2 LIST or WORKS. 



2. ELEMENTARY PHYSICS, with numerous woodcuts. By Robert 



Hunt. Fcap. 8vo, cloth. 10^. Qd. 



3. POPULAR HISTORY OF MOLLUSCA. By Mary Roberts. In 



one voL, royal IGmo, with 20 coloured plates by Wing. 10^. Qd. 



4. POPULAR HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. By Thomas Moore. 



With twenty coloured plates by Fitch. Royal 16mo, cloth. 10^. Qd. 



5. SANDERS'S PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE CULTURE OF 



THE A'INE. Illustrated with plates. 8vo. 5^. 

 " Mr. Assheton Smith's place fit Tedworth has long possessed a great English repu- 

 tation for the excellence of its fruit and vegetables ; one is contmually hearing in society 

 of the extraordinary abundance and perfection of its produce at seasons when common 

 gardens are empty, and the great world seems to have arrived at the conclusion that 

 kitchen gardening and forcing there are nowhere excelled. We have, therefore, exam- 

 ined, with no common interest, the work before us, for it will be strange indeed if 

 a man who can act so skilfully as Mr. Sanders should be unable to offer adAdce of 

 corresponding value. We have not been disappointed. Blr. Sanders's directions are as 

 plain as words can make them, and, we will add, as judicious as his long experience had 

 led us to expect. After a careful perusal of his little treatise, we find nothing to object 

 to and much to praise." — Gardeners' Chronicle. 



6. POPULAR MINERALOGY. By Henry Sowerby. Royal 16mo. 



"With 20 coloured plates of figures. 10^. 6d. 

 "Mr. Sowerby has endeavoured to throw around his subject every attraction. His 

 work is fully and carefully illustrated with coloured plates." — Spectator. 



7. INSTINCT AND REASON. By Alfred Smee, F.R.S., Author of 



' Electro-Biology.' One vol. 8vo. With coloiu*ed plates by Wing, and 



Woodcuts. ISs. 

 " Mr. Smee's facts are extremely valuable. His work, moreover, is one of most vi^ad 

 interest. Entertainment and instruction are here combined in a very high degree ; and 

 the admirable coloured plates add essentially to its value." — Britannia. 



8. THE TOURIST'S FLORA. A Descriptive Catalogue of the Flowering 



Plants and Ferns of the British Islands, France, Germany, Switzerland, 

 and Italy. By Joseph Woods, F.A.S., F.L.S., F.G.S. 8vo. 18*. 



9. POPULAR HISTORY OF MAMMALIA. By Adam White, F.L.S., 



Assistant in the Zoological Department of the British Museum. With 

 sixteen colom-ed plates of Quadi-upeds, &c., by B. Waterhouse Haw- 

 kins, F.L.S. Royal 16mo. 10*. 6d. 

 " The present increase of our stores of anecdotal matter respecting every kind of 

 animal has been used with much tact by Mr. A\Tiite, who has a terse chatty way of 

 putting down his reflections, mingled with easy familiarity, which every one accus- 

 tomed daily to zoological pursuits issure to attain. The book is profusely illustrated." 

 Atlas. 



'• Mr. "WTiite has prosecuted natural history in almost aU its branches with singular 

 success, and in the beautiful work before us has gone far to raise up young aspirants as 



