We have received the following Catalogues:—G.
Willis’s (Great Piazza,
Covent Garden) Catalogue No. 41. New Series of
Second-hand Books,
Ancient and Modern; W.S. Lincoln’s (Cheltenham
House, Westminster Road)
Sixtieth (catalogue of Cheap Second-hand English and
Foreign Books); C.
Hamilton’s (4. Budge Place, City Road)
Catalogue No. 41. of an important
Collection of the Cheapest Tracts, Books, Autographs,
Manuscripts,
Original Drawings, &c. ever offered for sale.
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NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS.
MARTENS OR MERTENS THE PRINTER. Will D.L. kindly furnish us with a copy of the Note alluded to in his valuable communication in No. 42.?
JUNIUS IDENTIFIED. MR. TAYLOR’S Letter on his authorship of this volume is unavoidably postponed until next week.
M., who writes on the subject of Mr. Thomas’s Account of the State Paper Office, will be glad to hear that a Calendar of the documents contained in that department is in the press.
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SECOND PART OF MR. ARNOLD’S GREEK PROSE COMPOSITION.
Now Ready, in 8vo., price 6s. 6d.
A PRACTICAL INTRODUCTION TO GREEK PROSE COMPOSITION. Part Second. (On the PARTICLES.) In this Part the Passages for Translation are of considerable length.
By the Rev. THOMAS KERCHEVER ARNOLD, M.A. Rector
of Lyndon, and late
Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge.
RIVINGTON, St. Paul’s Church Yard, and Waterloo Place.
* * * * *
Of whom may be had, by the same Author,
1. The SEVENTH EDITION of the FIRST PART. In 8vo. 6s. 6d.
2. A PRACTICAL INTRODUCTION to GREEK ACCIDENCE. Fourth Edition. 8vo. 5s. 6d.
3. A PRACTICAL INTRODUCTION to GREEK CONSTRUING. 6s. 6d.
4. The FIRST GREEK BOOK; upon the plan of HENRY’S FIRST LATIN BOOK. 5s. (The SECOND GREEK BOOK is in the Press.)
* * * * *
ARCHAEOLOGICAL INSTITUTE OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND.
The Central Committee of the Institute have considered a Resolution, passed at a recent meeting of the British Archaeological Association at Manchester, August 24th, in reference to the expediency of promoting a union between the Association and the Institute. The Committee desire to give this public notice, that they are ready, as they have always been, to admit members of the Association desirous of joining the Institute. They have determined accordingly, that, in order to offer reasonable encouragement to the members of the Association, they shall henceforth be eligible without the payment of the customary entrance fee, on the intimation of their wish to the Committee to be proposed for election. Life-members of the Association shall be eligible as life-members on payment of half the usual composition. All members of the Association thus elected shall likewise have the privilege of acquiring the previous publications of the Institute at the price to original subscribers.