of recommending three patien's 
oe each of “whow wills me- 
The second volume of Mr. Gepauie 
Cuarmens's Caledonia, or aa historical 
and topographical account of North Bri- 
e tain, from the most ancient to the pre- 
sent times, with a dictionary of places, 
chronological and philosophical, is in the 
a ea ‘It will be accompanied with en- 
sof innps, plans, &c. 
tie Rev. J. 8, CraaKe proposes to 
ish a work, entitled Naval Records 
ofthe late and present Wars, consisting 
va series of eng grav ings from original 
ns, by Mr. N ack, illustrative of 
wpa g gave geen at sea, since 
e cot faa mento ‘the war in 1793, 
a “ae ied. with histurical accounts. 
Sn eray ice will be ex ed by Fiut- 
audseer, and other sminent ants 
0. cba Mr, Wah yaaok Pa 
leat ses of D Cire. th Ob-- 
His’ Rt is i and. 
y respects the reverse of what has 
; een so gener ally” followed of late years. 
heaeark wa ill algo eontain cases allied to 
pebetss, in whieh o sim ence 
een succe a 
. 
» 
4 
‘7 
“i Ane volui aft igs rap phical 
f the late” Tex, T ee 
ee ay by themMev. OuN Woo nite 
Hye eerie, from his poetical v 
ee. literary. correspondence: between 
ie lent persons, leit by him for pub- 
aa shortly mike its appear- 
pepe f Lie of Rbiiney, by Mr. Bayrey, 
ea finished. This is expected to 
be av interesting work, that will tend to” 
nuke that eminent painter more uni~ 
yersally known:—he to whom H 
ae hd paid so classical @ tribute 
ion. : 
letter (transmitted to the “Navy 
30 » by Cxptain Hodgson, of his Ma= 
ty ss P ‘Yrusty, tates, that the appa 
atus dite atentee of an inven- 
jon Tor lst g fresh water ‘from sea 
7" ci used in the above vessel, pertorm- 
ved very w il, and consumed fess fuel 
one before in use tor the same pure 
at the operation of distillation 
t inthe least interfere with the 
of the ship’s company’s meat ; 
at when three byilers are in use, from 
wt wity to twenty-five gallons of fresh 
rater per hour are produced ; and that 
tho gh the water at first.is not perfectly 
roe eable to the taste, thongh 3 ye 
fy et.) 
bk + 4 ‘ a : 
Literary and Philosophical Intelligence. 
cs, 
55 
when exposed to the air for a short time, 
it becomes yery goud. The apparatus 
for the Trusty was of the size calculated 
for a fifty gun snip. 
The Rev. Dr. Eowarp Crarke, of 
Cambridge, ‘has in the press an account 
of his Travels through Russia, the terrie 
tories of the Don Cossacks, Kuban Tar 
tary, the Crimea, &c. in one volume, 
quarto, with numerous engravings. 
The following method is recommended 
for clearing fruit-trees of moss:—Sprin- 
kle or dust the mossy limbs, when their 
leaves are off them, in damp, foggy wea- 
ther, with common wood-ashes; and in 
the course of two or three months the 
moss will disappear wherever:the wood 
ashes have touched; perbaps a large 
wooden dredging-box would be the best 
instrument for this operation. sale 
Mr. Lawrence Dunpas CaMpaern 
is preparing for the press an Account of 
the Kingdom of Nypal, in the Kast fn- 
dies, from a memoir of the embassy de- 
puted in 1793, by the Marquis Corne 
-wallis, then governoy-general of British 
Tidia, to the court of CAtmonda, writ- 
fen originally by Colonel Kirkpatrick, the 
British « envoy on that occasion. Nypak 
is a country singularly interesting not 
only from the beauty of its scenery, the 
uncommon salubrity of its climate, the 
variety and value of its physieal produc- 
tions, the character, and customs. of its 
people, ‘and the peculiarity of its govern 
inent, but also froma its contiguity to the 
British dominions) in Bengal, and more 
particularly fromthe: circumstance. of its 
being at present.a blank in our maps ef 
Asia. be, work will appear in the 
course of next spring, in one volume 
royal and imperial Guarto, andswill be ile, 
tustrated with a map aud engravings. 
_AnA is tothe Poetical works of. 
a we s‘Little “esq. being att exe 
~ posure of ‘the Bits mos plagiarism of 
thal stication, 1 isin press. 
first part ¢ fF #-€lironological series 
“of te wa, st val table, - searce, “anil ‘faithe 
fal: elish ranslations in’ Poetry and 
aad rom the Greek Poets and) ‘Prose 
authors, with selected, and vew notes, 
corrections, pre es, lives, ‘maps, and 
heads from antiqnes, will soon make its . 
appearance in royal octavo, and printed 
in double columns. » The first part con- 
‘tains Mesiod’s works, by the Rev. Fran- 
cisirr, “A new translation of the whole 
of Pindar's Odes will be the second work 
of this series, 
A new edition of the rocks text of 
Herodutus, cavefully iis from the 
, edition 
