Rensselaer Republican, Volume 23, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 July 1891 — THE ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITTANNICA. [ARTICLE]

THE ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITTANNICA.

The Encylopsedia Britannica covers every department of knowledge known to mankind. - •«•-> ■— •' l V -V s ■ ■ • •- >, . v- j The Encyclopaedia Britannica is the most complete reference library the world has ever S9en. The Encyclopaedia Britannica is the highest authority -on every, subject, being the result of the la-! bors of more than 12,000 leading scholars, each one a master, specialist in his class, and a recognized authority on the subject of which he treats. It has been said of the Encyclopaedia Britannica that “if all other books should be distroyed, the Bible excepted, the world would have lost but little of its information.

The President of Yale College has said ‘’He will defy any one to buy 3,000 volumes which will give him as good a working library as is furnished in the Encyclopaedia Brittanica.” The authority of the Encyclopaedia Britannica has never been questioned in any Conrtof Justice in this country or in Europe. Lawyers take it into court to speak from it or quote it, with the same assurance that they would from a law book. The difference between the Britannica and all other Encyclopaedias consists in the fact that all the great subjects, of which there are 3000, are handled as a complete treatise, just the same as if you purchased a book on a particular subject, written by one of the best authors in the world.

The Encyclopaedia Britannica has 600 American writers and authors on American articles alone; whereas Appleton’s which claims to be the most “American” of all Encyclopaedias has less than 250 writers for the entire work As an educational factor in the home, no work in the language is so important and valuable as the Encyclopaedia Britannica. It covers every subject in every department of knowledge. It answers fully and authoratively every question that can be asked.

The high cost of the Encyclopaedia Britannica has heretofore been the great bar to its popular use. The English Edition cost $200.00 per set, and the American Edition $125.00 per set in the cheapest binding. These prices have almost compelled people to purchase the cheaper and poorer Encyclopaedias.

But a revolution has occured. The Publishing House of R. S. Peale & Co., of Chicago, believed that if this great “Digest of the Libraries of the World” could be made low enough in price, everybody would buy it. They have therefore reproduced the entire work in 25 volumes, with all the illustrations and new and better maps, and offer it at the marvelous price of $1.50 per volume.