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110th Thousand, fcap. 8vo. 2s. 6d.

ADVICE to a MOTHER on the MANAGEMENT of her
CHILDREN, and on the Treatment on the Moment of some of their more pressing Illnesses and
Accidents. By PYE CHAVASSE, F.R.C.S.

By the SAME AUTHOR, 130th Thousand, fcap. 8vo. 2s. 6d.

ADVICE to a WIFE on the MANAGEMENT of her

own HEALTH, and on the Treatment of some of the Complaints incidental to Pregnancy, Labour, and Suckling. With an Introductory Chapter especially addressed to a Young Wife.

J. & A. CHURCHILL, 11, New Burlington-street.

COOLEY'S

FOWNES' CHEMISTRY, BY WATTS.

*. The rapid development of the Science of Chemistry having for many years caused a steady increase in the bulk of this Work, it was determined by the Publishers to divide it into two volumes, each complete in itself, and sold separately.

PHYSICAL and INORGANIC

CHEMISTRY.

Edition, with Coloured Plate and 154 Engravings. Crown 8vo. 8s. 6d.

Twelfth

CHEMISTRY of CARBON COMPOUNDS, or ORGANIC

CHEMISTRY. Twelfth Edition. With Engravings. Crown 8vo. 10s.

"May be with justice described as one of the best written and most accurate works of the kind in this or in any other language."-Dublin Medical Journal. "Mr. Watts has done his duty with his usual skill..........Well sustains the high character the book has so long enjoyed."-Lancet.

"Mr. Watts has evidently done all in his power to render the book worthy of the high reputation it has always enjoyed as a student's text-book."-Popular Science Review.

"In Mr. Watts's hands Fownes' will continue to retain its character as a model of what a scientific treatise should be."-Chemist and Druggist.

"Edited by the a ble editor of the Dictionary of Chemistry,' no one could have been elected more fitted for the task, and he has performed his work well."-Edinburgh Medical Journal. J. & A. CHURCHILL, 11, New Burlington-street.

Sixth Edition, 2 vols. 8vo. 1,800 pp. 27. 28.

CYCLOPÆDIA

OF

PRACTICAL RECEIPTS

AND COLLATERAL INFORMATION IN THE ARTS, MANUFACTURES,
PROFESSIONS, AND TRADES,

INCLUDING MEDICINE, PHARMACY, AND DOMESTIC ECONOMY AND HYGIÈNE.

Designed as a Comprehensive Supplement to the Pharmacopoeia and General Book of Reference for the Manufacturer, Tradesman, Amateur, and Heads of Families.

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This Edition exceeds the last by some 600 pages, and contains a greatly increased number of receipts culled from the most reliable English and foreign sources; numerous Articles on Applied Chemistry, Pharmacy, Hygiène, Human and Veterinary Medicine, &c., have been added, many of the old Articles are extended; and, where desirable, the text is illustrated by Woodcuts.

To give some idea of the contents of this work, which contains between 6,000 and 7,000 Articles, a list of all under the letters M, N, and O is subjoined :

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N.B.-A Sample Sheet (16 pp.) will be sent by the Publishers on application, accompanied by a penny stamp.

London: J. & A. CHURCHILL, 11, New Burlington-street.

Organic Substances
Ormolu

Ormskirk Medicine

Orpiment

Orris

Orsellic Acid

Orsellinic Acid
Orthoclase

Orthopædia
Ogier

Osmazone

Osmium (8 Arts.)
Osteocolla

Otalgia
Othyl
Ovalbumen

Ovens
Owner

Ox (2 Arts.)
Oxalate

Oxalic Acid
Oxaluria

Oxidation
Oxide
Oxychloride
Oxycrate
Oxygen

Oxygenation

Oxygenized Lard

Oxyhydrogen Blowpipe
Oxymel (7 Arts.)

Oxyrrhodyne

Oxysaccharum
Oxysulphide
Oyster (5 Arts.)
Ozokerit

Ozone (2 Arts.)
Ozonometer.

Medium 8vo. cloth, 390 pages, 106 Woodcuts, price 88.

GEOLOGY

OF THE

COUNTIES OF ENGLAND

AND OF

NORTH AND SOUTH WALES.

BY

W. JEROME HARRISON, F.G.S.

Science Demonstrator for the Birmingham School Board; late Curator Leicester Town Museum.

"Mr. W. J. Harrison has struck out the excellent idea of drawing up a handbook to the counties of England and Wales, having for its basis the geological features and structure of every district: making his book in fact a geographical geology; so that, without special education in the science, any one with this manual in hand may readily acquaint himself with the nature of the rocks and other physical characteristics of any part of the country in which he may dwell, through which he may travel, or concerning which he may need information. A new interest will thus be added to the summer holiday or the rural excursion, and with a degree of mental effort too slight to be otherwise than agreeable, a process of education may be continually going forward.”—Saturday Review.

"We have tested it in many ways, and find that in almost every case the latest information, even when published in journals of very restricted circulation, has been discovered and made use of. There are numerous excellent woodcuts......We can heartily recommend this book as a convenient and reliable work of reference."-Nature.

"We sincerely compliment Mr. Harrison on producing a good and much required work of geology which will save a student not only much personal research and time, but put him on the track of almost everything geological which England and Wales can offer to him. Not only have we here a clear outline of the geology of every English and Welsh county, illustrated by sections, characteristic fossils, &c., but a list of the papers and other works published thereon, as well as a reference to the museums where the chief collections of each county may be seen and studied......This ought to be, and deserves to be, a very successful book."

Science Gossip.

"It deals with each county in alphabetical order, and describes in a manner at once concise and lucid the principal characteristics of its geological formations, their fossils, and economic products......The value of the volume is much enhanced by numerous illustrations."-Leicester Chronicle and Mercury.

"We have here a most laborious and, we do not hesitate to say, a most useful compilation......The remarks on the characteristic scenery of the counties, as resulting from their geological features, are interesting and correct...... We must express our conviction that the book supplies and fills up an important gap in the literature of geological science, and will be found a most valuable book of reference." Journal of Science.

"We have been greatly pleased with Mr. Harrison's book on the Geology of the Counties."

Natural History Journal.

"What will be the feelings of those who expect that everything should be original when Mr. Harrison acknowledges having consulted over four thousand papers, &c.? In this, clearly, he has taken the proper course, and all geologists will allow that he has gathered his harvest of knowledge discreetly."-Midland Naturalist.

"It is a work which no student of geology should be without."-Natural History Notes.

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The TIMES in noticing the French edition of this work says:—

"The merits of M. Duruy's work are so widely acknowledged that it is not necessary to enter upon any lengthened statement showing the great range of historical research displayed in it, or upon any fresh eulogy of the author's power of exposition and illustration. It deals confidently and plausibly with the elucidation of all that is obscure in the great borderland between the prehistoric and the historic, and with many it may shake the dictum of the late Sir G. Cornewall Lewis, in his 'Inquiry into the Credibility of the Early Roman History'-that all the elaborate researches of modern scholars respecting the primitive history of the Pelasgians, the Siceli, the Tyrrhenians, the Etruscans, the Aborigines, the Latins, and other national races must be considered as not less unreal than the speculations concerning judicial astrology or the discovery of the philosopher's stone and the elixir of life. Not only the results of the uncritical Italian historians, such as Micali, but those arrived at by the most learned and sagacious of the German inquirers, as Niebuhr and Ottfried Müller, must be rejected when they relate to this unknown and undiscoverable period.'"

The EDUCATIONAL REVIEW says:

"The Roman History for which we are indebted to M. Duruy has already established its reputation as a specimen of sound scholarship and of excellent writing, and the author has hardly brought it to a completion in the ordinary octavo form before he, anxious to increase its popularity and to add to its attraction, re-edits it as an ouvrage de lure with all the further advantages which the draughtsman's and the engraver's cunning is able to supplement. History is the proper field for pictorial illustration, and the artist need not draw upon his fancy to produce an interesting and useful result. Plans, views of celebrated localities, engravings of medals, coins, and statues, sketches of buildings, maps, and diagrams here find their natural place, and, thanks to the progress made during the last half century by wood engraving and chromo-lithography, we are able to procure for our children and our pupils illustrated text-books which were not so much as dreamt of in our own schoolboy days. We heartily recommend this first volume as a most valuable contribution to historical literature."

The SCHOOL BOARD CHRONICLE says:

"The illustrated edition of M. Duruy's 'Histoire des Romains' has now reached its fourth volume, bringing us to the accession of the Emperor Hadrian. Let us, in the first place, give a meed of due praise to the pictorial part of the work. It has been throughout, so far as beauty of execution is concerned, admirable; but a few anachronisms might easily be detected in the illustrations to the first three volumes, whereas the present one, examined in this respect, is almost blameless. We must also notice that the two centuries which immediately preceded the Christian era are particularly rich in archæological monuments of every kind; the only difficulty is, which to select, which to exclude, and the danger of allowing the artist to monopolize too much room was now the one to be guarded against......The foot-notes, which are extremely copious, prove abundantly that the author has consulted all the works, both ancient and modern, bearing upon the subject with which he has to do; Gratz, Merivale, Dennis, and De Clairac are as familiar to him as Suetonius, Livy, and Dio Cassius, and the impartiality of his appreciation is not the least merit of a work destined, we believe, to the most legitimate success.'

"

BELL'S WEEKLY MESSENGER says:

"It has been a vapid fashion in this country for a long time past to rave about the German author Mommsen's elucidation of the History of Rome,' and this has, in a measure, caused M. Duruy's far superior and much more reliable investigation to be not only overlooked, but, to far too large an extent, disregarded...... We can, by no means in our power, sufficiently indicate the value and importance of M. Duruy's exhaustive work. Were it only on account of its superb illustrations-no less than 2,500 in number, of admirable delineation and engraving-it could but be pronounced as a chef-d'œuvre, whilst the appearance of the binding is of unqualified beauty. These, however, are after all merely extraneous features. The chief value of the work resides in the manner of its unfolding the accurate elucidation of the annals of the once grandest nation of the world, the particulars of whose valour, persistency, and conduct, both in peace and war, can never fail to have both a pervading and a perpetual influence upon every people of the entire globe so long as time shall exist......We have had many Roman histories, printed and published in our own country, deserving large commendation-that by the late Dr. Arnold, the pre-eminent prince of schoolmasters,' more especially-but the fires" of each and all of these pale' and are 'ineffectual' before the research, the explanation, and the individuality of M. Duruy's imcomparable work. No one with any pretence to learning or judgment can refuse for a moment to acknowledge that not only has this history never been equalled, but that it is never likely to be surpassed. M. Duruy has, in a word, discovered all that ever can be discovered and written all that can be written concerning those great events, which changed the face of the world from the times of Rome's foundation to the incursion of the Huns, the Vandals, and other barbarian hordes which overrun the whole Italian territory, and changed the fa e of Europe...... He has augmented and embellished it to a larger extent than could have been conceived to be possible......Not one of our public schoolmasters should lose sight of the reappearance of this great work in its present form, since it will enable them to place in the hands of their most promising pupils-as the most fitting of prizes'-the very best means for their obtaining a thoroughly perfect acquaintance with the most important fact of Roman History."

Specimens will shortly be ready, to be obtained of any Bookseller, or from KELLY & CO. 51, Great Queen-street, Lincoln's Inn-fields, London, W.C.

WILL BE PUBLISHED ON NOVEMBER 25th.

In large medium 4to. in a handsome binding, price 31s. 6d.

NATURE

AT HOM E.

FROM THE FRENCH OF THEOPHILE GAUTIER.

WITH NUMEROUS FINELY EXECUTED ILLUSTRATIONS
BY KARL BODMER.

Including Twenty-Four Double-Page Pictures, Folded and Mounted on Guards.

NATURE—not as she appears to us when artfully fashioned by the hand of man; or when the free citizens of her domain are paraded to our view in the alien restraints of captivity-but as she is AT HOME, in the quiet seclusion of her forest depths; in her woodland pastures; and by her silent pools, surrounded by her furred and feathered subjects in the healthful and unfettered exercise of their natural freedom.

This is the aspect in which she is here presented by THEOPHILE GAUTIER, one of the purest and most picturesque of French writers—whose ardent sympathy with Nature is revealed in the threefold capacity of poet, artist, and naturalist. His descriptions, abounding in felicitous illustration, portray her in the varying moods to which she is exposed under the shifting influences of our northern climate; and exhibit the ceaseless activity of existence in the forests and the woods, with the changing efflorescence of upland and field, as seen through the observant eye of one by whom no portion of her kingdom was unexplored.

Nature's favourite haunts have had as faithful an admirer in the person of the Illustrator, KARL BODMER, whose pictures prove him to possess, in unusual measure, the innate capacity to interpret the free life of the forest and the natural habits of its inmates.

London: BRADBURY, AGNEW & CO. 8, 9, 10, Bouverie-street.

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The SEVENTH EDITION of The The VAZIR of LANKURAN: a Persian Play.

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eminent Men, and unrecorded Facts connected with them. BIBLIOGRAPHY,

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