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Goldsmith's History of Greece.

Abridged by the Author. Edited by the Author of "American Popular Lessons." 18mo, Half Sheep, 45 cents.

Goldsmith's History of Rome.

Abridged by the Author. Edited by H. W. HERBERT. 18mo, Half Sheep, 45 cents.

Few writers have equaled, and still fewer excelled, the elegant and graceful style of Goldsmith. Those who may read these works will not only inform themselves of the leading facts of Grecian and Roman history, but may, at the same time, imbibe from their perusal a love of the beautiful in diction and expressionas necessary in the culture of the mind as the knowledge of events.

Goldsmith's Poetical Works.

Illustrated by Wood Engravings, from the Designs of C. W. Cope, A.R.A., Thomas Creswick, J. C. Horsley, R. Redgrave, A.R.A., and Frederic Tayler, Members of the Etching Club. With a Biographical Memoir, and Notes on the Poems. Edited by BOLTON CORNEY. 8vo, Muslin, gilt edges, $1 75; Turkey Morocco, gilt edges, $3 00.

Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield.

18mo, Muslin, 37 cents.

Clarke's Elements of Algebra:

embracing also the Theory and Application of Logarithms; to gether with an Appendix, containing Infinite Series, the General Theory of Equations, and the most approved Methods of resolving the higher Equations. 8vo, Sheep extra, $1 00.

The object of this treatise is to present to the student a full and systematic textbook of practical and theoretical elementary algebra. Within a brief compass, the author has embraced a more comprehensive view of the science than is to be found in any similar work. The work has been extensively adopted in numerous academies and schools in different sections of the country.

Comte's Philosophy of Mathematics.

Translated from the Cours de Philosophie Positive, by W. M. GILLESPIE, A.M. 8vo, Muslin, $1 25.

We rejoice that an American scholar has undertaken and so ably executed a translation of a work which has been so favorably received and so highly commended by the first scientific men of Europe. For comprehensiveness of scope, for clearness of statement and exposition, for breadth of inquiry and depth of thought, we esteem it superior to any work in this department of science with which we are acquainted.-Evangelical Review.

The Tragedies of Euripides.

Translated by Rev. R. POTTER, M.A. 3 vols. 18mo, Muslin, $1 30.

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Morse's School Geography.

A new System of Geography, for the use of Schools. Illustrated by more than 50 Cerographic Maps, and numerous Engravings on Wood. 4to, Half Bound, 50 cents.

This popular new school geography, entirely original in its plan, is extremely beautiful in its pictorial embellishments, lucid and simple in its adaptation to the purposes of popular instruction, as well as by far the cheapest of all works of the kind ever produced. Since its publication over half a million copies have been printed.

The Public School Society of the city of New York have unanimously adopted Morse's School Geography into their extensive schools, and it has been generally introduced into those of Philadelphia and elsewhere.

The superiority of this Geography over all others, consists in,

1. The Arrangement is such that the Map, Questions on the Map, and Description of each country are on the same page, or on pages directly opposite, enabling the pupil to refer readily from one to the other, without the inconvenience of two books, or even the necessity of turning the leaf.

2. The Maps are more numerous, and generally on a larger scale than in any other School Geography.

3. The Exercises on the Map are so framed as to present a connected view of the great features of each country.

4. The Descriptions are a series of short paragraphs, written in concise style, and confined to the most interesting and characteristic matter.

5. The correct Pronunciation of difficult names is indicated by dividing into syllables, accenting, &c.

6. The General and Comparative Views at the end of the volume are on the plan first introduced by the author in 1820, and since adopted by many other School Geographies. They are regarded as well fitted to exercise and strengthen the judgment.

7. The new art of Cerography is applied for the first time to the illustration of a work of this kind, and enables the publishers to sell it at a very low price.

The whole work is the result of long and careful study, and is intended to impress upon the mind of the student such outlines of geography as will form the best foundation for farther and extensive acquisitions.

Morse's North American Atlas.

Containing the following beautifully colored Cerographic Maps:
North America, Canada East, Canada West, Nova Scotia, New
Brunswick, Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New York and Vicinity,
City of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Michigan, Iowa,
Wisconsin, Wisconsin South, Maryland, Delaware, Ohio, Indiana,
Illinois, Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Indian
Territory, Northern Texas, New Mexico, Florida, Louisiana, Tex-
as, California, Mexico, Central America, Yucatan, West India Isl-
ands. Folio, Half Roan, $2 75.

For general accuracy, beauty of appearance, and compactness as well as economy, these Cerographic maps have been universally considered as unrivaled. They have been prepared with great care, chiefly from new and original materials, collected, during some years, by Samuel Breese, from a correspondence embracing more than 2000 letters and several hundred local manuscript maps.

Docharty's Institutes of Algebra.

Being the First Part of a Course of Mathematics, designed for the use of Schools, Academies, and Colleges. 12mo, Sheep extra, 75

cents.

This is a very comprehensive treatise on the beautiful science to which it is devoted. Commencing with the simplest elements of algebra, in a form adapted to the comprehension of the youngest learner, it unfolds the subject in its more advanced principles, including all that is necessary in a regular collegiate course. The language is uniformly elegant and concise, the principles are stated with rigid exactness, and illustrated by a profusion of opposite examples. A better manual for practical use was never presented to the attention of teachers and students.

Docharty's Arithmetic.

A Practical and Commercial Arithmetic: containing Definitions of Terms, and Rules of Operations, with numerous Examples. The whole forming a complete Treatise for the use of Schools and Academies. 12mo, Sheep extra, 75 cents.

This is one of the few works designed for elementary instruction in which the subject is presented in a truly scientific form, and the consecutive parts developed in a manner entirely suited to the recitation room. The definitions are concise and exact, the rules explicit, and the explanations lucid and exactly where they should be. The algebraic notation conduces much to the compactness and simplicity of the operations, and prepares the pupil to enter upon the study of the higher branches of mathematics. The concise, beautiful, and masterly manner in which the Second Part, Commercial Arithmetic, is treated greatly enhances the value of the work for those who are preparing to enter the counting-room or broker's office. As a complete treatise on commercial matters there is nothing that can compare with it.

Haswell's Engineering.

Engineers' and Mechanics' Pocket-book, containing United States and Foreign Weights and Measures; Tables of Areas and Circumferences of Circles, Circular Segments, and Zones of a Circle; Squares and Cubes, Square and Cube Roots; Lengths of Circular and Semi-elliptic Arcs; and Rules of Arithmetic. Mensuration of Surfaces and Solids; the Mechanical Powers; Geometry, Trigonometry, Gravity, Strength of Materials, Water Wheels, Hydraulics, Hydrostatics, Pneumatics, Statics, Dynamics, Gunnery, Heat, Winding Engines, Tonnage, Shot, Shells, &c. Steam and the Steam Engine; Combustion, Water, Gunpowder, Cables and Anchors, Fuel, Air, Guns, &c., &c. Tables of the Weights of Metals, Pipes, &c. Miscellaneous Notes, Dimensions of Steamers, Mills, Motion of Bodies in Fluids, Orthography of Technical Terms, &c., &c. Eighth Edition and Eighteenth Thousand. With Additions. 12mo, Pocket-book form, $1 25.

Indispensable to every mechanic; it is, in fact, a condensed encyclopedia of scientific and practical mechanical information.

Ovid's Metamorphoses and Epistles.

Translated by DRYDEN, POPE, ADDISON, CONGREVE, and others. Portrait. 2 vols. 18mo, Muslin, 90 cents.

Loomis's Course of Mathematics and Astronomy.

The Course of Mathematics by Prof. Loomis has now been for several years before the public, and has received the general approbation of teachers throughout the country. The following are some of the institutions in which this Course has been introduced, either wholly or in part: Dartmouth, College, N. H.; Williams College, Mass.; Amherst College, Mass.; Yale College, Conn.; Trinity College, Conn.; Wesleyan University, Conn.; Hamilton College, N. Y.; Hobart Free College, N. Y.; New York University, N. Y.; Rochester University, N. Y.; Dickinson College, Penn.; Jefferson College, Penn.; Alleghany College, Penn.; Lafayette College, Penn.; St. James's College, Md.; Emory and Henry College, Va.; Bethany College, Va.; South Carolina College, S. C.; La Grange College, Ala. ; Transylvania University, Ky.; Cumberland College, Ky.; Western Reserve College, Ohio; Oberlin College, Ohio; Asbury University, Ind.; Illinois College, III.; Shurtleff College, Ill.; McKendree College, Ill.; Knox College, Ill.; Missouri University, Mo.; Beloit College, Wisconsin.

Elements of Algebra.

Designed for Beginners. Sixth Edition. 12mo, pp. 260, Sheep extra, 62 cents.

This volume is intended for the use of students who have just completed the study of arithmetic. It is believed that it will be found sufficiently clear and simple to be adapted to the wants of a large class of students in our common schools. It explains the method of solving equations of the first degree, with one, two, or more quantities; the principles of involution and of evolution; the solution of equations of the second degree; the principles of ratio and proportion, with arithmetical and geometrical progression. Every principle is illustrated by a copious collection of examples, and a variety of miscellaneous problems will be found at the close of the book.

A Treatise on Algebra.

Twelfth Edition. 8vo, pp. 334, Sheep extra, $1 00.

This treatise is designed to contain as much of algebra as can be profitably read in the time allotted to this study in most of our colleges, and those subjects have been selected which are most important in a course of mathematical study. Particular pains have been taken to cultivate in the mind of the student a habit of generalization, and to lead him to reduce every principle to its most general form. It is believed that, in respect of difficulty, this treatise need not discourage any youth of fifteen years of age who possesses average abilities, while it is designed to form close habits of reasoning, and cultivate a truly philosophical spirit in more mature minds.

Elements of Geometry

and Conic Sections. Ninth Edition. 8vo, pp. 226, Sheep extra,

75 cents.

The arrangement of the propositions in this treatise is generally the same as in Legendre's Geometry, but the form of the demonstrations is reduced more nearly to the model of Euclid. The propositions are all enunciated in general terms, with the utmost brevity which is consistent with clearness. The short treatise on Conic Sections, appended to this volume, is designed particularly for those who have not time or inclination for the study of analytical geometry.

Trigonometry and Tables.

Eighth Edition. 8vo, pp. 344, Sheep extra, $1 50.

The Trigonometry and Tables, bound separately. The Trigonometry, $1 00; Tables, 50 cents.

This work contains an exposition of the nature and properties of logarithms; the principles of plane trigonometry; the mensuration of surfaces and solids; the principles of land surveying, with a full description of the instruments employed; the elements of navigation, and of spherical trigonometry. The tables furnish the logarithms of numbers to 10,000, with the proportional parts for a fifth figure in the natural number; logarithmic sines and tangents for every ten seconds of the quadrant, with the proportional parts to single seconds; natural sines and tangents for every minute of the quadrant; a traverse table; a table of meridional parts, &c.

Elements of Analytical Geometry,

and of the Differential and Integral Calculus. Sixth Edition. 8vo, pp. 278, Sheep extra, $1 50.

This treatise constitutes the fourth volume of a course of mathematics designed for colleges and high schools. The first part treats of the application of algebra to geometry, the construction of equations, the properties of a straight line, a circle, parabola, ellipse, and hyperbola; the classification of algebraic curves, and the more important transcendant curves. The second part treats of the diffenentiation of algebraic functions, of Maclaurin's and Taylor's theorems, of maxima and minima, transcendental functions, theory of curves, and evolutes. The third part exhibits the method of obtaining the integrals of a great variety of differentials, and their application to the rectification and quadrature of curves, and the cubature of solids. All the principles are illustrated by an extensive collection of examples. The work was prepared to meet the wants of the mass of college students of average abilities.

Practical Astronomy.

An Introduction to Practical Astronomy, with a Collection of Astronomical Tables. 8vo, pp. 497, Sheep extra.

This work furnishes a description of the instruments required in the outfit of an observatory, as also the methods of employing them, and the computations growing out of their use. It treats particularly of the Transit Instrument and of Graduated Circles; of the method of determining time, latitude, and longitude; with the computation of eclipses and occultations. The work is designed for the use of amateur observers, practical surveyors, and engineers, as well as students who are engaged in a course of training in our colleges. The tables which accompany this volume are such as have been found most useful in astronomical computations, and to them has been added a catalogue of 1500 stars, with the constants required for reducing the mean to the apparent places.

Recent Progress of Astronomy,

especially in the United States. A thoroughly revised Edition of this work is now in course of preparation.

This volume is designed to exhibit, in a popular form, the most important astronomical discoveries of the past ten years. It treats particularly of the discovery of the planet Neptune, of the new asteroids, of the new satellite, and the new ring of Saturn, of the great comet of 1843, Biela's comet, Miss Mitchell's comet, &c. ; of the parallax of fixed stars, motion of the stars, resolution of the nebulæ, &e.; the history of American observatories, determination of longitude by the electric telegraph, manufacture of telescopes in the United States, &c.

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