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MEMORIAL from a CHRISTIAN FRIEND. Square 24mo. tinted post, silk, gilt, 1s. 6d.; or embossed paper, covers gilt, 1s. A POETIC OFFERING, TRAGICAL ADVENTURES and MISERABLE END of JONATHAN FAR, the Sab*** This Tract is well adapted to Sunday, National, and other Schools, and also for Distribution in Villages. Published by Dean and Munday, Threadneedle Street, and John Jackson, Agar Street, West Strand. (749.) REMARKS on the IMPORTANCE of an INQUIRY into the AMOUNT and APPROPRIATION of WAGES by the WORKING CLASSES ; addressed to the Statistical Section of the British Association, at its Meeting in Liverpool, 13th Sept. 1837, Lord Viscount Sandon in the chair. By Mr. FBLKIN, Fellow of the Statistical Society of London. Printed with a view to general distribution among the Working Classes, at the request of the Section; with some additional Observations. 6d. The Section testified their high opinion of this pamphlet by subscribing for 1000 copies on the spot. "We cannot do better than recommend Mr. Felkin's remarks to the notice of every Mechanics' Institute, every friend of human improvement, every workman, and every employer, as containing much in little that is both sterling and useful." LEICESTERSHIRE TELEGRAPH, Oct. 21. (750.) London Hamilton, Adams, and Co. Nottingham: W. Dearden. DE PORQUET'S Works lately published-continued. GERMAN TRESOR, BOTANY.-The BOTANIST, conducted or the art of Translating English into German, with Foot Notes and a Lexicon. 4s. 6d. A Key to Ditto. 4s. A NEW FRENCH CLASS BOOK. (751.) by B. MAUND, F.L.S. assisted by the Rev. J. S. HENSLOW, M.A. F.L.S. &c. Regius Professor of Botany in the University of Cambridge, contains accurately coloured Engravings of tender and hardy ORNAMENTAL PLANTS, adapted to garden culture; with descriptions HISTOIRE de NAPOLEON, à l'usage des and instructions, scientific and practical. It contains also Maisons d'Education. 1 vol. 400 pp. with Map and Portrait. Par M. 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This and treatment of the subjects figured reflect credit upon the conductor and his assistants."-PHILOSOPHICAL MAG. "This promises to be the best and cheapest work on practical botany. The plates are executed in the first style of accuracy and beauty."-EVANGELICAL MAG. Also, (760.) THE BOTANIC GARDEN, No. 155, was issued November 1st. (761.) R. Groombridge, Paternoster Row. PUBLISHED BY PERMISSION. ** Early Orders are solicited through the respective A SPEECH delivered at the TRADESMEN'S Booksellers and Stationers, &c. MYTHOLOGY FOR CHILDREN, ILLUSTRATED. THE GODS of HOMER and VIRGIL, with numerous Woodcuts; illustrated by appropriate extracts from the best translations of the Ancient Poets. By the Authors of "The Pearl," &c. &c. 3s. cloth, or 35. 6d. half-bound. "A subject indispensable to education, treated in a very novel and interesting manner, with considerable talent and propriety." (755.) Also, uniform with the above, THE CHILD'S OWN HISTORY of FRANCE, with authentic Portraits of its Kings. (756.) Joseph Thomas; and Simpkin, Marshall, and Co. DR. WHITAKER'S HISTORIES. HISTORY and ANTIQUITIES of HISTORY of the ORIGINAL PARISH of WHALLEY and HONOR of CLITHEROE, in the COUNTIES of LANCASTER and YORK. Numerous N.B. A great variety of the above, in suitable bindings, by one of the first binders, 3. 3s. each. CONSERVATIVE ASSOCIATION, at LIVERPOOL, on the 28th of August, 1837. By HENRY POWNALL, Esq. Second Edition, price 2d. (762.) Hounslow printed and published by John Gotelee, Bookseller. Sold also by L. and G. Seeley, 169, Fleet NOBLE'S BOSTON and LINCOLNSHIRE ALMANACK COMPENDIUM for 1838. Of this pamphlet 15,000 are circulated annually throughout Lincolnshire and adjoining Counties. Advertisers of books, medicines, and manufacturers of all kinds, will find the Advertising Sheet of this pamphlet a very desirable medium. 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Works formed on nearly the same plan, and with nearly the same end in view, have risen and fallen since its commencement, and proved by their failure the superiority of the original with which they competed. The aim of the undertaking was different from that of any periodical formerly known in this country; for, while other publications were busy in the fields of scientific, political, or exclusively didactic or entertaining literature, this aimed at the simple but important object of uniting, in the cheapest possible form, a part of that moral instruction which is the foundation and conservation of every well-ordered society, with the amusement which tends to lighten the cares of business and sweeten the duties of social life. To the heads of families the work holds out many important advantages. It has been long a favourite maxim with those who have studied the science of education, (and the names of Johnson, Kames, and Scott, may suffice as instances taken primo obtutu) that the most effectual mode of training the heart-the seat of morals-is, by stimulating, through the medium of portrayments of real life, the sentiments of virtue and there is very much reason to fear, that the prevailing passion for imparting knowledge and furnishing entertainment, abstracted from any view to the incalculation of morals or the improvement of the heart, may tend only to the acquisition of one great good at the expense of a greater. 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(767.) being a Journal of MEDICINE and the COLLATERAL SCIENCES.-Published in Weekly Numbers and Monthly Parts, illustrated by numerous Engravings on Wood. The Volumes just concluded complete the first Decennial ing Systematic Courses of LECTURES:Period, and among the Contents will be found the follow SURGERY MATERIA MEDICA Also, shorter Courses of LECTURES, or Sets of ESSAYS, on The ABDOMINAL VISCERA, by Dr. Bright. DISEASES of the OVARIA, by Dr. Seymour. MORBID ANATOMY, by Mr. Mayo. URINARY DISEASES, by Messrs. Brett and Bird. All the Essays read by Sir Henry Halford and others at the College of Physicians; Together with many hundred Papers furnished by the most distinguished members of the Profession in all parts of the Kingdom. Also Reviews; Hospital Reports; Extracts from Foreign Journals, &c. &c. Constituting a complete Record of the Medical Literature of the period. 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