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rii 161881 The Publishers' Circular 3o9 ...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Books Received :— Trom The Bazaar Office...
== to divide the prize . The result is that ve have th authors ree very being able treatises medica - l instead men (\ one of one of , whom two of Dr the .
3 Til / Ai * - ' . ' » w ~»—o , Macaula and M , [ VX the Ui « third y , - — is is - also - a London editor clergyman of the L-J «/ Leisure well known Hour ) , skilled controversialistThe book is
o p as IJ f lete . a the Uiv storehouse subject * - ' which » - — | , but not be of onl the y . evidence of ht to the bear whole , ancient history a st com and the
modern , can brougagain vivisectionists . From Jarrold & Sons . — ' Notes of Lessons for
Infant . . Classes j ^ tt _ . and the j 1 _ _ First "" HV __ j _ Standard C % a . 1 _ _ _ T . ' B T" > y 4 S / « . E —*• . Sing r ^ - — — ^^ leton , F . R . G-. S . A series of object lj lessons for the classes in
and sch ools subject well calculated to stimulate younger their faculties of intelli , gent observation aadto train their minds
t for his the book re , c in eption which of , the higher notes teaching are so . full A that glance they at need only be thoroughly mastered in order to
qualif service y even a s a ch young ool , will pup be il enough teacher to to prove be of that real the ^ uw art *_*•* . ¦ % *¦ of —¦ — teaching „_ -- _ — ^—j is _ - no - — longer — _ - _ - ^^ - - _ a — terra _ _ - ignoia « y — —to
our masters and mistresses , and with the aid of the models and objects which are to be found in nearly all well-furnished schools Mr . Singleton ' s
manual will be of immense value . To parents also such a work as this may well be commended ; for although educational reform has reached the
_„_ masses of the people , and has effected a complete transformation in the arrangements for the instruction — — ______ of their childrenthere are many homes
! in the middle and upper , classes where such a system as that set forth in this book is wholly unknown . Every governess who has the
responsiblo task of teaching in a private family -would do well to study this book and fashion her lessons on its model .
From Messrs . "W . & A . K « Johnston . —* Map of Asia . ' A boldly planned and distinctly marked
coloured map , set out on four sheets , each of them , roughly speaking , about 3 £ feet by 2 J in area , the projection not Mercators , but in
imita-I eluded Asia tion , Europe . This phere as accidental ; so far that as Paris in circumstance the and sweep London of if a we map is in of - | call it sogreatlincreases the usefulness , of may this
nwp for , referen y ce , seeing that English people relations seldom think to Eng of land Asia . or Australia except in their
From Messrs . Crosby Iiockwood & Co . — The German — — - —» P - J re ^ \_ J p »_/ osit \_^ kj A - i ¦ ons V- » *¦ - * k _» , wi It AUA th . A the » J « * N ' Cases ^ brf' i * UV P" — ' they *•* . * V ^ r G ^_ -1 - V ^ overn r V ^ jf ^ * - ¦ ,
volume b E y xemp Samuel lifie , giving Galindo d ^ 2 the , 500 . exact A usefu most meani l valuable Colloquial ng and little Phrases force pocket of , ' tile the German ViP , T > mn n preposition nronncitiATi s the f . Vio v ar rvinnr ins ense auca of r \ P
which differs so widely . , The prepositions yg are classified the sentences accord are ing printed to the cases in German they govern characters , and
opposite * n one . column , with the English equivalents from Galinxlo the same . Another . — « German volume Phraseology of the , ' publishers by Samuel '
' ~» iill vr « ULUDJ . ) UlUlilV V- » A IOJVJ I'UUIIOIIUJLU las ' Elementary hioned —¦» form ui School of conversational Series , ' giving sentences in the old
-- « « - '^* lui \ j ± _ iZKJll V Cl & a , i / l \ J * - ' a > i CCJHCUHO uavjiu exemplitication a h " o iHLie little book s book of all contains orkntniiis the ruUs more rmnrpi of than than Germ 2 2 an . / 500 i 00 grammar Gorman Grorman .
are phrases adde , d with wherever their Eng any lish points translations require , . exp Notes
lana-UUI l , From -Hohday Messrs IIand . -13 Marshall ooks . ' A Jap aeries p & Co boo . — kl ' Hal f-A fOWn b — _
eantl y octavo indicate , of the about objects 70 pa of ges interest each , which which plen lie - ^ " - ^^^| ' ' ' —¦ .. . 1 ... « —¦
within the reach of a walking rambler ; the celebrated sites , beautiful views , public institutions ,
health These - hand giving « book hills 3 distinguish , commons , them lanes selves , woods by , & the c . particular attention they devote to the "birds
fishestreesand lants of each neihbourhood , with which , , the engravings p are chiefl g y occupied , . DorkingHeigateand Kingston-on-Thames are
the numbers , which , have reached us . From Messrs . Morgan & Scott . —' Heaven : its
Hope , its Inhabitants , its Riches , its Happiness / by D . L . Moody . A volume by the well-known American evangelistwhowith Mr . Sankeyhas
conducted mission services , , in London and other , towns of this country . Mr . Moody tells us in the preface that this is the only book published
with his authority , although many have been published in his name , so that it would appear that our cousins - — - across - - - the — Atlantic deal as freely
with the production ^ s of their . own countrymen as ~ "with those of English authors . The book is marked by all the richness of illustration and
facility of expression which distinguished the author ' s addresses from the pulpit or the platformand it is stocked with those anecdotes ^^ - % ^ ^^ m ^ tm *^^ , h ^ i ^ v ^»^» ^^™* ¦ »^^ ^^ - ^ ^*^ ^^ r ~^ ^^ ^^ p ~ ^^ - ^^ ^^ v " «^^^ ~ ^^ ' ^ ¦— ¦ - ~ " ~ ' — —^ »• - — ¦— " ^ " - - ^ - ^~ ~^ - ^^ '"^
of what may be termed ' spiritual experiences ' which formed so prominent a feature in Mr . Moody ' s preaching — ( - ^ . The - fervid exhortations
f with which ^ each chapter abounds contain not a little of natural eloquence , and despire the Americanism of the stylethe volume will find
many willing readers in this , country . From the same . — ' Life more Abundant , and other
of Addresses addresses . ' JBy by Theodore the eminent Monod Fren . A ch collection pastor , oriinally published from a shorthand writer ' s
report g in the Christian , and now reprinted after revision by the author . The aim of M . Monod may be gathered from the caution which lie gives
his readers * against the common and perilous of error life of ; mistaking conviction increase for conversion of light ; gratification for increase
for sanctification ; knowing about Christ for deli knowing vered at Christ the . ' JVIildmay Some Park of the Conferences addresses , were and
others at Edinburgh and Dublin . From ^ ^ Newm ^^ P W ^* i ^^»^ B an ^^^ V ^^ hAam & ^*^^^^ Co ^^^ ^^^ . — ' Lilian ^—^^ — — " * m — Ade — — ^^ laide -. — — Neilson — -- - — . ^^ J ^ ^ j | ^^ VM ^^^^
AM emorial Sketch , Personal and Critical . Ey M . H . de Leine . Those who enjoyed the pleasure of m ^^ , ^ k witnessing ^ w J » ^^^^^ ^ - * r **^ **^ ^* j »*« ^^ a the *^ ^ *¦ ^ " performances m *^ ^^ ^^ ^^ — — — of Miss Neilson ,
an sudden d who death were in shoc Paris ked last by autumn the tidings , will welcome of her this Q . S A , i A Ru * brief ^^ * . * k ^» J * PV sketch - ** -m » ^ r «• ¦* - ¦ — ^ of - ** - •^ the — — — — talented — — young ^ C * actress
and the photograph which forms its frontispiece . Born a basket in Queen -maker ' s S she quare was , Leeds istere , tbo d daug imdtr hter the of reg
decidedly English patron commonp ym , ic lace of Brown and , just and althoug as decided h liad her ly
parentage iblood remains in her in veins obscurity . The , present !~ ho probably sketch is g from psy the of a lady who met Miss Neilson in tho
pen Yorkshire was tho astor village and of which briht h «* r husband an 's d kindl father manners Tnrninprti p raptti seem , to t . n have ha . v « ¦ won won g ior for presence her her here here sin sin attoc aflfoc y --
t ac ion quired as general on the stage as . the Her popularity dramatic caree which r onl she y
was lasted Jfjf ( Jbfij , m we f f V fi fteen ( are J * UL * V told % j ^ years * r AVA ¦ , commence V ^ — ^^ » J »» from m m « ^ . » . »^^ — 186 d ¦» - ^ ¦¦ at . ¦» 5 to Mnrguto . — .- — . - 1 Hunchback 880 ^ - ^ - - — — , y and whoro — it
her she first appeared London as performance Julia in tho being ' Juliet , a , ' letelher
cha briefl the racter Royalty y sk which etch T heatre she her mad , caroer in o 3 com 865 , noti p . n Tho g y all authoress own the , re -, tyifJfcA oft « VJa Rnr » r » AKpi «^ ftfl x ^ ' - ' which ^ «¦— »— sho ¦ - jic __ „_ . Iiievod . _ . _ . and tho
j ^ j ^ j ^ . *• • , V r ^ A- V / KJ V * V > ^^^^»» - » " - " « . ^ ^
Rii 161881 The Publishers' Circular 3o9 ...
rii 161881 The Publishers' Circular 3 o 9 a ,
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Citation
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Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), April 16, 1881, page 309, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_16041881/page/9/
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