i, iiin-j.»;.'. nl\A '.in - i'. ■■ |in- I'l ...I.'. I- km '.ti.I

nirutlLy Uicreof; mid wcti'iu -i mil ha fomnvi*:— *' "Katcnuyor "bull miaji uih!il>i;»iir whn u-nnH ltMV<> topny tha Publfa Library aoMaMnenl in Vi,ni ofth< k ' l-i-Uiff adopted." Ii wua ouotmded Umt thi- object irf tbe AH «"« n"^ I ODMUta^nr)'. bat .implj to pn •\ii|.-' n hn'ti-r mo<l»> of RsoprUtninff the onintnti a| Cfce '. ' '• i -, •mi hi? L>ird»hip waa aalicd to n-ud ih>.- A- 1 u i( *nliuu C U<1 noi DM iimerwd or did wit apply to thia particular raw, 'Hie arunrnpiit hRd wi'i^ht, hut after giving iviry ooOAlOcratiuD to the matter it inWHtn to bis Ii-.uMiip thai lo adopt it would bo to Btnihi Uio liuiguug" of tl«- Aot too muoh , he, tun •«me ryt rha iwneluKinn Him- h lofkt DO* ba fad. hut thut ttfi-tiiwi 1 ought to b* read at fottowl I " By thf iasor of a voting pnpoi to e-nwy inhabitant who woiUd 1 piiy the I'uMio Idhnin* ns UMnMal m vvutil ol tho Act being sdoptcd." fn other wdrdo, hia Lorlihip wae m I i to •;■ l-"T. (I. LwUutun DM tn*'i\ly

provided a new niudt? OT liseerUlulu;r tin: oiJtuluu of thf (MiiMlliuwy, ami had not

Cnjvidi'il > ni-** imulo nf udoptin^ lb.. \-t us a "vliulu Tin. .|iit)«|.itiri Hull aiVnu>, wlirt i a borough would have to pay the Public Library aoaeaair.cuL in tbo (v. al -»i ti. mi; ii<1i.ph-i| ' Tli'--t-itnN' wlnrh r^-gnlufrfl th» li>\ynng (it tho bnroUgb r*h« Kunicipof Corpnratioua Ait, iwi. Mis LortUhip then load acotiotts Hfi, 140, an-i I ■'.' tlie liui ul wblcb. In- paid, was very mnttriid. It provided tlnit vii..r- a pamli mak«g, under aootiuu 1 of the Poor Rate Ajeevment and Collecti.in Aot, 1MU, an urdfi to the effect that tbc .jwutn Uute<ad of Die uoeupier* of »uch rulahb*

... >iiiitrof*nta an thni-i'iii ii»'iiMn)ti4l nlnlH<(k roW*d to flit* poot^ H MOl

ovtvy euoh urdor rdiull bo dovmvd to npply to and inelvde rating1 to the borough rata with tho ^oroe indd'-ot'-. t-ondltloiis. poweri. ldibilltie^. iind i

rnto «ere x poor-rate. In ordur to ap^ir^inatc that. it. wuu n<*iui«ary to tarn to tho A«t .»( i^iw, n l.i. 1. provide.] in wUou i^ thai ywutut iiiurbi airreti lo pay llit' rule »ud be allowid n iwmTmwirm. anil wwtlon 4 provide<l that veatrh* might onler ihn owner to br rated inntead of tbc occupier ; and action 7 wnans follows :--*' K\cry paynn-iit of a rate by the oocuplor, niitwit.bstaudirii; the amount thereof, may he deducted Iron hie rent m boroio provided, and evfry pojment of a rate by the owot, wbotbar bfl la MiiiMilf rated lu-tetol of (In- .<■ <iM>|.r, oi baa &ktv<. v*li)i rlnw. luae) <>• wiUi Uxr overaeera to pay nurli rnta. and notwilh<<(nndlTig any allowance or deduction wfattfl tbc o'rraeCTo are vuipowercd bo main.' from the rale, ohall be deemed h parni the full rate by the ooooptor for tho purpose nf any niiAlifluiUon or franchise which. M rngnni* raUsgi tlaptadi upon (ho ptiymeot of too poor-rato*' Tit*'" uvi dliiMted tbo ocvr*t^]^ In niatdog out tfie rule U) in-crttho anmea of all oocaij tbe rato-l>oolf, and pn^adttd Omt the onitwaiou of an oocupiw'a nara» »di "■ ■1 : |>i i v t- liiiu nf nuy t|uaUlb*«tlou*o.l fianelii"'- ilcpnaliup opon ratfafc Tlici. I. provisions hi tlw »siih QflVot WCT1 I »iiUliw"l in nn Art .if Ifflff [4% Vlflt., C 10). wlilth WSI tu bo t^ootrtrncd odu with tLe ,\.ot of Irti)I» Now thoao ] i < < ' mfcnJod

<iaxvful t-'onahltratiou. '11 im Act of 1MB provided in the dret plat* that Iruprovm -nt rati-. w*iv t.. lw iiiil^..iHii vith thi> pror-rati, nn»l th«l .jocNplcni nora nor t.i h# deprived of any (jualilWstiiuu oi fraitold«<; depending upmi mtJiig. Tin' I^ncudatutt

I.I ni>' "ivp , nl" ii ii fn|ju< qualifloalVin It oould QOl hav* m^aot

thdt thi»iO who Wfio iinqualiBcd in Muh^tanC'C eitoull he •|imlttk-d i

1 1 .s.t^iutd clear Chnl Ibuev Bi'cUotiB were Inuadvd on iho rcriiRliltiun by U fhiif rati- wu. .i.w. |... id by tbo oecopJi* . and tbe provbtlODa of tho Act nmoiint»d to th/a, thmi w]i«ire nitm wt^e In subiiU.iLc* paid by Um o< .upici Iha4 abould olau bt rtwmm ta tortn payru«iit by hira wltbouBh \t w»a iaaA» 'Vi "tYa. V^aWl nf thn oari.'r

L. Ik

TBI! ACTft ANTi THE r.RC.AL A&PKCTS "I1 rill-: (Jl I.: n:i\.

34.'i

Boforn putinp with tlmt one other poiut ought- to be iti'Miht'Dwl vi*., nft<> whether tin n'tfhi |d vole vu 11 'lunliflratioii depvrnlmi* on thj ituvuicul of UlB |MK>r-r.iti;. Th** •)uolitlr*tii^n ir. IheLibioriw" Aj-'tTwloowd M 'Vu-iy inln.b*UaI who w««iM bftVI U p*y Llic oAKCuriiuut Ui crcnt of Ihu Act Ix-iiitf ndupteiL" It \»n* ouly hyiHttbetiml OOt n/i ai'hml ptiym»HU, ftfirl >n "J-rmth w < IvwtWJW al hiwhill " {'* 1, K." 1". Q.H., 4221 Mr. Justice Mellor said thea© section* oiifiht to bo utiiistiucd in a libeml spirit. The question then wan. what whs the rneuninir tf wriitm K i Two ulb-iniUivr

Intorpr-tatioim wep? ftubmitted 6> th«- Poort, For tho plaintiff* it. wait cantonlcd thiit il BWinl " UlDM vlin would be Wall} liable tu pay " ; wliOv the ih,l'"ii(liiiil.:< argued that It Tn*ant,.|"t,hiw*« who In renlit.y would have to b*ar th>> btUwH ri UU MM-" The scctiou fairly admitted of thut coa-truction. In tho Unit place It urn* expre&iod

in popular lunyuatre— " who wnulrt ten bo p'i>." CD Che dttft pi 1- I ■I'l-thip

coiud not eon tout tho Lctrixluhiro bud any other objoct than that tho determination

of th» ijjetttlt'D -hniili] n-.si w It.1i tin.- whtiju 'in. rutv would IHU m fubttaaw.

That wnt tbo omutnioUafi whfdi waned MBian.Ua 11* (riving full effect to tho Anta. I- abg MYfl effect to 1 1 . -_ word ' InliabtteiM " Id wetion 3. The owner of lucid was not necessarily *n inhabitant of tho (Ustrlct m which it ma sluuite, while it wiw onlv in oxKtpti'ionl gaavs that ua owupint was not un inhubiUol. J'or those rawoue hie Loruatiip Uitiinrht thut the toUd£ pant-re wi'ie pioperlj Issued, and (III motion roust

h l Btfawd. 'v-'li c.if,

It will be seen tl mt This iy it vtduahk* decision on the Acts. Ah the judge pointed out that tile right to vote belonged to "every inhabitant, who would have to pay the assessment m the erenl ol tlie Act being adopted," and hew that those wovdfl . li * l &ol mean merely "those who would be legally liable to pay " so as to restrict the right to vote to the owners where they were rated pursuant to the Croydon Vestry order of 1660, hut must be- eon* strued as referring to " iho&e who in h -nl.i \ wmild imve 1 1 beat1 the burden of the rate*/ viz., the occupier, on whom the burden would full presumably in the shape uf loeroBAed rent.

fn the Amendment BUI of 1887 one object Is to encourage bhfl formation of leading libraries in villages, where the ratable value if- so small that the highest rata authorized by the PubUc ldlHBrle&' ArU— namely, uuc ptuny in 11 if pound— WODld bo iu3uflli:ieut to meet the expense vi ereeting t, building, or even of renting n room for a regular " Public Library." The st'iieme, how- ever, ia also applicable to towns and other districts as well ;in to *. lagee, Thus a town is enabled i" try the expeiiruenl of a ! -:i img library hoforc incfu'riog greuu-i niMt. Th<- arrarigemenl i-. thatalendinff library may be" established by a library iiiuhmity without a aepurntf bnilding befog pXDrlded for containing it, and nay >e placed under (he care and superintendence of buc£ person as the authority think (it, and iu u building or room aeithci appropriated for the purposes of the Libraries' Acts nor pnrchnfi I I n ;<:d by tho authority.

in the inotrcpoliH the extenatoa of Public Ubrari ee has b much shocked by reason of the area prescribed heinir the |«rifh. Wfulonotneof tfi< iBirganetropolfianparishc const h tcasuiteblo

. i':i. .i feeling hnsprevniled in roiiio of the huh I Hrenofi ■'>;»* it'

b I'uhiK" Library were established there the inhabftanta <>f netol bounng parishes would praotioally share m the tmjoyment ofioe

benofttb, though the whole expense wouUl fail "ii the I'titep! vers

of th" mil',- idual parishi For tartooa Bdmhustratlve purposes

•I ii parfshes are alreadt jroupedin district ln»ar<ls,and it nas been ktl that the uifoptioa of Public LtbrftV\9A^taQWl",a6T«s^ encouruged by i^nuitting the area ad<»\>t.eflL lo "toej eV0t\w •&»

•Mi

FIBI-K MIUIAUIKS.

I'iiriMi or the district an umy L>p preferred. Ao.onlingh. the principal Act of 1855 is jiiuditiedso ;i« to enable the district luurd ot works as well ai the pariah bo establish a Public Library. Tin* ftxpeaoo is to be defrayed oul of the fund at the dispo* the district board Special provision Is made for exempting

a HV.uy rite m^tr-'politiii: [or -!:< - '.vlncli have ;ilv< ;i«lv esul'lUh-M :i Public Library OX may hrn Jaffa? <1<> SO, the power* of parishes

io establish a library being kept alive.

New regulations ore node with regard to tin erowtag t>f money by a library authority, and the powers and duties of the Treasury with rcpird b> Kimcti-nimg loans, &«-., tuv transf ttvuu tin- IVeosuy to the Board of Trade

in the Amendment Act *»i lS80o useful amendment has

effeotedi Hitherto the expoiiNcp ■! ■■;itliii£ iml !i.Mn<: t1!

Lug of the ratepayers to decide whether the Public Libraries'

\ - Mlifill he adopted or nut, and the expenses ol carrying those

Aotfl OltO axocution In onv parish, have been pnal "out ul :i rate to ho nmdc and recovered in like manner as a poor rate." Mow, those expenses arc to be ]>ai«i out **i :i rate to tx« raised with and as part of tlu» poor rate. Hitherto ©vary person occupying lands noed u arable, meadow, or posture jroiuw only, or on woodlan* -. or market a^raens, or nuwerj grounds, das been rated In reaped of the aatne in the proportion *it' one-third nan nnly at the full net annual value ilvivnf i< -p< >< -\i\ <\\ nos such a person will be entitled to an allowance of two-third* of the sum >isacsm-<1 upon him in respect, of such lands for such expense*. More servlceftMfl still is the provision now made for securing u Joint library for seronO [wirishes. It is now to be lawful for the commissioners appointed under (tie icte for :mv two or more adjoining parishes, wiiii tnsconseni of the vestries ol such parishes from time to time bo agree to share, in such proportions and foi suoli period as may he determined by fch< agreement, the cost of the purchase, erection* repair, and maintenance of any library building situate in one of BQob parleb.ee, and also the cost of the purchase of 1 1 periodicals, and newspaper-* foi such library, and all i tbei penses connected with the same; and the inhabitants ol both or all the parishes, 00 the case may be, will be entitled to use the

library 80 long a* the agreement shall continue in force. Km sued agreement ma> provide that upon ;t> t< n cuniion ,i meat shall he made of the Interests of the several omi ii inei in the library, building, books, and other property to whii b th< ] have contributed, and as to the mode hi which such ad shall be reached Further than this, poundagi fur ■■■ the library rate is now quite illegal.

among i tlicr :ioiui- to bo discussed :n the framing of a Con- solidation Bill will be the following:—

fite necessity ol making H absolute law, and not a matter o local bvooTj to have Public Libraries exempt from Iocs

IlllfU'Vnil t;lV.lt:ul

T/iat tliv l;nv of Mortmain siha\V uol a^V^ \n PubUe 1 brnj

THE ACTS AXI. THR T.RGAJ. ASPECTS OF THE QrKBTTON. 347

Hint the rite bo allowed on bh(? grMB, SU)d not tin the ratable, vii I no.

Thai nil public documents shall be presented free of nil cost.

Tiiut British Museum duplloatee juni South Kensington leans u- only to rate-eupportied Lrorariefl and Museums.

r.iki'n.LT the power out of the hands of the ratepayers for the u<l(>i»t ion of the Acts, und transferring it bo the governing body. Hie citizens would still have a voice through their repros Xhia would often save the expense of n poll, and there would be oilier gains,

That loans be for b period of sixty Instead of thirty years,

That loans be permitted fur luokB, work* of art, ana objects for tnuseums, bb weD as for nites, buildings nod fittings,

Wi© power to enforce tfce rata imniediateiv after tin- adoption

of the Act*.

That osurutteea Miall be permitted to make mu h 1 1 ■- ■•■., foi renewals of borrowers' owdsi w .. as th< y deem necessary. There ia S doubt whether, SB bhe euOtfl ftN corded, such chai'Kc* arc legal.

Olau&e* trivin^f facilities to rural districts to affiliate with the nearest town for the supply of ixx>ks and general library work.

Til.- ]HL.nit:i:mn^ of tin i':itv Lit ft jn*iuiy for Public Librorie* an

at present, and a further penny for tnusourob ami art ^allcne

Tfie present writer cherished the hope that the your 1*00 would pass without fcnj legislation affecting Public Libraries being brought lute Parliament vVSfcb 3 deefreihowever, to assist

in cleariugup one Off two doubtful points, Sir John Lubbock, M .['.. has brought in a short Hill which proposes to substitute the county anil borough electorate, as established by former v ts, lor the electorate of ratepayers ia whom the power uf adopt- ing the Libraries* Aote i*' now vested. The BUI aloe pro- vides that, where the district Tor which the adoption <>! tin Acts is proposed contains u population of 6.0UU or more, the opinion of the voters Eb to be taken to voting papers alone. The option that was given by the Aei of 1871 of proceeding either bj

viiti Iff paper.- or by public meeting would thus be confined t<> districts having u population of less than J>,000. Another pro- vision of the Bill is that the spools] conulUun which may be adopted may be etcher thai the maadmun rate Is ol I to exceed :t

1i>i1I'1h-iiu;, or three f;n t!iiip-r^ i Im-m OX&Ct Minis being the only

onei that may be specified. And iubaequentlj either of these limitations might be removed, or the lower one raised to the higher. It ia also proposed that the opinion of the majority of those who vote ahull prevail, and not that a majority of the constituency shall be aecceserj . M'mnw.T, whcsD queetloM arc put by rating paper* both as to Lhc adoption -if t!u Acta und also

us to limitation or Etna rate, the voter ia ambled to give a valid vote upon either or upou both of these questions. Thus he may rote "No" is to aha adoption of the An... sod "Yea" aavi limiting the rate i*> one-halfpenu3 ELeflwreti Vsu-

34f

PITILIC LrnitAIillS

until. n-ity are forbidden to put any question m to the limitation Of the rate In tlio voting paper or to the public mating, unless arjinitf (pi»»sTionon that point ta raised bythereouiainaolrti 1 1: iii i r.'tjuinuL' Kt.'j.- to in- taken for ascertaining the opinion of the electors, A final proposal is to extend section 3 of last year i Let, bo as to enable library oral aorrtiei not only t<» oomhino

for 'I'*' pnr*lKHt'* <>t :)w A'Ts, lmt :iUi» t" mvhiI tlnMnwlv.-:, i;.on

barms to be agreed npan,of the benefits ol libraries mi Intniuce1 of funds under the control of the Charity OommiMlonew

CHAPTER XXI. PUBLIC LIBRARY FUNDS. BUIIiDINGe, 6co.

^F the vote is in nvronr of adopting the Arts the work of tbc

provisional committee is at on end, no fat' as then? Iminc <li;itr work i- .■■ i .. < mod, iinil the Town Council, or othej governing body, will forthwith elect a library i omniitt £o who.se i.miv the movement will i.)c entrusted) 11 in van essential that the members of this eonu littes should be men ot close sympathy with the movement, and who are willing to lake upon themselves the labour, whieh is not by any means light, "i the formation of a library. One 01* two of these gentlemen Should he deputed to vit.it ibe Public Libraries in some of the large centres, and so gain a practical insight into their working and management. Every librarian worth the name will only be loo glad to answer truest ions and to show mu I. visitors ovrr tbc premises under his control Fi is very essential that there should be on iii' committee -i van fair percentage of burgen*ea, Vol many reasons this is wise, la most, towns there are .1 numb cA shrewd, fn rawing men of tan retiring ;i disposition t" 100k municipal honours, who would on a library committee be 1 decided acquisition. They ar* not responsible to mnstf taenia, a* in bhe representatives on the Council, and no look 1 matters from a different standpoint Moat w in ire no* adopting the plan ol having burgesses on thin committee, a;n.i some towns have even gone to the extent of having five-^dxlufl ol the number elected (roni outside,

The queaUqn of funds is, of course, the nll-hnportnnl 010, and if the provisional committee have succeeded in securing ;; hand- some Set of promises of donations, on condition thai 1 1 - t-* be ado ied nil th<' better, and this will be fonnd an immenae level In ranging bhe ratepayers to a satisfactory dei [slon. Proi for such a fund a* this become infectious, nnd, either in the of so much cash or so many books, they aid moat oi lubricating the movement, The names "I" those wlw [rive books aud money go down to posterity in the history of the ' tin- nunu-:. -ii Mil. I U* published in the first report. Th- scarcely another object which could be named win. b m pow« fitttv appeals to the bon< v ri< in 1 of all bo< tions 1 1 A 'hinrh or .1 <'hapcl appeal to a. wctte/a. rho Chrlstianiaftfig

l-i ..l. Iv ..MlKAtlY PClfDS, MI'ILl.iING.S, ETC.

iU9

Coloured races appeal* to a section. But a Public Library provides tin* chatitj which begins at home, und which, when Mtnblifihcdj u for «ll classes, and continues for all time. The

Sirit of emulation thuu helps and popularizes the movement, and ose appeals are rarely made in vain.

The question of loans has boon a somewhat troublesome one, bat no MrioUfl difficulty in this direction hn> boon experienced, with the exception Of OHO or two in«Uince*, where there were

I special GM186B 1" aCOOUOt tot it A g-Umrr nt tlie BtaPJgfcJOC ftl the einl will Show ttl« todebt'-'hiesfi existing .Duong Un.wi> institutions, uidfrora whence the loans have boon obtained, and the t»-rma 01 repayment. Two or three years ago a correspondence took place Ix'tui'iMi the liiiance committee ol Hie liivniinKham Town Council and tlie Treasury, on the subject of the repayment of a loan for

I Public Library purposes, and as the principle involved and laid down is u very important one, the jrist of these communications is here given in accordance with the authority conferred by the < irin.-ti, the committee caused to bo presented co (be Lords of ITer Majeaty'B Treasury, n memorial, In the name oi the Dorpora- lirin, pmyi*i# U<v iln'ir i(ii'dslii(»s' sanction to the borrowing Dy the Council at a loan of CG»160, for the following purpoMB, viz., lor iin' purchase faun the ( touncil of the Midland Institute of certain portions of the institute building, for the purposes of the tvntrjii Public Libraries, £1,300; for dexnodng E& uoutte the institute of the alteraliona rendered uecesserj l '_> bhu surrender ol the Bald portions of the institute building, also of tha odbC bo the Public Libraries uC uiakiug the necessary alterations to divide ihc Hbr»riri from the in.stitute building1, together v\it!i the oosl of rnuiiiM-iiiiu ami adapting the new hhhus tu the purpose* of tin; library, £M,">uo.- for furnishing the wing- of the reference

library, temporarily need as as art rallerY, witt ohaixa taM«;s and desks, for the accommodation it ronoera £350; together,

I'.IOOO. for the purposes of the Constitution Hill Library' C-iOO;

for providing Rttinxe, furniture, and easts for the School of Art,

t£i\"00. In reply totntooppHcAtlonac^rninuniootion wae received iioui the Treoann taquinsg whether, if the proposed loan of lift, 150, under the Public Libraries' Act of 1H8-5, vnw consented to, the Corporation would undertake by forma] resolution to pay it as

»loUoW9j vi/. : As to £.'1,300, £1,600, and £' loo, in thirty years from datQ Of bonowing; ana ae to three sums, making up £3fiGO, in ten vqmm Erens that date, '"i behalf of Ihe committee the town

ClorL replied, "Your tetter of the BTtn August. I8&6, has i n

luid before toe finance committee of the Corporation, and lam

<hm-led to iiKf-uro uin.ler what statute the I oniv r., nin>s ,

of [far MajostyB [reasury consider it to be tbelrdi tv to Impose conditions upon the Corporation witb reference to tin- period for U . repayment ol t 1 1«_- LoanM under the Public Lfbrarietf -\<-i, I8AU,

I i'ii i it in connect i<- 1 witli tlie Birmingham Corporation Consolida- tion Act, 1883, Hitherto the Corporation have been under the impression that the application u r the loan ba\u\vt Wvu ^uwtAb hv thf fonnril. :iml j.iihlfr DOtlCfl j'lvm qS 6&C rtwwv . MB&

x*>

PUBLIC I.TBIMlIirx

objection taken, the loan would in* Minotloncn by tlie i ><r«K I'mnmiKHioners, leaving tin* Coum-il lv determine Hie portod tap repayment, having dot regard t<> the purposes for which the money is to ba applied. An bh« period of ben year* appears to the Corporation dm short a lime for the repayment ol the mm of £3,500 lor providing fittings am! furniture tor the School of An, iiiiii £900 for fanurfriag the aei wing; of the Reference Library, ii i* perhaps desirable that this question should now be raised In anawer i" this Dommunioatfap, n tetter was received from one df the secretaries to the Treasury, in which he said, "I am to Mate that in ttu opinion of this Board their general power under section 10 of tl»t? Act 18 and 19 Vic, cap. 70, to require repayment within a certain period if they choose to attach Mich condition to tlun sanction, remains unaffected to the provisions of the Birmingham i oca) Net. The effect Of section 87 of the latter \ct ia to enable the Corporation to raise any sum they choose for Public Library in I'urii.s, but tlmt foot docs not compel the Treasury to assent to whatever period of repayment ilto Corporation muy dceire to fix in the case of partfoulor loans. The Town CSorlt Is correal in Stating that it hoa hitherto been left t<> the IWn Council to determine the period lor repayment of i'ublie Library loon oiroumel inoes bave brought v?ry forcibly before mv Lords the great and Inaroaatog pressure or" local taxation, and they consider ii t.» In.1 i..l much importance to assert in th«» iasr nt Public Librae* loam the sama principle ns that suggested by 1'arliament iu iv MmudpUCoi^omtlone1 let ol 1882, sec J 12. vi?., that the genera- tion which incurs the debt should also pay it wheuover praeti- * -able The Municipal Corporations' Act. prescribes thirty year* as tin' proper period nrrernyment or loans raised under that Act, and my Lonls consider that Public I.ibmi-y loans generally should have no longer currency With regard to furniture and lx( the rule my Lords have noted on not Infrequently, in 001 aectton with loans under various Acts, h;is been to require rep. ion yeara, as :t la manifest that n loan for the acquisition of articles liable to deterioration, breakage, &e., should not luivcxn (•([iijil ourrexic^ a .ili Loans for the acquisition. <>f bind or Hit* ereo* lion of substantial buildings. If, however, the fixture* in (he present case are of a solid and durable characlei, my Lords ffould not refuse an extension to twenty years of the currency i| thai part of the loan which represents tJaeir value.11

'I'he Town Clerk rejoined with a communication respect ir;w the interpretation of the law, enclosing a memorandum by I man of the finance committee, and or tin committee's behalf, stfttinft bhat. «>n the whole, looking to Hie permanent character of the Midland Institute and Public Libraries buildings, lie was instructed to ask tlmt the aums to be borrowed for the e purchase of 1 mi Mings nnd structural alterations might be exb fee sixty yeara, while the commit to ^.

td of "twenty years ns a reaeonnble period foi . «ub-

Ktswrin! furniture fbnt wift bo ^\aecc\ \w Vw V\t>teri< following to tilt mium Trtcpwrvd. \>\ \V- '

PUBLIC LIBRARY FTNDS, nCn.DIKOS, ETC,

351

ttnanee eoniiuittee, referred to in the foregoing letter: u Public Libraries Loan, 1 have read the Treasury fetter, and 1 Hani; thai the Corporation ought to press, as a matter of principle, lor :< boron of at least sixty years, for such portions of the loan required Mara to be expended upon works of a permanent character. Ttaft sum involved is not large, but the principle la inip irt&ai Thi'Tiv:tMtirv Htnic rh:il (drimmstariCVfl have brought forcibly before them the great and increasing pressure of local taxation. Capital expendi- ture, for the purposes »>i Public Libraries, Is a necessity wnlch it Ib impossible toavoM; and the very was to oaaiethal expendi- ture burdensome is to place the charges In respect of i- up* i e

genera tfi m only, by refusing u> extend the loan over a term of years commensurate with the life of the works which it repre- sents. Since posterity will get the benefit of the improvement*, il appear* that those who nave broughl then about) should he C 'i.trti'.'d with DO mop- than the ON ui hire, vf the menu.* which effected the desirable result. Under the present system the men of to-day will make u free gift to the men of to-morrow. Why should they do this? f*et hoth parties «hare rhr burden fairly, A pplyhui tola principle to the items in the proposed loan, « Inch represent permuncnt structure, it would clearly bo unfair to Accept the suggestion of the Treasury that the term of thirty your*, told down in the Municipal Corporations' Act Bnould be applied i" pOTtSCBfl of the present loon. Under all the circumstances, Earn clear that the Treasury should bo pOBPod to extend tho term for portions of tho proposed loan to sixty years; and it would seem probable that they would ootbe indisposed to yield To accept

their prewar ruling would ho to admit their ri'-jht to determine the period of tho loan ; while to contest it, would bo to assert the right of the Corporation to, at any rate, a voice in the matter."

The reply from the Treasury further contested the view of the finance committee, and said : "It is of course open to l-'arinmcnt to lii any term of years that may seem good for the repayment of loan* raised by Municipal Corporations, and to extend or alter exiNting limits; hot my Lords hold that where, Bfl in the l*ubllc LibmrU'H* Act, Parliament, has not seen fit to specify the duration of loans raised under it, but has expressly subjected them to Treasury approval, they have been invested with a discretionary power to limit the currency of such Irian*. The power to give or withhold approval implies tin- power to attach to the approval any mniliMnns that are nut inconsistent with other prOTHonfl in the Act. The enormoiiN growth of local Indebtedness during recent years, lias led my Tjorda to consider it their duty, wherever prac- ticable, to apply to Public Library loans the >ame limit of thirty years that Parliament has indicated in (he Municipal CorpofaUooa1 Act tfl the maximum currency of ordinary loans raised by men corporations under Treasury sun lion, even though thffi Ofl bi for tlic purchase of land, or erection of permanent buildings. As pointed out in the statement of your financial committer, TOffe* umitation increases the immediate burthen ol c-.vpvY.'Oi v^^M^iNNwe , but for that very reason its inevitable \v>\\U S to tOttr&> ^^

:-~yJ

ULtaAIUES.

:iin t >t that expenditure .... Expctnu'n:-!' on tlic

librarie* can easily oe irruduuted according to the capac

feneration . they do nut » involve a lnrges<?l

i»t i xpendttufs which must be carried oat at once as \ whole.

te ouj-e with suoli works as wur. ■_ Kipplj or irain-

TMy Lords, therefore, can only tanction the r.a- Ctf.160 tw the i Ihrmtngham, under section I1

: r i IcLtb "'M,., \.-r oi -.».,, 18 -mil 19 Vic, cup id[ ivpnraNc jt« follows, viz. v.; _'<e> for purchase of land Ami for buil< :i ■:.■ ui th rty yearn from the date of lorrowiDg; l%fl .' furniture and fitting* of a durable kind, repayable iti i nwn i in- date ol borrowing"

ii [s somewhat unfortunate that thw correspondence should have uisen with the Birmingham libraries. The Public. Lib Indebto readied 178,000, reiwyuble in .i hundred

yean II may be claimed with everj reason Hint thirty jr. i tooahwrl ;i period for Loan* for Mte* uud building Lcael Mty, yean ahoold be the limit, ami roi iWw latter period the BcclceiaaUcn) Commissioners, as well an some of the insist cxanponieSi an prepared to .uhvuire :• .n.- mm- ! jI-i.h *. turpenoa, on the security "t Eb< :ii..-, at ■"». pel cent and equal puym nt*, extending ovei that period. The inaiKt'imra nf the I^m mem Board ore «lii| «■■*«< 1 1. look kindly upon i-mh. i >r (id ol thirl v yean for \h< s izmtirulione. lo mai

repayments between thirty sad fifty yeara m .! [£b rence. The question oi adapted (wildings hoa petverj ngooddei lnjui I'liriuiiL. In the majority of caeca the idcaol purchasing n building, and adapting it, should not he entertained. I mitte - it: .vi' naturally to bo hound bv tl»' means at their dinpxtal.

p.'iueiifc of the p,irtjeiUar dihtrii-t whore *! i to exist Che ire i< cal circumstances attaching to own- tern, which make it impossible tc lay down a general rule. tiic co*4 i i i [apttng bmJdirur* in usually mi nreat thai by the promiBOB are reodj ot nccupation they have perhapt 1 1

price of b new and bi tatty constructed building' It U not

now a rare occurrence that m< hi nice and literary institute), and other imi|«linas uv ntfeii.-ti on wry ^Ivantngeous torn Public Library purposes, but it ronld scarcely he ft id cd rainy ot" these onildfnga that they li.nl been "adapted ' for the n*w purposes.

Economy In public Hspwirifture na|iiin*H In be carefully 1 hi t there :s no branch ot our social system in which wise and courageous eTpernlitmr will more repay itself to the town oron* t hi man In that for educational purposes, uml n I'uhiii' i.fi in. i the trueai w use ot the term, an educational institHtluri deter ulned hen a the first instance, to hnvoanminiiNlii

loignt'd ei.pres.ilj li.u the pin puNt'-. ul u i'uhhe. Library p i i townsmen w ill. a tliej oppose suelj ,i ■■ heme al m sooner nr Ititer, to nee that tin's lias been the « i^er ^tep. ! - fWuVc fjhntry ben pub! i bw\dvx\geVow\v T*'*lit l< the iut.-lli

rrorrc mmkaiiy rrsns, buildings, etc.

368

:

of the town, and upon which the ritizcns can look with pride

The requirements of a large library building' aro so numerous that no apology is required for derating some space I i a few

matter? of detail. The large library buildings ol Derby. .\ .■, <;i-Im, I! it iiii^liLiin. hundue and i>lhi/r [thro* ;u\' OOOBJUeUGUfl US

monuments of the taste, cui run.-, and BEoBitfiCtUVAl skill oi the age, The paramount requirements id a large library building aro: abundance of solar light, ;< generous provision of artificial li^ht at night, plenty ol pure air of a *iuiai»le temperature, well- Icwgned protection :iij:ii.i-: ilu- niviiyv. <t niv :md against ihr deleterious fnfloenoea of danrJcecB, proper ventilation conrenienl Interior atrfeiigeznents, durabQU^r ol building m&teriajQ, and Btanilfty of

const rUCtJODL Other nirmidoTa.lioiiH pl:iy a must imjnirl:i:v. paTL namely

The proper selection of U site, which kIiouIO l»r hiyh ami ilry,

for :i book magazine require) the dryrsl Htiil mid surroundings, an tlnrs ;i powder insgaxine.

There should be sucbdistAace between the library building and Oic niMivbt tiijfli structure a* to render possible everj oeccasarj use ol the direct rays of the aim.

The methods of ingress and egress should be limited in numb \. bol neij libera] fa proportion.

Tin- Huppry v] rater should be copious, well distributed through the building, and easy of access.

Ample provision lor the expansion of the Ivook-holdhig capacity of the building, in order that the deittaudfl for Hit- enlargonienl of the building, owing to the growth of the library, may 52 peet- poned to the farthest possible time.

Easy approaches.

in the reading-rooms fifteen square Beet oi apace should '< all iwed to each reader.

The production of a suitable design und style of architect. IT . which shall be in keeping with bhesc FeeuireiDcnts, nnd yet t! ; i the building have seme points of arol iteeVom] beeu^, iea matter for :hf architects' iMinpetitioiis. Several oi the leading architect* in the country are niakinv :i speciality <u Public Libraries nnd museums, and we are now rapid ;p reaching o condition of a distinctive siyi" 1 1 m1 ih teetuw for heae inautntiona. i: in sig-

ii.iicu i that I !■■ an mt important library 1hmH:iiwn «.t' Euro] Wed

their origin to tin dry «>i pri-ici-j i<i'rveii**tiasl teal tU n Iti rtea,

who gave palaces und other large structures eo subserve the En sr- ol lenrning. these btitidtno? wi re nnr. originally InreiH I for I i r . i : 1 1- v [wrposes, they had to be adjusted fo new use, nnd from tjms to time enlarged. Tills hflR not tended U3 make them strikingly artistic buildings.

Tho nfnn of asking etx or more arehlteeta to send tn tafgns in preferable t<> advertising for design*

Son.' ii there was ii ruiitrovei'sy among librarian* In the

i uited States. Tin- subject was whether the "alcove" or "stack" tern of placing the booka was the taller, uikI wrssv&\ *A ^&*&

-a

SSI

PI-RT.IC IJBRAEIPfl.

loading librarians oi the country took part. ^ 1 1 ether the indj- vidunl racks upon which the books pest Should lie placed singly and flatly against the wall, which constitutes the rack ayateni, or doubly, and at right angles to the wall, and project a small apaco into the room, say 5 ft, and placed, *av sit. apart, which constitutes the alcove system: Off whether the racks xlwmUl be placed QlOM to- gether, BaySj ft apart, dividing the former alcoves Into balves, which constitutes Boa Bcrat-alcove system, between the alcove and the Ktaek system ; or, finally, whetherthe.se rucks should be pi u say 2$ ft. npnrt- nnd extend across the room in parallel rows, which QcntBiftntes the stack system, Is :< matter of do concern to the

arehilerr, Ih'i-jmim* whichever system I'd placing books is :iiIci|>IimI

iniisi be acceptable to him, uud he only wants time to make his amngements to meet the prcferenoe demanded.

In solving the problem juat named an American architect. Mr. J. L. Smilhme.ver, makes tho Following euggeeMona. He takes i he eji.se of a .-i.i ill j i i.i i > structure, to be pul up to accommodate from 6)000 to 10,000 hook*, the interior arrangement to be no

pliable thai it will ultimately hold :_***..( a k i honk* without

or changing the building As rhi.s matter has not been fulh i

within any other chaptcr.it will be opportune to mtroaucc I

here, tie takes a building one storey high for hin purpoa.

i0 ft. in the clear, and 10ft. or 12ft. hiffh.havinp aekylight and Bide

lights above the !x>okcaae9i which arc only 7 ft, high. Ten books

per cubic foot will be a Rood average for such a library, T> foot

ing 4 ft. for the door at one end of the room, we hare ;—

18.ZMU-4U 12f>by7ft»t ... BtO i fet by 10 txn»K»

= iw fe*t by i feet, nofgbt of r*ek, = Sttfeet

= S.4W) Uukn.

It lis number of hooka will be accommodated in smyle nicks, pm against the wall. The centre of thin room may bo used for read- ing purposes, Should a greater capacity for l>ooks become Qeceaasry, twelve racka, say each fi ft. long" and 7 ft. high, might be placed in the room ;it right angles to the side walla, my § ft apart (forming alcove).

13 rfnglo «»**« by 5 IHt lonp tt>fectbY7*oeibitfh..

4aifoptbriuN>iV»

Doduft 1SI squire foot ot wall epwa eovcrod by neks 7 fc*t liigh nl 10 )>wk« , , ... ••*

fio r.-t

IWIWl. = 4,900 b.Mjlc-

Mobuok*.

i,*0 l>t)olt..

Hw centre of thle room may still be used a&a reading-room. The next extension will, if needed, consist in the introdneUi 16 more ineks placed between the alcoves, and dividing them into

liidves. By this addition is gained—

nj mek» by o foei Ion* = huiol

P*fe*tbv7fO0t - «*»*«»

WW (wl by 10 lwuk* = MKiboukc

I>«*lnot in aqiiaro f*et of wall spft-oo «»v«ro«1 by rtck 7 fo>t bigb

atlObwka - 1,120 bouki.

MQftbaeka Tlie centre of this room may s\\\\ be uaed naa readlng-n

prni.10 library rcftns, prii.MNCS, arc.

:iJ5

extension poealble will be is Che direction or abandoning

eoiupartuien; typo, and i]i*vnting tin.' spuoi' now used for read- ing purposes to book raoks. S\y this change will tie gained fourteen more racks, or 0,800 books. These rucks are placed In purnllel lines the width of the room, say '6 it. apart, with passages between them

11 ruck; by 10 feet long

1 10 (wt by r foot

WOfcotbylObodta... Tl.iL. will Mtlco ft tOlal u( (1) : .iO'i.

»*,Wtt villained.

= 140 foot.

= bud reel,

- O.BOOboota.

*) :.i,M0i M] i,4M»i (4 n.rtOO. T.,ul,

HOT

read

The plan suggested by Mr. Smithrncyer i* rather ingenious, Init U at the Manic time, practicable.

In .Inuimvr of the present JCBI B paper ITU roml before the Aivlnteetural Association, contributed by Mr. MuitnU'ord, " Oil I ho

planning of Public Libraries.1' Severn London librarians wcw present, and took part in the discussion that followed. The fact of Che paper being read shows the enhanced interest which, on nil Mdos, is being* taken iu thi> question, Mr. Mountford considered the various apartments separately, and naturally began with the entrance-hall. ,\« lliis is only u place of passage, he said that in UTttBgJDg an economical plan, the tendency v;ix '" reduce the hall to a minimum. He nrgtxl that the hull should be Bfl roomy oh possible, on the plea that people coining and going to and from all the rooms opening out ot it, probably often stopping to ohnt, u «mall hull must at times become Inconveniently crowded. "It simnid," he said, "have an outer porch, wherein, before the library itself was opened in the morning, copies of the daily paper* might he ported for the benefit of men who, being out of employment, want to see the advertisements in good time The fending library must always In* on the ground-floor . AS near as might be tn I In- priiu'.lp:il or it ranee. Abundance ot light wax essenlial; and should top-limiting be out of the (petition, there must l>e plenty or windows, wiih reference bo the position of which the book-cases would have to he arranged. The room should not he lew than 13 ft. high. the windows being: kept upas high a* possible iu order in throw light over the lop* of fclie bookcases, ami to penult dwai i bookoaswi being placed against the wall beneath theni." Mr.

\[< nntford devoted ;i considerable portion of his paper to Hie

•-lit" lvinerof books; Wit, as this is dealt with in another chapter, it la B&DBOSSSaiy to attain refer to it here. The need of the reference ii h i being :m the quietest part of the building in recognized by all. He leans to the view t ii.it tin* elevation should '-< rather of a municipal than domestic in character, it should in* aotod thai

in Mi,- rcicTCnce department the volumes would be nine, '.md not tC33 1" tin- lineal foot.

Wherever possible, in the plans for new building*, n. leOtUM hall should bo included, Thin, I KrWSTO, should not bo higher than a first floor, on account of ingress and egress, and if over a lending library, a special floor to prevent the noise Itqtcv &&<iaataKu& ^&» em below should be constructed. Where ttva >&\\*a \%r«v\\fc*A

M6

prm.if i.WRAitiaa.

it a locliiiv-liiill over the basement, ami sulo by aide wuh land) rig-Hbrary might i«» Arranged. This with gttllrtrica would then be the same height dh a ground-floor lending mm irjr, with rafaranoe departs enl as b Oral floor.

Whltat referring to this mutter, a Miirgratfon of ;i CamlvHdp;< tutor, of it Mi.nv ilcsii/ti tor libraries, which certainly pom merit of being n -v , Lh _■ . \ r n below.

The nucleus of Lhe buudinu consist** of a circular reuding-raora lighted by taeaua of tall windows under the dome, and coinrnuitf* eating with the rest of the library by eight radiating pan Round this room the library proper winds by the prcuongatioi] "i one wull: the whole is but one spiral pfl irried on to any

e'wveiiienl Imii'th, Mi which Uuht ii admitted frOTn fetticaJ

light* under the roof. The height of the walk? in supposed to be 'JO ft., and the width of the passage about 24 f t. , this, howon left nn orK'n i|iifwiion. IJookea^CK urc fitted to the wall at millet uboiu ID ft. in height, excelling ;i little in depth Hie

dividing tliera Both sides bcingr used for suu'iure of Ix^uks, 1 1 it* \ afford a* much accommodation a* the adjacent drvfoionaf thr v..iii. Thais, for book accommodation. a wall to botli gidee <»i which Iheac

euecsureRttaeho<t r-'i'r.-nrniM v.'iih i: le-nn

noting '" four times that of one side of it. Along the •> hok) pasaagc lijflit gallcri<#an intended to run, supported for tin

Srt by the bookcase*., by which means mi ea*y aeccas i the upper part of the walls. The practicability of this doela Public Library purposes may be doubted, but it is c baild future libraries on bucko plan ua w n allow ol ward tnlargomoat which nm\ bo noeeAeitatod bygrowtli If bj any plan this can be effected economically, at the . sffoansg minteiTUptod order and regularity in the in mitii4tn\tion. t»uoh x now ctopattAUte m'v\v»ww j - tiou

M7SLIC UBBABY PCVPS, BVILBISGS, BTO.

357

will hnve served a good purpose. TIM sOel 04 <■>'• « ling si circular building fur exceeds the cost of ordinary buildings, so thw is a mutter whidi would hove to be considered.

The reading- rooms should be made Cheerful by the presence on tin srsllfl of mapM, engravings, &c.; and pieces of smtuapy to the room. It is remarkable, when gtfr* of this nature sre onee set owing, how canon esn fee done in securing donations for such pur- |i"M's :ia ili.'Me from The better-class townsmen.

The present writer islets In fit you r of separate rending*rooma fttr Indus and hogs than would appear in rhe two former editions of this work. Where there is one gond-*i/,ed room, say of oblong shape, tin' i : 1 1 *:-->- fat boy* should be at the end nearest the den of the assistant ur caretaker. Thin would ensure the boys keeping quiet— fl difficult tiling to achieve sometimes when a Kt«|nir.iLe iniini is {dotted to their use. Our desire to see I wye the ml •■-I'll viiiLf '-ill 7.VUS nft lie lu tun-- a red I'm* m PuHir Library work to stronger than < w i li.n they leuru inriet end orderly liehnv- lour hy being in the presence o3 their elder*. The table* for the ladies m:j.'ht he I'luced at the extreme end of the room, and their presence m a nuge room aide ths ftraetal deeonSttt ado gives kb eppoaraEoe of cheerfulness and brightness to .t news and rending-

i ii. To any that frivoHtiea are MU-iy to go on by bhc sexes

bedng in the same room in this way, would lx? an assertion only liimii* by those who haw never boon in loijgs reading-room whore this plan is in operation, This would reouce the number of small rooms for the librarian, und his oasletoota to watch, und so their time would be ooonomnod for other work A eeparats ladles' room means very often e good den] of gossip, end eoitto- inii«- ii i- Brora these rooms that fashioii-eheot* end plates from

the monthlies !ire moat missed, Ladies ]>i'«i not taint at this

statement ; but t happens to be unfortunately true,

Ihi' pabliC I:iv:iToiv OOSOfn | undn Imn for both BSjXeS should be

el t wry limited eharaeter.U prnjini at alt, and it ts greatly open t- question it v. is. advisable, n it U extensive and the pieces are easily accessible they will be quickly turned into public* ponvenieneee, end there fs no reason why this Ofovisloo should be made out oJ the ix«nny library rate.

Uh.-Ii difference nl opinion and controversy )nm« eeurred between

even practical authorities upon ths subject of ventilation. Om the beet methods of ventilation ts to have gratings hi the outside

wniu below ii a* floors, and other gratings In the floors' placed so-as not to be near any Of the renders, nnd then some outlets or veu- ttiattnjr chimneys placed iis near Hie . ciliin/ as possible i by this arrangexnent not only are the rooms well ventilated, but the floors nrs also kepi dry nod free bom rot. Where there tss

chimney, a l-.is m-i.Ij!. Ihi i :s lreijiif:ill\ 0100*01186 of: but this Is

expensive, and not in out opinion so good as the other method. ii iwever, U La the lighting n sunlight be usecLn funnel may to the outeide, mid will materieilj aid in the veninuv Uob .it niftht without Dxtrs expense, wliei it Is nuMfc i*v^«*An

owinK to the uiere.i.sctl .tt[ri.i';.;.ier. ,\ UQunaClJ nfM&Oi tpM* «*

:vw

(Mill I l.tBRAItlKS

iiiurh vi-ntilation as a bedroom. Tlu- por-us U)oks i\\

impurities of the atmosphere h> Bponge absorbs water. Piles of books, moreover, afford s multitude of orevioee and crannies

vii.-iv iinji rv nil' an -IsLL-'uate.

The dootrlfl light now coming into nee in the large libraries i> being found u decided boon. Where this is contemplated a basement ton the engines iSj as a rale, essential As in some libraries it is necessary to keep i.uiits burning all day between the book-iiu'ks and dark corners, act umulators can be provided for these The supply fur these lamps eon be drawn from storage batteries during the day until the engine is bj i a. d I

riiL> app . Li :- i >l electric lighting is crrowmg wo w in raportanee, that in course at .> few years it ia probnu i. « ol tin larger libraries will (><' lighted by mw. The effect* of fra* npnii books Is an Important question chat lias for p loan tune regneh vexed the minds of ^ns engineers and others Gas has often been accused of rotting' the bindings of books exposed tfttta heal ,unl fumes on Hie upper shelve* of I hrurles; bui the Impeadh- ropni b:iH ax often been repelled Some experiment** show thai brown calf leatlier, when exposed for l,(x)0 hours In ;i dose ohajabei tilled v\ith thi fn ne* of burning g«s, anil kepi bj these ji .1 temperature varying From 130° to 162 Full., Is scrtoush deteriorated: it* power of stretching being reduced by onolialT, ami its breaking strength in uboul tin.' same preitortiuu. it Es also shown that heal alone fa not the eauftc. of thoc eflecte ; fni ill.* sa i.r kind ol leather, when heated uvei steam pipes t<< an average temperature »>!' I9fl Fab., for 1 ,000 hour*, i.h »u F< diminution of strut* hing power from l.'J to J) per ««iit.. while it* i"< fclns strength was reduced in the ratio of 36 i«> U3, Btei when kepi al ai avcrag* temperature « »l" 143°Fah.,oi aboul the spine heataathe atmosphere ol tin? close im> chamber, tea does not sustain any appreciable injury no Long na the air i- tolorably pure. .Vli tlii« is von* Mh'tin^ against the us* ol opei

f;:if tliuii'- 111 .■.-.■ :ij;ul:i .ills I'ontiii ump books bound m outlier The cause ji the deterioration of the leather under the influence of the product** of combustion of coal gas ie aot far to peek, it iu nothing more or lose than sulphuric wid, round tii" aypothefcJoal presence ut which in tho atmosphere of gne-111 I wo much controversy has raged.

The improvement* made in lights for public building* have daring recent years beei very numerous. Many xo>< which greatly improve the liglit from gas, and render it t:i Injurious than the old burners, are in the market. Su \\ cnhaiii, mid Bray's light* and burners, timonu ot 101 named Then is one thing could be strongly advised, and that in tiii' placing of d main gas tap In each flepartmi nt, bo that ttu ghu can !"• easily regulated or tnrned on, withonl inconveni 1 -m _>

UU read. 'is.

The heating of the build tig - an Importani matter, bul I <• are so ouu y systems In vogue that it i* iniposslble topurrlenlHrfase ifu.n Ovatnuv} nre-rAaeesareuw\eMhVn .■ lUKUtutiona

THK FOItMATlOIN OK IM' 151,10 MllilAllUJfi.

3ofl

fitly or sluy person a are present at one time, as the Bret who 8 1 1 1 1 o WW certain to monopolize the fire, to the exclusion of the

Sreat majority. By the hot air or hot water system the whole of le roona is e<juaUy heated, and there ie ir, smoke or dirt, and labour and fuel are greatly econoumed,

CHAPTER XXII.

THE FORMATION OP PUBLIC LEBBAIUES.

IS two following chapters BTQ devoted to a brief dewrip- 1 turn of some of the principal methods of work adopted in British Public Libraries. It is not intended, nor would it be potable in the space, to present more than a series ot snort notes on those point* which are eon- mvted With HBtahliKhment and organ i?.*i mm, and which should

Srove most fiprvfeeahle in new libraries There ITS 10 ninny iffcrcnt systems of management and such B vmiety of methods in vogue of dealing with minor points ol detail, that to describe lln'in nil would be Impossible in OUT limits, while to attempt to reconcile their divergences wnnld lie hk lionelcx* it* it would bfl unpiulUable. Il may DC said, ^en.-rally, thai any RyStCm which

fuliUH the main objects ol library admhiisirti ion, namely to record and supply, is uuite elfeclne for all purposes. ;md it matters little whether it tin* been hnilt up from the results uf experiment Mi evolved from Hit* mind by a logical jh'occhh.

I Ik librarian, on being appointed, will iialuiullv make a c aielul Mirvrv of the quartets iu which hi* librury i* to be housed, ami order hi- arrangements iu accordance witfo the architect ural con-

dltfotu of the building. Before proceeding to describe the rifli US kiinl> of furnishing* it may 1h« well to mention a few general prnodplcfl which *hould govern the whole scheme of arrangement. We shall embody these m the form of rule*, with bho reeerratton that the spaces^given arc the minimum for their

■I'iil purposes.

1. Ko truffle should exist in any reading room save what in necessary for the serrico of books ana seating of readers, and no public room should be made u thoroughfare.

2. Ko passage For public traffic should be les* than 1 it wide.

3. The BpMfl between reading tables: should be at least Oft.

1. The Hpuee bet ween UbU- end* should be t ft., iuid between table ends and walls the same, if there is a gang-way.

">. If possible, complete oversight of the news and reading roomj Should be obtained by the stall while employed on their ordluurj duties,

o\ All exits from the public rooms should be within sight of

Him stall. . Each reader Should have ut least ir ft, of elbow-room when

geated at i table* 8. Vll arrangements should us uuele wvUv r3*SA toSuKMSUeK i Ughting as well as eoiiveawuee

:;r

IM-ni.IC l.l'Ui.MlIKB,

It should be noted Hut the ren above lj i.<>

reading rooms and sot for public pnfwijfc* or staircase*, v. iU ih the architect will dou 'i i - provide .rnple and ipucioua

BOOommodfttloQ.

Shelving. As the proriauiti oi aboraffc for I*k>1<s U the i i ly earliest duty which -.\ ;ll <;;1! for performance it may lie ve< be ii' ii furnishings fii*it. (Joud bookcases mid fit-

should Invariably be provided Hot partoi ncnt buildings, as there

ik :ib»jilut.«ly no ceo-

n< i i\ i procuring cheap niakcshill trig which will onlj Uul i year op two before

railing tfl [»nvr* \ .it

serviceable Iw.i.ki-Ws ii be made from

volh u p. ii'. fli

. and \:n tiiHlii'd

or polished. Por tin- economical ahelving cd moke nbu durd or presses elmuM lr

adopted in prefi

i i m1 Hie

walls, v.-li an ft I

iHllV WaMfftl i

.|>;li'«-. Inr .-.' A | '„

i mm.-

•.•:.;.: \y lotlOUt '■ Muff. Sl;iti(!::n|:

cho advantflffi ording shell a vee both Hidevj i 'I lofty room can mi I . be ' provided with i jrluss an<l irern meaxa- nine Door, carrying1 a duplicate ttftWew of oases to hold additions Standard bookcase; should i><* m i d* CD the dimensions -iimvn in the nnuexo*! illustration, vitl nbtfl shelve*, which might nor tn exceed three I'-fi or three feet six inches in length, landing or refer? 10* Iwikcnaes or ritnndard, should not exceei Plyhl feet in heigh 1

orcioe and plinth. Lower eases ran l»e used IftFirniehl n< H.-r.rv. but tf apace t ;i roniddei'&tlon lilie height Is nol rxcensira when it la remembered thai ;< middle nIswI nerso.

top sfirll R ,fli .i BtOfJ hi ip' Lnche« ki nnr I'mi! l;i"li Mil'! <*r no^

://./'/ /•, fin feel should nol be w»A vf\\\uw\\\V mtaruattXcm

HTAVnARI) Tl'VnCCASR WITH SHTCT.VKS ON

both srnres.

Of a

THE FOHWATION Of PUBLIC Linit.VJtlMS,

SOI

floor iy tfullory Within Ihr hi'iy li I , ,1" . i^'lil loct, Ond Bllowhlgfor

thlokueee of shelves, vbieh now no! exceed en* inch each, ten

flholvee can bo plaee.il, DO an .ivora*re. in u lcm linu library where 8yo and lAno book* are chiefly kept. In B reference library nine ahelvcennvy be allowed for the same height in Ordinary standard caMA, hut id wull eases where t'oh'os and qnar- < -' tos are stored, probnbly not more than eight

shelves will !■«' ;jii;.

Wall cases should have a lodged base as in the illustration m-en be- low and tfce enlarged shelf space thiiK ob- \\i:i be found

«i| ;.'iv:ii service in

itoong large boolca.

In wi_\ larye libraries nisi ■1.1I means must be dei inied Pot She storage «<i olio volumes.

The I"\mt port of n.iii cases em easflj be enlarged fa two

IV.-I nn'ic in il«'pth

in order to admit very wide folios, bat it - <

u i.-.ri ]f|;in iii i,.,vc fmch boolca placed in b{n -

iilly-l'iiilt cuoce not

more than three tool

hitfh, the t ■>]»•, t' whioh

ran In.- use" l

lease 1 1 i i rraog new b* oka. ielf fttdbga are

nnule "I VBROIU kinds

iMth in wood and

rni'i i , bat the most oonveoieiu and effective support ih that

made by Messrs. E. Touk* & Son With tin* the Shelves ■> i loed ut iiny interval from one inch upward*, without the

letsi trouble, Ihlaformol support oonaieta of perforated metal stripe into wMoh mu I met* catenas are fixed at Intervale <t

fi\\(K ineh, on which the ahelven n**r. I' tin* k1u«1\i?n :ire icnle all

one initvu'Mi length, as they should be when possihie, any altera* Hans or re-apaeing .'ill hpjpvatly facilitated Hie fore-edgea of nil shelves ano-ala be rownded and polished, lunr protectors erf scalloped clofli let In i<i the front nnd^r-eidfts *»f shelves on .-.iHiMMiti.-. used. Leather for this purpose [a not vrnuu\uvu\^\- an it Minn dries, booomsa brittle, and cjrtwcto\e* \*» $*«*»<

WALL B00K0A8B WITH LBDOBD TUSK.

sea

I'll I l'." I.IHRAHTBB.

A mm i 'i : feel 9 im he^nhould be left between each book)

;ui'l 4 ff.! between cikIh uf oawB where there is a gangw.i). Tln-i-i- I ■.■-. uf apace rt-:ll Mifficr between ends of cases and blank

walls. In calculating the number of volumes which a case will

hold, allow ton volume!? pin- hueal tout ot shelf hi a lending library, and ten shelve* in a height of 8 feet as above. Thus, I division of a case with shelves G feet long1 will accommodate 300 volumo. Tlri'. U* should bo estimated at nine

volumes per llncul foot. This is u simple and fairly aces manner of calculating the capacity of phelvn*,

Counters. -Tl id » ••- . i

high, »nd IS in olios *;■!., an adieutor is used. If not, 8 1 ■■: I Igh by -' feet wide. The Length t > be loeordinx to Uk »ize of indicator, and the service apace required. A <.'otgrosvc indicator occupies fi lineal feet for every 1,000 volumo*. A refer- ence-library counter should be 3 feet high by 2 feet wide. Both should be provided Kith wlokei- and I!: j»k giving

public side, and should be fitted i n_*i_ i ? » - i wuhauosral supply el

shelves, and drawers of various hizos.

Indicators.— Tlwro IN leverul methods of showing to the public, by means "i ino ticvice called (he indicator, what nooks in :i Leading department are En use or on the shelves. There can be noaneeoon as to the utility -<f tin- indicator, aol only aa earing the time and labour ol the staff, but as i convenient interna between the library officials and the public. Hy its use the need

for elaborate systems ol book-keeping i< obviated, nnd ore rapidity and accuracy * * i service are ittained, The pruicipuJ ODject ol everj mdlcator is to display by moan* ol umn dJJraroutly ceionrod, or numbered ajHtccs left blank or other i shown In a glazed frame facing r.ln* public, *h.- honk* winch are to he had for reading

m-\ ;t.i! r;icrli;ri c::1 devio-h li:|VC I»'C1| n-ril :il vi< {< c- tri •'■ E0

effect the object* above described, bui It was not till 1870 when Mr. John Elliot, public librarian of Wolverhampton, brmighi forward his indicator, that anything of practical value vu achieved The contrivances used previous to 1*70 were mere makefthil'tb fur the use uf tlie staff, and designed simply with the special object of saving ihe labour of looking for books which were in use. With this the renders had no concern, nor did it in any WBtf assist (heir quest, The Elliot indicator in therefore the fn"*t invention which had any real value in the wrkri^ol libraries) :in«i was the pioneer of every subsequent device for the siiuplinV cuiiuii uf service ; aud.it may lie said, the buprovcitici relations between reader and librarian. It in preferred hy librarians to any of the more recent systems, and ha successfully iu a number of large libraries for monj yi

A* ta Illustrated on p. 303, it ha* the book numbers arrai Inconsecutive order on a series of uprights, and against each number is a small vacant shelf or pigeon-hole. When a bu issued its number with the date is written in the born wort curd, whidh ;'- pta ed on the sheM oppotfoe tas iww1^ itf tVa work on

Til* JfHRMATKW OF PIBI.IC MlWAaittS.

:•.<:'.

[In mrticator, and remains there till the hook i-, returned. Tho presence of a rard attainst a number of course indicates that tho hook so distinguished is out. The whole issues in a day are noted nn a -peeially ruled sheet or hook kept for the purpose.

HILlOTy. MUKAin iMtlCATOIt.

The indicator designed by Mr. Alfred Co tgreave, public librarian of Guernsey, in 1879, consists of alarjre frame divided by tin slides

ito Mil. dl rjompartments, in the rammer shown below, Each compartment contains aaraaU rever»ihl<' nn-uil i-hm- which Imlda i !•■* I'm i representing a rolumo to the library, and foi recording ii> ImuM Th§ emls of eneli caw arc turned up and enrrv the number of the hook in two colours, one to face the public when the hook is in, and the other vhen it is out. The QlUBtratfoDfl on j>|i 801! B©5, show clc urlj the form "( I Ma c i ••- and ledger.

t\:. ,i im;n;.- of < U'tivtlli^ Imok.S which have IhtIi lit pt ! »> louder.1* rand the period allowed, Mr. Cotgreave dob invented on tuHnnti his indicator in tho form o!' -muill Mide* m- <l*n-, ©1 diSstfe^nK lour« for covering the msnbera erf bocJkB to aw wi eje*jHftftj,&

;;.;<

i'i m.ji i.mii w:n>.

yaSofl dido* are need to cover the nuintiera bomed In one period)

red the following:, blue the next, ami black the tat penod, it follow* iiiai iin v vfiiuw slides remaining in the indicator when blue and Mark an causrenti denote books whichafa overdue. But there we other methods "i showing the eaiitf thing in ;i ie«* expensive Mid cumbersome ttntuuer »K'mm1hM m the t'*il liming

rS& "^

i ■nTf;nH\vi.: I ivim ATOB.

i --,i..i.--. I ic record of doily Jemms, in most libraries osSaa? IT, 11 kept in a special back or on sheet*. The "Duplex*' i* the same Qjvei] to mi indu-i .»■ r >.k<«iKned bj

Mr. A. W. Roberteon, nubile librarian, Aberdeen. U i$ i rariot cd Mm Billot Indies lifio tl i inn to an .1 ih<

nomeat <>i" Jaauing books, and an automatic inuthod of ahi DTordoe volumea apart Irotn the indicator luelf. 1 moi

* than the Cotgrett e ButtOft\uv,u\<. iw» u .

TCIK FORMATION OP PITBLXC IJBBAIMI IS. W8

ok a rongft oftttlogfcc Thin advantage i*enpnbl<» oi Itenig ied to both the Elliot s.n<l Bonner Indicators. notihev Form of tndfcator Hi that rleatgned by Mr. ritomaa Bonner, public librarian, Ealing it is claimed for it thai over

itne* ''an :ii mirr- W di-stingniNhcd without ;h.' n-o of the dtifo of flip of the Cotgrflave ayatPin, and thai IW 06t»t k SboTH otlfl fourth less. It has numbered octagonal Node* to represent work* in the library, tnni ahotdd prow i«efnl, If nay cfwefnlly worked, in ettBtfngulaning delinquent) borrowers. Each aide <»f the block is differently ci iiourcd, and the variations nf colour show overdoes hh in Cotgreave'A nlide ayste n.

Further particulara relating bo the workfnj ot the indicator, i»n*l Its application to the books in :1k1 library, n ill i e found in the following chapter.

Reference xhnulo: '•■■ inmle tothc " M;ium/.:m " indimtor, recently introdaced byMr. John Elliot, oi Wolvcrnan pfc d. it Eg described OB toll on - in the " \\ '• Ivcrharapton Express and Btat9i " . . . . The new b&eator is in the Bam* principle u the ..i<i onatj

coiisislinp ot* twelve nnriMw cuhuuiir-, in an enclosed wood DSOIO)

•ohmn containing flfty innnll tinned reoeptaelea foi the

ion of the pass-books. At the head Of Vftui column are neatly printed tho dilYevoid i out l> 4 tin? yea* from January to

Daoember, irW at down fcha outside wood margin at each en<! are the titles ot the respective magazines taken in. it will thus be Mod that as in the ease of the ordinary library Indicator, ;i would* ba i i novel CU aee al fl ftfa&OS whai magazines haVfl hoon lout hii! iii. i chose Btm available far faane; whilst, rax the other hand, the library assistants ea i readily ascertain In each ease, by refer- ent t*. tile ' ■-. t" whom" any pw:l\e>x\M Xtt^wx»w\va»\»»£<A

•m

rvwjtc MunAMRS.

l«nt, nad it detained beyond the (line allowed tor rciidiutf, rnn M

once oommunioatc with the boaoirer ret-iucsting its return."

Tables, Chairs, Newspaper Stands, eto. Tables for the reading-rooms Hhould not bo too long or too narrow. Throe foot broad oy 10 feet Imu? will bolound very oonvcnioiU aJfDQnt*iaii£| bui the length must be decided by the size of the rooms. It ia important to have them broad enough to admit of reader** being ed on both ddafif as a jjreot uTnount of unobtrusive bat effective oversight gained by I ho renders overlooking each oi In r, Hafijaidne or news-room tables should be about - root 0 inches high, but in a reference library where much writing is done the tables can be made two or three inches lower, Bad s few should bo made la His ihape of deaka. The framing nl the taMes should

not he mi deep ;e- 1<< nitrrli-iv with the comforl <»l pcr»

at them. Unain should not be too heavy or clumsy, tleavj chain ate very noisy, re piin* great expenditure oi energy to

move, and, Iw -3. »w O^ y>:- . , ^ hemgexpenstve are

a source nl an

l rouble to keep

clean, A bin light chaii u Ithoul

:inn\ Imvlug ;i sent 18 or 20 ineheM from Hie floor, with a hut-rail attached, and the legs shod with stout rubber to deaden the noise oi movfogj will be found admirably suited for all pur- poses. No wepaper stands

should be mudc t" hold papers opened out, on both sides, The illustration shown alwve will diKf »1 ay better than can bfl described the tlimcnsions and form of the ordinary type of stand.

They should be very strongly made, with a base targe enough to prevent overturning. Yellow pine jk r suitable material TV- -Mould be secured by brain rods passing over tho middle of rfte puner and fastened* to the lower part of the desk. The slope of The oWc ought not to be very great, 6ec:ttiM- the acute the pitch ia, the easier are the papers read. A pitoh o1 B Inane* to l fool is ample.

Backs are sometimea used for keeping the current numbers ol periodicals and magazines to£vth»M\ in«te:i I oi huvi ig iluon liltei in? alioiii mid Miii-uriilH-rine; the tables, Ttierc are various kinds la use, including one patentee i\ Mr Cotgreave, the designer o indicator previomdy described, bur none seems so -tv :is

// r rack of overlapping staying tAxetvesYu use at the FC< nsSn

imv i-'iinM.vrrov of pitu.K' iibhahiks

367

Public l.ilinii-i.'s. This can hp made ta hold »m.y number of peiiodloflli in their ciivers, an<l is not eXDBQSKYOj DOT <loe* it K'roj.y inncli sjKiiv. by iii'Djccihiu r.n- jnii, the room.

periodical nArr.

It IB lianlly needful to do more llum mention 6ttch article* of

furniture ;is fleftkfland Btew fof llic OEM "I tin* .st;ilY, but then* mv

hro fxiivmL-iy useful aftiolefl winch may bo desoribed. The rtr«t is theboolc -holder, for kev|>m.i£r<'.wsof bool^ erect ,.»irhi.T on «hi'hc . or elsewhere, which is made in wovorol varicticn. Ww following illustrations iuv MilHcicnt to indicate thoir tftyk*.

Km. I,

I'fr; 'J.

The metal book-holder* ol M«oa(Fig. I), and BratyiFiji B).trt far the mosi - itiafoctory, neat, and twrviotebk

" '"

PUBLIC LIBD^IUEJ

The *econd article is the ciota»ocvered box top holding pamphtel

or filing periodical*. Them* boxes can be miule any ni .-. n<l

:tlninMl :niy Imx-nnicei- MB SUppty them. V t'KKt convenient and

dust-proof box with index on Bap is made by Messrs 1 inohani &

'". i'i f!i<> -■; 'i- .jf Uie annexed Ulautnition. The ghapi of I lie J id admits d Che whole contents >; Iho bos being turned over into

it. TtlMa hn\e« i!Tiii,()wi in i.| ki'pr on ■Ik-Ii^, will

preserve pamphlet* in an onli Hv and posfly aoee nner

:ii ;i rust 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 below binding.

ci.OTH-rovr.RRn i*avphi.kt-box\ nox-T.in ant> ft.4.p.

Business Books. Besides the various forms of hooks roculrod for keeping accounts, as ledger, cash bo< U . pel ';. C LBn boos, fine book, &e., Sure we a number ■•! other special 3 ruled books for rejristerme' the volume* in the Ubrfijy, the use made of tbem, &c. CM these the most important in the stock b »ok, winch re history of every book in the collection, showing when, when , &1 what cost or otherwise nil books wore procured. 'Hie ruling Assigned by Mr. P. l\ Barrett, Mitchell Library Qli bow^ suitable for -any library, Columns are provided for date oi receipt, author and title, language number. clans letter, number of

volumes, now work >>r .'"iilinii ■ninti (t.i distinguish bookl from

rohnnfi9}fbook or psfnrMe%stze,lmprinr.,dat* of ptiMlrAtlon,oondl- tfon when received (hfhding), rtonor or vendor, price if purchased, discount. collation, special collections, remarks. There ore other foruMof ruling, but they are nil smncwhai siiuflar Somen books classify the books iiage by pa je in apeolally rated columns or by rneani ul a cumulative syHiem of nmalKTtng ft other case* 1 he classes are alwtracted annually on separate sheets, and copied into '"■ lasl few pages of the stock book, or iuu> ruled chuslnuatfrin hook, other necewarj books are the Issue book (for recording issues uf l.moks tuiO attendance u shelf mrislci 10 iinnn-rir.il 1:>I o. h.iK:- uithc

stand on ilr shel\ eaj, location 1 U the numericnl llnding 1 1

DM with the noTftbic system of location), registci »w*rs

(alphabetical, but often kept on card*), propositi bonk, order book, donation book, and others, whose names aiffii ienl i\ ludicati use.

Book-buying Th- ire are several points in connection with the selection and purchaae 0! books which may be worth noting

THE rnnMATTns ill-' rnu.ir mhimkiigs.

w

(he Information of the general reader, u wft] usually be

mihil, :il'lcr llic cattUOgUSH of existing llbraTIC», publishers' Ii.sls,

and personal stock of Knowledge have been ransacked, dial .1 list oi perhaps IS/JOO iw fWXJO volumes has been brought together, and

llir (JiieMlon US to bow these Ottfl beat be gut Will next arise, In

ii« Drat jihirc, [here will likely be included a largo number <>i book* not in print, and other* very high in price. These should be taken out 1 placed on n separate list, (01 circulation among tteeoud-lwuid boolwcllcxe throughout the country, with ,1 request lor reports on tin: edition, price, condition, £e., 0! the books rrnniect A comparison of these li*t-> wiim returned usually

suite in most of the books being got m good rein hi inn *{ \< 1 \ moderate prices, Sen books can purchased si discounts rang* log from 2$ pox ccnt-to&Sj per cent, ofl the published prices, according to the '-it net made with the k> al boolmeUer.bd when nossiblei all books should bo bought second-hand.

Tli'.- quc*(:< 1 "I <'<b(i-'-i > rather an important one, especially si regards lending IJorapj booksi An edition of s book auttc good enough for circulation may he purchased for a shilling or two, if the librarian buyii udi u osly,whilc if he purchases without int|uicy or knowledge, lie may pay many pounds for nn SXponsrVi edition di ttf.v< i|Uib unnnih-il tor lending purposes. The works of such w titers as Scot! , 1 iickooa, RJnglaki , Tennyson, Thackeray, I Icaoonflfleld. and a host of other good writers arc pub- lished in a variety of editions, some rosy o^rponaivc, and some \< i v cheap and excellent. 11 gooa without wyinarthotahondj volume dition ol' Tennyson, piuctiouliy complou for a fow shilling H a one 1 1 purchase for a lending library, and not an edition in

half ••' dozen i>r iiuhv v.-ihu ir« enMitm perhaps fc*8. For lending- library purposes ail dosses of books, but espeoiallj flotion, *-lnm l> i bo purchased in one-volume editions whenever possible. Indeed] u should be mads an untranogressablD rule never to purohasc throe volume novels. They ore expensive t>« beyond bina, dear fit almosi any money for the space they oecwyiand ;> source of endless trouble as regards recording, and Ens difficulty they Ion in the matter of statistics, v novel which has any itriking literary character or element "I popularity vii: almost And its way mto one-volume Conn, it may be three month* after ts original publication in three volume* costing 31a, iM. (— m\ v iH-t )t ;»ih! the probability that it can then be bought for any sum between 1*. tid. and -is. in the form most mih iit!<- in- ■•u'euJation. For this cheapening any public library

I can well afford to wait. The rule against I Its In more than one volume applies with almost equal fores to ■» certain daw oi book* ; :.- " ibrary Miuinns." RspociaUy is this the ease with the 0 B

e

1 1

numerous Inflated biographies o1 modern oelebritiet which are laUy named in a form our of all proportion to the importance

tbfeel For th»»%<\ a puhl'r lihrnvv should wan ill) it i*

ml their merit or popularity wamants their retsoau cheap one-volume form, ft Onanavei haomua,aa\a awxws is case wphiH copied from Bubacrtption. vtewrtSjftloto'ttwSQB*'

:*70

PI7HI.ro T.TItlMIHRR.

Smith's/oi i>oiigi;iOiud FoUjHafycan behoughi bq licate oopta oj boon should bopurchaBed very sparingly heforc :i library li opened, mid beyond •liif>1i«-:« i iny such authors as Scott, ImVIomi:. iii.H-keryv, George Eliot, ami h few others, no mora than Hinglc copies' ill' any work should lie bought rill ti 1* found i\ experience what readers most constantly seek. Duplicate copies of novels l>y moat writers of the day should be bought wtto especial care. In some *»f the older librarian il is a common thing to see shell upon Shall of books by once popular authors, whleb were Injudiciously over-multiplied to serve h temporary demand, stand - i t t jjt like daswiovered ghosts in sfleni reproach lor then* permanent iirylm-i, uiid Hit- misappropriation of public money! a public i brary should be ;t selector rather than a purveyor of fiction

The purchase of books for a reference library is quite a different matter, as the best and must complete editions. In h scholarly view, are by nil means most deniable, Technical and acfcnttflc books should be gol in the most L'ecenl editions, aa there is a vast difference bel ween «hut out oi date and up t<< date In the aria and sciences.

There is nothing else to 1>e said regarding h»ok-buyuig savs that it should in the first instance be left to a librarian <»i experience and knowledge, and that a special collection should be lurtde uf every book, man vt jninl relating In the district in which the library is situated.

Classification aud Cataloguing. Hie two subject* forming the heading of this section are probably the most debatable in ihr whole range of bibliothcenl science, Certainly there arc none so

Goliflc in the production of discussion and disputation, It m.iv poeeible bo and 6wo librarians who agree Be to few pointa n general adniiiiistiiitmn. but on the question "1* classification every- one maintains u right to an ex catkedm judgment. 'Hie subject very much complicated by the confusion which has between the classification of human knowledge, and that beet adapted to a collection of honk*, not to speak of the difficulty vtrich exists through cataloguing and classification being oca- foundod. In general, the rlussifications of knowlcd; suitable for a collection, which alntiy m cam* but n selecUo&iOJ hooks, boeauae of their elaboration and wont of practical aoauaia< tnnce with the literature represented in n general library. For n

fublio library any classification is satisfactory which adapt ,i pnrpoaee of arrangement and statistics, because the cats and not the shelves Is the index to the contents of the The elosfrifii ntion of books no the shelves of un ordinary public library need not be either very minute »■ exact It will be I of greater practical benefit to arrange the books more witt refcrcnoe to future got-ot-ability than scientific rotation Wp Fl t (hie purpose a clnKsiticntion with as fow main division

J i0 nblo ps recommended. The following scheme ol eJnamflcatloB suggested m Edward's " Memoirs of libraries " ha* ^-.ti adopted in a number of librw\&&;

m ,-u

mm: mriM ATIOK «T iciii.i- LtmAttTM.

371

1. ft«oio£y<Kce|f>HM*ticul TIik-

»«*y,I»fciU>8ui»hy. d. History, Travels, Biography. c. Lav, Economies, .Sociology,

j-.. Poetry and the Drama, r. UngDristiQS,

o. General works (Including

Fiction) or h. Fiction.

Politico.

i>. Arts and Sciences.

Thi» exceedingly handy scheme lias l>ecn objected to on grounds cliietly connected with what we might term the cf a. tfi-iffm tfon of subjects. For thi* reason many librarians have i*ub- divided the classes b and n in order to Miow mure minutely the actual kinds of books read. Perhaps they have been aUo haunted bj ii BOQOQ of tin* ineoiigruity arising from the juxta-

position ol tv -i Mu-h works as (.'lmton'a "Fasti Hellenics and the " Life of Allan tlie Ilothhury Piper," in class a; and the queci BBaOOfttttw of billiards and botany, sculpture and soap-boiling ill

i lass n, An an alternative we therefore give an approximate t<>

the QlfiSBtftoalion which bar* been adopted in u large number ol libraries ,—

v. Fine and Recreative Arts, u. Useful Arts. u. Language and Literature. r. Poetry and the Drama. k. Prose Fiction.

t.. Miscellaneous ami collected

work*.

a. Theology .Philosophy .Chiiirh

Emory. ii, Topography and Travel*.

v.. History and Tlingmphy.

n. Law, Commerce, Fconoinirs,

v.. Mathematical and Natural Sciences.

Further than this it is dangerous to proceed on such a de- batable subject. It should be mentioned, however, that it is exceedingly hazardous to fix the elan Of any book by Itfl binding. Grant's " Cavaliers of Fortune" and "Constable of l ■ivTi.-i-.' wiili others which shall be nameless, are reckoned as fiction by nearly every librarian in the tinted Kingdom f Ate Messrs. koutieoge to blamo?

Catalogues.— The one point about which most librarians are agreed on this wibject., ffi Che dictionary of single alphabet : <>f arrangement. On every other detail connected with n, opinion! arc as various an books. A dictionary catalogue em- bodies in one alphabet the authors, wihjects, ;m<: titles .it hooka to ths library, and no «np need be at ;i ions to Had at once what It does or does nor contain under anj of thr.se beads, if be knows his alphabet. For many reasons, but cliietly having raganl to public convanienw and knowledge, the dictionary form of catalogue in strongly recommended Far all new Public Mbrnrfm \ handy serviceable catalogue, printed in clear type, acroHM the

iiago, oa good paper, can be produced very cheaply. T'iiIchk tlie Ihrary is varj large, possessing say 20,000 volumes or more, small typp and double ooranins should be avoided) There is no advan- tage gained by crushing the information given in a catalogue itiln Hip smallest [losMhle compass. Readers are often. V*-*^V- tg the double colmnnn and eonfuKftdYfj \\\e muvOWjvv -. Vr-v-v - .

873

prune i.tBitMii^.

the catalogue acquires a starvud yet unbitiooi attpearttncOj which suggests ;> fragment Erom some huge library oatalogue n 100000 eomraw

rii'- i K- s1;mii1,| bo eiitalogned under then* authors, subjetotoi

and titles it *uffioienthy distinctive, <>n ^iipNu! puper, iihout k> hv bOB) and these must ho loft in the volume* till checked. H [fl i , -m'v good plan to make the author slip serve tor the stock linfik iTttry, 1\y including OB :i separate lltte above ill" r i r i . .

particular* required by the Conn of stock book adopted This ufton laves time whoa hooks an required for immediate ufr- nl trmn, it* they enn he entered in the rttoek )»«<]; from the slips ;tr :iny time.

In cataloguing use the rules tor author entiles Issued by the Library Association of the T'nlted Kingdom, and forsuo]ec1 or title entries, and nil question* relating to arrangement, u&e the "Rule* tor u Dictionary Cataiogno(u prepared hi Mr. c. \ Cutter, uf Huntou. This in published under the. authority oi Mm t" s Government, and urnnescaii generally lie had on upplieuii'Mi to the Bureau of Education, Waahington, 1). C^ TJ.B.A. n need hardly be raid that for small lfbrarlue onjj such roles as are

required should he adopted. IVt <l<\- . Liny the Mies of hunk*.

if it is thought adviaahle, the excellent "Demy hook acalc,'

designed by Mr. Charles Mudcley. public lilmirimi. Warrington,

Will he tuniiil ul -ji'vti BO] \ k One or two important rule* worthy of being kept in miuil,

though 1 1 '■■ ni« -ul l v overlooked, are those

Uake the dntc of publication purt of every author and subject entry This S often omitted under the erroneous impression that II is useless and occupies space it is of the niitioM i iipovtanoe that ;i reader should he able to lei] by the catalogue, the earliest ami latest books In the library on snoh subjects as MVicu, Vstronoray, Blhlo, ttlecti i i ;Iaod, Piijsidinyy &o., se

IMii.ee hooks under their netiuil subjects ui'lnmi reference to words on the title, which merely describe '.he torn which rhey are written.

For i -vi tuple— -pm History of Oxford, Element* ol Botany Principles oi Elocution, at Oxford, Botany and Eloei hut never at History, KloimMit* or Prlnclplee So with hooks whose subjecte are ool indicated bj my word on the title. ft lea vi > .--lipvlnid method of cataloguing to such books as .Tacksoift " F;iir laisftmiiu," Rakert "1*. in. n in." or Ruskin's "Muucru uulveris" only under rheet

lille wurdn, and not at Portugal, Africa, and Political

Economy, It Is (lie adoption of this very perfuneton

iiractlce which moke* *o iimim of our Public Library oata- nguos mere author and title lists, however notch thejmery

I'K'i.vnl to he subject-indexed

Bepcaj ilo- p unee vt different ml lio Sfirtuvno. ''iily disthiguwVi \ej » dwell uuthora oi un j<

which arc idiMitienl, *-.'/..

\'i:n\i:\ Al»Mr\'lMTR VTTnN

378

Johnson (PetorY Efiftory of Greece. WtQt

History of Borne. IddO.

Johnson (Samuel), Rftfflflffffr l-^i). Avoid tli< ce lnii.iniit headings, u Works by f &o» so ofteao Miii in tin- author cntrlca o* Roane cotnlofpicAi &s thoro Is it danger of unreflecting readorfl being bidnood to think thai

tin' tirltv. ivj'ivsont ]>ii'turi's .«• stiduary!

Arrange subject headings when *mall by uuthoro alpha helically; by alphabet of Babrhoado or groups of! rotated

su!>-«livi«iuri.s wlu-u loi^d

Use capitals only for proper names ov words which d to desirable to distinguish.

There are many other points of importance connected with cataloguing, but it i«* impossible Co nonce them m our preeenl space. Let the catalogue be made from the books themselves, and not from the work of some other Hbrarfafl

Jnst<*ud of n printed catalogue tor reference libraries there Iin been adopted to many librarian* a »yatun M col H> i books on oards written by Hie staff. This baa i»oon found revy advantageous [n main reepecte, bnl especially where the hubs* tlona oi oxpenoe ami fulness nf entry are concerned, These oat&lognea nonuM of \ series ol cnrdaon which are written the n in hofs, subjects ami lilies of the books, arranged nlnhnbtattcully in drawer* which arc accessible lo the public. Hooks can be eataJugued to any extent and inserted in the alphabet at any time * iiiiout cost or trouble There are various kinds of eatrfiieta for holding these card catalogues. mid voiou* way* oi* Hcnirinjf the cards and drawers so that they cannot be removed. There are good specimens of i\a -i- caLalno.m\s Lo in- sren iu actual use at the Guildhall ami Royal College of SurgeoiiA, London, Nrw- eaatle-upon-Tyne, zind elsewhere : but as they have not as yet been generally adopted it is not thought advisable to enter into ;i detailed description of any particular style.

CHAPTER XXT1I.

PUBLIC LIBRARY ADMINISTRATION

0 Da? as the public are concerned, n great deal of the success oV a (library will be tOUXld tO depend OS the

eye^oiei nt' iintiuiL'riiiciii idopted. As few impedimenta ae pewibk' should bo placed in tlu way ol tho b- Towen cu? leader, and alt reslrfetionc abould be ai flexible may be consistent with due safety an<! order, Tin* pomti I > h aba i:ir -,:i both lending and reference ttbrariea are rapidity and aeenraoy ofaarvioe ai d record To affect thoec mmii every- connected with the unmooring, recording, locating, and identification I the books should be a* simple as poai ible. Sotao of the more oonaroon method* in use are deaqcSbfeQ w\«<-* , vw *av- (iodc1 thai they "\:<\ j rose auggeattv^i

374

pn ill T.rnitAnrR^.

Preparation and Placing of Books, -All books on receipt

should he examined or collated with a view t«> their oomph U n< «»r otherwise, and compared with the invoice and order If they b i purohaeedi Bach volume should next receive it number

COUOCUtfvO leTies. A hook called an Accession n op I

i ion Hook, with fifty tinea to n folio, numbered 1 to 10,001) ii Bomotmiej used for this purpose in addition to th6 stock book or shelf HegiBter, and in thin tlio volume being deeU wirh tpoeiTed the Brat vacant number. This in called the acn-ssion number, and is used In some libraries simply BJ :i reference to the place of the book m the *toek l>ook, where, oh lief ore stated, its history iw preserved. In oilier libraries this number is used, in addition, Eor every prooeaa connected with the book, whether cataloguing or locating;.

The books should !»■ stamped in certain nxed places with the official stamp oi the library. Every plate, the title page, and the lost page of letr»'rpr<*s should be stamped, to addition to twt. or mors Axed pages throughout the hook. Stamp1* may either be smboastno;, perforating, or iak, and may he squi re oval, round, or any Hha|M>. Km bossing ami perforating stamps, u

at present made, ;"ti lurasy, und occupy much time m nse. ink

ruDDAr stamps posaaas the advantages of cheapness, legibility, and rapidity of application The leaves of ever} book ihoufa be carefully out, srefi Into the itackj before being put hi eJw 1 la* latioiL in lending libraries it w usual m paste on the inside tl the front Iwiard a label bearing nn abstract or the rnles n I to the borrowing of books, and a label to show the dati winch thp volume was issued, together with, in .some other particulars. In reference libraries a Mimple name label Is

1111 >Mt frequently uned. When ;i honk has undertime these several proeafjaas and Iws been catalogued, it only awaits lix-.iliiijf in- shelving to tie lendy for issue.

There are very mnny methods of planing buoka on shelve that they can be found without delay. The various plans arc roughly divisible into two olasaes, which we may term fixed and movable locationa, In the former, which is a -survival of the pre-imlicMhir period, when aaalstants were forced to run about with lout* liMs of numbers in .search ot uue which might chance to be En its place, the books receive m addition to Hum accession number, u press or shelf number which appears in the catalogue sad directs to the position of the book on the shelve*. it taction ioao h.v lms system to set aside a certain number dI bookcases for each olaea into which the library is dividedj and to apply to each a certain scries of numbers. Thus, may have reserved for it numbers 1 to 1000, class 11 1001 t< «'*000, class C 3001 lo 4000, and so on; or each claas may IwTC ;iti Independent series of numbers from 1 to 1000 or over, in .in) rite the assistant knows the presses allotted to each 1 and a demand for, ssrj Q 300 ia met by the assistant pi- < < '*' the (i press and" picking out the nxunber wanted. Tin. o> eametimee with sligW DDuo4k&8atitfma,\» \n cwmtim-a xa*

PriMC LIBRARY AIDnxfSTIlATIOX,

m

in British nid American librarie«. Another method <if Irxed locution ifi to number or letter the cases 1, 9, 3, S&0« 0* A. B. (', &o, uud number the ahdrefl hi each prew, and the books on

MU) shelf. ThiiB, Gh 8 -1 points to press <1, -lull' sixth I uii toj>, and book -I from left cud of «helf; or as i-* done in the British Muslim 30&.' 11, points to ores* :ttt:k.\ wrond top shelf, or B, in alphabetical order. Vet another method of fixed location is to nmnltci* tho books in one BCqaenco, set aside pTOSOCfl for ouch cluas, pick out the bookn of each rlu&t in numerical order us far as they go, urid pluce them on the shelves in flint order. Class A may therefore he airangcd 35, 79, hoi, 309, 311-15, 649j &c, but alwuvs preserving a numerical sequence. Reference need only DO made to tho very elaborate system adopted in some lurge libraries of shelving the book* uecordimr lo a lifted scheme of ehtssitiea- tion, There are several Mich schemes in existence, but ibni

designed by Mi'. Melvil Ucwey, now of New ¥ork, is probably Ivettor known than any other. It Should be mentioned, however, that the library authorities ni SioD College London, have developed a scheme from the actual

arrangement of the hunks on the shelves and not from mere

theory. These systems of eluaeffieatSon are not at all adapted

for use in public lending libraries. In all the methods oi arrangement hy numlters alxwe mentioned, it will be Been that in every one oi them. Bating the last, the number is a reference simply to the place of the book, and has no direct connection with the accession number wimii points bo its history; hence reference between these two numbers If necessary. Such references are usually made in a column of the numerical list called the shelf register, and direct to the page of the stock book.

The principal objection-; to the fixed system of location are these:—

Books cannot be accurately classified On the shelves after the nrigiiwl iimugemenr, and authors and subjects get

widely separated

It is Impossible to make any alterations In the relfl Ive positions of any series of volumes or to re-immU-r B By -i letfon without reprinting the catalogue bod procuring ntrff number* for the indicator, if Cotgreare's ii need.

The preliminary work is always greater, as the whole of the books must be arivmueil in :i lixed order and numbered inside and out before a single slep can be made, while the duplication and confusion of numbers us between Accession number ;U>, (lass A 80k B 8Q.C 80, D SO, &c. In one BVHtem, is :t frequent eausr o| \eiy annoying and

serious blunder*. When the movable system of location Is used, one number

Ik applied to each book, which direct* to the hi.-torv I

tsiitn, lie plane on the shelve**, nod i* regreaen.tatt't*. est ^fa>

nok whether Uif t'ftpaloga\n^ HgisU;v\y^ UY vawVuw* \»WvW*.v>,

■'.71'.

i'l Bl.tr i EQBAJ I I.

Til,- method IX «!lil[)ly DO m in! i t (tlO -hHv.<:~. Instead n\ PO*

numbering the hooks. The books are classed on the shelve m mimitelj p may be wished, and the lumber ol th- is; curried on to the libel trf each book and agnlnttl itannn m (.in* loe&tlon book previously described The peomrioi iniinbiT. wiiii'ii le tin* number oenttoned above, used In (lie

c:il:il uiif ;iml indicittor ul" '.(M«'ri\ In :, !,. inline library WfieW

the Cntgreave indicator is used, the lx>rrrawnr asks far, bj \(1 •.>")■-'. The atttriKtuiit proctM*!* to tin* Indicator Imok So, and whflfi making tin* entry, note* the shell number whl marked In iin* small ledtfer He then proceeds bo the shelf, sets, -* t : 1 1 1 1 1 »j- . and Issues the book itv Hits system bnokn are tmt tied Ed bu shelf In the library, mi Ehoi anj nunthof in- mibjeoJ can be kepi togetiwr ot moved nboui lo mill a&£ requirement whether ol space or eouveuieiiee withoul la ui | iifl'iM-tiiiy aurht save ili'1 ihflM number inside tliu book Itsel] the location book. Hie main objection to this plan i.< iin- difficulty caused ol ant i\ in- mtorventkm of the locution bunk lieforc the exact place ol the book can be discovered Ttiia objection is one, however, which never has the least weight aftei i rnou h a i rue, u ige assistant becomes so familiar with ail thi hi s\ Imoks as to be <|uiu- able i<> dispense with the iutvriu*

re renoe. If ea<l; shelf i> an'mint-d dlplwhetieully, as to SOHie- i iin Jone, hooks can lie found without the MightcM dels

Service, Oversight, &i:.-\ii.v of the ftvstcms above d will lie fuund workable, but the first mentioned ol the fixed md the movable locations will l>e found to work most satisfactorily. Whichever system is adopted, it may safely bo recommend* i be worked u conjunction with an indicator, Of the n indicators which hove been mventod, Cotarcave "s ta probab] aa any for oso as a basis, especially an its ment> have more generally tested and approved tlian any other. With thj villi other indicator*, (the use of ledgers io obviated, booke nre shows in or out iastantoncouely, ondleea troubk Es borrowers and staff alike, and overdue bonks eon be detected with little trouble. The methods of service are as foil

Tbe borrower having ascertained from the oataloffne number of the book wanted, and by tbe indicator that It asks the assistant librarian tor the number, say 6,692 an I I in bit! oardj without which he \*.ui not K* served. Tbe aasistaal io 5,80:3 on the indicator, removes the miniature ledger, and enters in it tbe number of the borrower's card ami the correal dnl.-. lie next reverses the ledger to show the colour ivpr.--.-Mii ;i,.l;.-: .,-' |t>:iv.'-; tin' .;n-l in il. and procures the

book, [n most caeec the date i* next carried on to the <J of tbo book to indicate to the borrower whon ho ha I 11 after an entry is mode of the book's number in o Lis1 boob ot iheet, it is isfraed to the reader. Another method the borrower till up an application form with the nura and tr be book wauled, unA \w* ww *M ticket nmu

i'l if. :r I.miUBV AI"MIVI9THAT10N.

377

bar.

This he handi to the aaaiBtuit nlnnjr villi his k served in tin' milliner described above, save

."ird,

Hi i

DO i];iy hook nv sheet is l Ifnl. r.he application forms hHlIU*

m:n!i' the I>h*Ik Of tin- issue Statistics This method h:ts the

adv&ntajfn of enabling the asuistwit. to serve more tlmn one reader a) I Ime, provide* n check nn what is being issued nnd to

whom it is Issued, :m<l gtVUtf the vnrv fcmsl possible dnlu DH which to base Hie record of issue*. The further greal itilviinluye which

it Inut of giving s sun' means of detecting tinl tracing errors i* not to bo overlooked! n i* always an objection i<> the nfad caai nniiioii ( r caiiintr f»r inw»k.t. thai errors aw of continual occur- rence through the transpos bon •! number*, and thai no check in

possible till oil the entries have been completed, md the book delivered. This objection com pk* 1 el, y met h.\ the uhe of the application form,

the detection ol book* widen an kept tonta bovond tba period allowed for leadiug !.■- rittln'i Important where bha iasQG Ifl targe. This u effected on the Elliot indicator generally to meana of the borrowers' aarda which have I lie ends coloured differently— sav

red and green. The red ends are turned toward* the htoff on flu- uidiiMioi ilurine tin* lirst periodj green th< n<\t, BO 1 1 1 :■ 1 When

tin- aeeond pei iod i.-i .li;iwii!\. bo a CloaCj QQOSt >! the tickets (ihOW- ing red remaining: in the hidii-.ilur :iic overdue. This method of

diatinguiflhtne oTtrduen by bom were1 aarda la adao adapted to

the Cottfreavc indicator, sometimes with four COLoUTB to uive a ,.■!•■ i.-.i i, ember ot changes. There ;ire two CQloUTB printed 01

soon and of the ticket, half <>f til** and bo each colour, and Mm period in which any numliei' has been issued :- slwvn by the

r « - 1 > i ■esentotive COlOUr, which i> turned right OC left BJ "ii:iy be

decided. These colours are father opt to rub off with t lie

handling; which the tickets get, nnd a shaped ticket has been introduced instead with success. Ordinary hard millboard out into cards the size of, but about half an inch longer than the indicator books, ami faced with while paper OD one Bid* *»nlv.

U very serviceable fox borrowers' tickets. If the cards bava M&o corners of one end clipped oft", four changes nv got by & iph turning the curds ne with the colours, hut the advantage Ilea of course in (he iion-effaeenient of the farm. First period, clipped endfl and white side op t<> face staff; Booond period, wiiite and square' third period, dipped ends and dark side up, fourth (M'l'iud, :md dark. These vani.ti.m are quft* ftftflily

' it- 1 in:.!!' i suable on the Cotgrcavc indicator, The slides and o rpa in ide for the < 'ote;rcuve indicator arc Deed t the Bane purpose, but require mere work in handling. The leodirin feature "i the Bonner indicator is the meaiu ror cheeking overdoes, and the Duplex niflo has a special meana of exacting a similar and which :ij j< ■ui'H to bo very ofneicnt. The detection >•': orarduce li onh :i aceondury matter, however, aid should not bo regarded an tho prtneipal tt iture \l u India itor(

mere are varioiM I »rm« "i ledger need «h« have not been adopted] though \\\- wm\v.>x^\ v* %«BwtfCea>a»

!

prUJ JO UTIRAJIIKS.

9 irked iii conjunction with n series lodger*, a rob i n n tA ledger , or rather day-book, consintcd of a volume ruled fifty linen to ti pace holding n hundred entries, with aolu ■boVingthc following particulars: conaocativc number, clam, book number number of rolumoB, borrover'g tickel number, data of return. Eoeh page is headed with the current lil Whea a book in issued, its number &c, is entered in the led »nd the date, and consecutive number earned on to tli- lnl-n-1 of the volume. Thi»*« direct to the h»d«or entry when the hook h»H to It marked off on its return All statistic!

compiled from flue* volume, and it in tho only record npin-t

iroin the entry nude on the labels of the books issued. H\ this method it is impossible to tell who 1ms u book which u out without vovy greet trouble

tactile* h*iii of lodgeff has also aftj lines per page, and >

ruled into Ifteen perpendicular columns of |ii:il breadth, \

page re ifc given to each book in the library, which It

entered n numerical order, and the columns are headed across the page -fciokot-nuiuber, date ol issue, date ol return. When

li hook in inxtied it :h only nore-tsary to turn up its nuinhor in the ledger, :md enter the number of the borrower'^ card Lad the date. The hooks on return are simply marked or atamjM-d off With the date. A single page holds the record of SfiQ Issues ol u book. Tins form ox ledger shows who has any book, end how long It has been out, wnlle the borrowers curd*; if arranged m a aeries of dated compartments, can be nude to Know tin- overdoes, if worked with application lists i tingle entry will -mmce at tho moment of issue.

There are many other forms of ledgers, but the principle io nil is much the same. Some keep an account of the book* read by each render, while others combine this with the systems above described, The ledger system is gradually gobuj out of use in Britain, aa it is found a seriou* Inconvenience die liindranee to the staff, especially as regards the Inborn- of searching through long lists of numbers for the first one In This eiiii with vt'vy little exl.ni trouble he undertaken by each reader where there is un Indicator. With ledgers onry the staff are ojien to continual ernnpla tits of ravoiirltlKin, ami ex- posed i" the nnlaanee of sceptical murmurs on the question oi booke being out ; while the eternal trouble of "marking off" is u serious matter to he avuideil if possible. Of course when the expense of an Indicator cannot be borne there is no alter* native but to adopt a ledger, and the second form described in recommended.

in the Appendix a variety »if form* hit l^ivh if applications, vouchers, rules, &e., and ii is needles* to say anything rcgaribng them. There are points In the inanagement of a ill .'i".iry connected with work-hours, borrowers' voucher fa i srdSj fines, service, See. which can only be discussed with due reference io the rales and regulations adopted, The reference is very aimflat to vVie \c&&a% Uhrerj i" ij*

l'l'Wl.l»' I.TBItAnV AI'MIMSTRATIOV.

:l7y

genera] working, but as ir is open t>> nil rooden without tntrodno* Bon "i' guarantc •, :t follows tnal great em must be exercised in the issue of hooks which can only be read on thfl premises.

Appln :itiiui t.n'ins in*' always used, OB which flic reader Ifl required to ^ive hi* ,,r her name anil full address, :is well ;i^- porticulaiN of the hook wanted. It is usual to put the slip, far

i took which bis been issued, In the place vacated by the vofnine* where it remains till it is returned. The slip* or forms are nsed after the books we replaced as the basis of toe issue statistics,

Binding. For public library purposes all bmdtag* should )»•

strong; and durable ; finish being a secondary eomtidcrsitlnn. Various material* have been tried, and at »no rime il WAR thought that in hnekram a clump and lasting binding Stuff h;id been discovered which would supersede everything, but there has itaoe been good reason found fe doubt Its suitability. Among leathers *ldeh have Ktood the tests of wear nnd tear aa well as any, are good Persian morocco nnd pigskin. Some recent fm- provexnanta tn the methods of dressing the hitter have ted to

0 very extensive adoption of this material \ l*mk hound in

half pigskin according to the following ipecfnCBtlotJ will stand almost anything short of use as a flre-brirk ■' Hooks to be well beaten or roiled. Sew one sliest <>ii, on

stroii"): tftjien, tlie first and last sheets or sections to be enclosed at buck fal Knen strips. Tapes DO be firmly secured between split-

hoards. Banks mace alow nnd flexible, without, bunds, imi with blind fillets in Imitation of bunds. Half-bound In pigskin, smooth sloth sldeB[and if thought necessary vellum corners]. Top edge to he eui, sprinkled and hurniKhed, fore and bottom edgen left with proof. End papers of stout coloured paper secured to linen

strip which should be sewed willi first ;md Inst Sections, with at least one white leaf before aud after printed matter. Cloth joints in all boukis, and plates to be mounted mi linen guards. LenSEna on back iu gold with title, author, and number, four tapes Nj W allowed tb ;< ~i iurh 8vo. otlier atxes in proportion."

Calf am! Rums leathers should never be used on any account. It is well always to put books in circulation in ttw publishers' cloth bindings, and let popularity and use distinguish those which should be strongly botuul hi leather. There Is absolutely no economy in buying; 2s. novels in sheets for Is. -Id., and having them bound in leather for »ay Is. Id. extra, makiny the first coat of the book h. *d. Il is much ehe/iper n (he end ami more judicious to take the wear out of lln- Original binding OTen though it be only paper boards, u there is always > risk ol books never being in demand, and the eoet of binding them is thrown away, to sny nothing of the disproportionate charge for binding

thrown On tin* early yearn of the library. An ordinary railway

novel eostbtg ssjj is, Gd,, will taef six months aud more wftn ordinary usage, and it fa time enough to think of putting it into. i strong binamg when it has proved that it U necessary, \ i raaooxa Plows und reading rooms ire © ucrclWfo farctta&it

torn**! persona Ihut little need be Bald u—.i^Ym^ VUvwa. \*«^

380

I'MlH-' UHI!Al:ll -:.

simple newsroom :n\vin.-h on i \ periodicals aro kept in Addition

to Eh* nowflpapor* th* n I for i number «>i boole* la almost

nnnoeowuvry whan a rack In axed, Light arm-chairs will he r«m n< I cheaper and <|ult« u eonvenlenl n* tabic* ru fur oh arm oupporl for rcadlng»oa*ee if concerned, Cover* Rliould o>- provide*! for each |M<riitiiii'.-ii or mngnxfne mad* ol stout millboard, bound in half puHririn, and lettered with the title nn tintk shirs. Periortiealfl allowed Co Be About loosely mkih noquhT i dirty and nigged

uppenranee, and alwaya make u room untidy. Tin- news

Woe! ought to oansJin »ii almost every variety of Journal i id periodical 7»4 1>^- i i ii !■ i i be acquired 03 purchase cm donation. The principal London, provincial, and, it poaaiblc, foreign news- paper*; neekl) trade, eonimcidul, technical, literary, and * iiiu periodical*: monthly nndqunrtcrtj magazine** and iniaoellunlea should be applied ;is abuiulanuv ua posHibl^Bo licit (lit new.. Uay Em representative <»i' every pliaoe of thuugbt and opudvSi past and current political tod Kricutific movement, and i><-. iu genera), a centra tor tin- spread oi Information oi 1 ■• conceiv- able topic.

There lire manj other minor pointa In connection with Public Library adrainifitrotiou. about w\ iob information could be given, iini i^ iIk'y depend altogether upon the main syrtem adopted, ii wiii perhaps bo beel to leave too question d their Bettlcroeol aloud Iliere i* sobbing more salutary and Bugueetivt than 1 \imi {'} some neighbouring librarie*. no fax ae the adoptii matters of detail la concerned, Indeed, there jh probab] better advice to be riven with regard to all matters connected villi Library vrurlt, than t" urge a frequent Intercourse with every librarian within reaeb

CHAPTKK XXIV, BOARD SCHOOLS AS BRANCH PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

hii i-ii.'K nn w:iste in nature, tt in only roan who wastes ' :tinl misapplies; und the waarte or power unci m dand is a crying shame upon which coll Immediate attention. Those wh< control church) chapels content themselvefe with, a* a rale, keeping Minns open about six bonis u week, while gni pnhuv public-houses arc open something like :i hundred went)

ru)ur» during thi* -;> dm nine iv^ioUy in no department of our national life la the wiwte (t*> which reference how beet 11 greater than m the allowing of Hoard School*, whic property ol the people, to he unused from, wiy, Ave 1 eta the evening to school-time next morning Ii \a notewi that many of tlie old voluntary «4ehools had a lending til attached i" them for the benefit of the school chlldroD too often the boolw In iliem were of an nnwitisfactor^ eliar- uri.ri. Tin-v fri'i|iiriiiiy relied tor Ihelr collection* on the rvaftinfttrj contrfbutlcma *»t the local ecfr\<Wvft -\v.-\k i,

B0.UIT> 8006014 AS U11ANCII ll'EUC I.IBILAMJ&. 3H 1_

Uenally that bus Bchool library became h receptacle tor odd volume, obsolete books, and the general rubbish oi drawere

ItfUl hmtiCsli.'lvi'K. All f«M Vclllllli.' Qf " Jihu-khtiHli/s l.'-H It11H?ll- l:ini's " wax cmi'c hOMl It :i lUn'itrv ilesiyueil for t-hihh'eli under

sfXti nod in another cose :i quantity erf Ration works were

given in)' the one object \ oluiuea of Bermoaa were a favourite mutton, an iiwv we t* .-. i:« v it hi t»ks Dt'i' Hoin'itxl. These can be hud nt any time by the cart-load, at the price ol waste paper, and ItaVould require one ol Sain Welters ■• douhie million magnifying

EIjikmom" ro discover what good a very linage percentage of thai] live necomphKlin).

The mere fnet ol there being school aeeojnnipdatton in England and Wales for 5,380,643 children for the year ending A.ngust 31, W-w, anil an average attendance of M,i',i;V*'J. ahowavtn I very brief form, the educational machinery which is in operation.

Thetnt.nl number of wlmnls receiving annual grants is I9,s?8, made upas follows.

National, or Ohuroh oi Enpinmi l i,aou

vVeeloyan , . . . , , . . . . , t 65S

Human Catholic , 017

Itriti^h I'ndenoniinational 1,378

sehool Board ifim

^ceordibg to the last report (1888) of the Education Depsrfc- ini'iit, there were on the registers the opines of4,rii,02G chiWra . di' whom

l,460^0i wei't! under i years of age | 3,027 ,$44 Iwtween '. and 13 ; 154,848 between 13 and 14; and

43,9*1 nl.ove 14.

these. .'1,(514,867 wore, on mi average, m daily attendance throughout the year

Here are the ponders E01 School Libraries, bul whore an the books :■ One sixth pi the entire population of JSoglandaad IVelea

are .it .school, mid il ir> (•■ these thai political 1 e-Minmrrciul, and

social power will by-nnd bye soma Let ratepayers fa particular think of the uuloanoe EOT good which n wcJLsicJected library win have 00 the wtadm of mm eobolarsi To Bchnoiaaaat *. . ad mistresses it to anneceasary to orgs apon tii.-t ti the udvisnbj

-■mjM -l:ing school libraries, for tiaoy aa*o abveadj ilive to the need ox them n w hoola

ail this goee to show what an absolute Bocoouirj agond library i- in our schools as well as o the universities. Pbrtunatcly. whether we look to Knglandj Scotland, or [reload, we ilnd :ni,"r strides have beoQ made within tin; tost decauc or two towards the improvement ol university libraries. ITnfortunafc fyt thiK wune BMuren ol wgreas hai ' - < ^ * »» by no uaam no regular and masked within the walls ol our school*, both epeax wwi, sinaii, Lad fet# wherever youth i-y.i.v\»'vi»\\nww;.' io&v

889

pdbuc r.rBRAjiirc-.

there BlwrtM be (bund a ooUoettoii >! books, lb< voluntary univer- sity trf Iln'M IsXtSl (fays, whnv the tttUCUoUS mnv r.M in' t. .

vuii read, mark, loam, and inwardly digest" the lofty thou and useful knowledge poured forth hy the Illustrious cleful on ttieirbehaU Forthore is in* nwra for doubt thai ithoronj good ind popular school library Is in taealeulable boon to the leholare, sod o great help to trie teachers— for they ire counsellors who "fly not from the suppliant crowd," neitfiei

do they wax wrath nor laugh at the ignorant

This <i!i»'stion of Bohool libraries ought to ho gono into i seriously by the rant array who have eiiarge of our boys and girls. Tii a certain extent, the future of the youth of our country is in their hands, and the spending of Idle hoars when the x wtratntH of school discipline arc not upon thorn may infl n the whole ol their after life. Ithlatfcs and outdoor exeroia* im

by no means to he despised nor (iihi'oiHML'otl ; I Mi Mien three

many boys who are not fitted for very mueh athletics, and, In our

ri:in:iii\ we may always safely reckon on :i certain percent* ;

wet d;iy.\ >uul then the library will he recognised, bolh by boy and master, as a haven ol rest where half hour* rnaj he passed thai are fur more enjoyable than aoiuc other modes ol spending time. Hie librury should, therefore, afford material for roerra- lion us well as duwnrjghl hard work.

There Is in the Education Blue Hunk for 1888, uutuuating ol nearly 7<M imnes, ;i Mi; < ■.■* > -■■ k,(' i»f I'l'ierniw < n the mrl of Hue various Inspectors i<» the need of establishing 3cbouJ

Librarii-s. In former reports, one ol' two no-j't i lr n > n-fn i

brtef paragraphs to this important matter. But whether ofhVtui- ism hie dficournged Una or not it is impossible to say. TTie boas \>f those piu'sgraphx was certainly to the effect thai in schools when' libraries are provided, the Intelligence of the scholar- n higher and more practical character than in schools « library does not exist. In one of the Welsh divlslone lbs Inspector says that " m hool libraries, I am jrlnd to say, are be» . common, and if the habit of reading at. home omM be established by their means. Hie work of the teacher in securing thoughtful reading would be greatly assisted." Why do not more inspection direct their attention to thin question of school libraries ;i vain neaivli through this voluminous report the only rofei to libraries In elementary achooui found by the author is the brief paragraph above, printed in small lypt *, and -mml . among n m sea of other inattor. Will the scholastic phiktu take up thin point? If this is done there will, no At nbt, soon be ;i . I . age, for toepectors are, an a body, too mueh in touch nM thri- work to overl'M.h the uucstion when it is brought home to them.

In some diatriete hoard Behool managers and teachers ha taken up the question in a praotieal way, hut the fringi oi ha» yet only been touched ho far aa the greater pa country b concerned. .Vt L .oxacid, m SniY. «IL. tboro endowed school with a Ubtwv. TAua . •->. &-«*& t\A, uad

BOA&D SCHOOLS AS MUSCH PI'BUf t.lBRAT.il>.

883

tains -•W volumes. The money wtw obtained by conceits, sub- BCdptioQS, and 1 grant from the school managers. The Religious Troct Society, the Pure Literature Society, and the Society for Promoting: Christian Knowledge granted book* at halt-price, arid the boohecUer gave a disooonfcot 25 pee cent. The volume* an changed every other Friday afternoon, only those lx»ys who have attended regularly during "the previous fortnight being allowed to take a fresh book. To meet the expense of repairs, &a, residents in the vilhige arc aUowod to join OB payment or one penny per fortnight per volume. The average attendance for the winter quarter is wl per cent, and the master attribute* this greatly to the library, lie also nays that the attendance at the night schools has beta better since the librury was formed. At Ashton-undcr-Lvne, the question of libraries in Hoard Schools has been raised, hut nothing special ha* vet resulted. The .School Board loan library bystern has been worked in Bh'nunghuni frith the most BatlftfttCCOry results. At .Norwich, a similar system jk being worked, and at Lynn there were 1,000 volumes in oncli school .

Mr. W. li. K. Wright, the Borough Librarian of Plymouth, has this subject very much at heart. Tlis plan is to* obtain from the Public Librae Committee a certain number of care- fully-selected hooks to be lent to the pupil* of the school for the time being, instead of leaving to run riot undirected in the

Qenftra) Public Library. It is JOBarj 1 2al '1 for the system

that it spreads the benefits nf the Public Library own- a larger area, with many < ■! inveiilene.es to pupils who may live far from the main institution. Useful supervision and advice can be given to the pupils in the selection of boolci suitable to then* age* and attainments, without unduly reMiictmg Individual preferences. Mr. Wright's main siiggiwtinti i* that "In con- nection with each dJs&FSet library, such as that propose'!, there should he a small collection of books approved by botfl library and school authorities for the use. of the children attending that school; and that (hose children should not be allowed the run of the central or general library, except at the special request of parents or tfi&OlKPa Thta arrangement might be supplemented i't TadOU! v.'»ys I" SUtt the particular Hrcmn-

itanoes of each case." According to the last report of the l'k-

i 1 1 It Public library 1,711) volumes are on loan union •» fwehe

Hoard Schools. In nearly every cose the teiiehei- take .l wartn f liferent in the matter, uud do their utmost to preserve the hook* in (food order and Lo encourage the children to be punctual in their return, an well as careful in 'hen use. 11 fa found that l In- bookfl earned home by the children are in DSfllQ Oaw

read by other members of the fouiily. mid the advantage* of tin- library are thus far more widely diffused than would otherwise 'be possible.

The Leeds system of US&Dfl r'>cir Board Schools is very frequently referred to nod quoted u an exMvtvA^. \.v.^v. v**.

: v '-*• hiji/ic/ic.s, bill in btfttdllg thia u ftttlW V«i v:vav,ve\*x*&-

:-i

PC SMC MB ILA Rl fcS.

iii.ii bod4 «»i Bfra hriih'ii.v ,-■» liouewd m BpeoiaUv-oroofc^d bujjdinga, ;iv ar« many ol the Sheffield, Manchester, Btrui ham. Nottmgha n, nod other branch lihrarfea. Leet - area roughly of thirty-three square ml'-, and i membi Town i Souncu mnde it u boott not tony ago, there weronol 10

I the 370,000 inhabitant* beyond six minute*1 walk trom a I'iiMiV Ubrary or news-room. Tnia may appear ••> good thing •it* wttftih to la* proud, bui It haa its rlrawDaekR; and it must u.- .irknowlodgea thnt while the Iflirarles and newerooma in

i la ire doing ;i mod eceellenl work, il I1- i leriotu qaMtUm

whether a smaller number would nol have i i&d quite

a* mueti useful work, Twlg-intr from an outaldeVa point of

BlOW il is rr illy :< GUM Of tOO UlUOl of :i good tiling. D

would appear that, ii owea itn origin bo the preponderance on the library oommitteo for n number of year* of metnharn nf the Council representing suburban nountf tunncicw, htk! to pic those, atul bring votea on the polling day. Letter* from realdents in the town and i>m*orml obaervation reveal tlua and Hir evil, for ii really haa Ixmuiip mi avll, lias not staled, neeuj^' that eyerj year brings a nuinbc ol nc\i noa In tin TVrwn Council, some <>i whom are placed on the Library Cbmraittae, * i j i*l other district* throug i their representative* areoryiog out for u branch to \v opened lii theft eonatitui i ey.

Tin boast of a ;tuv "i be population being Hthuieix minutee

walk i" a Public Library ta really nut u creditable una Ii ii nisiihiiimi is worth ;i iyi ling al all it i? ul - i-i worth I little trouble to get to it, due good, utrong and vigoi hi centra] library, and a t \% good branched would do .i work

iimI iji cifWl. and n.s uhi-liil in ivmiII- in the majority of Tliii la said in order bbat towns adopting the Acta ma. j" En for (<"' much discursiveness, and ire orjred not to one town oi district exclusively as an example for thcii pUn of operntiona. It iuny be. again slated that Leedr* is d

with it- branches at Board Rehoola an exceedingly g 1 work.

i v, , v( mv held n Board Schools. and of theue five ari open from 6to0i>.in., on (In evenings of rneadaye Thursdays, and Saturday Of cirh week One ia open four nights -> week three arc open two night* a week, and three are open enc night a vtei h'uin t; tti P,oi foi an hour only in the middle ■: the d

They contain Imp];. varying in numbers from 3078 to l volume* OGeording ti> the aire of the diatrieti »ul o)

i i kwelra ire supplied with comes of the local paper

popular magazines, Four I hunch Libraries^ containing al i

1,000 voluraei each, and eoneinting wholly oi juvenile lrtero4erO| have, vitb the eio-operation ol the Hoard, Ix bbahed, the

Library CoiusDittet purchasing Uie Ihm.-Io*, und th< Board undfl taking the supplying »f the Ijookcjtaea, &c, and tho mane tiH'nt. Theec oTunebea are n»en one hour on ;< oortoJ !hr weak to the scholars nttondinu th< ohoo rhihirt'n oi the netghbou-vhood fev tin- issuing oi boob, iii' «or\j ■■"•: dorn Vvjj ttvc ■•. -\.-v- ^^^ aUfiu

-, >\[1T sri-i.i.i.- t- pla\.;h r-rr.li. IlliTiARlES.

tilt

h...

to the four juvenile branches, three branches that had been established some yean have been handed war to the Bond.

m.ihI these ;ire ulsn ripen one hour each week. and are wo

by cta« stall of the schools, "fills makes Hie totaJ number ol Branch Libraries in Board School* sixteen, aa well us iime held iti church or other school*. No rent is charged by tho School Board for the use of the various schools, nor )n any charge mad< for cleaning, heating, or ga-v K Ifl entirely through th_i& public apirit uf the Hoard thai the COD ttlittoe have been able to establish branch libraries in ill parti ot the borough, and the Board has ckm< ererytliiug it could to help, rights rodgiog tho eetablishinent ot libmncs tin- -.>>tone .k«i completion of their work.

Tho oeBiatonta at these branches receive Is. 8d. tor each night open; nod le, per night in nleo paid to the porter of the school, who reiuuvcH the shatters oi tin- bookoaaaai arranges the room, ami preserved order during the time the library is open. At any branch where the work is too heavy for one assistant^ a boy to engaged to help him, and he receives payment ot tho rate of lb. per uight. The Board have QOl provided bookcases for any of the branches, except in (ho rii.se i-.f the three special juvenile branches.

in Bradford the School Board ofcarga the Ubrarj Committee a rent of £10 or £20 per annum tor each echnol used. V\ b> this should l>e datema BOme explanation ou the part of the Board

in 1878 the School Board ft* London decided tostartaaei ol llOTariea, bo change in rotation from school to school, fur the U66 ol teacher* and scholars. TIip schools were arrnngod In gronjm, SO ihnt each group WOOld represent a eonsrihicney of 10,000 children For each group £120, afterwards raised to £'144, Was

spent in the purchase of books, which wen- subdivided bnto ns

iiuiny libraries Bfl there were Schools, When » library Itud l>ei«n In use for six months at one school it wax hi; u-d ou to the next in Llie group, to ensure a certain amount of cliaiigc and variety in the literature available Thii plan did not work ran RBOOully, and has been considerably modified. The dmsmu iniu groupe ha-s been abolished* and now the books, after s years use to the are sent back into store, where they arc revised and re- lickote<l, lost one* replaced and perhaps OCH »:i - added

K.ich |iermanent schoi \ is provided with a lending iihrary ha the unc of boyB and girls of Standard ITI. and upwards, which is i under the care of ttw head Bwnbsfi For the purchase of sen dooIdBi a further oxpondftorot reckoned at the rata oi '■!. per bead poroxmmo >n tcholarsin average attendance i i both and girls" departments is allowed up w i ifr1m,rm oJ depurtmentj except Do the oases of Uirgo mixed departn where tho full amount ot jd. per head is allowed. Thfl head n, both of boys* and girls' departments, must forward wlih the annunl requisition I* i book! sad pparsri B,the requisition fi r . :,i be added to the school library [such b

sa

MBHAftrr*,

from tli..' catalogue <rf booka tor sahool libraries), U i the duty of the head master to bog that tho library is rendere I equally

mailable both to boys ami to girls. Managcra in hi?,1 that, tho books are. regularly given out, and mode available both b bow and to girls; and they are also requested to aionally look into the working of the libraries, bo Bfl to cnaurc that ihe library registers bm property kept, and thai full hm i* rnade r>] li libraries. Tho main regulation* are :—

1. That the books be Icopt at the school in a closed bookcase, sspietaUj •Queued for tin! purpose, which mImII h* placed, whenever po*wiblf, m tb'e

n' room.

2. That the library bo placed in charge of the heart matter, hut that llu books he available to the girls equally with tho boys, and also to pupil teachers of al! departments!.

3. That it lie thu duty of tho master to wc that the hooks ar»: not im#.- n*«l, damaged, or lost by the children.

C That any child injuring or lotuutf a book the parent of the etc called npon tO defray the eont uf mm I. humy in kns ; that the mulri make every effort to recover paynioiit, and, failing thin, thn chil<l he deprived of tho ana of the library for OS months.

5. That the library he open for the oxehange of books during one bour In **eh week, the hour being fixed by tho managers.

fl. That iiu book ho retained by ilm same child for mare than two weeka, hut if not mi aired by any other child renewal may be made. A i'liiM not returning hia or her book within the required time *h*ll b< deprived of tho vise of the library at the discretion of tho toachor,

Ae to tho quality of tho reading thus brought within react of the scholars, the Libraries consist of works by Tennywm, Longfellow, BbakaspoArC] Spenser, Dlaoaulay, SraUee and otnerai boofei of fiction by Dicltena, rhackeray, and other great novo] boys' books from the popular pens of Kingston, Ballnntyn. . Murivn t ; :md bound volumes '»t: nuifcrn zincs.

U in interesting to see what is being done in France lo th* way

of School Libraries. The " Blbliotheqnes Populaires den i . Pubtiquei are a special claw of libraries, established In schools, ;itiil 1'iviinc Ted with the elementary education dopari iin\ are tor the free ose ol the Bcnolars, and now number over Ba^SOO Ihfl law which regulates them provides that lo over v elementary school there shall be a library, under thi ot the teacher, which library must emitnin ii depot .it

hook*; for the free use of the free scholars Rook* ire t i

given by the Minister nf Public Inxtrncn'on and the general council for the department, and are received at) from any one. The libraries are intended for the parent ;is the soholara, and are not absolutely free. In some cwmh the parents |>:iy a voluntary subscript ion, and in all uuaes ;hcy are responsible for the care of tho luaiks. These libraries hi new inMitutiuUS, although they liavr m w i liccn |»r<iperlj | j.ii.i/.cd until the Republic took them in bund. J number of bucks "were distributed by ihe Minister of Instruction among the schools. Between 1833 and l 1 1

BOAltD SCHOOLS A3 BOASCH PfBLIC LIBIIA1UBS.

387

than h million volumes were sent t<< ihe BOhoola. But the libraries were then managed, or rather j ilai imaged, in mefa a

i way that by IMO the whole of the hooks hud disappeared, am! 00 trace of theui has ever been found. Ten years later it Ttu agreed to found the school libraries again, and in every new school built proper accommodation has been made for a library. In 1*hi a decree was pronounced for the creation of ;i library in every boys' school. M. Dura? gWO a great impulse to this branch of education. Ho considered thai library was abso- lutely necessary for a school. In 1861 the Minister eent ont fij,(KXi volume* ai n cost i about the miu1 number of francs. Ju 1863 60/XXXnnd in the following year &00/JOO volumes were distributed. In [860 there were t,8$3oi these school Ifbroriec in

France, and In 1868 11,395, containing l^3y,l«5 volumes. The loss of Usaoe mid Lorraine reduced the number, not in L873 there were over I -I/.X.IO. Three years Inter the number rose tO 16,46», and in IhTfl steed at -JO.ooi' libraries, with '2fiG\£tS7 books. Mow the ilbraries number over 86\300l and contain more than •I^x.x^kki volumes. The number Off books in each library i* not great, but then the render** are not numerous. Tho efrole i* restricted. The average number of books taken out during a year to about nix per person. 1 Miring 18*5 £'#v_'00 was spent on the libraries, which would represent ;i considerable number of volumes, for the Minister of I*ublte Instruction does not pay high for his hooks. In thin direction America is takings foremost place, and dot latns ■crow the terry are setting a worthy example to iim in direction. Not only by teucTierH, but by prominent men i. -Hilly, much attention is given to Kbs use of libraries in

D&BSCtlOD With the public schools, Once it was the eomphdnl that, thougli the school and the library .stood side by Hide, no bridge stretched from the one ba the oilier. Now librarians and

le trustee* of libraries generally, are trying lo co-operate with iei"w and parent* to dliwdjig into profitable ch&nnele the ig of children and youth. The younger ctuMivu are helped to select interesting and "instructing stories, and books of history and travel , older ones are guided to the sources of history, the . Qthoritiefi ii snlencej and finest examples in uterature. Ihe choice of the books is aided by the acquaintance of tho t cache] with the tastes and capacities of hi* pupils, the discernment on the part of the librarian of their wants, a&d (u6 knowledge of the books that will supply tbcia, and by the increasing nbiUto-: oJ i*. tt choose for themselves. Many circumstances and influences must unite in order to produce the highest degree of mutual holpfubieKi between the sehool and tile i" raryi 11 will lw Mcen from the chapter referring to the Public libraries m

IAniei'ict, that Uio st:it.' of Inassachnsetta stands at the bet . j work. In connection with the Pnblic Library at Qui in thut State, the trustees adopted a lew yean ago =i rale by Which aaeh ■' 'he BOhOOftl might become practically a branch i i i: i> the master selecting a number of volumes tvow\ Vw.

31

PCDLIO LrSIlARIBS.

bri rj ad oircelating bhenn among his Boholaitti In the Welle Schooli Beet m, a plan has beou devised for promoting the

Study oj g 1 literature. It involves tbo loan from tin: ftblio

Library to the public school of copies at some one book, sufficient in number to enable the pupils tf tl 6 school to rend the eainc boob At the -> I - time. Once a week they aire S3 lioi

free conversational way ns to the structure "i the work, tbfl relation <>i Its puts, the spirit tn which it was written, the ttcellence of Mi Kyle and diction, and similar guaUtiea, The iiMi- hi lik-.inr. li: entry increased in Ctoeinnai

interesting public school scholars in anthon or unquestioned mart! The School District Libraries of California are meeting with mailced BacoesB. H < iper ntendent or the Boston schools a&ya that the Public Library stands m tin- hc:ul of the educational system of the city, ft!" which it forms n trne part And, on the other Iwnd, he urges thai the sohoolH should give bistro*

in the best methods nf n-i.linir y«"«1 Imokt: "Reading is ;i;i

art which, nifchs little of almost every till i&bae ifeen taught iu publii school* iiunii'ii.i'i i.iily : but how to read a boos on entire book is au acquisition mode by row, and never system- atically (ought in the public schools," On* of the neatest helps '< bbe popularity ol a school lib irj

i:. Mint it *hi»uld W IhVntily admini t should n<-

filled with •* goody-goody '' books, to the exclusion of n u ra sub stantiol fare and I Lanaged by a librarian who really know.* and [ores booi , it is upon I i I iai th< irhols rains; hinge*.

£ trui- lover of boolca will be liberal iu the choice of his fi he will search far and wide, bring tho treasures together, cla and put cocli iu its proper place i and then, too, what an In- valuable help -i thorough to iwledgo of books enables the guardian t-> render the inquiring student! Rut it : absolutely necessary the librarian should Laki real interest in h too great a atr.-.-.- r:m > , be laid upon this, for it maal remembered thai n librarian uithoot true love of books becomes merely an official, who will perform his duties aa Speedily us ho can and with the least possible personal trouble,

BCOre general use might be node of Board Schools as branch libraries than has at present been the case* in many tuwns where there in a demand *< r branches and the penny rate will tmt itford ihi* co.-.i i"ii tniUdinjj. stocking, and mnintaining a branch, the Board School might with iMwitngc he used, i buildings ire pnblio nr< nerty, and there in no valid re whatever wliv ih.-y should not be used In the way suggy cost, of Dpenmj and rualnuilnlng them as newsrooms bkj iiitliiit'viiiii;ill> small, that our wonder is candidates for School Boarde hare uol made this m special feature iu their addresses. Our of Ml- obetacJes raised not onlj in London bn In country, h the cleaning of the sohools aftei the i

have Men used as ibrai ■• s: i>i;i s , uvn leu

I oud nine thonoxl morning, there would ha nmpl ..ti ouj Cot < toawhu: i a*l ** hand

BOAItP SCHOOLS AS KHAN'OH PUBLIC LTERaKIEk

888

:

wew it ni isary ox the whole nigl I to b supied, (here could

i><> no serious obstacle to the way Plenty of ventilation by open doors and wmdovra between the \\*-- of the building tor teaching and Pablto Library purposes, would ensure the rooms being kejrt any v .-inhvniry rery frequently alleged, is thai the seals nnd desk* being constructed for phllnren u*e not suitable tor ndults.

This is :ii: itlwtiu'li- which 1i:w r«i hi- in 'I.

There might be n drawing closer together m their worfc or School Boards nod the librarian* end committees of Public Libraries, The tatter continue In reality the work of the former. As 3Tr. Melvil Dewey says " We must struggle to teach oni masse? in read En our Bofiools. Thou bheynjusi become bread- winners; and if we oarrj on their education we must do ii by providing Public Libraries, which shall serve as niidi schools ana colleges fox the people. Ow schools W best wfl] onQ furnish the tools (how rudimentary those tools for nmM peujile uo*fl '); hut in the ideal libraries towards which we are looking to-day will be found rhc materials which witii these tools may be worked up into good oittzenabrp and I tabes Living. The schools give the chisel, tho libraries the marble; there can be no statue without both,1* School Boards have u larger rate to deal with than Public Libraries, and t )u-y might ro)i,M<t :ihh hi rxpoelcd to do

more in the way of providing school ITbrarioa than they at present do. This in a matter which cornea more legitimately within their scope of operations, and if tho hduention Actor tbo

Amendment Ac:.- .],. | t\ give thorn power to Spend the small suras which would be necessary, there would be no difficulty in getting a Bill passed by which permission would be conferred. Librarians and committees would, there ifl even reason to belie v i>, cn-opomu* with them In every way po$eib]e»aad would inmost eases under! a lee the management «.'! the libraries. The

link between Hoard S-! K iind Public Lihrimc; Is becoming

Huhm' every year. I lln-arn^ v<< rn .1 pi n 1<> Ihe rwople are the

real continuation schools, and ■"'>• the onjy means by widen (he taitfl for reading which elementary education creates can be :it nil adequately mel

The Society tor the Promotion of Recreative Evening Classes luis done, and ix doing, a most useful work in assmiftattng Instruction and recreation by a practical and agreeable method, Ita aim is to got hold of children who have left school, and to

Erovide evening occupation tor Khena of a useful and attractive [ndj which shal coul uuc 11 sir education and prepare lh*m tor

be actual Of < befon diem. In London nlon< no rowci than 80,000 children leave school even year. •»!" wl.mi unly i per cent, are known to confcmat their education En am systematic way The rest aodii forgei ii i -i' liter iwxrt of what they have been taught, and arc exposed In the evening i<> tin hideous evils of London street life. What this means m d] ten m Die work : educational, but the education is made interesting ■■-■■ icUro

by Doeani of musical thill, singing; and the axtonatve osa eJt^fosi

it* in foi illustrating lemons '"in historj, ftcou^a^Vj^^^ eJCBesJn

mi

Vlii],h MlilLA&IJjb.

tiiils .in.* litlfil in lnvuim' j_'»oil aw'v:i«t* or Mi he >■(

vrtoa useful by instruction in household sewinff. the maklnj mending of garments, and cottage cookery. Boyn are prepared tor technical training in claeaea for drawing, designing, mudc wood tarrfrut. &c. Hie teaching in Ml subjects in voluul Duriutf the winter of 1868, thirty schools were opened Eu I < Tin-. ..-isji-ii!)) winter the recreative and practical c.Ij started In M,t out oi the \.'- evonim» schools under the l. School Uoard, and In several national and other wheels, wWli in the country at large altout 50 towns of more or lew ii a ftneo have adopted the system. It ie estimated that tin i I of the Msoolation have probably abided 20,000 witliin < montbJ to tho attendance, at the evening schoolfl I ir *ughou1 the country. Nothing can bo of more vital moment to Um well-being of tho nation thon to provide some eafo and hca ohaonfl] for the aotMtiea »>t this olasi of the population, it I :i pooi eooaonry, which having educated them ut u co London, counting none but rate-aided schools, ol considerably over ;i million a yenr, w> nil. ay (hem to drift oil mearo I just when they most need a helping hand, A taste for reading. end the means for gratifying it, are perhaps the \»'\ bed aervatives a lad can have against the degrading attracttoi the London streets.

CHAPTER XXV.

PUBLIC LIBRARIES HC AMERICA AND CANADA,

MEIUCA has taken the lead in developing Hit usd iln - of Public Libraries. In tho United t: teethes* institu- tions form so much a part of the nati their abseuoe, particnlorly in the older districts , i- starnpa a district as being in tho rear in public opu i enterprise. Whore the striking of oil or silver creates u town, in u single round ol tho moon, mouey-raaking take the load, m I libraries have to wait until the lining of poebr- in. u«M accomplished, and a demand from tho citizen* prei cn< it « . sometnmg more intellectual than local newspaper* in which the staple news is personul gossip. In the actual use mad- of the book* in Public Libraries, England enmpares very fuvoui with America Bur. in library economy uuil administration we can learn many leusonn from our progro;-: )-. .m the

other sideoi toe Atlantic. In this a* well as in other d meats of lift, the old country and her strong offspring may plod Alongside by Hide in friendly emulation, efleli learning Other, an 1 determined that, come what may In the .| the

partition >ii Europe and other parts of the world, bolt) steadily pursue hose artKof peace and civilization which made Ihenu countries wlm.1 they now :ire We may In one ilffinihnrnt hike a lexsou fr>nu uur TraitHatlantli Maltve*, the adoption of which wonWhe fcfi\sttxw\. vm.\ix\u \\w aattao. Tb*>

ITTIl.H lIIllMRiKh I\ AMWHUU AM) e.vWll/A.

an

;;

Bureau dI Education fulfils :i service »t great utility Bo the United States. In designing and maturing Uielt1 cooatitutton,

George yVaehingtou ami his co-workers, gave to education a xrvy prominent place. Xfae dictum of the that President thnt the virtue and intelligence* of the people are the buro imh.-pciia- able securities of republican instllutioua, liaa found lie Bono all borough the L'nion ui the form of free education, common ocIiiioIm and Public Libraries.

In the department of the Interior there is a section Called the ureau of Education, the purpose and duties of which at* to

COllcd -itatlMic:- .ont ln« -Is BOO* Dig lli«' condition .tnd pTOgTCfll I ■!

education in the several states ind territorio* A further object

is to ilTimillllilin((i euch information respecting the organization and management of schools and school systcmaead methods of teaching oe shall aid the people of the United States in the establishment and maintenance of efficient school systems, and otherwise promote the cause of education throughout the country In thfl Wow of this office >hi' i'ul he Library system OCCUpu :| prominent place. Tin- mMiugemcnt of ilia- Jtui'cau of Induration, subject to the direction .»!' tho Secretary of the Interior, it BnBrUI ted tfl k Commissioner >A Kdueation who n; appointed hy

iin' I'l-cs^iL-nt, by and with tin- advice and oonsent oj the Senate, This Dornadsaionev preeents axmnajlj bo Congress a report era- tHxlying the results of his investigations and labours, together rttfri itatementof such bets unci recommendationa u will in his judgment subserve the purpose for which the office is eetaoUsneol The pabUeftttonB ol tide office are numeroue and excellent. Through the kindness of the Secretary of the Deport- ment, copies of the liooks and pamphlet* relating to Public Libraries and education generally are received by the present

writer. The Latest to hand hear the titles ns here given. " Hlfl-

11117 of Higher Eduoatlon rn Smith Caro1inajHS47 pages ; " Higher

Education in Wisconsin," i.> page*; " Ifi story of TCdiiontion in

Florida." oj page*; "Education in Oeorgta," U4 pages; " indus- trial Education in the .South,' Hi pages; "Study of History in American Colleges and Universities" 800 pages; " Education In Hie Industrial and Flae Areata the United State*," .-J-' page*. The annual report of the Oonuniasloncra nf Education usually make* a volume of 800 pages. Tlio special report of tin- Public Libraries in thfl United Suites, giving thrir history, condition and management, waa published In two volumes in 1870-7 and the two together fill \\$b pages. Following these in 1886 wis supplementary publication consisting »»f d hundred pages giving

BtatMfciCB of 1'ublie Librarfai iu America, The last !'<•<•. h ,.-..! is an

i:i'.-T<.'-tii!'j j.i hiiratiMii iii.-iidrd " litil'-v-. torn 1 lictfonnt^ Oatali true."

The uniform size of these puHn .it i. - i- i- dcm\ -I'-iav... I-Yom these particulars it will Ih? guthorcd what U being dOOO in the Waj ol publications by this department. Tbefr nv.-j h I fraction of what could be Domed. Of the content* of the volume*, and of tHe-v- Dnp*&&,\cte*tM*t> unA

nine li' -iH lWirM'oncXTll then ■<*lv,- , .i\ \\\ \\vAV-v- '- ftA30fca)&SSO.s

ii .,..;- l.Ii;fcAXIF.v

it would !>o <liilin.lt to speak too highly. It was as far l.

: lh< i -: i i . < . St. U- ijuvcrni icot i-cjiolvcd to i Dopartn ml of Education, Eyctj re&j tecordinglj elm there hue, iu addition to other literature, been i ttYoratriiv »l».ni( 1000 pairee, in which liavc been i letiu-ili the i m rnl atteraple mad< bo urapplo with then ioi difficult problem! for the consideration of which tin: b WW specially created. As tlicv appeared, thes bees welcomed with gratitude by specialists in *-' matters nil the world over ; and thin, not only because bhi i marked the successive stages reached by tho .Slates in solution of a. great - ion, t i the importance < i

iiiv- long hem keenly alive, but also because they foun<i tn i m -I fund of inlormatton, drawn from Uie b which shed nn interesting and valuable light upon the •'«iuoationaI GonditiotLB and expedients of most civilized c< antrioi note, if- would in* impossible hero to give an adequate Idea i the number and partetyol the questions raised, and m successfully answered, in these volumes ; but merely to mei u few taken at random will suffice to show the e ire '-■'iftnetra and suggestive character ol the topics discussed, Suol qui concern the relations of Mluoauon to pauperism, . Insanity; the principles and methods of the Kindergarten; dtt iiuluflirinl training ni boys and girls; the higher aaaoBttov al woman, and their admission in Universities; the nervier qualifications of School Boards: the shortcomings and cupnhil tfsi "1 Sunday and Mission Schools; the training vi the blind, the le;i!. and the dumb ; the dilleieuL form* i 1 manual ind arl I iiig . and the establishment of schools of agriculture.

As already indicated, however, the pubUcati<>n& ul the ( States Bureau of Education have not been limited to annual reports, hi addition tti the»e, it lui.i iremed at ii"f-j!:ir intervals ;i Kara number of bulletins, circulars, and special re Kfl oj winch riorne specific subject i?s discussed at length

01 nu&eadablc thoroiigbneaB, generally byaotno recognized an ity working with the best meora of information at oil command. The value of such special treatises in defining the establishing ascertained knowledge, and stimulatina; fui EnveetigfttionB, le ovident on the face of them Here aga wiO be sufficient to name a fow of the topics handled to show the interesting and varied nature of the " light and leading' L,r«t|. tV'»m tho volumes ruder n<*tiri\ Su.'h :uv : ture ; Qm training of teachers in Germany ; the hiatal medical education m the United States; training MhoolS for nurses; industrial art in schools: natural scion. schools; English rural schools; the legal right* -i a lib construction of Public Library buildings; college Libraries as aids i i . Detraction.

The American Library Association is older by n tin' Library *B*oe(uti<»n on this side of Hie Atlantic. Ii

prHl.l'- J.II1KA11IKS IN V.VKltlCA A.\!i ( ANAfM.

;m

Tin' Libunv SiliLmls aiv l>oginiiiuy to lmltl j flisturi. j.l.irc in the tiMiniuy of Ubwg nfatazits. Tfie Columbia Library school at. Albany, u, pretty tuwu in N>'« Y u \ -»i, t. . is &e chief oi bhese schools. A visit to the school is an impressive experience. It would lie ilifiVuli, to fiml uny place, where h MobOTex Hfffl i> baleen of library methods and responsibilities. The man.ini.* ol it claim tliat they li are been fortunate in their material ii-ui its beginning. The excellent .nm-shm** :-mt oat prove that it haa been of great advantage to have a course Ol technical instruction, The fact cannot be too acutely grouped in this country that the beat librarians are those who have passed through an apprentice- ship of training at mio ol' the Public 1,'hniries in th»: country. Committees and Commissioners eennot over-estimate tlio iin port- once of this matter. Tho Library Hurcttu tor Public mid Private Libraries is of recent torn ; rinn This iKtiiuatod* nt HG,I''ranldm- ntrt'iit, Boston. Its duparlmcuts are those fOT employment, eon- sultation, publications, and supplies, and this will serve to lllust i ii e tbe character and Kcope ofite work. The Hureauauns t< make itself indispensable to the libraries and it has evidently Ijolore it B ItSefuJ future.

Nothing struck the late Matthew Arnold so much in one ot his Lecturing visits to the States as the sight of a ragged and almas Hlincli-Ks tittle boy Killing in the n nnni of one of The

Public Libraries, studying his book or newspaper wtth all the ftittio ftrntt of a member < I i West-end club. 71ie sight was decidedly one which n democratic, nation might he proud it, and one. moreover, which Englishmen should be anxious to see in their ciwh country. The miirvHlmifc grOVth of the fflOTOIDGDl in

America in extr; dimiiy. Seventy yam agosucb tilings ftfl Public

Libraries wore almost unknown in America, (or prior to 18:20 there were but ten of them in existence ; to-day they are a* BODUaoB as public schools, Tliere is no town or village of auy consequence tli.il C&XUlot boftel Of ltfl Public l.tbrui v, BUG BOOM comparatively new communities have two i three.

In the most recent rev rl puUMu-d. IflBfl Public Libraries arc named, containing 13,654,610 volumes. 01 thin number 424 are free lending libraries, supported wholly or partly by public moneys, and containing 3,, 51,101 volumes. Moaaacliu- sotte haa much the larger number, via., 176 libraries with

9,000 rolnmeei hire 89, and State hue more than 13. Of free public reference- Libraries the AtUttbOT [a [53. containing .'J.OWnV*^ rolnmec, There are 241 Ivoo corporate lending libraries containing 1,737,770 volumes, tbe largest being the Astor Library in tho city ol E¥w forlL whiob however, is free but not lending, und'enntrn'mn^ ^'J0,B0a volume*. Of

k libraries belonging tu societies, associations and clubfl there are rui. containing ■i.Hio,;^! volume the Inrjmtt heirijr the New York IfereBHtQe. Of corporate <y#j] \\Vera\V-. «\w\\ Va mhMribflrS .»nly. there are VS2, wiVh "liyUjAY Hdga&Mr^m

801

i'i m i1, r.niT»AniR*.

largo.1-! Hting the JioRtoii Athenamm. Rhode Ealand bos nin dafiB. "i -v] lab iho Providence Athensam is the larj hiving iti.::n; volumes, and the Red wood Library and Athena lit* Newport, second, wtith 33.22H volurueft. Cin i lat ng librarim, oJ which there am seventy-four, with 214,187 volumes, com] the U<\. Klmde Island Ihk flfl y-iiui* libraries of tiieso various elnsses, I'ontan iiu/ an aggregate "f 878,W7 hni.l.*— h u-m^ n^uiu 'vim inhered that those statistics arc a year nhl, mn>.e.jioNi np.ni Che long delay in the preparation of fcne t'ommiBsionor'a report Providence aontami fourteen Libraries, w Ith 11)0,650 rolnmas

Further study of bhe report reveals some very atgnUkannl , i n ■■■■r-iiinv ihr geographical distribution of libraries More iVm 38 per cent oi the libraries uf all clasaes are in he EubUtd States, while twelve Southern Btutes, Including Delaware, contain only 136 public libraries of more than 1000 volume-* < :n I of (he whole iiuiiiin-i uf fiec loud&ng libraries, supported wholly or puiiiv \>\ public moneys, more than til pa cent, arc n the New Gotland State*. Pennsylvania and twelve Southern States have none, and 3ti per cent, are in the Western Slates. The tcndi to appropriate public money for the purpose of maintaining libraries i.Wroiitferd in the I^iM niid \\ est, iinil ili )*•-■> mil \.i exist in the South. In the former localities alao tfl foi ad greatest williug-uess to set apart private funds for the mc purpose.

It has also boon estimated that there are now in the 23,000 school libraries, containing forty-live million In iota, betas; itifi computed, twelve million more than are to be found LB SI the public libraries of Kuropc put tojrether. Other educai o^rabliehmonte increase this number l>v two and a half mi volumes, sad thirty-eight State libraries contain another aailb'an, Altogether, it may be taken in round numbers there org I Public Libraries of America fifty million volumes, wliich « atone time give about a book each for every living soul there Of course we all know that the Americans are a great reading people; but what an example they get ; iif in their magna" efforts to place literature so universally within the reach <>t :il.. Mr i kiin> tliii- us u people's victory, "the paper bullet

of the bruin." he says, "is the moral dynamite ol iriu up Democracy. He is not far wrong. These (nets speak for them- selves, nnd are a sufficient index of the comparative habits of the people in the various parts of this country. I are a sipn also of the vnlne which is placed upon education, and of the 6**gree. In which it Iihm been received. A Punll Library is an extension of the public school system, and through its means one may pursue an elective course uf study at will and through life. Cai'lvle thought bhat the ehiefl purpose of u university is to give an acces* U books, aid if this in true the greutc&t advantage of the public school tfl '-uiialost where uo facilities for wise and extended reading &ro offered in connection with it. la Ywting many of the ?u\Aw Xftrata <A \\vt

Hi'rtur Milium.:-- i LMKHtCA l \\AH\,

:;:».",

present writer has tiotlood in more than out of fchom the noble words delivered by Sidney Smith ai the Royal Institution Inscribed in. large letters upon the wall. "TOerefore"* inch ire >'is m question "when I say, in conducting your under- HiamiiiiL', love knowledge with a great love, with ;< vehement

lovr, »vil,|iii kiM-ruevul «Jtli lite, ft hat Jul Mty but love ii:ia'»ruir,

love purity— love that which, it" you are rich, will sanctify the blind fortune which made you so, and teach men to cull it Justice lore that which, if von art- poor, will make poverty respectable, and forbid the proudest to muck tin- im-annc.-* <>i yom fortune— love thut which will comfort mid adorn you, and

Sen to JOB the kingdom Of thought and all the boundless regions OonoeptfOQ. Therefore, if auy young imm hafl embarked h'u life in the puruuit of Knowledge, lot him ',g0 on without doubting the result. Let him not be daunted by her cheerless beginnings, or by the difficulties hoveling round her, Let him rather follow hex *fl the angel that guards him, and the genius of bis life. She will bring him out at last into the light of day, and exhibit him to the world comprehensive in argument, strong in reason- ing, paramount uhnvi* Ins I'd low- in ill In- :-M:iiii.n>. :n . .th.-i^ nl

m

The first Public Library established in America dates back

to 17UO, and this was established by a clergyman Who hid I

CbaplatO U) lh'-' Knglish governor ol fll* tfid) jn-nvinn' nt \r\v

York, ft is Bomewn&J Pamarkflble that the Brat addition to this library was a gift, about thirty yearn afterward*, by ilie British Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in foreign part*. ' tthcr libraries followed, ami about the year J760, the public took Op spiritedly the need of libraries, and fl large BUDSOflptloii fund was commenced. It may be eakj thai about the year [8ix>, there were within the UuitiM -t.t it_-^ 149 collegiate libraries mutuioJag an aggregate of IflB&fiM volumes. Eleven years later, returns which eiteuded to 117 only out of the 14», assigned to that portion of the coflegfete Libraries an aggregate of 1,323,148 vuluun.vs. Many of these libraries had been urietuaJly gathered by combined efforts of a very varied nature. Not a few of the bouk« were contribLUed by Englishmen, axal it ia pleasant for us to contemplate that such waalhe case. It will be a sorry day for both countries when the community of feeling between us censes to exist

It is one of the proudest distinctions of this great Bepttblic 1 1 is 1 1 l In- rafiltiia >:' jriviii« away money by rich cilfceens during thctr lifetime and nothing is harder for most men to part with, except prejudice— is more common among the Americana than among any other peoplo. aad thai the bvourite direction of their mnjomeance is towards he foundiogol colleges and libraries. What a list of American benefactors of this kind might we make out: the Astor and Lenox Libraries and Cooper Institute in Now Vork City; the Comal] Univeraitj to New kforts State:

the M'Cormiek University in Vir^imu, thA lAvV.*i\- ra&

Stemfond University in California, the eo^xv^^c Vv\V.\v \.\Vvaw-

06 PI i I H 1 IP.!1 \r;IF.S

or Now England, tin- Vonderbltl University a Tcmnwimg thaw are mil i Mthaol tha matitutioni which owe their origin wholly tn iin« bonntycn9 n single individual arpartlally t< contributions ifc.in what, fa tl hapels of Oxford .,mi Cambridge, are railed

tiutis henefactom, The meal princely of all givers for ! Ibrary purposes, whether on Hun skfc or the Vmerlcnn *idc of the Atlantic, i- Mr. Andrew Carnegie. Fortunately (<<r Grant

Britain, Mr. Cunn^ir is ;i SrciMnnun, stml Iiin library E&vourti ;in

divided between the two countries. Tabulating what be in

done for tlio.se in-.iit.iitn -us, il may be -l.it<"l is follows:

yjeghany City Lforarv £00,000

i larnegit Library, Braddocka, run. . . l*0,000

Johnstown Library, destroyed by the

Conemautfli flood* in lHHQ.aud being rebuilt

by Mr. Gafliegifl

Pittsburgh Library, to cost 15X>,000

Edinburgh PubHo Ubrary

i.'iu'iK'jjio Library, Dunfermline .. .. 8,000

S'-vivhI MiiulUi" contributions to other libraries, about ., i i.uhj

eaeo^oo

Mr. Caniegie'd offer to Pittsburgh was originally £100,000. but

be OSS told the committee that ho is prepared to spend :i million dollars upon tho institution. r'rom thin it will bo seen that I most handsome building will very shortly be completed. The most beautiful buildiiuj he bus had anything" to do with is the A lie City Library and Ball. TbU la built of ;i light grey granite nod stands upon one quarter of a small public park. The City Mall occupies another quarter. The two buildings occupy some S00 lc<-r sqmirc. in.l the two principal *trf.us cross :it right angle** The City 1 tbrary [8.1 Iwunlifnl building', and was opened to tin-

Snblie on February 20, 1890, by President. Harrison, Kn wonder i;it. lettera should frequently reach the author saying "would Unit we had a local Mr. Carnegie lo help un ! "

Kuril Slate maJtes il* own laws for the establishment of I'ui Libraries, But in 1851 tin? special provision which had been made on behalf of the city of Boston was niadc general through- out Hie Commonwealth, and took the form of "An At Authorize Cities and Towns to Establish and Maintain Tul I < Libraxiee." The. main pow*-^ nf this \<i ran as followa;— city or town of thin Commonwealth is hereby authorised to establish and maintain a Public Library within the aazm with or without branch oe, for the use oi the inhabitants ti and to provide mitable roomi therefor, under inch r for the government of said Library as maj froi un .

be prescribed by tho city council of such city, or the inhabitant* of such town." The Act further provided u i^n any riiy or town l appropriate for tho foundation and (iai | such

hhnry ;!• il uvsaiil t * u m not exceeding one dollar (roughlj ebfUinge) i< r eaofa ol Its raAabto \MA\ava\fcw ^«w

public i.nmAitu-.j- is .iMKarc.v ANn canapa.

M

*

Unit 01 i\liirli -,i:rti .i|i|ivi>ijn:iliiin xhall be made | and Dft] ftltO

appropriate annually, for the maintenance and increase 01 such library, a sum nor exceeding one shilling for each of its ratepayers in the .vein* next, preceding that in which such appropriation shall be QUbde- Any town OT city may fMtfTO, in it* enrpor:ile

capacity, and hold OT D&nflga any devise beqnost, or donation for the esfcahlteliraont, Incrfiaee, or maintenance of h Public

Library within tliu same." Now Bedford, in Wusswshuaelts, waft

the Bret 'own to establish, in 1651, a Public Library under fihifl Act; and the Itbrary coinmeoced vith lejsfl than ti.ooo volumes. It lias now 00,000.

As indicative of State library legislation, a few recent Acts may be <i noted.

In Dliaoib an Act wa» approved .lime 17, 1887, amending au Act authorizing titles and towns to establiah and maintain Public Libraries and reading-roome, passed in 1872, by increasing the amount levied for library purposes, in the anuual tax lory of cities of less than 100,000 inhabitant*, to two mills vu mie dollar. It wai formerly 000 and a-hnlf mills, which still remains the rate in cities of over 100,000 population, with the proviso that the v taxes ehull not be included in the. aggregate- amount of taxes limited in the Vet relative to the incorporation of oities.

In Now Jersey on March (■!, JhMi, an act was approved, amend- ing the law of 1879, to provide that when a Public Library hue been established in any incorporated city, pursuant to that Act, and shall have existed three years or more, ami possess property of the value of $30,000 or more, the directors shall annually certify to the common council of such city the amount required for the maintenance of such library for the ensuing year, not exceeding half-mill on the dollar ; and the council shall 00003 to be assessed and raised, by tax, the amount mo certified.

In New York State an Act was approved on .lime 10, 1886, and provides that any incorporated library association in any city, own- ing real estate of the value of £4,0nu, and at least l0tfni volumes, ami maintaining the same for free circulation of books, among the inhabitants of said city, and shall have actually circulated TiipCO in ihe preceding twelve months, may apply la the common council for bjd appropriation "''•', roni do1 exceeding £1/300. Any like 11 bra i v whii^ti ha* circulated, in addition to the 78,000 specified, mora than 100,000 volumes, is authorized to apply for a further appropriation of £1,000 for each 100,000 volumes so circulated, in addition to the 76,000 find specified The common i-ouneil i^ nn|Hiwi'ir<l to make proper provision for the payment of this

appropriation. In the city of Now York thia applic- I

v meeting the foregoing requirements, with the ivatnViion Ihut not note than £'8,000 shall be pain" to any our hbn.rv m any rjir. On Ma> 10, 1887, au Act was approved to encourage Pul it- Libraries in the villages and smaller oities of the State, which applies to cities not exceeding 30,000 population. IHl iM contains prov Ion Bin liar to those of the fnregoia^ V^vWiw^v n a reduced scuir. ih. &83$SV,<tt

30c

i'i ni.n; umiAniKi.

an annual rental of £60. Tlio somber ol volumes most be oot

its- ■)>.• > , 'i. and the anniuil circulation 15,00 rh> I'l-'opria-

tioniȣ300,with80 additional fcJOOforovory I ,000oi

Ol Mas u», 1888. the Act of 187d, providing foi the torn

of Public Libraries, was amended by inoroosmg the limit oj

annual appropriations from fifty to seventy cents per capita of

Legal voters.

In Pennsylvania an Act was proved on May 23, 1887, which » I >1 ropmtes the dog tax to Public Librnn.-. wlueli a tree

roHiag-rooma. This Lot aU< empowers eitie* m- take and hold donations «\ money, books, and other property t >r establishing Public Libraries, and to make annual appropriations for the maintenance of auch ttbntrlos.

It will ho noticed in the foregoing paragraph Unit there is a

pence to the approprlatioTi ril the dog tax. In nc

there to an annual Rax of two dollars on eaoli dog kept, and the bulk i-i1 rins iav goea for library purposes To is I seems a little Hlmrular to make tho keeper* of nogs the chlel maintainor*! or the Public Library.

Tin- iii>i:n\ world of America ha* produced some exce men, Miiniliu^ out foremost are Mr. C. A. Gutter, tin- pi'eeenl Presides! of the i i ni an Library Association, and it* Mr. Mflvil Dewey. TIw hud-numed librarian recently expi a confident opinion that ' ' In- Public Ui hairy is an institution whoNt* JiuporLiiift* ia i Mil r i.ii ;.'iii/;c' I 1 » v tlic niiioh ul 1 1 it* people It i> uui purpow In show il lo Ik1 of equal >alue with tin | Rchool Olid the church, these three farming ;i grand tainit means of public education and nerval com tt. Host people n< a look upon the library as a good bhinpto have is a community! i »nt by uo means an essential. This Idea iafeobc done away with, la the email town of the future the library wi'.l be iw one of the prime necessities. There is no way of reaching the public so effectively ashy the printed pages. It far exceeds the

Eul pit or tt'*- rostrum in force and power ot extension. Ben I the trinity. The public school makes tho base, ajii foundation for education; tho church forms ono of tho sid. its moral teachings and its cure for the spiritual man , and the Public Library makee the other side by its broad and rcncxaJ i raining; of all classes end sects. It will not be man) year ' the Public Library will be recognized at it- full value, and rlie

little libraries w ill be found wherever churches and scl 1 Imuoos

are. Every small town will have ifc library. Thai tbu cl -mvlv OOming is proved by the eonuiiuuications n

Litnai la constantly receiving from cities and towns all <>, t :iu- country, where Public Libraries are contemplated. In of the eases somebody has left an endowrnan ;v i*ui lie Library fund, or the nucleus for one, and tho people v\:u!i information how to begin (me aim of our orgm to give just this Information, for we have lennipd that rx] /•nee and wisdom directed towards the proper -turnup >( :i Pnhhc

ttbrur) cici't splendid returtu nui\ we a h»wiw r»r

rrauc mmluubb in mi 1(! v ami umai-a.

satisfaction in the later career of tlie library." Mr. Iirwcv is well-known in the library world on tin.-, -i 1 '..i the Atlantic.

Boston van among the first American cities to adopt Tublic Libraries, and it would have boon somewhat strange had it been otherwise, for this *uy bofl no small ground for claiming to represent the intelligence of the American nation. Boston refine- ment and culture rank equal to that of the West End of London, und it ie from this oily and the other New Knglund States that most of the assorts haw ootne for the benefit of the American community. The proximity of Cambridge, a suburb of Hoeton, where the Harvard University i^ Mtuatod, no doubt largely aids to make tin* BostOnionJ proud n| the!) uiMlcctuul attainments, lhix college is the Alraa Mater ol raeh prominent Americans as BJr. Jamef ttuasell Lowell, who has presented the IJorvftrd Library with some hundreds of volumes.

l'lie stamp of the Puritans is still unmistakably left, on these »w Knghttid 6tatS& There is solidity about them lacking in other parte. Kducrttioiially politically, and CoOlXni nially, they take the lead ol any Mtate in the I'nion. It wiw from here ci i.'. I he Impetus for the Civil War for the Abolition of slavery, and it is in (nose States that most of \ morlftft DOS! men were born and

lived, (Old th8Be BgftJO BW iiul BlCTW t<> acknowledge iheuiaelvcH as

dcM-cmliuit« of sterling English Wood, driven out or uiir country by kingly intolerance und cruelly. Mo.st of the American writers ill note had or have their homes in these Stales, and the majority ol" these again in Boston or within easy distance of that city. Willi such a literary reputation, Boston would have lacked some if it* j/mtt glury had it not t alien the lead in establishing Public Libraries, as distinct from the school and the State libraries. In 18-17 Josiali Quiucy, the then mayor of the city, intimated to the city council that " a oil tzejD ( iflsred I •> trivc to the city a thousand pounds for the purpose of founding .i Public Library on condition that a furtlicr sum of £2,500 should be raised by I public aum- scription, and that the library when formed should be opened to the public in as full a manner as may be consistent with the safety <i the pri perty." 34s council replied u thai the Qtyy of Bo '"'i wffl accept any donation (nun citizens or others for the purpose of commencing a Public Library, and farther. that whenever the library jfcal] be ol the value of £9.000 it will be wpsdient for the dty to provide a anicibls mi i «■ and KrmigatBflnta to enable it to lie nsed by the citizens witl

frost n freedom as the security ol the property will permit. ' lu»: was quickly followed by an Act passed by the Legislature ol BftsiiaflntWwitS empowering the council to "eslnbuah and maintain a Public Library for "the use of ity inhabitants," but it was not until a tew year* afterwards that it was put into effect. Nations influence nation*, and individuals Influence individual-., COriresJ or* w uidto offer ffbtobeamein Wteiromu iViHioman Mr. Joshua Bates, who offered bo contribute hooks the rains

el vhMiM', wnc cure to he emulated. The Public Llhrirv hud ttww Josl been Opened In MatH'he^ler.thcftvMtuivVv \\w StSt wiV.w^'*\A,

MO

PUBLIC muRABTT*.

;:j!.l Ull lliPMiiit ul pill- i ' . I I ;■:,!;( n \> i* tl Hi.- rn\\rx} Uf fir i i;il.r< |

which ff&Yo an impetus to the attention nt that time hen . ■_■ to the Hiihjc-Tt in Boston.

(livers of bootoj and other philanthropists who bestow pifts

lurlln; 1.1-.C «>] the public. arc the imnica which live in local

And Mr. Joanna Batoe1 name will go down to p<>

mid revered by the countless numbers whom his netion aidi -I to

coi lor »rj\ih'ij(« 'Hi (he c<imtn mi | Tin?

Bofttonlanfl take up the matter, that he gave h6/kki volumes ol

books in addition to the BKl.OOO previously offered, and whiWi was funded lor the maintenanae of the library. Between the

{i re L8B6 and into Boston spent in founding nor groat Ptabtic •ihrary mure thau eight shillings for each man, woman, fc&d child within her Umite, and she has sustained it to thin day with great spirit and liberality Many various bequests have

hern Hunk' tn il tl itx VMI'inils 1 n':* full i-h T.nn: Mir I » time. It

has been the pleasure, of the author to spend many happy hoUrt in the old Bales' I .ihrary ami the readtng-rooms. Long ego this building baoatue Inadequate to the requirements oi roe public,

:iri(l the :nh i;-:ili!lil V ;>n<l r leegBSlty of cmU'Iimm-i Were llfeOUS*

aunty years, but it wax Dot until November 28, )*hh, kfaal the comer>itoae of the new library buildings ou I'upley-sqiiare. wo*

laid. By the tenuis of the eon tract lti»* basement and story wore to I* llnished by the autumn of 1W9, and at the present linn1 active progress is bring madi* willi Mil- siiucluiv. i In; characlei of the building "ill li- wen from lli^ «c< unpauylag engraving, which LJM'.s ;t view from the square.

Mr. Mcllen Chamberlain, the accomplished librarian, ho* seut

copies of the annual reports lr 1877 to 1889 inclusive, arid

n purs r.lso nl nomr other publu-uttons of the liin'.ii'y. 1 most instructive and interesting rending. The quarterly bull issued by many of the American libraries are now familiar to the i .1 iintf English librarian*. Boston was the first to adopt the issue of tiaosc bulletins, and the idea originated vitfa Sir. of. Chamberlain. The - m sent consists of over 100 page* si foolscap, and is packed with information about the library. It also gives the accession books during rhe quarter. JThcec quarterly bulletins are made tbo vohiolo of bfoUographioa] commnni cations of special interest to studious claw nre sent to euch for the purpose of enlarging tl..- circle oi patrons.

'>n December 31, 1838, the library Ilea contained

60B|872 volume* and 354,256 pamphlets; the an

Ontral Library hciiu-' *v«-7,99."i volumes. In the first J i-r.i^l.'iii'c ol Hie Kates 1 1 ■> i : . '.-.".-'. ..".. I he QUI ll «T "I booloi WW

m.i'.s.s in 1888 the library was open 304 days, and tho total insuc r i 1,013,847 vohmifts frorn the Central Library and nim bran I'hjN gives an average issue of 3,."..'lo daily. Vtthel ontj >i Lll the issue whs, for home use 226.240 vol for refer*

901,090 books, Fiction find | uvea lie literaJ are are clasat imi h || v. .'ii to remember tbai i" luvenJIi 1 Herat i ■<■ a very iarm? ntimhei ol nnot be designated <■■ llei nn taking

m

i.iiiit.usrBs.

two sections together the percentage i- TO'i 7 I the entire issues. Etiaaigoiilcant thai Engb m his ery, topography, biography, i

; i rn I politO Uordniv etOOd m l8Sfl at K'T. North and

American history was 12'Sii, showing an equioJ interest bat wood Uu histories ol th< two lidoi <<i the Atlantic. Natural history iMsienee wore -■*<; ;md metaphysics and social science 6*18 >t tin- issaofii

A little book of L!l pages (fives the Acts and ordiaances relating to Che Boston Publia Library. In 1883 there was :i elatu In M Ant imposing upon the board of trustees the duty of annually appointing an examining oomnrittee ol not less than i ve poraens, not laewSew of the said board, wtiOi together with one of the eoi Lcttng as chairman, should oxarolns the library and make a report <>t Its condition.

I'll** hauaVbook tot' readers gives ;n 16£ pageatiK regulaiiG

Hip lihv:ir\ Wltt\ :ni :icctniiir *it tin- PataiOgU« nnli'v*-. t,i note*

about booKSj and other tntormatlon, Mention is made ol die special prlvltagn curds hy which residents may make application entitling the holder to draw more books mid to keep thera innger thai (he rules allow, Sucli cards, however, ait* granted only in the Interests of clttaen* at large, and not for the advancement run o( private studies, Authors, teachers, lecturers, and editors are considered among the privileged classes. There is lima s - difference between Uie term ns applied in this v. umtry and America. Pour hooks and four weeks are Hie limits ol a tpecfal privilege. Amniiif tin* " caul ions* there is one Hint ;enilomci must remain uimtivered while In tin* build i ■■

Ttir total number of borrowers at the Central t.tbvarj is and ;it the branches *MH8. making ii total ol 03,10a (>| applications l,9rW were sent to the police Ebi ■■ addresses another new feature in library administration.

It will also he of interest to English librarian* to leant thai tin librarian and 1 is assistants En Boston and the oil . .■ ,i. usual y »wom as special constables, so that in case i i. :uln dnmuging ii hook or purloining ,\ |>,-ri« h1i.-;x.| . may beT cough I in the aet.al on •■• arrested . i -l charged. U c have m i. m lird tlii Ii -Ii ;[nte I lihrnr> ndini liMrotioi on tin Will it be libelling the American libraries by statins that n to the elTei-t rhar., " Tin- one of tolmcc i is forbidden in thi > roon . hroomc Homcwlmt monotonous utter a d zen >r so in mii re

it., in '.i i\ a boon counted ?

A special volume would be necessoryto do anything like [u I., the A ueriean libraries, and .*■• n is nol practicable, , . h only be made to :i tew others, Maswhusj »di . ror I'liMic Libraries, and this one state has moro than "! I addad together. In this State one ol lie inoM eompacl arranged libraries visited hy the present writer in that i Situated about D teen miles rmm [toston, ;t hoar* lie w<'i. Buetainfl the character of the literary village, n thai Hawthorne and Emerson lived neighbours, and h are neighbours in the ba&utttul eevc\oA^\^ ^ ^a«^sj U .u- n

PI BUG LIIUIAKIR9 IN AMKltlfA AJTD CA>'AI>A,

dm

Par book as 1672 there are recorda of literary characteristice

of this pretty little town of sonic :\<hhi inhabitant,-.; .■ ml u: Lflfi] « Social Library which existed was morsel into Lin* Town Library. Two other collection*— i he Parian Library ami the Agricultural Library— were afterward* added to the Town Library, and in 1678 all were transferred to the- present Concord Public Library The i)iiildinfr»hown in the sketch wan given by

u worthy citizen, William Monroe, at a cost or' some Cl-,000, and it was opened in 1873, Itnlph Waldo Emerson delivering, on that oconnion, the address of dedication, and in which b Idrcsn he eomruoneed by snyiiitf tli«t literature is the record of the beat

CON COUP PUBhlC LlDttARY.

thoughts. EvervAttcinmanl oaddi«cipBi«wWehiuoraaafiBa^man'fl

OtH|iiairitanoe\vith the hi\w;Ltc world hits Ins befog. Everything

that gives him o oov peroeptton ot beauty, multijvHfts ins para

enjnjiiientr-.. A river oi' thoiiu'hr is :ihv;M- niAHfing OUt ot the

Invisible world into the mind aJ man, Shall not they who

receive | lie l:uy>'-( sii'i'Mti'- 'I'Ivmi nhrctil rhe healing Waters P

s\w Hinrrson was ft» nvmy years, and Up to the lime ot* ln> daath, a mombor of the Pnbue Library eomialttee, and roc

lihrarian, who fa the w:iv i- I Lsm j gavettlC oinhur BOIM \-i\

n tareatina remmiaeencaB ol tin's owtJiijruMied author. He wae .-.sidn.MN in hie attendance ai the PommUtee ui^v\\\^>M took the wannest iotereal In the welfare ot t'rtftYtotww. v&&

m

pi BI4< MOJU&tm

books ore ulphabctiouJfy arranged) find clemMed under the a of authors, titles and subjects, with many cvohh . tho shelves the bookH ore all cLf*Mlii'd, each -ulijccr hm i division *if a aubjeot in ing by itself. One :*!<'•« v.> m the library*

devoted oxolurfvelj '<• ffie books, pamphlets. &c., rolntin

i 'oncord, and tht> entire library bun n i<up:ioil y U r &>,<> How one is tempt)'!] to winfi that ©very Knglwh village more inhabitants posseted such n comfortable and p Public Library as that in Concord !

The State ll M:i«s:t rh us. ; : - v n , in, over 300 l'u Mi*1 libraries. Many of these are •uvhitecinrally very etTiktajr, and in a intent

PUBLIC MPHARV, NORTH AM PTOM V | |f

I every Just unco the building has been -p* t;il)v orivr.'-i for the purpose vt ji Public Library, *u lliat every u< i ha* I'i'teixed attention. Tin* buildup! '■ Norttuunpton h Stateihowi] in the engraving u mir which raHecta una the town, and of which they arc justly prt ud. I in I860 and bat over 1 ~* j k m > volumes, n-itli an annua) twin »£00 volumes. New York <'ii\ is not larking .-nln i in the nua quality ot her hooks. Hut. at the; name time it would Btf«?iiijf( In dcii> .i - a\.v\. Wi to*

IT

'

PITll.ir MUR-ARIHs IS AVRarCA ANT) rAK.OU.

•WW

that she Borefy needs t<> waiBoltriaftfl her treasures ami establish a great Ilihlic Library which will supply the needs of her citizens and reflect, credit QpOD the city. Samuel J, Tflden'abarrel of monej ased to be .1 Joke Is American

polities sometimes Illustrated raeeiiuu^ty, and commonly gibed at in colloquial journalism. He was a millionaire and vei7 ambitious, ami his money vn.s very generally considered at the service of any of the Democratic parly that would "hoe his row"

In win thfl "Presidency. Mr. Tildrn intended In make ;i ROOd use Of liih money in hi* .solemn will ami testament, He lefl one iiiilliuii Btorliuu to torm .md njHiulalit ;t Public Library. Such uiMiMial yeiu P'sil.x \<\ ;iu old mini In t lit' public could iinl . 'I course, pa*s unchalleuged. The nephew, who went to law bent upon eetanUahing ttaal \h>- old man moat have bean Insane to uaa&liuu by for the*ake of deluging; posterity with free literature, ha* so far been successful, for the Supreme Court of New York decided that although a great lawyer he did not know how to hi tk« ;> till leaving ma estate in trust for the founding o1 Public Libraries La Ken zort What .1 striking lesson thfi teaches that Hit- beat time to use money for the public pood is during the hf.'time 1 if the owner.

When nil the Public Libraries id New York Oily are counted,

mid including those in connection with Young Men's 1 'l : cititiau Issociationi and othei institutions, there arc do fewer than Ofi

will on aggregate of 1 , ttK),(lf K) books. Of those, however, only about ii tenth are free t<> the people. All but ahout u dozen belong

to clubs, societies or educational institutions, and are, therefore,

ol no value to fchfl gcnernl public. Of the ten or twelve CMS tC nil there. :.i-e two cUimmw one dovnted to consultation and re.fer- •■iire only, tho other to general cireuintinn, while this latter cIukk

can be divided into five and subnTiptinn Ul-nr e-.

01 the firal elasa rnentlaned, the kator Katha largest and moat bnportan , and yet. dthouffh il in the third largest library to \i id ' :■. and contains nearft $50,000 volumes, it Is of oornpara- iivrl\ \.t\ itile value. No books eon be taken from the library, and they cannol even i*1 consulted except between the hour* or y a.m. and is o'clock and from I tn&p.m. For five weelu Lo the -Miini.'i' it i* eloaed altogether. The average of daily readers hout two hundred and fifty. Rather n small showing for a :mo I of £300,000.

The next library of hn portance, or raUiercd value ik the Lenox, on Fifth Avrtnic, ooeupytng nearly all the Kpa.ee between Seventy and Seventy-Aral Streets. Hem u a building and a most extraor- dinary Colleen" >n of booing pamphlet* and manuscripts, valued ut over £200,000, and yet how Ynhicle.s* It Is to thufKOpln! It is

•ii only ' 'mi i ii a.m. in 4 inn, and admlasfou can ofify be hud

lir-.; writing In :he Siipi-'iilriiilinl |OT B can!

Tin- nasi two tnosl important libraries from the standpoint oi miniber of volume* arc iho.se of the New Tork Sfoaety, with 80|0G0( and of tins New Yurk Historical Society with ¥&$&< 'Em hours ej these Ubrarfea are from ft a.m. to ft \w

»

kh;

iiTii.n. i.iM.

.■..in-, i.pcn <n\\ to immK-rs, who pu.> ni''i-i»iirr<liif :••<•■• .m- annual due». AAOther library of the eume kind in that i d t\>< American Institute, oontaining 12,700 volumes.

Though containing the mimllej-t uumW-r of book8.yo( - i doss described it is the library of the Cooper Union t hat i « greatest value It is opvn to all. dag and evening, and only i'5,000 books there over S/30,000 year]} roaders. malcix daily average ol between CXXJ and 7XK) books ueed Tni t hau all Uh-Ho'cv libraries combined, .simply because ir ix aoesesn1 \> at all hours. The claw* of renders in the evening arc eupertoi '■ those oi the daytime, showing ignis the value of giving the people an opportunity to read at other boon that when engaged in iimiv duties.

Of tin- M-ciul class ui' libraries mentioned the Meroftfi ranks first, it is the largest (but one) I'imihuing America and contained loot tfaj 1,2 LS36 w Bat :t i-

free, and only members s h » oanVfi'firri ?uh. t year can hiive the use of this collection ofhooka. The.ro mv» now 5,563 members, bur the average numiwi oi books taken daily is 1cm than live hundred Rut oi tor more value than any of the libraries mentioned are tJx Apprentices' Library and the Bond Street Free Clrculn Library and tte Ottandorfer branch of Second tvetrae. Sni'iiiv of Mechanics and TiMde»uirii marie bho Apprentice*' Library free to .ill two or three years ago, ami the result has lwei most aatWaetory. The number of books now in the? library over 70,000, and the daily average number of hooka taken oirj 6*90, ami Ib uonalantly on the Increase-

The I'Vrr Circulating Library or Boml Street has now been operation nine 3 earn, and haa far exceeded the expectation ol h founders, The l tttendorfer branch wua opened December 8. 181 and ite circulation has already exceeded that ol the Bond Stn Library. The number of hookts contained in both libraries about BtWOOi wluUe the dally average circulation lb 6M. libraries are open eveninge ai well ai Sundays, ITie whole ni her oi books ffTven in one year waa _- ii. 1 1ft

Ibna it will bo seen thai of the 1,400,000 hooka in the Ubraril of thai city <aih nboni lijn.ooo arc ooceaaible to any and its one. and the Now York leading citisena arc tak na tiii,-. seriourtj to heart, What ii* the reason for this great lack «>1 li facilities in the largest dty of America? TIiuj question * naked of librcrions, and the replies wore much the Annie. thought it doe to toe close attention t<> business and conocqui lurk oi' intercut in such matter*. Others rlmutfhl the re- lators were too buBy looking out for their awn interest* and n #ested lack of faith in them by the luxpayors to entrust an »m undertaking to men *.uno of whom eun hardly rend or write city doee( howover, do flornothing' towards maintaining t!i. i T-cu^itinif libraries in operation. A.-.-or-lniL.- in m liiii ... the Legialaturo already referred :<>, uneli libraries enn draw (roni the >-ity VI.ikhi foi the first circulation ol 75,OUU volume fl/.OW additional tor each \»*),uw ^\cwv.vu^ d3c«M« 0

ind

l'l lll,l< MIUUItlKJi IN AMKIMOA AMI IAN-APA.

40?

Private bciicvnlriav is (faring much to supply Ihr drfirirory.

Mr. (feorge Vauderbilt., a young unci bachelor scion of the wealthy America u family of ihut name, im a hard student, with i fondness for rare pictures and old books. He* is able to gratify hi* tanles tti mix extent. lie is generous to u fault. Not long rj<i ;i Mend pointed mil bo bin Hud a certain poor district in Nov Vin'k wanted a Public Libr;ii\ ami readmiT-noiii. and (rented it badly. Mr. Vnnderbilt supplied tbc need without wasting for o-operution at a cost to himself of £fiG.uOO. No inducement could persuade him to be present an bhe opening <l:i\. As in- explained to (he ooxoxDJttoo who waited upon him, in- " would i.il!ir. lu- tliruAhcd then listen to the speaker so* iim kind Khinn abort Mm." A Miss Brace has given d library In memory of her father, A Children* Library Asm ■• Lit i< -i lias been Formed in New York for the purpose of supplying children

with a; i healthy books; a room in which to read, una means of

showing them how to road, hundle. and select hooks. The trustees of the Now York riot* Librury have voted tu give the

awociutton Qui uee of the (bird floor of their new building

It is UiHtriK-tive that many of the Public Libraries dependent entirely upon subscriptions tor support are languishing. This is tin- eaee with the one at Hrooklyn, just ueross the Kust Uiver From New York. The cfreolntion ol books in 1888 was UM|6B7| or i,iu less than staring the preceding year, The diminution doon iioi srein in )..(■ regarded as d i.^rouraging, but certainly in tin- iM'r:il and growing oily the liynron should bo larger and constantly increasing. Tin? "Sunday attendance at the renriinn;- reem Shown a slight gain, the average being B6\ It El not

riit«:ix:iiit to know that the directors have rented a part "i the ■UtUliily !"ol' CMiniiirrciril purposes. EVOTI if its tol'luer occupation

wns a matter ol convenience mther than of necessity, nnd although the managers were warranted in availing thernaeivca of the rental tu eke out their alender resources, r Le a pity thai any parr ol tlio structure should iw inverted from its Intended uses, and the fact that an Pklng-oiit prooeil hafl to be resorted to In not creditable to Brooklyn. H seems uncomfortably clear lion . after all Hiese years, flie library i* still a straggling Inst!* tutlon. Tha president says ii needs « large endowment to put ii "on a purely benevoleni basis.* The Income from Its fund i* about t'1,200. This i> scarcely enough for Bho service of it;' 8;000 patron*, says the president. In a city of -TO.oOO fnhal i Wilts the collection of 100.072 volumes should be brought within the reed of mure than one person in 200.

The first attempt a! a founding of a libr&o "' ;< public character in Philadelphia was made b> ;i small ssmcutioD, ••iiinpoAed of Benjamin Franklin and his fi Lends, who railed it the J it ni". Thi* society, out of which areir.ln aftevveaxs, the Library Coittp uaj i.i Philadelphia and Wis American Philosophical Bodetyi was established about 1727, when the tutu* philoeophor was

twnil y-uln- or twcu'.v-tvo \cnr.*i*ld, It was a dehvvUwv. -v.vKftSq

to a certain degree, mii.Mimch as ft« tt>&toa vasnstaaft

■ton

n Bl U i run M»HM

faoludod tint in i»- ' i commanic4tiona npoa curroni object* of interest unoug the people, witli oonvereation, remark* And expression <>r opinta teroon In the Douree of it* proceeding* the an mi el-, ol the fnnto found that it was necoseary to have & mmill lit imi'v. I v r>i*» use of which they might add to the force of their arjntmentB, umi open up more completely wh :!<■■■■■ points "i iinwert, connected with the subject under dieeufieion,

WeTC Impe lOl Mv l:no\\-i, tO 1 n - : i » .

r.'.nks wore brought to 'In- Hurting room. Fbfl en followed by agreement to aatahliah a library at their pi* meeting For their owe sonvenience The library remained there far ftboui ;i year, when, in oonseciuenee of *ome of I having been injured, the individual owners becan > diss > rushed und took then away. Una action destroyed the value of lbs eol action, but the oircumntoaee induced Krunklin and sou his iMin]»;itiii)iix to enter into s much larger experiment, the establishment of a genera] library for use by all who might be

losed m trail themsclw*. ut tin- nh:tiit:iL;r- of pariicip in such ;i Reheme. Before that time, most of the large littrai iei in Europe \yy< only used fop .•onsiiltntion, the books to be examined only bi the library halls and not bo be taken away. The Franklin plan wiw to diffuse knowledge and t< tin* members of the company tagnfchpr, not. only for th* seen* muUtuwi of hooka but to rntttct; tlictu practically twefn allowing HulMertbera to lake them to their own homes, the be read1 ui their lefaure. There arc now a number of Public I.il'iMviPh in Philadelphia, ind including libraries of i description Pennsylvania iiaui 4*¥3 libraries with a gross total ol i. :""-." .098 relumes.

Tin- Oonareaaionnl Library at Washington, now in course of . w ;n in i he ' i ntiouai lii i vwt"> in ;m\ c >untry when

completed. The founduUou* alone have cosi t'100,000,

las 'i Liscuaslan about I accost of the entire building being like!}

to reach over two-and-o-quartor million* sterling. The plaua were adopted in 1886, and the completed structure will affix < ;ij . .rity for eight to ten million volume*, The principal feature of the Dufldlug the heart, so to *peak, around which ererything centres is the reading-room, fn shape it is octagoneX and the

atei is LOO hot, which is tour feet larger than the rol ol lb' ("'npitnl, From Uo»n- i-. dome the tneaourcment in 90 It is Egftfcod froo eight large se-mi-circular windowo. 8c* !-■'-■; 'm diameter, located above the reofa ol the book re»

Sositorie*. adjacent to the reading-room, some ISO feet fron oor. In addition to the Hood of daylight thus admit will be a lantern light, 30 feet in diameter, eet in th< the roof < I" the roRAling-room ol t<h< National Library ia Eferis there \b mo aware i >©i ol llghi to i-- cubic reel at apace, and In the British Museum one foot »i Ughl has to do duty fat

101 cubic I oi c "'. Thus the reading-room ol

rkmal Library will be bclVet \\-0\\"A vYwxi i^thee u. oemtva oi fcbe i i an (loot *w v>« .>.-uV— ■■

I

vithi.ic Linn-iRffiA in amkrica ajti> CAN40A.

-10ft

enclosure ol catalogue countetB, m the central portion of which will he the deak "l' the librarian in eharge. Radiating from the centre there will l>c sixteen reading tables, each H'2 feet long, and faehioucd after those in use in the British Museum. The btftblfta have a partition on them, running lengthwise, so that roadmen one Bidfl do not distort) those who art taring thorn at the Aamc table. The sixteen tables will accommodate JV50 readers. In the eight screened recesses uroimd the room there ttM located sixteen book alcoves, two storcye high, in whieh will be kept such books 09 are iii Ti*' |in it linn,

The Chicago Public Library hae n u i i-rcmont tor the con- venience of citiaenN living at remote distances from the main

fil.ertiiin, i-v whirb «tatioM have I d aatabliahed Book ante

can be left :ii these stations, and ore collected by the Library "ugor«. who afterwards leave the bocks kob4 called tor by those who have ordered them. Thi* plans Lppeajl to work well. The !vv»k rooms are on the fmrth -tor.>y of tin- C il y Hull, but jr ik hoped that a permanent home tor the collection will i. II miMt -\ he found r I ii mi'Ihii'm I'.uk

Tins movement has not vet taken deep root bi Canada. There trea 'onaidcrubta number of smull libraries attached to meGhnnleV

:.-.-; r i tr --k , wen! tered throiigliow | Mo dominion, Met :il im' pivteni

time there are onli some sTa flFVae) Puhllo Libraries in ell < lanads The province of (jntarfn displays r.he mosi v deapread hiii-n-at. in educational matters, and the province ol Quebec is decidedly In the pear. In the whole of tin's latter province there ia no so-csutad

Public Library, although in Montnul there are one or I wo libraries open tree to Tlie public. Whether the French arid

Etonian Cauiolfc Influence has kept back the progress of education i the province of Quebec nmy gas tnattei of opinion: but cm>

the proi a itc both in educational and commercial affair*, is ntr Ewliind Ontario There are some seventy-eight mechanic*' institutes in Ontario, aach with an average 1 1 2*67)0 volumes, Hw oac Public Libra*? in tfce whole ol Canada] widen nfsr- nhadows all libraries open to the public, la the Public Library o1 Toronto. with its fire branches. The work is in charge of Mr. Jame-' Bain, inn., and it is in every way in good bands. It is cl oering to Know iM.it after *ix year*' work ng the part year iu>>

bean one of marked progress. (.\jinmrnciiu* with the month ol January, a steady and continuous increase 1ms token place in the number of books circulate*.!, and of readers at the different

readfoje-roome. The number >l book* i.**ncd in ]frt- wu>

:'7n,MIO; ii. 1880, 810,045, showing on increaae of 81,785, or about

1J per cent notion utands at 56*8 of tie issues. During the

paat session of the Provincial Parliament, an amendment

i uuli to the "Public Libraries1 Vet," empowering the boards of

m oi:i". i.ient Ol I'lihlj- L;l»i':.ii ■■ to ore.:uiiac and manair.' < v. i mil'

bib, mechanics and working men, in inch sul j u miffhl promote a knowledge d the mechanical an&iooi2B taring arte, btyreaoftitiou t\ the City Qeane^ Mtj ft,vsefv0we

I wans femeni was naked to u\W the aeejOBUK^ -VvV

no

I I i.m.i; v ti -.

THB Pl'BIilC LIBRARIES OK Al'OTRALASIA. 411

catnMiMiing such eronillg clar^e*. and the Mini oi 1 KM »u.- jm.-m i! as a special grunt for tin* purpoae. During the pafll year, 5,040 volumes have been added to the library, which now contains 67332 volumes.

The rate produces about £6,840, and to this there ia a grant from the legislature of £40. The building is admirably adapted lor ite WorE) and there is every prospect that it will soon experi- i-ntT more extended and useful labours. The library of the Umunion legislature in Ottawa in an exceedingly pnepOMHiog building, octagonal in shape, with alcoves, and lighted from the dome, toe effect ia very Htnking.

CHAPTER XXVI.

THE PUBLIC LIBRARIES OF AUSTRALASIA.

£>Ull Colonies are decidedly forging ahead in the way of Public Libraries, I»rs.s than three year.** afio the Chiei Justice oi Victoria, in opening a Public Library at Brighton, near Melbourne, mudc the statement that in the colony of Victoria there was a Public Library for one la every -I.KO0 of their population as against one for CVOTJ 277,000 in the United Kingdom. Whether the comparison iw a fair mill oocnmtQ one need not he questioned, but certain it is that in the mutter of fchoflo public iimtitutione our colonic* have

frrar-pi ■<! then vast importance, and arc determined that they will raru ;i lesson from the old coimlryB Mhtirgy, 9o ftu? they have HUOOOOdod iiduiir.iMc. and their PiaMu' Libraries are, without

almost :m exception, doing a worh of which the colonies thorn- Holvo" may not alone Ik? proud, hut the old parent may look on with admiration al tbe rapid .-hades which her strong and vigorous offshoots are making in thta direction, Op to within comparatively recent date little was heard or known in this country about the Public Libraries at the Antipodes. One but that Ion atone had been heard much of, and that Che Melbourne I'nhiji* Library Now, however, our information te more oon>

plate, and wr m Mux country aiv indebted for thai almost entirely i" Mr. Clifford \\ Uoljiate, M \.. TiaiTist.-r, of Lincoln's Inn,

who, [n tin1 year 1884, vnnted VustraHa and took i special Interent in M'l'ing for himself what the Public Libraries there were doing. rhi' remits of hi* observations were pnWiahoii -n 1886, In two pamphlets, one headed "An account of the Chief Libraries of Australia and Tasmania," mid the other " An account of the Chief Libraries of N«v Zealand." The library world ih t-luiH indebted for the diBsemlnatfon of Information In ti la cue, as It Is In other departmenta, i<> the enthutrfaein and wano tntareel in the subject of .i private individual :md not to any government or association. The present vrrttox hopes tofloon ■* ir-i r. the .\uatralaaian tibcartaa- The Melbourne Public Library va* fc\im\eo. Va \wavwwV.-. a

nuin.-ii'r/i/c/if of ti\>' trustees, .and aided \»\ :\ rr\\\\\\ 0& KwJR^ *w

412

PI in.K LTDB LATR3.

building purponcK, ind LS,000 lor the purehsM of liooke. From the date of opening in 1866 dowi to 1866 the work at I ilopod i r.-niy, md to the latter year 11 became apparent that tbc ibnUT, museum, and art gallery could no longer bo "5 mlniatnrcd by the original 6ve trustees, and an Aft of xheOT] lion mi passed by which tho governrnenl of this inntitution vw in . board of not lees than fifi<v>n "ni-.u-os In the ?urae yew the Copyright Act of Victoria was passed, grant ino; to ttM Libftry ^uiiifiir pm .i'.-Li'.-s to those hold by the British Mm rum Library. The cn|. my ^hous it- democ ratic spint in library work a* in other sections of it* life. No books ire allowed (a removed from tin- rooxce. and as ;• suppiernentexj rule to this, all books roust be returned to the shall from whence they were taken by the reader. Tlui plan itrai considerable labour to ihe atte&dflDtBj but it is not clear that from a librarian's point of view II works well. Tin- public hftW 90068* tO every work in Hie iiii:n\ with the exception of certain valuable ynaniiAmpt* and work-sot art kept In rim librarian's room, and a certs n portion of the gallery oevoted to medical vorka. Die library contained in 1888 114,868 volumes and 115,871 pamphlets and parte. It was

\iMlr<! during thai. yc:ir by -IOo,;ttm piT-.utiM. nearly double the

number of chose who n«cil the Ifhran in IBffif, From the vr.ir lust named the electric Hghl bus been in operation with mttiwiuctkni to all concerned. The system of landing hook* to

ttuimLrv libraries has In arrled mil with imuli rocoem hi

1888 the number of Country libraries nroivinir loam- wax llilrry- seven i ad the aim bw of volumes lenl wan 0,150, Hie library hns for ihiM department 126 cases of books, and from one to sis nt a time arc lest to Lhc provincial libraries in the colonj of all charge t'> them except the cartage to and from it: stations; Ow loan can be renewed at the end of th< twelvemonth*,

iir nlhei cj.sc> ] i.iy he -i -nt M Ihe option nt' I lie I mi rn\vri>, Karh

ii.ii- 8ft} rolutnea, and. the case Itself Is fitted up with

shfllveft, ku that the local institutions are M-ni al tin same time the books and the necessary shelves for them. The truetei boo library insure at their own expense the whole oi thi lending i.i.i;li\ books, and the borrowers enter Into & bond to replace any books damaged or to pay for any lass. A catalogue luw been completed and is now in use as the

lurge printed alphabetical catalogue of authors. This hat compiled by Mr. T. V Bride, LL.I)., the librarian. A now wing bo <i\ recently been added to the building.

No fewer thon'Sl I Public Libraries, athcnavimib, ami in celts institutes furnished -itfttistics to the (lovernment etnt: your Iss7, iliowing thai their total receipts wi

which the Yieiorinn Government contributed £1 1J80S, The

number of volume* n the libraries ■■! ihe mstitntli

n».f..> -.':ii >l,7i'0, and the estimated number ol rtaltatO

them $j/B7QfiOO. It aeems, however, se ami pram*

mfointhiit as well os other ttn\ur>. *ovw*

ntr. rrnuc i.rmidniES nr acstk m.ahu

119

were made in baa party port of 1868* when theChiel Bocratais hud liis attention direoteo to the laxity prevailing amomrst com-

mittOOB uT rujiuageracnt of Public Libraries thrniu/houl thfi eolony in the expenditure of tho annual grant ol £7,000 PObed by Parliament for the parchnBO of now books. According to Mir. facte (hsclosed cloee inquiry is needed into tho management of the PabUO Libraries established in many of the principal towns throughout the colony. Five oases are quoted a> samples ol (he real . md certainly there is need for inquiry. In ono easo a euin <<t t^Ofi was available for the purchase of new hooks, and yet tin- number of books was left* by ninety-three m lss7 tluui in the previous year In the next instance there i* neither Increase nor decrease in the number ot books, but tho secretary slate* that only £'12 of the amount contributed hy the Government had been available Cbf the purchase of hooks aiv periodieiiis, tho rot Imvinif hrr-ri absorbed in working 8XM&86S, la another ease the increase in the hooks, after presumably spending the Gaverntoenl grant, was nine. Later on we have a decrease of IK; after spending itovcniment money. \nd so it la clear that some system ik required wherohy the authorities shall satisfy them* selves that the grant la expended tor the purpose for wlaeb ir i-.

UltOOCted A little iirt-rssiirv lUpOTVislon would h:i ir *;iwd all these disclosures

The Palme Libraries of South Australia are developing. The nuniber of Public Libraries, athcna-Huis. and mechanics' i a chutes, which made return* for the yeiir )r*w*. wan 1 :i-J . These showed a total number of hooka of tlftv4W with a grogs circulation ot 300,990". On June 3t>, 1889, the Adelaide Public Library contafna I 20,flC3 volumes and parts, and had had 63,899 rinttora for tho half year then ended.

In the offloial reporl for I688aregrel is expressed that an Acl

hu> not yi't hfti! juis-.'.t (.. .uiIIpmmzc and i'i»ulatc the t nui.M'cr Of

institutes ti '.'iii i mi it i* ji> or district councils, f>vcr .i pa I

foolacai>--!/e papered tins Government report ia occupied!)) i detailed Hal of the cost for the year >>| every riewapoper and pcrJodleaJ taken for the BowBroom of the library, Tl very comprehensive, and embraces many periodieaM which would not usually be found on the tablets of the newsrooms of English Public Libraries, All the letters of the alphabet are absorbed En the cataloguhijr, as will bo soon from the table below, hut the advantages of such a discursive method are not by any meunfl patent. Tho divisions are:

i, AJtriculturOj Botany, &&

k. Hutory, ' llironology, \<-.

i. Basra] \it - technology, &c.

m. Fine Arts, im hiding Rioto-

■Ti:.b\

n. Uoral and Mental PMloso-

]ihv, Bibles, &C.

u, rutii ovudjKWiftfc«KWMa^ft tsfi v. Poetry nvS Ocw Crrasofc.

A

BncTolopeedias, Directories, Cataloguae, be, k. Uaihemacics, Physics, &e. a ESdaaation and Pnilology.

D. Medical Societies' Reports, h. Topography. Trawls, &e

f, Physiology, 7.0 •\<-<j\ , &i

i HiOgT :j>b\

h i odogy, i feomutrj .

■m

1*1 liMi 1 ini; \l If

« , State. Papers, English and

Colonial. v Societies, ProcoedicgB rind

Ueport*) of y. Newspapers, Bound, z. Patent BpodfloAl i

in«H-i*s thereto.

Q> Anri.rt Clnrwir*, including

translations n, Goners] Literature.

h. I-'. h'cilth Lftornturo, Modem. . Bxhlbitn \.- . v. Rolls Publications. v. Magna no Literature.

'I'll-- A.]-i:iT.i.' PabUc Library, the main Institution of its kind m Smith Australia, is ft handsome structure. It is, in «•.*•*] n with tho Mu.-oum and Art Gallery, modelled on the linen of the British Museum. fhe referenee reading-room Is i". ■••••x loot, and d magnaine room about tin > sums size, The room in which the library fe placed te ISOfeel hy 40 feet The room si well proportioned, ventilated, and Lighted, it has two aaUeviee^ The presses and ihelvev are of <U*itl and cediir. The public* nswo uccckk to worv pari «\ the hhr:ir\ i-\i'io»t d the i- .p L'allcry, where valuable Illustrated and other works sre kept

At the end of i**7 a Public Libraries' um was passed. This BUI Instituted anew departure so far ns Sonth Hutralte is con- cerned. From the Mill it seerns thni Public LilirnrfeR nun I b established in n municipality or district council, eveept in Adelaide, "and ror thai purpose tlw existing Institute within siu'li municipality or district council and the real and pel aatatenfsnen foatftute may be taken ovei by the corporatlaii 01 district council within which il in situate in the manner subject ii» the conditions and rontrU:lioiiK hereinafter prtwcrlbcd " Tin- proeesB i-. ;i uoniparalivelj simple out?, Ten ratepayers <.i the municipality are to sign a requisition asking the mayor to convene ;j meeting i<> decide whether a Public Library snail be established in the muirietpality. Tin* mayor is tlicrcupun to i meeting of ratepayers, stating; in his notice the object of tho meeting, and whethei it is proposed to take orer any ex Institute Tin* meeting may be adjourned, sad if •-» voti i arrlod at the first or the adj turned meeting bj .1 majority o\ thirds of the rateiNi.vor> invent, the Governor may at any : in n- thereafter by proclamation declare that a Public Library A ill established in tho municipality. No poll i* to be taken , but the decision of the meeting; is to be final. When the Public Ltbi u y U thuH instituted the locnl counoil ni*e to declare h MLlbi in rntO* without appeal to the rutejsiyers, of not Ick« than one penny and not more than one penny 01; tho ratable prop* M ": 1 rii.- meeting, or any adjournment of it, it decided not to ( i:i!.Ih!i n Public Library, the question in not again to be discussed i.<i a year :it b^t, unices a majority of thoee pn

decide " that tho mutt'*]' may ho a^ain brought forward and

sidered within that period. The foregoing provimonfl an

to apply to ili'.irirt eonneils. As we read the measure, anon

diatnot •-•-■men will hove power I tubtish only one Public

Library', When tho Library In eatabYufofcd in accordance wit! oodtirc a/reach described, 11 5 to\w caKaasjeA fcg teanafttoa* ot

THK I'nil.IC IJItRAKI)^ HF Al'6TTl,M-ABL\.

Jl;1

...

!fn, hull of whom are to be appointed by the corporation op

district council, and tlio other liulf to be" elected by the rtite- poyers it i meeting assembled Eor I be ourposei At Least throe of tii*' i-i'ifiiuitt.'" ure to he members of tin- council or oofporotion, and all are to hold office fore yew, but will be eligible for re- appointment or re-election, lhe committee will have tho power Bo i mke rules and regulation* which, however, will have no force until approved by the Minister of Kducatinn. 'I'll'* Library to be free i u every ratepiyoi in the municipalit) n it i- to be daoldad to take over mi existing Institute notice of litis resolution is to bo sent to the Minister of Kducation for his approval. He is then to rtnd our if the members or the institute are willing to hand owt i he property to the municipality, if he Is sal leflea that ihoy are willie/, and believes the transfer will Tie generally liencficial, he in ■nily Ills Approval, and is to publish an order 'in the "Gazette " to tbttt effect, Jind thereupon lhe uisidnle is to heroine the pro- per l.v of lhe municipalit v.

Tin1 Sdmi'i Australian institute circulates amozui the provitteiul Institutes certain books belonging to a separate and special department of the Library. These ace sent out In boxes* ww> taining about ihirt.v volumes each. There arc at present about IQB i i L'h-sh book boxes, and twenty-three German book boxen in circulation. The uihimtaurs offered to instiluUs which become affiliated to the South Australian Institute ace; A share of the annual Qovoramenl jrant, the loan of boxes of books; power of subscribing as an institute to the South trillion Institute ciroulatimc library ; aid in procuring and ng for lectures; and a eopj ul the Uovcrnmcnl "Oaxotte," Vets "i" Parliament, and othitl official popena En order i<> participate in toe grant bo the amount ol &W per annum, they are compelled to keep their reading-room open free to the publlo on Saturday* iVom | to 10 pjn.

\ very large quantity oj matter respecting the Public Libraries of Now South Wojci has reached the author from the \e;eni i ;.n.'i\il in London. In 1887 there were said to be loo Pubiio Libraries, athanceume or mechanics' institutes in the eoloin ol Nan South Wales, in the Government returns to hand there is ao record of what tiw»e provincial ubrarisi are doing. Tins is unfortunate, as the real criterion of library work [tea quite as much in what jk being done by country town* and villages »a in wimi provision is made in the large centres of population, ii w satisfactory to know that nearly nil the pro. riaeial towns iu the colony "i any importance have either mechanics [rial tute or a sehool ol art with a library Of the worR ol the Sydney Public Library there i* ample data.

The new buildings of the Public library in Bant Street have 11 opened since 18&I. They cost £16,000, and will nrcom-

modate 60,000 volnmes, and 900 extra readers \ new vending. room Is i courae of construction, Hie new building Is Bhoura in ihe accompanying sketch, L'nder date of DecewvViw v.,/.

i\ LV i ' U ill.er. the principal librarian, vrUSA toVStq \\v&\ ^ossi

I.innAKTBlL

v, ;•.• ;ti I llSl tiniC ii. U inui-i i-r ':((■■ l.'i.i,\in^ ill.' ^'rfflter

portion of their collection from the wing in Boat Street in new library in Macjunrie Street, ri c rora >val and n \ over 80,000 voliiiiH'K required much i are a i I attention

The Public Library wiw established uu October I, wii.Mi thfl building md books <>i the Austrs i crip

tion Library wore purchased by the Uovernment The h thus acquired formed the nucleus of the prcienl library, Tbs number ol volumes originally purchased wns ahoul and on December 31, I88H, they hud increased l (noludisg those in the tending branch, or lenl to countrj libraries, the Lending branch was established ha 1879 o meet n growing public want, and. under the, present :*ti v iMSTBOfi may, on the recommendation *»r u i Lergyman,

M i'\i.\ pi bi ii i nra m .

magistrate, or other responsible person, obt un under simple regulations, the loan of nnjrof the works on th froe of charge. The scope of this institution was rarthi tended by the introduction of a systei i by wh ' libraries and mechanics institutes may obtain on loan work of ii select kind, which in many instances would too c live for 1 1 i*_*i ii t'» purchase on account •>{' the (deaden tai their disposal. Under tins system, boxes aro mad up coni from 60 to 100 book-, and forwarded t" the country on application, to be returned or exchanged within I tor moatiw, This system* although only initiated within the hut few has already tnet with a large measure of success, h

of 1888. Hi boxes of l k- were forwarded to htl institutions,

soni'- oi r hi'iii at considerate ita&uwet Irotn the me

'

THK I'l I'.I.I L|Tll{AKn> HI-" AIMil'I.AM.V

417

the colony. The distance which these books were oaxried in

1888 amounted to IM.^t'w miles, Wuig on an average 416 miles for each box, an enormous distance* partly accounted for by the fact that some places to which Ixxiks are sent are most readily iicoessibta through the other colonies. AH the charges in con- nection with the despatch and return of hooks, insurance, &0., are defrayed by the State, and the system in vog"uo in New South Wales fa the most Liberal of its kind in nxistenco.

The conditions upon which books in bcotffl, each containing lots uf about (30 volumes, aie lent by the trustees of the Public Library, Sydney, to librarioB in cmiutry districts of N«w South Wales, wo as follow ;

1, Books will \k lout only to truste«a or cotutuRtuea of TuMic Libraries, schools of arte, mechanics' institutes, or libraries of municipalities, that may bo beyond the boundary of tho City of Sydnoy.

9. All books authorised to bo Lout under these conditions shall be houud in good strong binding, plajwd hi boxos constructed of nearly uniform mis, and uumberod from 1 upwards. Each box shall contain about 60 vuhunea, according to its, catalogue, in which no alteration Din be made

3. Printed caUloguo wliiw of tllo contents of each box, stating tho value of each book, together with forms of application for loinn are supplied

4. Trustees or committee* of country librarua, fcc,, wishing to obtain book* "ii loan, must make application in w filing, stating which particular box of books they desira to borrow ; and thotr application must he ac.uoni-

tuniod by au undertaking in tho form approved by the trustees of tho nblio Library, Sydney, in indemnify thorn against loss,

5. Borrowers in their applications mutt give full description of the library, room, or building in or from which it is nromwd to deposit or lend the hooka, and uiust specify the time for whicu they desire lo fttsAn the use of the books. They must also submit, for the approval of the Trustee*, tho conditions or regulations under which it is proposed to lend any hooka so obtained from the trustcee, who ronjrvo to thmiiuolvca the right of refusing any application without assigning any reason therefor,

All works of notion uro excluded from t h«?«e boxes.

The popularity of the Public Library K Unity proved by tin number or persons availing themsolvWof itH privileges. In 3870 there w.'iv o't.VHH visits, arid in I>-M>, i:t|,46i' visits. "In lshh H,L. number stood at 110, J 25. The institution forms u separate rispartmeiii and in under the control oi the Minister of i*nidi. Instruction, its cost to tho Stnto was, during Ihhk, snlanrK n.ififc'i, m.untenanre £&72, and books £3,683, making a total oi £3,190. During 1888, both the reference and tending depart- ments were open on Stim-byi The dally :m'i: ■;;.■ m vmn^

during Mu' fifty-two Sundays the refereooa deportment was Open

w:i- h| who lined :i rnt:il of 8,111 hooks. iViiudicnl and aerial

literature stood highest* the Issue being 1897. Natural philoso- phy ranks next, the issue of which whs I .flirt. Tlv ivcim^c number ol borrowers in the lending department on Sundays

Iv. i- .m iii tlse reference department all persons uver eighteen years erf iga an allowed access to the snelres, -and may, iaVa ant anynnmneroC works, but) when dons Vvrtv ftrej n*w Vow

tie

I'l'BUC LIBBAAIBf.

tli--ii) mii the library tiilil«*-. '■ l< put nwiw l-y 1 ho .itt.-n I

and bookc we not allowed (*■ be removed from the I u-l-i

i i : •-■: i i nn:i bar ' i Public Libraries) &Ci in New Zealand

WhJd n::.ur iVti.m- \v:iT 'J03, Lllnl til- : i ! ._' number »f

volu lion among those wo* 292,108, riu'v baa a gross rmnal l'V;" i subscribers, En the roturntrabliahed.cn tho 31 rd 188ft, the number of tibrariec whioh received grants woe i i -■ amount granted was about i,<xvj. and the amount

was based on the income ot the individual institution, rli<< Income being derived from rates, aabaeriptioiui, donation*, nol proceeds ot lecture?, entertainments, &c Some new rogulu

with regard to these grants were made in 1888 It a ns ih.ii

(.t Mie fust £8,000 rote, granted In aid 'if country librarfe

;i goodly proportion of it was expended "i the purchase of oi

Instead oi reference world on atrrictdtura] subject*. Comp was made that the bookfl cost the country libraries more would have been the oast*, had thev been purchased :tt In -ml- quarter*, and made grants of boots Instead of money. For these reuons, tbe Parliament refused to vote the grant, but it 1m hoped thai when some new plan baa been devised, I amaH subsidies wil] be again established.

It ib noteworbbv that in the eoionv of New Zealand] there are I'ublir Libraries Cor the schoolchildren In connection "itti the System of education administered by the Education Depart meal

Tin- jrrcat library event in Niw inland during recent w was the- opening of the Public Library at Auckland, is March . and tbe deposit in it of the valuable collection of Sir George Grey, K.C.B. In 1678, the committee of the Aucl Ni aanlea* Institute petitioned the i <rnri.il Assembly, urging the absolute neceeeiiy for the <'M.iUi.tiiiun.t nf a Pull t- i ii»rnw - B i oi ad of sdocation and of preserving the statu* of fchep<-"i>l The petitioners were referred to the Public Libraries' Aj a means by which the desired object might be obtained, The*c Acts are permissive as with un in Knarlond. and In 1881 were i I >t *C^ *uid Jd. in the pound was levied to support the library. I leu i Lorablo additions hove been made to tho books Rince then. The fs'itt of Sir George Grey of art and literary i wp»

n very valuable one. particularly in oarl,> South Son The number of volumos presented by thif- veteran colonial

.,!< i mi was between y,(XXJ, and 9,000, but the mere nnn iiiMilhi iontly deacribes what has been given. One who ■■■" i I hem says that no description could make intcIUgibl nice beauty and value to bookmen of some of the '

i Ik. One of thorn date* from the ninth century, and m oHi.M's are of great antiquity. In addition t" hooka and n scrip ta there is a collection oi native carving* ni wood from tin; South Sea Islands, and otherw by the iativo* "t Zealand The gift which is known un the "Sir (ienrgo

4 ''•Jinn," was given during* the lifetime of tin CoiaaSst, Hfl thus set an e*OT\veA»* -«i\v\eVi wttl y be

THB PrBI.TC 1.TRRA1HK* OF Al -miAIAHTA

410

hoped, lie followed by other COlOHlSta. Auckland is thus

determined not to be behind Melbourne and Sydney in its Public Library, and it linn already established a position of sound educational value, and created a real taste for reading and study which no schools could pver have done, li h vis tea dully hy from ttoo tu 700 people, and on Sunday afternoon* bj

about half this nun i

The cost of Die building including the approaches was fc^'4,375, and fox fitting** *md fcrttnura abotti £3,000 was spent.

Some of tlit canditiana of the lending branch uf the Public Library are a little singular. The Hum of 6s. per annum nufi to be paid for use of books, and 0*. deposit for safety of boob <n n^aicst damage, except in case of valuable hook*, when the price uf the !<<k has to be deposited. Anions the further conditions are that books kept over ten days, exdwnng the day of issue, render the borrower liable to a tine of 6d. pet day; n<> pOEBOO under lourtccii ycora of ugc will be eligible to borrow books, except by the librarian's permission ; borrowers leaving the district are to got their t i. kd i i aneelled. or they will be held responsible for nny book* taken out in their names $ book? cannot be axohangad <>n the day of issue, neither can honkb be re-entered on tin- day of return.

In Queensland it docn not appeal that a* yet there ore any Public Libraries, but there is u school of art in uliuoBt every town ;iud vlla^e, ■■ mulcting of a library and readier-room, and the nucleus of a muNOiim, which are nil much frequented by the inhnhitnuib of the respective towub. Nearly all of these institu- tions are aided by grants from the Government. The grots number of these u uxrat fifty-seven, showing an aggregate <t si.i-':: books and '<,'-'\~ BUDSanberai Dm capital city of Hnsbane

has not S Public Library, but :t ha* at laM l.tcou determined to build one.

In Tasmania, in lw-7. thirty-three I'uhlie Libraries made ret unit showing an aggregate of tEo/XNJ volumes. The trustees oi Hi*. Faamanian PuoUo (Jbrary, m frobart, have long bad under consideration the want of h elasaitlec! index or catalogue Of the 10,000 volumes contained in the Rational Libniry of Tasmania. BcQSfl month* SgO H DOfnniitlce wa< appointed to roiiKidcr tn.* question, (o decide on the heat form for a catalogue which Should be a complete guide to the general reader, and to the special student, and to saperinteix] Ue compilation. The committee, in conjunct-Mill with the librarian, have carefully considered and compared sonic of the beat modem library catalogues, and have deohled an the compilation of an entirely new catalogue on what is known as the " dK'.tionni v " piiiieipic. The nen catalogue will couiprJee hi one alphabet; (I) author's name, with tub title "i work; (2) short title of work under one or mow le&diuc words; (Jt) bats of bookfl on special subjects under subject beadii :: ■. i o .. TaMuanian mineralogj Bna tan history. The I setees and mt librarian are to be jongratu>.ted m laLvmg undertake Va^s^^vs ■icli w dnt, and on the chon » n\ a . frivm \sn \.\\evc cifctNfiflS^

m

rrni.10 ijd&^jubs.

which i* well up to thr must tppivivcd modern m-»l-

I'liMi.- 1.iIm-;U'V Ol T:i.slli,illi;i w;i : ,,i:ii'h-<l 109 prCSCIlt f(M

1870. " U for referenco only. lnlwrj aponnyrotewa* ini|

in behalf of the Library, but subsequently this was alter

has since been maintained by the Municipal Conncil out r.f the

rate*.

CHAPTER XXVn.

PUBLIC LIBRARIES ANDTKCHNICAL KDUCATION

rfjl^K appear, aa a nation, to be taking giant atrfdaa to

vf[\ overtelw 'in- arrears to our national edocatfcm j/y in no respect* in thin more patent than m the |Wa* universal jpirll uf Inquiry Into tlie relation b*w

Public Libraries and technical Instruction. The I Missing uf II"' Ministerial Bill al the fag end of the session of [flfl9 flfurtratefl thlfl rerj) forcibly.

Tliis Bill for i In: promotion of technical Instruction is a BUgtittf aider measure than that of the prerioua year, providing doe** fur intuiiuil <■< in< .Ut*Mi as well as merely theoretical instruction, I'Ik powers given by the Bill will be exercised chieflj

Board* and such local autlmntn - <- , ie empowered to carry nut the Publii libraries' Art*. Library and miiRemn n.iiiiuiiiiv ore long J»yo to take ttp the quc«ti"-n of technical •■ And as these bodies already have the management of educa institutions Chore i* little <!<>nbt rhni the carrying out of a vheme or technical inatruotion falls most suitably in the hands •[ tl eo -iiiiiitteee. The Bill lays it down that the rate for the pin i of technical instruction, whether it be levied by the Schol -I 1 1 or by any other local authority, must not exceed a specified

No one will oomptoin thai this jmmiuit i* unreaaooabtoi in vie* ol the recoffniaoa necessity for this kind of legislation Th& comment have by no mount acted in advance of i>oj fooling.

It is to be hoped that the permianive character of tha raoc will not mihtftto against its effoetivones--. The land ty baa by Ha ruinous effects upon the prosperity of the country districts, Donatantly driven into the already congested labonr market a quantity of unskilled la hour This ha* had the do affect ol reducing wage* and depreciating the - f ;<r:. >:, ni of work done. The foreign workman has thus seen his opportunity, and the oxwnpatltion ol foreign goods IxworaeH keener and kV< Technical instruction will do much In the way of gaining I for Ul the ground we have lost much mure than would Utf cirryingout of the suggestions of Protectionists and tai The children will not be taught the practice ol an] trade They will he instructed fn the principles art anpUcurjle to Industries, and in the application "i special' bnmenea of science and an u> specific indiiHtrfes, They will approach the lictual UanflVvng ox too\s «\v\\ wv XtAaX^jroee *

PITtl.U TinnAJtm AKI> TRrrRNIC*!. RT.irfATloV

421

without tho preliminary training, they could not be expected bo

NbtwiThstanrluu/ the endless variety of snjierior apparatus for

BQhool purposes now i'> tha market, our National school* have very lifct.le to attract attention, excite interest, or train the otw-ervuticm of the pupils. Maps and diagrams da duty until they full off the walls from Eke effects of mime* and damp. How seldom do we see » good map on the walls, The Ordnance and

( li'uluy ii';il Survevs have published valuable ftaj)8 a! Ihc public

expense. Jt surely would JKit be boo much to supply every national school with the maps of its own locality, thai the children may learn (he physical geography around their own homes, and bhfl geography of their own country, and (hereby the practical value of mope in general. The totw aoeence of suggentive object*, natural or manufactured, is a must radical defect in our elementary schools, for without them oar youths are brought up incapable

of appreciating Lho phenomena of the natural world, and fin complete ignorance of the industrial world or ite requircmente,

mid consequently knnw nothing of the various channel* into which their own labour might In realtor be practically directed. BonoOi when i( i- tflOC for ladfl to leave school, both they and (heir parents uro ton often utterly at a loss to know what the lad lr- to lie put to, of for what he ie tit. He has been taught to work hard to get result foofl Ear] is toucher, and he is glad to be relieved from tliie labour.

When we consider that thi* little country of outb— these small inlands annually export -'30 million pounds* worth of manOXAQ- tnred goods chioily, wo must feel, looking back upon the last half century, that we have a glorious past, and when we conndor the marvellous rapidity of our trade and commerce, it must make us feel K<'uo.'\vh:iT jealoOBj and nervous, perhaps, lest, by any means, or by negligence on our part, we should allow Uiis grand result to tall away from ou reives. We hear a great deal about f 'ontinental competition, and that the tiermans in particular ore running us quite out of the market, and it raukes us somewhat alarmed lew we are allowing our trade and commerce to suffer through any fault on our part. The Commissions appointed to inquire Into tins matter, have almost invariably recorded that our education is very much lacking, especially technical education, Which [fl almost in (ta infancy IS this country U'li-r the child has attended theelementary senoola&nd h Jusi beginning to total and to use his brains, and to reason, he should be Introduced to some .sort of application whereby he can bring the thoughts In his mind into substance, and especially in the form of producing some article. There is another consideration, and that is, thai Hie child should be able to follow his pruelivit ie.s for certain handi- crafts.

There is now a universal recognition of the fact that we alt far behind the century iu this matter of technical instruction. To "!. ace at one district only, one of the director* of South K*?wwsiy&ot*,

w at a technical school in Milan *500 invu fcuA ^twICwb A

423

lU'BU"' LIHRARrRS.

ii-;ui,.ii_ masons, painterst, sno1 joiners— ail of them vrorlrifig drawing and modaUing things which wereoi practical nse in Ebt tradM which they might follow. Ana what wu * stni mor< utonfahtng faot in thai particular school— there wans bondroda waiting for Admission whenever there was a raeanoy. Ibis > only one of many wiri \ ideuces which <■ mid in- eired.

As imli .alive of the icntft interest whirh librarian* are taking ta this subject, Mr. Alfred Lancaster, the librarian of the St. !M,-u\ Public Library, read a paper on tliiaeubjeei before tlae Ij Is&uoiatlun last year. Tn the course of hfa paper, lie said Unit "the Public l. it'i i , can be cade subservient to and help yrr.it liiciMiiv, Indirectly, the cause of technical matructfon, \\. ;ill know HOW desirable i' is U< bine mi mm hbr.in -lu \\ I--. copies of all the most impm-tum on I n»cfiil books ou (In* staple industries

of ilic district ::i which the Hlirary to placed, and a [inference to the uuiniiri of times such works are Issnedwfll prorc ho* greatly they iii' used. In St. Helen a the principal industries ni ohemicole. ami metals; mining i* also carried on largely, it - oar itim. therefore, to procure .ill the best books we can get which treat oo those branches of industry. Librarian.'* might co-operate with tonrhev.s of science unci art classes, and with mac managers unci foremen of works with a view to obtaining for the Library the beet and moat serviceable books <>n ^rinififie subjects, of which in many eases they have o personal knowledge, Too much importance cannot bo attached to the desirability of having In our Public Libraries a good supply of book* in all the 1 branches of literature: but we ought not to overlook the that in St. Helen* nn<l similar mm iifa«-|-uriu<r oentWJBi where a large proportion of the persons who use the library belongs working class, and where some of the occupations folio* a routine kind, not necessarily requiring much skill, it may be expected that the demand tor light reading will be rather I It is wy gratifying t > > dee decorators, designer**, an

visiting our reference departments, :iiel looking over li work* in order to get new ideas to help them n then? work 1 am always pleased to Me such making use ot the library, and tt I new work on decoration or ornamental an Is ad< i library they are delighted to lie informed, and lose do Un looking over it.'*

The part which trade journals are taking in this moatimpo:" i . on ' onnof be over-estimated, Thp author is ;i member firm who own the largest number of monthly nvi i leal journal* and Is well aware how largely trade journals generally have n to disseminate Technical knowledge among the workmen. than this fane truth has been forced home again and mm In upon employers that if we are, as a manufacturing nal italam

our ground, beehnicj I Instruction and skill win require to verv Braj place b our attention.

The bill widen has now become law (see Appendices) le far I being all that could be detarcd,aud<Uu!erH materially from tliat previously brought forwarA "by Si* \\eiur* 'ftofc«ws,>\.V.1W,. H U

IMM!.;r UBKAIUUS ANH I M H.NICA I. K1H I'.Vt I' IN.

423

a good Iieginniug. This may l>e said even when its ohUfKp phrases ami frightful phniwology arc tnkcu int-u consider* Eton,

Aiming the communities where tecluuc-al Instruction i* now re- ceiving pi at'liral attention are Livri pOolj M:oiclieMi-i', Xol f tiinOiiilii ,

Leeds, Birmingham, Southampton, Dundee, Watnfngton, Bootle, and Wolverhampton. These are not all under the new Act. It would seem that the Act has boon already adopted by t&v

M;i1(].hIimi<' Town Council, which haw voted a small BUM W 1 1 : * - School of Aim ; I y the Wrexham Town Council, which ha* decided to levy $d. tote in support of the art classes; and Ivy the Bolton Town Council in aid of the new Technical .School. The Coventry City Council has api>ointod o eommiti< < mi. in- Che Art (,» manfl^t the Tcehnicnl Institute, and, if successful, a rate will be levied in aid of annual expenses. .Many other food authorities are also taking notion. Tflfl BfttD lb BStor School Board has appointed u committer on tin- BUftlJeOt, and ft iio'i'tin^, mnugurnt«"*d by the Technical School, has been held of influents*) persons interested in the movement, who have resolved to present u memorial to the City Council embodying a scheme for the distribution of any id" that may he rained, Tin.' Brmlfi nl Technical College ha* ippl» «1 for a grant of Cl,ftOO from the Bradford Town Council 19m Liverpool School Hoard has recommended that the City Council should bo requested to use their powers. The Association for Technical Education In Liverpool has held a conference with the School Bunrri, ami various lueai hodies him* nl>;n been moving in thfl matter. The Salford School Board has B BCflMVtf ftw carrying out the Act. The Birmingham City Council has reserved b memorial from the Midland Institute asking for aid, and h k appointed i oommtttee to consider the subjeeb the Oswestry School Board baa requested the Town Gonad] to oonffer as to the

hexl menus of adopting the Art, and the Town Council DBfl agreed to the conference. At New, Mills a joint meeting of the Solum! Board and Local Board expressed Itself tn favour of adopting the Ac; ami enlarging the Board Schools for that purpose, The Look <'oii!ii)i,s>i"'i •: - Rra takfiu proliminarvatopfl towards adopting the Art. Tlie NcwcasiU'-im-Tvii-' School Board called a conference,

which decided u> approach ihe Cltj Coimcil with the vleil d adopting tlie Act. Tlie Oxford School Board has appoint committer to confer with the science and art hdinols on the

I subject. Application in being made to the Hastings Town Ootxnml by the School of Science and Art. The Leeds Association has held a conference, and has appointed a committee to consider the beat means of adopting- the Act, >ura« bai also been

followed by Several County CoiincilH, mich n>" the Wr:«l itul Voftfa o Council* and others. The lubjacl oi the Act has also been conalaered by the School Boards nt Stafford, Ipswich, Warwick, SwoOGCOi Feutiniog, and elsewhere, ami has been brought before the Dublin Corporation, The Town Councils of Asmc^nftdw l,\in'. Stiil'-vbrol-j.'. and dbflfioM are ->lsv \i\w\n^m\\w w*v\v*. Tills list shows conclusively that the \e\. \s t\cfc %,<&&fe ** >Y"

i-Jl

(•inn. UBRjUtiHs.

snowed to !»' B dead letter MW Qttfcl rliim; t" BMOFe i* titat it

Shall !■!■ ,\. rkod in [''•' niokt afleatfve iinnner pn$*i!>;.

Tho .M:iiu'iir.'rr lahnrae, u p); I before the wn

(forking >ii ('"■ Technical uurtructton, hold in thai efty "». N.H-..-I ibor 6, f*W>, may be outlined ;i* follows * i n

the rtfiiMi'llt hoard schools f'oi H'icti.v itnl :iiT iimtrin Ii.

•stating tan rwiommsndfld tor mippart nni nf the local rat* under Hit' Vet, unci with ,i view to their further development aeeo ii< the requIrcmwitB < f the ioaalil lea In which they are idtn ita, J Thai till ui6 efficient schools "i science an I ar instnu Hon

rilv nOW in mvipl ill iihl 1'nnii llir Srinn-i' :nnl \v\ 1 ifpsirl inrnl

in- recommended for support out of the local rate in proportion i< thr nature and amount of efficient tccfrnii a] d id manual Inntrue- tlon supplied by these schools or institutions respectively, nod willi ;i view in i heir further development luuler Hit- Act urn!

taring regard to On- requirement* »l the city. 3. Thai each of such schools Kc piMiuoftted r-> *ultruit tu tin-, conference its own

■ui<.'t,rc-,ti'»m ii -, t.i tli, iiiiinuiit .oel n i>\ the ml d

Iroiii the local rate. I. Thai in framing the scheme t>< i< submitted it shall bo shown that no undnc competition of * i i;iny locality fa permitted, and that the instruction En the lowei sdcn< o and ni't Knooli shall be contributory tu the hiehci iurl sod tdcal ichoole. & Thai the amount of the rate to h<- levlod Id thr Iret instance shall nor ozCOOd one halfpenny in the p<nmd.ond hIuiII not be more than adequate to provide for efficient inetr i i:i thOSOhoots now exiting Hiu-h aiumiut tn lie determined after tin- school managers hare furninhcd the conference requirements." At that conference Sir H. B. Rceooc, M.i Mr, W* Mather, M.P., emphasised the fact that it woe felt trj those win. took port in tin.' oonfbrenee thut It would enable the Local Authority to arrive at a quick conclusion as to its duty it i . h. n.. were presented to them containing the practically unann opinion of all those intereeted in the carrying out of "the Ai I would prevent a great deal oJ discission in the Towi I 'ounedlyaad probably a scheme so submitted would receive their aseent at Mi.' whole question was the possibility oi School ■Board* taking advantage of the a o( to constitute theniKelves secondary >■ tional authorities. Since he had something to do with tho |iiiHiiigiii tlm*e uiueudmenU which brought the School Hoard in, he i ij.-iii say that there was no don bfc on me part of theautl 1 to whom any question would nnnlly he submitted :is to the pretation of the lot bo far as the position of the School Hoard waa eoaodmed RHhertu sehnni FinnniH 'md iieen able to eajprvattl aeience and art inKtniction only Ivy a norr of underhand hut in the \rt n* \\ now stood the School Hoards were no Imwr regarded simply aBBelf-constituted committees t.oean\\ ;uui art. instruction, but they were hontt Jide authoril bostneu '' would be to carry on woondary education under the in' a\ Moofl contained in the Act Kaeh looalitji inuat determtne for itself the best way of bringing ttoe ^.ct into force, ror 1 r:-i fi ••/iiizpfl |ooa] Option as it* ftrnl vr\iu£\y\e . \\ ^vtVvsA *a»vv

TIBLIC |.nmAWK> ASW IKiHM( Ai. RDPOATIOW.

11*".

was not inclined to move, the ratepayer.*- could move 'or ' homseh (»k, and if they prepared a definite scheme tho local :niihonty ffCUld submit to* the will of their constituents and curry out the Aoi in all its integrity tor tho benefit of the general community.

As one of the most recent evidences ol the spirit of emulation in tins department which U making ittett felti fll« oaan ol StOOkpOTt m&J be «iin!. Here a large, number of Industries arc (Miiirtl on ranging from the making of jam to tho building of boilers and engines.

The Stockport people have agreed among themselves that the building, which was opener! by Mr John Lubbock, M.P., in November, lft8tt, in llir most handsome building in their lm\n, This admirable institution owes Us origin t-hh-iiy ,u a thrice Haycr of Stockport, Joseph Leigh. Alderman. *.LI\. who, in

lHHfi, KUggefited that :i number of local gentlemen should nmsidor the best lueuns of providing the industrial population of Stock- port tun! tho oolghbourbooa with efficient luesne for obtaining technical and art instruction. A joint committee was forraec, a deputation from which visited the prindpo] technics] schools in the kingdom iu order to ascertain how to best provide Tor the Kpcri;il needs of Stockport. The Major further said that if the Question were taken up heurtily, and jL'7,(HM» or i'8,000 raised its an endowment fund, he and an unknown friend would contribute n sum of money sufficient to erect the building. IajcoI patriotism lies deeply embedded in the heart of Alderman Joseph Leigh, and he ha* in many ways done what one would like bo see other meOMSfoJ manufacturers doing, He has allowed bis native town to participate in hie success in life. This handsome building hoe a Frontage of 07 feet, and from front to back in I \r, feet. It is the design of Mr, 0. Sedgcr, and is a simple treatment of English Renaimanco. Internally the building is noticeable for one thing in particular— adaptation to rexiuirements. The latcet improvement are introduced, even to the door knobs.

The work oi the school is divided into two distinct departments designed to meet the requirements of different eia«w. -4 students. For those students who dan- a sufficient amount of time at their disposal during the day the curriculum provided in tho department of day classes will probably he found most advantageous, inasmuch as the time devoted to each subject U generi ly greater thun can be allowed in the evening alaMSa, Da the other hand the department of evening classes will be found to provide efficient training in the higher branches of knowledge for the numerous class of student* whose daily occupations prevent their at rending the day clauses. In The department of day clauses provision has been made for instruction in the following branches '. Art and design, chemistry, dyeing, and mathematical and physical science. In the department of evening dOBM* the following branches of

I science, technology, and art, and of literary and commercial know- ledge, and domestic economy will be fully provided for: - Sbfinej Mathematical and physical science, chemistry end uwwCvwwv^, aad natural M-fr/iee. 7«-//ho%i/- BvQ&taff tTHlAwa, w^v-ww A

f

:

4*i

IU'BM" LIURAftlK?.

anxrmocring, dyeing, blenching, and calico printings tort huhutriM, and' hut nianufaeture. Art browing, pntatfi

ni'iii'-iltn^, and tleMjru;n>f. <''>inm*re$ «">' Literature CM

Ili.Ti l;il SOOffTtlph^ ttnd :i"Hlimcn.,l gram TU Hi' :in< ! rnni|M

shorthand and bookkeeping, md Kronen and Meronan. Khjmhww I iressmaking and millinery, art- neodlowork, and < ing. Ale illustrates the thoroughly ooniprehenidvi icop nrfaicn

him lu'i'ii mappi-il nut, and It :- very V\tM:u\\ "i; i

ROQstudentN have joined thoditfToreni elaasesaou"1 of theniei

i distance. Thin k^iooI bids fair to take n first place m ion tin- technical Dial button* of the country Stockport linn <-rer been unong the most progresHlYe tovnn of die country, mid Lhi eatabllBliraeat of this school prove* that in (lie inarch of teolmJi buttroetton tin- town means to necupy n promii on1 |

lei has i> adopted for It* maintenance.

The schools ;i( KtUKlde^ uud Hudderaneld arc d< ing i xi i Ileal work, ami ;ii 1 1 >■_•« 1 1 u -i ;i Universal Bptril uf Inquiry IS abroad

(lie bringing ;lil<i uin-i itlitm ul tin: flCM Vet 1'v fi:l tin* 1 icmI plsi

however, u to set Uie Publi Libraries Acta in force Bret, sod Hi

latter tube the outcome and curollan of tfw oldcj inert] u

tyjt or

he

ileal

CHAPTER XWJli.

PUBLIC LIBRARY LECTURES AND SCIENCE AK ART CLASSES.

O better index to the rapidly developing work of Public Libraries could he l'<mn 1 than hi the cvei oarti nduig number of these institution**, which arc ixiclod part of their njjorations loctures and science > elasseu. Future historians will have to rec ird thatei ol the most notable evidences of tiatu rial progress in the el yi ■■!- if the nineteenth century, ih the pruotlcj the education of the |>eople,and fore-moid among theft stand forth the instruction derived through and by rnto-sppporfc Public Libraries. Far and wide w the love ol i- I but up in ;i 1'ixiinaratively recent date the uteres uf k1, laid Up m l*uMie Lihrarii.'w, havu lo n eertuiu esJent 1'ieMl m. h-o upon because readers with only the library catalogue to gm them, have not had before them indications of any speeaBediti of study, and ao have groped nlwmt hopelessly. To iln- of Anger poets r<» direct readers ■<>■ to the heat and mom :,■ lines of reading, may be attributed to a very larg preponderance of fiction over other clauses ol Itternturs ft aa« much of the time lout in former yearn in being rapidly ov elcen. and ws ipuear to be within measurable wsttuv period whan no Public Library will be ■"! ridered lo hav< plate record unless it has within it* ramifications ol work arta] leeimv.s am!, in imm- w.\\ <<r 'mother, sc.fcnon and art ell associated » ii i Iti el orta. HlOAfl v\ o Imagine tnal the aVtenAvu^ ■■■ tnrj

J.HCTVBTW ASP BCIRNCK A^P AW OLAWU33.

1ST

lectures already in v»z\w have bMII dMG*n entirely Prom (he working ttlaeaea should, il possible, doom nes frenoeelves to the contrary by attending; one of them. AH classes hive been more or less represented, and the attention given and evident interest in thorn is sufficient pmof haw thoroughly they are appreoiati id, From i li*t «ii' some of the rabjeeti given, it will l»e seen that these are not of a class organized simply for the amusement of :i scratch audience, but that solid information has been conveyed, giving* Ed a largo number oi ntftanooB, i «iiroct incentive to fcae perusal of special hook*.

This is one reason why it has hoen urged that in the planning ol new Tm tidings for Public Library purposes, lecture halls should ho looked upon ns a mvessary adjunct where space t&d

means will permit As a souroe <>f laeorae bj the letting of she

hall it is :i matter of considerable importance,

Townsman have very frequently been the lecturers, and in other

OBflBH paid professional lecturers. \* suggestive tO other

committees the lecture work at b few Public Libraries is Indicated, bufl i<> direct attention bo everything which Is now being done in tibia vrag would require much more space Hum there is at disposal.

Among other lecture* il Liverpool, as part of their Tuhlic' Libraiy work during the prat autumn, there may be mentioned the following; -Rev. r>r. W, H. Dalllnger. T.L.n.. v U.S.. two lecture*, ''The World of the Hiimtesl Ufe;"flar Robert Ball,

M A., LL.O., A*:ivnuii)cr liuyul of lielaud, t'oai' lectures, ' Stor* ot the Heavens," " The Elements of Astronomy (i), and •' Experimental Mechanics;" Mr. YVni. Hewitt. BCienoC toften IE of the Liverpool School ttonnl.t'our lectures on " The Principle* of

(jfoograp) \ ;" and Dr. W, Boyd Dawkins, Owens College! ilan- chaster, two lectures, "Cave Hunting" sad "Eorij Man in Britain."

The afafloneatov work In this department i* well to the front. ii mm other subjects there may be named those try Mr. George

Rarwood on " Booka as Friends," who looked on I bs is friends

in six lights i tw thoy gave uk recreation, correction, instruction, -t mi illation, oonaolaAoUj ami elevation. A loan got more recrea- tion from books than anything1 cl*e, Ijocuuko thoy changed bffl D in. I. Mr George Mllaer disoour&cd on " Ballad Literature." The Rot. P. T. Forsyth had for hia subject "Popular Religious Liter;!! lire.' nmi Mr Miarlow Howler lectured on "General Heading for Busy .\ien." Professor W UktnS gave DJS Views otl "Madera Fiction," and Mr. Sowertautta told a large audience

what went towards " I'lie Making of Heography." -Air. ('. VV*.

Sutton, thi'ehu'f librarian, has taken his place at ttte IsetuMr'B

ilexk. and moong many Muiirhexter friend* of Public Lihr:irlSf

and popular education there stands out proxninantly, Mr u E a. Axon, who has for nmny years naen one of the ataunobaet and

moRt active workers for those institutions \s :i literary man

Kr. \\or ,has byhle pea done yeoman serrlce taz t\« wn\w\\-\«-. i ii \<a. jwrh.'jps, aj :i li'durcr in eoiuwctvwi it\Oa VxM&K

*•?*

prnuc mhjubje*.

Ubrarlei uul kindred insiitmionsthat ho h exerting a n and bfineflcto] Influence. Throughout I.nncnxhii'e, Chrshuv. ifmit I pari .if \ ork'shirc, ;md Ihe other neighbouring con

ii- roice'haa been rained to direct public attention to r 1 1 . reaching utility of Public Libraries, and to the stores <». mi Mined on the shelves of these Institution*. Through a Ion* scries of years he lias advocated the extenMrui of those :,i lions. There iv it ifl tola; hoped, a long period of active life Mill before him, hut when the roll of Public Library vortlijca cornea bo he. written the name of Mr. W. K. A. Axon inu.sl 1> first place One of lis Publii l.ihrury lectures in Manch recently waa on " The Story of Manchester," in which la- tr the history of Manchester from the earliest period d il I present tune* condadtna by expressing the nope tint each citizen might always endeavour to enable others to live hcj and happy Urea, all united together in the bonds of brol

mi rejoicing ■" 'he general rimt-viin i ( mid prospei \- It wib little use boasting about our wealth, population great ncs* mikwi all the people won: provided with In and comfortable homcN.

Another of hie lectures on " Books Ancient and Modem " ox< -•"ii .idcruble in tercet. He njmko ol" tin' great libraries of World Those, at Alexandria must have contained id mic time leHft than 700,000 hooka, although a book in those remote til would be the equivalent of only a small portion of a mod. <

volume. The number of books in existence to-day had b

"donated at 10,000,000, and this was being very ntpeily mcrco/vd

Tho number of new hooks published Last yew in Bngland wa»

over ",000 ; and in America fully as many ; while in France it tu much higher; and in Italy it reached tile total of I l/WO, U wa» impossible to become aec|iiainted with more than a small fract i •■ ol trdfl great mass of literature, To rend well all the boob their own library in King Street he calculated would occupy tl student 900 year*. Hence the necessity for a wist? s< I was a pity that the subject of the choice oi bock- could ;k»i taught in our school*. Tho advice ho would give t<- tho bop

would hi* that, lit' .should follow In- own beat m the hookH he

and xince no subject was complete in itself, the mind eoul working from any particular state in the map of hum ledge gradually come into contact with all other departmi human knowledge. In literature bk in religion, they must mii their own salvation.

In a lecture delivered only a short rime ago at. the Public Library, Denton, one of the "numerous places near Manch which have within the hutt two or three years adopted the he took tor his xubjeet "The Educational Use* (»f Puhli Libraries." Ra urged that the rate-*npported library tfiou I a centre of educational influence, a place which should university for the people. Tlie old •• rule of thumb" wouli to jiu- \vn\ . il lutd ffiven way in wane of Lli Mul if England was bo uv.uuUun \\ev \ueov*\rv.v\ Bovrowttiv

ad. u

wiws

site

a iw i .m tea .and if

I.EfTPRKH ANP MTIRNCE AND ART CLASSES.

429

she was to maintain her hold on the markets of the world, ti Bhe

w:is In rem nil i >i* Mil- had In '.cm iii the past, a great workshop for

Hit- niiciii- or the vorld, her people must learn sciences boo do!

depend as they had done largely in the pant, upon the mere rale of Ihuiiih. It in Ul he wished that every county hod such it vigorous champion for its library work as Mr. Axon.

It is woiih while inn iilKrinir that Manchester led the way in this matter o( Public Library lectures, and bind In the flnl jeax of its existence there were lectures delivered in the Public Library at CampfleM shortly after its opening One was given by Professor \ J. Scott on " The Literature of Poeti^* and Fiction ;*" a second by the Bar. Dr. Vaogbtt on "The Use and Study of History;0 and the third by Dr. Grace Calvert. A letter wae written as early oa September 7, 18G2, and was addressed by Professor Scott to Sir- Johu Potter, the then chairman of the Public Libraries, In this the Profeeaor, after referring to the opening of the library iu Caropfield, suggested a series of biblio-

S-aphieal lectures, dealing with the different departments ol •erahiro.

Numerous other Public Libraries have had lecturer* during the past winter. The series at Wideefl hare, for a tonal] library, been remarkably successful. Those at Win a equally popular. Those ut Birmingham and Watiord are growing more and more successful I'.-ich year At Oldham they arc regretting the bod accommodation wlticn they have for lectures— another proof that building com- mittees should keep this feature clearly in view. The series of leeturen delivered there during the past winter have been as varied as could be desired, as some of the subjects selected will show, Professor A. W. Mare. M.K., "GermB (illustrated by the oxy- hydrogen lantern)- .Mr. Alan S. Cole, Recent Discoveries in Egypt of Ornamental Weaving* " (illustrated by the oxy-hyilro- jjen lantern); Mr. J. X, Phythinn, ,( TTistory of Architecture " (illustrated by the oxy-bydrogen lantern); Mr. W Wnllis, "The Treasures of TTereiilaiienni " (illustrated by the oxy-hydi*ogen lantern); Mr. A. M. Symonris, u Comic OnfJttotarB off Shake- speare ; " the Ttev. H. E. Dowson, B.A., Charlotte Bronte."

\t Liverpool, Boot le (Lancashire), Ilundswiirth, Bud Aston (ne;ir Birmingham), the lecture* are growing in popularity with each hiic( veiling season. Ah the ialter plaro their expenses under this head are limited to £b» per annum, and, as they pay no fees to ledums, this amply covers all expenwM incurred, if then is a public hall, of which the Library Committee can make tree use, the expenses might come even ladow that amount. The travelling expenses of lecturers, cost of printing bills, and- hire of lantern slides for illustrating lectures, have of course to lie defrayed.

This chapter would be very incomplete without special reference being made to the Oxford University Extension Lectures. Mauy of these lectures are most suitable for Public Libraries. \ chief aim of I'uivereity Extension Teaching is to form and encourage

Km -ni hahil ul ; mil mms and systematic. re;olu\(t awV idy. It ll believed th.it thCBC Icciuves v\\\ uvwewA W\t ^.vaAn\-

4."*>

prniir ubrabhw.

new 'Tnl popularity of Public 1 Un-:irii*H by pnn iding ;ui addi ol rmdlng readers to the nesl book* Is poch subjeo

ciiiirsi' in dellVHli'l ds :i:t r\pe ririu'i'il lecturer. Tli<_.-- In

are appointed bya university Board, and form in fact the of nn itinerant university ml!ege. maintained by the co-op*: of more Khun sixty towns. The course consist* of twin &ii :■ twelve lectures and cl:i**c>, Tvn-li cm lu.^Li i:.-.l by a

printed syllabus, interleaTcd for u^tes and giving an ai in- lectures and lists of books recommended for private study.

The following arc u few subjects of courses adapted to Public Libraries:

I.— LmuuTtrws.

1. Chaucer.

2. SmuiBer.

3. Elizabethan Literature, 1. Mi Won and Ma Con torn

jtwories.

5. Literature of Xhv .Will.

Qnitutyi

t>. The Kupliali Essayist*.

7. Modaro V-> '■■

8. Corlyle and Kuskin.

IL— UlMuaY.

rt. Tin Hiatory of EreUul.

7. Tie Kretirli Revolution!

8, Enron si Waterloo.

'.), Tic Rise And Progrca* >l i<

Kngliah Coloniet. 10. Social Ruloriiins

1. (.rent Engluh King*.

2. Th" RngUU Parliament.

3. The Ajjeof Eliaabeth. 1. The P»ritnn Revolution. 5. England in the .Will.

' Vntiiry.

Ill -A»T.

I. Kugliali Painters (illustrated). 2. The. Croat School, of An

hlhutratri]),

IV.- BawoB,

1. The Life Work of Great Baalish 4. Physical and Political Geo-

Sciciuilk Jlon. fitaphy.

2. Th« Datwiuian advancement of j. PLyuogfuj Iil\

Knowledge. »>. Germfl ami their Halation* to 8i Lifp on the Sui face of the Earth. r»ij>«w*.

V.— pui>riit.!AL Economy ami Imujmi.iai. Hl«n>iiY

1. Weal tl) anil 1ml natry. S. Rnouhs of English Imlnitry

2, The firsat Kcmion jhIkaihI Mieir 4- Tie Inrtnatnal Revolution.

Tinifs.

At Wolverhampton Public Library they have had H economical history by Mr. Hewing l:niversity I'M l.ertiu'er. At tfiin library they have uImi bad i series uf (til Lectures on "The Life-History of the Kurlli." Ai Herel itariea on "The English Colonies" h;w been given by one - 1 lih& in \eraily lecturers, The Library Conwutte-e at rXunooru rendered valuable aid t" the cause ul I'uiversftj [ixtcnalon l,n turea, by purchasing: duplicates oi -ill the alnud&rd i I down in the travelling library, and placed (hem on one side for the special use of University Extension students attending cijursr.

There la sent out tn connection with the oouxeee i travelling library containing about bu\v ^A-nAsa^ ^oVwcn* \fccowuncnde4

LI-C1XHI> AMD 9C1BN01 LSD .■ Iir BLASSKS.

431

by the Icclurer for Mudy <l"ing bin coliruc. Eighty of the*o libraries arc in circulation, aud wo uvo constantly hearing irom the studouts of the groat value they >li m <■ ir<_»ni thia system.

During n course ol lectures on "The Social History of England," at I'nmbridgo the bookfe recommended to be rend by students attending the course were presented t<> the Public library for the use of the students, and by the permission! of the library committee were allowed to Jie upon the counter in the reading- room for their use at anytime The hooks were not removed from the library, but i*ead at the tables, md returned to the counter when done with. This facility proved of great aasiHtaaoe to many of the students, and the reading-room was seldom entered daring the weeks in which the cour.se WBG being held without nmliug the books fw use.

Committees and othern whu orgiun/eihesK" lecture* at Public Libraries, should at once place themaelvea in communication with ftfr. J. f\ Sadler, B.A., 1 niversity Extension Office, High Street, Oxford, from whom every InfonoHtlon can be obtained.

tVmuniiieeH may greatly aaslrt I'riiverKirv Krteoalon nmdentH by pinvMing (Hiring lilt' deliU'iy of 11 roiirxe nf lectures in i \i<\\ 11 !i T'jiivciMty EitruMoll Table rnntamiiur lie- books reroin- im-uded in the lecturer* syllabus.

What, it may be naked, are the [nirpowa (rf Public Library lecturea ? The answer is twofold to stimulate intellectual curiosity, and to abon how it can htiflUfa'flflftd in the tOOSb profit- able manner. It may BGG1 i supiTltuous thai the j>i«iisi- ni' t « rnkts xhould lienaid or sung in an age when the printing: pros tanw them out in myriad copies daily, and yet it i* certain that there are many men, women, and children who would be the better for the friendship oJ literature* Nor is the rending that in done ajvraya Of the ol&ec thai might be desired, Heme the advantage when a specialist eorne* forward and explains the charms and importance of hi* own line of study, and advises as to the beat to be Wftd by those who wish also to become familiar with ii \ little judicitiUH coun.se! lrom ;i veteran nmywvc the recruit

<>t learning mueh useless toil and unprofitable endeavour* Looturei which have n direct bearing upon the books contained in the libraries arc obviously the m< -l appropriate and pre likely to be

the moat useful who oan gaug« the [Dtolllgeace which tea

been ijuickened, the solid information which lei- been ^ainetl. and the evenings which have been well and profitably tpexit by these lootaret?

With our friend* ucroH* the Atlantic the Leetaring BVatelH hW br.-oiuc auite u institution, but we have - n .>.-.- < i them Is

coupling them with Public Libraries. There in in this country B

growing appreciation of blgh-olaBB Leeturee, md there b dg : why tiic> should not reach the Kane standard ol popularlQ winch they have attained in the stales.

Since the isMie of the last edition the number "t Pill [tc Uhrarie* having- lefeDoe Mid art ''Ihsscs m par' r.f their wcwV ha* been enlarged The nm : ml n\\\fcl t\\ 'Mew i\w**v -

4*»

"i ni.i'' i.imrtiiiKt.

at ;i iitnsi Important nature, and these am had an

mil i nibltc taste and the catering for artistic t.

tie- part of mwmfacturcrs which aum-: ■••• --'i mated, lu all jmrts of tin* country thev have proved in a hundred «nn

iln-i USefulmw. \If I Kttijfli an tt-f tit*- dc-6)gn»tu>II of Schools of

Ait Ci"v in- i»: modern growth. pel there an M the i»re«ut time attending these classes throughout the oom li'iiands of students. In the Science Division there arc II&806 pvpUa under metractioiL las number of art sehoo' .nr! rlasM-?, ha* itriwii to '«»7 and 35*406 hare niic-njed the Of Schools of Art there are 213 schools with 4I.lt. ; if There Is scarcely an industry of prominence which I Home way benefited by Schools of Art, and in some - i»;n*iiiMiiiiriv in pottery! gin**, textiles (woe. &c ). "lvrr. Iron,

10, and olectrc -pbiod ware, the effect of these ochoi hern -t market! that they- have HOW become most necessary, s&i have in numerous ways exercised n vitalizing influence. To what extent Hicmo kHhxiIh have been the means of supplanting foreign dcsignH by English designers, is known only i iinnit'.liitely :t«*ooiated with them ; and had no other good DOOM out of them than this, their existence would have l>een inorv than Justified, for there a distinctly British taste which ha* on] catered tor rocceaafellj by British designers.

The majority of those various art classes, seattcred throng the country, provide vigorous centre* of art, and are aided by OCCBSioniJ loan objects of art from the national collection at Snath Kensington Our contention is, that If art occupied some

f^BCe, tlOVever small, in the eai'lier education of boys and in number on? student* would be trebled and miaarupled in a fov years. Instead of, as at present, these being the nlttmati

HGhoel of the few, they would be the resort of the many. Tin-. the desired end, and any means whieh lead up to thin cannot fail to have a henenri&l effeet generally, and give a still gt IrnpetiiM to the demand for art manufactures, and a spirited competition to produce work of a satisfactory character tn meet that demand.

The aim nC all education should he to remove from the mind all feelhig that tin* pnnvH\ nf nlucatinii is mere routine ho much has Id he committed to memory, and noachoota have

i so mueh inspiration and so much new life to all studies as the Immediate studies connected with schools of art.

Their expansion will he a national boon, and, pcrliup* more thaa anything else, they will enable n* to retain that coin me supremacy which wehavesolong enjoyed, but which in the nature

every effort wfll have to ho str. tincd to maintain. They hare encouraged higher standards of excellence, and have pn»du< wholesome emulation which has made its results cvtdeo manufactures. Those Oovcrnroent m shools were originally designed far the i iivi i Lasses, and such among then h

to rfae to the higher grade in their own particular trade, ana fit .in rh.n t "advance, if ttaej sYanrfA \W vV\U (uvUv r ..i I

I.ar trans ash 80TJWCB ash art 0LA8SKH

43H

viae, to the practice Of ornamental and inventive art. It enn villi every truth I** saul that they hffVG had, however, an even greater utility than this, for fchoy hnv*' been Breatfre of dr-nigo* a id

nnmini'HtJifioliH which liavr given heiinly tu the ey(- ;iml work In

the operative.

When we turn to nrt tu the leading industries, we find that the tiest of this has been the immediate product in one form or another of the schools of art. In no art industry is this probably nunc evident than in laer, pottery, ami glass. In tun- case wheit* an immense industry baa arisen, it is stated, stud stated with pood reason, that it owes it-, very existence to the influence of a neighbouring school of art, aim distinctly new classes of lioth

! lottery end BUM have been the OOtoome. In i'li-sc wares (here s ;m originality of conception and treatment rhicn has led bo an irumenae sale. A siimlar result has taken place in other industries. In luce curtains and wall papers, insteud of sprawling palm trees and flowers to which it would be impossible to give it name, huddled together in ugly confusion, then* nr« now rtu'taloi and papers cheaper in price tlnm these horrible abortions, and possessing considerable artistic merit, li Is said that one firm alone in Nottingham pay as much m (#,000 a year to Beventy designers u/id upi'iciilii'.b, tn metal work again those nehooly have exercised a must beneficial influence.

A sum money is annually granted by Parliament for instruc- tion in art in iho United Kingdom, and Is administered by the Science on<l Art Deportment* The objeot ol the grant i* to

5 remote instraotion in drawing, paintuigj sod modelling, and ©signing lot architecture, manufactures, and decoration, especially among the industrial ebflses. The amount is liable to be decreased and eventually withdrawn. Payments to teachers therefore must not be looked upon as perpetual, or 111 nny way conferring on the

teacher a claim to any payment* beyond those offered from time to time. To effect thin objeot, the Department give* aid towards the teaching of elementary drawing- in elementary day schools and training- college*; towards the teaching of drawing in art classes ; towards instruction in an in schools of art; and tOWftVdfl the training of art teachers. The art Library and < <>1!. etions of

decorative art at South Kensington pre also made available tor the purposes of instruction in schools of art.

So undertaking should be comrnenced In general reliance upon aid from the Parliamentary grant. An sppacatfon for sue]

ufd should, in the first instance, be addressed to the Secretary Science and Art Department, London, S.W.

Witii regard to erante towards new building* erected for (he purpose of Public Library and tor a school of an, the plan \a for the secretary to Inform the Department ol the project, and

{Jam moat be submitted showing the rooms to be devoted t< he purposes of a school of art. The Department may hI.m our or two suggestions a* to the arrangement of I he rooms, and upon this will depend the grant lmvi-j l-'onr room*. wwvsV W devoted to art, in addition to am uppaxalua XOOTw\ «wt tc*$w*.

4 A

nni.ie umt.iiiiii-.

(>:i i-t ly iii'v<>N'<! In ml. md M&Ol herrOODQ partly devoted to aoirnn- 'lie lour ]m-i'ii i:mt i; I rOflTQfl fihOUld IM.-mmihv rn <t

t Mow : Rlemontary md Life Olaas Room, W I I

Antique IS- vi ii. j ■: It" by \J It ; Painting Room, 1^- ft. | ,' . n i li: n l.\ 10ft

Tin' A:iH'lnl:iii'(it \«'t of I S^ I , jivi'ti it: idlX, 'lll|'

any null ion i; noting under tho PuhH< Ubrarlo lotd to ve* ram I loOo nmittce of Council on Education tow ipd

purchoM -I i'.>- if the provision of preraiect or luinm.

schools Tor science or ipi ll..-r trrunts vor;j from IKK) to I

The official book, giving full instructions > the " Art 0

iihlKli vhetire. ami n.** this book goo* *<> fully inl.

ormation of these classes, H i* unnecesf«iry to iji ote n iMone. So thoroughly l*» the eTteniioi u! Public imii'.' the public mi ml that the compiler* . t thlt i btc taclaaorl hi their la*t bumon syno|>sis ol riu> law of Public Libraries H law-ell t«< keep In mind that where » Public I n

;i public mow inn. -t gchool in- schools far selciu r i

an gallery lias Imwii already eetahllHhed under an< to Public Libraries oi museums, :i similar Institution nuu established m connection there wl h *l lion furl iwr pn being Uilcen under the A- to, Ai Hi* South Shieltb Public Library there are sdeneeantf irl

claMM-M which ;nt- hriiu» it trtnlcd hv mci loO student* In mm-

imh:.")i h it 1 1 othsi rimuM cli *ce In the town the Public Library clawtoa have not only maintained but have "trciurtlwmed I position. At Norwio.lt Public Library they bavc theee nkirsrii and Borne beautiful work has been done l\v the ra ire lulvs stadeats. The Elaaley Public Library science clauses are mora

Mum jiiNt l'vi;i- tlu-ir exigence Vol llit.-r rhiMftr* tin r hlld 111

February last toot a gift of C220 from Mr, Huntbaol damn nt the >'«-wriistli:-ii]ion-Tyiic Public Library arc gaining

? round) but though they arc technical ly connected witl I ■■ library they arc practically ji survival of Mu- »ld mechanii in itituuon. Th»t institution hod suffered deca;

l.il r.iry tor-li |n i >*ti A it- premificfi. At \\ \

and Gateshead there ure some excellent which me*

the library buildtaea Thoro are science and ir clauses .ii its Hum Icy Institute in Southampton, which I indirect! corporation control, and tho Public Library is l ting i II help Mint institution on hy providing books in their Ion department for the use of the students, ObJj a limited section of Public Lxbrariea whon fkis

ciiri'ic'l on liuv.- hofn nnnied. Others . ••■ :i«1«!:mu; liu i i i

the li<t, -nut it will ^""ii ho looked upon aa an indLspenaabtl

feature t»i rii- work ol ttie^e n^titnriorH.

THK llJIiriMI Ml-KIM I.HWtAin AND ITS WORK. 435

CHAPTKK XXJX

THE BRITISH MUSEUM LIBRARY AND ITS WORK.

|HK Jlritish Museum Library will challenge compuriHon with any other national library in tbc world, So much may be unhesitatingly claimed tor it, nol onto with regard to tin- institution as a library, but in tho use made ol It* and in overy other deportment ol IU work. Of all the public, inwtitutuais which go to make London wbnt it ih, there in none which plays a more important part than Mi British .Museum. No library in lireat Britain, not even in an\ of the universities, nor the Advocates' Library in Edinburgh, ox the Bndlmnn ID Oxford nan ha an instant oompare with that at Bloomshury. Learned Berlin has nothing worthy of pittlnfl against it. The Vutirmi Lilimry is, no doubt, rich in ecclesiastical

history, but is poorer in rvory other department 'of literature. Paris alone is superior to the British Museum Library ad far da the number of books to concerned, though in tin* eatne mans*©* ment the Bihliothei|ue Rationale is infinitely behind that in the. metropolis of this notion of shopkeepers. Further than tlmt the reader at the British Museum borrows twice U iiiiui) books ilh the French reader. But notwithstanding the two million bookll and nearly two hundred thousand pamphlets in the national library in Paris, um Brtfcleb Muaeum ieby far the riches! iu English books, as, of course, should be the ease. But in French, Italian, Slavonic, and German literature.it is only second, if secondi to the Public Libraries of France, Italy, BanSflj .\untria, and PruWda. Scholars from ail parte of the world cmoe to consult, it.- Oriental riT;i>iu<\ Neither Cairo, nor Stnmboul, nor Bagdad, or Bokhara has nuch a store of Korannic commentaries, and in his recently-published "Bibliography of the Eakhno Language," Mr. Filling notes with

ho in r aciazcnicnl Ihnt l:r Intuj^i t&C fiuOBt COllOOtiOl ol tOXtl fr

that hyperborean bongOO in a private library in Washington, while the next finest was not in Copenhagen— aa one might have expected from the relation of the I>onoa to Greenland, and the fact that Rink, the greatest of Arctic authorities, worked thej'O

-but in tho capital of tiroat Britain.

Yet of all the great libraries that wlm-h is pre-eminently national is perh apt; the youngest It began long after th6 BCMemietJ collection* had* IMSBkOd Shape, :""' it W46 houseless, and practically unincorporated when many of the semi-private and professional ones had grown to respectable proportion*. Die truth U thnt it was only until a '•entiiry ago or ttiefBftbOUtft " ft1

any great need was felt for a Public Library Books were printed in comparatively small numbers, urnl i einmony to rend any "n or Latin wtw vouchsafed to only a limited number ol ndividunls. Scholar*! had rhoir collie ^vVxwS^v^rwvVj collections, or they purchased what tihttj TOq\tttfcfcA<$t **«?« w^

LM

I ki.IC LTBBABIBS.

ii:ri'y,rmm

■ra*

«0*TM IIBNANV

I'l.AN '•>' RKAIUM.-miliM HK1T1SH VIM'l',1

a BaMrintradenl B GJiwIogae TUMc«. c ttoaaet* TMblos.

D Ai«0»*« (or A I

E Entrain, fiom lUi)ttl

r BttnfUM fritrri North

I .ibnuy. G For KivHtrutluu ul

Opyiwhu. H L»dW (.'limit ILouiu.

K O^nlletn-n'- (lank

i t'-ir >*«nlieni»o.

M A*

pi'bli- uitnAnne

stadias. But on the pari o( Lho people gonorollj educatioj floont. and Hi'- dosire to rou<! tor trim Being anii

It is only thirty-five yoare ago thai thfl nintrnilicent rcaoUng- rnnin w;i* I'lunmcTn'r-il \ -i:--. I dure that tin.' jin-wing net

Increased accommodation had boon brought ropcatodlv *-d >re »t e

I Louse of Commons; but a fow stickleback adTucatca for ecu D.OQ3J opposed any additional outlay, and the iiideciKinii or mtfiiTai

of i t.- Government helped to delay the matter from year t<» Wnai i world cd ' irnpered national progress Um m I h of these false economists who h.ive from time Immomoria I down fcheir thumbs when ;i raw extra thousands have been roriaired for our national Institutes, and expenditure ol hundreds ol Uioasanda ol pounds has beta

--Jim thai iiavw lawn found fai too frcipiwulj rKvWon hell rang, recuperating IheJr |»re*mro»N)

Omniums, tn IflW ;i Vote wan got Quougli fi

new buildings and liuiuyh. and within throe jean be vast

structure vn completed] li la o well-known fact-

reading1* u ia circular. !l containe some ,550,000 cubic

of apace, and its surrounding libraries ?ft),000 cubic

I'ul lie I. Iitoih'* arc lusgi lining t<» follow the «t>*lc and chtti

o Lhc Nfaseum reading-room a around plan of it Lb shown. 'I'll.- cylinder which sustains the dome pre* i ontti

i in alar wall of books, which arc accessible from the flow from low galleries running round the apartment; :t i Mi the part open to the readers about 20.000 volnmos of booki of reference ami ptandnrd work*, utiJ in rhr part n und the gaUerioc more than 50,<XX) volumca ol the principal periodica] publications, old nnd new, ami in vuri >un to i -.m

The 11 i I the room ie occupy «i witn nineteen Larj [teen

smaller tablee^fittedupwifchample-accoramodation I two of these arc reecrvod for the exolu ladies can toko acatw at any of the other tables. I-*. I Ucnt of raising the partition down the middle ol ei larger ta ■- lomgnl iat n reader cannot sec his oi>] boar, privacy 18 secured, and on entering the nwm w hen I full, a stranger might at firel t il was near

abloi an all arranged bo as to converge towards the ccati :)u room>ai trfl] be seen from thepageen^nmii.r.tmir which aw tw ><-i!-ri(i:trrangeaof Htandsfor thegignntic ninnnki-: '

BJvery attention ia pcidto ti j renders, l«i new

civility and courteay on the part ol the official* could noi in any public building in the world. Thlafathe case auh those in the most Bubi i< inat* prtathWi the Tory hfghem i

II would aim oar. appear that the entire *l ifl Ii.nl nnt<

. - .'. tun Dompael unong themselves that thin national tnvtimtloa should be noted for this conspicuous fc; -nanr.

Whether th U be so or not, the fart *i Id In- rhnmicled

wide, aspeclally among other librarians, n « .n d tin Viivoii / .tln-nry ba\e J-'uVeW gi'«i*\»f*\ V«* Uvxt they are

TMK nilUItll MVSBrM LI KB An Y AXt* ITh wr»nn.

m

pubbc sonants ndiui.nM.-i lUg D put He institution nii|»|»i-i u<l out

of public money. It cannot be other than satisfactory that the hi^ncBl institution of its kind should bo 80 conspicuously noted in this respect, nu<l the leCBOfl will have it« effect through .-ill ilw roniifieations ot this now ever-extending profession. In no cepltft] in Europe is admission granted to the nntioiml library witn no free n band as at the British Museum. A nominal guarantee of respectability is oil that is required to give* any one above the u^c oi twenty-ouo iv:nJv access U> incomparably the best library in tin wurld. A_n\ book naked tor is unmodiutcly handed iv tin render, and practically no limit i* put to the number oi books he may a*k for at the same time. An official, elioscu out ol a staff oi men ol unusual attainmenta for bis intimate knowledge ol books and hifl wide acquaintance with tin- literature ot the world, i- Mated in the room to emrwer questions end to help itudentc Ed thtdr Literary research**, it la, therefore, ■> paxadiBu lor Ni'iu.iiai'N and students. There is a O0f>yboo& heading somewhere tli saysaomething about the unwisdom of making ivtmpaiianns, while the Bibllothacua National* is the target library in the id in present .t Ih Eos woral managed. There is not only n long time lo welt tor Ibe books as an invariable nile. and the time lii.'iv I'm hrvcrnl days in xoiiir imac*, but. BVBTy reader SBOQUI t c » In*

regarded is a queatjonalita character whose pilfering pronenall tea

Ii.im- to be closely watched. When a wtwld-be^etium1 enter* the students room, which i* about half tin* hum of the British MiiHcum readmp<rooni, a CaniiUonary bands him a ticket, on nfhtcb name and addrena must be written* Imt not the title ot tin* book wanted* This ticket No. I it* hooded to an assistant hhmrian, who gives another tiolpaL on which again is written tho name anal nadm** .tml the title of the l»o..k required. If bh i'*Hjk is not in the catalogue of historical works, or us a i ii;i!< gut >.f boohs published fltaco iHni_the only catalogue

ible to readers-— ip. Is requisite u> w: tint tin- phier ,im. 1U1 of publication are un the ticket, otherwise tin- reader may hare to wait weeks for it. When the work is found, it does not ODtoe '., i 1m- reader direct. CI to takes bs the attendant who iVmDd it to another, who transcribes the title, preae murk, &c, »r » bo tti kit No. l. The worh ii carried to yon by another uniformed official. When you wish to go out, you muet tret ticket Ko. I itamped to indicate that the book \m» bean return I Th Ban nt tin- door will not uiiuw yon topaaeool unless you rotorn the paper ho gnvr \<.u with the mark ol the official bcu! Opposite the if each book. Not only so, but he will not allow you to poo* with anything in the shape ol i book, though your owi prop< i tyi without :i pennSj ooti stoned by a librarian. Added to ail tin* la a HVHtem Of espionage in tin- form ol un individual tiros ■■! a gold-braided uniform ami cocked hut. This gorgeous juuitor

trumping: about the reading-room awing tin.' readers ea he looks from one to another with qtdok trjanoea from inn mUftary eye ThS restrictions with regard to ink are decidedly FrGtieH., und there ve otter restrlettoDasod tanraAttSeattaaX eaawfc-woutea

Ill

pcti.ic M-RRAnrpii

itt once to bum that the British Museum reading-room shouui En Infinitely more used than that tri the national library in Paris

Tin- «i:if latlc* ni' Hie British Museum reading-room for last yew

show the remarkable extent to whfOH bh© piililir i.i n vailing ilselt

nl' the bwwflUof iu.it Institution. Themimherof renders using the room won 189,413, befog JyWImore than the previous year, showing ;i dally average of oXM. The following figures show the progressive increase during suceivo-ive vrai-suvei lho.se preced- ing: 1882, 12,018; 1883, o'.Oitf ; 1884,1,748; 1885, 4,611; 1860, ''"■'■-. I--T, .'.."■". ; u'lviny ,iii ineiv.ise "I vi'i-v ue.irly .""AOGO

readers in the six years, The daily average of reader* ha* inert >ii.-in"lily I'riiiii 4'V> in ihhi to t'»_'J in the past year* Coincident with t Li- :.- tin* increase in the ticket* for I *oi »kr* placed in the baskets in the centre of the room. The daily average of these biokete in 1684 was 064; in 1885, 1,065; in 1888. 1,087 1 to 1887| IjKW; f*lmwin;r mi im-r^e i:k-<:i-.. (>i' lint Anil;-, otan day wince 18m. As the Btafl of the reading- room has not boon increased since tin- latter year, it v.

n;iMii'iiil;r' be expected that the average time taken to proeurc \hi iumks would inoraaeo likewise, and this is found 1 1 !><■ the v.uw. In 1884 tho average time taken by the ultetidautb to supply it work was fourteen minutes, it was sixteen minutes last year.

Prior to lS7/i the vevt rage time was between holf-an hoar and Lliree-quaHerfi, although the Dumber of render* never exceeded

BOO, or the nun r at tickets ">, ■*>'•"; bat In that year I Ir, (iarnett,

then superintendent of the resdnig-room . organwed the attendant* Into sections, the tickets being sorted sad distributed to the attendants at the respective Beenons of the library.

It in Worthy 01 note that although tho number of peailiT- lias

increased, tin- number of hooks supplied has decreased. Daring the posl voir the total number of volumes supplied wax l,ifH,7Utt .i ■.•■!! nst 1,221,298 in l**7. The printing of the e&talogne begun In 18H1, and aoeerdtng

lo llr. t > : ;irlv one-third of it lias been eompletad.

This third comprises about 9fi(X00G titles. As -lo,om volume.*, on an ivarage, are added to the library every year, the natalogue i* subject to i'oristani alterations unci oddftiouK, Formerly I

An!- inserted In the shape of written slips, hul the yolumea of the catalogue became so bulky end numerous that it was found Impossible bo provide room for them. The sunce uvuiluble Ear the printed catalogue will, it in estimated, suffice for the wants of three centuries Ui come. The compilation of thin catalogue

costing 1,0004 i vear, Dr, Qaruett says that one thing *i i ikei hlni in looking oral the names of those who attended I in the post, and thu is tint there were a great many < distinguished mcu than there are among those who go to the library now-a-days, Almost literary meu of distinction employ assistants t" work for them ai the Museum, this intelligible enough. Among tho earlier readers wore Johnson, Hume, Groyi

md Bishop Houdly. Tlwvc ia space in the shelving in th i n\t< 4 ttu readlnjr-

TKE BfiTTlKH MtTftKCM I.IfUlARV »NP ITS WORK.

44)

for 2/xui vohunea. in which it will be possible to record eighteen milium titles, or, in other words, the Rcenraulaftlon f>r thrw can* turlea bo come There is no tear, therefore, ol the catalogue being oramped. u la more dinVuit (a andexBtand where all Die books to which the Hf<n*esiild titles will apply ftM be disposal. It is rioted 1 1 1 ;it ftha authorities are negotiating for the purchase of some property done at hand, wirh a view to carrying out a considerable extension of the library.

In the> middle of 1688 the resignanou of Dr. Edward A. Bond « ,i- announced. Fur ill'ly-two years he had been a member of the

Staff) and for ten years had occupied the [hwsl of principal librarian. It is to D&Bond thai reader* owed the introduction 01 tlie electric light into the reudinn-nioni. This improvement, so grateful during the dark winter days, was followed hy a considerable extension of the hours when the room was available, and l>y the removal of certain regulations respecting the renewal of tickets *>l admission. Tlie appointment of a successor vrie watched with keen interest on the part of the public Tin- ehoice toll 00 Me. Edward Mattnde Thompson) nephew to .Sir Jamen I'oolo, the ox-mayor of Liverpool) Mr. ThompHon has n world-wide reputa- tion lor erudition, and hie career, in u scholarly sense, hos been ;i di&tiuiruishcd one. He wee at Unstop School from Ld68 to L869, the bead masters in his time being Dr.

Qolboura, 'i"" I'ean of Norwich, and Dr. Temple, v*>w Bisnopof

i tofidODi Mr. Thompson entered the Museum in I8cl.and,with tfae exception of the first few months when be was in the secretary office, lie has been all the time in the department ol manuscripts.

lie ia Hon. L1..U. Of St. Andrew's, and lion. D.C.L. of Durham. Oomuig into this distinguished position in all the vigour ol manhood* and with every sympathy with the book needs of the public, great things may oe reasoaabta exported of him.

Tin- two yarn's which have elapsed since hi> appointment M ipal librarian have proved him to be ft man Oi distinct ability, UbTary administration he is making his mark in a manner reflecting credit upon him self nnil that part of the work of the British Museum of which he has charge. Now thai the new regulations with regard to Action have had a fair margin to MM how they work, and the -dorm raided hy their promulgation has quieted down, it Ih feasible to w what liil lo rhear new ami

somewhat stringent regulations. The secret of the decree was

found in the fact that a number ol the. men ami women who were scoustomed to gather daily beneath the dome did so merely Lo pass away the time. Some of them did not possess hoiiieH, bill merely place* in which to pans the night, and in the strictest sense bhoy could be numbered bjugcsj fcbe unemployed. Thought and the acquisition of knowledge were utterly beyond these Fashionable lounfiexBi but notion ile-v loved, and of thin tliey could

thave enough and to spare in the ltlcomsburv buildings. Thin was becoming an intolerable nuisance. An«l the abuse ol it* privileges on the part of many of these publie-buildiiiK oorua&£& was notorious. Literary men engaged in gemmae "towdx&v "«wt

443

ensue UBBAHrpiS.

|»re-v<l utt, ni'l those <li'sii-inu- to m:do rulei'ine e («. «itiii' Wni'k

or works could not hmi a vacant chair op deak. As ninny ;i> imki of inch renders might ho excluded in n single day by even twenty

of the fiction vampires, who would t.ikc ti]> their position iinnv- dinMy the doors were ripened in the morning, nnd monopolixe

!>i:u*t'sfVii' the eiiiirc i\-.\\. Sane ol these gentry would #> our to imch at twelve and return at. three, leaving their places occupii d by the books and papers upmi the. desk. The offender) w:iii'in'<i. their wwtn miN far i time supplied. Then awne the

fleeree whieh sent, disomy through their number, thill rut I

should in* RQDpMed which wflfl not live year* old, and more than tMe the reader ivoald be required to state hia reaaonfl In writing should he require a modern work oi fiction. I)r. rhoznpnoo vrai severely liandled by Home pari of the pretw at the time. lie win reminded of bue proverb ul>oul new brooms erwcepuiu; dean, t>W

be -I b mke ■■ I b< --■ < w d legi ixnule Ai i

whom the nuiuher i.* legion. More than that, an example ha* I < ai act to Public [ibrariana througrhuut. the country bo wetoh Hie loafers and toaagen who are bo be found almoot everywhere. a new rescript toned at the time *>' writing will be welco by all who caw tor Hit- true welfare of tin* noble Institution! it ti I- ihc effect that henceforward unoccupied sent*, even should then he books on the table, will nut be n si n d 01 anyone under, am oircomBtancefl whatever At llrel siicbt it certainly eeena ban that a reader who maj be temporarily called away, ahoold be cable in iiiivc hlaeost oonflaeatod by anyone on the look-out fat a comfortable rcetrng-pUec. Rut it muat be remembered that under the old system it was a moat common practice for aelflah people who live in the neighbourhood, to huMen to the library in ii i Qornlnj , and, after reserving h place, to no awa^ and perhai 8 tu \«i return for hours, This woa :i distinct hardship upon legfti-

in;itt» w -rkers nuii)' ot whom are dcpciuictii fur their living

the National Library, ai d who perhape are an I1*'

the day Is well advanced, By all suati the ride in t|u»'»-ii«-pi vvi I

be welcomed, us not only deeirabli hut a nceosa

tion upon it practice which hud long ceased to be merely

CftfeOtlOXHlbW

I'hen ire other eUisaen who fretmenl the British M t •■nn read lug-room, who will have to be dealt with. The veadm^-roorn h 11. t tree from a very unsavoury number, who make It disagreeable for those who hi vc U work in then- immci nefMibouvhood. There (a still another ola*« official M us that Insanity is on the Increase. It acorns, that a regn': baa grown up among; middle-class families in London, who hfl to haven lunatic member, of procuring a ticket for the rra< room lor dint member n sufficiently liurmtesti [In p thus cheaply provided for during many h mrs of the da$ It to difficult lo !'n;J a rail mode of limiting the number o)

I'e.ider.s withuul eiieriKiehiiig1 upon the fev right* of tlkWO Di I

Agrett deal was dune, when the :u<v- >i i.< w- '.i another room ^ stmWar rc.mov\v\vuV\w\>w\^^ti U

TBH 0IUTI6U Ul'SErM UIlftAnY. AM* ITH WORK,

143

would eliminate many persOBB who come 10 BddrOSB envelope .

Stricter conditions aa to a|fO 01 purpose ED the USB* of tickets, even a little delay in their issue oxcopt in special circumstances. and a return to tlie old system, by which they had to bo ronewea every six months, would improve mutters. A sentence or two about the prot-ent o in the room of employes of " next of kin " in I Similar commercial undertakings. Is it not Strobing the prm leges accorded to tho community in making uso of the reading- room, to have the time of public servants taken up in continually attending tu the demand*- -I persons who are Hot there tor the purpose of literary mearoh or study, hut solely in the interests oi employers outside, who are conducting businesses of dubious

ndvjmtw 1" the hulk of the popnbti .-m - \, . i- wuiild «rnihblo :il airy r.'irln- ooeasioiialty applying for a book of which Qfl bad Tic pri-.-iu \\:tiit liiu wh» n En*' tn-v-pupor rOOTO is lW*ll dpi •:

pUn I ,..._,.■. .,,,.... __.;. | J

far Df tureseei) when thai addition r,o the render*' aivnimmidatiun

a •-. [uatttute i, we submit, ta the public rntore^thal some net inn should be taken in thp matter,

Tin1 on*) gresi need is i\M Public Libraries aiili their reference departments shall Iw established all over London. It is utterly impossible tor the British Museum rewUngMroom to meet the grow* iQU demands made upon the space available for readers, ami the only possible way of meeting the difficulty will be l y opening oilier BOUTCGB "t BUpply. Thai, Imwcvor, Jfl COStiUg* lO) London

has experienced a ware of Public Library enthusiasm.

Some considerable misconception has prevailed among tho

Public Llbrarieeof the country its to the Dumber of duplicate

\ of books which are available for distribution* Witt ' -■ < d

tu foreign works this has o:i.\ occurred when proeeutatfoD copies

havi been seat by foreign author*] and th* same works have

been purchased out nf tin u n .set u*ide annually for the purchase

of Foreign books. Of Enjrlisb work- n mi i tfahors send copies to the British Museum, and tho publishers do the samei so that duplicates and at times triplicates find their way to that institutu m. I li i an distributed to the various Pub! ie Libraries in the country. Bui it must not be imagined thai the supply is unlimited, and ir i. rerj certain that the demand far exceeds the BGppJy. ft ia iiuitc unneeebaary I" hnpretw upon the principal librarian thewi* dom of bonding these duplicates onlv to rate -supported libraries. That Is u necessity Of winch he is already fully aware. This j-i wi'cn from u circular which in sent to Public Libraries making application, in veturaiug which librarian* have testate the amount Of the rate, and what the rate produce*, and how it is spent.

444

pr 111,11" i.iiiiuniF*.

CHAPTER XXX.

OBJECT LESSONS EPT rUBLIC LIBRARIES.

16 title is used in order to distinguish Libraries, m whXoh are being conducted with an express object in \ fow. In some of these places unsuccessful uttempts huvc been mad' to adopt the Acts, and friends of the movement huvo In 'ii iui willing Unit tin: districts should pu without Public Libraries, und have started thorn supported by voluntary contributions or subscriptions, in the truest sense oftlietorm,the majority of then are object lessons established to Rive the Inhabit ants a taste for Public Libraries, and to illustrate what are tbfl ma iiold use* of these institutions. They are only intended to fin op £hegap during the Interval, and Kooner or later the whole t.hom win come under the Vets The process oJ educating these individual df strict** should not be hlow, and the Inhabitant* nonsuit Eheir tame Interests by accepting the gift* and no making

them in the tallest sense people's libraries.

AuiinOATJI.

In i*7m Kr.«[K wen* taken with ihe view .>i ^urlnn; to Arbroath

thf U'lietitx i.I the Public Libraries' \clh. \ leading pari w

taken in the promotfnn of the scheme by :i number nf the pn inincnt gentlemen of the town, including the large ratepayers A public me if ting was held, and the Rubjocl aw diaensaed, but the opponents succeeded In defeating the proposs -\ i iiiiijoriiy The defeat of ihe Acts caused considerable fflsapp ilnl raent to ;i largo number, and in order, us far as possible, to meet their views, the managers of the Arbroath library entered Into negotiations with the shareholders of the Arbroath sulatcj library with the view ■»! securing the books ladonging to them, ami tin- premises occupied by tkcui, as the nucleus of a PubU Library. The consent of the shareholders was obtained under certain conditions, the whole books and property *< handed over t<> the new managers along with the sum ol £1.1 0u> which was subscribed by a number of gentlemen For thi pun of books. In order to give the community an opportuxu* becoming potwwtcd of so valuable an institution, the pi :t:< made it a condition that if the Public Libraries' Acta wen before Jan oar v I, 1880, oil tin- books, fittings, and money a be transferred to the managers under these Ai fL|.

In 1879 the movement tvasugain revived to secure the of the Acts, and a requisition was #ot up and present* d magistrates in terms of the Act, and accordingly in Dot

thai ycur volum papers- were nwin.il, which ivwiiltod hi n

ol 96o njniinst the adoption of the Acts, the numbei

Utiti, against 1,632. There has been no further movement made

since that date lis number of itooksfs la/vo, and thi

e/onfsSw.6d.ayear. The Issue wwj

M

n. Ic

•UUKCT LKHSONS IX K'BMC 1.10HAK1HS.

445

these eighty per rant, arefletlon, Arbroath should hrtng forward tlic question ouee. again, and no place itself in line with nil tin* progressive towns of Scotland.

15aIJ.UK, MlTCTIKI.l., ixd Stiuliwg I. IBB ARIES.

The Glasgow people nro truly a penny-wise and pound-looUsh community. Had the citizens of this large capital of the North Ikjcii vise nil the last occasion, they might have seen to-day a large central library erected, or u portion of the new ninmei|»al buildings set apart for a central library, instead of being taken over by the Water Commissioners. With the magnificent libraries, which would have lnvn bunded mer to the city on the adoption of the Public Libraries' Acts, it i* difficult to hop why the unusually hard-headed dwellers in (Glasgow anid " No " t<> BO well-sugared u plum. The Glasgow libraries have been bo well dwelt upon by a former librarian ol «nic Of these institutions that it would be superfluous to do anything but give the brio! facta.

On September ^W, 1887, there was opened what ih called liaillie'K Institution, and which U in effect an addition to -Stirling'H Library. There are now in Glasgow three public collection of books besides the library of the University, which, of course, is not public, and if these three were gathered together

Mid suitably honsi'il, BqG lihrnry eOOOlDlIlOOlatlon wmili] be mochv

rarely fair. Whai is now ranted Is some £30,000 ot 640,000 bo

erect a. building, and some Glasgow merchant might very irteell follow Mr Carnegie's example and stipulate for the adoption of the Libraries' Acts. There are plenty of very wealthy men in filRKgnw who might fittingly complete flu* WOrS that ^tfrlingnnd Mitehdi and Bafflta have begun ami carried on. There larks only

the will, Tin- Mitchell Library, founded in 1874, is valuable and useful. But, being only ;i riHisiitiini! library, it docs not meei the rendhij? wants of more than u fraction of the community. This great collection of about 81,(XK) hooka and pamphlets is practically locked away from the inujorilv- In one of their recent reports the library cumiuitLee make a remark which is to the iwint at the prevent time. They-refer to libraries in other cities which have benefited by the operation of tin- Libraries' Acts, in failing* to take advantage of which Glasgow now stands alone among our great communities. This is the simple fact, and it is a landing reproach to the city. Half the education of the children of the masses, which has been pro. vided at such a heavy coat, is being absolutely wasted, because they cannot get books to raetain groat-end their knowlodgo, and to enable them to put education to its most delightful ueou. In the desire to do something in the way of putting the Mitchell library on a much more satisfactory footing, »* regards aooonuao elation, than that on which it haa hitherto been impelled fee remain fn-in sheer wantfl of funds, the Town Council appointed] daring 1880. a special committee roconaider tha irtata ■c^wsfesro of vrajw and mcajts, so that the institution tna.'jj \tfs \\^\\vV^vnRA.va

4W

ri'ULte l-'nn

a partition somewhat worthy of the city. It has, for the present, been dosed pending the removal to wow nimble buildings.

Uiifl ih one good result from tlio work of the eorjunltteOi now homo will he in the old Corporation Water 'I'm rl Oftce it 28. Ml OX BtVOeti Acting under some not altogether oca inendftitle indiioncoK, the ratepayers bave hitherto declined t-> i i too Ibe adoption ol the Acta, and consequent!? U i tlon b) question must he starved, and not healthily supported, aething be not done in the shape ol Parliamentary net... n, stimulated by the Town Council, i ! q special eonunittae ra ad h is :i liu'iiiv repragentattre body.

Stirling's Pobfle Library mm rounded by Walter Stirling, morcimnr and magistrate in the City of Glasgow In 1781, and i* ojitm ihniy iivf rn tli« public for consultation from LOn.rn.tiQ lu p.m. There 1* a lending department attached, which ti kepi up hy a yearly subscription. In 1H71 the Glasgow Public Library (founded" in 1804), got up hy private subscriptions, was am mated with rHirliiig^B and the two now ronu tlie Stirling fUjwgow Public Library.

Mr. F. T. Barrett ia the librarian of the Mitchell Library Mi William Hatton of the Stirling s and Ulasgi>\\ Liliran

The report for the year ending March 81, 1890, showed thai the total number of books leewd in the leading ami reference

department* had been 207,043, giving on iucrcaev orei buM jrwu ol b\072, The daily average for 30fi daya was omo. During Hie year,9&> books had been added bypurclum- and donation. There arc now £85 eubseribcrs to the library. At the beginning of the year the overdraft on the library 'a bunk aecouul CI ,1X17 I!**. Od , but on an appeal being made to the Lord iv a&d other cituscus n mud »\ W'~, lis. w;.i> reeeivwd, reducing the debt to about C1,000. Tin- iv|x>rt conel ill bj aving directors are aware that they will have muoh more difficult} in procuring the balance of the overdraft i tan they have fa procuring the large sum already collected.

Ka?:n-kt, II UtTS.

By the will of Mrs. Julia Hyde, lady ol the manor of bit' Htirnet, the sum of £10,000 was bequeathed for the purr* r/rOvMinA a library for the parishes of Hadieyand Barnet. The VUStees have leased premises in Unmet, For :i a >a 'ding-

rooms, an.! library ennrninma upwnrds of 4,000 volumes,

BfiTHNAL OflBE>.

Tlie Betftnal Green Library secures a nwl amouul cd chenr> advertising. If a member of the Roval fnmllj sonde a parcel of books or another takes the chair -it the annual It rue! il" entire country is soon made acquainted arltl fact try means of paragmnhs which g< the coinoleli row* press. Theiv never was in the entire hiatori of Put 1 i 3l much bogging as there has been, and still is, foi the ik'thnal Orecn Library. It has the diatingu lied, but nomcv iaJ tioiwbk, honour of being ftw way vw.-.vs, Wowa ta u*

OPjr.fT LE.SSON8 IN PTOLIC LIRRAIIIES

Wi

I:.

i

:

least, whore begtcinff boxes have followed a nbosQAneous pJfO- cession through the leading thoroughfarca of the* East-cnd. It. ia the proud boast of ite long liet of pntKmNBOa, rloc-preaidente, trustees, ooramitt*,«s &<-., that tlu* institution U supported entirely 63 \ Niiniarv eoutributiona, anJ these tell out to between. L'l/>ob and £1,000 a your. The whole of the report ih one long hut of donations of money, bookBj and pKnphlote. culminating in the

Bret resolution at the thirteenth annua] mooting, held in Unrob, \hh\), duiv moved :*u«i Beoondod; "Thai bhle toeotinff, on re eeivinp t!>" report of the Bethnal Green Pontic Library, reeom- ends that It be printed and circulated under the direction of the committee, ana records it* gratification on account the useese which it has received during the past ycur; aJao recognizes fl Divine favour which it continues to enjoy." Hie latter port , no do'iiit. 1 pious acknowledgment for the "siller," which hits «en bo liberally placed on the plate. When figures showing 1 be ici m and real working of the library aw concerned, these :

;" i-:)Vr;)sli)Kk!ir]T!rS Jl: ;l I l-'Vr.Msl ll'l'C l:llic l! NoVeUlliei'. The

statistics are decidedly lumped, and there has to he contentment with the bald feci thai tiJboul 80,000 people visited Che Institution last year, and thai Mifa was an Increase upon she previous year

r 8,(XX). There ;n*e brief paragraphs devoted to inrttenlara of " Free Popular Concerts and Lectures," " Evening Classes." and : Chats with Boys." There never was, in the entire history of libraries, no mucb en iod bo litllr wool. Taking the uuznbcr of days open as 300, these 50,000 visits melt down tu ubout 170m h dailj average. Tin- oosl of maintenance for the year was £837 14a. «d. of this sum eiQ i-v>. 84 ens wtuailj

a wot in the purchaae of books, magaadncsj ami newspapers. uuld absurdity jro further £ IVinting and stationery absorbed AM01 11a. 86Y; carriage of parcels, aavertiainfi, postage, petty h, coat of special appeal, sundries, &r.. reached B357 19a 1M. ; and salaries £357 2s. These 50,000 visits duri 1 cosl the

re and subscribers over id. for each visitor on every occasion when ;i visit was made to the institution

The nwrii handsome offer of Mr. Pnsemore Edwards 0/ 690,000 towards a new building wan made known in Muv, 1890.

Tears ago, whan the Public Library movement in London seemed ai dead asa door-nail, there wan some need . 1 n library

Ipportsd by voluntary 1 trib 11 ions but that need i.- now Ions; fiiiK-r ]>:t^t. "To bring this lihrary under the raiee,and teyy an iiirtnitcBiuuil part of e penny for its maintenance! would bring it under popular, oootol, which it now i* not, and would rescue if from being what it unquestionably is— a charitable Institution. Bethnal Oi'ecn has paraded its work so profusely and ao con- stantly that T.hi> 1 1 tm? has now arrived when the public have a rig u i" know more about it The question i* loft bare fot the

rSSSftt, but It la too important to be allowed to rest.

Cmpi'BNnAM, A small reading-room and library was openfiiY \i«t*t vCvusmV Wa

44ti

prnuc r.inuARiFs.

years ago, Reports ol iiu' speeches made at one of the normal meetings are before ttn» writer. To judge from tho tone od these speeches tltA library must surely be :tn adjunct I-i 01 Hie rjonttcal partial En Hie town, for they were of n »tro ptltUUl i'liiinu'tcv If the library won- hrmurhr Under thtf \<*t-.

ibis would be Bftxt to iropowlbfe Any Attnmpt to jrjve rate* hupj> irifd librarian party or creed character should ha Bl race nipped in the bu.l. no mutter where it is. There must bfl mrinv people in Chippenham who would value h real Public Library open Co those or nil political parties, for then there would be no

annua) i ting*, whien ;ii present arc turned into elertloni

propaganda.

Hawakumk.

a neat structure of corrugated iron* wood-llnod, with a ba« been erected near the ftrarrunor school, Hawardcn, a 11 and reading-room. It is one of the h'nent private librni country, and consists of more than ^0,000 volumes. Contrary to the ttflua] practice obtaining in private libraries, Mr. (iladatonc allows his books to be »ont out to almost anyone in the n honrhood who wishes to read them. Atone time this liberty was unlimited : anyone could take out a book, and keep it an indefinite period, provided that he simply left an aoknowledgmenl ol havinc l>orrowod tin: ImxiU. This privilege, however, was ao much abused by some persons that a few years a^o a rule was laid down limll ing the time for which a book rntfflit be kept to one month. The author's conviction become- deepened that the only way to imv :iii iriic privati' j/iftn of this nature for the fufieai use «>t the public, is by the reasonable tYHjuext Mud the people Will mail them by r self-imposed rate.

lirau WvcoMnn.

ThB library in Mom town wax founded by Mr J O. GrlffltS, Q.C.,

"Recorder of Read in;/ .md J .TV tor this Imrough. The building was purchased and altered by this gentleman, who also Nubaerlhed largely to the endowment fund. The fund was ralrted by sub- scriptions and the proceeds of a fancy fair, and amounted to £8,030. On the completion of the endowment fund, M. <«'r ilii- presented the building and its contents to the Town Council for the use of the inhabitants, the only restriction In the conveyance being that no rate should be levied for it* maintenance ; if so. the

S averts reverte back to Mr Griffite, The wisdom of the rtipu- rton that no rate should be levied may be doubted. \ I plan would have lieen to bring it under the Act and levj or any fraction of the penny for the mutter of tb.it. The institution would then, in tin: trues! sense, I"1 thi peopleV property,

HoawicH (Law .)

For a number of years n ground rent belonging to the had been accumulating, and Hi- trustees wen vi Unj the sane ton public purpose. \Wo\s»\Un

riBJJICT LESSONS IN rrHLIC !.1PR-M|]I>.

449

WBfl spoken of uk being n suitable object. After mature deliber- ation it w«h decided to establish a trio lending M>rnry. For this pnrpoeo a room vu fitted up in tiio Public Hull, and 1,500 volumes wore purchased. The library is open on Tuesdays and Saturdays from 5 p,m, to 0 p.m. The income f 1*0111 cards, cata- logues, fines, and bank Interest, moots the expenses for librarian's Kil;ir> , &0, Horwieh nhould bring its little institution under the Acts. It would then have a healthier existence.

Ilt'LL.

Hull is one of the few remaining very large towns which have iiot yet adopted the Kxsvb. R>r more turn thirty years 1 certain

determined :nnl undaunted class ul the eoinimiinl y in Hull have been contending villi their rellow-nitepuyers for Hie establish- ment in their midst of ;i Public Library. They will take no denial, BJld in their fight for Ihr cause in which lliey are associated they acknowledge im defeat. Four times has tin- movement sprung iuio vigorous life, and four times have the townspeople decreed its extinction. Hull was first agitated by the consideration of this question as long ago as 18.">7, and at that time the proponal seems to have been so decisively vetoed that not until 1h7'J did the advocates of the system once more muster sufficient coui.uc to place their Forlorn hope in the forefront of municipal politics. Again the CAnBC WW lost, and an interval of ten years was allowed to elapse before another attack was contemplated OH the. prejudices, or principles, or purses of the ratepayer.--. This ploiHSOJta took place in 18&J-, but the third time of* trying was attended with no better huoccsh thun its pfedeeaBBOn, Out of twelve wards only four showed majorities in favour of the pro- posal, and in these cases the proportion of "Area" was altogether inferior to the excess of "Noes" in the eight remaining con- stituencies. InftTOtes recorded reaehed a total of 10.nu.oi which />,8W were given against and 4,212 for the proposal, the majority being J ,677. In the face fi Tfln of this reverse the leader* nf the movement cnntimnsl to cherish their project with U&COnquortthlO

zeni.and now tor the fourth time within the p resent generation Hull

found itself called upon to say yea or nay ton ijuentioii that will UTObftWy never be finally answered until the ratepayers, either from slow conviction or wennness of uplrit, respond in the affirmative. On this occasion the. fight was short and sharp, and meet ablj generalled. The whule town was well and carefully mapped out and actively canvassed by an army of voluntary workers. But the result in September, 1888, when the poll was taken, was dis- heartening. For the adoption of the Acts, the number stood at 5,370 and against 13,(X)4. The number of papers v»id was 7,920, and the doubtful votes reached 117 There are a couple of comforting facts contained in these figures. The first is the magnitude of the ."ill "7,077 papers n tinned out of a constituency ur 30,tXiO, is remarkably good. The second is that the promoter* have not lost ground, Or the previous necusion Hull polled l#\2, in favour. thi* time 3,370, or 1 ,1 48 increase. 'Y\v: tte>AX «A •»> w«-

lia

I*i*tl| in l.TTlfcARIRS

whelming a majority was a blow, not ices to those who defeated it than to those who promoted it. The peopled Hull doolii profit byoaeol the greatest opportunities fox -<'ii-in provement which toe PWBwuentoi tin* country hats ever provided I elected to remain nndor a disability whioh ovory other ton

ttii- saint* tfiae in England h * ^ <n eded in removing. liu*

figures were unhappily ao plain In their significance that (here waa no room bo attribute r.h*» result foacadent or eToepl ctrcuinatfljtces. It '* written large In the result of the poll Quia groat majority of Hull ratepayers are unwilling to make the trifling lacrifloe whlcli the establishment of ;> Public Library Involve*. Their opinion tnu been oaken twice in siiyeara.and Uu last result La leoB favourable bhan die first. There no denying thai It* a sore discouragement to many who laboured wi-ll and bravely in the cause of popular education iu Hull But if the defeat produced disappointment it also created a linn detonninatiou that sooner or later those Acts should be adopted in Hull. Among the numerouH gentlemen in Hull who keenly felt tin defeat waa Mi. Tames Reckitt, .u\, .-v.ml.m-i Manor, near Hull. who has forec many jrc ira hcen intimately associated witl I in East Hull. About the end "I September, Mr. Reokttt called few gentlemen together, and, after expressing In- regret at the vote on tin- Public JJbrary -lucslion, * IdVh iu- reganl ; publi*

calamity, said he had determined to remedy thai del i no tar as possible*

With thin nhjtvt 111 i ji v . iju ii a Lertook hi providi I bo necessary buildings and books, and ri* entire east of maintaining i id \

ing a l'ublie Library for tlo> uir ol ihuuc por» iru* in

Kaatern Hull, wr/ere hi* works are situated. Mi. Kecktl Wishful to move that :i Pnblie Library could I"- mm I

of a rate of M. m the £', and therefore offered to Bubeoriba an amount equal to a penny rate on the whole of the propi borough on the eu<-t side ol the river. This munificent >iterwa* received with acclamation by all classes, and :< eoramittoe was :ii onoe formed to cany out the details. Thw committee w»* appointed on a purely non-political basis, and consisted ol representatives of nil "hisses and all shades of opinion in tin-

district, That gentleman haa erected a beautiful and suitable building tor thfl purpose, vtocked M with *,<>*> eoluroaa of tli boulcx, and provided the wlierewitluil for curry. tik on tin- ^■lii-inr lTiebeneflta of the institution are to be confined to Baal ti .ill. *<i i; tcltt believing that in Unie itb advantages lo that pint of the borough will beau apparent and *o ranch appreciated thai il»e ratepayers will, Snathci unrtsof the town, establish foi Lheu Uke institutions It was a condition of the scheme thi I v should be spent in establishing and maintaining iln. library than will do represented bya pennyratoon bh« ratable district Tin.- library is entered through n wide arched doo in the centre of the' front, opening into a vestibule with moMic and tcsaelated floor and dado. A nair of swing glaee doors on tin? right lead into the anvC-vooYu,ta \tou\-ot v\\e Uhroriaij'acouuUT.

4*2

PCBMC UQRAJUEA.

Aide are four pairs or nquaro-headcd windows, ind at the end three large Gothic-headed windows extending well up into the gable, 11 -I ensuring a plentiful supply of the uewi pupor student's d< I'Mtmn li^'iit. A marble water fountain ta built into the wnU injMic-tiaiolY opposite the glnsadoore. The wolle are divided into bays. Dad are lined with selected match-hoarding up to Uk window-sills, whore a neat capping eomplotee the dado. Tin- Style of architecture i* Oothie, with pointed archon nnd simple moulding*,. The front elevation ia evenly balanced, himntr u deeply reee«ned arch in the centra forming the entrance, with three we hod window on each side The same arrangement or window* Is continued on the first floor, and in the cootie over the doorway is a hold oriel window, above which a three-light mullionod window, and the four corners oi' the tower, •■- H high, have, octagonal Mono hmvN. uud :i stone parapet above the main cornice. The interna! arrangement Ifl moal >'nmodious ;iml siiilnlile.

The ratable value nf the property on theejud side oi the river f Ixill is about 6128,700, and -'i pennyr&te produces' CSSfl pes ywar n will tuna be seen thai Mr. Reaklttfeffifl to the t »wn .-on. unit-- to inn £10,000, u thii amount capitalized would not yield hla intended innualcontrihuU'»N <>f t'.^'s. |; iu.iv be mentioned thai the population in East Hull in about 40,000. In the event, al :m_\ lime, of the Public Libraries' Acta coming into force in I lull, Mr Tji-rkiu will handover to the town, free of charge, the building and books, Tlio town, of course, would then provide for the mauitcnanoe ont oi the library rate. To provide fox the initial expenses Mr. Reekitt ha* mod« other payments, augmenting gfift to about £12,000.

Tin* Morqula oi E&pon was Invited to perform tv opening ecrem »ny, and this he did in December, 1*W9, in a vcrj mnnner. lie remarked, in the course of his apecoh, thai i was i" Mm a Boure* oi no little regret when ho found that the effort! made to obtain the sanction of the ratcnayero (■» the eetnUid meat of n Public Library out of the public rotce ww

not crowned with BttOOaBB,

Then :ii u later period of hia speech, he said that

Public. Libraries were calculated to beoofit two cI&hmm of pepionn. Tin- first was those who might be Josignated as student*, and teen tlii>: might be looked upon general readers Of the itudent oIum and <!>• «■! ventages they would derive from mi institution of that kind it wa* need lew he should spunk, bwjiu.w to dwell on Hi* Advantages ofagral library, aud a libmiy containing volumes which took upwards of 400 jtaffci In il.i catalogue, was quite unperHuoue. He would rather turn to Uioy»;ii»iil rcadero, and aok them to look for a few ni omenta upon the benefit* which il library was calculated to confer upon those who had not lh« •ioerire or perhaps even the Inclination, to be designated by the hononixbk' of Btud»'nts, hi it. who, nevertheless, would derive from thai institution mauy agreeable hour*' intercouree. But it would be a groat mistake in <■■■ that a Public Library of that kind, where book> might bo and obtain «1 fur home reading, was to be conliued to thorn only who could giro torn* hour* in the <1av to Uwvt ttadu* o^ «.<

OBJECT LESSOKS IN IT/DUC LZBHAA1ES. 453

who could givo a much more limited time than that might derive the greatest advantage, from n library of that kind. Ha had oltpn heard it said by those wlm w«iu unfavourable, or wished to critkiae iu a hostile Spirit Public LibrariiM, llmi the only book* that weto read thnre worn works of fiction. He mentioned thi« argument because ho thought it waa ono which hod a oortain Bubstanco in it, and to which it was deeirnhlo to reply. They would remember he had not confinoi the uae of a Public Library iimrnly to purpose* of study. He looked upon it a* most appli- uablu fur purpose* uf rccmatiou, aud for thoau purposes there could be no doubt that the reading of fiction was more efficient than any other study, an! that it did afford one of the beet incan» of elevating a man out of that daily routine which prcstsad on all and tended to doproae their higher aspiration*.

Mr William Linney acta as honorary secretary, and the library

lias began it career of long aud indisputable usefulness. Hull will

ii have before it* eyes an object lesson of the best, character,

and when the time eiiine* tW u fifth attempt to adopt the Arts a

ireiy different result is sure to be seen.

LtTioy.

\n place in tin.' county of Bedfordshire lunro needs a rate- inpported library than Lnton. Vox nomc yean there has been a »moll library supported by voluntary robecripUoae, but it has for

:i If m^ tinw ln'i-n ft'H tli;(t until it w.is lii'niu-^.t nriih'!* Hie .Wis It would only luYiujtiiHti, and Ms best efforts 3o little to rm*er the reading nJqutrernenta of the people, in ihsi bo Dnauccenafnl attempt vu made to adopt rin- AeU, and It was fell thai n farther Mini m| strongth might he* made in May, 1688. prior tD which the mi ii js of i in* movement had worked energetically u> educate tin1 people, and Home capital meetings had been hew. A mortgage

of AM.-HX) mi the prcscul building .ippciiivd lu frighten a grt I nuUU people from sidiuy with llie movement, but it ima pointed «»in ul the tneetillgB t-lii.it- the to mi would yet. value i>l ;it least

tifiOQ, u .in- Mir i.s iti the rerj centre of the town, The library in well arranged, and only requires a settled income, with tin- other advantagee which would naturally accrue if the Acta wore adopted. The present trustees worked ardently foi the adoption of the Act*, and the people of Luton will, when this desirable end is accomplished, have a building and library Ftadf made, Th,- rate would yield about £340. For the poli in May, 18WJ, 8402 paper* wew iflfiuodand about BjOOOoI them were1 collected. The voting wiio- -for the adoption ot the Acts 1)92, and against 2.866 j nearly 1,000 papers were blunk or informal i 88 stipulated thai the rate Should not exceed \>l hi thi- pound ; 1 1 we»? as far aa jd>, and 046 appfored tli*1 id. rate, Bought? apealting, the opponents -i the measure wo aa 8to i ; in ism, when i polTwaa token, the pro- |>ortion against was J to J. The paper* f mm the principal streets were shnoet uniformly in Favour -i toy Acts, and those voting " So" came from the small cottage occupiers Willi .) largo Industrial population, aueh na there v* \v \.\\w,t\., ila WW to be trreutly regretted. In tUe AvftnuX* m \"\\waV».n

1 "* i

ii. inn i.TiiBAnms.

whore Mi.- -;mw pun industry li carried >'->, the* bav< PuUIr UbrftTiM. sod why should Luton take a hack seat I Cd these i>l;ii-i's - Sti.i -■ the pell wiis thnn taken many tri»*nd"<

turn been won over, and on Ifae next attempt there is good reason

In -ii.pi' -h:it I i ! Minv*'l:ii'nr. U'lll I'i'nw tirtl v.:t!' BUGC68A, M.AI4Vl.EbO.V15 \Lovdon),

Li no place have Che results of au object lesson iu Public Libran work been so encouraging as in Marylebone. The rofee tuken in 1888 irant against the idoptionof the Acts. notwithstand- ing the tact that a large sum was promised towards the erection of buildings. Since then, however, many things hare happened in Mir Public Library world, especially in the Xetropoli*. and who formerly opposed the adoption of the Acta in London have all corao round to see that after all there is something in these institu- tions. With a moet influential urbanization and wrll-innrshalled forces the promoter** of the movemeut worked in a \m.-i-. like manner, and, although beaten, tiny were not discouraged. The leaders wisely determined thi 'I Marylebone had

deolared against a Pablw Library It should have one of ; institutions on a moderate scale, and so provide friend* and with ocular demonstration of the Large and ever-extending made of thorcuduig-roooj and the books in the Mv ling library, A

Ixitter decision eouid »t Iimv* I n armed »t,und theentin method

ot procedure emiM not have been improved upon m 'L'o Alderman Fran! Dcbenham b due the credit of initiating the scheme, and bo him much is dn« for fjeneront BUppoi ways, immediately the plan wan launched flubscripl promised, and a suitable habitation was found in B block Of modem buildings which Tibs lately beei oanstrneted :n l.iason Grove. These were opened on August 12, 1889, by a i ceremony! and there Is nu ipiesthjii ahum U10 library and i room being genuinely useful. Some fi.10 people visit if dalli In the evening the place presents an air u id ippeuranco of solid business. The reading-stands and I lie tublesare well occupti d notunftequently there ore over 100 renders ixitht rooms al us \ good selection of newspapers and magazines is provided in the lending department there arc 8,800 volumes of i tioroogblygood and readable Literature. Every class of literature ii rep and greater ••mv* and disrretimi could not have been SXarmsed in the selection of materials for the reading tastes of Morytobone 31u nucleus of a reference department has been formed, and Already there ore 600 books in thin section, The issue is over 1 and the appreciatioti of the library is extending with cuch succeed- ing day. So much so that a branch foranothc i port "i has been Started In Mortimer Street, the Duke of Trfe p< the ceremony on May 1st l;i I llio organization and m<

in both libraries are excellent, and refloat credit upon Mr Doubleday, the ehlol librarian, and Mr. W. li

honwuiy Nrcrctary,

HVlCii l/ic movement W»r 'A.'- -.*V«\A.Vi\\ i)U\w5u^,«,*^\!o.

JIURC1 ih.-shns t>; prm.IC LEBOABXEB.

-155

:

{Trees two years ago, those who were not favourable send that a Public Library was not wanted, was not asked for, would not be appreciated, and wouM bt Wtt to hut ii 8t*rt©ll ItoO experience d Mnrylehone, as everywhere •tee, proves exactly the reverse. There, as elsewhere, it is the supply which creates the demand, Uid the Marylclnine object lesson has undmi •telly more thuri realized the c vpi ct :i: icu:>- whirli were lu-hl nut with lvgurd i" it Success is Stamped ujton the very face, of it, and when the Act* I'ome t«i 1m' Milopted in MarylehnnV, as adopted they will he, it is these little libraries which will have accomplished the conversion nf the pariah Quietly ami uiios|.»niatioU8lj they are pUTSUCag tfoftfl work of UBe Cullies. Headers erowd Ihrstandhund thy I si hie*, and a]] ogee and e lapses use its books. II i»ea*iy ludec what will be the immediate expansion iu its work when a large central library "id several bxaUOOflfl arc opened, All iu the parish who care for hue and lasting progress, and who yive a single thought to the reading ro.|uirement8 of the day, will work for iliis object, end side with those who have at heart the general good of the community in which they live.

PaddinOton (London). The failure of the attempt to carry the Acts in March, 18*7, in Poddington, carnc aa a surprise to many. The majority uguinst wue I. lit;'. < > ;' U ir M JyJ*', pftpgn delivered, 7, li»7 wnr returned With an answer to the question, "Do you vote m favuur of the adoption of the Public Libraries' Acta for the parish of Paddingtonr' " 5,£I5 replies being in the negative and 1 ,6/i2 in the affirmative. A greater interest woe taken than at the annual election of guardians, but it may be Observed that l,l-'> poraons did imt vote a( all. .Vn analvais shows that, comparing the Northern Ward, iiihnbitated b v a working- class popidation, with those districts adjacent to Hyde Park, there was the same degree of apathy among the rich a* there was reluctance on the part of (lie pool to give ft decided vote. It "i onlv proposed to levy a halfpenny rate, but this the opponents represented would soon be insufficient, and a request for Moil* would lie made The movement hud many wnrm and i irin-t friends, and while they accepted the defeat, with a pood grace they determined that notwithstanding the rcfusnl to adopt the Acts Pnddington should have an object lesson in library work. T iheral Hitlwcriptinns were promised, and a large house WM l.'tlrn foi B U'l'm of five yearn at £70 a year. An appeal was* made fur MuWriptions and books, to which there wa» a Wr response. Tin- committee wisely culled to their aid a practical librarian, Mr, Alfred Caddie, who for BOme leu years had been ai the siriu-uixm-Trcob Public Library and Museum. In June, 1888, the building was opened to the public by the l-"id Chief Justice, who still remains president of the library. About 3,900 books have boon giveDiand this is the oorabet of volomei tn (he ubiftrj at Represent time, it Is ft very common experience, when books arc ashed for for D library, thnt the ordinary run of mortals do not send their best books. Those who make giving a principle of life send uhtfvA s«w\T^ta&\<c>\«K?«»s

186

rruLii.' LniRAKit.s

but too many, tuifortunntoiy, looking u-oiind their shelve**, ooru idef i hui o library urny boa mausoleum of dead literature, a* it ha boon expressed, and get rid of what they can most spare from tbotl Own QoUeetloO. It is nut being argued that books should not N 'inked Ini' or accepted when soot. By no mean*, for Ottl number sent some BM wire to be worth placing upon the. hlo-hi*. and cataloguing. If, however, the Iwoks in trie Paddington library represent the high-wnter murk of Paddington book giving, tin toonerthe Acta are adopted and a good selection o4 hooks ivmght the better. A gift of fiuo volumes from tf r. Pnesmore Edvnidl to Pnddington is a gift worthy of thr man, and there are some other nets of books wm>h reflect rht* practical •)vv.- of the donors.

The library has much more than Justified ins existence S use 200 people uaoit Bach day. The placing of the advertisement- pages oi several of the London dailies at an early hour each

monitog ill u \rr_v Jirri_>hil>lr pho'e leading l<> tlir main eillruw.T

ia adecidrd boon for the unemployed, and a facility of which ti and iiKTiM^mi: u*e is made, Paddington hasan opportunity of it-, appetifc wring whetted, and tin-* time ia fact ripening for again bringing tin- movement before the nttc]>ayers. The (|m'rili(in in London stand.-* on ;i l.i'.ln plaifi nil than was the

in the early part of 188T. PI after place lute adopted

ilic Acte, and the |»cople who really think nboul th< matter nt nil nee the ncod ol these libraries an<l their genu:: among the people. If only the apathy among the rich in 1'nddintr- ton can be conquered uuccesa in assured. "VVitlt a rntnhlo mine ranking the seventh highest among the sixty-seven pariahon of i ii<- Biol ropolifli and with exceptionally low mtesj few iUi trfote are in a more favoured condition For adding the inftniteeimnllv burden which an additional halfpenny rate would entaif

.!.ii

the iluule by tho struggling parishes <>t the Kast? i will not do justice to ite intelligence and culture il

. t i be taught a lesson in educational progret trieW

nniaUor and leaa Important. Che whole M l^ondon wlU watch Paddington very closely in its next attempt, and with the of London and the country upon it, there will lie in nil prolm' :i very different result when the question comes again to the On -''11 hands within the parish the mnvcinenr has gained U I

If SOUK' nf thus.- [>0>tSC*Hlng the i.r:m> would giv* :t pl'ili

illustration of the Gospel of wealth the whole miration would be lubricated.

EtocHJurnm. At Ruoheatei there ;i Jubilee Free Library which ia not yel under the Acts. This institution had tla orijrfi! in i sulmti raised during 1.S97 in connection with the Jubilee. In alia mum of 6&TO wax raised, and with tin's sum and the handing evei of small library which had belonged ton workmen's club, "i"'1 ■■ were commenced in tin* library room of the Com Exchange, thi uac of which vraa given by irk AVvmCo^cU. The lii-r.m

n»ji;r-r i.r.vso.Nti IS 1'CBLIU UBR-UaES.

457

Opened iu June, [868, ami now uonsinU of 2,101) vols., with an average weekly issue of 500. A book for every- twelve pcrsoiib of the population cannot, of course, lx^ the extent of "In- ambition of the influential library committee who.se n&mee appear un the report. The average of fiction in the issm > i •> 7 i per cent., and the tfia&agOTB console themselves by saying that the issues of fiction range from 60 to 90 per cent. ThJeie nct<ruite correct, the nvcra^c is from 40 to 80, which in tdightly different. Kent has not yet taken its place in thin Public Library movement, und Rochester might take a worthy step by shoving the way to some of the other Kentish towns. To lie enrolled among enfranchised town* should be the aim of the mayor and thoee who act with him on the committee. The library, it dependent on subscriptions, will only starve.

SALTNBY, NEAD. CliBSTEfi. '

There is a literary society and workman's library here. For two years the committee and members irate endeavouring to raise funds to enable ilu-in to build new library and remllng- rooms, the old room being not only too small but quite ineon- vonieni for the purpose. Mr. Gladstone Opened thau POOnSfl on 1 1. -r iber -''"•. I1"''. In I Bpeedl OH "The "Workman ami his nppor- luiiiiii-N," in the course, of which ho referred to tfw ueefulneas nf Public Libraries. Tto committee have since been ranting rendu

with which In furnish I he bttjldtng VtOd renovate the lecture hall, ;i:nl have appealed In Hie public for monetary aid, The district is a jrrowinjr one, and Un* population Ee largely a workinv'hisH

our. The iirliabibnds number 2.300. If the institution vole to

come under the Acts, it would greatly enhance its'- utility to all claeees.

Skbo a

An earnest attempt tree made in iff? to adopt the Acts, but

l was not able to add itself to tin- list. Mr. J, B. Btrnchan

bought the town grammar school for i'WH>, ami presented it

to |h« town, and gave an additional £*WK» for tin jo-.v.-sary

alteration*. There wetu botoo other Iwjge ^ifts, brining the amount up to a total of £3,500. The opening ceremony took [>!:.< r in .September. 18£8. The structural alterations and the internal fittings of the library cost about £700. A handsome portico wns added to the building, and rooms for the librarian were built at the buck, liustn of Shakspere and Milton are enned to bae-relleJ abov« the portico. The interior in divided by pitch pine and glazed partitions into three compartments, one '■ontuining the books, a librarian's counter and an indicator, the Hi'cond the new- rending desks, and the third the table* for hook

and periodical rending. The Uorarj haBaceonimodailon for about

GflGQ volume.*, and Of these some SJ500 are now on the shelves, and Hie lining well used. A nun of £1,000 WftB invested as an endow- ment, and in addition to thiN something like Cl'/io i< Guaranteed unnuaily for five years .sin mil has thus got Ha Public Library, und Mr. .Toil n Mi by, whohai token bi active Interest Lb v\w watacx, tee that the work Is rapidly extending bemg Vft&ttte S)e»

uiid

■!•*.»

1-1 i i.i.

fm: yoais liu\c expired, them i^ ewn aaaon to thiol that tftffoud

will have Bt'tMi the error of it* wu.vn imd will adopt tin- A. I a canter wheu next aha question comefl bo H role.

(>i SBHBB7| Timnvici, Ulands.

The (.«uiLlc-AUcs Library hero hae a voty Lntercstiu in L s*;i. Ur , Quille, a satire of Guernsey, then a boj at sixteen! ■was serving his apprenticeship with a well-known firm in New York, and lie enjoyed the privilege of across to a very oxt I library in that city, founded by a wealthy corporation known a* thi' lienors I Society Hi' MdotafiiOG s i sioen. The pleasure

and profit he dertred from this source vmiv go (great sou mode such a deep impression on his mind, that the resolution took possession of turn ihni should hi» business career prove prosper- ous, and his position enable him to do «<\ be would Found a similar institution in fluemaey Ah 'he years rolled along thU Intention was present with in'm, mni rummi'iimni .ii <>in spite of bin then limited means, to purchase books which :-; f.-nii iIk Qudeni of the anticipated collection, he began t «> lay the

iniilnlHtiiMi nl' tin- lUir:ii_\ IrnMiir- .sliieli imw fill tlir shell

the GaflLe-Alles Library. Nm wats he less mindful o1 the ad Uvea of a museum, which lie wisely considered would ho a valu- able idditioD hi illustrating themawer contained in the works on natural BU&eoxerol which it wua Ins especial desire Lo old I large and valuable collection II w-.mM take too lung a tii relate bo* iiii.^ (^tleman progressed in his self-appointed tuak, or the many difficulties and heart-burnings lie e£pcrienri frequently seeing works he coveted for his laudable enter]

!»nt up at a price beyond his mrana, and purchased '■> we ndividuals ur highly endowed Institutions. Altai mkwi.y years, fortune smiled upon Mr. Guille, and ho returned to Guernsey full i)!' i;hl'(iim see " put in work his Ions-cherished and lopjr-laboureoV

for design. He w:in joined \.y In- business purrn<

long friend, Sir. F. M- Allen, who also wished to be Identified with the work, nnd who hup materially ftwu&ted the original both with money and personal effort.

The east of earning outtMsundertakm&iiioludi] ction

of buildings, purchase of books, ftttings, &e,. lias already amounted '-. no to now, about £-10,01X1, and the outlay shows no *igiiH of cassation [n addition to these expenses there is on <•• rund.aud for this the munificent donors intend to seJ apart ;i '-um which the above amount boars but a am :i 11 proportion. Bo thai altogether the Guernsey community will be indebted to an educational foundation worth a magnificent figure in n ralue alone. Then' are now in ii sW.ii »*i.hii v. .in those hnve bean classified and catalogued by Mr. \. Uo

wins well known hi England, who has hud many m practical experience in library administration. The* ntairigu*

COOtOiOB ilmni 1,300 ii;i;;i'h, :uni display** the En »■ ;m

hifxniv with which :X Ua> We\\ cuu^WrA. *\-«u ;>;\i i i.-m.

rHH SUNDAY 01'KXING OK PUHUT LTBRABIBfl.

159

.1. L, Pitta awl Mr. John Whitehead, have, as honorary curators,

rendered very valuable service 03 tin; arranging of the library. A sunacription of ten francs a year is charged to adults for the use of the library and reading-room, and for the lending library only six francs. In this section 34,266 volume** were lent East year. Tin- OhanncJ blonde do not yet poaaesi a rate-eupportod libra v\.

CHAPTER XXXI.

THE SUNDAY OPENING OF PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

|HIS i.i rapidly becoming one of the pressing OMtttJOIW ol the day. Many prominent men who have hitherto hesi- tated about expressing an opinion on the subject no longer liud theiusehers able to innuitain <i neutral position. It is well that this slu-idd be the case, fur the matte* is of too great importance for anyone who really takes an interest in notional pi -ogre** r«i .stand aloof ,ind allow things to take then OOUfSOi It ii undeniable lhat nwm earnest Christ iuii men haver hecn compelled reluctantly, perhaps, in some COM bo boom (.» the conclusion that it is both irfee and politic bo gflVS noa-cburch goere a choice between tin* street or publlc-honae and libraries, museums, and nrt galleries "ii the Sunday. Th< n-1 Hon will be diaouNsod impartially, and tho vie vs »ro end. eon

ui iii. matter of a few veil-known people will be civen.

Toe opeains; ol Public Libraries, nrt galleries, and mmenflM

on the Sunday 18 resisted in this country rather from tradition than on principle. Nobody can point to any mural detevtonlion Qkely bo win from anon eonceBsiou, Most of (be experiment* yel made In the direction of bringing the tveaanrea of literal ore art, and until nitty within reach of the people on the day when

they have most time available have boon crowned with mi. --..

\i-ii \ who reflBt lUOfl I Btep in modern progress derive ih.-iv impolite rather from tb< peat khan Hie present*. Their Ideas are

a survival of Puritanism, Of so niucli as is left « < *" it Ihiwover,

the bunds of thealooh cannot stand still; and it is Impossible la Bootoh the march of progress, or yet She growtog BehT-rellance ol 1 1 h' people It may, no douht, he taken as an axiom that the altantfon ol

the sympathies of the w (.irking e hisses from places ol' worship is one of the most deplorable signs of tlic linns, Wry niun\

nonconformist ministers and clergymen of ^'l sections recognize

il is i.n t is acutely iu> do any sections ut' society. Furthci . tin ) in i o strained -.very nerve and adopted every means to stem thai tide of abstention from churcheH and chapels, but without any

appreciable success. Many "I those rt'hn ci me iu rluse C'Mitftct

with the working clones, and have thus hud opportunities of learning some -t the imihci -d this state of things, have come to

the conolnsion that th< abstention from relhpo^BftwrtVjsAvs^'fiwto paa*i of the Packing claesefl does, not ariae ttej&a «aq a\\\ay*^v*

460

;-; B|jr i.irr imp;*

againat \\\o church or yel any antI*reHgiou« reeling they may hold. The two primary i'.'ihki* are, first, tin* i 1 ol pn;

KB! :il(rl ;lir VDil. :i! il \\(irr_\ of I in- \m-.-U :i :v nuT; (M 1 . Heemidl;.

Mir deeply-rooted feeling thai the ocenpanta of higti-baekad and cushioned news look so iniH'h aakaneo at the presence of the

whim of toil worshipping side by side with them. !i ^ a pleasant fiction to say that all stand equal in the Oiureh OB worshippers of the Almighty, so far, at leaet> as the estimation of men Is concerned. How much irreligion pews, pulpit*. - and "man milliuery" en hive have caused it is iiuiKaywhlc to conceive. It may reasonably be aaked, Why ia there iraoh an <jHiin<ii- W&etQ of lorn.' iii the churches? Purely there is .1

. ii ir Anomaly in the tact that churches nnd chapels should be open, aay, six hours in the week and public-houaeo open soroe- thinjflike 1#4 hours. The waste, again, of force in not utilizing an intelligent loitj to a far greater extent ia most lan>< The r\ ii.- uriiiiiu; livm u onc-mun ministry, whether app the Establishment or Nonconformity, are considerable. It it eertoin that matters must continue w remain very much out of joint until wo readjust those uml other nnoraalioti with n gard to < hurch life. In the meantime tin- aj-iieiirwu-e <t <\ ehUTOhes mUKl continue {<> |ireaoii( itself \<< <uv gaze, !

i ,■. re regret of all who have the true welfare of fcuc nation nl heart,

The poRttionol the nominaJ Christians on tho subject ha largely taken into account, We are, as ,\ nation, perpt Or <m\g about our i 'liristianity, nnd theiv '-■ mn.-h in our nu i:t i wnjoh 1* as Bar removed rpora the true spirit <>i the le Of Nazareth an light from darkness. It may iv-.i«<>nably 1>«- ;imU..<!, by what right do Christians tndnlge In their own ptauntrv iiel deny those same luensures to others!' They have only r Ik* tight i if might, awl siirrfy < ihMstians Rhmild !*« th* last f»> oxer aright! The mimical have the melolioun sung* of ttw CI i reh, the peals ><\ the organ and the harmony nf the si ring instruments in which to Indulee themselves on the Sunday : the literary man has the use of booKs belonging either to himself or to » tine libraries to which he in able til Mib.scriiic, through win. n to commune with the great of the ps*t and the present; thoa 1 love a good dinner on Sunday as well as on the other dl week do not feel it necessary Lo give their domestic*! inatnu tioni not to stay at home on that day to eonk it while iliev go to

I'lnii-rli, Tin. man who loves to commune with n'mr in

sen lielde and pleasant woods in which he can take Tcfugc and Study on the Sunday. To sketch a flower or tree on Sunday counted by many ;i crime , yel those same censors will paafi hours in the criticism of theli neighbour's bonnet, w 1 the circulation of sillj nnd m *chioi >tis scandal, or in the verb*! planning of n drew, or the arrangement nf bulls nnd partir the ensuing week. Theresoems to be no clear or defii Eta idea 11 keto ;h<- ■.;m.'ii;v . -V Hu- Huudivj i--uls ii end* among muvj IH'ojilv . but 011 one point lAv&y QU vA:tw\tov\\^ wgoe^sas^. t.h»t

srvPAV oputfivn or rrnn unnAitiKs.

161

is that bhe opening of i Public Library, a picture gallery, or n

rnuMt.nmi U GO ofimoti against the law of the good old hnglish Sunday. Such should remember the lined of Tom Hood—

Aceo

"A man may cry Church ! Church ! at cv'ry word, With no wort) piety tliau other people ' A daw's Dot reckon 'd * religious bird Because it kteps a-ciwuig from a (tteepk*."

according to the views of many of these good people the admirer oi paintings, and natural science, n not to east his aye upon these beautiful Defeats beoaose, through no fault of his own, he in not able i" g<> wnere they are on any das bin* ihc first day

Ol the werk. Public Libraries, museums, and picture galleries

belong to the people, sad not to only a portion of them. Ccm- Bequaatly thai? convenience aa to when their institutions shall be open should be taken into account. Sunday must ever bo mainly a day of tepott) to thoae who uiidergu hard intellectual or mamnd labour. It is obviously a ain against himself, and

ultimately again*) the community, if a iimu goef> 00 with his work on a Sunday. lie utterly ruins hi- higher powers, and bfiugfi bimaolf down as nearly aa possible to the lave] of the brutes. It \* the duty of everyone to try and brine Inn fellow- creatures into such a position that they could have the Advantage of studying nature in sonic way or other, and ve have now reached in education a point at which something more on the Sunday than the teaching of churches, chapels, and Sunday- schools hon heoorae absolutely nceessary. People must DO brought under the influence of pictures and other beautiful object*, and IkioUh, It is m it creditable to OUT boosted civilization thai in this time of the life of the world wo should calmly allow ao many of our fellow-creatures Co live so little above the level of HuvagtfR, when there are so many things in our civilization which, if <ody used aright, would tend "to raise them high above then* present condition. How can all the instruments of civilization be used if they are not to tte used on the Sunday as well as on other days ,J To tin* muss of people -Sunday is the only day of leisure, and every opportunity should he given for Their getting on that day the best kind- of Mental and intellectual recreation, If people tiro bo get the full benefit* from the study of books. pictures, and the contents of Public Libraries and lUUeuma, POCtl plaC98 ought In 1*4 opened for n>rlain hours on the Sunday.

There are many good Christmas who do not consider themselves called upon by any divine law, nor yet by any consideration of what is best tor their (WTO microtia, to devote the whole of tin- day to religious duties. Even among i.lmse whose nrthudoxji

if beyond question there is a great difference of opinion regarding Christian obligations in reference to Ihc Sabbath. Some people oonaktai it sinful even to »o for a walk on Sunday, though I strict view of duty i.*> not in accord with what was the yttt&fc* of the Founder of the Christian faith. Vs Wt \* uv. -«Wi v> *Q^

m

IM'TII.IO LinUAIUIH.

a

allowable in en orthodox Christian become* purelj ,>n •'

degree. It porraiaalhlo to road in one's own house, on Su and, except on an untenable Sal hn toman view, to read on; thut may be profitably or Innocently read on a week-<iay." Does tho place mak- any OifFerenea? Ik it unlawful h joint oi view, or socially inexpedient to do in a public instit on the first day ot the week what may be done on the days, and what may atill be done on the first, day <i the week

16 t Few people, as a matter <>( (net, now i'1'i. hiiiLT ■»!! .< ire 3 religions grounds; but that ratnei base * li.-rr opposition on considerations connected with the >| i Sunday labour, it i* not to lie denied that, if libra and pxetnrfl galleries were opened on Sunday *ome amount "f Sunday labour would be necessary. Bui we do nnl rortdd UN work unit i* done in connection with churches, private In hotels, clubs, railways, tramways, and numerous other nrgiuiii*- tioub that arc "going" ou Sunday a; aud the question En wlieihrr the gotsl out weighs tin? evil. It i& well known that, fur wanl <>f 'I means of rational enjoyment, lar^e iiuuibcn oi people get into erfl oouraea ; and the advocates of thepo tndsj

opening believe that much ruisohief and much positive *m would be prevented If the masses could go to li pfctqxe galleries, and museums to spend their noun of total on the day of rest. Then- ;n< mime p-'ople who op] Sunday opening of libraries, and kindred institutii consideration* wholly irrcspct live of the rclitfiout connected with the Sabbath.

The one main reason why many arc bo much opposed I Sunday opening of Museums is that it maybe tin- getting la of ihe thin end M the we Ige t" continontallao our Sunday. Thontatcmcnt fe vorv tiMi|Luiiti\- madfi that if waopon libraries, miuaMUQfl nod picture gailBTiee, on the Sunday, as i logical ■■■ |in i iiii.t nl-.o be opened. But it doea Dot nt nil follow tliat we murt tall into the groove which unfortunately characterises the Can tinont in the method of spending the Sabbath. Th< rOT* rental feeling is fnr more deeply rooted in the minds of tht speaking peoples than of* any other nation on the lace n earth, This is sufficient safeguard for the proper and reasonable extension of the opportunities for n rational spending of SundsY, Again, what Public Libraries, museum* and picture

I ro ru'ccM^iricKol »nenlal and mnntl life. This CJSODOt be Maid of the theatre, Hie first article of faith oi Which I amuse. Libraries nml museums, with other kindred in-ntu! arc national property, and there is no mnney-maku :.t hi

the question, hut with theatres the question la illfferenl 1 <|uently Ihe opening: of these twodeacrlpl Ions of UMtUnl lousKtssidv on a totally dissimilar looting. Wi'h iv?-:.t'. i<> Mi.- i^hmi i theatres on Sunday Mr. Irving has stated chat if this wave sjpo-

poseil, actors and actresses would be the very first to opposi such suggestion. In Paris all the puAAk hujwuui* wA w&o\M are uiieu

s

t>le

IT,

-

raB SIM.AV OPF.NINtl OF PrBLIO LIimAIMftt.

4tft

Sunday*, and eves is those instances iu which they aiv only upon on two or throe days a week, Sunday U nlwuya one of 01066 (fere In Berlin mail EnsfoRttfonfl are open on Sundays, but for sojaowhat shorter horn's thai) on weekdays. In Amsterdam the famous Jlyks Gallery, containing the pictures of the grout Dutch masters, is open every day, Monday excepted. On Sundays its staff is supplemented with twelve soldiers, in view of the tact ot the number of visitors on that day being always greatly augmented. In the Amsterdam Fodor museum, which is tfic property of the municipality, the charge on weekdays H LO&jOfl bwidays fid. only. Tin small cost of superintendence in France is remarkable. The task of watching and keening order in the four great national museums, the Louvre, the Luxembourg;, Versailles, and St. Germain*, is confided to a stuff of 168 men. The FWO chiefs receive only £80 a vear, while 132 of the nurnhor arc engaged at salaries varyiug from £64 to t'fifi.

It will be opportune to cull attention to the general position or the question, and to lite I'xpi-ewiofiN of opinions of mnue uublic men. A [v\\ yeiuv ,r/n, when llie matter was before the House of Lords, the Bishops were ounspicuoua either l\ thro absence or efleoce. Out of t wenty-Mx. neven only were preoent, mid tln»e do not seem to have made any exertion to OzprOOfl their opinion upon I In* mailer

Following ill--, . i Royal OotuuinSau declared tiut the Sunday opening ot mnaeuma and art raJleriea Iiaa exerted a salutary Knfluani Q on the moral and intellectual condition of the people. Immediately after the report ot tin* Duranueeioj] WftB puwisnod Sir Henry Hoocoo asked* the Elonee ot CoraTnoni to recognise the justioe and expediency of opening the Natural History Museum at .South Kensington and the Bcthunl fJi-cen Museum in Rust

London on Sundays without further delay, thiiH extending to London the advantages alroady providotl at Kow, Sainptoii Court, Greenwich, Dublin, Birmingham, Manchester, and ten other provincial towns. Sir Henry ltoscoo, M.l*., mentioned those places wlieiv Sunday oponiiip lias been m practice for Rome time with excellent results. Dublin holds a foremost place for liberality in this respect. The collection in that city, of painting, sculpture, archawlogv, and zoology, is free of access on the Sunday, and a fine Sunday iiitruei.- i lurujor number of people than all the other days of the week combined If it be objected tbat Dublin, ltcing in another country, is not n convincing example Tor England bo follow, we have She home illustrations oJ Blaneheati p, Bradford, Birmingham, Neveustle-on-Tytie. London (partially), and neural other places, and not a single evidence tlmt anything but advantage lias resulted.

The long discussion wbieli took place during the baiter pari of WH7 and the early part ot 1888 as to tin- opening ol the Batford Museum and Public Libraries ou Sundays d&s given the question ;i grrat impetus. Mr. B. Armitutfe wan the prime mover through- out, mid championed the question, notwithstanding much cfttaNBQ, iu a maimer highly creditable to hhu. 'V\w: v:v>«\. vtt <tab SF»

out, a iu a

m

FillMi1 LinRAlURs.

KAOnou* it very large Hum, whn li Mr. \nnitngc paid. DVCX tlu> expenditure there wns ;i l-v. nt -deal »*l" *li.sen»wion. The following iH ;i. summing v)l the |.;irii<-ul:us of the COSta incurred by tfac returning officer in connection with the poll: For printing, publishing and posting of bills, notices, forms, und ballot papers, including stationery, So. j £38 i«.7d.; tor erecting and lirtiug up

Killing stations, taking down same, end removing fittings to Town till ■gain, £07 Us. KM. ; tor use of thirty-nine schools and a house U polling stations, including the erection of a booth X Kivi.-.in Liiii«, Broughtou, csvi is. iM,; lor torty-t'onr presiding offcVer*, including their attendance at counting, iTi": for til r v poll clerks, Including the like attendance, £fi( | tor ttrvioa

?h1m fwtoblos, and allowance to thorn in lien ol rptrcshnient. i.'iis i i.i. for refreshment* u> Jolnera fining Tip polling

and to returning officer and start on the day >! ti lectloo,

a :<. fld.; for cabs talcing ballot boxen to the vnrfmi* polling stations and bringing same back to Town Hull. iis l'k. i for sundry other BXpBiiMesi Uioluiiing clerke' overtime, iueaaeii| cab fiiic*. fltc«. £$ fe.i to* pnifeMSKiual hcrvices and awtotauoe in ihe conduct at the poll, £6S IDs.; total, £40d& OU

Bo ridloulouily insignificant was the number of elector* von took bbfl trouble to record their votes, that the cxpenditu: several hundred pounds in connection with I In- OpCrftUOU WBfl well laleulited lo annoy thoAc who had to find the niom \ , r.*|irn;iil , as it is known that it would have been easy to obtain number of signatures to a petition either for or against the 8undfl | opening for tnc expenditure of about CIO. Out of n total nm of voters of J!t,o47 there were in favour of Sunday opening :;. against, 5,1(12; showing n majority in favour . I j

Lg we fact that 23,940 of the voters were utterly indit'h about the matter, and did not take the trouble to record their i Vn afuUvBifl of the east of the number of votes polled shove these 6.60" votes cost Is. :>?d. each. This is so very inatri. that other districts Bhould neeitate before talcing o poll on tlui question.

The Public libraries m Salford were opened on 8u i taj for till first time in September, 1888. The attendance was not v«rj large. The hours were from two o'clock to nine, the mine bourn in Manchester. At I'oel Park there were thirty-five visitor* during the tir-i hour, forty-one the next hour, thirty-nine from o'clock to five, tbirty-two between five and fitxftwenty-«ix between aix and seven, and Bfty-fiine from seven to eight. Very lev books were naked for, the visitors occupying them-Hvex rnainty \\^\i niagayines and newspapers. At the branch llbrar Hegenf Road the nuiiiIkt of visitors up to seven o'clock vm about ninety A special room is set apart in thin libra1;

boys, and between five o'clock and seven fourteen boyH mod of it. U the Greengate branch, which stand* in the lie Hoiking Sal tWd, the utiendonce hud reached 128 ::i eight o'clocl To the 128 eighteen IhkiUb were issued— such book* an " It ibinsoi Cmaoe," "Uncle Tom's Caclu," "Xwte* "^oA-w Uu i

THE JOT NT) AY OPFNISQ OF Pl'RMr MRTHlii'N.

4(55

trated l^mdim News," " The Old Curiosity Shop," •• Household

Medicine," and :m "Encyclopaedia.

Tlie late John Bright, m.i\, writing to March, 1888, said:

1 lift VI

111.' FlV-;

diced the discussion on the question of opening Libraries in your borough on Sunday afternoon* ind evenings. Jl I were a rl well or in your town. and one of your Town Council, I iholild be on** of your supporters on thetniestinu in which you have taken so muoh interest. I hope you may succeed, and that the results of jour buccom may convert inuiiy who aw now your opponents,"

Mr. Thomas Hurt, the miners' representative, wrote:

" I nntirely approve ofyooractten in ttying U> haw the Reading Room* of the Public Libraries at Sal ford open on Sunday aftornoona ftndevcnhitfK, and 1 wish yon every eueoesa."

The Into Dean Uukley \m<Ii> :

'• Pico access to useful arid haiiulos* hooka in a coiufm table hkjui un the ono day of loleuro in the week plainly adds to the means of moral and mental improvement, which is the business of a Christian Sunday, in addition to teat and after the worship of AJ mighty Uod. Bcsirtoa this IHihir.ivn ttin, we are lighting against an irr.it.inin!. indeed an irreligious idea of Sunday. Whatever be the issue of the appeal to the rate*

Iiaycr-i to know what they wish to do with their own hooka arid their own wildings on the only day when most of their owner* can mako use of them, we may fairly demand recognition of otir own belief that we arc lighting the battle (if reasonable religion and Christian liberty."

Sir John Harwood. bhen Mayor of M;uirh<\si«r, of high standing as a Methodist, and of uniiupe&chalile orthodoxy, Bold;

" Why khould the peoplo oq compelled to rood in dark, dingy dwelling, when they paid for commodious lulls that stood mpty t To t-nUrpe the idea of Sunday, toUDbnoe hoalt.hy relaxation and intellectual nxercine, was to help to make a happier, more sober and contented people, and to BtfQBgjAMII the librc and raise the tone of thb «<reat nation.

Dt Ki'sr'.T, the Into Bishop of Mnnehester, whilst ho never

holy un<l formally" (the phrase is his own; advocated Son. lay

opening, never opposed it : he did justice to the motives of those

wh<> 'I -suvd it, fin* t preserved all ah ma- mi attitude of " benevolent

neutrality." Tim* la bla addfett ai President of flu 3oda] Setaee

Conyrens, he gave the statistics of the first year of Sunday open- ing at the Manchester Libraries. He did no without one word of disapproval. "\V> must Ih> taught by experience,' said Bishop Frawr: and, taught hy oxperionre, 'In- prrwuif Bishop of A[:nirlirHt.M' :ubi- rlio weight of his ecclesiastical status, his intellectual power, his high dharwrter and practical philanthropy in favour of Sunday opening. This is what he wild ;

*' I heartily support your effort to secure the opening of the Public Library at convenient hours ou Sunday. No on* DION prison than I do the rest of the Sunday, and no one would oflpOM more strmmonely anv aflbrt todepiive the working classes of that advantage. It is for this reason that I have always opposed all attempts to organize amusements -I to i .ill into action onylargc amount of labour on tho Lord's Day, Rut when 1 im * layman I always found that <\u\at teA&vaa v\AsA. Cix*

PTOMC LIBBER rBS.

profit miiI pleasure of my Sundays. Now. I know that them arc hiindrtslt &ii<l thousands of youug incu in Manchester who, bring in lodging?, ur ia narrow iftd populous homos, have neither the books to rend nor oppor- tunities for reading. To those the opening of tho Public Librariw won! ! Itn )i priceless hoon, and it would be easy to movent any too great in fringe- Bi i,,' of tho Nit of the ordinary employes ot the library."

Mr. JIuworlh, M.P. fur Salford, has strong view* uu the subject, M W& be Been from his words:

*' I hftvn always h«M thu «amt- viimv on this ipiestion, and took an aotive part in opening the Manehmter Uhrarira "n Sunday, and have iH'vn regretted tue »teii I took. There are o great many people who >b> nut go to church oi chapel ; there arc many other* who xo onh Muny >tt those are young men iu lodging*. It acems U BU that to compel them to end their only Sunday occupation in the public-house or tho club IB neither ( Christianity nor i* it even rational. On the othor hand, QUN are ol&ases, like the railway nut* vaults and cabmen, who can only road, if thtjy read at all, on Sunday, Thy uigiiiiieut about employing |wop1«- [| librarios on Sunday in to uw a very hollow ouc. TIk very mm ivh'j raise it. employ postmen and railway guards in largo nurabors, and read their Monday's paper (thu result o( Sunday labour j i|iiite comfortably."

Tin- oxperlfinee ot the Rev, s. a. Burnett In his work En tkt

Kasl End in the Suud;i\ 'jpemiiK ul' his annual ph-luii* exhibition,

has more than confirmed him in the wisdom oi tho stop, fa i

letter received by the prt-M-nt wriu-.i 'nun him iu October 1;im, he says. " [m (In- interest id religion, it swrus tout; that tho words of the girut leurlier.MMight I" 'it- accessible oil SundayB, Town

life has «ii destroyed many nt the- rueaus I>\ wlurli (l<n\ spoke iu old day* that it la incumbent on us to provide lihrarir* .mil in inaho tlie books accessible by which He speaks iu these I Our people cannot become Hludeiitu of nature, but they 11U might become students of mind."

Another London clergyman, deeply in touch with the in'cdfl "1 the day, and one who has taken an active interest in the proms rtaOfl of the Public Library movement in the metropolis, tho Kcv.Canoii I,clli;un,l'..A.,Uector of Lambeth, ami mm of the Earl of Chichester, writes to tho author, on follows: " As to Sunday opening, lam cer- tainly in fuvour of it us long 06 it is limited to the reading-room*, and that tho lfl>rali&08 m-v not employed on Sunday.. irceflpeotive of tho moral question of using books on 8undi could not boar the idea of a library being shut ,\ hile Hi bouu ih <>pan ! 1 urn of opinion that religious biograph n us that "1 Cord Shaftesbury, ;inri iii:igasines^boundup)aiu>h.i 'Quivor,' shuuld bo put under the title 'Tneoiogyrr whine ultiMjw a irla.su made up with sermons and dry-book^ .ml y irnrtitnd of containing all kinds of popular religious- books."' I ; certainly might be cross hi-nrfingu under Theology from these magazines and other books.

The Rev Bernard J. Snell, a Nonconformist rninia si In - ilford, hi preaching trora 'lie texts, "Thp Sabbath is made for mac," and " It is lawful to ilu good on the Sabbath Day," b

" In* fame of Bund*} in pmj o^qWwySVj Vm <ta 4»n loooMfct of

TIIE M'XDAY OPENING OF PUBLIC LIURAJilBtt. 107

tho*. fvrultuw which lie dormant undai LiAr*s drudgery was tou koenly appreciated for practical men to throw it away ; bat .Sunday was not kept holy by being kept empty and dull. The dnmialnota of Sunday wus the o;reat cause of Sunday intemperance ; men were fatigued with too mueh nlleneHx, and in ahenr despair of anything lietter to band, soaked thon- eelveaiu liquor. On the Continent public- nailer ice, for which the adini.s- «on chargo on wock-daya wm a franc, were free as air on Sundays, and thronged with working folk. Our niiMOMna and Public Libraries ir«re among the hneet results of civilization, and it was remarkably thrift! mk that in a free, nation ]]ka mm time* place* were not acceuuuldo At The moat

(•(iin-.MiicTit tltnoa," Tim Roman Catholic Bishop of 8alfor<] Baysi

" lu a quiet way I wont ronnd myself to several of the City Libraries 00 Sunday evening some two years ago, or thomibonU, lor tho purpose of '-■ « - 1 « i ;; bow in tie h they were nasi, and wa* very favourably mtprcityed with what 1 witnessed. I was tnoro struck by the number of boy a I fouml in the iradiii^-nioms than vi ith anything clao, and with their t|iiitl tie* -ur.nuour. I asked myself I* it bettor that they should bo here than in tho streets I Is it roaaonnblo to oapoct thum lo spoil d tlio whole evening I" i Inn-en f la there any postttn nUignhon that they should iposd oven one hour Of the evening in tho church ' How many of those rwrsoua Mated quietly in lite leading -iijonis would go to tho ukuruh to say prayer* were the reading- rooms closed f The answers to those uuextiona ura ohrious, What do thev want who dcsiio to close the roading-rovim on Sunday cvoniDgf Surely not to compel everyone togo to church willy- nilly twice a day ; and, if not, why not noowaofl thn quiet and improving occupation of reading'' Suggest to the young what limy should read on much aa you please. Encourage: the reading of religious books if you please. But au not say you may hang about the atresia, you may go to tho imbuVhouK, you may invent your own way of wailing away the Sunday evening, but you ahull not spend the time in loading your own book* in your ova library, because both th» bonk* and the library aro not private but puhlir property."

Lord HbbhouiK! salt] at Bolton v/hen the dibi-iiHsion— a Rome what fierce one by tho way wan goiug ou over Ihitt (juml

"The principle of the Lord's Uay was real. recreation, and worship. Sunday wan nor. a day of dulneas but brtghtnfj*. Thoqiieation that ar-we wax itic of xervlce conlraiy to the law of Ood. Service mighl. be .(luliiied by workb of mercy aud necessity. Tho public ought to Ikj toon consistuut than they wore. Thoy used tho railways ami the post offiee. Had thi | op« thought of tho number of moi ] ! •/"■ la :|" | MWOfkl an! of tho imniber of police on Sunday. Vhv did thflj DOl do 'nv«v wOh n have n jiaratlln lamp : Did not their I'lii-nd* in the lmrcfim and Sunday achoola labour on Uie Sunday in lighting and cleaning ami io on. The spirit found it* beat io»t in God, and he know of no DotfenT rMt fur the n;iitl than to take up a book and road it, What be b< 1 1 was that to DMA a library on Sunday was a work of morey. What did they want ii>:*ncs open for I For the benefit of tin we who had no lihruriea of llietrown. Wai it a sin (oread book a on a Sunday I Gould Chaffl (m anything vrong to reading astronomy, history, or even a book by Charley Dickens. Ho would a»k those who objected whether they tneusd werebt't. 1 1 1 nj ■'. I m I!. Bnftdty than tliOno who would be OntdOT

retcKna In th4 abrvftft. Whan, would iuU, vfvi*. ^wni^Vw^,1'

46*

II ni.H MURAIUKS.

on iii'- Sunday srenina Boom people said they ought, to be at ahtn ft

U(] clniprl, bat why <IiJ they not get tlieiu tUore f Dot man) of Litem

H found in ptililii'-hon MS, anil liyoi'ii ii<-t ou it Sunday they

would i whilst not getting at t>.« fucMlors, lio abla to prevent many from beginning to go lo tin- public-bouM."

Chnrh'h Kingslcysaid that libraries should be open on Bunt

and l.i, with nearly SOO ot&cr eminent clergymen, signed i

n i" the House of Commons stating that "the opening of

i u ruins, libraries, and art galleries on the afternoon of Sunday

would greatly promote the moral and intellectual improvement ax

1-. obesee "i He» BCajeety'e subjects, ami in toorouhlv in iii'i'.orflaupo with the object mid meaning of the Christian Sun

Kir Win. Houldsworth, M.P.. in favour of opening Ifbn and museums on Sinniiv~ on the ground " that reading and a contemplation of iho wirk- at (Joil were esxvu-os in every way

in barmorvj \' ttii tin* true character and object of the Chrli S:ii)b:itii ; ;uni to thousands m our towns these Sunday occ tionfl were only possible m such institutioi - as Public Lib' and mussums.

Hie mIv,., ,:,- .(f rim opening of Public Libraries, art gftUttta and museums on Sundays have jusl received an ncqiiwdtirm M strength from a quarter in wliicli they have hitherto been opposed Tin-' Trade Onions Congress passed a resolution in favour ol piiipfNal. Previous congresses of the rcprescntntivi « ol the I ii» UX organlnitioni* of th« country have declined to sanction the Rui opening of our national treasure* of art, science, mid lltcratm the ground that to approve of such an Innovation would bo tfl reoOgnlK the legitimacy of Sunday labour. The delegatus to the Congress have abandoned this view, ami by the resolution tturj ndopu-d at the final meeting on Saturday hate bhown ih.-ii ihcv have no fear of the true Sabbatarian principle of rest hum labour being violated by the adoption of the policy of the Sunday Let Hw numbei of people whom it would be Beceseary to employ as attendants and caretakers at museums ami art galleries an Sunday, were these institutions thrown open on that dd y, would be very small, and probably would be more than balanced 1>\ the number of otnor workmen who would be relieved in this Bo far from tho Sunday opening of public collection! ol science .'H'l art treasurer involving any violation rf the principle of Babbatcrian limitation of labour, we believe it would hn\< Iv opposite effoet. VVoro workmen afforded opportun for •ritomplnting on Sundays the objective result a ol BOfaatifte irch and the noblest effort* of human geniua, they would feci their need of leisure all the more. The Trade rriowiCongrceo, ui 'net, by passing a resolution in favour ol the Sunday <>] i of l^ihlic* Libraries, museums, and art galleries, has takes n step in tho direction of the realisation of that reduction of the bourn of toil at which it aims The fact that the resolution was nd by forty-five votes to twenty-four that i* to nay . i o- majority of twenty-one— indicates the great advance which n opinion is making on this (piestfnn. The adoption ol th<

ttii: ii NIMY rtPKNixr. ol PTHLIC 1 l»DAJl));s.

I'M

by both Houbcb of I'nrliiimcntiHoiilvi' qu&ttanof time. Hitherto the opponents of it hare* been able to make o strong point by insisting that tho Trado Unions Congress was on their side. Tins argument can no longer bo trotted out. The recognized repre- sentatives of the working oIosbcb have pronounced da QOnflt rati \<> \y in favour of the advocacy of the rational enjoyment "1 pari of the I iv Ol rest.

Some opinions against Sunday opening are here given.

Lord Harrowby says : " I l>eg to convey my best thanks to trie directors of the Glasgow Working Men's and West of Scotland Sabbath Protection Association for their friendly eon-mninicutkiu I" me respecting my action in favour of maintaining the integrity of the Lord's Day. It is it subject I have deeply at heart, as I believe that its maintenance as a sacred day of rest in obedience to the Divine Institution :* a matter ol paramount importance to tile British Empire, and to each individual member of it- I indeed rejoice with you and with your association that, after inanv years' Rt niggle, the British Museum is opened at night on week days. I ttu» that before lone all such institutions In our towns which :m' maintained our of the public resourced w 01 be opened ;ii night on « oei; days, eothat our labouring population may nave tie fullest possible opportunity of enjoying them without, infringing upon out preofnua birthright of the Lord's Day of Rest."

I >r. Kyle, Bishup of Liverpool, says; " 1 heartily wish success to the moreineut for opposing ihe opening of museums, &c, on Sunday. I mu lighting' the .same battle here in Liverpool to the best- of my ability. The advocates of the unhappy movement which we oppose mean well, I believe, and think they arc doing I looVl service and l>euefiting the working classes. In my opinion they are totally niMaken. (hir old English Sunday is one of the greatest bleesings which Ood ha* given to thifl country, and if the trorldnn classes of Great Britain allowed theniselvea tone deprived ul it they would soon find to their cost that they had made an enormous nn.-tnki;."

I toon Stowell, of Manchester, f*oye : "The advocates of Sunday Oponing lay great stress on the imporluuee of providing a counter- attraction to the public-house, and plead for it in the lateral temperance. 1 would suggest that a more excellent way of promoting those interests would be to clone the ^mblic-housee on Sundays, if tho gentlemen who so oarnestly advoeoia the adoption of thin remedy would take half an much pains to BOC ire tho removal of the evil as they are doing to counteract Ha I ■>'■ it would BOOs GOaM to exist." Canon Slowell nude much of the ; i.imv. wi.ore Sunday opening had been tried and had not been

1 mud - lecessfnl.

In September, 1884. the Town Council ot Chester resolved to open their PubJio Library on Sundays. After three montha' expelienoa tftt Town Council resolved to close it again on Sunday*, with only three dissentients out of twenfc$4A$0 members present.

After four rem":' experience In Bfe&fl o\\-Vvv>-\\Y, &fe \^vtfcv>:

i:u

LTOBAKIIW

wrote to the Uayco1, in November, 1885. n letter, in wMi following statements were mode: "1. The persona Hi was intended to benefit are conepiciuma l»v 1 1 »- i .1! ■.-• ■<■.> . thin^ ha* degenerated into ». promenade and ©onver&njaone for children on their dismissal from school. ThoHo children, * i m : ling about and making n noise, do mopo damage to tin-- boohs, periodicals, &e„ thun would be done iu a year by the ordin:i. -.

ridtOPt I. XheM Br© B*»vt«r:d i»miiiIh<i> nl the Council who arc

proparod to oonfixm those statements." In December, t880#the Public Library was finally closed on Sundays.

In Mny, IXHI, the Town Council of Worcester resolved by oighl votes ogtunsl tour to opes their omasum on Sundays. At the meeting of the Counoil, ui June, after a months experience of Sunday opening, it was resolved try sixteen votes against fourteen tn '.'|i»'..- t he museum on Mtndayw. The! Jourt "I < Joramon ConooU, 1 ondon, is evidently not yet m Che way to m ike its Bund up on (tie xii'i somewhat vexed question ol the opening ol libi museums, andarl g&Uorles tniringBorae portion of Sunday. Some nine or Ben year* -.ijxo a resolution was proposed, havinp Cor its object such opening: nnd in a court uniRterlng bul ISO men nr bo, out of 338, the proposal was defeated by 1 majority «t seventy-two Very latoty flic subject was reopened, though in i mora modified form, the proposer simply asking fin- : refer anon toolTtaln the opinion of the Library Committee an ths subject For mine two hours the battle raged font, mid furious, albeit : in a seanty court, showing that plentiful lick of Interest on the point at issue *till prevails. Eventually the "previoua question " was w tried by eighty-three to forty-two, ant] the hotly-supported and opposed argument of benefit and Sunday relaxation GO the 0O.0OO " sleepers in the City " is again uixm the shelf.

The Norwich Town Council, at a meeting held in January »d»pted a report presented by the Public Library Committee, which recommended the opening of the Institution from three- to nine p.m. on Sundays. The Council was uoaitinUKM OB the question. None of the week-day staff of the library are cuj. for this Sunday duty, for which one man in employed at a small payment. There is no circulation «>i books, buo some a works are put on the tables for the day, ahm^ ssi'.li the co periodicals. The committee wart Instructed to report in » - < leas tliEin three months on the working of the experiment.

The trustees of the British Museum, il is anticipated, will nlinw the rauacnm to be open during certain hours on Sunda

Museums, art galleries, and Public Libraries should be whenever and wherever this w necessary to meet thi neodfl 0 tho badly housed, the homeleae, and the working classes in li towns and cities. Whether observed ecclesiastically or

inday if too valuable n boon to be wasted in low sell rtdnlg- once. When we consider the incessant toil and sacrifice the ever necessary to counteract the tendencies and temp' eareJcas Jiving, the SabbaUv ow«ht to be jealoush : and

1 day conRoe\'oA*Ml Vo soexsX, Twrcax, ttoo.

THKni RELATION TO MECHANICS INSTTTPTIKJ. ETC- 471

culture, when the great rarities of Hfe, truth, boauiy, love, jumwe. goodness are mode present and Irapressivs to man.

It is difficult bo thi'ik thai one single person who ban hitherto been accustomed bo attend b plane of worship would be drawn

away from ehurrh in \i*\t a rnnsouin 01' picture gallery Tht» great success which has attended Sunday opening in bo on any other pkutes, UN will be seen mi reference !o flic statistics, slioufil give the greatest encouragement to other places to adopt a kuji In- plan. Whenever poKsible a plebiscite of the citizens should be taken, bo thai the matter nay oorae fairly mid fully before those who oiro these inistituiiojis, and who namrally do not ull think alike upon the question. Bui the cum of men poll should be carefully calculated beforehand, for it may mean several hundred pounds outlay of the ratcpayeiV money.

During my journeys through the country for the purpit.se of visiting the Public Libraries, the (mention has frequent^ boco asked about the success of the Sunday opening, if this MM in operation. The reply ban invariably been that thr Sandfly opening was attended with sal i*fu< t< a y result:-. The

caretaker living on the premises is in many eftMi the party in clmrge, but no actuul labour is involved. The visitors Iiave helped titcoisclvoM to iho papers nnd magazines cu the table. In casea the work is divided among the aeeUtut.tM, whose turn eomcB round perhaps in throe or four Sundays. In other cases the .Sabbatarians have been relieved of thoir responsibilities by the easy expedient of appointing* JWW to look after the institu- tion on the Sabbath Day. ThiR arraugeiiK'iit would pro baby fail to satisfy the conscientious scruples of some Sabbatarian*. Although there would be no difficulty in obtaining the service trf Jews, tliey object both to their appointment, and also to the use of the library \<y other*, at a tfDM when thoy did DOt UB6 it, and thought it ought not to be used, no matter what opinions to the contrary might be entertained upon the subject, The following are the place* where the 1'ublic Library reading

i mi are open mi Sunday! Birmingham, Bradford, Gfitesh

Miihi-hener, Mlddleahorongh, \i,wi,:i.siie-ftn-TjneJ Northampton, Oxford, II n-hdali', Snlford, Sheffield (museum and an t^allery) St. Helens, 'Walsall and Wigan. in London! Chelsea, ralbara. Hammersmith. In Ireland: IhmdalV and Slign. Seor.lnnd nwl Walafl keep the doora erf their libraries closed on Sundays.

CHAPTER XXX II.

MECHANICS' INSTITUTES, WORKMEN'S CLUBS.

AND THEIR RELATION TO PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

'HATfcVEH feeling of rivalry and antipathy there was at one Hine mi the part «i the managers nf mechanics' institutes, and other similar instituti appears to he rapidly disappearing1! if Indeed it has no! aJivady become i thing or the past. It Is tmpowfl In to jtii'-ii<,ii the faoi thai wi^ffi^ \\\-.\\v-yv*--. v-v-.*-

47-

l'l BLXC I.IPRAIITF*.

occupied a most iinpoiiaiil place in tlic c«lm-;iiMn or ihc pt TOO modi pffidM UOOOt I"1 fc'iv '''-'I work vine ;

accomplished by them. Previous to the cstabliehmeut uf i institutions the means of education among the working claaac* were of a scunty nature ; and about sixty yearn ago, when the neod for muivaeod educational fae.iiitic.- boirantobc run acutol

ttany previous period, inechanice mfltitutcs wove eat and it was felt that they would fioo.ii tolco their places as college* for workiu^ men. The highest hopes wore entertained rexpoctiiu; ftn Hi, and niaiiv of these expectations have boon realize* Hi: u thiflj there are not a :< n m ebonies' institutes which to-duy be reasonably pToud of the work they are doing, even the most suuguine friends of mcch; i tutos and

workmen's clubs would out claim for them thai they h u every promise and every hope which was held out them. The causes of too apparent failure are not fur ta The phrase " ipi»:u«-iit failure ' is u*ed for the reason thai own :i ti»i :iiimi! whatever appearance of failure there may be, the rooord which lies behind them liaa been so vital thai no «■■■ ttonul history of the lust ludf century would bo complete « hJcti did not rally recognize the place they have lUled.

The origin of mechanics' Institutes in tztteraa&u g. Boinewfcare aboal titty or sixty year* ago, Dr. Birkbeck was aetlnj Profess* ir "of Natural Philosophy at the Amlersonian Inatitul Glasgow. Some apparatus, required to elucidate one i»f In* lectures, waa out of repair, and two or three artisans were for by him to remedy the defects. After he had given litem the iifirexsary directions, one of the men observed ' FIuw iuurL better we should be able tu do this work, if we understood the object* of these instruments, and the principles upon v. arc constructed." The Professor replied, "My friends, will you listen to me if T try to explain them to you ' " "Oh ye certainly, if wo stay till to-morrow morning, waa the ouev er, 1 was given in so sincere and thankful a tone, that, although then late at night, tin - nt Doctor commenced an elaborate

i Kpli niation, and the rays of the next mondns/e ran wen ahmlnft When that group separated —one going to his repose, the . to their daily toil. The readiness and the real of these craftanten to acquire intellectual information produced such an effect I the I>octor, that ho Uivitod all the artisan* of Glasgow to ;r his Ltcturea gratuitously. A mechanics' class was an' i formed, and not long after mechanics' institutes sprnnjr u various localities. Thus it will bo soon how small an mdocnl may lead to I great public jjood.

fJBM &l the einoi ••:,u sei which have militated against ih. that tliey have Dot been made sufficient ly practical in i that the artisan classes understand that "term. It luu enough for a working man with hi- auins to bi

ii \\i | ee one a member of one of these institutes, he won Increase his knowledge as to render it. probable trial he might thereby improve bis condition. That has not gone far ooougfi ;

TREIH ABLATION TO MECHANICS' ISSTITl'TRS, HTC, 47li

m

Tl

re

i

.■ml ^nall oa the quarterly subscription has been, before parting with it he bus tried to 3ee pretty dearly that ho would dome somo immediate advantage equal to the outlay. Others again havoo&idthflt the subscription wm* too Uw, and that ftiatfhioauon ns Imh can be procured for little money is but indifferently valued. lie is not a particularly good argument, especially at the present timet "''"'" OB ;l" binds education ruv-" progressed by leaps and (winds, and the need tor far greater educational facilities is being expressed on nil sides. A more important drawback associated with them is that amusement nnd recreation have very largely axnrped the educational work nf mechanics' institute* and workmen's clubs. But this again is oMv parindU trad, and bad ■li.".i- jii-titutrv been heivtt d'i rational amusement's, nnd left to possess the sombre character of the cloister, the probabilities are that, there would hp moiWo lament with regard Tn them than i* 'uMi'il at the present time. Still, ho strong has the recreative clement become that the draught and chess Ijounln, billiard Cables, and dramatic performances have only too frequently elbowed aside the educational ('Infractor of these institutions nnd now

ni:iiiy ol thrin :iii' little inure thiol i'e,spee| ;ible lOfXDflQfl tOT HMD

fairly well-off, who dislike the smoke room uf (In- public house or hotel, and prefer the quieter and less objectionable place

The library and reading" facilities afforded by these institutions

have not been and are not particularly great. The librftriee have

:- etod too largely of fiction and other books gathered together

jii'lLM.TLiiii:m[i''o, ami (lit nonsruuiu Iiu* 1 »t;eu su indifferently supplied with a comprehensive choice of periodical literature, that what has been supplied has often made the poverty in the Stock d ephemeral literature the more apparent. The One fatal obstacle, however, is that there to 00 continuity <»f life in the management of these institutes. The individualmechanics' institute or workmen's ciub invariably owes its existence to the aetivit ynnd energy of two or more individuals, who have irnlvauized the whole idea into life and useful existence, and the place logins with oil the enthusiasm and publicity possible. As long us those heads and originators remain all has gone well. By-ond-bve, however, i^ 1 1. -arli and removals have decimated the ranks of those who brought the whole thing into completion, a change in the spirit of management has come about, and decay has sot its talons upon the institution. The roll of membership line in very many matanoes declined, nnd debt and restricted resources are faftr accomplishing otter congestion and coUapae of nil the original

fturposea ot the institution. Kur too large a number of them nave iTJeu almost entirely in the hands of cliques, and it is to be reared that in eotnec&aoJ personal ends dictate what shall be done. The one vital difference between mechanics* institutes, work- in. ns clubs and rate-supported Public Libraries, is that the niiii/emi'iu oi the iwn tormer has no representative character taching (o it, whereas in the other ease the continuity is oanrod W the corporate nature or the institution. \ Vx&S&r. Library forms part of the corporate *ttte tft \A\e xuniyi MaxW^-

471

PITlTJr f.TRTMRTl?*,

administered by die elected repreeentarfvee ol the people, who

h:ivc EAglVfiMI BOCOUDl Of lln'ir xirwnnNhip f" those who

i i 11 r«> itn* governing Uidy in which they sit This applla

to the sm&jlesl parish whifh may ndopl the Aets up i > tfw very

large*! city. And hence the mala reason why Public i. i

m> rajildlv extending and taking the place of mechanic*

;mh! vcvamexia clube. The subscrfptjui] character of fchelntter

has tended to restrict the membership, and the national mid

oniveraal character of Public Libraries lias been the keyMone ol

their Ufa and vigour.

The rnirpnsc of this chapter is to indicate how the educai \< charactci ol mechanics' iiiatituic- i.ud workmen's clube - t tin 1 Uu n.-'l, ami those institutions (HI the tnic place tot which they were originally intended. To save them from misuse and falling into the hands of oliquee the earnest desire f many who have at heart the welfare of the building* a which tbej have been bo long Interested. A very considerable numbei ol these institutiono have fonned the nucleus of Public \.\\- and on exoeUeul beginning has thus been made by .1 happ wedding ol ;!ic old love with ite oroditable past and Uw new I m with its enlarged prospects and solid eh inc ■» cd suooee lease of life has thus been secured. The mana Institutions are Heriously contemplating what can boot onmirc useful future for their institutions. II to those that 0 sincere hope may he expressed as to the step which they will ultimately take. Although in some respects mechanics* institUt* workmen's clubs are proprietary institution* they are in an sense public property, inasmuch as subscriptions from the general

SLiiilic were solicited and obtained when tne institution waB first .unched. Consequently the private benefit which bbn there accruing is a wrong to the original promoters, and aa Injustice to the loenl public who have u general interest m tlM Institution.

This is sufficient ground why present managers maj wi-ll inlti consideration what are the best steps to adopt Ttli ' strietive character of their trost deeds la. nf comae, the lim winch they have to act., but even in this respect there ire, 1* n rule, mi serious Insurmountable ubstacles in no betters these buildings be preserved for the educational benem

tiiblic aud also for rational auiusemeui thau by tut. [to Public libraries. In scores of towns and district u would at once lie adopted if such an offer as this were n ode. M Cannot be too well borne in mind that rate-ftupported Public Libraries are not antagonistic to mechanics* institute workmen** clubs. Dut they certainly are endeavotu on .1 larger and more practical wale the work which tboaE

institutions originally sol bhemaelvea ou to accomplish,

Difficulties with regard to the staff of mechanic*' insli and workmen'* clube, should such a step as that indi adopted, could ho met Vej a several undcratanding that the mailer suonld be BerlouaVj borne \n ywkA \\ \Vt. k»a»-m« adopted

'V V

I."

I

THKfU N1-1 ^I<i\ TO MFl'HANirs IXOTTrUTB*, ,l(

■ir.-)

and die uiMiiiiri-m becomes the property m the people, Borne uiu'uriiuts ni' I'nMic Libraries are known to the present writer who were in the same bunding librarian tor uie mechanics'

institutes, i:ni iIm'h is a proul' that thib ultsUir.li* is one which ean

if tneU All public appointments should lie thrown open, but En Midi instance* it ctumot infrequently happen that the best men fur librarian mid assistant* art* those who have luul charge of (lie place up to the time of tin- change being made,

Thia ;;% .1 question ol Mich importance to the future of the Public Library movement, that the subject is one which may be earnestly presHC-d upon the attention of committees nod Irmdee* of the institutions under difiOUBSiODi There is no control on the part of the public on rhe character of the men who may Occupy their place at a later date. Would it not be truly wise to ensure the future of their building by placing it under the control of their local public f If there in n debt npoo it, which is so fre-

i|tiviitly the ease, thin eonjd be taken OVCr villi the. building, and

bv the placing of ropraaontaMvee from the old committee of munugement of the mechanics' institute on the library com- mittee, mid rhe Irun.sfoi'eiiee <»f the officials where this rimy DO advisable uud practicable, the mum difficulties would l>o bridged, provided ol course, that tin: atop is in accordance with the spirit and rendering of the trust deeds.

It is opportune to now call attention to the strength and work ol exiting institutions under these designation*. Hrel and foremost tin* re BtandB the Yorkshire Union Of Mechanics' Insti- tutes, which celebrated its jubilee about two years ago. For life and vigour this union Burpoaoei oil other unions of these institute**. Its Beeretary and lecturer, Mr. Frank Curzon, it such a host within himself that to know him is to know the secret ol the success of tins Yorkshire Union. Its present strength mny bo briefly summarized bv stating that there ore 271 institutes affiliated to the union, witn an aggregate of 58, J 00 members. Its village library consists of 30,000 volumes, and the books tod 6he4l wiv toaorneol the moat remote villages of the huge county of

Ynrlc Two hundred villages in Yorkshire :uv now availing

thamaahres •) Eta facilities. Tin* hooks have been largely given from friends of the union, and bote* of books are nained after generous donors. The milnrrfption is a guine:i n year for 900 volumes in nrty volumes exchanged each quarter, a weekly

n'l-in'i! of the circulation is kept by the local institute, and there

can i>e no doubc that these books have been the ineanaot brining tn thntisionls of Yorkshire village homes pleasure ami [aatTUi lion. Hut the reasonable contention is that the book need* of no village can lie met by the ph^ngfao ni' BCta books once a Quarter. All

h m to the Yorkshire Village Library for the work Hurt it baa

dour and Is doing, it is Dcoopying the ground faatouslj until the larger atop In aeon to be pracaoablOi and that.it is to be feared fto far op villages are concerned, i.- not yet within mcosurc- able distance, in Bubg the breach to rutovj u«'\»^^w^ <& die village people, the Yorkshire Dnlon taeerr Vn*> tosbw «

176

J.rnitAMRv

:ii rrtoadl ol provincial Uf and if any reader I ted I

the lack of hooks in villages, and would like to do sometl ; make It loss ao, he cannot do bettor than com muni eat* with Mr. C'urzou, at Victoria Chumhers, Leeds, Bad 90 establish a few Iimv.'k of I Kicks known by hi* name The U«e of On* hooks In this village library work is shown bj fcha i«*ue for lasl > aar befog &i,950 volumes. T^ie subscript ions to llw* individual InantutaaafBo* dotfid with tin* union vary from 4*. to 21b. a year par meaihir. A large number nf lie iiflil :'ini i!iHiilnt<*.H aw iloim? an exoaBea! work, and it le Doteiworthj that fclw imohI succewful i I then in town* where raii:-^ii(»i>i» t «" I lihrai les we already Id exlston Tin.- is especially the awe. at Bradford, where thrr< members. At Doucaster there is a Railway Institute with 3,00) members. The mechanics" Institute at Halifax has 1.099 meii;- bCT9i Slid the one at Leeds has l.&JH jueiuher*, and OwMR also be named. Thi,* shows that Publi< Libraries nnd mecn institutes in the lar^e centres yo hand in hand and work log for the common pood, It is refreshing to peruse the last oj tlir uiiiuu, l'ur it reveals a power at work in Yorkaliiri- in '!n ■•■ institute* which must produce good throughout the coo , i , the 274 affiliated institutes and olubs who gave particulars in thii

prctinn, l. ore exempt from Wnl r:\U~.- :ind Mi are not, whuVt fi-w are partially exempt. The work done i:« to be COUUtti I ;t is patent that there are a considerable number is diminishing, and the future of which is fur from I encouraging*. May the hope not bo exproeesed thai for there eorae development into Public Libraries under the rotco will : it at biter eoruo about - There nj'o Hve other associations of these im<titulos in country, but the Yorkshire Union is so influential "ffhon with these that it maketi the indications m declining povw more evident, The next strongest association Is toe 1 iioa Uinea&birc and Cheshire Institutes. I hi- w »-; . viable ! by the efforts ol the late Richard Cobden and other genii* [$B ivi'oni of work for fifty yenrs is excellent in the organ tx lectures, holding examinations-, diffusing informi fSoi deserving artisans To obtain a collegiate education. I Institutes are in union with this organization, with a membership of over fiO,000. As an old secretary of unn of tb ■octetltt atnliHied with ibe onl( n, n e presenl write? know* lw« large has been the lmpot.ua given to adult education ii I shire anil Cheshire by the -work uf this union in before the pusslng of the l\1cmenl:irj Education Vol 1 1^ work is still very useful, especially in welcUn

Bets of the smaller sec-lkm*, such ua mul isd impi sodetieb and literary elubs. The next in order in the is tlu- Northern Union oi MechuueV ii:.siitutio:is institutes are afllU&Led with it, and it is gratifying Ui one of tbe objects of this anion is to promote the welfare of mechanics' institutions-, \SvU\v LtorsMfta, work! and martlnnr rnnran tVwou^out \\ie o3ft\\\w»» ■•fl. ^«"vV«H*k*ciV*fc<i

It.!

Ion nt

htl

TUE1D nFI.-VIKlN M SIKllHAMlh INSTITUTES, WO.

477

and Durham, m **aa established to 1848 and oofta ;i number

of it* affiliated sueietie.i .uv strong and healthy. Another of these assucjutions i?* the Worcestershire Union of Mechjuiius'

JllhllluU'h.

The Working Men's Club and Inabibute Vniou, with its head- quartered! 1 50, l[(t!b<tru,E.f\, Iui.n, after twenty- SOS ve.uV existence as B vuhuitary organization, become ft corporal t bodg under the Industrial and Provident Societies' Act of 1676. The number of clubs and institutes affiliated with the union is very large. Many <>f thru: jii'e political clubs, and in its rigorous work and splendid organisation the union is accomplishing" work of a most useful character.

Public LibrnricR under the Acts will never do away with these unioiu-J'ut on the contrary there will bo some strength in workup together. Members of these various institutes and unions should nil bo friends of tho Public Library movement, for in numerous instances tfbreriee snob ae those fto* being advocated can only be the outcome of clubs and institutes. In handing theiri together, and so creating a community ot interests, a now infusion »t life has come, and it is noteworthy that the most conspicuous failures among Clubs and institute* have been anmnj* the ^oeiotios not affiliated With any union. Public Libraries :uv - lip! v an extension ot their work. They are in tho truest sense pro bono publico, whilst elnba and institutes are for suimeriptioii members only. The work Ot elevating and educating; the people tB 90 lurge that neither lii.r:o-ieK nor any other organizations ran by themselves

r-itiv on the tn>k There is then room for all, and some of the mi ib2 earnest supporters, of Pttblfc Libraries come from the ranks of these oluba and other similar bodies of men.

it u will not be considered Intrusive, attention may be called to : i'.v »( suuny mechanics' institutes vWch arouid tbnzi an

:Mlii!)i';ilile nucleus fur Public Librurk's where tlie\ du not already A3 1st. Bat this is purely HUggestlve. and all Initiative must natu- rally come from the committees of management of the several mntitutioiis. Tin- town of -Tarri »w -ou-Tyue, with a population of 1*0,40!?, has a mechanics' institute with <VX) ruembens They are anxious to make it 5,000. At the winter classes there has been it lurge attendance, and 090 students presented themselves for examination a by UQ means bud record. They are appealing to the tradesmen of Jnxrow to buy ticket* for their assistant*. The vice-chairman of the Carlisle Mechanics' Institute is rather hopeful about the future of that venerable association. The library is his -In: >r anchor, The report, however, eontnuui too many signs of -if.-: iy. The falling-nil in membership is something serious j the decrease m the number of boolw issued ban naturally followed, and the departments have sow been reduced to Bio library and tho reoning-reem. One of tlie Hpoakors at a recent meet- in-.* did venture to hint that it wouJd find its salvation in being made the basis of a Public Library, and that baa bees m legitimate end, for the A. (■: wren adnpfed «>n June {\, ]&yo. The tution was made to pay it^ w:>\ Uim yw,M\dA\\<i-«HVfc&'

ir-

ITULIO UPII.m:!!.--.

will bo to oontmu-' iii'Mii the h uno lines until the osti bliflhmwt mi i mt&inpporUd library. Sleaford baa a literary institute "inch leeine to bo mo

Erugrcss. There is also here :i tuvvu library, the I I- . -: ive been chiefly t^ott^rh t by funds subscribed by the local SleaXord has population ol over4,uuu It would be wil u all towns poaseaalng Libraries riot under the Acta would der-.n ihrin Town Libraries, as is done ar Sleaford, no that Mm re

It n»> i -i but it in to be hoped that Sleaford will cr

hfpra lis Public Library. -\> eringriin \< ;i busy I Miieushhv town

where the Qjaendon of a Public Library is not new. A year or two ago the resolution passed by Ibe director* of the Mecnn Instituiiuu iii response Lu (in- in«iuiry from the Town Couni to whether the members would be willing to hand over theii undertaking to the town, to be carried "M .is ;i Public Library ;unl Bchool of Science and Art, under the Public Librae i was considered at a meeting "i the Council in coiumittee. Hw dtrectora suggested in their resolution that the Council rata H sufficient mini of money " bo covci the cost of the now alterations and extensions, and furnifdt such an

with ;i penny nitr. will enable the Town CoUOClI iXt I

efficiency of the work at present carried ou by the In The feelinff of the Town Council was that nothing con jriumintced, and no nlcdjErc could be given in the shape of raisin c a certain amount of money, but a resolution was ptu

..-riVrt llnit II the mi-nil'iTH ol' tin; institution Itl'C willing fcC h:.ut\

ovtT their undertaking the Council would do oil in its po» iiirrv t»n the educational work of the institution more effii than it is earned on now.

\t New Swindon, in Wiltehiro, there ia the Oreni Wi Railway Mechanics Institution, which is doing (rood Wiltshire does not yet possess a library under the Id there would be some appropriateness in Swindon beoi firel place t<» adopt the Acte. Barnard Ca Cleclchcatoii, Uoole, Keigbley, Malt on, and Hipon ineehnnica' institutes but no Publie libraries, and all tin placet need these rate-eupported institutions. In Weymouth there is s v«.ii;ii:;.' mens rluh, mid Moras of lb* niemhera would like it turned Into a Publie Library. The club is very ?eni ral > I >-•■ the Guildhall, and was built at the cost of Sir 11 M.P., for its specific purpose. It contain* an excellent raj room and billiard-room on the ground floor-and overt) i capable of seating ant) or 400 parsons, There ccUenl

foundation in this plnb for n Public Library, and \v.\ should set a good example, uud lead the way in thnt pari th( uiitiy. These are but a few eases, Very many other

be iMtro1.

In Todruorden they have been dUcn>slritf the adopting the Acts, and it is much to be n \ retted thi operative Socictj should hav< come t' an rBepecl to a Public lAbraijj luv nfa&uuwten sviwu K wtw

MO

I'lULlC- LIBRAIty COJIHirTKKS \Sl> COMMUHlONHlISi

47P

question was txj the frout. Some of the members tltuti^liL they should l>c very chary in giving away the library. Another, in bUwftjl forgetful DMA "1 the adoption of the Art, made the astounding assertion that by living the library to tbe town they would lessen the advantage* of the persons who had the privilege of using1 the library at present, a* it would certainly increase the number ol readers! Adnptiny the Art i* the grand object <>!' routing readers at a Lea cost, adding to the number of enitable books taad other conveniences in harmony with the ago in which we live, and, in a word, to make life more desirable, About £8 a year may be taken a.s a fair acorn ge <>i the rent of tin- boUMG in TodraoraVn and neighbourhood, so that the contribution in the penny rate would not bo extravagant.

Whilst reference i* being made to thin part of the subject tliere it unulln.'i' l>i;iii«'li 90 OlOBely allied that relorence m:i.y be made to it here. Young Men's Christian Associations posses* some libraries, and in small towns where these organizations exist the eXCUfle is sometimes made t<» those seeking to promote the adoption of tbe Act* ihal there we already libraries existing in such institutions as those just, mentioned. Bat without for a moment seeking to question the usefulness of Young Men'fl i 'hristian Assoeintlous, it pan seareely be said that their libraries meet the book neeilK Of tbe riistrirlh where Miey are situated. Young Men's Christian AModaflona oecupy a Diane of importance, tat ft is straining the argument considerably when opponents of tbe Public Libraries movement are told that then are already plenty of books Tor the public stored in such institu- t lone as those to which reference is mow being made

Whitehaven, North and South Shields, l.aiii.sli'v, ;md :i iiihhIht ol* other place> have their Public Libraries liuused in buildings which were formerly mechanics' institutes. Nottingham took orer the Artisans' Library for its Public Library, and occupied the same building until the library was removed to larger premises. What lias been done In lhe.se town* may be boned to have its in- fluence upon other place* to take a similar step. The progress of the movement in very many towns depends in the immediate future upon the public spirit of the committees of management of mechanic*' institute.-* and workmen's clul*. The matter is commended to their thoughtful and earnest consideration.

CHAPTER XXXIII.

PUBLIC LIBRARY COMMITTEES AND COMMISSIONERS.

HE majority of the members of these bodies are acutely sensible of the purposes and work of Public Libraries, Too often, however. Uie constitution of the conunJtfat such as lends rather to hinder the work uf these institution* than i«» help it, and it is most essential that

:ouncil* and other governing bocliee should .see to \ at only men ui sympathy with the work &Q& "wVw •*%. i

town

tat

4*0

PUBLIC LIBBAXIK3.

necessary time to it are elected. It mtmt bo aokn.iwle town councillor* aw seldom bookmen but always politicians j . in noi ;i few cases tin* penny in the pound for the library is i^crarded :tH unproductive and nwhw*, »n<! with (hem the time Spent ir. com- mittee attending is looked upon ns time lost, and not nnfreqn the business is hurried over and little thought bestowed upon ii Wherever the political element prevails, do matter on which side it may be, there is sure to be congestion, and it muy bn unhenf*

l.itingly slated that the Public ],ibr:u v / iverned by ;i Bomm

whose work and deliberations art always linked with * jinHtfca] Has is as good as lost. There is no purl u| the operntloi town council or other governing body which ought to hoi removed from a political cast and character than in connc< ■rSfcfa these libraries. They are institutions supported bj oUasQi, for the benefit of all, ;md sh<mld In- intcreetfl of all. It is imposHihh- for ll i-. to be so, [j

prejudice and idiosyncrasies are perpetually influencing tin-

: >D8 oi those who oontrol them. The library committee's minutes ought not to lie ncco- 1 submitted to the couneil for confirmation, as the bin members having no vote (in council) their deliberation

liable i" b€ negatived, and choir time thrown awuj Tiw i i,

lorew on the committee, therefore, arc apt to stay away, tUld thus the library goeH down. Anothor roaun of j propane* Kmnoil members is that the chairman fa always inosen bei )io is a member of the corporation, and it sometimes hn: f hit r ho lias no other qualification for the position aj all, Public Library committee should have a secretary who should1 be eyes, ears, hands, and brain, to the institution, which the town cleric la tre [uently the secretary, and the

tie :ii :i ncrrly periimctopy maimer. The librarian \k speech- less, and can only answer questions when asked

The plan <<\ Meeting i proportion of the committee ' outside the council w fast becoming general, ae will be from the list below, which might he made more complete were i in <v*sary to do so.

Until h

oil

Non-

HtoabcH

at

» ;::.

1 cur...)

of

CminnU.

tkmam

Airdrie

.. 12

B

fl

Ttorow-iu-Farncsa \'

6

Manchester

0

Itirkciihr.nd

.. 11

7

Newcafltlc-on-Tvne 2fi

n

Blackburn . .

9

13

Xortii Shields 13

L5

Blackpool . .

.. 6

a

Nottingham 13

2

1 V.I lol!

.. ft

aj

Reading .. .. ]A Rochdale .... 6

-

Bradford ..

.. 8

0

•>

Clitheroe ..

.. 3

0

Rotberham . . SM

6

Derby

.. 11

7

Sheffield . . 0

6

D aoMtuv

ft

8

Shrewsbury 1ft

A

Fol kofctono

.. 10

Ii

South Shields . \'i

1]

J/nnJoy

.. u

U

7

ro prnuc i.nin.vnY eoMMrrn:Fs .\m> <"«>MMia9tON"BJ»i, 48]

Sonic of these committor Rrc unduly large. It is a well- igniaed fact, thai a small working committee, the members of waftf) ftttead r<> their duties is infinitely preferable to .1 huge body often very iu\% i*Ki\ . and who.se deliberations art I 1 1 likely lo clcgenerato into a sen of talk. Much could DO said In fov iUT Of electing members from outeldo the governing body. There 1 >€ in ,1 : 1 11 y towns moo thoroughly in touch with the educational needs <>t to-day, and with J'ubhe Library work, who shirk tin 1 >i

citciuent and worry i»f contested municipal .•U-rtioiis.but wliDw.mld be on <■• uMtion to any Public Library committee. Care should, of course, be exercised thai suitable man arc selected, in one

lnrge Town the plan lias not boon very suecesxiul, because Etteo

of indifferent education have pushed themselves into the oon> mlttee by the vigorous touting for vote* to which they have resorted,

The fdmnii'winnois of the London Public Libraries aPS nor ho extensive in number as are the provincial commit bin, and the plan from the first has been adopted of going partly outride the vestry for representatives. The more deflniti wording of the ant in this partloular applying bo the Metro- polis perhaps accounts for th& llie only object sought to be gained, botn in oommttteefl and oomnvhwionera, by co-operation or this character, is to render the uimingement an an adminis- trative body more efficient, arid to ensure the more complete confidence ur the public in itn work, The London c.oininiwii»nei>

pu.vsrss 1 In- iidvanlugr of ha\inu great n puver am! freedom IV*uii control than is the ease m the provinces, and their number is li 1 Ited to aine,

The duties of a librarian are becoming increasingly impor- tant, and tU'- need thai the standard <>r the men should be main- tained ta becomina more and more necessary. Librarinnship is now justly reoogiuzed as a profession, and such being the ease, oomxnitteea and commissioners may reasonably be expected to tukc an enhanced flaw of his *ork lie 13 iu far toe muny caeca the worst paid OJ OBJ public Official, and when it comes to the question of soliciting an advance in salary, and the question going through the mill of the ocmmitteej and worn *till the pulverising machinery ef ratification by the town ii, the whole process is *:> .-pint crushing thai many Librarians prefer to go struggling on year after year with an Income far too annul for the labour and the responsibility of the office, than to pass through tins <>rdcui. it an .idvaner

is asked for l<\ a ga* mana;_'.i'. whe:'r 11:" irus\vv>rk»i lire t !io pro- perty ol the corporation, a unitary InapeetOTj or 1 ehlef o1 ponce, haw different is the process, In these cases the applfaatfon

Cor aD advance is usually i-arned through with a canter, been ue forsooth, their work is looked upon as an absolute necessity,

nnd for those paste flood men have to be secured, and 1

men should be paid ^-itisl'iietory salaries. All the parsimony and carping orfaclara within a council centres '"" nreojw around the Public I Ibrary and its ofi\c.\n\*, axvo, \v \-

PUBLIC UBJtABIE*.

jrrndually tlia" a change is comiug about in the views held ra»*

CrtiTu these insUtuMon*, And roi thii change the vigouj terest which librarians hove thrown into tin- work Lai had ns much to do as the increased educational fa< <\wy, and tlie advancing regard for a higher civil Life. 3urelj the work of n librarian is in>t of Was impn an that -:'

iuuiiiif,'i'r ur ;i sanitary inspector, ur CVCB tlir head con- stable. Tlie time has pasted when ho should take a BOCOud plao to these officials, for the work of a librarian tends infi] moTG to tlie development of the real life of the town than the labour ol 'n'\ line of the department* jont named. The Uon [a hastening; when the librarian will be looted upon ai niusl m.vessnry official in a tuwn next to the chief magis-

ii-i\.-. When thin desirable change in public opinion ai ihr salary and position of these officlale will be greatly enhnj

A- u Uidji they are shoukingty paid] fti d sppherttiwt* tor a read-

i oatmeal In Una particular are delayed bo i<>n# that a good mnn :eepN Ins eye* and cam open for the postt in his prol which nri' in m < 'vnn open. Ir nuij-t he luani'eKtJy to tin-

interest of u library and :t town to retain the service* i efficient man. Only those who are familiar with the inner duties of Public Library are cognizant of the vast mot fletiiiN in rho work. The v.mw MiiKinnt of "nerjry, perseverance, :u .1 attention to duty devoted to other walks ol Luto would menn an infinitely larger income to many librarians than they M sent receive. Committees and commissioners would find the best and truest Interest* of the library served by giving gr. power to the librarluri. Committees may come md do b*J the librarian remains, and many of these officials would work wiiii greater sect and tatereei 11 more latitude were given, and tin* true nature of their work were belter iui<1ci*I<hhI, hy tlie average committees, One word more. If the funds v% ii permll of a better salary, the librarian should be permitted tc I I eeive tradesmen** advertisements Tor the catalogue. This 1s a commercial m well as a reading age, and If this is permitted be can increase hie own salary without lading the ratepscyai spending the time he should give to the library Foi purposes.

Perhaps the most frying aud yet the most important worit of u committee or body of commissioners ie the appointment of n librarian. The shoals of applications arc so nuroeroui task often becomes bewildering and nerplcxim?. Thear o cations have reached in num1>or n* IukVi n> r. >. ror i lv or fourth- rate |x»t, and invariably include tuldloi dice*. peoeJonors, clerks, teachers, booksellers, and from verj cle section "I society. Bui only too many of these applicants would us a rule, bo dear ut half (he salary offered, Th< in other departments of life which po u makes man succcaafv] tend to produce nn equally meritorious u The present writer unhesitatingly and emphatlcalli affirms that the best lihrarinna are the uwivwhu tame been ti uned m public

■TO PUBLIC LTBUARY COMMIITRRS AND DIM M BHII IM S-RS. 483

Libraries, nnd who have grown np in Che work. It is just a* necessary to receive a frafiuDg for these poets en it is ne able

tO fOllOW ethVi cully :uty nt iter businGSS i if life. Many of the SYel&|BB

applicants for those positions who have bad no previous expe- rience in library work, imagine thai the post fa u easy way to rcspcctuMe ptwiLhm in society, or that ii nfford.s an opportunity for private study. Holh ideas are erroneous, (or with nian.v evenings being absorbed u iibrao duties, librarians tiavew little chauoe as anyone foi the cultivation of social acquaintances: tad with rogara bo the second •■httts there are few bodies of men who

really have lc*.> tune for reading than librarians It is an ott-

ijuoted saying that "the librarian who reads it loot/ out it may be onhcStatinglT affirmed that, in those days of annexes! culture and the ever-extending wore of these institution.*, the Librarian who does not road is lost, The desire to serve some personal friend i>v voting for bin whan those vacancies are being discussed sTiouhl he strictly kept in check, Politico or

self- interest of one kind or another fur toofroqaontlj enter Into the

appointmenti but with one or two marked exceptions, of late committees and oemiaisaioiisre wo beginiiing to grasp what the

Ctsition really menus, and are using every eo.ro and oonaidorntion gel hold d the best man available, But Btul there have been I.*.* tmiT'\ ottoee where professional experience and ability seem to be nowhere with ftommitteea and boards, and the interests of :he ratrjmcrs :in«f credit « ■! the ti •" m arc Nneri&oed Wlthoul Invi- tation to gratify any caprice ox Buaoeptlbility ot Choir own. or to smuggle into n snug berth some local partisan or reduced friond, who may bo totally unfit for the position, n these people were regulating •' business of their own that the] knew rery Utile about, bui wished in make profitable, their ftral action would i»' '<> appoint the best and moat practical imitmgcr they could and,

\nd if they would aot IhUB In their mm interest, ihbuld they not

sol iii b similar spirit with the ratepayers' InteresM which are confided to them :- ft* they chink not, then they are unworthy 01

the position tO Which they hlive heen elected. Of course lite good

of (fie rouininnity ih (he main question concerned \ but there is a

'■rc:ii injustice done togood practical men, wlm h;ive Spent their

\w $ almost in public librarv work, when thov see themselves passed over for men w hose only claim Ik local Influence.

All agree that the poet should be thrown open to the public; but frequently much headhunting and di»appoutttnient would in* Bared among local candidates, and ii would also obviate a plethora of oppueationa from aondew ript people, if the advertise men! staled thai experience in n Fnbuo Library was absolute]^ essential

Taken as body, librarians am oacel keenly in touch with their duties Thai desire to work with and help the public In ercrj n a which lies in their power. The place in the education of tin people which these inentutlons are aow occupying, and the *till more important place which they are destined to (in. has for along time been recognised hy the librarians. I'.w . v a. w\>< v.\\\v\

4*4

Pl'BMO MDBAlUES.

body of men, there* are exceptions: and the mystery i* how int-Mi got into theft present posts Some ... these arc 1 1 n n andor the idea that the Uornrtos over which thej prtctary tnst it i:ti<nis, and that the public have no right to uQaaiK into the worldi g of the libraries or anything about then i

H,' | rosary unhusroesflllko and e&reless, and perform their in :i m v nefthoi credit ihlo 1 ■» themselves nor the publl ui rlwy Fire Karvantt. Where there ire congestion and laxity ..- "iiiniiN of the library, the faidl Ilea only too frequently with i in< librarian The most successful ol these Institution* i the charge of men who wo smart and energel ea an I habit* ofbuNiiicss, ami ilitiM- institutions which areata too often In the charge of men who neither do justice nor honour to the profession.

lbs tjuiirs of librarians are ■■>< Itlfarioua that U lb doI n

indicate what are the qoolUlo&tlans of a librarian lie catere not mlv for juveniles hut for adults, Jl:* fluty is towards the whole reading jfopulution of the locality to which he irs attached. He [a lou larjfii extent their intellectual p:-o\-;<i.T The man of \<

i i&a not necessarily Blake the boat librarian, hut there intr need for an acquaintance with the contents of books as s i the hacks and titles, if he is to fulfil hie duties to the high r.-.t .1. heri- tage. For one of the find of those duties obviously 18 t<< pi i In- collection which is put in his charge. Ik is called upon to make constant additions to his library, and in order I efficiently he ought to possess a considerable knowledge of I turo. Ife ought to he able, in. the first place, to lisan mode In which th< blanks in tin* library nhonld he tilled up Such blaokBOsist in ovory collection, and yo\ they ought not to b* tl

Tin: iilvnl lihrjiriuuV lii^i cniv ^h»-ul»l !■■» t'-givoenmi'leteii

the leading deportments ol his treasures to boo that trtmerit author Is thorougtuy well represented, and that every

i represented by all his works, and by the beet editions of them. No good Library should ever have any serioi The

Student and the general reader should be ins position ii every standard hook nn every ordinan subject. This Is a matter which more particularly applies to the largi than those ol the rank find file, Hrent dleerhnin uMcoi Is nee* in the acquisition of new nooks— 1n selecting those which eertata to be of pennaneul Interest, ami rejecting those whfch nrr of purely temporal*) value. A good deal of judgment, too. « shown in the choice of the nrtitlnns which are purdinMCfl, the fir>4 Issue being by no means always the tuoat desirable. Ideal librarian mm do vwy much to guide the taste and direct the studies of the readers who apply to him; hul ubvi faimoi (In that unless hi.-* rea<ting has been and - llo.\ often a lil>rarian is asked to recommend a bookorl>ooki If. In addition to being a custodian of books, ic weri of their contents, he could deliver occasiono lectur> !';• reeolteol hi i tporlence aa a student nm

H rritiv.

TO PPRUC MRRAItY POMMITTFKf* A N n < -oMMI&SION'BnS. 486

T1iik is already being clone to no small extent, and there need be rut tear about nbrarisna rising eqtml to whatever needs nwy ho Hen le upon them, 'rill- tatellenboal life <>f a town la fast ecntering around these inBtitutloOT.and librarians have been among the first to recognize tins enhanced life and public utility, Those who occupy tin* highest places In the profession are oyer glad to nndsl students and scholars in their researches, and the literary man

I'lti-n tind.s in llii'in Obliging hoIpDiOtW. Kven duv we OUT or

read ofeorne writer oi etuto) acknowledging the good offices of those librarians whose knowledge of books gi ea beyond the tides and outaidoaof ilirni. J Jut beyond this the librarians of Public i.ii.r::ii'-s and assistants, who come moat closely in contact with the general j ordinary reader, and arc roost f nUy acquainted with bJa or her wants, and hia or her manner of explaining them, arc frequently giving help to the reader The genera] publft i an

hardly be :nv:U-L- "1 the extent [•• which :i mtdir.-r Uist< U 'lir<. U<\

by the humble library assistant. A girl or youth comes op to

tb untor primed with the names of worfia which he or she

desires to read. It may i"1 thai ;ill of rhem we "out," and then the applicant Es dtsposia, of tor much thumoiagof the cAtalosrae,

(" 4ivr it|< t no task i I Mleet ion in de^air, and throw liinmell or

horse] upon the gentle mercy of the Ubranun. " I Sen you reeom- iiu'ihi to me ;i nice book?" "Do you rftmember the name of any other of !$o-and-eto's works > " Booh queries axe of tlio commonest ocenrrenoe,

in the engaging ol assistants and boys, eonunittees and com- missioners would do well to make atriet inquiries a* to whether ii eae have made up then- minds to adopt it as a profession, Tbe aagiatanhi examinations In connection wifli the Library Veaocta- tion are doing excellent work, and rJuWlwrariansahould encourage their luwfstants to) nter for them 'l'ho oertSflcate of Bffl •■■< ncy fccm tin* body will soon rank as an ladlspensauleaccesaoryofa librarian's qualifications; it may bnngnJn reiterated that the best training .■M'hnni for n future librarian la In h library. The ordinary appren- ticeship rule* should hv made to apply to the hoys and usfiuuita in these instil us inn*.

TTiere i* uodonbi thai ladies make rerj efficient assistants and lllo'iirinuN. aud their servicer are being sought more generally.

ii axg< '<iitre iVimii forty to fity female assistants aio

i mi l ryed. Of tfiesej some sixteen receive 18s< par week] and the others vary, according to length of service, rrom 12s, to 32a, pei

week. LaOV Jit o.i. i.u.- .ire .i|i]iiri i.uvd on the other side >>i tin

ktlnntic, and have a wider hold of employment than they ha> in flreat Britain, vrhere they are nol employed hi Shoe Howie*. An taoeriesD librarian gives the highest testimony to the energy and enthusiasm ol w an libroriana whom ho had known m

Vjaerica. One clever little woman, a student at the I.ihrorianK Training College, to whom a fortnight^ leave of absence WSC

Eon ted in order that aha Bright htari u lil-mry, tound har services such request that her fortnight's leave WBB extended to two . during which time the helped to atari or Vcaptcm wi \wwre

4*?

. : :

titan 100 IJbrarle*, in one ««c raising o num n!' QO.oon i!ol

iiihlniil of 5<00f) original^ propCKed 1 \ l!i" town. Am

managed1 her libra/) ■%«• BUCcewfuDj i wan offend Litre

t in i" undertake the post uf librariaj I 1 1 -

library in an adjacent town, noii« «»f the mule candidate* being

run.-niri-rtl %Q CODIPCI G tl

!i. pui taacol books has been dealt with in anotbea luii b i i th< r refon a< i u re will not be out of ntaet Lw il book* seller* are quite unable to {rfrc the terms which ean bcobti in London and Manchcatrir. \\ here .1 large i mibcr ■! no* t*ookn ore to be pUTchi ed Ltoni time, it ia well to advertise fbi i mi tract mi to write i" n few firms requesting them i i estimate, ii. . should '"■ Itotupht til a discount "' 38A]»or published price*. Public Lfbrariea aIkium unquestionably I* do lidcrcd oi whole :■!■ buyer*. For ficcond-hund count of nol Lea than 10 per * - » - thoulU I btoined, Jt

(V«i|itiMi!)\ li:ip|ioiH thftl liln-:in.-.. 1 1:.\ 4- offered I" 11. cm ftV« <"

Ilftocn hundred volunitu ol Aonond-hand lw«tki at an rd I -round price ol Id. •» Hd. n rolume. Thc*c uro otton worth buying, si though there maj be much rubhuth among the uumher, Ww

IsiIIhM fan lie Kitted :unl ri*-+ioM, 4ometiihr* for tin* nri toat, Kor nc»w*j»np*»i and periodicals tt i* well to ailvi

locally for wtlnmto*. I-Vom 10 to I > par cent, di* ml »houkJ

be obtained Moralnu; imper** are required early, and i

i -ni umaii ':'ii ii i Mus need where one at a < tel m '.c v

mi riiM]i- i .<< una i»ii' i<> 'i" bo

I I it": v Of I Minks ii rr 1 1 >l r!l nil I'll I - « l'Nlc-HUi*|Hirl eel lil.i':ii'ii'w h

British Museum : the i:< rd Office, o1 I Iw ol ;

papentt; the Clarendon Press, Oxford : the India Offln- "i I rcspff-riti^r the old creeds of the Oriental peopleM* the Bun

I'M lira I inn. Washington ; tllO MllllUlHiHilnil InMiliUi Pin 1: hi. Iplih

^n thorn iiul publisher* verj frequently send cupfe* ol buok»mnl pubHtmtlons. All Libraries atiould be enrolled an member* uf the i.

\*.mm-i;iI mi . iujiI chief librarian**, and in mime ease* 1 *--»-! t;ntt>. should In- not mil; permitted, Inn i (ted to attend annual meeting* of the Arwocintian. and their expensea paid la order thai they may do «<■. Tin onporlunit) of iuteivhunfrira; il'i- wiiii their fellow-profe«aion»lN is most uriuabl the iiii-i li'i'l- 1 'I libron admin tat ration arc ln-inj? conntnntly trnprortil, oml it Is imnoMible for libnninna to krep ulweaiil "i tin i prion union* they are in neraonal touch with their coHea^uev ports of the country. 'Hie Library \-.m... lion , ■,, ..v

In occupy ill tl'uc l»huc, nlnl t lien- in U-t n'r it u

future Afl mi addition t.» tlr- work -1 the parent \ District Annoeititiona uro hcinx formwl. That of the M (lintrit'l wuh the tir-i, iml uln-u'ly ^ome lielpfid »ind t'ujn

iM.-p-i nit» Imvc takra plwei'. Tlu1 rnufi'irm ire u*td ijnai

when i I- ol tl . lihrurii'S within tin- dtnti i

i pi pew have been reuiA, and vainoun C|ueat -rary

fldniinwtratloi ' TVwvtuisaA «\ \\\«^\>\*ww v..

TO PCBL1C LIBRARY CQMHXTTB&S 12ID commissioner. 4&,

eata

tions was formed on March 96, 1890, when the North Midland Library Association held its first meeting at the Nottingham Central Library, under the chairmanship of Mr, J. Potter Briscoe. There are ivquhvl to Complete the mvlc, District Associations f (ft Scotland, Ireland, Wales, nnd West of England, Yorkshire, and the Cleveland district.

In moot libraries, notwithstanding nil the euro which may he exercised, duplicate* and ujioalajogued hook* will aooumu- late, and what to do with these $9 oft times a troublesome

amotion. There is no reason why a system of exchanging uplioate* nnd surplusage should not be adopted. Nothing SXlstfi in the Aott to prevent it, «o lung as the IiomIek are not sold for any individual advantage, and Mil* is u*»t by any !iie;rm* probable.

It is very questionable whether the aid uf the J "reus h:is been sufficiently sought in giving publicity to the work of libraries. Tin* is a matter uf w&J lmportsooe>, and there ore not b ten1 editors sad managers of the local oeivspapfirs who would fljadlj

SivcaK the aid which lies; in their DOVOr WCTO flioy solicited to n so. Some libraries ;ire benefiting greatly from this press

publicity. Next tu the best Mep of placing the r 'nt additions

in B BpOCial ease which ran he cjixlly hi'imi by the readers, is ihe

plan of giving u list at the new books, with title and author's u ime and the library number, in the local prow, Explanatory

notes mv sometimes alwi given which are helpful to borrowent In one cane the list covers two columns of the newspaper, mid the editor may well advise, a* lie doc*, readers to cut tliesu lists mil as thev appear, and plan- thorn at (fie cad of the 1 catalogue^ as they will in tlus way be able to secure a complete tot ol the books on the shelves of the Public Library, information ol Ihe week's workings should be sent BYfitemabicaUy to the papers, and Intimation Of all matters of interest affecting the library. The

Lch . 1 press are capable ol being the beet possible friends to these institutions. In many DBMS this can already he said of tlam. hul there ifl room fta expansion in this direction. Some superior Individuals affleel to sneer at the local papers. They mi^ht just as well turn op tlieiv ZLOSCS at the »un, for the ttfluonoocf the loco 1 press is great, and ever becoming greater. The suggestion may he carried a step further. By printing, say fchfl reference catalogue, piecemeal in this way the necessity for a oaMoffue ol 'bin department for a small library would he obviated, for after printing it in the newspaper, a certain num- ber of impressions could be struck off while the type Is Standing. SiorC might be done in the wuy of supplying &mull printed slips a) booki on special subjects, say when a lecture is to h* delivered, or nt other time*. Gonoral rulop for reading and liiuta to renders might DC printed, in the printing at catalogues, a plan not generally adopted might bo more frcauenfctf tried. There would, as a rule, 1h* no difficulty in finding ;i focal ni-ni Owning a&d print- lug a newspaper who would take all the rinks of producing*, catalogue providing they are permitted le. \v>>-vv m\\i-vv\>^tovx\\*

I -

PI QUI i mllA&IBS.

.1 'M'-li end, the library to l»c ; supplied \m!'i r<>pir> i. i

the usual discount. Tfhis would often save i he&Yj IteD

printing falling upon the income.

II r i|iifKtivn of reports is u serious one at some lihrarics

where tlir revenue fa UnjUd. Whv Should OOt ttW I * J -* -i I I -•

itod in manuscript, and then after being pat > <■/ .'.-A In the local papers. The purchase •• p am i iei

Ltainiug it, ox some reprints tftru *fa >ri, w >uld often rave -'[<M':. Me outlay. This does not apply to the very large contrcvi lull might with advantage be adopted nt tin- average .■.. . tution. Hv the printing of the catalogues and report* I given to the newspaper otliccs tihh'Ii pood for the libra r.< cured, w 1m.iv this is dons no 1 nge of political fj ■■ a should chftriictGrixo It, and in order to remove the leu for this charge the work should be given alternately to the other representing :iii political parties

While i'i'Iit:- H" In Ilu-ML' reports i: rn:V\ br mlviHnl thai I he

report of the working of the library written hy the librarian should nlwny- and :i place. Many useful hint* could tie given by thsm

In Indicating where the work Is weak or strong md i luch ii-i

by tins means be done to develop the public Enteresi In their own institution, In course <>f time these report* wfll cfiase to be the mass of dry statistics which is now the main ehnroct* of many of them.

it I(h omrhl. to be sought and enrotiriiyc'l. Should imiv :i:i I valuable books bo offered, they should Ijc received with open arms. No individual member of 11 library committee ca

ilize his interesl in the library thnnbyagffl id Nwur and suitable books. Make it well known to your public

"i I ks will bo acceptable, and in the case of a m

i -f.iMishcd library iriv an idea of what kind o) books an State in advance that paper-back and elaborately Imardi

sermons, and the ffooar-i ly kind are not wanted h i

that £f>od engravings, pointings, tapestry, statuary. woul acceptable for the roadirnr-rooni, (.lifts such ae th< *c not made because they ore never sohVitcd. It m >rc wen i i this way wc shonld have brighter and more cheerful rooms which invito occupants by their prepossessing appeal a and elevate those habituating them. Committee* and oon eionore eon with the fullest Force point out that thoy are public custodians of an institution used by all classes in thoii comi ui An I'iirt "I ! i subject "1 making I'rM.uHK ohoerfn and inviting

interior di ration should he ir keeping with tin o »l Ihe

I uilding, XI i* i^ ■• ' <rr ago, and tho day of the pro repugnant in decorat ie-i: i*- over. There i^ no oVmbl which arc m themselves artistically beautiful, Mid where at! keeping w;(b this charueter have ;< most perceptible influenci tho users, They become instinctively eloan in their use of books and papers, and the surround] a ntudjousnass. rhorc is no reason ...

from the Science and Art Qe\w:tm*>w\ sVwxi.ii

TO PI'IM.I"' LIMtAftV QOUMtTTUW ANJi ( II « M I BIOS KB ■-. 1*9

the British UuseoiQi Should not Em u available for Public

Libraries as fur SChOOlfl <>f art mid RHlseUma.

Committees ami commissioners lind it difficult BOtnefctRUM to keep a middle oourm in the selection of the newspapers and periodicals. At some libraries there is the charge made (hat ihc newspapers of caia particular shade and wkmnng, largely pre- p inderatc over tbecn Fie ra of the opposite side. This ought n * *t to he. All sections hare to contribute to the library and the internet* of all wctione should be considered, In one - use thirteen papers"! one side wore taken ;i:id four of the other Of tl

twelve, all representing on< tide, jwere displayed on stands, i uo only two of the other section. This was manifestly unfair, ad when ver this in the ease n scandal id euro sooner or Later t< irino. Let tin: stomp of '■ no politics " and " no erred " be about every- thing done by the committee or eemmisBioners, These would do well to strictly avoid purchasing denominational papers; though they eon, of course, be accepted us gifta should tuny he oflcmL if oneu mtrodueed than will eooii Be st yew long list, lot ovary

"ism" will want to I>e ivpiVMenh-d.

There tire a few persona who frequent libraries who mom to

interpret the word *' free " to mean that they ure at liberty to cut

or maris the books provided at ri»e expeiixe hi the ratepayers. and

:o nli.-tiMi.-r p:is.-jnoH or advortmoiueutH iii the news].: [n-i's X lluii- iv. There ifl something peculiarly mean in this abuse "I

rin' Ubrariea, and library committees are otten at a loss how to put i slop to It. There is an obnoxious class of readers who take the liberty of marking on Che margin >>f the volumes they read passage* to which they attach some special interest) En other passages arc underlined. There is a tfiti more obnoxious

Who Write on the margins their comments on the text.

These literary snobs talce advantage of a common privilege and

Inflict upon Intelligent readers their eratfetfc otaervaMons, it wi.iii.i be a genuine satisfaction to all" who know how to use a

book which is public property to Bee H few of these persons in the police COUrb or l*dVe the cminty-cuiiit jnd;re, as the educational influence of Mich an experience would he likely to teach llieiu

mowi thing which they do not atpresent appear i i knew, Tlim- w

u Hither claws who nhould roeeiw attention, and that la the

niters or commercials copying out their orders, and Ghc

I j w\u- seem to infcM every pub LC bejkttngi

Tin- Question of as Insufficient revenue with * bach to do a 1 1 .1 i I 'apidly extending work is a serious one, but this la a matter winch can scarcely be dealt with here. Die towns where this is meat feu" arc settling the question for themselves. Whether tb

B ■<• iiHMii. outside the penny rate i-. not very clear. Thisdoc

apply to boeaara being held to produce ;i much-needed turn far Alterations or oth- r w poses- At Penrith, Denton, Dorlnston and

other places, bazaars for thin purpose win' VOTJ SUOCeesful.

Btuoiara bring ho many workers nxo ros Sold and excite so much

et that- they might be resorted to move frequently than the case. If they are feasible lor chanties U\e^ *ivy\V\ w&x&3 \*&

490

1'inur MP1LAHIW,

practicable Ua PubSc Ubratiee. Kie question htw over ami over i arisen iw to permitting the use tA foe Uiohnar-library to

[►er-Hinn outeide the horoujrh, on juy in ul' a Milwnp

or hulf-ycurly in advance, Donaaster, Worcester, cv-i. lfvu, Million, ntv\ other librariea already do tl fa \ irw fa that libraries have no legal power t < > 1 on 1 1 books t<< t»erBona residing outeidcthcmunicipulbnrough, nor under any ri>n<hriaxu»to make a charge for borrowing. The Acts expressly state th Libraries, on galleries of museums established under the

hluill bQ 0000 to the public fii-- Of nil il:;iri:.. Thin in i>rlit be

coxueruod t i moan Mint tho nowsroome shall bo i"t«-, bul th< context and spirit of the Acta toad tonhow that tho libra to bo Ere* ofall eharae to tho users other than tho rate, ii ii moat desirable that fibrariea should have this powcrpbat local circa nstnncee would always determine tho desirability of ear

it Miit. Th" question nf <ittKi-i'jj>tii»ii iv- mis :ui<l tiiliftcri|ititiii

Ubrariee conducted la connection with Public Library work, may be left rortfiepreacntjbutthctiraewilleorut when thee© will dad no I-:, ce in Public Library work. Tho desire for outlying town amalgamating with the large centres fa spread! ig ao thj tncnaaod ratable value wit come about, and the book wani thoat it present outside the t»oun(lnrte«ofmtiatclpaliHeaj>oaooaidag public i Sbr H lee win be mat.

There la Rood ground for thinking that tho original Eramei the Public TitbrarteN* Acts meant the penny only for ma and looked to the local governing body, r>r local lw?nevoh<D provide the building. It reasonable to expect r.hal Ttnrn Councils and Loral Boards shuuld do more out <>t tlied i Phi'Ihim-s hinds rnr library laif Mings than ifi at PTveeni the

Libraries cannot afford to lose the Anes for detention, the charge far the renewal uf tickets, or any of tho other usual rah- sidiary sources of Ln conic. Postcards, advising borrua particular book for which tlieybave inquired is In the library, and charged a pennj each, arc a source ol small income but thai chiefly for the convenience of the users.

\t part of lliia subject there is the larger one thai the fall oa of the penny thull he used fur library purposes. In not B few oases whanovot here is any balance luft, it Ea simply a savins; to the Town Council, and does not un to the credit of tho Public Library. The balance of £1600 at Preston, es ■■ n the Huvinflps for aevcrul yi'nr- in readiness for the expenses \ will oomc od the removal intothvncwbuUdinKihaabccnatcrribli bone of contention. A hnlanee of as much >• CcX)haa iron* Into the borough funds nl Stockport, and al Bricrlcy-hUI the unspent sum has gone to the credit of the Hoard. I the lull extent of the rule should be upcnt in each individual

There *h«>uhl It n<> -::vp\y IV.nn year to yc;ir, 01

^cumulating ol the rate for any unreasonable i

the Aet« nre adopted hi«iun operations aro begun i hut SID only be obviated by the Library Commits own bonking account and *Autt\n*.\*rt'TO% VYwSs ww fund.

it> n ui.K i.miiAitY OoiOUttvU a.\i> OOlDQItfUlJVBWi '*91

nob unreasonable to make tins request) especially u* there arc several precedents Plymouth in particular where tine instalments arc placed quarterly to the credit of the honorary treasurer, who is a meml>er of the sub-committee. Thin is a matter which should he pressed home; but in any ense committees should see that they have the fullest fraction of the penny, and that DO balance in allowed (<» go r.> the credit of the general borough fund. The foot of the CommisaionoTfl of fcho London libraries having u Bcporatc banking account if d strong roaeon why committeeB nhould be allowed to adopt the mime

plan. There tS also BACd Mint the rate should he levied on the

grow ratable value, and not on the not The poundage for

collodion i*- now an illegal clinrijo ncoordisg to tin- Amend- ment A.el of 1889,

Thosubjeol closely allied to thia is that of the rating of Public i,iiii':mos; ;uki no apology in iv«)iu-ii«.' for stating that Public Libraries, museums and an galleries should bo exempt not only bom local rates hut imperial taxation. Where Utarory lecture* halls :irc rentedj OX B Charge ix made for admiw<i"n to the special exhibition* in ;o't naileries, it is different. 80 far us the local rating of these institutions goos it is simply a i|uestioii of taking the money out of one pocket and placing it in mother, ffovr

VHvioil are? tin* :irr:ingemcnt** in opi*r:ition will he xoioi on nlci-- e net* to the -t:ilisti('K Thin exemption from (oral ratis in clearly

shown hy 5 and 7 Vint, n 3i\ which extends to England, Scotland, and Ireland. The title to exemption must rest mi the Vollov. grounds: That the institution exisis exclusively for one or more of tin- specified purposes; that the land, houses, or buildings, of parts of houses or lMuldlng&,to be exempted are occupied hy it, whether u tenant or owner, tor the transaction of Its work, and for

eaminy Into effect it> purpuses ; Dial Ihc instil lit ion la supported

wholly or in part from the rates or hy annual voluntary oonfcri- bulionei and that it doe* not, ami by its laws may not. make any dividend, gift, division, or bonus In money unto ov between any

of it* committee or those who use the iii.siilntioii. Hie official return as to the Income-Tax in relation to charities, moved for by Lord Addingtun and ordered to be printed recently by the [loose of LordSj has now been published. The present Lord VMmgton, in n powerful letter, called fresh attention to bhfl subject in the oolunina of one of the London dailies. The return discloses nothing novel, but gives some interesting official facte. \m« eg the li^t of chanties hitherto exempt, but to which their tOT DOMtroction of the word "charity'1 oaf alroady made the I nland Kcvcnnc refuse the usual allowance, wa notcmony well- known organizations. Side by side with the Itritixh and foreign Bible Socii-ty, the Kdinburgh Committee for the l^pagation of

Hie Itos|k.'1 in Kmvign Pints, tlie Society for Promot QUI Christian

Knowledge, the National Society, and the Moravian Russian, va see such edueationul trusts as Ihilwieh College, Monmouth

(irnmmar School, Kru* KdwnnT* .>. honl, lluini hu;Ii:*ih . St. vW<* Grammar School, a tiff the Working M<stC* CoWfcUj* ^Qsr$8n&£fe-

403

WBur i.i iira man.

aw also oome upon raveral trusts tox Public Libraries, and fop hospitals, besides such phflanttinroic institutions :i" the I

Hum t n --in. -iv. the (i«iu.'i'ii».-N*i's" Benevolent In^liii:

many others, Tin- case in its legal aspect is tlic subject if I

penutiiK appeal to the ticuse of Lott

Tin- iUi>-!'iM\ Dl otherwise "! Opening I ■iii»ir;i:*v p

hetweon the adoption of the Acta and tlie completion, of ;i |wp ■■mI l.'i Mm: qui -h"ii of irrcat hnpoi I i ■• c, Vfl i

:i in*! inquiry, the present writer has come to to* ootid . where ft permanent building is likelj

am ■• i \\ foi nso during a period n >t c x< ceding cigbt< i u i tonths, tin' opening af tci tporary rooms i* quite unnecessary

r i . <>> i n tmbcr of instances, are Ear from nuccessfa] from the

point ofviow ofn ffood bcftinntafl <>t' the work.altho igh in point oi attendance and use made of them thej have farcxvccdi I .

The purehuflinp, oliuiKifjin^, and CQtaiopninp : 0,000 Toluraes should duvo at leual twelve months devotee to it, sad iln1 BuporvlslOTi ot i<'in|^r:in rooms n<* toss&ri V I [ to ittentfon of bho librarian from this more importenl The oi < ..I providing ncwspupci* and pono ■■- for rooms uj almost as much n* for u permanent building, One ohjo iilon against temporary rooms la thai ihsy lieeonie in crowded lew i"" rtonuontfy the resort »>i Nthe prroal unwaancdrntotha isioi of the "grenl wi d cd." In i ' trg ?1 i Ltd i.v thl ►poarsp for there Is more mora for the mixing ol the of society, t. result so desirable. T>mi>orary rooms Enttor

llu« raW Without AfTordlnp :ui\ Si1ei|ll:iT«' :)(h:nil:t;:(- fo r.

They are. as :i rule no badly lighted anil ventilated that the work hcirlna . l r . --■ - her under depressing imsplccs, and then Uiiiir oiil disappointment. The fclat, which comes from tbs tavcilng mill opening of ;i sjieeially-deshcncd linllduiir, m alwenl where temporary newsroom*, ami [Kwliapx a i i dins depart! lire first opened. It Is, or com -so, mposKfbk1 to lay down inj rule, hut the expenditure of several hundred pounds ii inn! temporary rooms habitahle, merely to i»- used for two or i years, should oulj be entered inUi with coneiderallou, can Forethought. In small lUstriels the wine nrjfumeuts naturally not apply*

An to tin .m!\ IsauQil \ orotherwiw of opening branch Ifbn much maybe said 'vt and against The demand far branches

COm OS, >it COWSC, from the ratepayer* In the OUtlylnp '!-l^^l^

who my thai they arc (-■■ far iwny from the central depi avuil bbonw lvos of it, wh 1 they have at the sara< time i" codI i- bote to 't. Tin- is peasouablCj l>ut, i xci pi i*i the lurc*c i hi.- cnicstion of branches should be looked at ii- new. One well-equipped nnd efficiently ndminfstcrcd I Hotter than a hultaturvod ccntrul building md I\\ - or brttochee Every brand openo*! tends to drain lh< porcnt I tiirion, and there to alroady «o much re rc-

quJred thai most libraries have reached the •>» rj mi i ol ^> in vombfo I do with n \>etitv^ tv*«. U docs seem that v.

TO PUBLIC LTBttABY COMMtrrRFS .\N1> eOMMISMONBIW- 108

the furthermost limits of n town do not exceed I from

the -'i ntrnl library, d branch is Dot d wolutcly necessary. In toad of ftipenflitc branches with separata staff and stocks "i books* one good central building would appear the best, end Board Schools u 01 as nowooms, op for branch lending acpartnv The foot i'- already recognised that to place libraries fa the midst afpeopl* ' fi<! > ••■. ;it once a oec of those libraries it further admitted iiiit :t centra) building, were it never so large, would

*bo unoblo to rood the deraanci made upon it were there no inMiu'lirs. Tlu- wiii.it' nuttier is tentative, and no definite rule can be laM down( it [s purely a question ol ws^inoanfij sad the rallesl efficiency and oorapjetenefls. tt* in Uie meantime ii" .Iim-s something to check the un venal demand For branches the object for the present wfl] be astned.

tote opening of delivery stations in ;i plan deserving "f atten- tion. I'lY'ijUi'Iitlv tills Would iili\i;i[f the liccrssilV 01 :i blTUirli.

In America these delivery stations ure quite rwnmrai Ob cer- ium days the I ks u* Hooted and the new ones left &n b

iih'iuis i>r supplying outlying districts from tin' oentral library, ii seems very praencabli . Coca] posl unices would frequently be convenient Btaoonit,

library tafiuranoG is an Enroortaal nutter. There homos to be ;i movement in Europe for the insurance of the great Public

•Libradea. Ran boots and uiauuwrijrte. like ytctuxee, ii is true, connol i»t- 'insured" in the afrrlol senec of Efoe ivorcl,«iflco no amount of rnonen can be on etraivalent for the destruction <»r unique historical docunaenia ox pointings; money, howei -■.. Lfl better than nothing, 5t< Gallon has fust insured Its splendid ItifUbibliothek for tho terra of five years for £30.000, and it" 'VadianV tor £4,800 ; Ziirich, its library in the Yvasacrkirehe for i' 12.040, and itM imimwcritit oollection For 0&\flOOj Basi . El oniv rsity library fW CH>,Joo; onrl Home, it* city library for t>,*-M>. The Grand Ducal library u( Karlsruhe has also been

insured for I'L'O.'HXt. Ih. iimy;iiilicciit librum-* ol tin- British

Museum, 'it Berlin, Vienna. IMriB, and Munich are h\ ill unuiHiuvd. tlighor insurance should I>e resorted to. and the premiums ought not to be advanoing, soeinffhov largely the elootrfc light is co into use in the reference an<l lending libraries.

The charge is frequently brought before committees and com- missioners fcn*1 ths hooks of which thei have lbs general oversight are the means of dluerntnatmg Inlectlou* dtscanrw rhe utatemeni

is monstrously untrue, and invariably em mates £r the %\ >wod

enemies ol these instil itfons. 11 Is doubtful whether there has ycl been a single Instance proved beyond the shadow of doubt where the bonta i »f :i t'liMii- Library hni o been tin- meansol transmll rtnj Llaoi k either among the library iwnlsl intw or (tie public, ftul we ore warned that books may earn those horrible ''germs/ or " niirriiin >." or what nut which sow tnemselv^saxid yi&ld <* harvest ol fever. Ere long there may be a demand that '»or pu i iHc libraries be kept redolent of disinfeotantB.and that every lK»uk be* CiuuivyAwV or otherwise clefluacd before fl is returoca tn \.>v* i?tw\i 'Vv^

»"1

1'tTIlJC MBRAKiaS.

"genua" ore becoming B terror of lire. Winn »-.; hare fCMgm or dWnfoctcd OUT books, boiled our milk. analyse-. OUT water. killed our out*, deoUMd I - 000 a Bab, iui.ijitod rc*U)iruto<r», ana sternly refused' i<i -h:iiv- hand vtth our Monde, and adopted all t h >ther precautions which are recommended oga scopicul OUgbonrtf, will it bo worth while to go oh : UuppiK for HIT i >»■: i --<• of milld thfl majority of prefer to take

ottr rwfc. it i" not said thai necessary precaution* should art li»- adopted, and a rule or two in tho byo-lawa doi ialh

w.th -h> Bttbieet ought to be embodied m the codo ol even

institution. Dlfl eiivulatnm af bOOlM m an;, iiualj

would ot ruurne lie prohibited, and in Hie eveut >i . diaaaM apjiearing after it hook had been borrowed, should at once bo disinfected, before being .^ ed m

circulation Compulsory notification to lihruriunK of Infec disease among the families of their readers should be im open. More arrmpent mcaaiuvs would necessarily be :ippi . the coat of persons borrowSng from the librnry while trieras in reeled or living in an atmosphere of infection. Permlanta t.i niii any lunik xhmild be Withheld for B SUflldent time "I he

disinfection, or better still. If possible, the substitution ol a new vi luuie I'm i»ne ahead;* taken nut, ihould U- tntisted 00 and mo repetition of the lii>l offence be held to justify cxelu l he benefits of the library for a considerable period.

The work of disinfecting bookfl [abetter done by Hie lib. uuthoriLius than b> tbe borrower, and several methods an- A present to operation. One su^t-sUon yoes in tin- extent of t i

that the !■ i nineiit ttuard should he advised In lake hueh

legislative aetioii as will enable il impose a penalty i>r inmate "I an infected house who may make use ..if liook

Public libraries without notification. Trie compulsory notUcn-

liou id Uitrclimo -I ...-nihi1- h,w. now been dealt with b) in V t ) Parliament, wlii-h li.r- )»!oced the matter on am 1 i >' tag.

Ar Dundee they hove a simple uppuriitii* ID OSC whei ThiM coiiMSte of a sort of dosed cupboard made of orui tinplatc, with a lid at the top, a wire shell half wu\ up, and .! little door at tho foot. Ity on arrangement with the sanitari inspector, nil oaaofl of infootioue disease* are inunediatelj reported to the library, and a notice in at oneo want forbiddu podding in such houses to return book* until thos hou MM are certified free of disease, m Sheffield they tried a v>\ :.-m >i

hoatlnff the books In an oven to the temperature i 1 h.iilii

and that ot the same rune they Nhould bo exposed to th Of carbolic acid. By usirn/ hmliiie; water or <

ioureoeJ heat a constant moderate temperature would bo insured. and this with impregnation by tbe vapmir of carbolic, i heeuiv iIh' hooks being thoroughly disinfected, ii i*

that this plan doe* nol Injure the binding or cnuae the I In fcs

amoll of the carbolic acid for very lone afterwards. A curfouN experiment \u\h>h eu two v^ Uu« u.kwi

TO PrUUC UBUAHV COMM1TTBR8 AM' « i).V»IIN«li'> Kit?. 495

of Dresdeu. It liaviug lieou suy^-Metl that infectious dif*ea*en were spread by mean* of books in libraries, a number of much- used volume* wore taken from the town library, ami the dust from the leaves and covers w&e torn) in nutrient media ami cultures reared, the result being that no microbe*, helonging to infectious diseases were found, the duat being in fart nothing but ordinary dust of a harmless character.

The Him nice I and beat arrangement whioh luu* yet been hutro duced ia tne one in use at the Prewton Public Library, and the invention of the librarian, Mr. \V. S. Uramwefl, A UC&toh of it in whovn, It in a mcrul famigutor made from l»»th wive guuge shoot iron, with angle, iron door-siippm-tn and *ide-shclf jv.ii*. Its w-oight is Jicwt. I i|i*., and the cost of it was AM 10s. Coitt-

Euiiiul MilphuroiiN acid ft burned in a anmll lamp, oral a raw ttle buHU'o* to disinfect the books. The apimmtiiK > an be iruVU anv size. I'Yom foUF I" Bvfl feel tiiffhi ami tln< width in propor- tion, if- n useful size. Jt should be raised from the ground bv means of n wood frame. 1'he shelves should I* perforated in ...It to allow of a free eiivululmu >>! the I'uiiich of the aeid.

n'H'h ihiMiniMi Ai'i'.nuri^.

Wbi-n not in use ii look* vcjy much like u book-*alfe, and answer* all the purposes >! DnOi Let it be again staled that

librarians with twentj-eeveo to forty yeara axperienceof Public Library work luivrni'u-r known or heard of dineoM befog com*

iiiiiiik .ili-d by books to reader* or even to the awo>Umt>- who are constmitly handling the boolu and breathing the air of the roonu

in which they ore pl,i<-<-d

A* a matte? of mumr importance, it may be suggested that books in constant reference, such an directories, imcctteera, q ■■ . i lopiedias, and other* might be placed for use ujj Rsr \w&>V\r,

49(5

'.'I UnBARIES,

would not he necessary to take op t'"- lime .if (he king for them. Wherererpof [bTe, javoniJo lfbmrieB shoiild be started. The i i Ggteadinft everywhere) with specially hooldi and

cataloguce. ■•""! uro doing toed jorvico. fJo >fc i for the blind

. ii"H :-l iti'I itnlv i "t I venookod, but it' tl.tr arc alrca

I»- found, and are aecoeable at dome local institution for tin- blind, i !,.-i, . !i,,i io a ai h need to obtain air it the

h ira ■;. . 9 id v 1 1. •■ or* Eocnrod aho ild be mow w son? I k

: th< "• i i i -tithtii/ns. The question of hours to an important one, bu1 it - i. i .V downs Sxed ml* for all districts Etorlendin irenea

libra ■:•■., 10 a,m to i> p.m. In, oxoept in special enaes, AiURoiont For newsrooms in urge towns 10 p.m. Ii not iiiio'iKionublo time. There should be for the el libi i . oja assistants two to three hours off riu'ri day, and half -day holiday poT week ihould ho pvi n. n . .in, i should not bo expected to he at hi* post more than two 01 evenings a week after »\ p.m. Xo matter how well a Public Library is managed, and

ii ■•:« i' in':illiJ>ilil y :< l'lir:oi:tti mtiy rnnii'^oiiirbmiy i- WTO to " ru-l

Into print" over aome petty imaginary grievance or other; aad

much Injury lms often hern done to it good librinMim hj gntnfl

anonymous Berihe or other, who aired himself in the local prcm In nine cones out of Leu those letter* of complaint are either crobchetmuugera or people who BuSer From ;i i feultrftudlug uyioplaint. And io the majority of c ises the libi to his assistants will be in the right uid tin- c impb lruu I In the

HUE. Theaeeoiiii)I:i:iit«coM ul opic* (VI DUO UfflC

it will be that the committee turn ( i- ran Donaon

miiijiI.) hecanite they will not add certain books vrhioh those busybod as suggest. At other times it will be thai they 1H011 their political proclivities to influence their choice of boos that political pamphlets of one Mhiu-lejiTc ri» be I'ournl on the i

o( tho roaoUn^-Toorn, and not pamphlota of the other side. latter fa*'t would bo explained by the pnmphlotA hnvinJE been given, only an anonymous lei tor in the press eases the fcell i the complainants so much more than Baking i question from the librarian rospeetinat the proeonoo of those political books on khf tables, (t is significant that in nil parts ol the anonymous letters reflecting on the management of 1 *■ ii -l ■*• i Kvariw ; v, becoming fever as the year* paei bj

497

LATE8T ITEMa

A poll in to be* taken utmost immediately in rhe two metro- politan pflfffg^fffl of Lowiahaau and Bft Geor,gc, Hanover Square.

Tin- opening erf the Edinburgh Public Library, on June J>, ihik),

by Lurd Iloaebcry, wm an event ol great importance to the library movement in Scotland.

At liunliriilge, in Ouuty DoWU, Ireland, the OUeatfon hits juM

come forward. It is Mated that n Indj ami genUcmaii iu & have offered provide the town with u Public Library on condition that the Act* arc adopted.

The msc of Tipton. Staffordshire, Is peculiar. The Acts hnvo been adopted, but the clerk of the Local Board Ik unable toglvt the date of Mich adoption. The Act* have, however, not vet been i»ut into operation, \ tew energetic people are required iu Tipton to Bee that there la an cod t<» Bita lethargy,

The adoption of the tat* in Carlisle, «m June 9, I&90, reflect* credit upon the public spirit manifested in Che town The statutory iiieeting waaaa representatiYe as it could well be. The Town Council had provimwly received .i formal offer of the library

>nnd other property of the Mechanics Institution on condition that it was made the uaaffl of a Public Library under the Acta. The gift, altogether. a noble one. Burn Quarter of a century the institution has existed, and at mir ten- ii^ Membership wue »e*3

large. Il wffl form an excellent nucleus IW a Public Library , .on!

Carlisle is. fortunate ji having bo good a Ijcginning.

Eft mmaev ov ntK Adoptions of tub Acts up to Datk.

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PUBLIC MlimillKN

PuBLir LnuJUXfl ISrXBLlftHKn ITHitR Hpecui Act*, m;: \ ti. I

\M I-: Ti-'i 11Y ,\ T/K'U Imi-CiH \CKST Al f

Birmingham, litighlon, Leed* (applying), Liverpool ,'cutitiniip Manchester, Norwich, Oldham, Oxford, Preston, St. Hokum, Wal*all (fippl ving), Wigaoi Wolverhampton, Swansea, Dul-lin,

Pi" HI. I.' 1. ![;[..-. fcXBB AND Lo«'AL R\rEX,

There much diversity in tbie matter. Some are totally e\. iodic partially oxeinpt, and sonic hove to pay all loeal rates. All aliuula !"■ t-xempt. Tlds toe clew And emphatic meaning of 6 & 7 Vict,,

The, following arc totally exempt : Anton, P.irkrnherid, Uiiniin^ham, I'.ii.kburn, Brierley Hill, Cambridge, Canterbury, CHtU<i-.> i u Darlington, Derby, l>onfam>r, footer, Folkestone, Gsta»hoedf Han toy. Harrogate, Kidderminster, Leuk, Leieesier, Loughborough, Mace In MauobeBtWj Newport, Northampton, Norwich, Plymouth, Richmond Ilo'-.hJalo, Sbefurld, Southampton, Sonthport, Truro, Warwick, VT.> Wadaoaburr, Wfiitooeron, Wigan, Winefnnl, Yarmouth, 1 1 nwiok Thurao, Wick, Cordiir, Dnndalk, Kulham. Lambeth, Woatm

The following aro partially exempt: HI acU pool. Bolton, i ■rintol, Fleetwood, Kewnwtle-oii-Tyiie, South Shiolds, Watoast t

Thi Following i«iy ell local rates , Ilarkuijr, Barrow, Rootlo, Bred! "id. Hi [dfgwetor, Cheltenham, Denton, Ealing, Halifax, Hertford, Ipai Loads, Muitilewoi'otiyli, Nelson, North wi eh, Oldham, Kotbernam, Bi Btookton, I yaemonlh, Walsall, Wimbledon, Dumbarton, Dunfermline, h'orlar, Paisley, KtUirk, Bangor, Swansea-

I'i'hi.k; Liiuury LOJUR.

The following are tlio loans in couuorliuu wiLh Public Librarian ml* of interoot, teime of repayment, and source- from whem-c uh-.-iin.. I . Birmingham. £7S,000, for 100 years, from various soorcoe, at SJ to 9 1 1 i. : I'.i.i :'■ i-n. £3,000, PoliceSuporannuati i Fond, for forty yeei ■I percent, ; Bolton, £3,000, Preston Having' P.ank . !■■ thlrtj years, at 4 pr rent,, and two smaller loans for ten and tu yeaie ; Bristol, £5,000, private loan for five, seven u.ci'1 t»n vm •. -it ."■; pot cent. -. Brixton, £1,700, for thirty yeans, at3$ pel cool , Uholteuhao, £10,000 Royal Liver KriondW Society, for thirty year*, at »? por . Cheatorfield, £1,000, Hoyul Loudon Kriendly Society, at 1 I Why, £.V)Q, from pru-nJp ^oin/'n at 41 par rwit, Ihidloy, j'".uihi> fbf tiiiny yaan, at 4} par oent : fialfng, £2,000, Kriondii Provmonl Iiiaiituiion. m .;■.' percent. . Exeter, £1,030, for thirty yenra; Folki jCU.fiOO ; liateohe.td, £7,8.10, from private person*, a! 3 HandBWorth, 48,000 ; Manchester, £18,630; KewonaUi •• Tttio. £24,000, private eoarcea, at 3J per cent; Northampton, ' B00, Hull

ago' Bank Cut thirty veara, and £2,500 for sixty year* ; t 1 m Kochdali', £A,fiQ0 j Koihnh/uii. E1.900, fur ihlriy y^.i

!.' w i1''.!. from Suneraniiuaiiou Fund, at 2) pw cent,, roparniant £500 annoally j ShrewBDury, £2,000, 1, s of II. ^I.Trei

E ,82$, nl 4 per cent.; Stockton, £2,206, F> IVovidoiii Institution l par con t., ropay I Wth

fbl flftj years, 44 ]>er cent. ; Walaafl, £1.000; V:mu.l . per i«ent. : West Uromwieh, vi.M'u, i ir r.h rty yean VTIiiteb fur thirty yetw, at .if \w cent, t Widnoa, £700, at d Wimbledon, £4,000, froui Prudontfa] Aasumnce Ooiupany; V..:, 50, prirate sontce, foTt\urt,5 iftata, mXl^yat oeut. ; A1

>'i MM'li"-.

509

S -irate source, at '6\ per ooul.. annual repayment -U6Q. ; Dumbarton, 300, Gdedoman Iijsnraaofl Company, for thirty years, at 1 percent. ; iCdinburgh, £4,500 for books, i-epayahU- in tiva yearly instalments ; Orangoninuth, £*oo, rcpwi'1 by annual instalniPntR of £50 : Cardiff, £10,000, for eighty years, at 34 per cent, and -1 per cunt. ; Swansea. £18,567, Corporation Loan Fund, &t H DOT cent; Uatleraea, £14,000 London County Council, at 3J per <:cnt., £3,000 repayable in fifty yars, £8,650 in thirty years, £2,050 in ton years ; Chelsea, &17,500 ; Claphani, £4,350, London County Cotvnoil, at S$ Mr cent, £9,300 tor thirty years ami £1,000 for ten years ; Clprkenwill. £0,000. Orrterof Forest*™, 3J per (•(int., £5,500 repayable in thirty fHXB, £500 hi Il-u year*: £o,000, M> ttopoli(Hi) Board" of Wor^ Tin thirty yeare, at ;;.' pu 0*nt, ; IUiunni- Mnith, £1,500, Loudon County Council for 6vo roars, at per cent, ; Konalogtou, £1,150; Wandsworth, £3,700, for thirty years.

SaLAIUES Or ClIIISF LlUiUaiANH.

Borrow, £150: Belfast, £220; Birkeiiboad, £200; Birmingham. £500; Buotle. .£175; Bradford, £200; Durslom, £70; Derby, £200 and bou.'o, coal and gas ; Dudley, £100 ; Folkestone, £100 and roonia ; Harrogate, £70 ; Heywood, £78; Kidderminster, £105, but pays aeaUt- ant and for cleaning library ; L»;ede, £300 ; Leicester, £1S0 ; Liverpool, »: in Loughborough, £«5 ; Poole, £30 ; MaeelMficId, £100 ; Mum I Mb i £350; Maiykboue, £120; NewcHsUt-uu-Tjne, £300; NuUinghaui £225 ; Oldham, £200 ; 8t, Hcluus, £J50 ; Warrington, £155 and EoUM, W'liii. Iiliv ;i, £00 and hoiwfl, otc,; AVolvrlminptoi), £176 •, Clapbam, £200 ond house , Cbolsoa, £200 ; Falhara, £170, houap, cool, audgoe.

Income from Fixes, akd Vouched ok Tickets, and Amount 8rrnr Ansuallv for Pemodicalb and Newsi/apeiw.

Abbreviations K , Finos; V., Vouehera; I'., Periodicals and Nevsp)i|x*rx(

AahLuii. P. £95; Aston, F. £05. P. £50: Barrow, F. £15. V. £1*. P. £83 ; Bilston, P. and V. £5(3, F. £10; Birkenhead, F. £64. V. £15, P. £100 i Birmingham, F. V. and CaUbtrueh £652, P, £438 ; Blackburn, I'. *M6 ; Blackpool, P. £53; Bolton, F. £6S ; Bootlo, P, XiO ; Bradford, i r.v*. V. £38, F. £312 ; Brulgewater, F. £45 ; Brierley Hill, 1'. £3j ;

Tirutol, F., V. and Catalogm* £4iW, P. £36fl ; Cambrid^. F. £4B, P. £118; Carllou, P. £10; Cheltenham. P. t78, V. £22. P. £66; Clitheroe, P. £13; Coventry, P. £47; Darlington, K £5(1, V. £12, P. £«4 ; Derby, F. £50, V. £0, P. £56 ; Doueaetor, F. £29, V. £40; 1'. W9| Dudley, P. £46 ; EiliUff. R £80, P. I'll: Pb*t*OOd,P.£80| i.flt^li.ml, K. 240 1'. E66- Handawnrth. I'. £63 ; Hanlny, K. £4tt : Harro^te, K. iml V. £80, p. £40 1 Hineklev. P. £4fijj Kingston, F. £20, F. £45 ; Leamington, F. £0lt | Leeds, F. £840, V. £200, P. £-182; Leicester, F. U>1. P. £03; F. £80 ; Loughborough, P. fflfl , Mnu- ohoittir, P. £2,053; MUlom, P. X10 ; 9«WUk P. £86 ; NoWeaatle, F. £15d, V. £10, p. £113; HorthaHffltoa, P. £50; .Mortbwieh, F. £2S ; Norwich. \\ £68, P. £(J8 ; NottSngfiun, i' 61 M: rivn>oiitli, } - Portsmouth. F. £50, P. £(15; Preston, F. £50. X. U0, l\ C68] K-idlnj;. F. £84, P. £100; Rirhmond, P. £58; ShellUM. P. £2J7, Y. £C(>. F. £250. South Shields, F. £47, P. £71; Southampton, P. £75 ; 8outhport, F. £22, V. £20, P. £«J0 ; Stafford, P. £32 ; Stockport, P. £55 ; St. Heloiw. F. £34, P. £78 : Warwick, P. £96 ; WednoAhury, F. £12. P. £40 ; Whitehaven. K. £54, P. £flO{ "Wigan, F. £28, P. £fifii "'arnimiili, F Ji.'ir;. v. filB, P, £*fl : Ahardwn, F. £l4S,Y.£AV>¥.4StA

Yarmourli

510 PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

Alloa, P. £40; Hawick, P. £35; Cardiff, F. £112, V. £22, P. £102; Wrexham, P. £47 ; Dundalk, P. £25.

Dimensions of Main Rooms.

The following are the dimensions of the main rooms in a few repre- sentative libraries. Abbreviations L. L. , lending library ; R. L., reference library ; N. R., newsroom :

Barrow, L. L. 35ft. x 40ft., N. R. 60ft. x 40ft. Birkenhead, L. L. 52ft. x 24ft.( N. R. 65ft. x 40ft. Blackburn, L. L. 65ft. x 20ft., R. L. 68ft. x 34ft., students'

rooms 17ft. x 16ft., 16ft. x 15ft. Brixton, L. L. 24ft. x 18ft., N. R. 45ft. x 30ft. Coventry, L. L. 30ft. x 22ft., N. R. 62ft. x 32ft. Denton, L. L. 39ft. x 24ft. Folkestone, N. R. 60ft. x 30ft. Ipswich, R. L and N. R. 75ft. x 36ft. Loughborough, N. R. 45ft. x 26ft. Macclesfield, N. R. 46ft. x 30ft

Nottingham, L. and N. R. 88ft. x 44ft., R. L. 88ft. x 44ft. Oldham, L. L. 60ft. x 301t., R. L. and K. R. each 60ft x 25ft Rochdale, N. R. 54ft. x 30ft Sunderland, N. R. 65ft. x 35ft Wednesbury, N. R. 40ft x 27ft. Wigan, R. L. 81ft x 37ft, N. R. 45ft x 86ft. Yarmouth, N. R. 50ft, x 25ft

.-,11

APrEKDIX I.

[ :^' Uh'jIc for ffanditHto.]

WHY SHOULD EVERY TOWN HAVE A PUBLIC IIBRABYt

I :■ i ii k a rate supported Public Library ia oa neoffMM? for the mental and moral health of tho citizens a* good sanitary arrange ment- Water ftnppty and fltreot lighting are for tho physical health xtmI comfort; of the people.

II. Ik-i'AUBC the ralo foi Ha BOMXirt 18 very Muall : the utmost amount |M'iiii'It'<i bj tli>.- l'nl'l;-; Libuuiv- Actsbei&i "nr /'■'im/ni On

/'.., mI mi r..'/ m ih- ttatahU Pirii .

III. Iteoauso 4 I'uMii: Library in town property, into which any person

can outer during tho rBOOflD&ctd honra without let or hindrance.

IV. BlOBUM if El rim I'tiivorh-ily OTthfl wr.rking QUUDeS

V. Bomdm it ifi opou to ALL claseeo, rich and poor, ami where Pnblk

Libmites exist they are actually used by all ofoaMBj fn-m thu profefflion*] man to tho hnmlluut working man.

VI. IViway it ix an education*! institution ; and education ileojww the

HUM of t.hn duties and [irivi leges Of(Dtfuii8Mp.

yti. BoctnM tba existence or absence of a Public Library in a town in

btflog MttOptaul iu :t standard of Lhu intelligence and public spirit

manifested in that town. VIII. became tho newaroomo attach od to Public Libraries afford a pUu

of lOftt, recreation, aud Improvement, without any char^o I'm

admission. \ lit'cause for young people of both sexes a Pnblir Library tflbrdl

boniij place to widen tbey can go. instead of loitering aindr.v.l.v

about the public street*. X. liocauno a Public Library is ono of tlio boet invent™ onts a dintiict can

D iota for the welfare ot its citizens. \I lli'iaimn there isnoriir for which there U uu tniT6rtif>tOSnd tftflgiblfl

benoflt a* out of (fat paaay nta fbi &u lujrpcri of n Public Library.

XII. lSucuaso it bring.* the vunt stores of our nobli: English litci.il i<

within tho reach of all. \M1. BogMUR It : cultivates habits of rca'ling, and reading I right.. n

and malcnt* the hnnir mnro r.hoorful and nttnu \.\ i . JCIV. rieeauso ill ni'ojjruwivo towns have Adopted the Public Llbrarlm

Acts, and nu town Of village alive U' Lin: DCOdl "I" bO'tUy abuuli]

bo without ono of these admiroMc institution; . XV, liecaiifio in no town where they hove OflOO established in tin rate Foi 1

ob a bullion, and it is, in fact, IS many aaju till DMlt QUOOflUlty I'M in thiM-arr-napor. \VI. lici'Aiixc Public Library building* always impiou lie: ilninn;1

property* Some UavIcmui.ii advertise Llicir^ Ousincaa as bein^

within ao many minutes' walk of tlic Public Library.

513

PCDLIC UDOAIIIES.

XVII. HrcanM wo do not wont Old Knglaud to be bttuad oth<r countriea, and tho United StAts*. France, Germany, ami the Auatr&kjo Colonies, have long Ago ocreptAd Public Librari*.*. *u abtolata necittcltiub.

Will, Uocouec tint Kraal uacfalurju of Public Librwioo in town where they are ostabliehed hae been proved beyond any possible doubt

M\. Bosom a I'ublic Library provide** a pliwc of roforonoo for Patent*, Ham and Technical IlooVs, Qovornmen.1 Docuine&ta, I

which the aittaana in ev*wy town hIiohM iiavo *a*y miun* d

K booh

XX Ikcaiuo it in saiil that the workmen of ionic other oou

battel educated than oun, and Englishmen are Jotcrmiuod ihi thin ahail not bote; and a* Ofio forward step ii, evury tnwri ought to have a Public Library.

Thomas G%SKKWOOX>. Author of " Piblic Libran.x

THE EARLIEST APPEAL FOR PUBLIC LIBRARIES.

[Tlu- following iw I Iip earliest unitfnl for Public Libraries in Cng I which r.h«re in any rerord. It was first published in 1699. The ontaint character of thesjvUiaK Las been maintained.]

AN OVERTURE FOR ESTABLISHING OF BIBLIOTHECKS IN EVERY PAROCH THROUGHOUT THIS KINGDOM.

IT is uw essential to the ituliuc of Lo In: dc-drou* of Km \

Ad it is for them to bo rational Creature*, for wo wo norther col tine for our Reason, but to teok oat and search for th? Know].- . all t&OM things of which wo are Ignorant. fcPo in 6W

to Hi'- «w» f\i ratn, to fte cxtreiwil therewith. Thatbemgborn h Indigent and Igiim-ant, we should be forced to enquire by bhi I

KcaaiJll, lill" lii' Nat in «■ ,iild B BOH Odfi "1 dJ bllOM III I.;.-. "I.i !i w

•boat DO, and to Invent and Perfect oil suoh AiU and Man ifl are nocowoiy for thu *up|>ort of our Llec*. All which thlSM ai* w numerous, and the way* of attaining to the ICnowledga of ih< i . di'lienlt, longsonc and uncertain, that it would lm but a very until Deoieo oven of the meanest Art or Science, which any man could ituiti unco by hi* own particular Study and OuaeTvatiuu, il he were tloeli all tlicW) Helps wo receive from others, by Word and Writing.

Thcroforn to facilitat tbie aoru Travol, God Iiath ondnod MattklD 1 will-. h Faculty of Spoveh, whereby they way Teach and . on tnunieal to oa* another, oil such Knowledges and Ohaervatione an Hhall l*1 found a ony one of them \ thati i eve >ue studying a jiaru and eontrlboUn

i 11 Mile of bis ObsrrvatiuiiB into thy public)* Stock, tboy Might at

length advance Knowledge and Learning to that Degree, which Human'

Nature in thii lapsed Eotnto is capable or. And that there might bo torn*

eonstdetmbto Pro^reat. mode in this Work at tii*t ; Ood did '

the hrat Men long Live*, with vigowua Imagination* rihI mild

that thereby thai rnjglit both amiiire gnwl Stock* ul Knoi

ObM-i vatiijiib, and lukdit convoy them, or coiuutuuicat them to oianr

Device* of their Poftantn'.

nut Men abasing tine It loosing of loiifj LilV, and Ihrtr

ik1i(<s only upon Kvil and thai iMnMiniully : '■■■ ■•,«*»

nrovoked to «Ii«>rki their Lives, aud tn confouod their l.jniniaf^

ArrB-NMx t.

613

whereby thi« way of convoying Knowledge by Word of Mouth, aud Tradition limui;. vnry Imperfect ami lyabl* to nmny Inronvi'ideneiioi : ami therefor*; that these Means nf enm-easing Knowledge, and of aearching uut all tin! Work* of God might be fit ill continued amongst Men ; God in hid Infinite Mercy, wao graciously pleased to teach Men a new Way of luieatiii^ tli"ii Though I* and Word", by Writing; which ho did "It. ii tM did Write the Law with his own dinger, upon the two Table* of Stone in Mftnut St'tuu, that thereby Men might more easily and universally uomuuntwti lhd» Obeemtfou to nil Am net "f Mankind, and might more certainly preserve tlieui to all Posterity.

Hy this Art of Writing, Knowledge and Learning were very much advanced : till Book* bcuamo no niiiueroa&, and tho nay of writing with i l-Vn being both dear ami alow, Students could aenjuro only a small rnnnliKr of them, whereby many Book* were nt'gh'rteit and lost, and Learning came to a Kttud. and theu at length foil into a great Decay, for Uen tamed th'-ir Wits and Studies, rollm to collect and understand the Writings and Opinions of the Ancient*, than to enquire into the Nature of tho things themselves, in soiumdi that .ill PhiloMophy was turned into tin- Opinions o\ A t iUolle and Pinto ; aud all Theology was lodged in tho Opinion of tho Church, or Tn the Fopo'fl Infallibility. Yea, Ignorance I >ie wtilcd to that Degree, that it was encouraged aud preached up aw the Mother of Devotion. But at length Printing, which Li a more easy, wpecdy and «heap way than Writing, wan Invented ; which remedied all thoae lacouvenioneiee of Writiug, and so recovered Learning at itfl last Gup, nut of its long continual and almost fatal Decay. 8iH08 which time, learning hath taken on an it wore a now growth, and though it bo uot. as v:i recovered iu several Carta, yet many Art* and Sciences are advanced to a far greater Degree, tlian what they had attained unto amongst tho Ancients, From all which Course of Providence, wo may clearly perceive, that it in tho Wiil and Design of our Lord and Maker, that by core Travel, wp *dionhl simroh out and know all hi* \vi>mi» trfQl Works, that we may Admire and Adore his Infinite WmUmi. Goodaeaa, aud other Perfections in them. An also, we may perceive that a full and universal conxmunicatii>K of our Thought* aud Obaorvatione to one another, iu the necceeary and ordinary Means appointed by God, whereby we may At Urn unto this natural Knowledge ; ao tliat whatsoever luconvunienciva do nliMinu't. thin free and nmveraal communicating *>nr Thoughts aud In- strucliouft to om* another, or do hinder .iludeiito from Attaining the Know- ledge of all that hall) becu Discovered before them, must of necessity much retard the Advancement uf Learning, and hinder t&e oncMaae of Know-

ludgo aj&o&at up; an I thoroforo Jo deserve our uorious Thought*, and

ntmoel BttaonvoDte ti> remove Kbem, Bona of thtat taoDaveniaocieo

an*. I. Hook* ar« mi vasr.ly multiplied, and do *o encreaxc dayly, llmr must |«nl of Studcuin either naut Money to buy any modern t Cbflooll i - of [hem ; or ih), they want Convenience to keep them, fur Mocks aie very troubl MOEBC to Traii.-poi-l from jtUcu to ptneo ; or 3/y, they hove thctii not in due time, while they are young and free from Care* ; for after a Man ik settled in the WoiU. then toe Cares of !.i. Kaiiiily, and tlm Df bit- ("VI i 'j,', 'I" mi t i Wind, that be ran have no time

nor beart to study. 4. The Money that is bestowed apao Hooks nut

U: looked upon us lost; and this certainly in a great Dincouragemeiit. ii. Many RookH which a .Student ahull happou to buy, will aftor permml ho found little worth, ut least for his DUlpOMj whereby he lamentably disappointed, and lo«eth both hla Money and umo. \\. ^t%\a% *X wwV distance from theno famoiu Towns wbeiv n»wt \»rt. c»? WxftLA *.ve> "?t"\\^«Cv,

514

: ill: AKlr.N.

that there ate many uavful now B toka Printed whii li wt avra tail «f.

ami tbo*e wo hear of, cannot be brought home to us without gnat

Expensed ami Trouble. 7. Although a Student had nit the \

that can bo reowm ably expert wl m nun man. Vet he cannot A'.|:n.

the BftOkfl in :hc World, that, may nilat4< in the Subject he si :

«o he will ntill be nneaaio and BUGpicioua, (hat there may bo something

worth his Kaowlndfe in th \u rants. And It En not to U

expected, thiu any mai: an mlvuiav - i improve any Aft or fldefiN to a fall Dogreo, till first ho have a full and eomprehaDnVfl knowledge of all that bath DMO mttteO and discovered of that Subject before him ; and

therefore rompleat and free Libraries am abaohtelj UJ ;

Improving of Art-, and Si unices, and for Advancing of Luarui.i no.

For e (foe tna ting of thi*, and for Rlmoding all tho fotti wam&l I venionoios, it ia modestly oonoeired with mibmiuiou tr> better Judgment*, ibat the Founding and Maintaining nf Bihliotheeki in cvnry J wihin thijt Kingdom, will bo a moit oUectual moans, for there? v i Student will have com pleat Libraries within u few Mihnof Hit* nlaoo win happen to reside, out of which he may ruaily furuUh himself from I . time, of oil sorts of Books Kit for hi* purpoao without Mouoy, Bad that in Ins youth, while he hath health ami itrength to Study ami ia free from the oarca of the World, lettnM can he lw» troubled with naelou Booki, using he iimv [Meaeii ly eturn them to the Bibliolheck and i ami Lastly, These Libra tie* In a few vcam will be full and ooagiuMt, bfVDf furnished, not only with »11 the valunblc and u:m full Old Booka in any Art or Science, but also with all the valuable Xow Books, so anon a>i over they are heard of or seen in the World, as will eloarly bo demonstrat after- mnta

The Method ami particulars which 1 think OWWHMO '' '" Ulh PottOalng and Maintaining of IJibJiothcukniu ev ry Paroch through ml tlaia Km aie these.

1st. A convenient place in ovory I'arooh muat eot a part, and filial for keeping of ItookA.

£7j/. Kvr.ry prewnt. Miniater ninxt i^ivr in all lit* Rooks, to the B theck of his own Farouh. at tin- sight of the Herotor* of tlie Parwh. nbo shall eoueo rank them conform to their volumna, ami shall cause exact Alphabetical Cataloguas of them, with the phu< .< 1 the

time when tlioy arc Printed, of whieh Catalogues, thure mint 1" principal Coptdoa luhscrlbed by the Mfniutor ami Here-tors of aaoh »\l or 60 1 one Copy xhall lid kept hj lb* Mi the PaTOch till he he paid for bin Hooks, another ahull bo k< Reretora iu a littl Clnal I the Bibliotheek, that it may bo an upon tho Keeper of tho Hibliothuvk. to bu aiiHWerablo fur nil i li the third must l>e kept iu tho Uihlintlierk npi-iily thai any Hei Parooh, or Minister of thu Pfosriyterie may got u double o1 N whan Ihey please: ami the fourth Copy shall he aeni to the principal library at }&.tiitbi>i->tftt tu be k'.'pt thoic for ■arena] oaea.

. rat avoiding all dobatee ami riintcuHiea, thai n :«eea

Heroior^ uml Kiniatetn in valuing thoso Booka, it will oa fit thai Uinletera uud Heretora l>e Hpjmiiited to draw out n gen< igna of

.ill -i... Books i the Kfunloin, out of throw particnlar Catali shall be Hut in to B&irtburnk from over} Pan h, ami to ict a certain prico upon each llooli . » don general Catalogue with afljeo

it) moll Book, ahall br I'l'tutud and diitributcl tbrougli «very Paro tho K/ogdom, conform to w\ueV Ca\*\a©w, *-\>a ¥^*\& ««rt; P

I

vir pntux r.

filfi

•hell bo valued ; or there raay be laid down some HoM-al rnl« for valuing of Boolu at so much paY Shift, and so much for Binding,

■irV//. VYIi.mi any ftttaiatat slnill die, or he removed from one Ivirk to an OthWi thun he or hia Heirs or Aasigneys, shall havo right to all the BUpoodl of ihul Paroch Lw which |l« gam iu his Bonks, ay ami while he bo payed of their full value conform Co the Catalogue ; and the Ministers of the- Presbytery shall supply that Kirk during that time, but if tho Paroch cannot conveniently want a Minister so long, thou tho succeeding Minister shall want, such a proportional part of tho Stipend as shAll ho thought tit, whirli shall I* payed yearly Co the first Minister, lilx Heirs 01 o&aiguoya, tilt the full value of his Books be joyed.

Ifh'ii. Where the Kirka are vacant, the Ministers of the Presbyterio with the Burutors of the Paroeli, shall have power to bestow all tho vacant Brpaodd of that Kirk, upon sun Hooks as they shall think most lit ami necessary for the Bibiiother.k of that Kirk.

Whig, EttuU Freabyterie shall endeavour to boa compleat Library within ittaelf, that U, they shall endeavour to have one Copy at least, of BVon valuable Book extant in sumo ooo I'tbHetheok or other within thnir hoiiiolv . wherefore it will be utJCGsssr that all tlio M hunter* in ono Pi' i -hytHiii', compare th*tir Catalogues, ami consider nf what Bonks they havti more Qoppiea then ar« npfldful amongst I hem, and what Bonk* they think useful ; of which they have no Gophiee at all, that they inny exchange tho Hooka they havo for those they want, couform to the value sot on o»eh Book by tho gonural Catalogue.

7//(///. The keeper of the Biblaothook, who may be the Render or Sc.hunl-nia<ter of the Paroch, most find eantion to the Minister ami Hurulurti. to be faithful in keeping tho ftwkx, and in preserving thorn from all iiicunvoitiunctift ; and he atiull uol lend out miy Buuk hut to iiii Hero tor of the Paroch, or to a Minister of the Prcsbyttrie, or to |0(£)

Bi reins residing within tho Paroch as shall tin J sulhruint caution for all the ooks they get out of tho Library, and he shall take obligations fr-wu ihi in all, that they nliftll raitON thfl Boofcl In good OOSdltta, ami wiri n, muIi a sot time a* may be aufficitmt for reading the Book, but within 01 1 Moucth at farthest ; that so an He re tor may not defraud the rest of the u»c of any Book. And for prcvnnlinp; the iiubagHug tho Books of l.hir Libraries, it is tit there he a note written upon the rororse of the Titlo pacje, and on tb<. I*.,: I., J ul cui*t. IV...I; Sulweriliiwl by tlm M inist .-r, declaring thnt the Book telonpeth to tho Bibleotheek of such a Paroch, bo that whoever any book shall bo found wanting thoTitlu patfe and tin- li>i loaf, it may bo auapected to bu stollen from the Librarien, and so may hi: con linear to thoir use.

^Ihlif. It will hn OOnVMIflllt thai there be a Book lunder in every Preflbjftorte, » bind all the Books that hnlimjr tn that frafttyterlfV for which end lit DUttt he prouiltnl with A House, und all the liistruim-nt^ fit fvr hi* Troth:, and with some f-ma'l SbJpOttd ft iriy to maintain !mii ; and then whatsoever Bnnka hr shall hind lie shall bo payed only for tfifl nmtoriala, hut nothing for Inn work ; or the keepers of tho BInwotbtttk

oi Uintrtan Servant* niAj h* taught to bind Badks, vdA may Nwiely bind all tho now Books tl.nt Bull hejpveii in to that Library in sill] '

". h will i". bo .i. eolent iim nil the BiiM'-ihii'k-. i.i the Kingdom

obmrjvt the aamr iim thod of ranking and plaroini; thoir Uooka, which iin in »d may be to rank tho Books according to their nauio and mm. iii th* gnnorat Catalogiin, which naino and nnmbat DHUl bt written nnon 0 of naper, and battered to tho hark of the Book, or to ftOOM leaf of it, iluit It may 00 ea**lrly Man and R-ad, >»y a\iy \hvcxa\ \Vax •iwwea.w'w

r>]«

ITBIjr UliKUUKV

tttc fHblioLufck, that aoMiiibtei;- <>■ .Student*, when they m1in.11 happ-n to remove, from ouc Paroch or BiblEotbiol to mother 1 1 j t v may not br nt ft low* where to find any Book, for by ll.ii nirthoi] ihoy will )<• tocnL'v kBOW in what plueo every Hook should stand.

The** are all tho paftinilars whirl: 1 think1 mmMMy Tor the prw»st for founding of Bibliothicks In every r'uroili, but for the

piDQlotlSg BOOH it will bi: uecewaflry fuilhei, that

lOthiff. One Moncths Cc*s to lie payed ytarly, to be sot tied a.t * I'wid for buying and PrintSflfi all such Books Ifow or Old, u shall be jujpd valuable tod n-.fi.! to be Attributed through the kingdom, and uvorr l. bllothak in The Kingdom shall get ft Copy of ©very Book that ahall U printed : ttu om intlf iiftliia Honatbj Caw* must bepeyftl by tlm Heretom

COO&nn to tht-ir Valuations, the other half by tin: MlDUltOTH the prorations of their Stipends.

Whhj. Thin Money or Koud must bo entrusted to some JkOHOil Fcrwti or Persona, who whall therewith ttreot rrinniig-Houao, and Manufactory, ami ahftll uttle ami maintain a Oorrfi«poiid«nm mt. ftll the Printing presses abroad throughout Bwrovtt imiX shall bring I ionie Ouppica of all the Books that shall be Printed, as noon aa pool and shftll Re-print all inch Book* vhother New or Old, a* shall be ju fitting, or worthy to bo distribute*! through the Kingdom, and tliuy ahfttl be ohtiilged to give up Aecompte howthe llnm-y Eabeatowod, from b timtt tu such Ministers am) others, as glial) be uppuiuttil to rrrpire, and examine the sauie,

\$fhhj, A ComtnisMon of the General Assembly niuat be appointed, to Roviso all the Now Boolw that arc brought homo i and

to give siomo abort seeonnt of thorn in Print, or to emplcro tnoh fmnione m they shall judge* moat fit for that Work : and roRariu all tin ■ay t..» dBtermlna what Books shall be Printed erwy Monerh. and to

i" >-\\ i; mid ol Q illU he !'i ii-.i.'-:- .V' oinpU.

Tin? ib a Method which I think will be both caoie and rl factual for eetablishing, and promoting of Btbliothcoki In •Ton Pftrooh Ihmnjaoif tb&i luripiimii, uxifhor do I foresee any iimUirial ObjoetSoQi that eau made. agaiiiRt any particular Article of it.

For it shall be Objected against the swoud Article, by somo of tbt protcnt Mininteia, that if they shall happen horcftfter to be rein tboir ptroob to another, tluv will bo at a great lew for want of Uiom Booke, with whieb they havu been accustomed of ft Inn^ time.

This n* easily ana wared, (or when a Minister i- removed from PODCh tu another, be will imnifdfatly have a right to all. or at l«ct u part_uf tlie Btjpendfl uf that paroeh, till he b-) inyed for hi» I tlieti with that Mon^v he may buy what Books he think* moat ueenjusin for hiuifielf, an*] give in to tho Library of that ]>aroeli to which he ih 'I i..:i-.jMHubidl and be payed Tor them after Iiih nnnnvai.

It may he farther Objected bv the MfnUterx, that whan tin Debitor.it is Bometimos dilHcuft to get uoyiueul ; but thb Object]

f(roUDdleaii hert? for in this cose the public k l> nol Doltltuf, bill

tiiv.it tu u it ia Dr.lntoi lor hifl proportion >d tho vooaat 8lipendft, U liniflter hiiunelf, or bin lleirs and Aajngm>y«, ay and while lm be pay»J for all the llxilc* bo gnvu in to the Biblintheok of that nan h linr tlidt wbioh Bhould move tbi Min st^rn to comply willing with ihw

h'le is. that theieb> iln-v both ret iin lh>- uv id" tln-il Uookft, ami ftlM aeeiito tho valun of tliotn, lo tluunclvr* ur tbeii Hi ra, wl lUlht be Inwt or Sold for very little. It tuny bo Objected hy tfOD&xn vg&vaX ^\^ *wvOa. ft-rO^U-. that w"

Moncth* Cess, which amount* to 72,000 pounds Scots by your, will be too great a Fond for buying ami printing of Book* yearly,

To this I answer, that If it l>e too great it must be so, either in respect uf the Boemt it will buy ami print, ur in respect of the PpratMt that way pay it ; but it is uot too great tn respect of the Rouka it will buy auJ print, but rather too littlr, for the priuting of an largo Book aa the five voluraiis of PoqIu I'liiirk . man the titbit], will more thau exhaust all, ami then wbtt ahull being bCflM New Book* and Ra-DOBt them. Rid what shall maintain the CorriiApondenc.e with all the printing placed in f£uj'aj>c '

NuithMt is It too great in nance t of the Ptrsom that must i»y it, for the half of it which ia to be payed by tlio Ueictois, ia only tbo 120 part of their valued Rent, and thoir valued Runt is ordiuarly but tho third part of their roal Kent, so that au He re tor of ouo thousand aid two hundred pounds &60U of viiiu»ii I;.' nt which is commonly StfOO pound* of real Rent, .shall [mv mily t«n pounds StaU yearly, for maintaining and promoting of these LUhliothccks. And cnrlainly U would bo very unworthy of any Ocutloman of aucIi a Kent, to grudge the paying often pound Serfs yearly, whofl for it, ho, his Children and Toutntiti may have tho froo tiao of a well luniisned Library and of all the new linnkn k Gazer* so soon ay ITOI they are Printed. And I belie vn moat part of Geiithutieti |«'-i limn thfa Proportion uf Unit BOBbl upon Book* yearly, k. vet am but ry iiHiillicimtiy provided. Yea, many Nubbnu. u and ltoulle:ueu b«'*tow more mion News; so that tlm half Mouth* Cess will 1m no DOW Hurdi-n

1 1 th.-'n, bol « mora Bflbettwl ami prohtahio way of bestowing thot

Money upon Rook* and Nnw«, which now ^ ,.vp.-n.l.d to little or no purpose.

Am for the other half Month* Cras whieh is to be payed by tint Ministers certainly non< «<f them will grudge at it, seing any HilUfttota ■Share »l it fawn although it WON 4tvi h>d oiuaugot then* oy o«j>nl Porto) will fttiHJiitit only to So" pounds Stots, whleb is not so much as tho yearly Anniialrent of that Sum, ffhloll now a Minister intmt riefNumarly lie snppmed to bestow upon Books, before. In: can la* any w.iy tolerably furnished for bin Studies. For supposing there be 1000 Ministoi* in Mot/ami that shall have Libraries for their own use ; tbon raoh Miniotora shnte of this 36000 pouwiu Sotttft will be only 34 pound, which is only tho Aunualreut of 600 pound* /»*«'«/* : and I believe there are lew present MlnUtera, but bavo I ian wed more than Thin Sum upon Books, so thai: the half Moulhs Cow ii |i<m ilk'in, is not to Iw looked upon ae a Burthen, but aa a way to preserve the Money, seine; by this Method, tho yearly Aunualrout of a email Sum of Money, will fumioh them with a corn pleat Librnry, ami incomparably moro Books, than both the Stock and A ninialrent of a far greater Sum can do otherways.

Hut further, there are several oiliCT Considerations which maymaki the Ministers willing condescend to this Artiule ; for either they may prevail with tho king k parliament to ordain this half Months Com to bo payed out of tho BiahopB Rents, or to lay it on upon tho Tenuis uf the Kingdom, •jrbioh do justly belong to the Maintenance of the Worship of God, or some honest hearted patron Titular of the Teinds, may Gift or Mnrtifw m much as may free Ins Minister of his Proportion uf it. But though none uf those should succeed at present, yet tho Tacks of tbo Tciuds must run out at length, and then tbo Ivirk will be miftieieiitlv provided, not only to pay this half Months Cobs, but own to pay tho WHOLE, and free th'u Heretom of their SHARK ol it.

Ir m.iy ohjci-ied by nthnrs, that the l,vmd will bstOO litMc, and the Work will be but small and couteiuiitiblo. But it ia aiiswert*LTliaA

ais

prnuo r.rni:

though it may b6 mill At the Winning, y. t [t will m.f.Mw dejgj not*, for know that JBOTim woe not oil built in one day. an J It U del - , thai

theao Lihrarica will by lhl» Vend in a few years become very gloat «n<] coiwid arable, so that the voit meanest of them may compare wi* moat Runoaa Libraries in the World i for thin Fond wOl P fn1 Shci<t< of Paper dayly, which in ciimigh for any man r.< irarl ;

Sheru dayly. trill bo 8000 Shoota yearly, which wf] innm>

Of 300 Sheets to uarh Wditinii ; BO tbuL in 100 yearn, ibis will 1000 Urjjo Ytdiurin-., I'ln'tiftiM^ nl tin v hundred thonxmd Sheet* <"'f I' which willi the Boolta that will Im Rfvon in to the Libnarioe from to time, l'\' Mio Minfateri and Hatetoia, may dn much to eonturtBeiLQ' all

the* vsliKiM. Itnnka extant.

iiin i . i>< ■-!■ " ■" r, i !',.. i , d in thoae Libi a tm mi ■■

nuonor attained, if the Kinj* and P*i liainrnt shall tit i I ill thiis Ccm upon the Hcrottira for amno yean, or for Printing; of potn-- Bookfl : or if a Biota oaaiu and speedy way of Printing can bo Invi that) what in now in use, which I am Mnwaded may ho done, if BtM Sense won* encouraged to apply themselves unto it.

Lastly, ii may ■».-. oMectoJ that the different bus Muotipt

Ministers may iiuli all this Work ; But it is answered, Thai ■■ . dSflett&t PurswejdotiH among? t Miniature, may obatruot the U--< botftw ing and lending <>! I'm. i hot need if- no huidei

if" -■- * ' i rod increasing of thi Bflioutookc a oyeq P I

paying n* thoii Bbaroa Foi maintaining of the Printing HottM, as

PnniiUA lucfa lk>uk*ua shall ho tlloUgnl lOOBl iitteawirr.

Whnt hath booa laid, I hope U ruSciodI to coannca any m»n. tint

Inure is uu dillb'iilty in this Work, iF we !>■■ willing to *ot abOV Therefore 1 «liall in tho next place, lav baton jron Mxrao Couaidarttie&fl taken. I. From the AdrantngioiiKneM of t.n- w i !;. 2. From Hn> Flo ablenan uf it. Ant! 'j. From Uw Duty Lhat, lie* upon hm to 0 HinSsten in all things necessary for thutr Mini.-.i.iy. \\1 i ;li may ntft Argun, invade all pfrgona willingly and cordially

Work.

1. Tlii* FMiihiw'iii.j.' i.f ''■ - in every Faroes will BOl only

rotaodj tha foramantlonnil Ineonvtni*iid.w and Dilllintltliw ...

but it will Iim wvurul waya Advantageous to Mm- Comitruy, For 1. I

baaeoneUlerahle Maiinfactory, and wil Mai itain many People at ft i. will keep oil tbot Motkv in the Kingdom, wbioh now go« oi buying of boon and Papor. t It will oucouregc young Mun to I thfir Studies in lh«it own Conn trey, and thm 1 1.' i: For tonus Abroad, and man) uthur nonxid«iulilii Inennvi i young Men are expoeed unto in atrango Oountrvyn. i, II pr..v..ki t.lenfl non to beetow thd iparo Hours in reading of new U^^», which may provo a good Means to roitrem them from Qamba and if, iilin«, tiu« that «ii":i-i.: :in.| ■• . u some Idletiwa of 1

wl iiit. If til rAMDl of these, and many ot.ht't Kiminni.. -,. : I' h a abort time, carry away the whole Trade of Printing fivm all the net of

Hut 2. A-i Una EflUill iehing of FlibUothoeka in ovory Poroch «ill b* A'lvantngcoue, bo it will hu very Honourable to thU Co

hall not. only he tlie firal and the only Nation foi ji whih h htrtj i)i- ■■- -. : 1 1- and iinofnl [ilenty i Rooks, But Z, Hon bt all wrti nf Learning will mightily oncreaK and flouiifili aiuon^at ub, and

( » Rrtot oi n !■.■ h l''-]'l' ye! w< i ay I" ■» «»c and a learned People* \':a further, the»( Ubnuioa wu « ^\otas WvLwl Tcan wttJ Ua aoioll

APPBNIHX I. 519

ipleat, that the Mwt Famous ami Magnificent Librarian in the •hall not outdo the meanest Library in any Faroeh of Tin-.

igiluni, Ibi numben of valuable eod uaeflil Books, UDatfcbenD ilrta43

stnonstiiu.

S. If it lie our Duty to provide our M;> I tap u! li .it! thing? IMCONUy for them oi a oompotoiit Stipend, Mai.- nd ci.dl., tbnt thoy boing free frnm wnrlilly Cor.-A, miy lun-.- ii>rm 1. «tudy and Instruct thoir People.

I Then iiertainly it ntuat much more be our Duty, to provide th'-m artth ciiiii|n'iciit Libraries of thv laott neAil Hooka, wiiug without theso they ran n»t study, nor be fitted auCidyutly for Instructing their Pooplo in tho Truth* of their Religion. Mhhj. Being (Joa hath mad<» ull men l>y nature dosiroin of know- ledge, undoubtedly tho satisfying of rhie aefi , 1 1 Dl >" I eoneideflable part of uiir natural foliuity J for Dot uttll delight ol our Souls, which, arc our better juui, lu which tho Bcwly doth not i»i-t,tko, U th« dolight ebe takf.th in Knowledge And Conteun.il.it i on. And -.lug Cod hath so ordered it, that tho moat part of our knowledge should bo oomnuuiicat to ue

boa 1 lore fatboiw, and Contemporaries MpooteJ J by their liooluaml

Writings, It doth nnueeneily follow tftat the qttihltorn'ng ami promoting

of MU.-Biica iii I'vt'iy i*aruch, whereby tin* una of al Knurl k of BoOKM may he n iu\< i .d moat fnw and niiiw; *jd, mid may I"' j" il.>. th -K-rinvd U> all oui

posterity, will bo a Tory otTeotuol in vans of increasing Knowledge and Loam 11 1^' 'I'm. n -«t U'», and >.f \<> .[• 1,' u-<, mid "ue I'.'iU'rita :" leeroh out all tho worki tf "Hi Qod,thet we mafaiftnJra end ouote hb inimh

wledom and QoofteeML in making l.htmi Hindi, ami hi *i wonderfully

dbpoejau of tbetn lm his own punwet* and Glory, which tweum to bv our

I principal end, for which our bJeceod Maker hath mad* ua rational Creatures. Tlnw tlringe tanng du«ly considered, I hope what liutli been mud will beeuttdens, to parsmdaajl [oven, and eneouvegtne of Learning, that tin* founding and promoting of Rlbiiotbeaki in every Paroch throughout thli Kingdom, ie both nuccseary and coaic, advuutagious and Iiuumuable OOI [ntOKBt and our Duty.

THE OPINIONS OK HOME LEADING MEN ON PUBLIC LIBRAKIE8.

[.Vtn\ff >if iMSM li<r< net j>> BttMri m yrint.]

[wim. fXfSM SIMTAJJiB I'AKAtiUAi'fl* run DlBGDUUBt, rrcj

Sir Charlei W. Dilke. -No odo who hiu> the smallest ac<iuaintanui with tlioc tmtttLution> can doubt thoir value.

The late Lord Iddeeleigh.— All that I have seen of them- inatitntiuiia io ouoouraging, eSBOpfe tin.- smallnes* ol thti: n\imli<t.

Kr, Byduoy Boxtoa, M.P.— Anything which help* to proinoti lln PttUk Librarica movement will always have my wainicat syui|Hdliv.

Tho Soy C, H. Bpurgoon, I am in favour of I'libliv Lihreriee n\ ,'h. ii 1 oat ie amall and tho benefits great.

Kr. Samuel FlluxeoU. The movemeut for eetebllahUx I'n'ilif Eabrariei Kuu B3| beefty eynpethyi ua I consider it * yalublo meane of i" UOVarai tho working rlowee,

Mr. J A. Froudo. Public I.ihrarica, if the rfgkl boola aic in thrm, •,vili beef tuosueue ralne. But wo real more and bon Dowdem for : if lit, and *h» moot absurd books arc tho moat popular.

&K>

1'iuuc i.i uitAiui:-

Tho Hon. C. Bitohie, M ,P.— There is no mm abiding pli-a*un;, io ui

(-pinion, than that tu 1m dmivi-d IVoin reading and I would gladly rr+ tfa facilities for tho pursuit of this ploaiuro, in tbo ?hnp« of Pi Mir I.ihrarica, largely HtUB

Tho Hot. J. Clifford, B.D., e*-Preaid«iit of the Bnptiat AsaeoiotioiL.-l rejoice in the progress of tho movement on behalf-- •, *tA

trust !li:it it Uy not fir distant vlicii th< | Itfitfl Will b* r#iid*r#l

asoaflatMB to rvcry En^lUti man, woman, ;in I cttfM.

Mr. Justin McCarthy. M P —1 llii'tk a I'nhlii' Library in one of lU v*t blewingi with which n community can be on i lowed. I Hltncat with to tost the civQu&tion of every population by Making— ^R

\.ni number, ami h«m ninny Public t/lnaiiCA have you .'

Sir Frederick Leighton, ex-Pinsidoat of the Roval Academy.— 1 1 until* fc nit- that the uses of Public Libraries: ucm obvious, aadaojHsaanaUy

roongnh*.nd, that no words can bo beaded to emphasiso thnni, Sucft Libraries if properly usod, should b* powerful engines of a

The Duke of Argyll. -No one can doubt ll.r value of PiiMi«. Libiaim who odniiU tho vol no -if odUOfttiOQ nt all, Union "d.».*ation U to itOp •'. thi- *' three KV the telf-education of adnlts by careful reading it an •mfltUI. Tho difhYulty ia to make reading m . r«d7y

tartnoUvs.

Mr. Henry BroadhurBt, M P. Without doubt, money cannot >•■ pniiiijibly spent than in ploclug knowledge of the highest kind rcsdi of »U who cmia tu avail theiniudvt-s of it Kc«.; to good there ere few sources of public exjicnditurR more justifiable than in p log good librovi's f<>v tho people.

Mr. L. J. Jennings, M.P., for fitookport. Thoro arc fbw in lilii-ly to bo of greater service to working men and thoir families thou

Public Libraries. The taste for reading in tK** only one w hi-1

in ynntho) *£!<'. And T do not know how it in to be gratified among Ike poor except by tin: establishment of FiiMb. Libmi its.

Mr. Frederic Harrison —Tin- Public* Library movement Uj fr#f

from suspicion of belonging to party, class, oi sect Of nil Ibi passed in tho last fifty year* there is none which ha* dona a good with low burdon on tbo country, absolutely without hir complaint) than tho Public Librarius Act.

Bir Charles Rnsiell, M.P. I have o high opinion of the great adran< tagts to bo derived from Public Libraries, and 1 think it a matter of regret that tho Public Libraries Acts have been availed of to so limited as extent I think this fa to be attributed not to inrtiflerenne amongst the public, but to unwillingness to add to the already cnoinious burden «f taxation.

Tbo late Henry Ward Beooher. A man that should establish la Brooklyn a Public Library for the common people would be a regenerator of tbo city ; and if ho plauod to have hie name inscribed, th»t Basil OOnJd BtVOCao below the norixon. He might not see the result ; for th« visible effect would he nothing as compared with the nnaoen, pb x cll'ect would appear in generation after generation, and hit noma would be ^loiioux

Mr, Thomas Sort, M.F. I attach the utmost importance to tbfl PttbHfl LibiarieH movement. It is certainly autazing, and not at all creditable, thai thirty yeans after the cuuiuioucement of the Acteof.-vv Uivns hate adopted ill In Nowcaatlo-on-Tyno we had a long and rather BtVarl fight

APruywx J-

&l

Wo won, and at present an excellent institution is established, and is doing valuable wont.

Mr. Robert ftiffen. LL D. (Of the Board of Trade), in his address, as rn-Kiitrnt nf the StaliKfical Society, on "The Progress or the Working Clause* in theLaet Half-Century." taid : To a great deal of this expendi- ture we may at i v li the biblical value. It due* not give bie&d or clothing to Oh: warhinj; man, but it all helps to make life snvecter ami :" 11 r, and eo opeua out careers even to the poorest. The value of the Public Library, lor instance, in a large city \a simply incalculable,

The Lato Right Eon. John Bright. Tin re is no blcsnut; that ran bo giveu to an artisan's family more than a love nf book*, The hotnoiuHuoucn <\ nob a posspnaion Is one that wilt guard them from many ttmptfttiOBi and from many evft*. Tu the yuuug especially I his in iif great uii|mhUiioc | I'm If there he iiu acod time then: will certainly be no harvest. It is inipo&aiblo for anybody to confer upon young men a greater h leasing thau to stimulate thoin to oHiocialo thomsolvea constantly with a 1'ublio Library, aud draw from it any book they like.

Lord Granville. -Aa a Londoner I must own that I aomotiraoa Pool ashamed %t the contrast which f/Midon present? to provincial oitius in availing tts»:lf to hrtle of the hihlio Libraries Act. I hope tint when Lontlou baa something like a municipal government, accompanied by that public spirit and by that ttpvU <lt eorpa which alwaya go uitli it. it will not lug behind the provinces in thia important ami intellectual race. The poaspasinii of a Public Library w a proof of the intelligence and thy public spirit »<f the towns which pomes* thorn.

Ttao Bishop of London.— I look upon Public Libraries evorywhorc aa being of the highest importance and value for the cultivation of the groat Ividy r»f people at large. No doubt there will lie a perpetually KDCfetft- i rig number of those who would be glad to have the opportunity of rend- ing books which it Is impossible for them to buy ui tin, It Is a very excellent arrangement that there should be, for common good, Libraries of the kind to which all may roeort Libraries which aro open to the highest aud th« lowest, the richest ami the poorest.

Mr. Henry George. There would be a great and increasing surplus I v. mio from tho taxation of land valuoe, for matorial progress, which would go on with greatly accelerated rapidity, would tend constantly to InOKaM nr. This revenne arising from thu common prorMrfy con hi be applied lu the cumuion be unfit, aa were the revenues of Sparta. Wc (iiik'lU-tjot establish jxihlir. tables they would I... unnecessary; hut we could establish public baths, nuuieuiua, libraries) gardens, locturo-rooma, riiuaio and dancing holly, theatree, universities, technical uchooU, play- grounds, gymnasiums, Aie.

Tha Bight Hon. Joieph Chamberlain, H.P. -I am a great boliover in thn advantages of a miscellaneous reading. 1 believe that by it we OMO onr mind* lo imw ideas ; we widen OUT HYinpar.hien, and expand our Intellectual and moral horizon : and I know. also, that for the student who AotirM to puisne tborouUv any mtya 1 . I il uUulutoly iwiniwmj that he nhould have access to bouke, many of which aro costly, many of which ure very di flic-alt to obtain, even to the richuat vf single individual*, but whM >•' i' ;""■ Ui* power of n tttntne/nthf U / rtnritU !••■' «'/ /'* iivmlmrx And in thin poKaession there in no favour conferred ; it is a right which II eujuyed by all.

The Arohbishop of Canterbury.— rublic Libraries aro a necessity of the

priii. ]• r.mruaiK.

timn, and! shall l^Rlad to we thn.

Libraries are, of tliu inuat important kiuJ, but that Ucwa Lot imply Swiai- UtXOf any ntoi-e than the wonl Ottftrt implies Chaitiat. 1 wouid ab>:- remind yoa that those Libraries would uot iiavu boon possible in Knglanl thirty yeiire ago, uot merely uu account of the prejtul against them, huf rtill more In ooneequenoe of the lack of thai eiiK-ation which would have enabled people lo two them witii onjoj or profit ; but our present Ky&tem ul elementary education lias ivu thcAc Libraricao nm.-Mity.

Tho Bishop of Rochester. Sooner or later you tnust auccwJ in Li but tho proper completion of tho Elementary Education Ait of 1970, and tho trao dafogtui-dingcf that mooiornbb: extension of tho franohl from whirh a new ora of Knglwh ht«t<»ry will iumir<i«lly betfiti. Von i>< but th« duty (if wise men, who I')*" their jonntry, who I > do knuuledg* i>f any kind, ho long as it ii exact ud complete ; who feel thai the education a man glTta himself is far move valuable than aus who eipcot, not wtthont mason, that lu eoarso of time tho b expeaM from a halfpenny rato will he inoi-'j than uttvod by a dimh of the public ch argon. The Cnitml .States huva long been ahnad nf m in thin ijnflKtiim of I'nMic Uhraritw, an I w»ll knmv from poiMOJUl oliwrra-

tlOL.

Bight Hon. A. J. Balfour, HP.— I hall wiih satisfaction thy menl in other town* of a Public library like that whh-h I miu around a>, and I could triah no better fortune for my old friends and o one ti toot* of Hertford, than that they may ono and all acquire that taotc for liwr* tnro, and that habit ofroauinu which can bo latistiod in a Lit» In which we an- neated, mil which will, lam convtnood— *nrt i from no narrow iwrtfonal experience, but from a knowledge uf what ha vo felt in all gcnciatione of mankind prove a eource of »attn v. in- Ii Hilt not tail tbem in time; of cam or trouble, which aieindcpendcat uf seasons, which arc iiidopunduiit of tho favour or duttavoar of urn- and which art* perhaps the moat preCKXM hwrltagn wind: ' mankind by tho invention of printing,

Lord Coleridge— The rinu Uu* gone 1 y whnn it wu nocawai libraries and reading. I remember when It. was aald If yon imtrufttci the people iu reading, all aorta of diiuxu.lt oonnopi »«uW

iCAult. We liave got pant all thooo notion* now, and bare 00 foal tho onornioua advantogo of reading and of Pul I Libraries, *od I trust that We have got on bo far aa to realize that ii B I < manly

toextsod to oilier people the advantage* we otir»i-'lve« en v/lm ioei DOt IQq.UiOl ninmnlf \vir.h wtuit ntlmn* have Hah] tftUBt tX laalW wine a very common-place and dreary individual. Tho moat «;. egra thota whose inmds areenriohel by culture and oduoatien library enables men to appreciate these pointii ; Maltefc capable of doing bit work, and appreciating the tiioughts and the grwit men who hvod he font on rtirae. VTha; i i ul*i

and liberalise tho mind has a practical bcarhig u|kih that iu Vflld ore all rntewetod— nomoly, the Bupreaiocy of tin* Kieat couxitry.

Mr. John Morley, at. P.— It ii profoundly true, m Aurka «aid, cku education ia not reading a parcel of book», i Dg reatraiiL

dtodplice, virtue, and juatluu. Tin: parcel of books, bow chosen, reconcile* at) to the dtsciplinu, iuterprcta the virtue ami jwck*t ami awaken* within tin tho dirinor mind aa to what ia boxt ia efkan and ourwlrva. There in mwa to \nake vooyli . b«ti»#f Uv

IPFKKDIS I,

593

npread of literature, qb now understood, does awake the diviner mind, 'I 'in- ttttiftl at ' (Ik* bookl taken out of public libraries are not all that iimlil be wished. In one great town of tho north, fiction form* 70 per cent, of the boofca borrowed ; in other j;raat tuwin it is respectively 82 per c«nt., 64 per cent, and C7nev cent. The average in thw country is about 70 per coot., whereas In t! United States it is only 60. In S-otUnd alwo thoru in a Iiii'kci- demand than in Ktigiund for books that ar« called ssiioiis. 1 .tin mys»df a voracious reader of fiction, »»<' nhth U> see the amount read reduced from 70 to about 40 jn?r cent, <>f th< ri .tiling of Hie people, the difference being tuado up by other litoruture,

Sir Edward Clarke, M,P.— There w no bettor way of combating Intern W En thtf couuUy than by the En r&UQ of education. The nonMBMT idleness of much of the day with those wlio ate engaged in manual labour, and tlic limit of space in their home* caused by tho pressure of population, tend to drive men intn habits of intcrni>©rarieo ; but those &n Ihlnn winch can bo met in a very Ltlfifl decree by t»ip ernarinn nf Pnbtla Libraries. Id the provincial towns t1ie.se libraries ftxlst to a. much fttcater Mteut limn m Loudon, and wLeiever they have been nsl.abliidicd are found to b" »o popular, and iucruaaiugly popular, that towns (rill "h bavo them would be a-ttouUhinl and appalled at the idea that they in future idiuidd be without the-m. In unity parti of London tho home* Of the working men arc* so uncomfortable, ami so far from being pllOM kBcTO they cuii have any SOIt of iiM-fnl rtCTtttlon, that tht-ii; i- bni.ll.v any choSct mlb lln: men between their Utile uud uncomfortable home* and llio jiiiblu i-hoSH, I aui couvinccd that Public Libraries will l>e a source >f great and abiding and steadily increasing benefit to the community. \ pemrp ntfe will not bo sufficient in itself to establish an<l OffOiD them. Such vi addition ro the nv i. oxtromilly mnall, and if tho propound mount a really studuus burden to tlio ratejiayora I would not advocate i :

bat it will be bo miftl] in gompariBoa with thy benefits to be nourvd

that I hope rrcry pariah will not heeitat© by a great majority to too tb.» proposition. I further bulievc that those libraries will tend to rodoc I tho burden of rate*, because they will help to reduce pauperism and crime.

Tho at. Hon. W. E. Gladstone, MP.— Without tho Mossinc ofrttd2nA

irdcn of life for many of w would aliiiunt bo intolerable, and

i u rf* i 'I lifa would be reduced to the merest penury. . . . 1 am

one of those who look with mmr, I think, than a common Intorwt

Upon nnuiijipo,] itialiutious, and who attach to them a value thai. I can

hardly oxprem. But I "ill put. in ■m- - vvlut I ban nay;

I am finn'.y eonviueod that without municipal institutions England would not have been Holland that is to t&y, it would have been a iuodameut- 1*1 ly different Kugland to the England that it now is. I admit that centres of pojrUlaaon give facilities for the work nf a I'ublie Library which it cannot enjoy where they nr» more dUBowd j but at the same time iu this country it i& quite plain that we must have a very large population outside of our mutuoipalitios, a population that ie not included in the munioipalitu'ti, yet will, in many comb, bo considerably centred ; and 1 look forward with pUiSDN ami ttnfisfaetioii to the day when rufllbjus of persons who cannot enjoy the advantages will, through the enactment of notiud and solid ay stem of local govi.uiuue.iit, ombraciug the vrBolo of tho rural, the whole of tho non-civic and non-municipal district* of the cuuntty, bo plocod within tho roach of wultttuiltb <sl VjMiw-AJ* **a^.

SM

LUmAHZUi.

advantages from whioh tlmy aro now in u conaiucrable dogreo exduiwi i mill wiubkiwiao havo that uieatimahl* profit w lich haa boon enjoj our n>tini'':]>!il 'uwiin of a rogiilnr education in public, riutlea, machinf ilawnwardn through all r*nk«, hikI ambncilMJ Msaoj* uf llin popuhtfjoa, and giving to il»» EagUsli lirti.v.-i 1 1- much of it* firmness *nd Imm

The Right Hon A J. MnnAflllft, M.P.— Tho public aro man ippeilBi for knowledge, and union* pure literature is provided there It a mat llADgfll that It* place will be taken hy impute lltaralui-. I U !k»iiih1 t.o wiy t liMt I Bo tint think that htctatmu of the v .i i nil d to any extent among the mawiui of tha pi pie, 0 naUy

havo pur<'hft«n.| pn h lip* t mil" at mimll khopa in thi I LHonrrMvJi,

i.i I havo found wi-r» mil m from and bad an lntotenthl

Sttch publication oil- tltonuthci aithout litera/v merll. *n<] 1 mi that a youth who lies had ai.CoM to OlWei UuMotiutli, Tlmrk

Diakeso, ami other luna n<l to ton

| rr.l.l.i.h to WOWh 1 haVO allud-1'! I b*lilivr t li:* t I ',;■

antidote for iurnuri litoratare it pure lltamtnrn, and In my optnioa tfei

way to elevate, a man. to keep him in tha path* of virtue, purity, aot nobility, in to jiiiiIu- him i i.ini. No M-euhn

hotter than a taota for reading, which taalc, of all othrr*. St the no* tag and tho fdioitpoet. Tlio plouuira* tint! danaM a man an thoy moot ooetly to tho «o4y, son I, ami poaknt, wlrfh Iha plea elevate him wn happily beoomtiie cheaper every i i •> ratepayer

btigrudgo Ma education rate and his punny for the rub Ik Librarian. Tort* an? hi* I«wt iiiviisfcnii-iiL*. Lot ilinn observe how, during meant Ywar*. the criminal population havo iliminuthod how Ihc diminutv eapCQlally nntieoablo among orinunnll an lor thirty year* of ago; obaerrt tha decrease it) the unotml paid for oatdooi : and i^tly, ohaar*« ta*

nuhu'ml oonennptlon "f alcoholic driolca. Kdoi itlori ii >- done not* loan

any Iliiu^ clue t.o bring tfiMfj happy results* about. TIlOM mmt r* hlghw and hotter education, ami a oonnnuity of it, iunl they uuat have idn

night echoola and more Public Librarian.

Teitimony of Mayors

In n ply lo letters reaper, ting tho we anil Influence) of Public Mhnrlai

ihoir towim. these leltorx of u few Mayon will bn road with lol

wuuld havo boon an oaay task to greatly oxtoml tin a amber, »-ut Uieaeaft

leprnsicntativo of othoffl roooivod.

The Mayor of Birmingham icays :— Tlw> ihmmg of tho Iihrarioi, If It TO proposHl, would " oicito the most violent opposition."

Tho Lord Provott of Aberdeen wye:— To all afipcaraju.>i in the ailranlAgow, illroct ami inrliroot, of tho HhTarios ei city i* *' nniveraal and strong."

Tho Mayor of Beading writes:- 1 have pleasure In uaylnfr that thi fublic Library in this town has Iweu an unpia'iliwl BUcoew, ami haa oonfertfd ■ignal advantage* upon tin* iiihahitanU.

Tbe Mayor of Horthampton suye ;— -During our late ibrikfl in the staple trade tho librarica becamu o capital counterantivo to tho publh-bvusfo, being literally thronged from morning till night.

The Mayor of Loeai ^jb;— The Publh. Library iu this horotlfjl haaboea catabliahed for upwards of tifUcu yearn. It has bcun Tory tuccwaful ia

■■

APPBNI'IX I.

«fi

itd operations, and has proved iteolf to be one of the. most important educational institutions in tho borough.

The Mayor of Newoaatle-ou-Tyne writob :— There can Iw u<> nucation that the Public Library >n Newcastle has been a grcot benefit to the inhabitants, and in moro used by tbc eitucna of all rhwbCB tlian 11k i-'.'i | 01 'at i on ever contemplated &r pmlmbiu when it woa initiated, i : It ink thprr is only nne opinion in r.he city to it* vain*.

Tho Mayor of Manchester says . The operation of tho Acts in llii* city city has unquestionably been advantageous to tho beat iutoreato of the community, hii'I 1 think it improbable that the closing of tUe libraries weald have any nup[>ort whatever, as tlioy are among the moat popular and most imliKvxmaable institutions of l.lia city."

Tho Provost of Dundee eaya that tho Public Library, Museum, and Art Gallery exert a powerful, refining, educational influence on the nun- ninnity, anil that n proposal tn minuend the Act would meet not nniy with strong but practically unanimous oppuaitiou,

Similar tootiuiomee to the oporatione of the Act havo beeu received from the Mayors of Liverpool, Norwich, Coventry, Cheater, Cuinbri<lge, and Reading, the Provost* of Galaahieh, Dunfermline, and Porftr, and (tan forty-one other English aud Scutch tuwns.

PARAGRAPHS FOR HANDBILLS.

It ia good to eee ko many Public Libraries starting in vnrioui town a. !r. indicate*) a growing taste for good reading, ond a wnll-ytockod library

Qwill cultivate that taste Then it is su :li au iuusliuiublu privilege to l*eopl« who are too poor to buy all tho books they want, and to young le etill attending school ; in fact, it ia a benefit to every ono but the r at the corner.

There ii au analogy between the creation of a Public Libiai y aud tho lighting of tho etreota. When it waa first proposed to light the public KfMil, there were probably w>iuc ol our forefathers who met the proposal with very specious objections. The facilities for walking the ot roots at night hail been enough for them, and were really nriougn for all n.'.iiiul purposes, To Hgbl tin? streets wuuld only be tu provide at the public rout a temptation to people to KO about tic street* al night when they on^ht to bo performing family dutiea at the liioside. The argument* now advanced aguinet Public Libraries ar© jiint as grouadloaa on thoeo first edVoaoed against street lighting.

Public Libraries uro *' continuation schools.'* If a boy or girl, after attaining the requisite itettdftxd, was plunged into hard and loboriou* lifo without tho opportunity of continuing tho education hogun in ony fern. tin- rUllH too often wu--. n, ,: in n very fow year* thoro waa a lo*a of dm knowled^fl and power already airalnnd, ami ebDMt IrWltftbh I IO»of thl appicciatiuu of the advantages of that education. There is no contiuu- ii (on nboe] which could be 00 good ea a Public Library, which would girc to every citizen the opportunity of continuing his or her education t>j ihc end of hie or her life.

A Public Library j* tiuw fairyland, says Sir John Lubbock, a vnv | «»l ' ■!< light, a havru of rVpOM 1'ioiu the itorma ud troubles of the world. Rich and poor rnn enjoy it. equally, for here, at, leant* NtftitWa <v-

ii r.i.i- Mm.

advaatage. You can transport younelf without delay an i with&ut

*ri»nae to any jmrt of the globe, or even into the regions of tho title*.

You ran call up tUo prosiest men of the pant or t > i - | ire inl dT ttlfil or an/

other country. Surely to the works of E

havo flome right, The literature of England

ance of every Englishman, England baa prodaood, oud i* produdM,

wine of tbo greatest of poete, of philosopher*, ol ma of ideate. Si

aoaattfj sat) bojwt a brighter, purer, op nobler literature, rich*

coiuiuerco, more powerful than our anus, the true pride and

country. To this litaraUru the very poorest of our fellow-ton

ifiMA

There way bo persons in the trade who fappoae that a I i i, Would Iwnn tho demand for books which tbey

A vn:y little inquiry will satisfy them that expencu. shown that Chefs, b DO f> al of ttuoli a result. A PuUi.- I,

round to oratta ind fnstarataate for reading mm) i I'll,- of powoninx

Itoolca, and thim to benefit the bookselling trade. Of tho argument aits the uufair iuciduno? uf t*X»tIou OH -sii ■pknjujrs, enoUfiJl lun ulrcao. Midi But wo may odd here that even if tl.. a ttrwu

v foolish to fight it on the narrow and certainly loai ifl Library-tax. Till prudent poKej would to accept the tax and thi •nil' for public npirlr which its acceptance will bring, and tc raiaoths whole question of the taxation of snopfl III tbo general form. If th* griovautfe is real, it comprehends runeh iu.ui than tlie I,i!ir,ini.n ; ba- the imposition of the Library-tax will make a small additiuu i will ifamgflwn the position uf thonc who may agitato ugainst if have already endeavoured to show that the grievance in imaginary ; but n 11 in not, there BOUld be no groatHi* mistake titan to nibble at a mare Man of ii like 1I11 Library-tax, instead of dealing with it tun Whole and lighting it iu J'arliaineut.

Within a few years thn whole nf the ixvmlc of this com educated, and when education is universal, thu educated claa* wi lunger couaiitnte a kind uf intellectual aristocracy, churning v" thi ' positions of life ax a matter of right in virtue of tb

>.»:\ tbo humblext oee.npatioiix for th© illitvrato. Witiii a very few years the very lowest occupations of life will be occupied by intallij^nl men, educated up to & point as high as that of the middle . Impend upon it tbi« will produoc startling result*, and, I i. very likely change the whido aspect of aooioty, for wo arc on tit great uphcavul of tbo maeaet; into ilii^h.-r i< vol of in tolled ;. dial

... i \ id ■•■ Iheir mental horizon widen far beyi

toil. For although they will be educated, with all thru nt. Hi

knowledge, theji will aid! bo ciituiNtratively poor, and lb ureas

n lifli dilllculty in rising bum iho lower oceupationa inl hor a*

the exiHting raco of laboarcra iiliw bna. AW have brougl.i

oiireolveB. For a moueat brnubu<t aaide all ipnriblo tculiiiga, and

rceolve<l to educate the people and |>a»fi the Kiluci io Tiat

moment wp planted the seeds of revolution, and we mm

faco a ucw urdci vf tlitugn. The Public library AcU are * tuiural

lOe of the Eduratioi) AcU. Aa time tolls on, 1I1U nil! becoa evident, that I bclinvu tlio Public Libraries Acta nniM lx anittraalK adopted.

Tao followlna; U9 a (»>>»> specially written i'.-i i i coromoay oi a 1'ublie Labravy re ito livvud Jiut« :

naif/

APPKNMX I.

Good Sooki.

" Ad n sky that hun no cnnnudlntioiiR, As a . "mi ii y uimatoicd by brooks,

Aa a honsc that ia empty of kindled, U ml In mined by loving lookn,

So dull in the life of the people

Wlin (enow not the birring of books,

Good Looks arc the best of cum pardons, They help ua to sec with the eyes

Of tho groat ones in ngos historic ; Dead saint* at tluur bidding ante

Prom the moss-mounded graveyards to toaeii in That the tiuLli wlml; U Hud nrvur dfa.

Good books arc thu kindest of unkjubourit ;

Thoy help ua to know oua another | Thay show how tho words 'man* and 'woman'

Have Always meant 'sistfir' and 'hrnther.* So they fan to lifi: reelings fYatuiual

That the dnat of the work-duy might BBTOihtT.

Kio hooka that we cherish are Iranian ;

Tliey bi'i* written from heart unto heart : Now they muvu iik to sinking uud laughter;

Now I hey uw*» tho warm lou-diop to start ; \V< feel— a* wo read— their fresh pages

By tho roao-breath of love blown apart.

Good books are an inspiration ;

A spirit within stir* thuir leaves With the nigh of a burden prophetic,

That worms, and rejoices, and giiovcs; An I the ear that is open to hear it

The word of tho vision receive*.

i;,n>.| liooko— who all measure their 'deviing Tell how it begin*, wheru it ooils I

Sow thov totWWMTO I\wt, PlOMDt) Future, Until Tlino with Ktcrnity blends!

TI117 an) man Ihwi sofDistoloUB anil u.iiyhUiurH s Good 1h>i»Ux kiu th* truest of friend*.

Good bookn tliv) who build tlicui a shelter

A place among puoplo to aUy A* hid pur* and guides and iimpmrK,

Onr bolt benflwltvra are they, And therefore the heart of this village

To our friends ia grateful to-day."

527

HOW TO POPULARIZE AND EXTEND THE WORK OP PUBLIC

^LIBBARIES. The Opinions of a few Librarians,

Banow-in-Purneae (Mr. Frowde). Increase the mi ■■• h l.jd. or 2d. so hut branches might be opened. Some stay rliii would isad to the ejection of the Acts in certain places. My plan w ww-i l,v. \«j W\ S.V*. *v«.

■CN

prune i.rnitAmr.3,

remain at Id. until tbe Central Library la a prove-: thflra that Qm

w.-.-k nay be intended and paid for out of the increas** rate. |t bfl optional for Cou mils or Library Committees to levy lb- fate at

will.

Birkenhead iMr. Hayi.—To advertise in the widest manner the mlwuitagea of iiMug thnlduraiy. To advertise llit Library the mi in u any other htminrw scouia to bavo been 1 oat sight of, A now Li '•■ thrown open and tho people aro ovpoctod to guess what i* cxk; therein.

Blackburn (Mr. Aaoton),— The special feature* of Libraries etc., depend to a great oitent upon ita relation* to tho town, and i out it* own ipecUl work, a/dt its mtotiag the people in their own branch b| t dnBtry. If thin is done the work must Ik* appreciated.

Bootle (Mr. J. J. Ogle).-(l) The bettor payment of tho right men. <J) T It >• tnioouragement of certificated Library Aflrifftfttrhv (3) The aprsad of ii broader and higher ideal of the functions of a Public Library i light uii'ii I mean men in full sympathy «iLli working poopu ml with taVnsat young students, aa well oa good organizers and of wide muni reading and thorough Knowledge of library history and general li. To secure this typo of roau for tho niovement will r< the oner of better salaries than are usually given. ["think, with *\ Irgal restrictions even, a very great deal can bo done by the right men.

Bradford ;Mr. Wood). All burdens of rent, rates, lighting, *t«., oliould I., i ■--■ moved, or At least not paid fur out of the penny rat«. A scan* in the pound it nut aiiffloieut to uiouilaiu branched and the fantrsl Library'.

CUtheroe (Mr, Kobinaou).— I should say that a librarian might tnli\ a useful service by directing the attcuttuu uf borrowers to the beat world. With boys especially a great deal might be dona in tbo way of adiisiiur. and directing tho choice of book*.

Denton (Mr. Snteliffo).— By impressing unon all local mthorltki the avty of aut'li institutions and the great benefits derived fitona lUm. (apueially to tbo rising generation. A lecture we had in tliiu diatri " nihlid Libraries and tneir Uses " appear* to have armiwod tho inhabitant*, for the attendance has been very much increased.

Great Yarmouth (Mr. Carter). The distribution of reports of anCMeflfttl Publie Libraries in places where the Acta have not bean udop-

Halifax (Mr. WhJteley).— A battel Btyk or education at the Board Schools. The nnpila of theie schools seem to leave with a rdnge imperfect knowledge, of their own language, malting them totally m«-..- of understanding anything like high-clow litciatuir.

Harrogate (Mr Harrison), Ky eo-opcratkm. That i*. tha eoflUBlttN with the librnriflii, and the governing body with the public

Northampton (Mr. George).. -Too muoh at:- nil,. i! .mn.i . [-aid rising gen (traitor. By getting hold of the lioys mid girls befora tha left school, and so ouc.ourflgiug and guiding a tastt) lor rending.

Norwloh (Meflars.EftsWTandTennaot).— Uocnghiziiigtlio utility of trade advertising Untune ihonld be regularly given \ to tho contents and nacfuIawB "I lli^ books, and aimuuueeiucui,* made ol lliu uev i The circulation of u two- page leallct yearly through mil id, .| I ring i bo arrangements and facilities connected with :li

Wyjnoath (Mr. WrlghtV— \Sy TOVa\^\^fe\Aa.u^waA.va\t.roi,Uii in tli*

WTHNnr* II.

529

Boanl Schools for srcning uso, so that every district of a towuship be <u i -plied. By circulating book* by the same, medium bo the chUaren attending the public elementary schools. And by assisting diatnct* where no such libraries exist to reoognue tho value of these institution*,

Prestoa (Kr. Bramwell).— For existing libraries mi active chairman Md liberal cof&BlittM, 4ttpj)0f*UDg and BtWMtbcpiBg tho work, of an industrious and faithful librarian, give solidity au<l increasing intcro.it to tho work*

St. Helena ,Hr. Lancaster).— Free lecture* on the different classes of literature t«ud lo popularize and increase tiw usufnluuss of the library. Attention could iltiih bo directed to thu best, books un various subjects. This would increase the demand for these book*.

Watford (Mr. Woolman).— Hotter [ftgUlattOD. With a consolidation of the Acts and a wider and broader seopc of the work laid down by the Icfiirdativu assembly, a greater incentive wuiild be given to libraiy work. Tli-: Public Library on^bt, in ix legislative nonac, to be established a* tho recognized institution at which, tho youth, instead of stopping short with bts VBTJ rudiiiiPiirary education at thirteen or fourteen, might so con

limio that education as to tit him lor any capacity. The Library Coiuuiitluo

would thou tike an tin- work where bba School Boanl left it oft it is au

anomalous thiug (bat tho School Hoard should be able to levy any amount of rain lor tho education nf ynnl.li, but that r.hn Library Committer with perhaps higher vork should be limit oil to a penny.

Whitohavon iMr, Simpson ,— Those cugaged in benevolent work aiming the poorer o1a4bo>» may do much to recommend tho benefits of tho merit u 'i, m. An animal celebration in connection witli tho library is * good method of lii'Hpi ning public intorost ami giving an impetus to the Wttft of our library.

Wlgan (Mr Folttard), Energy in administration. LmIWM Upon Bbf books. Liheral use of thf facilities offered by the local prattf. &S lew restrictions open the public as pOtt(blfc Constant attention to social local wants. Latent text l-ioks upon she various local industries. A liberal allowance of good Motion for recreative una.

Wimbledon (Mr. Babbitt),— The local press used to give the fullest publicity to tb«* library. Tho proceedings of tho committor should be open to tho roprooontativta of the press.

Wolverhampton (Mr. Elliot).— lly work inn in practical svmpathj prttll

tho people. By supplying tho books needed, ay hogimdti:; classes <y\' i untrue tioii bearing on fchfl trade of the locality.

BHgo (Mr. Saultry). If yrunU from i" >'< ..iiuim-nl could poeaibfy bo procured for tho purpose it would bo to the xfcatcat possible advantage, and ton 1 t>> ttu private pereons to give donations.

Aberdeen (Mr. Robertson).— The multiplying of the means of making

ihci public more I'ullv acquainted with tl anient i of tho books at thour

diapoaal. Titles in this respect give xo little information, or are so ofton mi*- lending, that withm.it explanatory notes they fail entirely of then puipim:. SoTOtHiDg can be done to remedy this through tho catalogue, Bltt probably more might bo ullected l>v havloy K>meoae (the librarian bin ot lonifl bfhoi meoabatof bbi staff)) part of nhoea duty it .-diould bo ^i 1 1 Li bit and i Npbiin Bomrtbingof the abaraetu ^ booka for which iu^ulvy

LloUBsidl ! bll tb«1 l itoidd \ip looturcs by spt-.mlw on

paoUl -nii'sw* of raadtug i netitioii » III I v libi.iry Then w *

-I.W..1 Mil i pin i'u ibi etdUratlon «•! a clow ralkttamhin hatwawvtfc*

firm

TJi.r-- rap itim.

Public Library and UM 1\i1>1k Efc&oola Thw* *hould »ti|.iplcjxiciit

■npporl -.1 both* r, lepociallysoas that, for thogreat multituaV, whereat education uiterrujited jnat when it is bacoming valuable, tha

Library may amy on I h I I Bgonin Uio aohnola, ui<) ' rue, in truth,

a University for the people.

APPENDIX II.

PUBLIC LIItRARIES' ACT. 1355.

IS ftjrft 10 VtOTOBUi Cap. LXX.

Aii A" I bl liiririh promoting the fetablhshmeiit •">*' PvbUc Lihrarw* Mu-Liiiits in Municipal Towim, Hinl Cor extending it to Towim bow iiuilt'i Local Improvement Acta ami bo Pariah**. [30i l | |J8.]

\\rHEHHA8 it ia expedient to amend and extend (he Pul.li. ) W Ant, IS50 : Be It therpfnre Piiftrtml h\ i : . . .. I

Majesty, by anil will; the Advira and Consent of I Of T,< i U spiritual end i'- nipuitil, and Oominona, in ibh prauat Parliament mwmi ifed, ami

ih Amln iity of the aatnc, u& follows .

Acts repealed. 1. The Public Libraries An, I860. U h., ,;. but such retwal shall not invalidate or aflojt anything aire* i m tnau.ee of thu same Act ; an<I all Libraries ami Mm-.

i that Avt oi the Act thereby repealed nrvill b. :onaidi rod i-> ii nndci iIjih Act, and tho Council ■■( any Borough

idopted the sani A»-t of One ihout^nJ eight huuilruj an or f'stnbbshwl a M Often m nml'T tho Act thereby repealed -(hall h»r* an<(

may uv and exerciao all tho r5cuciltet I'rtvilegas, ami Powm. pi- tfall Act; end ill Monica which have I

*»aiil repealed Acta or cithm* of them, end .-.till remaining unpai

i { fhnruof, shall bo iihnrgod on the Borough Rates, or a Rate to ujmiimbou1 and recovered in tho like Manner u a thorough llato to b<

i.y -. Irf !- of thii Act.

11. In dthifl th» Act i'< i an% Pin !■'■.■•■■.. \, i ._ i - - •- ■<. h ■.., ill In .mii. ■. u*e thu HUprcaaiuu, " Tlic Public Iaoratua Ad, LfiAfr."

Interpretation of Terma 111. In tho Qonatrootton o!' thi* Aot 1h* wing Word* anil Expressions fchrtll, uiiIpmk tlmru hr Subject orOontext rapuguaut i" huuIi Couaituvtion, )t \ Meaninga usfthniud to them respective!} . thai is to aoy. mean every Place maintaining ita uw« Poor; " Vcatry bj ia (h>

Inhabitant* of thu Pariah lawfully aaaeniblcnl in Vestry, "i for any Purpose* for which Vi'sriie* *ro holdon, except in I trhiok

iIhmv - i j*Hort. vrn*try dccUfd under the Art of thi t'liry alntt Year King '".'!</■;/' ih'' Tlr.nl, Chapter Twelve, or under tho A< t «f :1

iad V'eam of Kijik IFitiiaw Lbo Fotii li, Ulia iUii llxtv, wi und< Piovi.uoiij of ftiiy Local Act of Parliamont for flu Qovorunivul Pariah by Vootrice, in which Piu-isln-B it nhnl! nntm mich SI. I '. ands] ..-.. i,i-'.'in any Kod; . . ^ \ >,, . .i ^

.in. ..i an; A< i ol Parliament, I'n rl|>Tton . in ruitcad of n Vostty or S«Ioi:i Vi- try ; li

rufaii n'l Peraona f»i thu Tiiui bi itig BBBemod !■• Bat

I' ' i ■' 1 1 '\ i 1. i . : iii. ;in alf

autftOJ I'd1 hi l a\< i" w\A< .u.i. . ., I. ■( r ho Km i f

of (bo Patiah, wad wltoftVaaJUad *a vi-jrt-«-»-».u\ *.•.■

ArPEXI'IX II.

.*JI

shall mean the Coiwiiiaeioncra, Trnateoa. 01 utlici ttodv of Peraoua, l>y whatover Namo Pfctingnuhod, for the Time being in Ofttec and anting in the Execution of any Improvement Act, being art Act for draining, .•Icrtn^ing, paving, lighting, waddling, or olherwtae improving a Place, or for any of those Purposes : " Improvement Rates " shall mean Ihfl Kin-, Tolls, Runt.if Iiiiuiue, onfl other Monica wlmlsinnei which wider the Provisions of luiy mich Improvement Ant ah.vll Iki applicable for the gonoral Purposes o! amdj Act.

Town Council*.— IV, Thr_ Mayor of any Munuipal Horimgh tho Peculation of which, according to the then laat Census thereof, shall exceed Five Thousand Pemoni., *lialt, on the U«Mtu.'b(. of tho Town Council, coavane a Public Mooting of tin- liiiryew, .11 'the itorougli, in ord« i fcg .It'ti'imiiK- whether thix Act. ah all Ik? adopted for the Miinirip.il iSnrough, and Ton Days' Notice at leftist of the Time, Hate, ami Object •>( Eflfl Meeting anali l». givon by ifflidi g tin hum on « now On nam of *wj

Cliurcli and Chapel within tlic Borough, aud uUj by advertising the sain'e in One or more of the Newspapers published or circulated within the Igb, Seven Dayaaf leaat rWni-i? th« Day upjiointcd for *meh Meeting : and if at such Hattutgl l»0>l I] rdflol BOoll Parsonr- aw aforesaid then present shall determine that thb Act might tu lr adopted for Ihc Borough, Urn same shall tlimitefurth take effect and come into ujitratbii iu such Borough, and shall bii carried iu;o execution in nccordan villi the Laws for tho Timo being in force relating to the Municipal Corporation of Quell Borough. ProvMM always that the Mayor, or, in llli Absence, tin Chairman of the Meeting, shall cause a Minute to be made of the RmoIii< of the Miieling, and nhnll sign the aaini! , and the RcnidutionB so 1 slml! bo conclusive Evidence that the Meeting waa duly convem.-d, rhe Vote tlioroat duly takon, and that tho Minute contain* a true t. of the Proceedings thereat.

. V. Tho Expenses incurred in nulling and holding (,he Meeting, whether this Act shall bn adopted or nut, and tho Kxponwa of carrying thu> Act into execution in tqcb Korough, may be paid out of the

lloroiigb Fund, and the Council may levy by a separate Rate, tD I idled

a Library Rait, to 1*; made and recoverable in the Manna hereinafter

Kivlded, nil Monies from Time to Time ticct.-wiuy for defraying audi pousct; and distinct Accounts eball he kept of the Ueccipta, PavflM iiinl Liul'ilitio* of tho Council with rofen nr.» to (he Kv.-outioii nl i!n. Ac!,

Local Boardi.— VI, The board of any Dbtttot, bobjl l V\i >■ nitfcuj tbo Limit.- -I' liny Improvement Act, and having men a Population a* aforesaid, ahall, u|wn the Rcqiiiitiol) in Writing of it least Ton Peraone aeeeucd to and piy:i,e the 1 row woluonl Kate, appoint Tfasi not loaa than Ten Hay* nor more tliati Twenty Day* from the Timo nf receiving m\i\ iLrqni^.iiun for u Public Meeting of the Persons aanossed to ami Wjblg »UCh Rate in oidvi to detvriiiine vliethci tins AeL nhall be adopts lbi'MU'h CKatrict, And Ten Days' Notice at leant of tti Time, Placn, mid Object ofenoh Meeting h)iuH bn given by afltxing thu Mae on or near the Door of every Chareo .nui Chanel within tfae Iiintriet, and alio by adviii'lmin^ the Maine in One or mote of the Newspapers ptililiahnl < t ■iiriibii.'.: wuhiii Lin- Diltrfcti .Seven Dayn at lotfil bofbTfl the DoY

ippolutod for iln UeoUni u i If *t naoh afoatfox Two-thin '

an Aa aforceai'i tlt-.n praaont Rhal] loiarniiae e£jbI tbit Ait ongiit i" be adopted for tho DUtrwtAe sumo <hall thonoeforth takocffoS, and eomo into operation tn aueli EHltrift, aimI «hall '••• CArrtad Into acconliiig tn the I.a\v> fm '.hr lime bvin^\n l«TCS ta\w^\v,U\ w\«-V\^w.\.

MS

II BUi LJIiHAHIKft.

VII. Tho Exponacu incurred in calling and holding tlio Meeting, whether this A<it shall ha adopted or not, am! tli* Kxpr i.-. I ■>' »rrT:np thin Art into UoOQttal In *ny moh District, -hall bn paid tint of the Improvement lUtt, and tin- lJuard may levy as Part of tho liiiprovciat&l Rate, ur bj a separate lUtc tu be AMusaed and lecovcred in Uko Maimer is an UBproramiftt Koto. am-h 8nmn of Money oa 3h0.ll be from Time toTmic noeeesary fur defraying such Expense*: and the Hoard ■hnli leoap cUrtfod ■'».■. .-nnta of their farmplR, I'aynients, Credits, and LttbUicSoi sntb

reference to the Execution of this Act, which Accounts shall bo audited to the BHM Way Account* arc directed to be audited undei Lhi Em niout Act,

FATtahoi.— VIII. Upon the KwpiiiflitK.n in Writing of nt l<-n>t TVn Hat*- layers nf nay Parish having aoiJi a Population aforesaid, ihr Oveneer* of tho Pool shall npiwint * Time, not 1pm than Ton Daye not more than Tnonty Pays from tho Time of receiving suoh Requisition, for a I

UttOtiag Of th' K'''i'"\': : "[■('it. 1 T -. » minfi Win th01 tin: At tiifiali U

ufoi the Pariah; and Ten Days' Notieo at loaut u!"t!..- Time, and Object of die Meeting shall le j£ivim by BJ I nMr

the Door of every dm roll mid Chapel within the Parish, and iln fay advertising tho same in Ono or more of thy Newspaper* puU.*hcd Q liicuUtcd within the Parian, fieren Daye at leut before the Day apuoiatal fcr tlie Mooting ; and if at euuh Meeting Twu- thirds of tlio Rai. ; than present shall determine that this Act ought to Ije adopt Parish, the same ahall come into operation in such Pariah, and rh* Y«ttry ■hall forthwith appoint not less than Throe nor more than Nlrn

the Act lata uooution, who >>l>»li Ik »

IT

tyers CuiumiKiiuuer* fur currying the

odv Corporate by the name of "The ComnuWionora for Public 1

and Hueounw for tho Parish of , in the Cotraty of ," and

bj that name may nue and be mod, and hold and dispose of Lain-- nso a Common Seal : Provided Always, that in any Vmi-li w i ■■•• •.!..- shall not he a greater Population than Eight thousand Inhabitants by Qm llitn last Census, it shall bo lawful for any Ten Ratepayers to dcli»r' a Requisition by thorn digued, and describing their Place of K tho OvorteoH ur ono of tho Overseers ol the wid Parish, requiring tho Vote* of the Ratepayer* at auch Aluoting to he talt»n according ! I'n visions of the Act. passed in t.hn Fifty -eighth Year of the rVign ol Kinfl (Jwr'ie tin' Third, Cimpter Suty-uiiie. and the Yotva at such Mediae; ohall thoic'Upon be ultcii according to tho Provisions of the said last Eoaed Act of Parliament, and not othotwiso.

Bo tiring from Office.— IX. At tho Termination uf 1 Yaai beiug reckoned from and exclusive of the Day of the Fimt A] | ntent. of O'uniitiBeinuorB) a Meeting of the Vaetry ehall ba hcid, a* Meeting One-third or ai nearly aimay bo ttn** -third of the Coromianonava, tu bo determined by Ballot, shall go oat of Office, and the Veat.-; appoint othor OoinmuniAnani in their Place, bai thi emtgninjj miwioiiuni may tw lv-clcctod ; and tho Vwatrj shall r) VaoaACJ

among the OoniaSaaioTiei^, ^b-ili.r .>-rurring by Death, Bcsignatt* othorwiao, as noon as posaiblo after tho same oocun.

Meetings of ConunLaaionenj,— X. The CoiumiMiuiicr&fthal! tiimtatloaai DliCB in rvcrv Cali:nJtti Month, and at ftuch other Timo m* the) ll i tit the Public Libi-ary '>i Mi uufi or nomo othur convonienl rloM i uw . in* I'oiiuiuKKioni-r may xnuirnon a Special Bjoetiog of th-- I

1 mot by gfvliiR Phi «i olnar Days' Notice in Writing ,|% •*«■

m

APPKtfUIX I!.

saa

culled : and no Sultans shall bo transacted at any Meeting of tb» Com- missioners unless at least. Two Commissioners shall bo present,

Minutes of Proceeding*,— XI, All Orders ami Proceedings of the Commissioners shall be entered in Books to be kept Lfl thtm for that Purpose, and shall bo signed by the Commisniom-ia ov any Two of ihern ; and all such Orders mid Proceedings no entered, and purporting to be bo signed, shall he AwBMd he original Orders and IVoceedings, »"d «ueh Books may lie produced and read as Evidence of all suuli Orders and Proceedings U|k»ii nuy judicial l'u.'i.vcdiug whal!>uev»:r.

Account!.— XII. The Commissioners ahull keep distinct and regular Accounts of their Receipts, Pa v incuts. Credits, and Liabilities with nifri- •'it'" to th» Execution of this Aci, which Account-a shall he audi ltd yearly the Poor Law Auditor, if tlio Accounts of Rota Rate Expenditure of

the polish be audited by a Hoor Law Auditor, but it Dot &o audited, than by Two Auditors not boing Commissioner?, who shall he yearly appointed by the Vftniry. and thn Auditor or Auditor* xliall report th-ii'i-on, and miicIi Report shall be laid before the Vealty by the Commissioners,

Expenses XIII Tim Expe-nae* of calling ami holding the Meeting the Ratepayer^ whetber thh \a\ diail bo adopted or not., mid thn penaoi 01 carrying this .v t Into execution in any Parish, to such Ani'Miut (i- -thrtll be from t ttm to lime aattOtSoned hy the Vestry, anal] he (inid one uf a Rato to bo niado and MOOTarad in like Manner as a Poor Kate, axofpft that every Person occupying Lands iwed as Arable, Meadow, tie Pasture Ground only, or am Woodlands or Market Ciitrdeiis, or Kursery Grounds, shall be mud in ivspeci uf the sumo in the Proportion OJ Oiie-Thiid purl only of the full net annual Value thutcof RMpOOtivAly i tho Vestry to he called for the Purpose of aauctitduug the Amount shall be convened in the Manner umial in tho Pariah < the mount lor thP Time being proposed to be raued for such JCxpenaea qhall bfi '-(pressed in the Notice convening thfl Vcntry. ami shall he paid, according to the Order of the Voslry, to mob Parson as shall bi tppgdnted by Ihi Ooninlanionan toitcttTv>tiioninoi Provided uJ way*, that in tho Notion ionium" the Payment of tho Rate there ehall be stated the l'i'"p..iti"ii which tie- Anumnt t«* bo thereby ruined for I ho PmpOaM Of this ACt ihflll hear to the total Amount of the P.:ti

Veatries combining, ~XIV, Tho Veatrica of any Two or moro noigh i, ,,i ini;: PariihM having aeoording to (he then Io«t Couaua an aggregate

PopunUfon eioftoiliiig Yw* thomauu] Pamona may adopt thta Act, in liko

Manner as if the Population t>f each of those Parishes according I" Ilia

[ant Oenaua oxoeedexl Five thounaud, and may concur in currying the eorao into execution in such Parishes for »ueh Time a* thoy shall antaaUy agree ; and such Vestries nioy decide that a Public Library or Mumhihi, q] holh, shall be erected hi any Oiu- Oi lUOfc Rtrfahaa, Ud tlml the I'.MjwnBOfl of earning thfc Act into execution wirh reference to the same alutll bi horne hy raoh Pari-hes in audi Prupurtious ai such Vuairie** xhall mutually approve; the Proportion for each of ouch Pariahefl "' ''' Experieca ehall bo paid out of the Monies to bo raised for tho fifiliof i t Ihi Poor of the aame raajpaotive Purinh*is :iecordi»gly : bnt no mom than Thrw ComialMloaani shall he appointed for aaoh Parish : and the Oorankbadoneni *" aptiointad f«**r each of Booh Pnriahej s 1 . a I in i.ln< MnitngBTHTint of the lanl Public Libiary and Miiheum form One liudy of Cuiiiniisaiuuci*, uud shall aet accordingly in the BncoaUoa ol thfa At j and tho Accounts of tho Commissioners ahall ho examined and nj on hy the Auditor or Auditors of oaeh of su^h PariehQi i a.ndltw> wa^jVox

Ml

PI ii UOOAniKS.

to til- O'mm'h of itch I'.iii iij'-- ■onieatj ffoportfoi

■i, i, i u bt ball b n*ah i o met I | n

BAtoi loried.— XV. The Amount of the Rule ... \„ [vriad Ui mj Horongh, Dfatrt i. of Pariah m any On« Vo*r for the Pttrpoaaj uf ilii oh*U not ox*v>'"l ihi- Sun. <./ Ono Penny io in Poun

Exjpv nf thi Librtrt Rati •» i tin QUnaw VI tho loan-. ]inpr^.»><ni«rt Ittifte* Aot, 1*47. with re.Hnect to tho Wannor of making Kaii« i

Appeal to In: msdfl ii»»iisl nnv Satft, aflll Uj tbB Keen i \ if Kate*. tiX\ 1m iii>mj<<MU(l will. Ihi.- Act . a ml \»!iint.ver (lu VTovdfl ' :;

ooeur in th* Act »rporat< tl they shall moan " The l*ul

A<t, IBB*."

Accounts of Board. —The AooountB id Board am

sianou ro*Doctivcly, wit i reference to kite EfttoeutlOD of this *ck m all roMonAblo Times lw ipen, without Charge, to tlu inspection oj

Person rated to the liiipi<»v.>iiii'iit Rule ot to :!.• K;. u--. for '1, li . thp 1'onr of thp Paruh, i< thfl Oaat may lie, who inny tnnko Conir-- Extracts from audi Ao uunl .. without paying foT the *am« ; an Hu»rtl ui tlm CiiiiiiuiMiuiK'o, ui any ui Utotii re&HiCtivoly, ur any roonuctivo Ollirvia ui Servants liaruig the Cn*tod> of such Ao.'ouuU. shall not jwrmit tlio sarin Account-! to ho iiinpui tad, in- ' i . ..I u from theaatno to \h made, ovory Person so < Hon Ling ehall for

ve Poandf. Power to Borrow-— X VI. Foi carrying tula Ac* nto i, the

C"iiii;:l lV-iipt, ■•[■ i.'"innii> < i ii » r I'-- J".-.-! .vis* may, with t!w A. i j * : ■■■

UajestV s Trea&ai v -.in*. lommiwiouen, with tlx<

ftlioof tha Veatn rod the Poor Law Board), from Time to Tims bone* at Internal, on the Security of a Mortgags or Item! of Tho Rnre or of the Rates levin! in iitirviMiicii uf Uils Act, nucb Suu -noy *>

h :i\ \. l»v thorn |v>ji,vtivnl> rOHlirwl, mill tin

ui execution tho At ..f the Niot i aoH Tenth Yearn of Hoi Majoats, i haptei Eighty ,iivv ll",,l Thn« t<> TIrn advance and land any ona\

SllIlIX M

Proriaioiis of BorrowinR. XVII, Tlio (.'lauoob ami J'rovhtlun ' "in]ianio6 Clauaed Consolidation Act, 181.''," iN.tli roaucot i

. ■<■) ..]i Mortgage ot nond, oiiii the AccountabiHtr of OOoo*

an>l tho tUoovary of hiamnyoe uinl PecaltSas, M lar on oaoii I' niuy nwjimtivi'ly he nrtplirnhlc to th« Pm'paans ni \\\\% X'!, Bhl

, . -j i tive j nn.li;, tratH #ltl thli V I

Lands, 4c, appropriated. SVH1 Thi CoiiDoil of any Eku thlBoaidol my iJintriot respwtively may I'l'.ii] Turn to TLsu ..•lith* | pprov i of Mai Waiaaty's Trejuuiy, Aii|>ni]>i>lata for ;he pcu*poa<a r.4 tli* Act an) Nui.l- vvsilau, u Ihi Cftao may ho, in * Bomiigh, in ttio Mav«r, ''■'■■ ii i Mini KurKcmjua, aiida in a District iu tho Board; ah. Ooonoili Board, and CommisHonora reapootii ilj mar il Approval, nurcliaoo or ronl | L i i i op any aultubli Ririliltnui I ""^ tho Council wml Uoai'il and Commission urs rcupuo lively may, npoo any I-iimU *<i a|i|iroi)riatec1, [nirohaso*l( or rontod raspeoti Bufldlnm simabw for Pdblfn Ubrarto or in both. «>r fitr

Art, ami niuy ajipls, take ih rn, altor, ami luoh i ui [KjacM, and rebuild, rapair, and iznpruTT ta« roapacuvuly, and lit Up, furniuh, mul iu;»j>l;. irc^r

■■ b i/i requisite P\lTni ' ow D -now.

W-I'KVWC II.

585

UftTO

Ge

XIX. "The Linda Clauact Consolidation Act, 1816," shall be [uooi pOltled "itli r.liia Act; hill rhe Coiinnl, BmMI. and t_(>iniiii*'-ii<>ii< ik

raapflotlve^y shall Dot ponhaN w take any [aqos oUierwlae than by

Agreement,

Lands Sold, Ac.— XX. Tin* Council, Board, ami CafumiafriniHirx nfoiwaid reipoxtfvely may. with the like Approval as i* required for the Purchase of Lauds, sell any Lauds vo&tod m the Mayor, Aldoimou, and Burgesses, or Board, of Oaottlflilonori roswotlvriy, km 1 1 * -_- Pur ponce of thtit Act, or exchange the aam» for any Lands bettor adapted for the Purjtoses ; and tho M onion to *ri*tt from atich Sale, or to be TOMWed for Equality oi l<;>vh«ign, nr aRUinoinnt Fart thorflof, shall 00 applied in or towards Lbc Purchase of olhur Lamb? better adapted fur dueh rurpobes,

General Kauageinent.— XXL 'I'Lc gun oral Managunnmt, ReguUr.inn,

Control of such Libraries urn! Mum mm, Schools ratv Science an 1 A. I .

be, as to any Borough, vested in and exorcised by the Council, and

to any District in and by tho Board, and us to m <, Parian or Parities in and by the Commissions or fllCb Comuritteu as tKtfih Council or Hoard may from Time to Thnn* appoint, the M-nibum whereof need not be (numbers of tho 0DttHQu Off Board or he Comuiissiouure, who may fiom Time to Tinn purchase and 1 . 'lo Hie necessary TucI, Lighting, and Othel Bflaflaf Button j Hooks, HOWIMPOMj .Maps, mi 1 Bpoeimcnf ->f Art and Soionco, for tho Uao Of tin* Library of Museum, or School, end oattefl the UVU to " betlni Off

repaired whf-n aewaBary, end aupnint Knlarfod Officer! and Ber*ente< tnd

disml» the same, and make Hub's and Regulations for tho Safety and L'se oJ i;. ! hmrioBBod Museums, sod Sohoolj, ami fur * I ■*- A<innv PnbUft Property Vested.— XXII. The Lauds and Building* no ti bo Off

Sropriatcd, pnridinsod, or rented xt aforesaid, and all othor Ucnl and LTBonal Property »rhetover preaealed bo or purchased for any Library or Muxi'um eottbliibed under odt Aat, or Sohoolj shall i>« vested, u Caw.» of a ftorongh in the Mayor, Aldermen, 10 I Burflpajco; in tk<> Com of a District ID the Board, and in the mwof a Ewtn 01 Pariaha* in the Commissioners.

XXIII. If any Meeting failed as aforesaid to determine as to tho Ad- plion of tliii> Act for any Borough, District, oi i\niih m1io.1I detORnfae against tho Adoption, no Meeting for a similar Piu-po-ir, "ball \m imld for the Spoco of One Tear of. least from tho Time of holding mvioui BCeefiiur. City of London. XXIV. Tho Lord Mnyor of the City of Lc fehftll, on th ft tteijucat of ll»t« Lord Mayor, Aldermen, ami Common* of

the Oity d lantton, fa Comnoo Council iwembla), convene i Pab

MeetluK in DUUSeZ liiMoiubofuio nientiontd of all PernoiiH rated and aMOaaod to the Comolidated Rnta in the City of &OH&OH* in ordn to Irtcrmino wlielbcr thin Act nhnll be adopted in llie said City; ami if at lUOfa Mooting Two-thirds of «uoh PerHou* thou present thai) tletor*

-nine tliat thii act ought to be idoptod for 1 1 ( I i;.v irf LendiM, the oame shall thennefortb talte etTeft and comp into ojieiution in the I I i if LuiuUm, and shall bo carriod into exucntioii in HCeonloooa with tint fjftWl for th> Tiuie Ixaing in foffM relatiui; to tlm City of /simian ;

ways, that the ReeolatioD of *Hoh Publii Mo. tin;. t Lit Lord Mayor, *hal! be reported to tho told Lord Mayor, Alilenueo, ana Commons, in Common Council aniemblod, and entered m thl ^hriiitos rbon-of, and that such Entry almll U< RvldtnOO: the SxpflnflU iiiumed

-,.'!.

I'l Hl.lf UltRMtlKS

in culling am) boh Hug the Meeting; wbethe* ttik Act Bain

■ml (In: c.i |ir iihL'n uf carryiuj; tltfn Act into the Oity of ton ton 'ill *«■ paid out of tho Consolidated Rat*, and tk* Commissioner* of siowers of the City of London may levy 4 Port <1 thl Consolidated Rate, or, by a separate Kite, to be assessed anil reeoev- lik. Mii:iri 11 the ConaolM atari Rata, all Monta from Ttaoi to

i.t »lcli:ivin^ nicli Iv-. ■h/m-i.' .. MkI li.'-.l.iiii 1. SOOtfUatl -.1 1 :t1 ; :•

kept of the Receipts, Payments, ana LinbOittOfl >»f the Mid Lord Xlftynr, AMermon, and Commons with reference to tho Execution »f

tine A,t.

V, The Ariitiiiutou wail LSbrarioa and Museums estnblvdn 1 in.l this A"t ehall be open to the Public flroo of oil ChngC XXVI. This Act ahsll not extend to Srelaiul or 8t#tl

PUBLIC LIBRARIES' AMENDMENT ACT (EK'LANl) AN'li SCOTLAND), 1060. 2# a?tp 30 Victoria, Oai-. CXIV.

An Act to amoud the Public Libraries let.

(1 irli Aupiut, iMHi TTfJHEBEAS it la expedient to amend the Public Libraries Act, M mill to asalmilntc the Laws relating to Public Libraries in luayTu and Scotland: Ik it thoreforc enacted by the Queen's mont ECxi Majesty, by nud With thfl Advu-o ond Consent of tho Lords Rnirittj&I ml TcmponI| and Commons, in thin present Parliament ugnmhli'd, ud bj the Authority of the same, as follows :

1. So mui'U of the Section fifteen of tho said Public Librarii 1So5, as incorporates with that Act certain Clattecv of the Towns In]

CIamm At-t, 1847, shall, so fitr m the same relates to or eonoonu Mnnlcipal Uuroughs, It- repealed.

Clauses Repealed.— '2. Section Wirt of the said Act, accept to nmeb thereol u relates 10 keeping distinct A<munts, shall beropesded ; ai Expensed incurred In calling and holding thu Meeting, whothnr ill

\ !inil V adiipti:d <j: not, and the Kx [tenner of cai:v-: into .\*-.';iti'Mi in iinv >1 1 re iiKil liorou^li, may ht paid onl of the DorOUftll Kate of Mitels Korough, or by and out of a Kate to be inodo and rocowsi hi such linrnngh, in like Manner as a linrnngh Kate may to 111 *- - en I therein, but the Amount io paid in snei Boi i] Ou

V11: -l:;ill DOl BXOeei] the BUOI of Olio Penuy ill lllO PtfUttU UIK'ii 'lit

Annual Value of the Piojieity in Audi Borough rateable to a Boi Bate: Provided always, that nothing in this Act diall interfere with tL

Operation of the Aet Twouty-cightb aud Twenty ninth aafH

One hundred and eight, so Tarns it relates to the Collection of a K*t» lore I'uldii: Library In the City tiCOtfOfd.

In Boronghs.— 3. The Public Meeting mentioned in Section 1 ..1 said Public Libraries Aet, IS55, ahall bo ml led either on 1 1 . i];< Town Cuuucil, or ou the RniueHl in Writing of Ton ftau>payen Tfeiding in the Borough.

Parishes.- I Any 1'nrlnb, nl whatever Pnpulstlon, fclj-'i liorouffb. District, or Parish which shall havn idontsd ur ihall n>i

61al«r the Adoption of the naid Public I.ibraiins Act, 1B65, may, Wj. onsciit of more than One-half of the Katcpayera thereof pfCSBJDt at a tfeeUna to lie oonvcneil in manner ilireu 1.. I by ' h rxs*«i

tp IfWttngH of Ratepayers ,an«\ w\\^ i\v''«^w u-u oftl

appf.npis n.

537

of luob DoiQugh; or the Board of .inch District, or the Cota&itastonefl of such Parish, as the Caao tuuy be, determine that such adjoining Parish shall forthe Purposes of the -mid Aet (bin Part ofaaeh Borough. I rittrii t, or Pariah, and thereupon the Vestry of mioh adjoining Parish shall forth- with appoint Threw Ratepayer* Cniiiinhbiimera for mieh Parish. Oim-tliird of whom shall go out of Office and the Vacancies In- Idled up as provided Lv tlio said Act with respect to tho Commissioners of a Parish, and audi Commissioners for the Time being shall for tho Purposes of tho said Act be considered oa Part of such Town Council, Board, or Commissioners as til..- Case may he ; am! the Expenses of malting the Meeting, and the Pro- !■.'■■ ir.n of the RxpenM* of such adjoining Pariah of carrying the said Act into execution ahall be paid out ofthe Poor Rates tlwrwf to such Person as the Commissioner* of the said adjoining Parish shall appoint to receive the saine.

A Majority of One half.— .'.. Tim Majority necessary to bu obtained for tho Adoption of tho said Act or the Public Libraries Act (Sattltuut), 1854, shall ho mora than Ouehalf of tbt> Persons present at the Meeting, instead of Two-thirds of such Parson* aa now* nqrauf L

Act may be adopted whatever Amount of Population. 6\ The Public Libraries Act (18G&) and the Public Libraries Act (Scotland) (1-951) ahall be applicable to any Borough, District, or Pariah, or Hurgh, of whatsvar Population

7. 8o much of Section G ofthe Public LibTariea Act (Scotland), 1864, as authorizes the demanding of i Poll ami 8irl.imis Seven and Right <if the said Act, are hereby repealed.

ft II any Meeting called aa provided by tlio Haul last-mentioned Act ahall ^ determine ngalust the Adoption of tho Act in any Burgh, no Mantiug for a similar Purposu shall Ik: held for the Space of Onu Year at least from th*» Time of holding the previous Meeting.

Borrowing*. —8. The Clausus and Provisions of the Companies Clause Consolidation (Scotland) Act (1845) vrith respect to the borrowing of Money upon Mortgage or Bond, and the Accountability of Otfloors, and il>' Keeovery of llaniago* and Penalties, so far as such Provisions may riwly M npUoaou to the Purposes of the said Public Libraries Ant fS.-otfaih/) 0854J, shall la> respectrvnly incorporated with thaf lot

Museums 10, Wherever a Public Museum or Library has (wen estab- lished under any Act relating to Public Libraries or Museums, or shall hmuaiW he established uudrr cither of the said I *efo re-men lion t:d Acts, a. Public Library or Museum, oa the Cose may bo, may at any time be ,blisb*«l in OO&MOtSoa therewith without any further Prorrcding.i

iug taken under the said Ads,

11. Tina Aut may bo citod ax The Public Libraries Amendment Act

iiitujlmui Mui Scoilttnd), 1H6W, and shall be taken to bo Part of the said 'ubiie Libraries Act, lX&fi, and shall he construed aci'onlinglv.

PDBLIO LIBRARIES' AOT (1S55) AMENDMENT ACT, IM71. 31 AKD 36 VlCTOliLA, Cak LXXl.

An Act to .intend the Public Libraries Act, 186B.

[14th August, 1871.J "lI'HEltEAB it is expedient r.« uuiend and t.x tend tin Piddie Libraries W Act, 1655, hereinafter referred to an the '* principal Act : " Ho it thoreforo enacted by tho Queen's moat KkcoIU\x1 M.t^«chV) *Vs*i *»&.

533

pi n r r.ItlK Mill:*

wiMi the adri«:o and confront of thf Lords Spiritual and Temporal, ar.t

h-iiu, hi fchii MtflRlK Parliament assembled, aud by tho authon tha naiiio, as follow*

I. Kvtiry local board, uu-U> tho l'ubhe HoalUi A •'.. 1S48, »nd tb* 1. K-ii Uor«nim«nt Aot, IB56 01 Bflthei ■->! ttiiia, i* amnowarad, in lit* manner » Uianl nnilcr any It ipTtmrflant \rr, tfl adopt ami miry into execution the principal Act.

Interpretation of Term*. '*. For tlic norpoaw nt.,>,. ..ml, tho follmrtryr. words in the principal Act shall have ttio following ettfim wl (font, \te., tin- won. " baud " shall tiiran any unci) local board m* ifort-

aaid ; the wonla " improrcincnt rat it " *hal[ moan the

rat* lfYJe4 bj WW •■» boarl; tho word " ratonayor*" shall OM

persona o«*i«*c-l bg and naying took general ciiitriot rat* : the word

** district " shall mean tne district in which anon local boanl ha*

mull irity to lovy a goner al district rat* | the mrni "In

hhail iniAii flic Local *iovriuiariit Act, 1858.

to much of aection fifteen of th<* principal Act as mfWrk to ihs

Towns Iiiiin'ivciiKMii. Clanaub Act, i S ■! 7 » afmll nut apply U> rat™ Bttdl In !>.,! boaraf trader ttra principal A<jt ; bwt nothing herein contained shall oufch Local ) b i' Ufyor urnond fa tho parpawi of tl... ■■i.m.ipsl

A'i i n v -i ''lito ma ii any y*« thai ■> i<> j >-nny in -ii" pooxuL

Borrowing Powexa.- 1. For currying into exocntioa the j rintip*i Act, 9W9PJ Wall ional board may borrow upon mortgage ol the EBraaral district nttwaoyoararata rata ha leviea ond>r thi > borrowlnR shall bo affected in conformity wick the \< borrowing contained ill Lin- Loral Govern went Aci, loot), and i In? Acts i i. .ii|.,.i.i tr ,; t.i , i ..Mi. i,, ii, u if thi pi >'■ ieioii u " bo ron inf| i nnltfnn in tho principal Act,

S. This Act iibaU not apply i«* my I i I the wb«l# m im ,.■ whiob \t within any auuuoipal borough, or within tho jariMich eomini*wioner» under any [awOTonMOl A< !

(1. Thia Act niay bo tiitud Cor ail purpOHOa a* "Tb« PabUc Libraries Act [1866) Amendment Aot, 1S71.

PUBLIC LiaBABUBB1 AMBNPMENT ACT, 1W7.

An Aeft to omond the ruhlio Librnrioe A

[Uth Autrn

\irHKKKAS by tho Pnblie fibrorlra Aftti, IS & 19 VTcl ' TT for Ireland; 29 & 30 Victoria, c 114, for Bnglrun] : iai 81 Victoria, o, 37, for Scotland, the mi».le by wliioh tha Aot la to W idoptod preMribod to bo by public mooting, and it haa L«u

that in many conch u [iiild :-■ I aot osd muatu

factory uiodo, and Tails to indicate tho general opinion of the rata payers, and it. U ilesirabU to jwcnrrain thene opininuti

Be it L*uaclcd by the Queen's iuuhL Excellent Majesty, by ana the adrioo and consent of the L#jrda .Spiritual and Teiu[Miraj

Commons, in thia present rarliaincnt aanciultlcl, und by lii< autli

i I il,<. Rttiuo, ao follows:

Voting Papon.— 1. It MiaJl be competent foi the prtaerrlbajd local ftOthority in any i.lacu or comtuiuiity wbleh liu-. tho power tu ailr>|it no* U tit* aboi'o reeitou Aoto, tnaaawluu ttw o^wtaiu ' I of th«

I ITU i

**>

ratepayers cither by the proocribed public mooting or hy tho issue of a voting paper to each ratepayer, and tho subsequent collection ami scrutiny i ii ."cuf. Ami any i*Vjk»tiw» hi connection with such voting papers fllmll h,- bonu iu thn suine way as tho expiinse of a public: nice Ung would be bOIQl mid the decision of (lie majority no awerUhwd ehedl bo onually binding.

Assessment— i!. In addition to the simple vote '* Vts" or *' No " In the adoption of the Ant, such voting paper may stipulate that iU adoption ah. til be -.ul'jtvl tu u limiUttiun to some lower rate ufaftie.'feiimiil than tho maximum nl lowed by Act of Parliament in force nt tlio rime, and nasi) lower Limit, if once adoptnd, ahnil not bt sulwo^uontly altered except by

public rota similarly tafcon,

3. "Ratoimycr" ahall mean every inhubitant wlin would ha\-<> to pay the Kree Library assessment in event of the Act being adopted.

4. This Act may ho WtOo* iw tlio Public Libraries Amendment Act, 1877.

[IM61

W MALICIOUS INJURIES TO PROPERTY ACT , (ENGLAND AND IRELAND). 24 UIDtS Virior.iv, OAV, \'<VIL, tj3ft. IOKVEU shall unlawfully ami MaJioioOfllj deetroj ofdifnif Book, 31anu*eript, Pfotur*, Pnnl, Stuhu-, Bttot ot Vote, M uuy other Artich' or Thing kepi for tin- purpose* of Art. Science, or Literature, >r as in Onjont id Cnrwwlty. in any Musmiim, Gallery, Cabiuot, Library,

»r other Repository, which Museum, SoIIott, C-ibinct, Library, or other

"epCoUory is either at till Tillies 01 from Tiliiu to Timu open iur flu

d mission of tho Public or of any ennaidiTahlo Xiimbii' of Pomona to rlow

& *amo, oiLbpr by the ponniBBton il tl.n Proptfotor tWoof ov by tho

»"!•■ "I" M.tin>\- ...|..r.> ■■( i."iit(L! tli" '■»! r ;iny Pi. -tine, Statu*1,

louumont, or other Memorial of the Dead, Painted Olnas, or other

hi.nuu'iii oi Work of Art, iuauv (Jhmcb, Ohs.pt], Hooting Huusu, or other

'hi*;'» of Diviuc Worship. .»r in my Building belonging to tho Queen, or to

any County, Ridiug, Division, City, Borough, Poor Law Union, Parish,

or Place, or to auy University, or College, or Hall of any University, oi'

to any Inn oi Court, or to any Street, Square, Churchyard, Burial Qroufid ,

'iihll'r t-ianl'Mi nruround, or any Statue or Mommmt expose.! To Pnnlln

leff, or any Ornament, Railing or Fence Burruuudiuy »uou Statue ov

mi' lit. diall bo guilty *>i a MlMffllffMHHir, aud being convicted thoicof,

bo liable to be imprisoned lor any Term not excoodiug Six Montha,

Eth Of without Hard Labour, and, if a Mole under tho Ago of Stfttouir

'•fttm. with or without Whipping : WOT Wfld that nothing hONiB

mull nhail iw dwm&l to alfect tho Right of any Pertmn to itcov-t, l>y Action of Low, Damages for tlir Injury io ohiiuh ttrd,

PUBLIC LIBRARIES' ACT, 1SSJ.

47 and 48 VicTOurA, Cap, W'.WM.

An Act to onipnd the Public T.ibiauca Acta,

[2filh.luly. 1534.1 iK it enacted by iIk- i/uuou'a moat Kxrulleiit Majesty, by »0<1 HW the odWoo an»l cou&ent of tin Lords Spiritual and Tcnijionil, slid lonimona, in this present Purliaineut aaxcmblod. and by the authority of is Mine, as follows :

540

I 'I Ml : 1.1 :n\r;lMs.

SeaooL of Art 1. WH adoubl have WWII «i to VTnetfa

tiek acting nnflrr the Pnblfe Libraries Acu lure power t<j talfi] the QOndlUWM required fur a parllaoittntary ,'rrant in aid nf the fts(xl»lixlmicni

Ol A Si linnt t,l ,\|. |m O A IK I All •• "1 ■' 1 < \ cl.i .|1 V I'.'UiuVO KUCh d'HlIlN i

It i^ in 'lil-'c; he toby declared aini enaoted thot. Where any authority acting under tho Public Libraii. \<ta »

K'ftiit out ol" nioiiitys j> V ■• i'lrluittciit from wy QOBQl Of Ebt

nvv Council on Eiluc-ilion lOVAfdn Cite puuhwe of the rite, Or ill' ri-iiti. BnlaiRunant) or renal] of en.\ School for Sdanceand Art. or Bdhoo] km Science, ot School for Art, or of i In rerideuoi I icna

in Mui-h school, or towaida the fhna'onlng of any inch Rehool, authority shall havo power to accept auon grant ujkmi thg tonditioi preecribed for the acceptance thereof by the i«d C< mmitt< wnh butruments as may 1* required by the eald Committee I Into " l'< i .H' I loudltious, dint upon [laytncnt of the. grunt shall. (• with tboir OOCOOMOlli be bound by »m:h condition? and iitstiuuicut, uid have power ami be bound to fulfil and obarxvu tho hum.

2. Where** lection eighteen of the Public Librario Act, L9&6. a^rtfianl* England, end RoctioD nine ol the Pahlu Ltbierice Act (Ireland), 1- regards Iruhind, provide for tho onotioii «>!' buildings "euifiablc fa Public Ubrerioe, or Milium*, or both, or foi Schools for Art".

And wIktwi-. m:i lion tun of the Public Libraries Art (Scotland),

8ruvUl«a for the election of building "suitable for, Public Libraries Ait tileries, or Museums, or each rcHpectSrelv," end doubts fcre cnl -Utu-'l ue tr» thfl moaning of those proviaione Now, therefore, il

declared tnd enacted that—

Bnfldlflga m:i\ nnder thfl mM xentiona be erected for Public Llbri Public Miihviuiii. Schools for Science, Art. Galleries, aud Ekhoch fw Art, or for any one or more of thoe* object*.

Power to establish Moieum.— 3. (1.) Where any of Liu i ill inatitutioQH) namely, a Public Mnwum, a Public Library, a Sclto Soioii-:« Hid Ar, a School for Science, o School for Art, or on ha* l.'Owu established either before or after tho paeeiugoi tfali \-> Uiw the Public liibrtrioA Acta, or any ol 'Km. thoro m*y at tl HttbllHharl in oonnaction Cherevith a»y otbet nf thfl lahl InatltQIIoai wiiinmt auy further |iroi«e<liiig8 being taVcn under the said Ao1

(S.) .Srciii.ii inn of thrt Public LihrarlfM Anirn Itnnir Act (Kn^Uud and 9ootlkud1. IStW, hi;i1 uwtioii *eveut^i'u "f ibu Public Libi (Scotbuu.1), lf5i(7(. arc hereby rei)^!*?!!, without projuilict I under thoat- KCaon i<

A. In toil Act, The cxpnaoion "Public Libmiine AcU" niceu* rwpMta England, Scotland, and Ireland respectively, the Acln men in the rivet, eocond, and third ports roepeotively of tho scheduU totn The csbieasioii " authority acting under the Public l,ihrane« Acta" m«ni

t.llH rouiicil. tumnl. mi.'/ixli :i.!.h or i niiniiiiuiioni'r .tlon

the said Public LibrariM Ad I .*.. This A«-t uiuy be lited as the Public Libraries Act. I i Tlie Acu iiiuutiuiieJ iu thi fint part of the >clieJ 'iy U

i tted togelliei with this Act »a tho Public Libreriee (England) A I

to U8i, Tho Aotw mentioned in the second part of the schedule to ihw Aet ttmf

)>. nt-ui t..L-i't1u«i with this Act as the Public Li hraric>* (Scotland

APPRNMS I.\

-ill

The Acts mentioned iii the third part of tbo schedule to this Act miy dttd together with this Act as tho Public LibrarinM Ireland) Acts, 1855 1884.

An Ml

PUBLIC LIBRARIES' ACTS AMENDMENT ACT, WW.

60 and 51 ViaroifA, Car. XXII.

An Act to am ond the Public Libravioe Acta.

[8th August, 1887.]

BE it on m: toil by tbo Queen's incut Kxaellont Majesty, by ami with tbo advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual ami Temporal, and 'ommnnn, in this present Parliament assembled, and by tbo authority tlie samo, as follow* *—

Prc/i'nti'nari/.

Short Titles.— 1 Thin Act may bo cited as the Public Libraries Acts

Amendment Act, 1887, and may, together with rhn Acts mantle ha tba

schedule hereto, be cited aa the Public Libraries (Euirjaud) Act*. 1P55 to

187.

Comtructioo of Aet. -3. Tliia Act uhaLI bo construed with tho Public Libraries (Rngland) Acta, 1865 to 1884, and expression- UW(1 in thin Act shall, unless the context letjunvti a dilfurent eonstnicliwi, hav« tho same nivaning as iu those Arts, and where any Motion in any of thnM Acts ha> boon modified by a oubnenucut Act, the reference hciciii tcudt bo D section shall bo construed to refer to tho section ao modified^ and tbl reference shall have cHect accordingly.

Extent of Act,— 3. Tbih Act -hall nut apply to Scotland, Ireland, or the city of Luuduu.

I Definitions. ). In this Act •'Metropolis" shall mean tho uiolro polls as define*! by the efebropolfa Maimgtiuoiit Act, 1855, excluding tlio city of Londou ; " Libt.iry Authority" means the Council, Commissioners, Hoard, or 0th* ponsrms or authority carrying into execution the Public Libraries Acta. ''District Board" means a district boaidumnLitulcd under the Metropolis Management Act, 18CB, and "District" shall have a coiTeaj'Miid- ing signification.

Lending Library ft. The power to en>crr establish, and maintain a lil rary, fj'iveu by the Public Libraries Act, 1855 (hereinafter Called Mi. I ; ti'ipafAct], shall be sxteudod ROM 40 empower the library authority to establish and maintain a lending library without providing any wpaiatc building for conUiniug the same, and to enable them to place nioh lending hlra-v under the care and superintendence of inch person u they shall rhuili'fit, and in a building or room not appropriated for the purposes of the said Act, or erected, purchased, or rented the librai y authority, and all the powers of tho Mid Aotfl shall bo applicable fur tin [>.irnoeos uf this section.

Amendment of Acts. —8. So nun b of nectiou fifteen of the principal Act

a** m 'orpomtea with that Acl aerUhi cUfiweeot the Tovni Lruprovenient

Claims Act, l & -i 7 . i-. berebg repealed. The Public Libraries Amendment Ac*, 187£ dmll ha*. iMi. UbrarieaArt, (856, wcrarocltod Lhoreus.

if Hie

m

i.rnuARinn.

Borrowing by Library Authorities— 7. ■■■• » wa httndi

tMrty-tixise, two tiu idred ami Uiirt>-faur, mid two hundred

Bis to twii luunlri'tl jih] lhir|.y-iiiii< , but!. ui< Iumyc. of tht I'til'lif Heallit

Aot| 1876. ohftll «i»i>ly, with tho necessary modification*, ■■ all i . . . , t - . %s . . S i y any library authority after the paurinj-;iif 11 . . if tie

Notary rntao it] viii I ii rbmn -unitnry authority and u il fatfoo the Vnbiic Liin'Ari«x (Engboid) Acta, i*5U to ia*;, iron rnibtdniMd to

tihoM V t iniiK and iii the fnrnw i.hiM'uin lututiouttd for i'.fi:n m-r- SftiiHiirv Acte or the Public Health Act, 1875.

So iuu<li ol Motion sorcntoQii of tho principal Aotasincon cliiuscb and provislona f the Companies Clnuoeu Consolidation with rssp»?i lo the borrowing of money on mortj rr[M<j|lfyl except ba to nay money borrowed liofoii> tlio paamij; nf tht»

Transfer to Local Government Board. 6. Tho power- and d ConTjniBrionOM of Eta Majoaty'e Treasury under the Pnblii Ul MBngUnd) Acta, i- id in 1887. *hall from oik! after the pajufpg o] Act hi; transferred to tin1 Local Goveruniuiil Hoard, ami nr.t:1

aud BtgbtOOB of thtl |>liln:I|i»l Act. shall bo construed *ud 1 ■.."•' M- I ju, if

a reference to tho approval of tlio Local flora n1 I knrd wan I intstituted for a reference to the approval of Her Mojesty'f Treasury.

Provision ai to Parish. 0. Where any pariah i* partly within air) partly without any borough or district which il.all have adopted . •joiitamplarv tho adoption of thepnncijwd Act, the part of without tbi< borough or district Khali, for the purpnsiiH nf tho i

Miction of the Public Librarian Amendment Act fKiigland am! Scot! 1800, be cou.Mtluiml a parish withiu tho moaning of tan said Motion the ororaoors of tho poor for the aai<l parish shall, for the purpose* 0 noid wi'tioii, ho con-odored the overseers of the part of the pariah ittuatc without the borough or district, and the expenses reforren U In thi niri itentlori shall, so far as such part of the pariah Is cencorneri, In- d- I out ul' a rati! to be levied by the overseers in such part Of the jutridi, i it.h.r m an addition tt. the pour rate, or as a MparatC rat*: to bo mule awl recovered in the earn© way as a poor rate, and to be subject to tot mhiio rightr? of appoal.

Power for Diatriet —10. Ln the metro poll* any ditto el .hall in

Clfat to adopt the 'principal Art, and for midi pnrposc the tuid Act altered and have effect as follows : (1. Section* eight, nine, twelve, fifteen, twenty-one, .in. I ■■. Khali be read as if the word " district*1 was MirrttlCutsd " ("rtiish"; aud the words "diatriet board" liiitoad of Lb " urenttwrV' and Uu word ' featry,' as tho tana may b*\ (2.) .lection thlrtoan Blull not apply, and inBtoa-l theroof tlio foWowlnji

pIOVTiioiU rdiall have afiSbOt - The oziienrKA of calling and hoMiu» Uie nieetinjrof tho ratepayers, whotnor the princii»l Act ohall bo uloptaJ oi exponoca incurred by the Oonimiailon i

Ail. and tha Acta rainoiidiug tho (tame Ii ion in aoy-iirt*

( !■ t, to snch xiiumiit vIihII lnt from llmi to tinu um hy ti . diatrii . hoard, kIihI I i paiil i ul "i the fin (I trict Utard h\^i\\uVa« Vo IVm ^uvvveXiiX^rtW-JV'^;'

AITKSIUX II,

:,va

in the tijcooution of tho Metropolis Management Act. 15.16, ami

the sums required for the purpose of defraying the extwn&es

incurred by trie Oommiwrionfini a* aforesaid -diall he paid by the

district board to aueh pursuit ait ahull bo ut/puiuicd by thu Com-

mUa&MMto to receive the niuh, hut DOUUfig herein contained

shall enable district boards to levy Or expend lor the purposes of

the principal Act and the Acta amending tho aiujo any greater

swm in any year than one penny in the pmin I

(3.) Section fourteen shall bu road as if llw word* '* district boards"

woro Bubstituted for the word " VHHtriea"; the word "district" for

"parish": and " fund* applicable to the general ex pen km incurred

by the district board in Uio execution of tho Metropolis ttuagomoot

Act, lS&il," for "money to bo rowed for the relief of the poor,'' mid

section MXtiioti ah all road an if tho words " distrust hoard" woro

substituted for tho word ".vestry," and the word a "rates out. of

which the nrPfJPWH Of '-ho UotiiiniwiiouerB are payable" fer the words

■"rates levied in pursuance of this Aut."

(l | Where any jumhlia* .previously to the t Assiug of thut Act aili.|.h< I

the piineipol Art, 0T <han milHwjuHitly adopt tho samn :

(a.) No person shall, by ivas.iii of Iwing a ratepayer of snch paxiafa, lw arennntwl ss * ratepayer of the aUtrint of which it farm* a part. (6.) No representative on tho district hoard for ouch |>aii.di shall

talec any part in any proceedings under thiii section, (e.) Such parish shall not bo called upon to contribute toward k any cvpenseK incurred, and no part of the funds of such parish ahou bn (upended in or towards calling or holding the meeting of tho ratepayers of the district, or carrying, the Act into execution in the district. {H.) And, tn every respect, such parish shall, for tho purpose* of

tliis section, be treated as if it were ouUile tho district. (#.) Any question of accounts arising between mch parish and tin- other parishes in the district, ot between such parish and thu district, in continence of tliis section, ahull bo decided finally by the Local Government Board.

Power of Parish.— 11, This Aut ehull not deprive any pariah in tin tOettOpoUa of the |>ow« of adopting the principal Aet, but niW any dixtriet shall have adopted tho said Act, no pnrhdi within .such district rdialJ nl bo ailopt it iu uiunnor provided by wction one of the PubUi Libraries Amendment Act, 1877, or hold a meeting for considering iu adoption, without the nnHont of the Local Ooverriment Board.

IUBL1C LIBRARIES' CONSOLIDATION (SCOTLAND) ACT, 18*7. LO AM) M Vicioria, OaI. XLII. An Aet to amend and cuunuhdate the l'iihli< Libraucn (Scotland) Aut*. [10th Btytamuer, Ufl! TTUEIiEAS i( [a expedient feo amend aud consolidate the Public '? Libiorico (.Scotland) Aoto, 1807 to 1884 : Bo it theroforw ouaetoil by the (Jaecn'l rnott Excellent llajeety, !■; ami with the advice and consent of the Lordu SptlitfUj anil Tnnp«inilt and

t <Mi:inins, in thin present I ailijj:i;rni. .i>:-it:ii . d, i - * 1 j KioSuU ty ol

the oauie, u follows :—

til

i &RIB8.

Ihort Title, ]. Tin* Act may l>o eitod ai the l*y i <iui«

CbaanUtofon (Scotland) Ant, 1887, and dull apply to Scotland only

Definition!. 1. Tim following words And eapreasions in thl- Act i.'ul! have tli" meaning* harsbv 4-m^tkmI t thr-m, miW» th«h' he w<mn 'lime hi tin nUaol .ir oontftKt ri<mignant to such construct ion that i- '•.

"Bnrgh* *liall include royal burgh, [tarliauuntary bui incorporated by Ad of Pnvlmni.ni, bTIrgfl of regality,

barony, and any populous ldaw* or police burgh odi i uJ

or partly under auy general or luial police Act, and the I

Biich buij^li shall, to i tin- pnrpotao of tku a- Lwutotafa

whieh neb 0*41*1 or local pidico Aot oxtcudfl :

•' I'arixh " snail meau a pariah for which a separate poor rat* ix or

!. r»r Cnr which i. -.^urMn parochial hoard ik or can be

nupoiuuit, uud shall bo oicloaivc of the urea of any bin

a burgh situated tlioreiu : 11 II iQSihuliicrn " .'hull moan, i it the omc of a burgh, alt pcrvon* who*

name* are on to rod on the iimnicijial regixtor, and in u

!inn«li, nil porsona < rttitlod to <i vote In It- a wtinn n1 [i iuoh paruh, under the provisions nf the Education f . Soot land j 1872, and any Act aiuimdini; the MBW :

" Magistraci-a and council" shall bo applied .*«■]!'-< liv.lv, ml qo4 separately, and *h*ll include provost, rnagititratca, and town i magistrates and coniimesioiters of police, and any or.1 i" i "lis for the time- being in office, oy authority of whom tli-- general aaSeoMoonl In lo vied , and wham in any nurgl) thn magi and council form a corpomU Isaly, ami llictu in also in (ho auir burgh a board of coiuuiiooiuneiu of police by whom tlie buqdi AeBOEtiniL-iit ]• icviod, the voids ' * magistrates and OOUndl " dna.il. II rd> thi* levying and recovering of the hl»iai\* tftto, apply to *aeli •'OiuniiHsiniietM of police, but in Livery other respect it aliajl aj such oorpontfl body of mngiKtratosaim couof]

"Chief iiuigist-i'uto" shall include provost, mid ahull a|ii*< magistrate legally acting as chief magistrate fol the time wing:

"Bonrl " idiull mean tho parochial board aeting Under the and uinth Victoria, chapter eighty-three, and auy Aot iimn tiding tie •HUBS

" Committee " shall in ami the committee appointed under any Puollc Libiariea Act affecting Scotland Tor the time being, oj il. i

"Municipal neater" shall mean the rngiatcr, li>t, or rol

entitlftd to vnto in an oloc tion of town mincitio™ or cominuwi' i

C. in a burgh, made up according to the law in force (ting : "Burgh gmiersl assessment" shall meau an fuaoeaineut whScS) auy gouoral or local policv Act, shall l* applicabh U

Iurpoeco of such A-. I ; ibrary rate " ahall naoaa the rate or auticaainont authorizo tor the puipoa« of carrying the Act into aXOOUtlOn ; " Libraries and nniHRnms" and "libraries or muhflnnm' nhall i whooln for BcUnee, art gallerie*, and sgIiouIh for art, au cApreosioiiii. or either of them, when u^ed in the oi I include a school lor notence, an ait gallery, and I : Wordfl importing tl»' lauctilitm gender shall, when applind to bouea- bolilCK, in< IiuIl' li'inulo houxeholdora.

Kepefll Clauses ». 'X\\t Vu\)\wU\)Wvc*v^.aW»\\AvU, 1

AI'PKNWX !!.

313

tho

ho far as tho same relate to Scotland, ore hereby repealed ; but such nftn] •hall BOl invMiiintc or affect njiy tliiuj: n trendy done in pursuance of these Acta, or any af theDi. and all buTflna and pwwlw in Scotland which hofore tho MftdnK or tlii* A'-t* have adopted the recited Acts ehall there- af(er bo luttittl to tho provisions of this Act : Frovided alwiiy*. that

nntlilnffin tin* Act contained shall prejudice omlfest Hbopnmnona of

i Miibiirtfh 1'ublie Library Ansrasmeut Act, 1837.

Adoption of Act.— 4, l.'poii the requisition in writing of the magistrAtc* and council ufauy burgh, or of ten or more householders in any burgh or parish, the chief iuugi«Lrale uf «uch bur*r.b, or iu the case, of u parish, tin- ■herlff "f tho county in which *uoh parish or tho greater part of tho arc* thereof in lituated, shall uncertain tho optuiona of tho uousoholdora iti HOOfl bnr^h or parish as to the adoption of this Art in tho maimer sot fotfh in Mrhi'dnles (A,) or(Ii.) hereto anuexed, which schedule* shall ho KUUtmed and have offfcet as part of this Act, provided that whore in any bOTWB tho number of householders exceeds three thousand, tlio chief tratc intU itdopt tho procedure, by way of voting paper, sot forth in jahvdale (A.), but in any other ease it shall ho optional to the thiol nijif;iKl.rftt« or to tho alien IT, ax tho ease may In?, to adopt snch procedure hy way nf voting paper, or the procedure hy Kay of pnblin westing, sot forth hi Schedule (C. I.

If not adopted. 5. In HhflOVSDt of the householders doLennuiing by a majority of vote* that this Act shall lie adopted iu any burgh or parish, tho name shall from thenceforth come into operation therein ; but if by a majority of votes they shall determine against tho adoption, the like nro» me shall not tileo place for the space of at least two years from the

re nf inch determination,

Exponiea of Determining.— 3. Tht expense of the procedure for deter- mining as to the adoption of this Act. shall, if the Act ho not adopted, bo Bald, in the ease of a burgh, out of the Ivirnneh general assessment, and t the case of a parish, out of the assessment for the relief uf the poor in null ptrfflbj or where there is no snch assessment, by a rate which tho board arc hereby empowered to levy ami recover for thia purpose, in tho same manner and subject to tho same conditions as aro applicable to tho library rate; but if the Act iliall have been adopted the expenses of the pi-oi iithirfl nmlor which it has been adopted shall he payable out of the library rale, ainl it shall be iu the [tower of the chief magistrate or of the shciill, as the case may be, immediately upon the adoption of the Act to borrow eueh sum or same as may bo uoooasary to defray such expenses on tho security ol the library rate to be afterward* levied.

Expenio* of Carrying:. 7. Tho SfpODMB of carrying this Aot into exa- i mi an, when ft 1 -ptod, including all sums poyablo in rcapect of intercut .,ni linking tana Un a ryanthorfMd to he borrowed, and all hum

DOConoi} for the mxintniitinm nod itiamu-'.fiuciit. nf tlie lihrariwt and museums established under 1 1 » »** Art, or to which this An. applies, or for ilir I'uicloiac of tho aiticlea and things authorised by tin- ■■ t- In- put 0AOM)3| shall bo paid out of the library rate, which shall bo levied und rod, in tlio *-*m« of a burgh, by the magistrates and council, from tho no» di'Kcription of parsons ami property, and with and nmlor uu

il.,- powVfB) prorltdonj, and IXCODCloBa the bnr^h funeral a mid :ii the case of a pariah by the board, from (.lie saint doHiiptmii of

, notu iad | r"!"«rty, ami with and under tli- like DOWttra, pfOvUooa, and exooptiomi as tho aaaewnnont leviable under the Aet eighth and ninth Victoria, clmptur figlity-throc.

51-.

i

ytMt tl the amount oi tha library ini.* t i be i»-» » *** in any «eaj >hafl

In no owe etcnwl the sum of one jtenny it. the pound uf pearl] minimi value appearing on the valuation roll, and where, under uV

C revisions of any general or local police Act, tho burgh general aaec . or may be levied at a higher rate upon land* or promises above a eartatl fixed rent than cpon lowsr rented lands or pr^misea, mob provi«oa*,*s Tar ai they authorize iui h differential rate, *hall not he applicant.- alhVi thn library rate.

Aeeonnti. t). The magistrates and council or a burgh, or the bo u [ai'wh, us the case may to, shall provide and keep boolcs in which snill '" '-ritercrl true and regular accounts of their r< liabilities with reference to ihe execution of this Ait, wWco ihsll

at all reasonable times, he open, without fee or reward, to the uwp of ovtiiy I'oraou liablo to be u-tstxaod for the library rato : and the magie- imtfts and council or board, tu Iho ease may bo, shall cause such la in 1 1. annually audited by one or more roinitetcnt andJtBfS. not brine

members of the committee* after vrblifh audit the account* shall bewpiw

I'v iwu uf tlio magistrates and coum il, vx tuo member-

H i oaeemaybe, und an abstmcl th< roof similarly signed ihall

and hIuUI do ittecrtod in ono or inure newspapers pabliuhod or eSrel

in the bttr^li or pnrndi.

Lands, 4c, may bo Appropriated, 10. The magistrate* and roi.-m-l! m board, as the cose may ho, rnay from tune to time appropriate, hi purposes of thin Act, any lands or buildings vested In umbo, ind msy, no: of the library rata, or oat of money borrowed as heroin pravirtml, purchase, futi, or rent snv land, or any suitable building ; ami may, nuou 1

: (nopriatcd, routed, feued, or purchased, erect any buildiuc auitaol tot public libraries, public museums, aohoola for aoienoo, art geUerh m-hools for art, or for any one or more of those objects, and may alter ot attend any hnildings for sneh purposes, and repair an<I improve th rapOOtlTUy, nnd ut Dp, fiirninn, and supply tV umc all requisite furniture, fittings, and conveniences.

Part* of 849 Viet., c, 19, Incorporated. 11. Tho elanae* an I virions of the Lands Clause* Consolidation (Seoiltui Aol ISi^vttt respect to the purchase of lands by agreement, and Willi tv inert totts jinnlia-c aioaey <ti •■(iMipMisiitnniroiiiingto parties having limit M hilcpssBt. or prevented from treating or not making title, and with leaiwct to eon veyaiico* of Iambi, so far as atieh clauses and provisions arc o|

hones, feus, or leasou authorised bv tins An, and are not buret

sorprawily varied, shall incorporated with thin Art . and the "the special Ad " used in mirn iilaiiaea and provisions ihsll ! tonie&u this Act, and the exprauiou " the prutn i i (hetmdeii

oacd to sach olouaos and provisions shall 1 uai n«d to mean tAtnapi

tiutts and council, or the board, an the oaafl oiej

Lands, Ac, may be Sold.— 12. Tim magtsttitM tn<1 nntiefl W tW board, as the case may be, may will any wudtfi buildings, *>r oilier [■•• jwrly vwted in thern for the purpo»ca ol thi >ri i\ bango thefassi

for any lands, building or other propel \ b ttOl ,■ a] I ponos, an<l the money arinin/> from fiuch sale, and tho property r#eatr«a b i ■.. sh ingB, ihall r»e applied and held for tii" pm . .

Lands, *cM Vested, *c— 13. Tho lands and building /to tn Uj affs*- priatoA'l, purehased, or runted, and all other rnal or |>or»ional pi M /i .frier, prosente>\ to ot p\irp\iaseA fot ».v\^ IvVaoty «

\>1X IT.

under i iii- Act or to which this Act applies, ihall in thu cun of & burgh bo vested in the magistrate* and eonsoQj and Efl the oaoo «>f l pariah in the hoard.

Powers of Borrowing.- -1 ■», Tlio magistrates ami council, or tho board, tho com may bo, may from time to tirno borrow at interest on n > i-n- >:■ bOMl <>n the aeeurity of tin rato to *x> lisviud in puriU*1W8 Of thia Act, for i.hi" purposes theren', h sum or minis of num.u not BXdMdtllff the capital •turn represented by out-fourth part of thu library rate, autliorued by this Act, capitalized at the rate of twenty yoaia' purchase of such sum ; ami on i- payment of such auni ui minis, 01 any purl tlioieul', I.m :imy fioin time (■■ time re borrow in innnnor ami for tho purpoeca aforesaid, but ho that the whole* sum borrowed at any one time shall not MOBed tin? amount of (hi* uiil capital sum after deducting tbmfrofll any nuni Mt apart m a

linking fund ^ hadaaftn provldod.

Sinking rund,— 15. Tito magistrate and council, or the board, aa tho case may bo, are hereby required to set apart annually, a sinking fund i. i tin- extinction of capital sum* boRvWaa1 umtor the authority nf any lil.i jii> VI in font for the time being, or of ihii Art, a iDjn MOal to at I coat one-fiftieth part of tho money bo borrowed, and aiuh Btnlong luiid rdiall he from time to time applied in repayment of the money ao borrowed, mid to no other purine whatever, ana aboil bo lodged in a joint atooll i.ank of iaqne in Scotland, or invested in Government securities, ur lout out at iutermt in tho name and at the diwretiou of tho mag form tea ami 'oiiiirll, or the board, a* the case may be, until tin.1 name bo applied for (he pin | ww before specified.

Parte of 10 * 11 Vict. a. 16, Incorporated.— Itf. The clauses and pro- rlahma of the Commi«slonftr» CAjrhm Act, 1847, with nopeel to ih.»

liabilities of the couiuifegionura, and to legal priced bigs by or against tho commissioners, and with respect to mortgages to bo executed by the coinniiaaiooora, excepting section* eighty-four, eighty six, and eighty- bcvou, uhall, unices herein expressly varied, ho incorporated with thi« Art, and the several words and oiprevooiis, to which by the last moStod Lol meaning* are awugiiHl, shall in thin Act have the Mam e respective mean- ings, unloaa there be something in the subject or context repugnant CO Mid. e.uuitruetiou ; and the cxproaaion "tho special Act" used in xmh clauses and provisions herewith incorporated shall mmn this Act : ami the txpronsioii "the commissioners" .shall mean the magistrate* ami cnunnl nr hoard ami the comiiiitlet' in the ilmrharge of their respective duties under thlfl Act.

Parliamentary Grant —When the magistrates and council, or board, as the ca*e may he, accept a grant out of money* pro v MM by I'ntii nooni. from any CoODDittDe of the Pi ivy Council on kdueaiinu, toward* the purchiise of the aitc, or the cnv.lnm, ndaigoiinnt, or H'pair of any aohool KM i '•>!•• and ar'., or school for jtciencu, or achool for art, or of the

i n.v .. I' Any t."a« I ci in meli -.'/li'M.i, oi i r.v.itl . rlu' furninhnig of any

wtich hidio«'l, thny .shall li ■..-.> power tn accept Molt gmnt Upon tnOG li XIR pi'.'-cr'hed for the acceptance thereof ny the 'ii) I oomnfLTCO, and to i Minli' naofa iiiKlnuui'iitft as may bfl nipiiiti by ihr ^oiiil cotmnitii'* ftfl earTyiiijl n.' li couditj nm, and upon pUDIOfll of tint grant "dull,

Eogtthi ••''! thnr saooaaaora, be boasd m »"« i- ooncUtioin and li b I . und have power anil be bound to fulfil and observe the same.

Committee. IS. The ina^intrutcA and council of any burgh, or ono Wri uf any pariah whore thm Act haa been adopted nhall, within lb.

«4fl

: :

luuulli alter its adoption, Hid ttaoatu-, It >iii ,"tti to m*ni, In tl»! c** \ burgh, at tlio lir»t mentiriR after the animal dn dun of lowu ciHiunlh or oomminionoTB of poliac, and in the i-aso of a parish, at 11m Hr.it i», »CU/t after the annual mooting for tlio election of represent ative mombara of tifl parochial board t oppmnt a com ml Hen, ootuUnOff of not loaa than I mon than twenty mom tiers, half of whom .shall be ohOMiii fti the inttphtratm ami amncil, DV board, ui (lie «:;ls« may \jm, and l,h«r rrinain- iiiS half from amount tho householder* of tho burgh 01 | >■■: 'm

the mogintiato* and council, or hoard, and throo raorabere of ami can uiilloo ulinil form <i 'juorom.

Apuolnt Vacancies la Committee 19. Any masher of COTomlttMd_

hsro power («» nvjpi office npon tf ring at leant fourteen din rssita

notice to tho olork of tho comm tl - if hi i int» i > ri - . r io to ],. v .'lit «»l any vacancy oooarring in the oomtnlttee do rind their I bAqS bj tho ro.i^nution or death of any meinour, the committa* iball farthwttli OSrtM lint Baui6 IO hit intimated in tint niftyistrare- or board, ami tins magistrates anil council, or board, as the OBO m may at a meeting thereafter elect fiom among thomeelvco, ui Itam inwffl the houooheldore other than tuomeolvoe, according to the elss> IB vU iho vacancy liav ariaon, a member of commit resigning at lying, provided that im proceeding* of the tjommittai be invalidated or lie illw^al in conxeipiiiTicA of a vacancy or recast: the number of the committee.

Meetings of Committee, So. 20. Tho committed appoint**! an iff* nhull, in the caxe of a burgh, meet once in every three m on the, oroftourr if BSQSBSScy, and in the caae of a pariah, u often na may bo nacaenrr, ilftterminfi as to any businiMs falling to he transacted hy r.hnm, ami appoint a chairman from among tlmir own lunula;, who th&ll hold O0o> inii.il next election of committee ; and audi chairman shall, in com «f . ijuaHty. have a casting Tote in addition to his rote as an provided that, in the event of a vacancy occurring in tho ufllo* of man, the committor* shall at their tint meeting thereafter appowl chairman, and hi tho abaeua- of the ihoirmau of uomnntftc at any

iug, the mojiinj; shall appoint a rliairmau fur tbl U being, R/h

iit.ctinp tliall axercue tho privileges of the chairman of cum mi I

Power* of Committee,— 21, Tho committee ahull manage, rofpiUU, and ml all libra rios and museums estsnlUhi*] under th i tin* Act applies ; anil shall have power to do all thing* uccrstfary for iota management, inoluduig Urn following power* ; that U to say.

To appoint »uo committee* of their own uuiuber :

To appoint a ailaru«i olerlc, and salai i Lbrarian i, i ffieero, and errranit

to act during the pleasure nf the committee, and to nay an.

tlnini | To puirhatc book*, newspapers, review a, mej(aeln«

cale, etatuovy, pictures, . mapa, ip.

- i'-H'1' , and such othor artiuM and thiOttM *■' may be aeetaoirf

tlm i\s!:.U >limpitt, incr«-juio, and iikc nl tlu« lilirAncv and umae

under tlielr wutrul, and to do all Udfi}n necetmry ta\

asnu in a proper state -jf preeotrstiou ami rop To provide h'.uii t me to time tho noccaaary fuel, li^blinp, and eAas

in ut torn:

nr- axehsngc any hooka, w.irlca of art, or other pr..j

fhero may Imj anytinktm, ^rcwVt\«\ t\v*v vnamnnpy arising frvtnaxi

u

.vi'i'Kxmx n.

oty

sale. Ami the property received in exchange shall bu nppliod&ud hchl for thfl purpose* of this Act :

To provide fluitatlu looma in the libraries within which the buukn, i-oriudieola, and newspapers may Ikj read :

To lend out, for tho purpose, of being rem] by tUo householders and iuhabiUntu of the.' burgh or pariah in .iud lor which the commit t<»< has been appointed, the book* nf any library under their control, or nich of them as they may consider proper; and at their discretion tu ^ranl tin: NUDE privilege to LIp; inmates of industrial schools, training ships, reformatories, barracks, and othci aimiliu instituLinus, estuhlisuod for or in tho burgh or pariah ; and also to any portion carrying on business within the limit* of the burgh or parish, or to any employee engaged in employment therein, although anch person or i;iti|iliivi i' may Hot be a h-jiiachuldcr, and DBI^ HOC reside wiLhin such limits :

To < compile and print catalogues of all or any book*, articles, and things in the libraries or miuourae undur thoir coutrol, and reports of their

) '.T, lilies. :ll|,l I.I M'll t l|- -,(!tH\ III'" pl'.« ■<'...!•- |l» )»> Lj.|.I'.d I'm, tllU

purposes of this Act. To make Bye-lawi. 22. It shall bo lawful lor tfcu committee to make liv»'-la\vn for regulating all or *ny m alter* and things whatsoever connected with Ebfl control, management, prof err inn, anil UU nf any property, oxti- elos, or thiugo uudur their control for tho purposes of this Act, and M Impose such penalties fur breaches of ouch bye-lava, not exceeding five pound* for each offence, as may bo considered expedient ; and from tiuio to time, as they shall think fit, to repeal, alter, vary, or re-enact any »u<h

i»v«-Uw«, provuod tJwayi that soch bye-Ions and utusttan thertoi "hull not ba repugnant to th«^ Iaw of Scotland, anil teforo being acted on aImII be siguttl by a quotum of the committee, and, except in so far ua limy relate solely to tin olliccis or servauts of the coiiunitUc, audi bytj-Uwa AlaII DO approved of by tho magistrates and council, or T.he Itoard, ao tho oca© may he, and shall bo approved of and confirmed by the aherilf of tho county in which the burgh or parish, or the greater part of the Area thereof, is situated : PEOTHttl also, thai nothing hcrcui contained shall pit i-ludi! the magiatratus ami council, or board, as the case may be, from recovering the value of articles or tilings damaged, or tlio amount of the damage austainod, against all partice liable for the

»Naw»paper Publication of Bye-lavs, *c,— 23. No bye-laws ur altera II thereof requiring eronlirmntion tdiall ba conttrmal, an bofora men- iiomid, uule&s notice of thu intention to apply for continuation of the nlmH have been given in one or ntN uewspaperi piiblnhed ami i rooloted ill thfl dlatnot nno month at leant before the hearing of (he apphWiou for conlii uiatioit. and en> party aggrieved by any BUflfa lawi or alterations thereof, on giving notice of the natmc of hi* objection Ba tho clerk to tho committee ton days before the hearing of the applica- ble eon Urination, may, by himeolf or bin counsel, attorney, or aj*out, ba In * ... i. but not »o as to allow more tfcu one party to be hoard npon the same matter of olgoction.

Exhibition of lya-lanra. -Hi. Tei one month at least bufore any audi application for confirmation nf any liyudawa or aUi-mtions tliereof, a copy

o? neb propoced bye-Uvi m altaratloni shall bo kept at the office of tim clerk to the committee, aud shall also be put up in mm comipicuous place tn oaeh of the llbraiics and mtiaetium of the com mil tee, and all persons may, at all reasonable Ihnca, inspect such copy v\t^e/a.t fe?. «it tcvivc^s

»

I'lULlt Ul'K.lRIK*.

(iml the, dark to the oommlttoo shall furnish ev«y mnon whoaliall i

fur th^ .-amc with a copy themif, part thereof, on

bExMDOO f°r ovory ornt hundred words so to ho copied.

Printed Copy of Bye-laws.— 25. The clerk to the committa »hall *ir< it printed ropy nf tho confirrnrd byc-lawa, for tho time being I M cvciy pornou applying for tho eamo, without charge ; Ar»i.l a copy thoreof shall he palnna or placed on boarda, in< pal up d some ooi iptouon

: of the libraries and mimeums of the cominittfle, anil with tho byo laws thereon alia!! bii i-uui'wutt from tunc to till in u* OW shall P.'i|UirtS and ahull iw OpflO to lUBUactioil wUboil N

Bye-lawa when Confirmed, He. £6. All bye-lawn 01 alterations tin mmii' ami cuiiiir in, -.1 tooordlng to the provisions nf ti is let, when lulled ami put uu. shall bo binding upon and bo obeH rod IB all pa.'Sita, and aliall be a iDlEctoQt uaiiunt Cor nil |ponoua *i*. Lin« under tin tins;

Evidence of Bye-laws -17 The production of « written 01 pi of Die bye-laws respiring confirmation a* aforesaid, mthentl i signature ofthenbflriif who *tuill liavti ixinfirmud the saura, ami awriti

K toted copy ofthobyo'laws not toqainng ra< b onfirmation, authenticated ' the common seal of th. rornmittoe, and eigne*! by tho chairman committee at tho timo when the same were made mall ' o ovhionc duttnoe and making of un-h hyrdawv in all cases Tor uvowieiilion tho Mini1, WitllOOt proof of I. lie signature of »ueh sborilf, or I Beelofthe eoiiiiniti'i . "i Hie *ig nature of then chairman ; and with tw the )MO"f "f ;Ii- |- .i.i.i. -.iti in r -ii' li byo-lawe it oliali sutlti ■- pTOTfl that ti boil '■■'' [•;, ilmv.il v.v, put up m. I inl

in manner by thSfl a.-i directed.

HcooTcry of Ponaltioi. 2$. All pen nl tie* ami fmmiMi i tie Ait, and tho Acta incorporated wholly or partially I umv bye-low made in pursuance thereof, utay be recovered bj smalUdebt action in thi- nan plcrh c< tho Lints

being befurv ollhoi thu sheriff or j not low of tin dffttric ; i

'Imll be payable the committee, and shall! rvbou rw appUod '>' them Eta tin purposes of this Act ; and in any . mult. i' tlii" Act oil excerpt from tho books of tin tomnutteo, tlto clerk or other proper officer, -lull be held eouivalent to Li

tho c iilttM and all wntrin* in the Ixiokit nf the niinmittoH i i

any book or books mentioned m referred lo therein has or have been borrowed by the person complained against aliall be taken and reeel evidence of tin foot, and tin laudi thull I* thrown nn tin

:nj lainc.t nj;ainHt, and if dooroe pawoa iigniriMt «ueh party, 1m aball m luii n.l liahle in costs,

Aetlona. -Jli. AH actioiM at the instance of the OOBUJlittei -bill W

br mght m name of the clerk to tl itta an< n^vinat

the committee, it shall bcHuihcieut to caII the clerk to tho cMmnutteofor

the tiinn being iw defender, and xeiTle.e fin I In tllall be imm itMtil

and nil wttuua brouuhl iy or agaiind I lie clerk lu tin coirmi

dffioiil ' i * ■' ; r obeli bo continued by or a-xaiitat ^'fl 8" " *fflw

without any action of tranaferonec.

Batixnatea. 30. The committee shall in the month of Apri Idi make up, 01 oaUae tu be made D|>, nn eatluintc of the Ordoi to defray thu iuteroet of uny money borrowed, rln of tb<

lixtkittg FuJid, and tha eatponae of mawtainuig end rn .1 file

oi mueeuma iiudov thuVt coutvoWw W ^ew :,v..- ^v.>

APPHNIHX II.

..".I

BO ">tne, and for the puipowuf pmeha>Lig the books, art-ides, ami thing authorized by ibis Ait to be purchased (brsuoHUbnindi or moaeuus, ant] t*hall report tho same to the magistrates and council in the case of a bunbj or to the board in the oaso of a pariah, and the magistrate*? and conned or trie board, a* thy (Ut may bt, ahull provide I li *.- MftQflttt required nut of the library rate to bo In vied by thi-ni, and aha.ll nay over to tho committee tho sum DeUMNJJ for the animal expenditure by them iu terms uf tlitii catiaiuto.

Power to Add, Ac— 81. Where any of the following institutions, namely, a Public Library, a public museum. * school !'»i BOteo a mid ait, % school lii vieuco, a school lor ait, or an art Kail' >v loi;- licou established uudcr any Public Library Act i i * ferae Po» Qle EtOJi ■" -tag, or under tliiA Act,

there may ui any Eizni Mtablfehod i" oonaoctfon thorawft », toy other

of ilit' Mid institution* without fartbof pvOGCOiBngi being rnken for the adoption of this Act.

Librtriei, Ae. to be Free. Mi". Ail lifanuiw, uuihvuihh, »r art ^alloriuu p. tut ilished unrtar this Acr, or to whirls thin Art applies, shall he OMflj to tlie publiu freu of charge, and no charge shall bo made for the uio uf books hi mugaAMea issued for bona rvmliu^.

BOHBDULBB.

S. iini.ri.B (A). I'll* i'oii Di.ikii.mi.mm: DV WllSti I'^il.i:

AH TO THK AhOI'I'loN t>Y 'TUV. A<.T.

(1.) Uiwn receipt of tho mq ilflttton specified in the Act, tin: chief luapntrta or the sluirifi", a* the ease may be, shall, without un necessary delay, cause to be printed, ah«I k be dotiwrod Of sent by poet to eac-h hotitjoluddir on 'iiti'iintion and a voting paper, in the respective forms appended hereto, and tho mtinuti'Oi may bo prefixed to the re papor and on t lie MXttt paJMI tfetfOWifh, 01 may be priBOBd tt*pn.mtely, provido 1 it be <ln)iveieil or posted! simnltniionusly vtth the firing paper,

(2,) In the ease of a burgh, tho voting papei ahull bear tho number of the householder on the municipal register, arid when :1m burgh is divided into wards, tho uumbur of tho ward : and in the earn of i parish the voting paper eha.II bear a number relative to the entry of tbn hooaohoidwf in a copy of tun valuation roll applicable tOMOb parish, or in a Iwl ol tho householders in nub mrish, which copy or list, distinguishing tho annum l of u-utal *L wlm.li uaili 001800 i* assessed, the assessor, undii the A-;ts in force for the valuation of lands and heritage* in Scotland, I- hm 1f required to umbo, certify, and furnish to the sherill', withiu fbOTOMn days of an application by mm to that effect, on payment of a KM of not mora than on«< shilling for Moh hundred nam en : ami such copy •a liiL certified as aforesaid, shall be sullicient proof of lhe g,UaHflfi»tMB if thl hou^iholdcrs uautovl thoruiii.

(3.) Tho intimation ofon^aid shell '|ncify tin place at win. -h tha rotblg I isj 101 ia to bo collected, and shall also f-poeify a day foi' col loot ion, herein ■ftoi ii-ii the day of the poll, heiiujj not Ie*« than three lawful day«, not man ib«B cm days from the lajit date of tbt delivery or of the posting of lint voting papers to the households.

i l . , Thi; cfiief magistrate 01 lhe nbniiT, aa the "'oueiuay be, shall, bffotl the iwuo of duoh voting papers, appoint a competent person oe f»W V f thereof, on iuoh terms and Ml nob K'unuieratton a-- nuy bo NOIOnibli | and he shall also, by himntl' m 'lnoiigh the QOlUcI UOV II i I, -t any timi' Jwfore or during the rolleccion or wnitiny of i\\& vnrinp nai^rv ,

:>YJ

i'niuc UP'i

appoint euoh number of eaautant collectors es may bo nocoaaar eftnylngont tin* pi'ocednni hvrein specified.

(o.) Tin' rluef niH^ixlritc or the ahcrilf, x* tlie owe may bft, -dull, ai leant tlirw dnya previous to tho day of tJw poll, intimate such J».

fiiftro or plncofl ana hours fixed for oolleettng each vote* by ndvertiionicat n ono or ttioro nowapepvi-j bubliuUml or circulatni^ in the burgh or pariah ; end tho Haul advortuenient tihall also specify tho name of th> i " mi d u aforesaid, anil an a.Mn<** where voting pip... mi leroived from nuuli collector, iti tertua of the IcmnoQBatolj nuccccdlnr article.

\C.\ The collector, or on assistant ooUottol , afcaJ] attend at tlie bMrcaj ■MfluUd in auuh nilvortitfcirrcnt lor at leaet thron specified hour* of each

oV [lie two ImwI'iiI days n if i B liaddy preceding the day of tin pot] Voting paper to inch applicant; and the collector, 01 any awnUm

.... ...v- ».... ,-.. -_. - .-,..-, .-.j |..,v^^...k (..» «-j «. I™*" I

kIi&II, on the application "f any householder, ana nn !.••: n<

that such householder haa nuL aluuh n.*i-«*i v I . pply

colloctor, fthall at any (inn: after the imae of tbo toting paper*, and 1-. HTW o'clock afternoon of tlio day of tlio poll, on being satisfied that a voting |rtp*r b»* l»!.<n in ri.vi i mly In-!.. I. si nyc»). Of 'loaa,

hiva povrei to nipply a duplicate voting paper, which thai) bo merle*] ■■ ditmicatt]" before bung uuoed.

(7.) Voting papers duly filled up end labacribed by blu hooatboldM bo v.Ik. in tho wauu arc roepociively applicable} may be transmitted by

to tin? collector, at the a>Vlrc«e ipooined in tho »'• ieai4 idv<

i i th.it 'i ■«-ii voting poperi reach the eolieotoi before etahl ■■■ of the afternoon of tlio day of the poll, and thai the ho*wenold trsimu titling prepay thtf poatagt Lhereof, otherwise the mum *liall not be received.

(S.J On tho day of tbo poll the chief magistrate, or the BfloriaTg ae tbo oeM ina\ be, shall cause the platw or places epeotUed in tit* aeoOnipan/ing the voting p»|n*r to be kept open from monrint oil Bight dVIock afternoon, and wel plae . i place*. :l tnOTfl than one. shall be under the charge of the onlta i au eeeiataut collector, who shell ^i it- pergonal attendant! lm i hoars spreitkd for the inn-|'08o of ruoeiving all Voting papON ffttiab maybe bonded to hint.

(9.) In theeaaeof n. bur^h divided Into ward*, than shall be at Isnal ono place for tho collection of Toting papers in each vanl, and In mi burgfl 8* parish where more than one place fur collection ahull han

appointed) Out eollectaon in all of such plaoei shall take place on thoMiuc

daj% and the intimation a^Tniiipanyitig tlio voting paper Klml ;

particular placfl where rack voting paper ia tn be to I .. tw\ i ho« il or assistant collector, in charge of any suoh place for en m on ihall n«t be hound !'.' '.ct.L'ivi a voting jiapur wliidi »boll buvo been dixivUd Ui he lodged At 4Uiue utlier such place.

(10.) Whore any householder i* nuabU to wriu, lu may att» mark to tho voting popvr, provj led thot suoh voting aapor m signed by a wituoas, whoM aodtaai uall be app< Dded b his ifgnuura

(II.) Any paraoii rabrlcatlng a vnrlii^ paper, oi [iNMenting oi

a (aJ irifal.eO voting papur, or any voting papt-r, kiaiwiny that i!n- dove not. L»;jt the true sifmnture of tho houscuolUor to wboui auuli t Mpai b Lntendcd Co appn*, ihall be guilty of personation, and »haU liable to tin panaWeaof ftat oiroiiee is iet fortb :" the Uailol A l,

( i'2~) Ho votinc papar shall bu receivesd afUl t ;l I 0 dock afternaeo fflo day of the poll ; and. in tte e^wt h\ <ivcrc\*a^^TMn than mm plare

nod by

;nnilatf

iaUb

.\iii.:;\'ix II.

*u

;

fOT cullivtion, each aaiiatant collector shall immediately aI'Ui tli-j OfaeO of die poll transmit tho voting palters received by him to the eollontor, nml tin' whole voting pBSBRI slut II tbi-n-aftor hn" under the charge •">! r !■ ■-

collector auhjoct to tho directions of the chief niagietrAt*, or or the

shtiiir, u tin: coat! may 1*:.

fl3.) Tin eouootofi lunjact ^ aJbreeeid, shall, as w>on an may be oitoi DDcltuion of tlir t»i>ll, proctcd to 4 amitiuy of tho voting peper Khali, with *uch ixsi stance as may hv nocoaeftry, compare tho statue with tin' nuletypl register or oritt the cony roll, or list of householder*, «c tho case may be, And alinll ascertain how ur the vW fflg paper* litivr ben Mlm up in tame of tin' illi'rctiuns i.ln:ii'on, and hsvit boon duly Mvimsl liy i.Im

bostofcoulen bo whom Bvob rottu ptrcn were respectively watted ; and

lialoly on tho conclusion of mion ■Muiiny In* »holl report to tho ehiof initflintrrt(,«, of t.« the alioritt', oe tho oaio may bt, tho number of hOUNboUtn Wio have voted for tho adoption Of Hi*1 Act, lud thti numbs* who liAPfl voted againer. it.< adoption. obeli alio report r.h« DotR iiiiiiiltur ol rotiotf ntpen reoeivtHl, uxl (he number* il any, which b»v« j ctol by him, and the cause of such rejection.

(1 1 . I j receiving tho report of the collector, tho ohnf inrt^i^iriito, or

the •horitl, as tho case way bt), shall, if Hutialtod of tho accuracy of such report, cniws the result or tho noil to he made public m mich manner a* hs ■dml 1 think most . i pe lit : t .

FOKM INI'IMAI'ION. Mid !,:hntriat CoitsulMaium (Scul!«u<l) Jet, 1687. Borfih [or pariah] of

No. jMert it a miter itffvtu.wJmhf.fr mi rriffotcr, mil, or Mat],

[f*«rf nfcoo Hfld pbsif </ fern I- To [inMsrt mime of hom*hol<! i]

In toOlll of tho Public Liln i.ics Guisulidaliuu (Seoljnnl i j have to intimate that a iciitiixhinu having '»e«ii pnwittoil to ;nc l»v f! <

uresarSbaU nuubor of houeboldi ra of the burgh [or parieh] of

to Ufa 'Ki' opini is ol thl householders oa to whether the Act ehouhi Im

adopted in said burgh [or parish J, I havo ohiumm! the auhjoiiiod [o»

accompanying] voting ruipor M bi uSMlftd bo you Is a hotWtthoIfl«r of x:iitl

borgh [w pwUiX wbioa voting nsiUi tltatj Dlifld up and wibwribed by

you, will U-; rtoi »vi 1 within [ivtiu vf place] on Ao

•lay of must, botwMH the houra of eight oWoost moruing and

fiRllt oVlfwk aftcnioon.

Tlio voting paper may be delivered ptttOJUdty or liy a mi-K-i'ii^'f, ptuvidtil it beer your stgnttnre.

In lieu of delivery of tlu voting pepej in i uerebtrTB mentioaedi tt

oet nt to any householder U> jKint it ml»iiVMol to [*i«i«k andtuUirvto •f eotietf'*'], provi'.i the poetiAi boprepftldi end that the fotLDA P*poi i.- . -ii il..- ooflootoi befom uiyht ooJook afcornoos "f the iovJ Knim h $i »rt/f]. Tin* riHk ««f diOivr.i y nefbn th* bonr HpeeWed teeu ffbih th« home-

older tdoptfafl tliia mothod of return.

(Sixned)

J JT.t OliiefMagiotrotc, [or siundj.

Fokm or Vorivo V'A la! ?k Libtttria QmtOJUtUA WQ yfc/, 3387.

llui'gh (or paruli] of ,

No. [in$erl r.uvibcr vf hi/u*f holder im rfjiHart reil» «r Jirt-V

f> 1 1 Pt'BLIC LIBRARIES.

Short Title.— 1. This Act may be cited is the Public Libraries Consolidation (Scotland) Act, 1887, and shall apply to Scotland only.

Definition*, 2. The following words and expressions in this Act shall have the meanings hereby assigned to them, unless there be something in the subject or context repugnant to such construction ; that is to say,

"Burgh" shall include royal burgh, parliamentary burgh, bnrgh incorporated by Act of Parliament, burgh of regality, burgh of barony, and any populous place or police burgh administered wholly or partly under any general or local police Act, and the boundaries of such burgh shall, for the purposes of this Act, be the boundaries to which such general or local police Act extends :

" Parish " shall mean a parish for which a separate poor rate is or can be imposed, or for which a separate parochial board is or can be appointed, and shall be exclusive of the area of any burgh or part of a burgh situated therein :

" Householders " shall mean, in the case of a burgh, all persons whose names are entered on the municipal register, and in the case of a parish, all persons entitled to a vote in the election of a school board in such parish, under the provisions of the Education (Scotland) Act, 1872, and any Act amending the same ;

"Magistrates and council" shall be applied collectively, and not separately, and shall include provost, magistrates, and town council, magistrates and commissioners of police, and any other body of persons for the time being in office, by authority of whom the bnrgh general assessment is levied ; and where in any burgh the magistrates and council form a corporate body, and there is also in the same burgh a board of commissioners of police by whom the burgh general assessment is levied, the words " magistrates and council* shall, as regards the levying and recovering of the library rate, apply to such commissioners of police, but in every other respect it shall apply to such corporate body of magistrates .and council '

"Chief magistrate" shall include provost, and shall apply to any magistrate legally acting as chief magistrate for the time oeing :

" Board " shall mean the parochial board acting under the Act eighth and ninth Victoria, chapter eighty-three, and any Act amending the same:

" Committee " shall mean the committee appointed under any Public Libraries Act affecting Scotland for the time being, or this Act :

"Municipal register" snail mean the register, list, or roll of persons entitled to vote in an election of town councillors or commissioners of police, in a burgh, made up according to the law in force for the time being :

"Burgh general assessment" shall mean an assessment which, under any general or local police Act, shall be applicable to the general purposes of such Act :

" Library rate " shall mean the rate or assessment authorized by this Act

for the purpose of carrying the Act into execution : •" Libraries and museums" and "libraries or museums " shall include schools for science, art galleries, and schools for art, and these expressions, or either of them, when used iu the singular, shall include a school for science, an art gallery, and a school for art :

Words importing the masculine gender shall, when applied to house- holders, include female householders.

Repeal Clause* 3. The Public Libraries (Scotland) Acts, 1867 to 1884,

appendix ii. oi")

bo far u the same relate to Scotland, are hereby repealed ; bat euch repeal shall not invalidate or affect anything already done in pursuance of these Acts, or any of them, and all burghs and parishes in Scotland which before the passing of this Act have adopted the recited Acts shall there- after be subject to the provision* of this Act : Provided always, that nothing in this Act contained shall prejudice or affect the provisions of the Edinburgh Public Library Assessment Act, 1887.

Adoption of Act. 4. Upon the requisition in writing of the magistrates aud council of any burgh, or of ten or more householders in any hurgh or parish, the chief magistrate of such burgh, or in the case of a parish, the sheriff of the county in which such parish or the greater part of the area thereof is situated, shall ascertain the opinions of the Householders in such bnrgh or parish as to the adoption of this Act in the manner sot forth in Schedules (A.) or (B.) hereto annexed, which schedules shall be construed and have effect as part of this Act, provided that where in any burgh the number of householders exceeds three thousand, the chief magistrate shall adopt the procedure, by way of voting paper, set forth in Schedule (A.), but in any other case it shall bo optional to the chief magistrate or to the sheriff, as the case may be, to adopt such proceduro by way of voting paper, or the procedure by way of public meeting, set forth in Schedule (B.).

If mot adopted. 5. In the event of the householders determining by a majority of votes that this Act shall be adopted in any burgh or parish, the same shall from thenceforth come into operation therein ; but if by a majority of votes they shall determine against the adoption, the like pro- cedure shall not take place for the space of at least two years from the date of such determination.

Expenses of Determining. 6. The expense of the procedure for deter- mining as to the adoption of this Act shall, if the Act be not adopted, be paid, in the case of a burgh, out of the borough general assessment, and in the case of a parish, ont of the assessment for the relief of the poor in such parish, or where there is no such assessment, by a rate which the board are hereby empowered to levy and recover for this purpose, in the same manner and subject to the same conditions as are applicable to the library rate ; but if the Act shall have been adopted the expenses of the procedure under which it has been adopted shall be payable out of the library rate, and it shall be in the power of the chief magistrate or of the sheriff, as the case may be, immediately upon the adoption of the Act to borrow such sura or sums as may be necessary to defray such expenses on the security of the library rate to be afterwards levied.

Expenses of Carrying.— 7. The expenses of carrying this Act into exe- cution, when adopted, including all sums payable in respect of interest and sinking fund for money authorized to be borrowed, and all sums necessary for the maintenance and management of the libraries and museums established under this Act, or to which this Act applies, or for the purchase of the articles and things authorized by this Act to be pur- chased, shall be paid out of the library rate, which shall be levied and recovered, in the case of a burgh, by the magistrates aud council, from the same description of persons and property, and with and under the like powers, provisions, and exceptions as the burgh general assessment, and in the case of a psrish by the board, from the same description of persons and property, and with and under the like powers, provisions, and exceptions as the assessment leviable under the Act eighth and ninth Victoria, chapter eighty-three.

wtm.tr r.m

Rat*.—* ii..

EMM i>xi"tc<l the nin of one |K*nny lii the pound I | NBt

annua] vn-lm cu appeal ii.k 00 UlC riUlat&M] full, and irh< uiori»loiU of *' Y fMir.ml «t ' .lie burgh gvuoraj a*-

la or may I"© UtioJ it a higliM rat* upon :oiuU or pi-omiMa alxrrm a OaTtal lUod raut than apon lownr «mt«l laruK rj ;■ provision*,

fn 11 thar authorize *>i rtile to

itc. Aeoatinta.— 'J. Tlia iiutfihtralat and minimi ftl a burgh, or th© board »f a |4ii«li, Blu DaM "»»>* lw\ »hkll JUDV vhloh *h*~*

1*3 entered line and ;*j»Milar account* laf t "I ItaliiHl u of thia A

ivaauiublc times, be open, without foo ©i Mffwd, to the itiij> try naTarm Kabul to hi »»-^«.«l Tor thy 111 <-iagb*

... ; . . ii nan ml an mi J * ■■■'■' ti nonl

to be niiuuuUy audited by out? or more cuuiMiteul auditors, nut Iviux motQoara of too commit!*©, iftei fflilch aadll - 1 shall be

lie .ii.M .t ■■ of tho bOAl

i ilia.ll Ui -.•riutoi triad iii one DOrnoM B9WiMpOT> jtulili I. SUbatad

In tho ) i n£] m pi

Lands, *0 , may b* Appropriated 10 Tli,> DttgaTbmtal and comical or board, jw thn eaao rany m, may from Elm© t Q i -i 'p»x>prtftt«, !• piraoaM of iiii. Act, bdj bvn l- oi bufldii la thmu. ami nuj

liluiuy raw, ur out "f oiuuw< a< litimin pru\iiU«i, jiui

hn, ■■ Laa 1, OC A«J raittbla btlUdiog ; and nn, nmn th© htnj

oo appropriated, routed, fouod I ill] builaiofl aiutaMi

UhTanat, public museum*, schools for ict

irhooln Cor ore, of for any oni i mot* of taOAi DRJnet*.aikl rruyaJtsri

my l)iiil(lilijf.i for muOi pwpOWS, ami . ... 41 n

rwiwutivoly, ami nam, and supply tin nUUI I A'ilL

nil iO|ulait© furnnuu, fittingo, an i<-©a,

Farti of I A 9 YJot, 0. 19, Incorporatod 1 1 Tin- I'tarts©* ami vision* of tlio Lands CUiikus ConjoUdaUoo (6eotland Act 13*5, irll roapect i<! tin pnrcAaM of bunl* hyagrioi uliii rcajioct to tb

ptin baafl no N pTwTaniad from tasting oraoi tic, md with rafpeoi to con

i ios* "i 1 aii. : : "and provisions *r« a

purchAsca, foti*, or leues anthorl/ci h\ IMr nOl and

I ..lv viiicil, :-hnll In- iiinu ;i.M,,ir<l uitii UlbAotl att4 till '(pltaaklO

Uic M' ' ii Art " used iii soon clauses nn<1 |

In nnuii -In .'..'; mi,l the C«pr©9hi"r. ' ' Ukl (■;■ I i >l>ii of thcuildcr!*'

Uttj utd prorbdoni loall bo i inoun tli* tuagU

- thl aal ni:iv bt

Landi, Ac-, may bo Sold,— ]•„■. TIm- nuvpatrefcv and bo

lumni, ti r | uV . n.'iy sell .-.iiy land a, hmUlinp*, or "'

party reotau1 mi tbitji 100" Bio jmrjHiaes 01 I'

ftr any IiimU, luiiLlin^r-. or other proiiortT hortot Ad

|iobui, and the itujuey ajismp; from such wlV. tit! rha m'opaity •-< hall bo applk-i int hekl foi ih wtubAtL

Land*, an, Vt.it.nd, *p —l:. 'Hie Uudu mid buildings n

IlBAfid, 01 I'Uiiil, ami hll ntlier real or perianal

sNlnt-Mi.pl, [brnnyUurary trnnst'tiin ■•

APPKNPIX IT, 547

under this Act or to which this Act applies, shall in the case of a burgh be vested in the magistrates and council, and in the case of a parish in the board.

Powers of Borrowing.- -H. The magistrates and council, or the board, as the case maybe, may from time to time borrow at interest on mortgage or bond on the security of the rate to be levied in pursuance of this Act, for the purposes thereof, a sum or sums of money not exceeding the capital sum represented by one-fourth part of the library rate, authorized by this Act, capitalized at the rate of twenty years' purchase of such sum ; and on repayment of such sum or sums, or any part thereof, they may from time to time re-borrow in manner and for the purposes aforesaid, but so that the whole sum borrowed at any one time snail not exceed the amount of the said capital sum after deducting therefrom any sums set apart as a sinking fund as hereinafter provided.

Sinking Fund. 15. The magistrates and council, or the board, as the case may be, are hereby required to set apart annually, as a sinking fund for the extinction of capital suras borrowed under the authority of any library Act in force for the time being, or of this Act, a sum equal to at least one-fiftieth part of the money so borrowed, and such sinking fund shall be from time to time applied in repayment of the money so borrowed, aod to no other purpose whatever, and shall be lodged in a joint stock bank of israe in Scotland, or invested in Government securities, or lent out at interest in the name and at the discretion of the magistrates and council, or the board, as the case may be, until the same bo applied for the purpose before specified.

Parti of 10* 11 Viot o. 16, Incorporated.— 16. The clauses and pro- visions of the Commissioners Clauses Act, 1847, with respect to the liabilities of the commissioners, and to legal proceedings by or against the commissioners, and with respect to mortgages to be executed by the commissioners, excepting sections eighty-four, eighty-six, and eighty- seven, shall, unless herein expressly varied, be incorporated with this Act, and the several words and expressions, to which by the last recited Act meanings are assigned, shall in this Act have the same respective mean- ings, unless there be something in the subject or context repugnant to such construction ; and the expression "the special Act" used in such clauses and provisions herewith incorporated snail mean this Act ; and the expression "the commissioners" shall mean the magistrates and council or board and the committee in the discharge of their respective duties under this Act.

Parliamentary Grant. When the magistrates and council, or board, as the case may be, accept a grant out of moneys provided by Parliament, from any Committee of the Privy Council on Education, towards the purchase of the site, or the erection, enlargement, or repair of any school for science and art, or school for science, or school for art, or of tho residence of any teacher in such school, or towards the furnishing of any such school, they shall have power to accent such grant upon the condi- tions prescribed lor the acceptance thereof by the said committee, and to execute such instruments as may be required by the said committee for carrying into effect such conditions, and upon payment of the graut shall, together with their successors, bo bound by such conditions and instru- ment, and have power and be bound to fulfil and observe the same.

Committee. 18. The magistrates and council of any burgh, or oue board of any parish where this Act has been adoptod shall, within the

548 PVBLIC LIBRARIES.

month after its adoption, and thereafter from year to year, in the case of a burgh, at the first mooting after the annual election of town councillors or commissioners of police, and in the case of a parish, at the first meeting after the annual meeting for the election of representative members of the parochial board, appoint a committee, consisting of not less than ten nor more than twenty members, half of whom shall be chosen from amongst the magistrates and council, or board, as the case may be, and the remain- ing half from amongst the householders of the burgh or parish other than the magistrates and council, or board, and three members of such com- mittee shall form a quorum.

Appoint Vacancies in Committee. 19. Any member of committee shall have power to resign office upon giving at least fourteen days previous notice to the clerk of the committee of his intention so to resign ; and in the event of any vacancy occurring in the committee during their term of office by the resignation or death of any member, the committee shall forthwith cause the same to be intimated to the magistrates and council, or board, and the magistrates and council, or board, as the case may be, may at a meeting thereafter elect from among themselves, or from among the householders other than themselves, according to the class in which the vacancy has arisen, a member of committee in place of the member so resigning or dying, provided that no proceedings of the committee shall be invalidated or be illegal in consequence of a vacancy or vacancies in the number of tho committee.

Meeting-* of Committee, *c. 20. Thecommittee appointed as aforesaid shall, in the case of a burgh, meet once in every three months, or oftener if necessary, and in the case of a parish, as often as may be necessary, to determine as to any business falling to be transacted by them, and shall appoint a chairman from among their own number, who shall hold office until next election of committee ; and such chairman shall, in case of equality, have a casting vote in addition to his vote as an individual ; provided that, in the event of a vacancy occurring in the office of chair- man, the committee shall at their first meeting thereafter appoint a new chairman, and in the absence of the chairman of committee at any meet- ing, the meeting shall appoint a chairman for the time being, who at that meeting shall exercise the privileges of the chairman of committee.

Powers of Committee, 21. The committee shall manage, regulate, and control all libraries and museums established under this Act, or to which this Act applies ; and shall have power to do all things necessary for such management, including the following powers ; that is to say,

To appoint sub-committees of their own number :

To appoint a salaried clerk, and salaried librarians, officers, and servants to act during the pleasure of the committee, and to pay and dismiss them :

To purchase books, newspapers, reviews, magazines, and other periodi- cals, statuary, pictures, engravings, maps, specimens of art and science, and such other articles and things as may be necessary for the establishment, increase, and use of the libraries and museums under their control, and to do all things necessary for keeping the same in a proper state of preservation and repair :

To provide from time to time the necessary fuel, lighting, and other matters :

To sell or exchange any books, works of art, or other property of which there may be duplicates, provided that the monoy arising from such

Al'PENMX II. 549

sale, and the property received in exchange shall be applied and held for the purposes of this Act : To provide suitable rooms in the libraries within which the books,

periodicals, and newspapers may be read : To lend out, for the purpose of being read by the householders and inhabitants of the burgh or parish in and for which the committee has been appointed, the books of any library under their control, or such of them as they may consider proper ; and at their discretion to grant the same privilege to the inmates of industrial schools, training ships, reformatories, barracks, and other similar institutions, established for or in the burgh or parish ; and also to any person carrying on business within the limits of the burgh or parish, or to any employee engaged in employment tberoin, although such person or employee may not bo a householder, and may not reside within such limits : To compile and print catalogues of all or any books, articles, and things in the libraries or museums under their control, and reports of their proceedings, and to sell the same, the proceeds to be applied for tho purposes of this Act. To make Bye-laws. 22. It shall be lawful for the committee to make bye-law* for regulating all or any matters and things whatsoever connected with the control, management, protection, and use of any proporty, arti- cles, or things under their control for the purposes of this Act, and to impose such penalties for breaches of such bye-laws, not exceeding five pounds for each offence, as may be considered expedient ; and from time to time, as they shall think fit, to repeal, alter, vary, or re-enact any such bye-laws, provided always that such bye-laws and alterations thereof shall not be repugnant to the law of Scotland, and before being acted on shall be signed by a quorum of the committee, and, except in so far as they relate solely to the officers or servants of the committee, such bye-laws shall be approved of by the magistrates and council, or the board, as the case may be, and shall be approved of and confirmed by the sheriff of the county in which the burgh or parish, or the greater part of the area thereof, is situated : Provided also, that nothing herein contained shall preclude the magistrates and council, or board, as the case may be, from recovering the value of articles or things damaged, or the amount of the damage sustained, against all parties liable for the same.

jTawspapor Publication of Bye-laws, ftc, 23. No bye-laws or altera- tions thereof requiring confirmation shall be confirmed, as before men- tioned, unless notice of the intention to apply for confirmation of the same shall have been given in one or more newspapers published and circulated in the district one month at least before the hearing of the application for confirmation, and any party aggrieved by any such bye- laws or alterations thereof, on giving notice of the nature of his objection to the clerk to the committee ten days before the hearing of the applica- tion for confirmation, may, by himself or his counsel, attorney, or agent, be heard thereon, but not so as to allow more than one party to be heard upon the same matter of objection.

Exhibition of Bye-lawn. 24. For one month at least before any such application for confirmation of any bye-laws or alterations thereof, a copy of such proposed bye-laws or alterations shall be kept at the office of the clerk to the committee, and shall also be put up in some conspicuous place in each of the libraries and museums of the committee, and all persons may, at all reasonable times, inspect such copy without fee or reward ;

550 PUBLIC LtBRABlES.

»nd the clerk to the committee shall furnish every person who shall apply for the same with a copy thereof, or of any part thereof, on payment of sixpence for every one hundred words so to be copied.

Printed Copy of Bye-lawn. 25. The clerk to the committee shall give a printed copy of the confirmed bye-laws, for the time being in force, to every person applying for the same, without charge ; and a copy thereof shall be painted or placed on boards, and put up in some conspicuous part of each of the libraries and museums of the committee, and such boards with the bye-laws thereon shall be renewed from time to time as occasion shall require, and shall be open to inspection without fee or reward.

Bye-laws when Confirmed, Ac. 26. All bye-laws or alterations thereof made and confirmed according to the provisions of this Act, when so pub- lished and put up, shall be binding upon and be observed by all parties, and shall be a sufficient warrant for all persons acting under the same.

Evidence of Bye-laws. —27. The production of a written or printed copy of the bye-laws requiring confirmation as aforesaid, authenticated by the signature of the sheriff who shall have confirmed the same, and a written or printed copy of the bye-laws not requiring such confirmation, authenticated by the common seal of the committee, and signed by the chairman of the committee at the time when the same were made, shall be evidence of the existence and making of such bye-laws in all cases for prosecution under the same, without proof of the signature of such sheriff, or the common seal of the committee, or the signature of their chairman ; and with respect to the proof of the publication of such bye-laws it shall be sufficient to prove that a board containing a copy thereof was put up and continued in manner by this Act directed.

Recovery of Penalties.— 28. All penalties and forfeitures exigible under this Act, and the Acts incorporated wholly or partially herewith, or under any bye-law made in pursuance thereof, may be recovered by an ordinary small-debt action in the name of the clerk to the committee for the time being before cither the sheriff or justices of the district ; and the same shall be payable to the committee, and shall, when recovered, be applied by them for the purposes of this Act ; and in any prosecution under this Act an excerpt from the books of the committee, certified by the clerk or other proper officer, shall be held equivalent to the books of the committee, and all entries in the books of the committee bearing that any book or books mentioned or referred to therein has or have been borrowed by the person complained against shall be taken and received as evidence of the fact, and the onus probandi shall be thrown on the party complained against, and if decree passes against such party, he shall be found liable in costs.

Actions. 29. All actions at the instance of the committee shall be brought in name of the clerk to the committee, and in all actions against the committee, it shall be sufficient to call the clerk to the committee for the time being as defender, and service on him shall be sufficient service ; and all actions brought by or against the clerk to the committee in his official character shall be continued by or against his successors in office without any action of transference.

Estimates. 30. The committee shall in the month of April in every year make up, or cause to be made up, an estimate of the sums required in order to defray the interest of any money borrowed, the payment of the sinking fund, and the expense of maintaining and managing all libraries or museums under their control for the year after Whitsunday then next

APPENDIX Hi 651

to come, and for the purpose of purchasing the books, articles, and things authorized by this Act to be purchased for such libraries or museums, and shall report the same to the magistrates and council in the case of a burgh, or to the board in the case of a parish, and the magistrates and council or the board, as the case may be, shall provide the amount required out of the library rate to be levied by them, and shall pay ovor to the committee tho sum necessary for the annual expenditure by them ia terms of their estimate.

Power to Add, Ac, 31. Where any of the following institutions, namely, a Public Library, a public museum, a school for science and art, a school for science, a school for art, or an art gallery has been established under any Public Library Act in force for the time being, or under this Act, there may at any time be established, in connection therewith, any other of the said institutions without further proceedings being taken for the adoption of this Act.

Libraries, 4c to be Free.— 32. AH libraries, museums, or art gallories established under this Act, or to which this Act applies, shall be open to the public free of charge, and no charge shall be made for the use of books or magazines issued for home reading.

SCHEDULES.

Schedule (A). Procedure for Determining by Voting Paper as to the Adoption of the Act.

(1.) Upon receipt of the requisition specified in the Act, the chief magistrate or the sheriff, as the case mav be, shall, without unnecessary delay, cause to be printed, and to be delivered or sent by post to eacn householder an intimation and a voting paper, in the respective forms appended hereto, and the intimation may be prefixed to the voting paper and on the same paper therewith, or may be printed separately, provided it be delivered or posted simultaneously with the voting paper.

(2.) In the case of a burgh, the voting paper shall bear the number of the householder on the municipal register, and where the burgh is divided into wards, the number of the ward : and in the case of a parish the voting paper shall bear a number relative to the entry of the householder in a copy of the valuation roll applicable to such parish, or in a list of the householders in such parish, which copy or list, distinguishing the amount of rental at whicn each person is assessed, the assessor, under the Acta in force for the valuation of lands and heritages in Scotland, is hereby required to make, certify, and furnish to the sheriff, within fourteen days of an application by him to that effect, on payment of a fee of not more than one shilling for each hundred names ; and such copy or list, certified as aforesaid, shall be sufficient proof of the qualification of the householders named therein.

(3.) The intimation aforesaid shall specify the place at which tho voting paper is to be collected, and shall also specify a day for collection, herein- after called the day of the noil, being not less than three lawful days, nor more than ten days from tne last date of the delivery or of the posting of the voting papers to the householders.

(4. ) The chief magistrate or the sheriff, as the case may be, shall, before the issue of such voting papers, appoint a competent person as collector thereof, on such terms and for sucn remuneration as may be reasonable ; and he shall also, by himself or through the collector aforesaid, at any time before or during the collection or scrutiny of tj»e voting papers,

55g PLBUC LlBRAftlES.

appoint such number of assistant collectors as may be necessary for carrying out the procedure herein specified.

(6. ) The ehief magistrate or the sheriff, as the case may be, shall, at least three days previous to the day of the poll, intimate such day and place or places ana honrs fixed for collecting such votes by advertisement in one or more newspapers published or circulating in the burgh or parish ; and the said advertisement shall also specify the name of the collector appointed as aforesaid, and an address where voting papers may be received from such collector, in terras of the immediately succeeding article.

(6.) The collector, or an assistant collector, shall attend at the address specified in such advertisement for at least three specified hours of each oT the two lawful days immediately preceding the day of the poll, and "hall, on the application of any householder, and on being satisfied that such householder has not already received a voting paper, supply a voting paper to such applicant ; and the collector, or any assistant collector, shall at any time after the issue of the voting papers, and before seven o'clock afternoon of the day of the poll, on being satisfied that a voting paper has been inadvertently lost, destroyed, or rendered useless, have power to supply a duplicate voting paper, which shall be marked "duplicate" before being issued.

(7.) Voting papers duly filled up and subscribed by the householders to whom the same are respectively applicable, may be transmitted by post to the collector, at the address specified in the aforesaid advertisement, provided that such voting papers reach the collector before eight o'clock of the afternoon of the day of the poll, and that the householders bo transmitting prepay the postage thereof, otherwise the same shall not be received.

(8.) On the day of the poll the chief magistrate, or the sheriff, as the case may be, shall cause the place or places specified in the iutimation accompanying the voting paper to be kept open from eight o'clock morning till eight o'clock afternoon, and such place, or each of such places, if more than one, shall be under the charge of the collector, or of an assistant collector, who shall give his personal attendance during the hours specified for the purpose of receiving all voting papers which may be handed to him.

(9.) In the case of a burgh divided into wards, there shall be at least one place for the collection of voting papers in each ward, and in any burgn or parish where more than one pface for collection shall have been appointed, the collection in all of such places shall take place on the same day, and the intimation accompanying the voting paper shall specify the particular place where such voting paper is to be collected. The collector, or assistant collector, in charge of anv such place for collection shall not be bound to receive a voting paper which shall have been directed to bo lodged at some other such place.

(10.) Where any householder is unable to write, he may attach his mark to the voting paper, provided that such voting paper be signed by a witness, whose address shall be appended to his signature.

(11.) Any person fabricating a voting paper, or presenting or returning a fabricated voting paper, or any voting paper, knowing that the same does not bear the true signature of the householder to whom such voting paper is intended to apply, shall be guilty of personation, and shall be liable to the penalties of that offence as set forth in the Ballot Act, 1872.

(12.) No voting paper shall be received after eight o'clock afternoon of the day of the poll ; and in the event of there being more than one place

APPEXUtX II. AU

for collection, each assistant collector shall immediately after the close of the poll transmit the voting papers received by him to tho collector, and the whole voting papers shall thereafter he under the charge of tho collector subject to the directions of the chief magistrate, or of the sheriff, aa the case may be.

(18.) The collector, subject as aforesaid, shall, as soon as may be after the conclusion of the poll, proceed to a scrutiny of the voting papers, and shall, with such assistance as may be necessary, compare tho same with the municipal register, or with the copy roll, or list of householders, as tho case may be, and shall ascertain how far the voting papers have been fillet I up in terms of the directions thereon, and have been duly signed by tho householders to whom such voting papers were respectively issuod ; and immediately on the conclusion of such scrutiny lie shall report to tho chief magistrate, or to the sheriff, as the case may bo, the number of householders who have voted for the adoption of the Act, and the number who have voted against its adoption. He shall also report the total number of voting papers received, and the number, if any, which have been rejected by him, and the cause of such rejection.

(14). Upon receiving the report of the collector, the chief magistrate, or the sheriff, as the case may be, shall, if satisfied of the accuracy of such report, cause the result of the poll to be made public in such manner as ho shall think most expedient.

Form of Intimation. Public Libraries' Consolidation (Scotland) Act, 1887.

Burgh [or parish] of

No. [insert number of householder on register, roll, or list].

[Insert place and date of issue].

To [insert name of householder].

In terms of the Public Libraries Consolidation (Scotland) Act, 1887, I have to intimate that a requisition having been presented to me by tho prescribed number of householders of the burgh [or parish] of to take the opinion of the householders as to whether tho Act should bo adopted in said burgh [or parish], I have caused the subjoined [or accompanying] voting paper to be issued to you as a householder of said burgh [or parish], which voting paper, duly tilled np and subscribed by you, will be received within [name of place] on the

day of next, between the hours of eight o'clock morning and

eight o'clock afternoon.

The voting paper may be delivered personally or by a messenger, provided it bear your signature.

In lieu of delivery of the voting paper in manner above mentioned, it is competent to any householder to post it addressed to [name and address of collector], provided the postage be prepaid, and that the voting paper reach the collector before eight o'clock aftornoon of the said [insert day of

Sill]. The risk of delivery before the hour specified rests with the house- older adopting this method of return.

(Signed) A.B., Chief Magistrate,

[or Sheriff].

Form op Voting Paper.

Public Libraries' Consolidation (Scotland) Acty 1887.

Bnrgh [or parish] of No. [insert number of householder on register , roll, or list.]

PUBLIC LIl:OJJ([KV.

VOTIKO PAPKIt. To bo dtlivorrd on the day of 18 [itucrt dam ■•!

poll] IwtveM tlm hours of eight o'clock morning ami oight o'clock aftornooo, at [tfMaftrf [litrrvf McZeelCml In reply r«. r h>. nytfen WaeUMV tho 1'iihlir Libraries Consolidation (Sotlatidt Aot, 1867, should be adopted by the burgh tor pAii: 1 rolfl [fiuicrt Yon yr No.]

[Signa/urt oj h->\lstJ*>Ucf ] Xotb. Any perxon fabricating a voting paper, or presenting or KfeaHB inga ffthnoatod voting p*pi>r, or any voting jwrwr, knowing that tho aamo doea not bear tho true sign At 11 r>- <>f the houwholder toarhOTn aoch rating

papuria intended lo upph . If ffallt) of |>< DiMiiUhni. and la liable to thi

pBoattSa of Uirti ofltoca as tot forth in tho Ballot Act, 1Q7S

i-nn.F (ij). pitou-jtDtitR yon iwwmrwpw uv Public \in am ro thk AnoiTinji of thb Act. (1.) Upon receipt of tho requisition vpecitLod in the Act, tho < hi-i' train, ni the RhertfT, as tnn case may ha, tdiall c'onvnna a n . of Ul« hoartlKlHw in Boma iviiviuiiouL plaru within the burgh a parish, w tho cwo may bo, for tho purpose of •Ivtormiii . 1 l; whethtl the iidl! be adopted within such burgh or parish. (2.) BtWD iruM'tnig uhall be hold on a day not lo*a than fotirt D or num. linn thirty dayn :t f r - r Hi- r-r.-ipl of Mi.- r-.iijimtimi, and notioaol tl»p moetlng shall he gtVfln DOt low* than seven ihiv> pr« t^lin" it-* dati i.y postlng will ; 1 tho bmgh or parish, as the cow tiiay 'w, handbill* In tin- lurin nujexed hereto, ftud also by advcitlMmimt, in the Mid I'mi:.. inserted at loflflt DUC4) in overy dinh newspaper pnblmhi'd within Uw burgh or parinh, as tho cose may he, uud in tho event of tbom Wing no 1ini\ Dowarnjwf >o puhlinhed, tiwii ai Uaat onoi in mm of mora &«*«• pagan pabuuitd nri'ih'ulnting within the burgh or parith.

t3.) The chief magiatrate. in thaeaseofa burgh, shall ntotldi UousU

with a 1'opv of the municipal resistor, aud the sbnriff, in lite a*) of ft pariah, .-.hall provide bunaoll with <i copy of tho valuation roll applicable

t».» nii.'h pariah, or» list of th< bouaeholdora therein, *\i i 1 cow whall ho made. oertiriM. and fiirnitdied to the sliurilt on his application b

tin- Minna? dinatad In aehadnle (A.).

(4.) At (he moating failed a* aforesaid all lioiHidioUle-rr on mnui.i|>,il r«iator7 is th« cose of a burnh, or on the oopj 1 tuniiflhvl aii'l iTtiind u aforesaid, iti tho raao of a lari.iu, ul-' uutitlod to vote, and no other person or pomoiin whfttovor uliall i-j so flntitlwl, hi id the ehiid mngiatrate, or the ihaiifT, !ix Lha 01 *hall take such niDoaurea aa way be necenxarv fur (tie B) I BOH

qualified poraoiw from tho iii«eting, or for preveiitiuf saah paDaona voting, and for securing that tho votes of such pordoiut, if given, aliall not be uountod ; and, if uircataary for this purnooc, no may requlro thai houfloliolder intonding to be praaant at tiiv meeting, 0* praaent th#rooi, tdtal! enter his nanin and address on o card to he furdinheil In him that all such cards shall bo delivered up before outorlng l«o

totes arc recorded; ftiul every person knotriugl) and t Mprooenting himaolf to be a honaoholdcr in »a b buigh oi | Arinb, and ai IQoh ou tilled to votii, whall be guiltv of poraonution, utui shall ho liable •» tlw petinltion of that orlisnce aa aet Forth in the Hal lot Act. J -

[ft\ Tim chiol maffiatrste, or tho ^heriil, the casa may bo attcutl and shall prwide althc uvwUuul, and shall appoint 0 xhtdl make rtigular miiivvVyH uv l\w ycwaaAattnk Ctu««A, «wl tho vlild

U nurvtx n. 866

roapittxato, or hhorilf, as the case may Imj, shall iu case of equality have a coating vote

(5.) The TOHiilr, of the vote, whether for or against the adoption of the Act, ahull bu announced by the chief magistral*!, or aheiiJT, tho case? may ht, at the meeting itself, or in aay other way he may think must . . xi'dlicut, provided such announcement he made without unnecessary delay.

Fotim OP Kotiur op PiroLiu Mketisu. Durgh !»'• parish] of R »ticc ii hereby given, that under and in virtue of the nowemconUinal in tho Publie Libraries Coiifcol illation (Scotland) Act, 1887, the house - holdanl '»f the burgh [»/ pirishj of are required to meet upon

the day of next, at o'clock, witrrin

when a vote will be tukuu a* to wlidlur t&fl Ait ihall be adopted by the sail burgh fa parish].

[/it thf MM yf i' harm •"!•(] By tho Act " houaoholtlora " are dotinotl to muau " all pcrsoiiB entered on tho municipal register," and " municipal rogucler" in dstined to numn " tha rngiir.T, lUt, nr roll of persona cntitlpil

i.i rots in a" " vleotlon of tows aoanaflloia or commissioner* of police in a liurxh, wade up according tu the lav iu font fur the lime bulng."

[In the MM of c /•-" ith owl] Dy tho Act " householders " ore dflBxwtl to HUM *' all person* entitled to voto in the election of a aehool board in a pftrfall under th« provisions of tho Kdu<<ation (Scotland ) Act, 1872, and any Ait amending the wiiir."

iThe chief magistrate, or sheriff, m tho caso may bt, may append any n:nululiuii.i he may lliink expedient for scouring oriiei, ami for dlivlniv

tb pmrpoa* of tin. mnetiiig.]

Dated at tho day of 18 .

[Signed) A.H., ('hid Magistrate, [or 8lierilTJ.

PUBLIC LIBJEURIBS1 ACTS AMENDMENT ACT, 1881'.

ul VICTORIA. CHVITKU 0.

An Act to auiouil the Public Libmii.a Act, 1S6G. [31 it May, 1880.]

BE it enacted by the Quccn'a most Excellent Majesty1 , by and with the advice nii'l OOOBMtt of tbo Lordu Spiritual nini lwBJOWJ| and Com litona, iu tlnw present Parliament aaauiubled, and by tho aullujrily of the

Mill*', RS follow

Repeal of 18 & 19 Viet. o. 70. a. 18 1. Section thirteen of tlio I' I

' all Act, ISfift, ahall be ivpualed, and in place thereof the following provisions shall have olTect.

The espouse* of calling and holding the meeting of the ratepayers, whether the Public Libraries Acta shall be adopted oi not, and tho expeonca of carrying thooo Acta into execution in any pamh, I luch amount a* ahall bo from time to time (.auctioned by tfct vestry, tdiall be paid out, of a rate to ho raised with and aa part of the MOT rate pinvnli d that < very person ivMeaaud to such rate lit respect of lands used as arabl'-, meadow, or pasture ground uul.v, 01 as wuodhuida or tnaikut ^udcita, or naraery grounds, ahall be entitled to an aQowWMI of tVO-toMa of tho IVin aNfluHsod upon him in rNJMOt of ^nch lands for such MCPOBNl j il>< rMtn to be called for the WDpOM of sanctioning tho amount Hliall be oon- venr<l in the manner unuaf in tho parish : and Chfl amount, fo? the time being propceed to bo raised for auch exncsnaeia *VwX\ \k w\t\*3aWL \v\ "^ak

556

1I1UMIUKK

u-ttii'o convening thr vretry, and ihall bo jmid according to tho or i the vattry, such i"i*m a* shall a^^omuxl by tin OommWftb rvctsive tn« aamo ; Provided also, that id the nntici |iaj

moot of the rato there shall bo elated tbo j to portion wbicu tbo amount t> bo theroliy raised for the pnrpoase of tho mM Acts nhall 1-oar to tho total •mount of the rate.

Proviso aa to Rata. 2. tfolhing in this A'-t inall be deemed t<> tstaU ilatf> uny ratfl ui:uii nrlnr fo tha passing thereof, slid any ••vponwv to which MOtUm thirteen of ilio Public: Librarkv. A«*t. i -'■'». l| 1 1 ■<; may bfl paid 'Hi of uuy such rato if this Act h«ui not paBttd,

Joint library. 3. It shall he lawful for tha Cominlaal <rata3y

(ipjioiutMi iniii-i i.l im I'nhlif Lihiariea (England) o\eU( 3866 Us 1^6?. fa any two or moro adjoining paiioln a, w it 'i tho oooscnt of tho vcotrloa of •ucb parifihoi, from time to timo to agree to share in aiieh proportions tad for rniuh jwriotl at may bo ilotci Wined by the agreement, the cowt of tho pfimhaie, amotion, repair, and ruainttmanee of any library Imi situate in o»o of ouch pariahcB, and al«o tho owl of the purchaM of honk*. I »oi vA icaln, and newspapers for su«:h Kbraiy, and All other oxpousci I'uniin.'ted with tho same ; and thu inhahi Units of both or all tho tail Mil baa. au tho 00K QUJ do, shall bo entitled to use tho said library m long the agreement yIdlII continue in EbtOB.

Vml any wh agreement may prnvidn that opon f- tennlnttfon an adjustment ahull W made of tho i merest* of the several OotnmUeloii' llu- library hniMhrfc Iwoka, and othor property to which they bam contributed, and oh to the mode in which such adjustment .-.hall \k ai i at.

Short titlo. 1. This Act may be cited as the I'ublic Librari** Acta Amendment Act, 1889, and thin Act and fhu Pnhlic Librariai Art*, I <s.i in 1887, aw i '•' road and oonitrnarl together ** on. ,md may be dtod together as tho Public i.lhrarifs(Knglaml) •' I to 16S&.

TECHNICAL INSTRUCTION ACT, 1889.

lot to foeilimt.- ih" Provision of tv< bnioal [m lion.

I8i)th Angus, lssaj

BE it OOactad by tin Qucon'> m "■» K\v,dl.ui* Mnj.-ly, bjj k«d 'vi'h th-. ndvti'H iiini i-oiiM-iit ..t th" i,nnl« Siiintual and Ten

t~ nif»iw, m this prammt rarltamont aweml 1. and t.y the author!

the nan, as follows. Power for Local Authority.— 1.— (1.) \ local anthoritj a j Iron ii

to rime, nut of |.h« loxyil rato, Hii[»M)y or aid |.ln« HUpplj if twl manual Inatructiou, tu such extent and on *m:h kruu as tin think oxpodlcni lubjeot to the foltawing raatri --■ .—

[n.) Tin) local authority auaU uol oi t of the local rata supply oi

the supply of tcclmicnl or manual inatruotion tooohoUra r-.

biatrnfitLOn at on domontary suhool in the obligatory o

ftiihjoo(a ttroacribod by ih« -.-.iwlvt of tho Education L»op-

for the time being in force :

{/'.i It thall not be required, as n. condition ol any BCtolai admitted Into "i contiuuing in any «houl aidtd rate, and n hub hi oi n uuual imti

that he nliull attend at ov n\w\*w TWm ^VavViuv.^1 V-^iday »cao«l

AiT'KM'IX It.

557

or any place of religious worship, or that In shall attend any religions nWivance or any instruction iu religion* .t«h ' ■] ■_-< ti in tho school or olsowboro : Provided that in any* school, the erection of which bu hwu aided under thu Act, it shall not !«■ n* pared, ft<* a condition of any wholar heing ad miffed into w QQA- tlnuiug in such school, that ho slmll attend at or abstain from ttioiUUUg any Sunday school or any place of religious worship, or that bo aboil attend any riditfious onsorratio1 or any iiiM.nii f nm U) D IjflEoui etibjeoU 111 tho sebnofor el«n whore (

(r.) No religious catechism or religion* formulary, which iu dlstfnotfro of any particular toftOlirillAtlOn, slmll he taught at iiny school Atd"d out uf the local rale, to a scholar attending only for the punicae* of technical or insirial instruction u it* l*^ r (li> Act, and tit" Iiiium for prayer or religious worship, or for ony leaaon or series of tftfffflM on a rotigiona subject, shall he conveniently arranged for the mupott of allowing tho withdrawal of such scholar therefrom j

(d. ) A loud authority may. mi the reijucat of the school hoard for its district or auy |mrt of its district, or of ;uiy other managers of a arhool or institution within its district for thu time being iu reoolfri of aid from the Department of Science and Ait, mukc, out of any local nto ratsud in pursuance of this Act, to n«eh extent an BUT ho reasonably Kurfieumt, having regard to the requirements of tot

!■ ;t.ri<-r . I. n : to tin oca "'i<"is ami rontdoaooi oontnlned in

thifi wclioii, provision iu aid of tlie technical and inununl in.'Uuctton for thu time being supplied in sehools or institutions within iU district, and shall distribute the provision no made In proportion to tho nature and amount ol officiant technical or manual itmtri ti in •mppliad by those schools or institutions respectively ;

((,) whom such ottlaf managers of a school or institution receive l!4 fioiu a loud authority in pursuance of this section, thu loot] authority shall, for the pur|K>se* of this Act, oh represented on the governing body of tho school or institution in such proportion as will, as nearly as may bo, correspond to the proportion whi.h bhfl aid given by the local authority boar* to the contribution ratdl Oram all sou reus nth or titan the local rats And money provided hy Pnrhu incut to (he cost of the technical or manual instruction given in tho Hchool OV institution aided ,

( /,) If any QJIMtfon arises as to the sulfiiiicnoy of tho provudou made under this section, or ax to the qualification of any school or Institution to participate m auy ROOD provision, or as to the amount to he allotted to wh wheel or in*f itnthm, or as tn the e«etit to uln.ii.. »j i:i.n|r in uhitli, the 1 teal authority is U) be rOprOMDtod "'i khOfOVemitUl body of any such nchuol or institution, tin- qncHlion •hall bu dl b mined by tho Dopartmont ol BOUllOC and Art : Provided llmt no such provision, out of auv rate raised in pnrauanae Act, Khali bo made i" aid of tvhiiies»l or mamud iiintruehYiii in any school conducted for private profit ; and

(«M The aiuuuut of the role to be raised iu any one year by a loctl authority for the purposes of this A>'t shall not exceed the miiiii of uuu penny in the |>ouud,

Vt.) A local authority may i'ur tbf DVpoMI at" this Act appoint a com- m '!'!' ccrtsurtlng rith« wholly cm partly of in. mm)., of rli* local authority uud tuny delegate to tin noon oommlttee any powers Bxanbe-

oblo by the authority under this Act, except the power of raising a i>l

"i borrowing money.

.ttfl

i-i ni.ic unii-tni*?*.

(3.) Nothing lu this l ihiU lm oouotrucd so as to tub I m>

rxUliu^ powers i>f school hoard* with inspect to the provision of lochunal and manual inntrurl ion.

Proviiiun for Efttranca Examination.— 2. It shall Ik 00rnpft«Dt for US school Imnmii or local authority, HhouM they think u ota «ii

••nil Alice examination foi persons donirous of attending technical Hchuot* o? claano* under th»'ii n.riiifiguiiieiit or to which tiny confn

Parliamentary Onnti, 3. The condition* on which ]inr*»inmoriUry KtanU may he made in aid tit* technical ut luminal iaetUucLiui IIiomo contained in the BllBUtW of tin- Department of Science force Tor the time Iming.

Provisions s* to Local Authorities. 1.— (I > Kor (ho piiTpeein* of thi* Act Hi-- ujtfualoo " local authority " Bhall nan t lie- counoll ofaaj

BODDty 01 Ihihjiik'i, unit *n v urban sauiliiiy authority within the in'

of the Pahlk Health icte

{'£.) The local rule fur tli- pur|M)ittS of this Art ihall be

(ft.) In tho no«a of a county counri^ the county fnuii ;

('/.) In tho com of a Iwiough eonuril, thn baroua;h fuiui ot boti

ril': ;

[c.) In the caee of an urban aan.uiv mthority not befog a be*

rouucil, Lho dlltriot fund and gtiiieral tlUtritrt rato, or othir fun 1 ->i rate applicable to the general purposes ol the Pabuc Health t< <

J3.) A county council nay charge any nxpsOMfl incurred by i.. this Act on any tart of thoir county for tin i gut

IXBCRfljOfl have been incurred.

(4.) A local authority may borrow for the ptjrboeee aftfafl Act

(<u ) la tho caee of a county council, in manner provided by the Local Government Act, 1S88;

(0, ) In thfl imo of a borough council, oa if tho nurpoeae of tl | wero piirpoaee for which they are authorised by nootion one tatuulnd and six of the Monieipal Corpora tionn Act, 1882, to borrow :

(c.) Id the COM of an urlian sanitary authority not being a borough council, as if tho purpose* of thin Act woro purpoaoe for which they aro authorized to borrow under tha Public Iloalth Acta.

Audit of Accounta. 5. Where the managers of a school ot niriili.ini receive aid from a local authority in porauanoo of this Act, thoy render to tho local authority audi account* relating to the apptiual u tho i.ioncy granted in aid, iiml those account* -shall Ik vanrn«l and [ted in Kurh manner as thfl local authority may require, and tKt BMlugera aUalt bo peiaonally liable to refund to the let al authority money granted under thin Act. and uol shown to he pro| er j I the purposes for whhdi it wan grutiUt!.

Accounta of Urban.— tl, Tin- accounts of the reoaipu and upend of an iirbmi suuftary authority under tills Act shall lie audited In Kkl iiiiiiiin. ; uud with the like incidents andcoiisvtiui'iiuaa, aa the oucounta W I heir roceipta ami OJrpoaditul'C ander the PuUl< Health Act, lSr&.

Appliaatton to Ireland.— 7. En the application of tht* At to IwlWrl— p.] l*ho oxproarion ' 'local authority " ahall moan tin urban or

H-iiiiUrv imlliotrv, as tho cue may bo, villuu til* uirnuiii. i'uWkOlcalth (IwlajnAI Act,\ftTA.

ArrKxt>r\ in,

W

(2.) Tho local t»tt for the purpose* of this Aot shall be- ta) In the ewe of mi urban Military authority, she ntf -n (Y,i,.i applicable to the expense* incurred or payable by auoh Authority in tho execution of tho Public Hoiiltb (Ireland) Aot, 1878, utidor tho provisions of the said Act : {!>) In the eflfio of a rural sanitary authority, the rato or rate* out or which special exrwufiea incurred in rospoct of any contribu- tory place or places aro payable under the provisions of the aafd

Act.

(3,J A local authority may borrow for the [mrjwKW nt tliis Act a* if Tin- purposea of thl*i Act wan parpoatt for which tho nanitary mithuritv arewiihiirhied Lu borrow tunler the Public Health (Ireland) A«t, 1878.

(>l.) Any ruferoncK to the Public. Health Act, 1*7.1, shall lie construed iw« reference to the Public Health (Ireland) Act, 1878,

Moaning of Technical and Manual Instruction.— 9, In this Act Tho oxproaaioii "technical instruction" shall mean instruction in tho principles of science aud art applicable to iiiduatrioa, and lu tho application of ipecial branches of science and art to specific ImUwtrioN or employments. It shall not include teaching tho practice of any trade Of tDtlastry Or employment, but, save as aforesaid, ghftll include instruction in the brandies of acfoliGfl and ait with respect to which crante arc for tho time boing mode l>y tic* I >epart inont of Science and Art, mid any other form of instruction (including modern lanKuaftcn and commercial and agricultural anhjecta), which may for tho ttart l*>iug he aaticllnned by that Department by a minnd* laid bafbrl I'lrlianieiit and made on the representation of* a local authority that audi a furm uf mslructiuti is ittjunwl \>\ till ciiruuihUiiecs uf 1U district

The expression H luanualinstrnctiou " nhall mean instruction in th< use of tools, pfOBaWW "f agriculture, and modelling in clay, wood, or other material.

Extant of Aot,— 9. This Act *hall uot extend to Scotland.

8hort Title. -10. This Act mav be cited as tho Technical tiwlmctSnn Act, U8t».

VI'IKXltlX III.

cut", OP RBQUI3ITI03 TO CAMi POBU1 HBKTNO IN A

DlHTItKJT GOVERNED BY A UK3AL. BOARD.

To the Local Hoard for the district of , batUfl till I rb»Q Ift&tttn

Authority for the same Dutrlftt Tim IVt.tion of Ebj undersigned, being poreone OMOaaed to and |-> the General District Kate levied by the aaid Board.

Wo the undersigned do hereby request yon, the wild Hoard, toapjHiint a day for u public meeting: of thu iicisoiik awoaxed to and paying audi gesoro] district rate, in order to determine whether tho I'ublic Libraries' Aot, ISfifi, and Acts amending tho same shall l»c adopted for the District

of , and aUo to convene and hold mien mooting mi diri-< ted by I In

Hid Acta.

Dated this .lay of 1*9

(TAoi fvllmctk* xiyAatttm.)

560

PllH.H' MCRAUXM.

KOTICK CONVfiNIMJ VlKETINO UK Ki.TBPi.YBR8.

Tin*. I'l'M.i' ilr.wui A* i, 1-i*.', asp nil. Pihi.ic Lfiiual

Act, 1666, wro fa i- uixyDnN rms .-ame,

District of \Vlioroaa ton aud muro pOMM ftoaetaoj to and paying the General Dbtliat Kate, mittlu mi'l levied by the Ix>cul Koar.l of too ItittnVtof

in ihv (".utility of , twdng the llrhun gnnj

rity for tho said district, have brikiiUvI ti Kivpilsiiiou to the mltl Hoard in .i i I'uU ic Meeting of the jwrhous uschdJ to and paylnvsucb District

Itate, in onl m to dttciniiuc whether I he Public Librnii..- ■.., •n<i

all other Acts relating thereto for promoting tho OMtablwlimtnt of I Libraries, *hall ho adopted lor tUv I .littnet oT ;

Ami wIihww trio Raid Local Hoard hi.1* derided that the | i do] majority af tho ratepayers shall be aseorUln&l by the prASCribftl PaUlo .Mx tiuK ,

Notice in hereby given that the Miid Bonn] liu appointed that a D

[nj of ntfpfyaij of tho Hill district of J] bo bold at the

on tho

, at the hour of half-part- wen o'clock in the ov^ini^, Ear in pUrpON of taking into consideration anil ilnjldituj upon till matter of the lUipiiMtiun, and the adoption, at tho *»id Tnblio LLUmrlcB Act, 1S&5, and tho Aot« amending tho sumo and relating thou t Q under tliu sual of the Board, at a mooting of the Hoard, bold on tbu <lny of , 1419—, in the presence of

, Chairman of the matting. , Clerk.

COPY OK PUBMC ANNOUWKMi'M WHEN ft POM. HAS BERN DKMANDKD AT A STATUTORY MBKTIN

This FOBLIO Hiui.rn Alt, 187;".

Tick PUBLIC LfBRABISv' ACT, 1856, asm AOTH LM1 SV1VQ nil: uavr. At ft meeting of ratopayer« nf the Local Uovarnnumt Dbtrfvt of

, tn Hi,' mii'ity of , hriil in the

DO . tho duy ol , lflp,

ro&roiicil under tlio provision* of tbu Public Libraries Act, 18CC, and Urn Act* amending the Mime, for the purport f raking into conaEdomtioi deciding aa to tho adoption of tho said Act*.

I the uiid«'r*<ign«d being a person annexed to ami pAyingti. DiltrtCt Rate, made and levied by tho Local Ffcmnl, for < ret of

In tho county of , being the Urban A.:;

Authority for thcaaid district, do hereby dotnand a [.oil or th« pi

aaQOted to and paying mii"1i tloncral DihIium Kfitr. in ui I wh.-t her 6T not tho wild Act* shall bsftduptttl f«r the •aid dintu r. A* witnoits my hand this day of , I sit.

litem l(u» til erne

Ooofipati ffl

Wit now

CERTIFKIATK OF BILL N 9TCB. La at Bqavd. / Ih-rchy cvrllfy that on Qu An* <& ,VA— , t .tilp jo*t

,

atthnm* in.

Ml

copioa of tho annexed notice (markod A) cm tho principal doom of the following churches and chapels in the a tare-mentioned district, namely :—

On the same day I also posted copie* of tho Raid notice in the othor places in tin* Haid district where public notices arc usually posted. Aa witnt».i my hand tkb day of 13—.

(Signed)

NOTICE OF POLK

Prnuc- Health Act, 1875, a:?d this Tcblic Libkabi]>' A i HC>:<,

AN1> ACT* A.MUSDINO THE SAMP.

Distri : >t

Whoroas a meeting was held iu the , on

Monday, the twonfy-wghth lay of , 13—, punuant to nutiw duly

given, for the purpose of talcing into consideration and deciding upon tln> Hiihjm't niattor of a rcijuUitkm therein mentioned, and rim adoption fot tho district of of the Public Lihrariw Act of 1855, and Acta

mn'jij'liiiff tho Mime ond relating thereto.

And whetou at cuoh meohng a resolution adopting this aiiid Act* waw carried hy risln'\v »1 liiHids, tut n poll was demanded.

This in to givo notice that the Mid Poll will rake place at the

. on Monday, the Ith day of . ]> , and

tliat the houra for mob I'oll will be from ton o'clock in the morning until eight o'clock at night, when and whero all puiuona entitled to vole at Ml fa Poll muat attend to record their vote*.

Datod this day of 18—.

(Signed)

Cnuiinian of the meeting and ChllrUH of the Local Doanl,

ANNOUNCEMENT OF TIIE ADOPTION OF THE ACT.

Tub Pvbi,i< Hf.at.th At, 1076, The Public Libkakieb' Aur, 1655, * D Acts AttSAXUVa MB bamis,

I, the undersigned, being the chairman of tho local board for tho district of | in the county of , ilo hereby corhfy that nt * meeting

i*i ratepayers within the mid llBtriol convened under too provlrioni or the Act Ifl arid 19 Viet. Cap, 70, entitled *' The Public Libraries" Act, 1865, " «m«! tin; Asia aioandina (ha HUM in tho

on , the fifith day of , 180 , at half pout aovoii o'clock :n

tho evening, too following resolution HU HOpOMa by Mr.

nJ iv BIT , mid mipporird bj other* •—"'hud. (hi* BMfltUtt

nf |»:moitn assessed to, and paying the guuoral diatnot rate, made ana

hn-.i.i fa ii; i I f- ' i uu aifltricl . i th« oaunty of

. Mm the Urban nniUry authority for the aoid diatrict, boi 1 1 -,

...ii.. | that thu Public Libraries Act, 1866, ond tho Aebt ann-mling

Uio name, nball Im* adopted for the said distrr?) '

And I tarthtl -'"itily ami declare that at the meeting the leHdiiti mi war, pxwd by a lalgfl majority.

-'.* l prni .1- i i

A Poll was demanded by Mr. , and the medium

mijoiiuniti to Moiuiiiv, tiii' , to that th« poll might H

l*le*n at till!

Ami I do hereby fartatf certify ami deolm that such j»oll was taken by in- .it the . aforwaid on

< A that thore were FOOonUd rotoi ni favuui frl

tin? rtnoltitiou, and agamat it, ami 1 eatttlfjp aud dwfilara thai

the resolution was rArilwl.

Datud lliia

Chairman,

OOPS OF BEQUXSmOW FOR I'AKISH OVKRSKKRS,

To mm 'J U 'i i if rm- PADUB W in ihl

Couxrv or

Nvtr.— Thc word "jxtrink" mffOM rwr I "/ tti oam poor.

[The l*»ibJlc Lil-mrii-- AotBj 18S0| ami all AeU amending the >nnc. j

Whereas by an Aoiol Patticunent passed in the 18th and 10th y<an i Quean Victoria, chapter "0, intitaled "The Public Ubi 1866," il BWVided that " Tliat tfio ovttTNOn of any pariah -hall, ut»>h tbts Ke»|iimtion in writing of at least ten rttauayen ot iudh poitth, appoint ;i time uot tow than tun daya nor more tlian tweutj um i ine oi raceJTiDff eucli Eteqaiution for a Vublic Meeting of tin: t»W- Mffon of men pariah, in order to dotcrmino whether thcoo Act* *haU be

adopted For aueh parish.

Wo, the madawgaM, bafruj ratupayarx of the said pariah ..I di hereby i.-jipcctnilly rcquwt you to laauc Voting Papara di ml] Meeting of iatq*yen» of the nnid parish, f-ji the nurpoac of deli «ln:thu or not the above-mentioned Acta ahalf DC idotttad puriidi, in manner provided by tho said Acta.

FORM OF REQUISITION FOR SCOTLAND. In ordinary Uurglia Hit ad J km would rim tlun

To A. Bm Ks<ptiro, l*rovoat i or Chief Magistrate of the 1 lurch vf

[Tho undernoted loini of a Roquisition to the -ShenlV U uoin Sheriff Leo*' Handbook of Sherifl Court Btyloa] !

Unto tho Honourable tin; jdwrill'id tin , of ej

Auhfllittttc*;

Mv Lord, Wo, the undcraigiiod, loina ten household -I , require you, in terniK of " Tim Publin tibr

Act, IS'(J7/' to oonTime a maotinj] nhnldon <>i ., .

(In ptupoac of considering whether Slid Act. as ainon loai -iiatd

in the yuaia 1871, 1877. and 16S7, ahull bu adopted by aaij luutth . and t* i ii.> In: other atopa proridod by «aiil Act* to amnrtaiu tin npinloi mtJority ol -1" ratepayers of laid iviriflh in regard to tin toid A».'t, «o amended, and to givo otfoot to mch opinion! 11 lavi-uraUi <..

fVaaU.

AIM'KNIJIX HI.

«S

FORM OF PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT FOR BOROUGHS. Bonorun of roue LntRAniEH* Apt*. 18S5, axd all Acts iMPvmaa rur .\vk.

Whereas by a rw|uc»t. in writing duly nigum! liy tint requisite munotf of ratepayers" of the borough of residing in the « id

boiougn, I have been requested to t*ke tho Opinions' of the majority of the ratepayers of tho noid borough by the iaauo of a voting paper to each ratepayer, and tho aubaociuont collection and werutiny thoroor, upon tin- question whether tht* Public Libraries Art, 1855, ami all other A-ix amending the iamo, ahall Iw adopted for the borough of

Now therefore 1 givu notice as follows :—

1. I shall cause a voting paper to be delivered, by person* appointed by me for that purpose, to alt persons enrolled *■• burgesses of tho said borough, at the place ftf abode stftttd In the Bulges* Roll iif each *w\i perwu, on

2. Any peraon enrolled lis a bnrgeM of the Mid bOTOUflfa who shall not liHvt received surli voting papnr on that day. will be entitled on personal Application to the town clerk, at his olHcc in the Town Hull, on my of the throe following daya, between the hours of 10 in 'thiT morning and A in tho afternoon, to receive a voting paper and to liil up tho name in tho

tuwn flerk*! presence, and then and there to deliver the same to Iniu. 8* Tho voting papers will bo called for and collected by tho persons appointed by me (or that purpose, Hi ,

between the hours of 8 in the forenoon and 7 iu the afternoon, and if an v voting paper duly delivered shall not have, been collected through tho default of the person appointed to collect the same, the voter in DOtVOS may dolivor such voting i>apor to mo at the Town Half, before on tho day of , 18 ,

■I. Tho acrutiuy of anoU votiug jiapovs will oomuttaea at thu Tmvn Hall, in tho said borough, on the day of , at 10

o'clock in the forenoon, and be continued until ontnplefrd. Dated thia day of . 18—.

Major,

When- intimidation is being practised the fullowing bill ahould bo circulated :

Waicsim*,— Whereas the Muaotofl of Utt Public Library moveuimt

termed lliat certain voting papers ban: been tilled up, and what

purport! to bo the names or marks of thu voter;, written thereon, at

times when lucti voters were not present, iud witliout tbo aanetion of

.nrli voter*.

Now this is to giv.: uoUm to all whom it may concern thai ilm

[iruiuoteiu wilt object to all audi voting paper* ut Uu: linn: uf :liv -:<>uii L- u«, and further, will institute PTOCOodlnflH agtfuit the pciwu or i « I (wuuao names ore now or may hereafter M m :lm'r PPWPHioq) WUO have l»n'ii guilty, cithci ■■■ U or aoeeworifi, oj lorgery m ftfoTMtidi

XjUcc. Furgory in a felony, and punish od by jtonal wrvitudc for lift . the knowingly uttoring a forged document lb punished as forgery.

A oamplo caw has been vubunHed for legal OjfoiOlL and di-clared tc \>c a forgery. Legal proceeding* or" Mng inxritutod UaUial il lender,

The piomotera will be ooKgod 03 intimation of au.v papers tiiat have been lilh'd up against the with in in the aOMOSB ot ttsa Nu\xt».

501

PUBLIC U.URAIL1E&

l'UBUO LIBRARIES' ACTS— VOTING PAI'KR

Dfetrfal

Ooowouttri No .

Name

Addrcia

..Mm M .#■« i

Dale when loft

II .r.i nt which Lift

ir not loft. aUtc why.

Dal., fffca ndlmtAd

Hum at which collected..

n Dotco)lpct*4#sutftvhy.

Name of plnc«. The rvsLio Lxbiiamzo' Avm, 1€65, asu

all Act* AunrmxQ raa UA

DiatrJct Votiug Paper No

Name of Voter.

Addrcea of Votan

The Overseen o1 the Parian ol t'*lng the local authority) having received I 'Kciiuisilioii from tho Ratepayer*, en thereby rcuturoi to ascertain the opinions of tho majority of the ratepayer* of tho

[NBUfl f.^r ietenDUliSA uli.'ih.-i Public Ubrories Acts (BnglandJ ehall S*

adoyted fas tbi» ami yon

deamxl to autiwer the <iuc*lioii herewith lu writing od this Voting Pa

_TowuCt.

Do you vote fox the adoption cd

Public" Libraries AcU for the

■■Y«i or "No" -if'..: UM word •Answer, and sign yonr nta the line beneath.

* Answer Dated tin

day of . 18—.

Sumatuie of V

Or tho Mark of Voter

\V irnes* to tho -Mark AddreM of the Wttncw . . , If tho voter cannot write he or sthe v make Lis or bcr m*ik, and *ui:U ma.il. C must I- att.*l.rJ by a witneae, who (5 must write the anewcr "Ye* "No"— ou the Voting papur

Tho "Requisition" state* the arnouat to be levied foi tho Pariah Kit.'.- o tin: Public Librariia Act xiiaK

on tho Ratable Value. Tliio paper will be called for by Tel UonaUWe on

ANOTHER FORM OF VOTOTO PAPBft Horouoii or

Ward. Name of Voter

J"aco of AV«d»- o< Unta aa etatc-l in fcV BwTgw.K'AV

m-im;v nix III.

•7'.-

X)o you vote in favour of the adoption uf t&fl Public Librarins Act, 188S, and tlic various &ota amending the oawo, for the borough of

In»?rt lieu* " Yiw " at " No.

Signalmv or Mark of Voter

Pine* of Abode of Vot«r

a* staled iu ilie Rui'ifiwi Roll If Voter lotkca I Nrnno of \Vrituvu to Mark

his Mark ( Address of Witness to Mark

Dinurriova to the Votri:.

The voter mual write the word " Yes" or " No " opposite the wintry whether ht votes for the adoption of tho Publio Libiariea Aids, according as ho wiftln-5 to vote, and must Biibeeribe his uamc and his place of abodij as etated in tho Burgees Roll.

In addition to tho airujde vote "Yos" or " No" to tho adoption of the Act*, tliu voting paper iftaj ftttanlitt tnat Hdr adoption shall be

subject bo a limitation wan lower rate of oRBMirnwit tlifiti the

maximum allowed !»y the Acta of Pmluinent now in four, i.c.t Id. !ti

tho X on tho Annual ralnu of tho property in llic Borough ratable lo a Borough rata.

1 1 tiif voter rxmiot writs I tike word " \ *■* " or M j\n," or IU< b itipali turn a** Jilmvu mentioned, may be bBorton1 by any person at the request of the voter, who must make his murk instead of subscribing his name, and the pvison insetting the word '" Yes '' or " No,"'ur suirh. attpulatiou, ruuxt WttttBOB fcOO voter making bis mark, and must subscribe his inme and addrosB a.- a witnone thereto.

Thte paper will be collected on , bid ween the

honrj* 018 in the forenoon and 7 in the afternoon, and if any vot I duly delivered shall not have heon oollfOtad through the default of HI* person appointed to coUflOt tho same, tho voter iu person may deliver aueh voting papor to the Mayor, at tin. Town IIoll, bofbw lioVluek at BOt i , on

PUBLIC LIBRARY MOVEMENT.

Imntii uom ro (tafYANanu ami Omsiu.

[Useful where them a lax go number of workers.]

ore virUuMed with the duties of aovw tabling how <-veiv vi»l.-i district intonda to vote oo this question ; of sooing that every who Id in favour of a Publio Library does vote ; of endeavouring to the adhesion of every doubtful voter: and of trying to eouvtrt rOtOT npi".-..il BO tin- lihiArv, or to, at leasr., obtain a prnmiat of neutral iii .

2. Remember that the Committee regard* you as personally iv-]»-n'.(l.lc U>v tlie viitei'H in your district. You must ubtaiu tbe&aaiaUni.eof li niaxiy

EBWni to help yi»u a* uecmwiry. Select thow beat ocipiainti 1 n Etfa row itriot.

9, From time to time reiwrt tho result of your woik to the Ward Chair- man, If you require further assistance do uot (oil to v^ ^.x -A.

rm

..

L Dnplodfl i doubtful voters, and the back ntrwto, court*, •ml

in lion.

* Hi JTOUI aould receive very special ami cartful

f>. Koo[i yourself well unppliid with tlio viriona lcurluth mmi.. tlio oouimitt.B(t, ami luai*<* one vir more at every kou&o in youi district, Thpy may !»' nhluiiicit at the Out nil f '■iinminw Rnnm.

6. Any instances ol Improper practice! on the part of our omms i -pi^iiilly iniiMii'lAtion of voters, and threats to wai the rent, km I

lly noted in writing, mid at onoe wnt M , win. t 1m- ninWR and

addrvmch of my witiieuu.

r. I'lintfnlly .uri»rui:i vhothtt any VOtM in your district i* " to peraunulls fill up his voting paper, Oiler to fill it up Jul bbn,

as tiii iiiiuk tli -let'i. lie aula that you closely follow rhr direction* piintni on tin: voting pa|n-r. \ The Central Committee Room ia at

ind i ipttn I *.m, to p.m. Any taibmAtfcai

or help you (my ro^juico may !><j ILi-il- oM-i.iii<'d.

G. Tho following argument..; ID (avow of a Pnblu Library may bt useful to you. Put! Hy a* yon can to any doubtful vot>

jrotL diitncts—

(n.) The rate cannot exceed Id, in the t on tho ratallo value of the vntor't premises.

{ti.} It in uo more under the Pabttt Libraries Act* iu miy town n< England.

t) This limit of 3d. In the i' i* Kxad bj lei of ParUameat, nolilce the Bohod lizard rate, u-hu'lt ik not Imnt.wl hy any Act

of Parliament.

[<(.) If thl runt 5a. a week, the rut- will be It*. * V«r, i t mourn, If fh" rent i* -Ik. a wefik, the rn(* will Iih lew thf n year. If the rant Li 2a. Oil. u week the rate will only be $d- month.

Other QXampL B,

LreitAiiV Ratp-

Rmtel pe? Year.

IVr Yeiir,

IYr Quurl-i.

Fer M-.i.tli

s.l,

2d.

£10

10.1.

2*a\

Bit

Is. 0.1.

:l.

m

Is. *].

4*1.

>*L

m

Is, 8d.

W,

ltd.

£84

So, Od.

Sd,

.'.1.

£80

*2s. Od. 3s. Od.

r:,:l:

%

I ■'.} Tho voter and hin family will have. tli« inc "i tr library, the u»t of the noweroom, and the use of hooks at ham*.

{/.) Who nee the Library i In Leeds, seven working-men to one professional man, Tho tame ii tlio case die whore

{$.) Will the library be much ued ! In Bradford and KoHanghaBi 3,000 people visit the library daily in each town ; that ii ore?

i,ooo,ooo a yen.

It II amid iW tk\ft«arj ^\\ V^^VVAwVV^XiWvv unr.lt.'

APPRNI'TX XV.

567

This is Ultra*. R»nwnilif i- that worthless OOTels will not ha admit t< «l fey the library conuatttpe.

(l) It is naid that books are so cheap that Ihi working man oab afford to buy them. How many books nan a working man buy lor the It., which ho will pay in * year to the lib run* rate il his rout

ttlllOUUtfl tO SB. A WOuk :

(/,) Existing libraries are uui injured. In mint cww the share* go up, not down.

i'.) It in aoid that men, especially tho unemployed, will fiuipwiil Ihu nvwsrc»iiiN iiiHtcwl of tHo ]Hiblii;-houMM. 80 much thi b b

NOT A SINGLE VOTE MUST BE LOST.

!'/■' W'.i'K. < i ln'm.M aoim. hi- your watchword.

Every hmiselinhler on the fturgi-as List will liuve one vol.11.

N. B, The Voting Papers will bo delivered1 on ,

and will bo collected on , You must HM fWW

utmost endeavour to mdwe the voters to till th*m up in favour of the library as soon as possible after the delivery.

APPKNDIX IV.

RULES AND REGULATIONS SUITABLE FOR PUBLIC LIBRARIES. WITH FORMS IN USE, *0.

PUBLIC LENDING LIBRARIES.

II i.C- AMI 1: K<:t:i. \TTONM.

1 . The chief librarian shall havo tho general charge or the lihrnrietf, and shall bo reanonsiblo for the safe keeping of the books, and of all other property belonging thereto.

2. The newsroom -lm!) be upcii to the public, every day {Chrutmas Day and Good Friday excepted}, from ninn o'clock a. w, to ten o'clock p.m., Ami the library from ten o'oiouk a.m. to nine o'clock p. in, On Sundays from "Won a.m. to pfaMI p.m,

3. No person ahall bo admittod who is in a «tat« of intoxication : nor thall auy audible convocation be permitted io tho rooms ; nor nhall any person l>e allowed to partake of refreshment* therein. Any person who :diiill offend against these regulations, or shall be guilty of uuy misconduct, a. ill not I 'i allowed to icmain within the building,

4. No person shall lio allowed u> pass within thu otudoxtirr of flu libraries, or to take any book from tha shelves, except by iieniiiwiou of tho librarian,

.'1. I'ersons enrolled as burgesses of the borough of shall be

■nii'l-i bO bODVW Uovaa uu their OWD re»pmn:hi:it.v. t'cnoua nut M cd shall be nqvbM to obtain the signature of one burgess. Any 1 having ai^ucl this ongogemunt, who shall afterwards do . withdraw from the same, must give notico thereof in writing to tho LbnifUi who will give a release as soon as ho thall have aaeertained that no low hat boon Immrred,

.V:-

LtnOAJUVl.

This voucher diiihl be dali v oral to thu librarian throw daya bof. | firtt i»uo of book* to the pentou ro'amtnenilal-

o*. All booke borrowed must bo returned to tha libraries, vriti.i: timo appoirh'd on the respective covers, tinder a pcna ly sJ am penny for th« whole or any portion of the first week, anil on» penny for each w<vk

or portion of i ffMk trXtrwtrrh.

7. The librarian shall aarelullj u) mta , or 'atuo to be examined, <»<■!•

hook returned, and if the *mn he foimil to have wiiHtainwl huy injury Of damage, tie slinll roif.uru tin- person to whom the Mine wan deliver his guarantor, to pay the amount of damage or injur* done, or otherwise to nrocure a now copy of tht bo*lt ofc«|iinl value, and in the Inter com: *ueh |>onion ,dmU he onlillcul to the damaged f.opv on depositing the now noe,

8, All huokn borrow od from the Uhrarius roiwt b< rtforitod, irroapoetJTO of the time allowed for reading, at the half-yearly date

printed labels at the beginning of each hook. Borrowon m

Romply with thfx regulation wfU risk tho forfeiture of their privilege of

borrowing boota

i BoiroWen laswing town, or fseaffnpj '<> bm Ehi Itbnffoa. en f<--piaee*l to return ilici- rb ten m l.hn librarian, in ordur to have Ihrm ran;

v wo thev and their guarantors will bo held respoimible for any hook

taken out ii ll;«u u Hi

10. ISorruwurs, when they change* their rooidouce, are required to hand hi theft ticket with theii pieeent address to the llbrnrlajj, ottterwii

will lose the i' right of liorrcwing hooks,

i 1 . llwnnvi m :i[-wanlioiirtl aguinal luaiug Lhru Uoketa, M tiny will hi held responsible for any book or book* that may be taken out of the libraries in their nawoo,

12. No burro wur will bo allowed to have more than ono work I aanie time.

13. No book can be. relieved more than once, If required by ti

Ijorrowir.

14. No borrower will be allmvt.il to mala- usn of mow than nno > ■■ libraries at the wiue time,

The librarian shall have the power tn refaee Ivtnk-a to anv borrower wiiti nliall oeglect to comply with the lulee and ragnlatlcns of I ■, poison no refused shall ba\o libcilr to ap|>e»l In . riiuiinitu-i'.

PUBLIC REFERENCE iMBRARIKH.

No person will bo allowed to obtain a hook without signing i" H. Tloket," and such signature shall he taken and winstdcrod ro ha an ajwat to tht rules and rvgulutioua of tho libra i v.

Render* oannot obtain wore than unu volume on theaamn ileket, oti tho ostra labour can he our tailed by staling the additional » required on blank tiekote.

Readers gfviaf a false name aud address will be held responsible tec tho conaequcnooB,

/( 1% exnrourv (brUcHen to t*\i tto.\. o\ -Oft-a KajUug-room aay

APpRSnrx tv

.*,.;;.

itic, uv other article belonging to the library ; or to write or make mark* upon the same, RrttryxttyTT* Jcairoim of proposing hooka not already in the library may no so by on taring the same iu tin) [imposition book (quoting prieo, Ac), wnieh i* pprindinally qnbmittud to ilio committee lor con- sideration.

No person will \w admitted to The library who in intovWtflil *r in a dirty condition, nor will any audible eonvflrsstion l* permitted In thn

room.

No person 1h Allowed to pass within the oneloauro, except by special I riji;i,:iion of the public librarian.

Pomona Qndff fourteen yearn of aye are not admitted to the liflmnda

om, except for spool*] purposes, to ho determined by tlio llbratlan, or hi* assistant In charge.

Headers nr» [DuliiuUily reumwtod not to soil or injure illustration* by Honoring or laying their hands on them.

Tin: use of ink for copying extracts, &c. , is not permitted, as serious injury to platos and l>ooks n*s resulted therefrom.

Illustrated and other worka aie issued only on written application to thn committee, the titles of which are distinguished in the catalogue by an asterisk {*),

Open daily Attn 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. The bono of Ijyok* diaovntinucd at 0.16 p.m.

FoitM FOB Gl*AP.AMCI .

PUBLIC LIBRARY. I i inN«i Library.

doairiug to borrow books innsL first this Guarantee, mi of the Municipal Roroug

this Guarantee, aicnod by an Elector

bof

, of Street,

Ward, engage to pay in of any Book belonging to tho Con»o of , which shall be issued in

nam* or of Sr ..■«■!,

unit which shall he IohI, injured, or not duly returned, according to the rules and regula- tion* of tho Public Library, such mini of money as may bo imposed as a tine, nr pHvinout Cor lout or damaged books. TowefNaonCntfiibl IhtM fur two years only. If the person who may have signed this sment desires to withdraw from it, ho may by giving uotico to the Librarian, who oanoel it if no liability under tho same

agist*.

Chief Librarian.

N.JJ.— Ono penny will be charged for The Borrower's Ticket

[This part to Lk: lillcl up by Mi1 Librarian,}

No. of Ticket Date of Usuo -

Admit tin- Applicant, Signed,

Librarian. Did

/>:n

prni.ir r.tniiAi(Cfe».

ELiwron'.« Cfahavtrr.

BOROUGH OF PUBLIC LIBRARY.

Lsmiwa Linus?

I, the MidrrsijflicJ, Using an elector of the Muni»i[>a. Ilimmgh .-I' , u4 being

desirous of borrowing books for homo reading, lu'i'i'hy mala- ■ppBoa.ttoo for a Borrower r Ticket, entitling uio to Iwrrow book*.

Should any Wk iuntwl in my name bo lost, dflmagetl, or detained beyond the time allowed for reading, 1 engage to pay such oum of lii-Hi-y to Si Corporation ns will

pay for the losx, ilainu.o', nr tmiiue (Intention of the l*x>k ; *ud, further, I eogaKo to con- form to the rnlea and regulation a of the l'ublic Library.

Datwl this day of

Maine Onijiarioii

A'l'l ■« >-> "I K' M-l'.'lP.'t-

Wmd

Sif^iictturo of Librarian

JV. //.— Thin application imiflt be aigned In the preaonoe of one of the Librarian*), and loft with him for examination.

Thi« guarantee in foroe fur two years only.

Chief Librarian.

Ono penny will be charged for the Borrowor'a

fin I.

[This part to be til In] tin by the Librarian.]

No.ofTiokot

Dale of lano,

Admit the A i Signed,

I.il ; V '-Mi.

Ditto

Rr.NP.WAt. or-. Posr Cxnn 8lii* whan Intjioatoh i.

PUBLIC LIBRARY, LEXDIMO PBFARTMEXT.

Rokwal Bur.

Tli im alip in designed lo aavc liorrowcrs the inconvenience of carrying a book to and from the library when it ia roiuired to renew the to which the book has boon iasned.

l'I**«e till in the particulars opposite hom thfl 'liarging lalwl at the end uf the book, giving Uio class-letter, number, ami the hwt row of figures entered on the label. When the work ii in more than ono volumo the figures requisite will bo found at the rod of the first or earliest

volume.

When the figure* have been filled in, aa required, the presentation of the alio at Uio library will enaurc

r*a$w$L

Mat \ Utter I

pro,

Jtonrwxf

:i

APF'PVIHX TV,

-571

Should a farther rnuWal l»- required tliis slip must ho produced again. When the book is returned after renewal tliif slip must be ivtm f l ii i);< Niim time, :iml a fail urn to cuinply will) this latter condition will QOJUMJ the removal date to be cancelled and the enforcing of a fine.

It is rcfiorvod to the librarian to doolino the renewal of any book In demand by other readore.

Copies of this renewal slip to ho obtained at the Library.

[Sutadle ron EUmnOb W Di«-riiiurrrc UfOWG Boiirowhiib.] HOW TO USE THE PUBLIC LIBRARY.

V -SKItlKK (IK RU(lli»41'm>H Kill: INK ffgl Of :k\uKKH,

tllU

Teat-Books aa a Basis of Bonding. In moob Of your hm.i of tin- library yon will do well to ruako your toxt-books tho baaia, That io, you will feci an interest in somo iubjeot which U touched upon in your leason, and will wish for more information about it than in found there. Such iiifnimarioii you ran find in Hoiue larger and Kofi complete work iti the library, which, perhap*. may be quotwlj or in some way referred to in your text-book, Do not under taku to read all of tho work* thus referred to, but make yourselves masters of wliat you do read and

<:Oll!<llll.

tfse of Boforcnce Jlookrs. ' DeflOTnfl familim, al>o, with the nMofvorlu

roforenoe, particularly audi ids am arranged in dictionary or alphabetical Theee arc not designod to he rood through, but to be consulted for motion which nno part of tl»» volume m.iy ;n mi. i .. ■nendently of fill other parts. In tho some way, yon should form the habit of uaing maps and atlaws wlmn loading any work which in GOOOOIUxl with the location of places.

Reading for an Essay,— I :i making mhh of tin* library for tbl preparation of an essay, seek for that which wDl be suggestive. That Li, wlien you tome to write, let it bo something which vou havo thought out for your- .su1v<h from tho Mtatcnioiite you consulted", rather than something tranx- ferrod bodily to your page*, with no rnontat effort. You will find your- nlraijat so nuieh stronger mentally for every effort yon make to think for yourselves.

Habits of Heading,— Strive to acquire wholesome habits of readina, and to maintain them. Come to thn library with a definite book of subject iu mind, rallier than with an aiiiilutH denim for " some hook— no matter what," Concentrate your attention vu the subject you are reading about, for it is worac than uoelew to dawdlo through It. Read carefully and Uwroughly, so as tu bo able to dJgttrt 001 subject in youi mind hffort! pawing to another. Do m I nrn th» habit of Tetiiridiiffynw l>o<.k« CTtt? two or three days. 8och a practice, If ponfatod i", will mako your reading a morbid habit, rather than a benefit.

Imaginative Ltteratare.— H i.-imt intend**! th'W ynn should be limited in your rending to books which dimply contain information. It will be well for yun tu bOfKKDDQ familial with the beat work* of pottUy, fiction. and othor department* of literature in whirl, lim imagination u the chief element. Ask your teacher for MiggcatioiiB about hooka of this rloas, Ho will be glad to direct you to wmo work which you will find it a pa benefit to read. Do not forgot, however, that, of all the rowers of tho mind, the imagination it one that i& must easily abused, and do not allow this class of reading to claim boo Uracil of WW time,

r*i nu i.iMi:

Xxcmmto leading, A pro|>er aubitiori [| <• <mmcndablo in reading, w In othor thing*, but there u nothing meritonouo in the mere aet of read- nip, ipefl it -mii my good rasnlta. Rpmomhor that one book, linn, dtattfld, b N'I.Iit Mian twunly iiuickly hurried through, ami i! Huickly forgotten Nor should your reading interfere with your ordinary v l.i.ml dutiutv, hut Vte made supplementary to thorn. So, alao. it ibonU not interfere with your regular out-door oxeroi». Home pupil*, oertal wi.l Ml Mfd '-hi* caution, hut it in of great important.-.' that it should f- heeded hy thoae who Jo need it.

Aiimanca. -While you will gain inucdi in mating your.«dv>>* pendent ofl neuirtUnco in the iirnpler matter* of study and reto*r>

---iitAto ro *s* fnr hidp when yon renl!y need it. The librarian ami his IttUtOntJ will bfl vi-iv glad to give jroo help Ot suggestion :. ,„ 1M. dUOtttl ahout which you urn seeking for information, and you will flu them iiitorcstitd to help yon.

Reviewing. It will he well for you occasionally to review y«ur n i for ft wries of weeha or month*, noting down what new idea* yon gained from tho hook* you hare road, and noticing wbatbof your advance no* been, on r\i<< nbota, Is 'ho tight direction, if it has not Lump, begin at one? to correct Qui trror It will be. iiHful practice in a uotedmok, from time to lime, mum facta or memoranda la >■■ ... ■M<i nf epwial value to you, Tin very act of writing will tend to fi* thorn in your nicm"tyr i van 'hough you aJiJoald aarflr look *t the nu mi rftmlum again. Life ie too short to road many hooks through bat one*, I nit yon will occasionally find a book which so iaiprooMfl jroo thai ui«h bOgO tlirniiy.h It a KCCond tlnu I. Vint will hi

only how your in Lcrest ia almoal doubled on UlontH I reading hi.

iiu: two newi ytni hove uhlAini'd of the took, rapplouiontfiaj each oth r,

have served to fix an image oflta main iden m yuu* mind. In brief, then—

1. Begin by baaing ymh- raiding on jnnr «chuol text-booko.

2. Learu toe propel use of rofeT^mcc-oooka,

3, I'm: books th&t yon may obtain and aRgKOOJ idea* <>( your own.

4, Acquire wholesome balnta of reading.

6. Uflo imaginative literature, but not immoderately. o\ Do not try to cover too much ground.

7. Do not htttiUtfl to ask for asaisunee and suggestion*, ut On library.

8. Bee that you make your reading a definite gain to you, in aotnr direction.

(Would make vr ihtu a vbuy sbat am» HrrutiivK i-rjuox

8VO. OIIlCTLAIl.1

CIRCULAR OF INKOKMATION OONCERNIK'. THK PI BLIG UHKAK'i .

Notk. Thia cin oTnr bid) signed by tho library cornmlttw b the iphobltiata uf the Borough to make greater uh of tho aJvorrucftn ih« Public Library oilco. All person* intcreatwl in the work of the library help the commit ice by handing thia circular to any acquaintance they ty know to be unaware of the factlitiu* given for reading and atody. Copies of thia oireulor, Eoi 4\att\to«A\ot\, ma?j W aV\a\^«\ ott.b

All B.NTtIS IV.

573

Public Lmianv,

SruEcr.

LENDING DEPARTMENT.

Opon daily 10 am. to 0 p.m.

of I

Tin"* department of t&f library :* fanned faff the issno of books fm tLOVQ reading and onUlna over vol u mm, every one Available for issue

to borrowers.

Tho worts comprise a liberal and wide selection of the beat literature of all classes, and recent books of interest are constantly being addo<],

Kvory person wishing to borrow Looks has only to obtain & library ticket entitling them to take I Minks home. The committee hoa placed as few rtnti'iultuiuj aa possible in the way of obtaining chla, ami il i* ouly uouwaary tliat a guarantee form, properly filled up, with the signature* ol two rate- payer* of the borough should bo loft at the library.

Tho printed guarantee form* may bo had gratis" at tho library. Ct.ll, or aeiul for one.

There is alto attached a Juvenile Lending Library with una volumes of literature for the young, OOOtuning many of the bwt muduru books for boy* and girls.

Re.\i>buV PuorosAT. Book. In this book, it is o]wn to roadora and borrowers to enter tho particulars of any book thoy may doom deiirablc to lie plActHl in tho library. These propositi an* submitted In the < < 1 1 1 1 n- at each meeting.

The librarian and his ansistauU aie alwaye ready to give rnodeta any reasonable help in searching for books on particular or special subject*.

KEKEKENCK LIBRARY, NEWS KOOM, &c. Open daily, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.

This department is open freely to everyone. The only requisite I" ubUiii the moat valuable bouk? fui i^iuwil within the building, b tho liliiot; up of an a.)>jdii^atioii form Tor oaeh book wanted, with title and number .>i" I 00k required, aud uuine and uddresa of reucfor.

Tho BbTOBBVCK Library w uut i|iiiU » repository for dictionaries, directories, almanacs, Jce,, which it is sometimes thought a reference library is, but it is alio a collection of the most valuable works in all bi mem - of lit'iaturo, which, on account of their rarity or value, cannot be tarn in) for homo reading, or have m>uw >'1u i luunnx I'm' Wing consulted williiri ■.in: building only. There arc more ibau volumes, many

i>! them wiy U.'Miliiid wurk**oul)n lim arts, tml tin Ifflot booka OB uiua- mental design, architecture, engineering, Ac. The library is rich in general Kugluiii topOttVphlGH works, county histories, &<■,, and has a jmrtietihit'ly good collection of local hook* and work* on Sh&keB|«'\i<

New-' RoOMi Displayed on stain I* in Urn imdiiig-room in 1 varied Btdoetlon ol the leading newspaper*. I... 11. 1. .11, [ooal, nn.t prnvim-m.

Mai:.i£ini-:h *jn> PsiuoxxciaU. A wajpcahainjiti otlonol •■■■

and poriodiaaj litoralnm i* t*kf>n Ptgnlarl/i including thi loading trade and tnl.hlral journals, tho popular monthly and quarterly ma^azlmu aud

rei t iwa. la UDtatn' Boom.— Hun li ai«n a <er«ratJ>roniii (be tfadaaitj fct wWcl

I he lickul of admission, may be easily obtained.

(Then would i - Ion prl W tod partlCOlajl <>' < uUlngnej*, and tlie MUM it Hi' librarian. titanUi and library committee.]

574 PUBLIC LIBBARIKS.

FORM OF BEQUEST.

I bequeath out of such part of my personal Estate as may by Law be bequeathed for such purposes, to the Mayor, Alderman, and Burgesses, of the Borough of , in the County of

, the sum of , free from Legacy Duty,

tor the benefit of the Public Libraries of the said Borough, to be expended in such xcay as they may deem expedient ; and I direct that the Receipt, of the Town Clerk of the said Borough shall be an effectual discharge for the same Legacy.

INDEX.

Awnli-Kii ViilihV Library. 221— «2« Aberystwyth Public Library, 201 A1 (, Local Improvement, 149 Local Government, intlueuce

of tbo, 289 Public Library Amendment,

222, 346

» Public Libraries' Consolida- tion (Scotland), 1887, 543—551

special, for OMhani, 120*

Technical Instruction, of 19BQ,

72, 193, 566—559 Ai-t--, Public Libraries', 530— 54. i,

WO, badly drawn, 336 confusion icgardiug the,

71, 81, 115, 195 governing bodies with

power to adopt the, 71, 72 litigation concerning the,

386— 845

not adopted, 281—28?

main features of tho, 81

rejection of tho , 71, 248,

206, 270, 281—287, 326, 44B,

463—457 vagueness of the, 338 ^— of Australia, 414

of the United States, 396"

-808

Adapted buildingfe for libraries, 3.12 Addition*, recent, to stock, 262 Adelaide Public Library, 413 AiliuUiiatraliun uf lib t axles, 374 Advantages of reading, 24, 86 Advertisements in catalogue*, 264 AtlvnrtHMTinnu, m»w>*papi<r( In

libraries, 150 Advocate*' Library, Edinburgh,

238 Agitating for tho adoption of the

Acta, 7c Atrdric Public Library, 226

Alba Public Library, 226—428 Altrincham adopts the Acts, 142 Amendment Rill nf 1887, 345

, Libraries', Act of 18.15, 50

American bcuefuctyra to libraries,

806

idea of 1'ublio Librnrioe, 33

libraries, 3

Public Libraries 890

public school libraries, 387

Ancient libraries, 340

Apathy nud tbo library iuovomout,

71, 72 Arbroath Voluntary Library, 444 Archbishop of York on Public

Libraries, 137 Architectural plans of litraiie*,

Ui, 00 Architecture, library, 127, 217, 231,

297

Arguments in favour of Public

Libraries, 511, 525 Arrangement of leading -rooms, JIM1 Art gollorie*, 108, 126, 103, 257,

Art schools and libraries, 101, 125 Art, schools of, 166, 167, 1A8,

867

Artisan* as readers, 07, 104 Aflhton-undor-LynoLibraiy, 85, 27\i Association*, local, of librarians,

382! Aston Public Library, 144, 145

273 Attendance, method of estimating

tho, 187 Auckland Public Ld.rary, 418 Australian hramdi libraritw, tfa*,

410

Public Libraries, iU-418

AuaUian libraries, 2

Average eoMt of boulcM, 180

Axon iMr. W. K. A.; and Public

Libraries, 110, 127

ii in. ii i.ibH.Aiii Bq

B

Kail lie Library, Glasgow, 445 Balfour (Rt, Han. A. J.) opeiw n

library, lflf. Uaiirui Public Library, 201 K ink mi; aciounfa, 264 Harking ariopta the Acta, 194 Bamol Voluntary Library. 44b* llarnftliy adopts the Acta, 86 Barruw-iii-KuracsH Library, 86, 275 Qatli mjecu tin Act*. 281 lUltcraco Publio Library, 301 Btbington Public Library, 336 BtdAK adopts the Acts. 1.4 > BtqtMt, partial failure of a, 138 B«iu».»U to librariw. 124,

li. IIH"||i|n<y ftlt'l til' li'-'KHV 111"'*..-

nient, 330 Bonix>ko booka, 162 Betlmal 0Man asd :!■• TO < for tht-

Acta. 80

Voluntary Library, 440

BiUtoti Public Library, 145 Binding ior Public Ubrnriea, 370 Bingley ftdopU thu Acta, 88

liirk i.i.e, moremant •£, 2&1 Ulrl^nhcad Public, Library, 14o\

147 Birmingham Public Library, 0, 20,

3o\ 123, 147-164,340-352 Blackburn Public Library, 8W Blackpool Public Library. AS Blind, librariiM fur the," 114. 134,

247. 2<;i Blue l>ook«, 32 Board School branch libraries, 106,

100, 21M, 380 3i»0

mis (if, 10ti

Board 8&0Ol library raltB, 380

DclioWn, lo, 24

Buaitl Schools, 0, 18, 116 Bodloion Library, 41 Bodley, Sir Thomas, 42

Bolton Fran Public Library, 00

Book dutiiifcutor. 126

Book buying, 008--370

Bookcaasa, 360

Book clubs at Ki-oi' UbMHoj, isIS

Books. uiTangetm'Ut of, 376

uracAgaooaf of, i«0

oheapnoa <>f. 27

coat of, 180

oxponaivc, 60

influence of, 66, £61

Book*, (icrcoutagi'. of U

mi, 116 perocntago nf, t<i tho popula- tion, 27S, 2*8 li>---kM4Hntf irado and Public Li- bnuit'jt, 27. 32

Borrow, power to, 534, 537, 588 Unrrowora, liinU to, 571

occupations of. li'l

Olltafri*, 101. 115. 118, 137,

105, 185, 183, 324

outside, legality of, 336

Boston Library (U.S.A.) and Iktiou, 278

(U.S.A.) Public Libra:

—402

Boya at the Derby Library. ItJO Boyd' rcadiug-iooiur., 01, 111. 13L»,

304 Bram well's book dialnh bar,

496 Branch libiurim, I0o» 10>.

113, 132. 146. 143, 183. H7

2ti2. S60

and tin p'liuy tut-

Brasdvv'* (Lord; j,nft to Ha^ltu^*,

283 Brechin ndojitt tho Acts, 22ft Brentford adopts this A ■'■. I: I Bright Kt. J Km. Juhn pfl 1 1 1 % .

Libraries' AoU, 6*7 Bnorley Hill Public library, Brighton Public Library, 1»6— 198 Briscoe (Mr. J. Potter) ami " Li

hrarios foi the Youug," loo1

aa a librarr missi' ■■

Bristol Public Library. MP, 43, 271,

272

British Mummm Lihrti

14*

nuintaiN

Brothcrtou (Mr. J.) and fr Cwart Bill, '

ami thi Sal ford U\

Bn tharton'i (Mr, .1.) axaUin

tii» moreiiiriit, 1 31 Brown (Sir W.) and tlu- Li»

Pol tic Library. 108

Hrovtxia (Mr, J, da Malm ttruuniir (Mr. M.P.] mi :

bftu-ulaL i m Build Juyo, uefa tiwn, ISO

Building! fa PuMlo Llbiailot,

3^3

.

.-)"

lurKMaes on library committees.

HI

ey, library BOTOflOQ&t at, 2*2

irna ns n fotindflr «f librarfas, Bfi Inmlum Public Library, 184

Burton Ltthnei and i lie move-

ineot, 1281 I'.myf William), 45

r.usiiits^ books, 'Jits

Boston Public Library, im, iss

Lain bridge Public Library, 3f>, ]'•<', University urn I PllfaUa Li-

»bmri«, 04 Camplicld 1'ublic Libmrv, Man cheater, 64 Canadian PuWioLibrariciMOO— 11! Canterbury Publio Library, 198 Canvuwin# for the. adoption of the

Act*. 566 '.v.; .1 . uuin^' i.--, :i7:i Cardiff TuWic Libraiy, 202-244 Carlton adopts tie Acta, 157 ; vital,

334 Carlyl* *nd Public Libraries, X Carmarthen, movenwit at, 2u9 Carnarvon Public Library, 204 Carurgias (Mr. A.) munificence to

libraries, B98, Sflf, 231, 234, 240.

$06

Oatalogua odportiaettumta, 234 Cataloging Birmingham, 150 ;

Xuwi'wlli?. 1 23 ; Nottingham,

18U i Wigan, 140 Cataloguing, 371 Cen trftl libraries v. bramdi libraries,

Hi. I erVi " \l\gi-tt ..I lll» I AW

relating to Publk: Libiaiiin ami Uti&iMiiuV 4c, 337 Cl.niit, CouBi&Maonffi ami Public

Libraries, tift Cliarlcw, r*r<mU, ami Incnment*

miiI Putlii i bi u las. >5

Ohi'apiicaa «jf buuks, 27 OhoaUn Publfa Libraries, 185 Cliuiitortiald Public Library, . Chatham Library, M a n -In- -i. i '>-

48 * lii-;nji> PuWie Library, 409 CUippenhain Voluntary Library, 14 7 Chinese libraries, 14

Chwwiek adopts the Act*. 323 Cliuicii. Koo. uinl 1'uUlir Ltbrorias. 76

Circular* Of libmrv information,

93, UT, I' nit> "Frtn" Libraries, 325 Cloaai lira t ion of book*. 3/0 0!etJ5)*nini uinl tlic library move-

ineut, 76, 149, 2*5, 302, 327 Glorkeuwoll, litigation at, 341

i iHtboroc Pnblla Library, M Club* ami libraries, S5, 332, 471

479 Colclieater, aohomo faila at, 281 Uolcraine adopts tho Aoto, 3B7 Collection of the rate, 337 r3rtmmift*ionnr«, note.* for, 320 Committee* ami Coimiiiawiuiier*, 87|

2«8, 271, 846, 478, 689 Committee meetings reported, 109 Comparison of lil»mr:. •, £71. 273

of rfctoft, 19

Comparison a, unreliability of, 274 Concert* in aid of libraries, 1*9,

192 Concord (U.S.A.) Public Library

402—404 Confusion of tho I ihrarW \<-U

71,81, lift, 19fi Consolidation Act of 1887. 222

noed for a, 337

(Scotland), 1871, 548-

551

Bill prica, 92

' anjfgestiona for n, 340

of the Libraries' Attn, 71

Continental lilxar i 0 i I. u i rati iota, '267 Corporations and libraries, 7 Corpus Ourfttl Liltrarv, Cambridge,

40 Corrupt practices, 83 Coatof booka, 160._180 of lihrariiw, 97fl

per bu I,

of taktWB the poll, 73

Cotgroavc'i library indicator, 804 0 mueili nod libraries, (riotia

twet-n, 130, 13f> Domtry PaoMa Library, 158 ComU (II r. P.) on BSDtral librarleii,

108 Credlaud (Mr. W. R.'i on tbe Man- chester Libmnr:*, 110

on tibtoTY •wwiV, W7.

TO

""

II ffll.Ti I-JIHI i i s,

i..'i, tiodoro (DrJ ^-^ Ifca Mtam b*i

L'ublio Librario*, I Criminal aUtistics, 26 Criticism on Public Libraries. 271 Croydon aduple the AotS, 323 decision aa to voters, 148,

848 315 i'iiu-i . rulM for a dictionary

PiitJilogiiP, xlv

])*ng*r of high *h*lving, 171

l»(irlfl*trtn PoSiDd Library, 1:»W

Darlington Public Library. Ml,

Datweii Public Library, 91

I>. oium of iwuce, Cttiwcfl of, 101

Defective building*, ISO

Del moo of fiction, 165 BTO

1 ».'i«iLirnling a poll, 80

IVul (Mr. K. K. > uml liliniM lec-

turee, 145 Don ton PublSfl Library, 00 l'«['utation to Lord Iado»loi^l., 84 l>«rby Public Library, 160—1 Iiivhv^Uire Public Libraries, lD4t

160—309 Dovey (Mi. Mvlvd) on public

Mood Hbrftiioe, 388 Dawal nry PodUo Library, 100 LHelc&ns (Charles) at the MaueiiestiM'

Public Library, 66 Dimension! of library iooni«, 010 T>taiitfci:tiu)i of hooks, 1-29, 493—

108 Dootnnnta nod majuweripta fa

PobUc Libmriei, 87 Donations, 220, 228, 230—284 Dmn-aater Public Library. 100 DoilOIB of bookh, 1 1

- tu libraries, B5, 68, 01, »(i, i 18, 108,196,169,160. 164, 170, 171, 1T», l mi. LSfi, 221 S»,«8, \tMi. >\l, W, VHft, 2»7. '/:»*, :«i-l . ■OT, IM'. 166 Duosjlan Public Librarj . l>iiblni I nlli. Lil.it.nr Ducbou of Kutl&od and Piiblia

librarian, irt<i Dudley Public Library 1 1 1 Dumbarton Public Libiuiv, 229 DoDtUIk Public Ubrniy,

Don (M Public Library, W9

RanArmKno Public LAI

Pith Of the Stale with r«c libraries £3

E

Ealiu£ Public Library. 324

Early ad voeatoof parochial li hraria*,

49 Ejwthournfl and the library mow-

uieut, 282

Matte*! C*.; m and

tbo movement, 204 Edinburgh iMblic Library, 238—

Education Art. 8 Education wrviif crime, i>. 26 Education a neceaait] , IMwMtiVa(E.) i videiiiv on Public

Ubrariao, DO, 51, 53 Bffbot of library lucturwi, 273 i Efleol of the state or trad, on

libnriea, 108 KHVet of wcothci on library

statistics. 273 Electlifl limt In librarioa, 123, 368,

U2 i;k:iii, library movement at, 249 Elliot 'a (Mr.) roadiuu;- rooni Ul.lt*,

191 Employment obtain™! i i

aavortuuiuouta iu tlio library.

150 Encyclopedias^ 34 Kuduweu Public Libiarii*. 174 Buamlcs to ihu library movement,

73, 75, 78 EoMZ Public Librarioa, 104 lut'iiin^ lil mi ifi, 1 ' n

Evils of Hoard School brueli

libtariro. 100 Ewart Hill, the, 40, .'.«— 3S Swart, Mr. W.. life of. CO— 02 Kxoe*flivo route, 135, 13ti

atli ind the Ifhrarj i

IIUUll, Efl '

ill" poll i-i. ft|, (86 ExpcbttM book ', Kxt avion ol library work, 110

r

KalKirK, library movctnant at, 2*3

tVvusv'ivtli, liltrarv

i it lit

I m.i:v

0/

:■»

Fiction dofondod, 1<!5, 279

in Public Libraries, 24

iifflu.: uf, 123, 123, 129. 183,

15*. 1 00, 172, 179, 135, 198,217,

274, 278 Fi«oo at * statutory meeting, 80 Finance, 264

Kim' fttT turning leaVM down. 89 Fiiuwat Publiu Libraries, 121, 225,

509 1 I i it the Birmingham Library,

150 1m -st Frco Library, 43—48 Fitting* for Pnhlii* Libraries, 353—

308 PlKtWOod Public Library, 86 Folkc.&lono Public Library, 198 Forfar Publin Library, 239 Free education and Public* Librarian,

275

gnu te to Public Libraries, 37

11 Free " Librariw a miaiioiuer, 20,

31 l'i'oo Libraries' Acta, 12 "Fi'oo Librarian and Museum*."

146 Frouoli librarios, % public school libraries, 380 Frundn to thu library movcinunt,

7S Fulham Public Library, 288, 2l»5 Future of Public Librarim, 275

Cos, effect of, on books, 358

Gateshead Public Library.

(urmrnMiy lo libraries. 85, 88, 81, 90, 103. 125, 120, 130, 100, 104, 170, 174, 179,226,223, 230,234, 2D0-S0S, 30-1, 407, 419, 458

Gorman librarian, 3

GtfU nf pnblic'Hlinns, :iH

GIfU to IrrflmmalMo bodiw* 87 ftUatm'fl (Sir W. ) jrift U Newark, 174

i.l.la (Kt. Hon. W. K. and

Public Libnru'n, 23, 206

Gloagow and the (foray moramaDt,

21&— 2f>3 autl tbo voU for the Acta,

80

Voluntary Lif<rario«, 445

GlonMHtei rojaati rfai lot*, 2*2

"U'KxlBook*," W

Government aid required, IBS, 967.

200 Gorsmmont grant* to Au*tr*H»ii

libraries, 412, 415 Oorornmont Publicationo and

Public Libraries. 36 (lovnrning hod fox ami Chi Iftinrfat'

question, 71 74 iJivai wanted to start a library,

257 Oraatfl of Parliamentary Paper* to

Public Libraries, 37 GranrtUe (Earl) oiwn* a Public

Library, 185 Guarantors, (juration uf. lu" Cnillfi - Alli-a Library, OafTDMT.

458 Gutter literature, 277, 279

Haggoiv. ton's ( VI r. W. J.) worlt at

Newcastle, 188 Halfpenny rate, 260, 268 Hand's (Mr. G. V.) work at Old-

ham, 126 Ilandbitla, mi£"OstUmfl for, f>2& Handbook to this library, 110 Ha»rf-]i«U of books, 147 Hanilnwnrth 1'nMfo Library, 102 Hauley Pablifl Library, 184 Hanin Iustittituat Preston, 127 Harrogato Public .Library, 28,

103 Hartington (Minima oQ on Public

Ijhrarhs, 86 1.14 Harvey'e (Mr. U.J gift lo Damnify,

85 Hantinge rejeota the Acts, 283 Ha«ty polling, effool •■'. 860 Hawardmi (Mf.4 I la/Ktone'j) library,

us

Hawirk Public Libmry, B39

lb .in, i ol i i aria*, n0, 174, 358

I ! m laxoo, 200

lluitdoii. movement at, BBS

rd Public I.ibi-nr)1, 184 Hertfonl Public Library, |tJ5 High Wy^otnbo Voluntary Library,

Hinaklay lull i Library, 100 HimUey" Puhlie. UttKwj^Vft HobaO VuWw \.\\wwr^ *A*a

580 Pirnr.ic LDOUIUKR,

HoIium (0. W.) and Public

Ja|ift!lL^r.' Itlinuiu*, H

Libraries, 0

Jercma [Mr, w 3.] ou Public

Hone raauog, ©4

Libraries, 33

Rwidinff Union, 1«»,

ESoutidh Voluntary Library, 448 HODDI Of Public LibrarifM, 400

JubtiM of the '* Kwart Act," 280

Juvenile burrowars, 157

Pah k Librarian uhi, i im.

HotiaooT Comma tw Report on PubUu

i W, ISO

U&rarJMj L8tf, 50

How to nnc tin library, "71

libraiics, 30, 95, 102, 111. 121 ,

1*9. 109, !0B

llu-.Uali Torkard Public Library,

lltoraturu, 31

167, SSI

Hull and i.lwi library vote, 83 Voluntary Libraiy, 449— 1M

K

I

Kendal and tho library niovenwtk

Iddeclnlgh (l,Ofd) OD gTilit4 tO

Riddarmlastar Public Library, 108

libraries, 37

Kirkl.y's (Mr. C. V.) work

Idiusyiierusies, library, 271

LolcetteT) 172

luijiuiiol taxation fur libraries, Wfl

Kirkwall adopt* tbo Acta, 242

Iut|)ortaiico of Pnblic Libraries, 890

Kirkwooil'a early advocacy of p*to-

i BOUDttm to good reading, 270 IncoinA, variant) additional anurous

.dual lihrariea, IW

Knight (Charles) on Public Libra-

of, l§fi, 187, ir,8. 102, Inn. 188,

rian, 08

191. 192. 209.32-1,489, 309

increase of, 10'2

Indicators, 332 -566, 87*1

L

Iiicroaxo of the Library Rata, 76,

hi, i\m

lAhoiMhorc (Mr.)aml the "Kwart

IndiM'crenre, erToet nf, on the

Bill," 5?

library moramnL 71, 209

LiblitN' room, SW

i&fliunofl «f buokfl, 00

Lady librarians, 88, 4Wi

Instituted and libraries, 868, 209.

Lag^arda in the library niovoiuoat,

J!S1— 2S7

S»e '* Mechanic. "

I ambflth fnblic Libraritta, 14, 238,

luHomiiCfi oflibrariea, 493

290—800

Intimidation of voters, 83, ."»03

Laucaatar (Mr. A.) on t'< linieoj

liivcruMd Public Library, £41

oduoatioi

lndaad (Mr. Alexander) and the

Lavntuiiitj, yr«?

UanchtMturPuhliti Library move-

Lawe relating to PuUir Libraries*

ment, 70

U7

lalenf Man Public Lihnny. MO

LoallMs on library ivnrle. 164 Leamington Fuhli' Li >raiy, 1C0

[ale uf Wight, fuiluru of the move-

ment at, 28.1

U. im. . ill l.biaries, 120, 13ft. 141.

bdoworth, iDorooiflnt "t, 234

L6fl, 104, 171.191,420, 491

lasuo of books, 33, 179 373

extunaiou, 106, 171

ladgOM, ■■

library, efl#

Issue*, eausoa of the decrease of, 101

Leeds Public Library, d, 29. ion—

[lorcoiiLajjti of, 271

100. 120, 271, .

Italian Hbr&iica, 3, 12

Uok Public Library, 169

I/?L-ik'.it_v of admitting auUi'lo bof-

J

rowore, ISO

er l'n Mi" Library, li i \ A*toaA*i^i\v:VviUlcLibrartis, HW, \ Ylfc

.Taction (Mr. G.)<m MTbaMNaa&&<4

imprortoa public taster" &*

IXIlBX. 8&1

Leigh awl iho library luuveiueut,

Local chartuij* and Public Libraries,

28*

35

Lending library bookn, 3M

literature, 36, HO, 147

Leominvter Public Library, lti4

ratai. 10

Liberty and Property Defence

taxation, 10

League, 21 Librarians and librarianship, 481

Louden P.o;nd School libraries, '-".'>

1 compared to Paris and

US

Borlin, 288

as public ullimla, 30

luUic library movement in.

fts " Special Constables," 402

2S0

Libraries, intlnoiicp of the, 84

libraries 435, 44ft, 454,

Olid .Si.m ii!i-.iii. 21

ift

and the Church, 70

-- progress of the library move-

as crime reducing institutions,

ment in, 287

26

vestries and the movement,

for flip hlin.I, 114. I.S4 847,

200, 84?

264. 405

LungLoi), movuntcut at, 281

of local litcrnluru, 30, 90

Lust books, 116

on prolutiou, 345

Public, argument* in favour

Loughborough Public Library, 167

1 .owes toft., library scheme at, 28 1 Lubbock'* (Sir J.) Anionilmoiit hill,

of, 611—525

Public, criticism on, 270

347

Public, how to popular be,

Luton, lilniuy movement at, 453

527—530

Lytton (Lord) on Public Libiniii>,

Public* opinions on, 519 525

M

v. crime, 200

Library ai-chitceturo, 127, 217,281, Association, the, 355, 450

M

UtcAUfttft I'ri/i.i Bill, ■.;

niuB-Doukft, G2

Maecleafleld, turnover at, 273

committees, 87, 268

Manchester Public Libraries, fl, 20,

plana, 04, 08

30, 43, 02, 110 115, 121, 271,

work, comprehensive viow of,

272

497—507

acbemo of technical rdumtlnn,

Li-lil i-uiHrig. 274

424

I.i:;hii;i^ i«l" lilirfcrios, 128, J -li. 358

"HaOCUQSUH School, "6(1

Manchester Suburban Libraries,

Limerick, library inovoinont at, 250

119

Lincolnshire without &n* Public

Mnrmfiold adopts the Act\ 174

Library, 104

M.S. in hhrariOH, 243

Litigation concerning the Acts, 338

Maryluboue Voluntary Llbiarit*,

—345

454

LWcrpool Library and Mumim Act, ISO, 310

May's (Mr,) renewal elrpis, 147

Mechanic* and libraries, SO, 32

Public Library, 6, 20, 106—

ai reader*, 07, 104

110, 177,271

Mechanic**' btfltitntas and Public

Llandudno. uiovcmeuL defeated at,

Lihrariiw, 27.78,85,88, 100, IIP.

209

HI', 125, 130, 141,158.18-1,225,

Llangollen. ]nvuu- library at, 200

:T1 -470

L/Mlbra in tho library, 30

institute, Origin of, 471

Loans lor Public Library purpose*,

Meeting. Statutory, 72, 70, IIH,

176, 648—8(12, 508

170. 174, 191 187 824

uUicial ini(iiliir: i mic utility.

557, 500

lo2

kfalboume Public Library, 333,

Local Boarda, 581

4U

ftUtbodfl of library work, 271

Mlddlesboroufch Public Librarv,

118 Middloton Public Library 117 Middlcwtoh adopta the Acta, lit Milium Public Library, 117, 384

HUdm R m (I*n RougntorO on Public Ubnritn, 8?

Uiumtvi of Public Instruction, 11 Mumtal entente atom tho Library

lUto, 148. 149, 168, 18% 881 Mi:. hell library, I Hftagow, Ufi

MmikK ami iiianuaniiits, I I MmUvVMr, S.) gift to XoUiog-

hum, 181 Mouu Sulci* adoption •lUfUtjOLCll,

119 Mountain ANh Nftfittthfl AfltR, ^70 MuchWooltco uoptf thu Acts, 119 nV»(Mr. J. D.) liliiai'} wuilv.

147, 146 Mn-niinp ami Public Librarioe, C2,

86, v.. 92, II-, LIS, 128, 130,

188, 185, ins, 170, ift, M0.188,

•230. 257. 209, 837 Mum. in I.l.raiici,102, 180, 184, 2(14

N

N'.tnt.ivii'li adopts tlu* AcU, 142 National Gallery uiainimai,. . Nclfton adopts uk Act-?, 1 It1

Ni i South Wales Public Librtriofl) 41 fi

New York Public Libraries, lAfl

New Zealand Public Libraries, lid

Newark Public Library, 171—170

Newbury and tho library more tneitt, 28/i

Newraatlc catalog"*', 1^3

Newcrwtlc-on-Tjm 'i ni- Library, 24, 29, 38, 38, 120-12C. 271

Nowcoatlo-UJidoiLymc adopts tlm ArUj I7ti

x l< aitj of braneh libraries, I I I

iVt-vpuit iMon.J, turnover at, 273

N"« iwnponw kUhiK. Mfl

Ni:w»|ui|trrH UmI the library move- ment, 74

Kvwaroouio, 20. UG, 00

NewahanVa (Mr. K.) l«<jui>»t to Protean, ISA

Vevum Uvath PnbUa Lforos, LW NicboJaon initltut*, LaaV,lW

. df jt'Uhlf, I

North of England, Librae) 1:

im-nt iu thi!, 83

boapton Public Library-, 17rt

—179, 273 Northampton (U.8.A-) Public

Library. 404 Xnrlhwicli Public Library, 179 Konrii b | 1 iti d, 871 Nottingham Public Librarioe, €, . IDS. 177. 170 184, 271 Nuiiiir.'!] .in-iiii.' Public Ltbrorios,

187, im, 178 Novtjlrs, value of, 278 Humbci A Public Libnrloa, I, 2,

6, 280

Objections lu l!i liltnii 78

to the popular vote, "3

to Public Libmritu, 7ft

Objeotonto flu* Library Rat.

7.'.. 78 Occupation* of borrower*, 20, 1:»;

of roodoi

Ooonricn havotho right Old Jocuuioiita in Public Ltbi

92 O'lWn (Mr. J. .1.) CnimnlUftttin

Bill, n OMbury adopta the Act . Obi ham Pu 0|teuuifr lln« Rnl Public Ul

Manchester, tt3 Opinions on Public Libraries, Mi'—

W Origin of the "avmrl Bill," 63 Oaborim (Mr. IWual) and Ibo

" Kwtu-t Bill," 66 OswUBtry adopt* the Acta, 265 OuUiUc boriowciy. 101, 310, 11?,

137,165, 18S, 188. 9

, legality of, U^ 388

Overdue, dookvi Sow to total " Overture for Foundinc •'. I

Uinin j -I I.:' !:- thfl I M9 Oxford <xt< n*\ .11 Kocturoofoi Win rico, 42»— 431

V.«>\*V\u>guM.'<«a\\uaUuT libi*'

m.i:\. 583

Paisley Public Lilniiv, - 1- 211

[froMieiacUtl wrtei ) i, 164, 890,

Pamphlet bat, 3W

526," 6611, BOG

Faniz/.i'8 (Mi. 1 ovii!ena< nu Public

Public uilucittioii, uood of, 24

Libraiii'n, 5)

siuWiiptious, 2<M

Perkev'd (Archbiahop) library, 41

PublJOWfl and the library v

Parliamentary (Library) Kernmo,

336

Ifl

Publishers' donations to libraries,

Papers, 37

Patent Otllce publications, 37

m

Putney Public Library. 302

Pauperism, •lecre.LH' i)f. 20

Pease (Sir J.J, 90

l'ct'olinr position of tin* Dublin

q

libraries. BS3

ivnnv run, 19, 76

,"i iicai literature, H

Penrith Public Unary, in

Peiisiuus, 13

Ponzuucc, movement at. SSI

B

IVn.'ouUgc of Usuob, 271

Periodicals, Ac. oott of in librorl^v,

Rati', i oUeotfon uf the, ^7, $55

50V

axtanston of thn, 1 14

Periodical rack, 307

halfpenny, 260

Peterhead adopt* the AcU, 2H

Increase of the, W( 12.1, m,

Peterborough and the library move-

■2w

ment, -'-

LrwguUrity of (he. 273

Pictures presoatod tollbttriOB, l!*s

Ittultalkm »l tin', iyo

Pictures (Sir A. .1.) and Out Liver-

_- mhn pwuwniBtfonH regarding

pool Public Library. 100

the, Ma, H9

Plans of librarii-a.. JW. 17s ,;'".

imrlly held bu. k. 108

fisc, 2«7, 303, yf>6, rsQ

reform*, 19

Plants (Minor) work at Peel 1'nrk,

twopenny, 125, III

ogea tor Biieoum and Softool

130

Plymouth Public Librwy, Wt 819,

of Art, 267

271, 272, 383

vniiiii- far iiu' amount -.-i

board Scliool Libinrv M'stcm,

ii o, $42

:;s;

\vkh.Hit rotioffi 72

Poll i|i>iiiaml>->i by ili.< debated

liftU'h aomparotl, 16

parly, 80

of Ungual] towns, 10

Poll, evpcnxcsot th<\ S2; .

Ratt-«up*inrtiNl without the i itl

Papular vote wauled, 71, 73

; -. m

Popularisation of libraries, S27—

IUth;-ui Publi Lib) kry, -'00

no

Kntlunine» Public Library, 890

Potter [Sir John) ana the Man-

Rating of Loii'loii pnriidiuK. 2iU

abetter Public Library, 65

ScFnUtc Uoiarfee,*W, I

Potteries, libraries in too, LM

Rnwmarsh and the library mott

Preparation and placing of books,

incut, 885

Rawsuii (.Mr. If.) ami tin: Man-

Press, Uie, an.! bluur- work, fl0..

chester library. 111

95, 112, 261, 2titt, 30"d( 487

Readers, hint* to,

Preston Public Ubi u 1 SM

occupations ■■(, -J, 'A

Ul. "272

Headers' tirk.-t,, number of, 871

iVioi (Mat)ut Wlmbol HI Lib.-i.iy. 42

Heading aa ednoafiloDi 94, Bfi

Prison, a, turned »!it«> a libra-

rjbiigw %\ tftmrwe, L3 :

Prise for suggested Consolidation

improved ohmotn of, 1--

Bill, 93

.

fcUflAUvu, V \xV\v. \A\« ^x^ i 'ffifo

S4

prBMt: UBBAblKH.

Reading-room, arrangement of, 359

dispensed with, 134

Reeding, solid, increase of, 274 Record Office publications, 137 Recreative evening classes, 389 Redwood's Library, Bristol, 44 Reference libraries, 29

importance of, 188

Reforms of rates, 19

Reform of the method wanted, 71 Reg. v. St. Matthew's, Bethnal

Green, 80 Reg. v. Wimbledon Local Board,

80 Rejection of the Acts, 248, 269, 270,

281, 287, 325, 449, 453—457 Renewal slips, 147 Rents, excessive, 135, 136 Repeal of the Libraries' Acts wanted,

of the Acta advocated, 338

Reports, 488

Reprints, 27, 277 Requisition, forms of, 559, 562 Richmond Public Library, 324 RiddeU's(Mr. H. P. A. B.) bequest to

the Newcastle Library, 124 Right, the, to vote, 81 Riuou (Marquis of) on Public

Libraries, 452 Rochdale Public Library, 129

271, 272 Rochester Voluntary Library, 456 Rosebery (Earl of J ojwns a

library, 231 Rothorham Public Library, 129,

273 Rules of Archbishop Parker's

library, 41

for cataloguing, 372

for Public Libraries, 567

Runcorn Public Library, 185

Russian libraries, 4

Rutland (Duchess of) and Public

Libraries, 166

S

St Helen's Public Library, 134,

135 St. Martin-in- the- Fields Public

Library, 800 Salaries of librarians, 509 ^question of, 128

Sale adopts the Acts, 188

Salford Public Library. 65, 130, 131, 464

Saltney Public Library, 28

Scene at the re-opening of a Lam- beth library, 14

Schedules of procedure for polling, 561

Scholars, number of, 381

Schools and school accommoda- tion, 381

Schools of Art and libraries, 101, 125

Science and Art classes, 101, 102, 125, 191, 431, 434

Science and Art schools freed from the Library Rate, 263

Secretaries of libraries, 480

Sectarian literature in public news- rooms, 85

Selborne (Lord) on the "Ewart Bill" 58

Selkirk Public Library 244

Sermon in favour of a library, 142

Shaftesbury (Earl) and the Man- chester Public library, 64

Shakespearian Library at Birming- ham, 151, 152

Sheepscar Branch Library, 106

Sheffield Public Library, 132, 133, 271

Shelving in libraries, 171, 360

Shields, North, Public Library, 125

Shields, South, Public Library, 133. 273

Shrewsbury Public Library, 188, 273

Sibthorpe's (Col.) opposition to the " Ewart Bill," 56

Sites given by corporations, 177

Size notation, 372

Slater's (M. J.) generosity to Dar- laston, 159

Sleepers in the library, 31

Sligo Public Library, 260

Sniethwick Public Library, 189

Smiles, R. W., 112

Smith (Aid. W. )and theManchester Library, 111

Socialism and Public Libraries, 21

Somerset without a Public Library, 285

Southport Public Library, 88

Spencer (Mr. Herbert) on State socialism, 21

INDEX.

$$

Staleybridge adopts the Acts, 134 State aid, need of, 13, 22

socialism, 22

duty of the, with regard to

puh'ic enlightenment, 8 Statistics of crime, 26

of libraries, 271, 497—607

Statutory meetings, results of, 79,

80, 117, 134, 141, 142, 159, 170,

174, 184, 187, 224, 233, 236,

285, 637, 560 Stephens (Sir James) on Public

Libraries, 67 Stirling's (Mr, Justice) decision as

to voters, 343—345

Library, Glasgow, 445

Stock ill kept, 116

objections to Public Libraries,

75

of various libraries, 271, 273

turnover of, 121, 273, 497—

507 Stockport Public Library, 79, 135,

278 Stoke Public Library, 185 Stonehouse, library movement at,

285 Stratford, library movement at,

324 Stroud Voluntary Library, 457 Structural defects in libraries, 121 Struggle for the " Ewart Bill," 56 Students at the library, 263 Students' rooms at libraries, 31 Subscription libraries and Public

Libraries, 27, 28, 78, 100

interests of, 196

within Public Libraries,

158, 191

rooms, private, in libraries, 166

public, to libraries, 264

Subscriptions plus the rate, 259 Suburban libraries (London) adopt

the Acts, 288 Sutton (Mr. C. W.)on the Man- chester libraries, 110 Sunday attendances at libraries,

114, 141, 190

issues, 114, 153

opening, a failure, 469

opening of libraries, 87, 92,

102, 121, 459—471 Swansea Public Library, 177, 265

268 Sydney Public Library, 415—418

T.

Table for the reading-room, Mr.

Elliott's, 191 Tables of comparison, 271, 273 Tarves Public Library, 245, 334, Tasmanian Publie Libraries, 419 Taste for books fostered by Public

Libraries, 33 Taunton, 285 Taxation, Imperial, for libraries,

276

local, 10

Taylor (Mr. J.) on the first Free

Libraries, 43 Technical books, 136 education and Public Libraries,

420—426 Instruction Act of 1889, 72,

193, 268, 556—569 instruction at St. Helen's,

422 ; at Stockport, 425

schools, 127

treatises in libraries, 36, 90

Temporary premises for libraries,

827, 492 Testimony to the use of libraries,

265 Thackeray at the opening of the

Manchester Public Library, 66,

68 Thomlinson's (Rev. R.) bequest to

Newcastle, 124 Thurso Public Library, 246 Tickets and vouchers, sale of, 509 Toronto Public Library, 409—411 Torquay movement at, 286 Tottenham rejects the Acts, 286 Town clerks and the library move- ment, 77 Towns without Public Libraries,

281, 287 Trade influence, 144

effect'of, on libraries, 109, 144

Tradesmen and the library move- ment, 77 Trash v. Libraries, 277 Travel, books of, in Public Libraries,

35 Travelling libraries, 106 Truro Public Library, 221 Tunstall Public Library, 185 Turnover of stock, 121, 273, 497—

507 Twickenham Putyic Library, 324

flllLK LTBB.AXt».

Tvu. i:i jii:1, iintimii.m lian<l I 01

t> tii.. Pm Ufanrr, i2»

Two-penny rate, ill rate at Oldham, Ufl

U

Unfair oomporiaoDt,

Unlti -I tftatet I'nhH* UfamrlM* Act*.

80fl, 308 I'niv.Milv I v:- onion bcturw,

ie«, i7i, a;e

Unreliability of ftetaffttat, '-'71 Unlimited rate, an, 126,

\ .Ui. ftfflatfftn. 105, »71, fi78

.lion of libraries, 136, 367 Vonwy (C*pt.) on villogo libraries,

330 roatrfcOj t:oiul'iuatiim of, for library

nuriiuHiiA, f»33, 666 Villogo library, a, Z%

Librarian ortnUiihtd, 334

Iiow to aid, 331

u^wnifH for, 24ft, 933

Public ril'...ri«A Ml

Voluntary rate, 141

\". lun'.niily KM Mrtod Public

Utarion. 240, ZS6, 141

Potej i'«i[.nhr, <ibjfcU<m* t" tin-,

73 YOtora, deciaiuu uf Mr. Justice Ingw to tho, 343— 34C

,«iuo«tioii of the, 81, IW, 33H

Vnting hy post, MO

, cost of, 7.'*

on tho library aOtttSoB, II

papora, 74 W>, 503, 00

system, 339,341

Warrington Muaoum *nd Ktfczcnu.

-■>, m

/Clonal Library, ■408 Watering places, uued of ! 'utile HTM rtl, 201

Watford Pnblfc Librnriw, I0S

WmUh.'. . i ii'. ot -. f, on llbmiw, ti7S Wadnmbury Pnblb Liltrary, i»n

WeVh (Mr. O.) on Whirring. <n

W. !.[, liliuuitw, number pf,

ill r,.l |I

WaUlipool adopt* tho Aetna PabliC Libroi ■'. 2M, 298—295 Wantwa-Buper-Mnw adopt* titv Act*, 221

DOtttfa royceta tbc Act*, 28$ Whitehaven adopt* lh<< Ad

Wirk Puhlii: Library. W,

Wignn Library. :»5,

Public Library, 137—1 il

rcft-rcin'H catalogue, 139, M0

Wimbledon Public Library, 30, 3£S Wirobonio, old library at Windowt, crairied, in librari.- Wlnrfbfd Pttbllc Library, isS— JftJ* Winton'a (Sti Frnncto del !•* oC

t, 121 Wifblogton and tin? library mtnt 28G

U'rilvi-rlunipron Pub! in Library.

U , 181—103, tfl 25T2 Wora I UbTafy, IBS

Worocntoniblra Public Librari?*,

1*3 Workington adopt* tlio AcMj 111 Workman u readers, 67, 101 Wrrxham Public Library, x<ix WifchtCMft w.a K.i.

libraries, 219

W

Walker Art Gallery, LnveTiiuvl, 10B Walnall Public Library, 100 Wandsworth 1'ublit.- Library, 273, 288, 296

I

Yalw (Mr. J.)aud branch Uhrartk-.

100 York ny'Ktu tbc AcU, 28<J YorkHhiro Union of MecbaMUOO1

liutitutoa, 475

4rraVn .< »«»u. Prvt Wit C>fa* 0«lH. i?U* H««rf i i

Advert ixf'H!rtit.t>.

EVERY PUBLIC LIBRARY SHOULD POSSESS

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For full details of W. & A. K. JOHNSTON'S Wall Maps, Wall

Illustrations, Aliases, Terrestrial and Celestial Globes.

Scientific Works, &c. &c

SEE THEIR CATALOGUE, WHICH IS POSTED GRATIS TO AM? ADDRESS.

w. & a. kTTohnston,

tivvgrnuluri to the Quean, Educational and General Pub'Uhen, (ESTABLISHED lh'tt.)

Edlna Works, Easter Road, and 16, South 8t. Andrew 3treet, Edinburgh ; 5, White Hart Street, Warwiok Lane, London, E.C.

8HARP * KBHT.

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Aft I)

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Many or the largest and most successful Electric Light Plants in London were supplied by us.

ESTIMATES GIVEN FOR ALL KINDS OF ELECTRIC UGHTtNO, ELECTRIC PUMPS, TRAMCARS, 4c.

A I ■-?■• Mate

{(CYCLOPEDIC CATALOGUE

LENDING DEPAKTMENT OF THE

UILLE-ALLES LIBRARY,

GUERNSEY.

COM r ILK i

LFRED COTGREAVEt Principal Librarian.

OonUinl** 40,000 Votumt*. of which 30.000 «re tnrfWh and 10l00O

f ffflofc Engliih Btolhn 1,000 ( ^ttion 257 99.

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