ADVERTISEMENTS. 
6 6 5 
111 
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. 
“We congratulate the publisher in having presented a valuable little work in so easily 
accessible a form, which, like many attempts at popular scientific expositions, is neither deficient 
in accuracy nor superficial in information.”— Dublin Medical Quarterly Review. 
“ It is the composition, not merely of a mechanical observer, but of an accomplished 
botanist; and in the description of the parts as they are prepared for examination, and in the 
systematic manner in which the subjects are introduced, the reader has an abstract of our 
present knowledge of structural and physiological botany. We can recommend this hook as 
being well written, well translated, and got up in a very creditable manner.”— Medical Times. 
On the 1st of each month is published, in Royal 8vo., 24 pages, price Sixpence, 
ILLUSTRATED WITH ENGRAVINGS, 
THE NATURALIST; 
A MAGAZINE OF NATURAL HISTORY IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. 
Conducted by 
BEVERLEY R. MORRIS, ESQ., A.B., M.D., T.C.D., 
MEM. WEST. CLUB. 
“ The Naturalist” for August last contains a Plate and account of the occurrence near 
Leeds of a specimen of the American Mottled Owl ( Strix Asm), new to Britain. 
u The Naturalist” was established with a view of affording to those of limited means a 
standard Periodical, which should take in all branches of Natural History ; and which, while 
the information given in its pages was popular in its character, should yet be accurate, and 
available for all scientific purposes. For the way in which these objects have been carried 
out, the Editor confidently refers to the four Volumes now before the public. Many of the 
communications are of great value, and all will be read with much interest. 
“ The Naturalist” interferes with no other Magazine, there being no other Periodical 
which takes in all branches of Natural History, except at such a price as to be entirely out of 
the reach of the great mass of working naturalists. 
In order to extend the usefulness of the Magazine, the Editor confidently trusts that his 
friends will kindly continue to assist him in making its existence more generally known; by 
so doing, a wider field for contributions will be opened, and he will gladly avail himself of the 
additional means thus placed at his disposal to render “ The Naturalist” still more attrac¬ 
tive and valuable. 
Communications , Drawings , and Rooks for Review to be addressed to Beverley R. Morris , 
Esq., M.D ., Bishopw ear mouth , Durham. 
London : Groombridge and Sons, Paternoster Row ; Edinburgh: James Hogg, 4, 
Nicolson Street. And by order of any Bookseller in Town or Country. 
Now ready, neatly bound in green cloth, gilt, 8vo., the 2nd Volume of 
THE NATURAL HISTORY REVIEW, 
With Woodcuts and Lithographic Illustrations, 
For 1855. 
London: S. Highley, 32, Fleet-street. Dublin: Hodges and Smith, 105, 
Grafton-street. Edinburgh: Johnstone and Hunter. Forwarded by post, on 
receipt of 10s. 6d. worth of postage stamps, sent to the Editors, No. 5, Trinity. College, 
Dublin. 
