9 LIST OF WORKS. 
8. POPULAR SCRIPTURE ZOOLOGY; or, History of the Animals 
mentioned in the Bible. By Maria EH. Cattow. Royal 16mo, cloth. 
With sixteen plates. 10s. 6d. coloured. 
‘* The series of popular books on scientific subjects, published by Messrs. Reeve and 
Co., has been increased by the addition of a treatise on ‘ Popular Scripture Zoology,’ 
by Maria E. Catlow, who has already contributed other volumes to the series. It con- 
tains a short and clear account of the animals mentioned in the Bible, classed according 
to their genera, and illustrated by a number of well-executed and characteristic co- 
loured plates. It is a seasonable addition to a very nice set of books.” —Guwardian. 
** Miss Catlow’s abilities as a naturalist, and her tact in popularizing any subject 
she undertakes, are too well known to need reiteration on this occasion.”??>—Notes and 
Queries. 
9. DROPS OF WATER; their marvellous and beautiful Inhabitants dis- 
played by the Microscope. By AaNnes Cattow. Square 12mo, with 
plates. 7s. 6d. coloured. 
** An elegant little book, both in the getting up and its literature. ... .. The text 
is accompanied by coloured plates that exhibit the most remarkable creatures of the 
watery world.’’—Speciator. 
‘* Of the manner in which this work is executed, we can say that, like Miss Catlow’s 
previous productions on natural history, it displays an accurate acquaintance with the 
subject, and a keen delight in the contemplation of the objects to which it is devoted.’ 
As far as the living beings which inhabit ‘ Drops of Water’ are concerned, we know of 
no better introduction to the use of the microscope than the present volume.’’— 
Atheneum. 
10. INSECTA BRITANNICA. Diptera. By F. Waker, Hsq., F.L.S. 
Vol. I. Price 25s. 
11, POPULAR HISTORY OF MOLLUSCA. By Mary Roserts. In 
one vol., royal 16mo. With twenty plates by Wing. 10s. 6d. coloured. 
‘*The authoress is already favourably known to British naturalists by her ‘ Concholo- 
gist’s Companion,’ and by other works on Natural History. We expected to find in it 
a useful and entertaining volume. We have not been disappointed...... The 
work is illustrated with eighteen plates, beautifully coloured—in most instances afford- 
ing a view of the structure of the animal, These drawings are not confined to the 
species living in shells: the various species of land slugs, and the nudibranchiate mol- 
lusca, the slugs of the sea, are all described and figured.””—Atheneum. 
12. POPULAR HISTORY OF BRITISH FERNS. By Tuomas Moore. 
Royal 16mo, cloth. With twenty plates by Fitch. 10s. 6d. coloured. 
‘*Mr. Moore’s ‘ Popular History of British Ferns’ forms one of the numerous ele- 
gant and instructive books by which Messrs. Reeve and Co. have endeavoured to popu- 
larize the study of Natural History. In the volume before us, Mr. Moore gives a clear 
account of the British Ferns, with directions for their cultivation ; accompanied by nu- 
merous coloured plates neatly illustrated, and preceded by a general introduction on 
the natural character of this graceful class of plants.’’—Spectator. 
13. SANDERS’S PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE CULTURE OF 
THE VINE, as well under Glass as in the Open Air. Illustrated with 
plates. 8vo. 5s. 
‘Mr. Assheton Smith’s place at Tedworth has long possessed a great English repu- 
tation for the excellence of its fruit and vegetables ; one is continually hearing in society 
