TO TO NO MASTER PRINTERS.-Wanted, years connected with the Row Houses, and intimately sequainted with the above businesses in all their departments, is open to an engagement either as MANAGER or TRAVELLER; in the latter capacity he has a good Town and Country con. nexion. He has also a practical knowledge of Jobbing Office. Can assist in the Shop if required. Good references.-Address L. L., Mr. W. Johnson's, Printer, Horncastle. O JOURNEYMEN Printing. First-class references. Address 3. T. R., To PRINTERS. Wanted, a Practical Printer, capable of taking the Management of a Newspaper and Jobbing Office where good taste is required. - Address, stating salary, age, and references, to Pica, Gazette Office, Tunbridge Wells. TRAVELLER. -To WHOLESALE and FANCY STATIONERS, PUBLISHERS, To PRINTERS.-Wanted, by a Married &c.-An experienced TRAVELLER, having a Man, a situation as OVERSEER in a News, and Printing Businesses, is desirous of a re-engagethorough knowledge of the Stationery, Bookselling, Book, or Jobbing Office, or would take the Management.-Address F. R. S., Publishers' Circular Office, ment of a Country Office.-Address J. C. M., 28 Smyrk's Road, Old Kent Road, S. 14 Ludgate Hill, London, E.C. TO MASTER PRINTERS.-A steady COMPOSITOR and PRESSMAN. Young Man would be glad to hear of a permanent situation as COMPOSITOR. — Address Printer, 9 Elvetham Road, Birmingham. Wanted, by an experienced workman in ordinary and fancy Jobbing, a situation as WORKING FOREMAN. Thorough competence in every branch of the trade guaranteed. References as to character and ability on application. Lowest salary accepted 30s. per week.-Address K. B., TO MASTER PRINTERS. Wanted, 9 Norman Read East, St. Leonard's-on-Sea. a situation, by a steady Man, as COMPOSITOR or PRESSMAN. Good testimonials. Bets, at Mr. Johnson's, 58 Wellington Street, Bradford, Yorkshire. TO BOOKBINDERS. Wanted, a TO PRINTERS.-Wanted, the Manage ment of a General Jobbing Office; will keep the Books, &c. The Advertiser is a thoroughly practical hand, of sober and industrious habits. Good reference.-Address R. W. B., Mr. Black Young Man as general BINDER: must be able to assist behind the counter when required.-shaw's, 49 Oxford Street East, Liverpool. Apply G., Post Office, Doncaster. To BOOKBINDERS. Wanted, a Young Man who can make Map Cases and Letter-Apply by letter, stating age, qualifications, and wages expected, to A. B. C., 6 Charing Cross, London, S.W. WANTED, in the Country, an active and intelligent Young Man of good address, Bookselling, and Stationery Trades. He is wanted who has served an apprenticeship to the Printing, to work in a Jobbing Office, and serve in the front Shop when required.-Apply, with full particulars, to A. H., 15 High Street, Kingsland, London. BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS, ANTED, by a respectable Young Man, a Situation in a Jobbing Office, and T who thoroughly understands the working of Ye and PRINTERS.-Wanted, by the Advertiser, Caxton' Machine. Good references.-Apply to aged 29 (married), a Re-engagement; being a pracC. H., Church Place, Church Street, Reading. tical Printer, would have no objection to assist in office if required. First-class references; fourteen years' experience.-Address A. D., Post Office, TO BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS, and PRINTERS.-Wanted, a re-engagement as ASSISTANT. 7 years' experience. Good references. - Address N., 18 Hertford Terrace, Coventry. TO BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS, &c.-Wanted, by a respectable Young Man, who has had upwards of 7 years' experience in the business, a situation as ASSISTANT. Would have no objection to assist occasionally in the Printing Office. Good references.-Address T. E. H., care of R. J. Severs, Bookseller, Wisbech. Overton, Hants. To O STATIONERS. Wanted, by a Practical and experienced Young Man, a situation as ASSISTANT. First-class references. Address W. J. S., Post Office, Sheffield. TO BOOKSELLERS & STATIONERS. Wanted, by a Young Man, aged 25, and 8 years in the Trade, a situation as GENERAL ASSISTANT.-Address T. E., Messrs. Grosvenor, Chater, & Co., Cannon Street. BALLANTYNE PRINTERS AND & CO. STEREOTYPERS, EDINBURGH. ESSRS. BALLANTYNE M rally, all the advantages in Printing which their Establishment-the most amply furnished and extensive in Scotland-commands. They are enabled to execute work of the best description at Hand-Press or Machine, or Machine Work of ordinary quality, at moderate rates of charge. Their Founts of Type are varied and extensive, affording an ample choice of material; and from the size of their Case-room, with the number and power of their Presses, they can turn out an amount of work, within a limited period of time, much exceeding that of ordinary Printing Offices. Estimates supplied for Composing, Stereotyping, and Printing Books or Serials in any style or quality of work, including paper and binding if required. CARRIAGE PAID TO ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTRY. PAUL'S WORK, EDINBURGH: Jan. 1865. Books Wanted to Purchase. Particulars of price, &c., to be sent direct to the parties whose names and addresses are given. BOOKS IN PRINT ARE NOT ADVERTISED FOR. Bickers & Sons, Booksellers, 1 Leicester Square Life of Jamie Wood the Miser Sumner on the Epistles, selected by Wilkinson, 12mo. Hart's Gustavus Adolphus ! Mauning's Sermons, 4 vols. Newman's Sermons, 6 vols. Yarrell's Birds, 1st edition Forbes Royle on the Fibres of India Forbes Royle on the Resources of India Karslake on the Lord's Prayer, 1861 Aristophanes' Clouds, by Mitchell Aristophanes' Acharnensis, by Mitchell Latimer's Sermons, 2 vols. 8vo. Semita Justorum, or Lives of the Saints Blomfield, H., 177 Grange Road, S.E. Betham on Dignities, and the English Constitution Mardon on Billiards, royal 8vo. 1858. Clifford, William, Bookseller, Exeter Neale's Eastern Church Maskell's Ancient Liturgy of the Church of England, according to the uses of Sarum, Bangor, &c. Bp. Waldegrave's Bampton Lectures Colbran, J., Royal Library, Tunbridge Wells Trench's New Testament Synonyms Illustrated London News. Christmas No. 1863. 3 copies Coomes, Bookseller, 141 Regent Street, W. Byron, 1st editions. Verses to a Lady Weeping; Lines to a Governess; Lines on a Portrait; Hebrew Melodies; Tasso; Parisina; Beppo; Prisoner of Chillon; Manfred; Dream; Ode; Prometheus; Fragment; Lara; Giaour; Corsair; Mazeppa; Siege of Corinth; Bride of Abydos Cornish, J. E., Bookseller, Manchester Carlyle's Letters and Speeches. 4 vol. edit. Vol. 4 Books Wanted to Purchase-continued. Chaucer's Works. Vol. 1. Bell's Pocket Edition Henningham & Hollis, Booksellers, 5 Mount Street, Army List (War Office). January 1863 Hindley, C., Bookseller, 41 North Street, Brighton A Rural Ramble to Brigthelmstone, &c. War at Brighton, or the Battle of the Tar Tub, a Poem Mrs. Hill's Apology' for having been induced to appear in the character of Scrub, Beau Stratagem, at Brighthelmstone Theatre, 1786. 4to. The Observan: Pedestrian Mounted, or a Donkey Tour to Brighton, 3 vols. Simpkin & Marshall, 1815 Rowlandson's Trip to Briglithelmstone: a Set of Prints Bewick's Birds Jones & Sons, Booksellers, 10 Broad St., Hereford Owen on Spiritual-mindedness, 12mo. or any edition Kirkland, W. S. & Co., 23 Salisbury Street, Strand Davy's West Indies before and since Emancipation. 1854 Walker's Chess Studies Dowling's Catalogue of Books of Old and New Testa ments Stephens or Stephenson on Anthropology Letts, Son, & Co., 8 Royal Exchange, E.C. Croudace's Tables of Interest at 4 per Cent., with Tables of Commission, 8vo. Hurst, Robinson, & Co. London, 1822 Lockwood & Co., Stationers'-Hall Court Owen's (Robt.) Life, by Himself, 8vo. cloth Percy's Metallurgy. Part 1, 8vo. cloth De la Beche's Geology, 8vo. cloth Parnell on Road-Making Hogg's Jacobite Relics Retrospective Review. Vols. 15 and 16 Beaumont and Fletcher, by Dyce, 11 vols. 8vo. Vols. 6 and 11 only Catalogue of Daniels' Sale Results of Committee of Inquiry and Report on Armstrong, Whitworth, and other Rifled Ordnance Hughes' Astronomical Charts Fawcett's Liturgy of Church of England Tales of the Castle, by Madame de Genlis. Translated Discussion on Rev. B. Grant on Christianity. Holyoake Mawson, H. O., Bookseller, 43 Kirkgate, Bradford Temple Bar. December 1862 Florist. January, February, April, 1860 Handy Andy. Part 8. Lover, 1842 Pickwick Papers. Parts 11, 12, 13 Chapman & Hall Miller, W. H., 225 Westminster Bridge Road, Lambeth, S. Gladstone's Homer Nann, John, 23 Euston Square, N.W. Plates of Fashions for the last Century, similar to Ackerman's Packer, G., Bookseller, 23 King Street, Portman Square The Rephuim, and their Connection with Egyptian History, by Fanny Corbaux, reprinted from the Journal of Sacred Literature, Vols. 1, 2, and 3, New Series Lawrence's Nobility of the English Gentry. Last edition published Parnell, G., Bookseller, 63 Southampton Row, W.C. Pawson & Brailsford, Booksellers, Church Gates, Sheffield Dr. Samuel Pegg's History of Beauchieff Abbey. London, Nicholls. About 1800 Reeve & Co., Booksellers, 5 Henrietta St., Covent Garden Hooker's Flora of New Zealand, 4to. Parts 1 and 2, plain or coloured Robinson, G., Reading Room, Crystal Palace Glenmore, or, A Voice from Glenmore, by D. Shaw. Supposed Scotch provincial publisher Rowsell, King William Street, Strand, W.C. Berry's Heraldry, Supplement. Parts 6 and 7 Simms, S. W., Bookseller, Bath Froude's England. Vol. 1 Hessey's Bampton Lectures Martyrs of Carthage (Englishman's Library) Smith & Son, 186 Strand, W.C. Seger's Russian Expedition. Good copy Stacy, Henry W., Bookseller, 2 Gentlemen's Walk, Haymarket, Norwich Genealogical Memoirs of the House of Hamilton, by An Enquiry into the Pedigree, Descent, &c. of the Chiefs Terry, Stoneman, & Co., 6 Hatton Garden, E.C. Tidy, H. T., Bookseller, Sittingbourne England and Wales Delineated by Thos. Dugdale. In 1s. Parts, royal 8vo. Parts 35 to completion. Tallis Treacher, H. & C., Brighton Vaughan's Sermons to Children Coleridge's Phantasmion. Pickering Etching Club Protoplast, 1st edit. Large-paper copy, illustrated by MACMILLAN & CO.'S NEW LIST. MR. PALGRAVE'S TRAVELS. CENTRAL and EASTERN ARABIA. By WILLIAM GIFFORD PALGRAVE. [In the press. CAWNPORE. By G. O. TREVELYAN, Author of 'The Competition Wallah.' [In the Spring. ESSAYS in CRITICISM. By MATTHEW ARNOLD, Professor of Poetry in the University of Oxford. [Next Week. The CLEVER WOMAN of the FAMILY. By the Author of 'The Heir of Redely ffe.' [In the press. [In the press. NEW NOVEL BY THE AUTHOR OF THE HEIR OF REDCLYFFE,' MISS RUSSELL'S HOBBY. A Novel. Two vols. crown 8vo. NEW VOLUME OF THE GOLDEN TREASURY SERIES.' A BOOK of GOLDEN DEEDS of ALL COUNTRIES and ALL TIMES. Gathered and Narrated by the Author of The Heir of Redclyffe.' With a Vignette from a Statuette of Miss Nightingale by Miss Bonham Carter. Handsomely bound in cloth, 43. 6d. The POEMS of ROBERT BURNS. Edited from the Original Edition, and from Manuscripts, with a copious Glossarial Index, and a brief Memoir. By ALEXANDER SMITH. Two vols. handsomely bound in cloth, with a Vignette Portrait and Design by J. B., engraved by Shaw, 98. These form part of the Golden Treasury Series.' BALLADS and SONGS of BRITTANY. By TOM TAYLOR. Translated from the Barsaz-Breiz' of Vicomte Hersart de la Villemarqué. With some of the Original Melodies harmonised by Mrs. TOM TAYLOR. With Illustrations by J. Tissot, J. E. Millais, R.A., J. Tenniel, C. Keene, E. Corbould, and II. K. Browne. Small 4to. cloth, 12s. GOBLIN MARKET, and OTHER POEMS. By CHRISTINA G. ROSSETTI. With Two Illustrations from Designs by D. G. Rossetti. New Edit., fep. 8vo. cloth, 5s. [Just ready. The poetical art of Miss Rossetti is simple, firm, and deep. . . . She can point to finished work-to work which it would be difficult to mend.'-Times. DANTE'S COMEDY.—The HELL. Translated into Literal Blank Verse. By W. M. ROSSETTI. With Introduction and Notes. Fcp. 8vo. [Immediately. The PROGRESS of DOCTRINE in the NEW TESTAMENT; considered in Eight Lectures preached before the University of Oxford, 1864, on the Foundation of the late Rev. John Bampton, M.A., Canon of Salisbury. By THOMAS DEHANY BERNARD, M.A., of Exeter College, Rector of Walcot. 8vo. cloth, 83. 64. [Just ready. VILLAGE SERMONS. By G. F. DE TEISSIER, B.D., Rector of Brampton, near Northampton, late Fellow and Tutor of Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Second Series, crown Svo. cloth, 8s. 6d. (This day.) Also, First Series, crown 8vo. 9s. The CHURCH of the FIRST DAYS. Lectures on the Acts of the Apostles. By C. J. VAUGHAN, D.D., Vicar of Doncaster. Vol. II. The Church of the Gentiles. (Just ready.) Fep. 8vo. cloth, 48. 6d. Vol. I. The Church of Jerusalem. (Lately published). Fcp. 8vo. cloth, 48. 6d. A CRITICAL HISTORY of CHRISTIAN LITERATURE and DOCTRINE, from the Death of the Apostles to the Nicene Council. By JAMES DONALDSON, M.A. Vol. I. The Apostolical Fathers. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d. The INTUITIONS of the MIND. By Dr. M'Cosн, Professor of Logic and Metaphysics in the Queen's University for Ireland. New Edition, revised throughout, 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d. [This day. MANUAL of POLITICAL ECONOMY. By HENRY FAWCETT, M.A., Fellow of Trinity Hall, Professor of Political Economy in the University of Cambridge. Second Edition, crown 8vo. cloth, 12s. [This day. NOTES on BRAZILIAN QUESTIONS. By W. D. CHRISTIE, late Her Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary in Brazil. Crown 8vo. cloth, 68. 6d. [This day. CONTENTS:-The Story of the Free Africans.-Slavery in Brazil.-The Aberdeen Act.-Commercial Relations with Brazil.-British Claims on Brazil.-Brazil, Buenos Aires, and Monte Video.-The Reprisals in Brazil. LONDON and CAMBRIDGE. (89) Printed by GEORGE ANDREW SPOTTISWOODE, at 5 New-street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride, in the City of London and Published by SAMPSON LOW, at the Office, 14 Ludgate Hill, in the same parish.- Wednesday, Feb. 1, 1865. General Record of British and Foreign Literature CONTAINING A COMPLETE ALPHABETICAL LIST OF ALL NEW WORKS PUBLISHED IN GREAT BRITAIN AND EVERY WORK OF INTEREST PUBLISHED ABROAD LIFERARY INTELLIGENCE... 81-6 BOOKS PUBLISHED IN GREAT BRITAIN FROM FEBRUARY 1 TO 14......................................... 86-99 BOOKS ADVANCED IN PRICE .......................................................Eg 200KS REDUCED IN PRICE....... LAW REPORTS .... BOOKS NOW FIRST ADVERTISED AS PUBLISHED 89 .89 ................................................................ 91, 104 ........................................................90-95 .......... BOOKS LATELY PUBLISHED, NEW EDITIONS, ETC........................ ..........................................95, 97 MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS WANTED TO PURCHASE 102, 103 THE HE gossip in the newspapers and literary reviews has recently been confined almost exclusively to rumours of new journals, and criticisms upon the latest comers in this field. The Pall-Mall Gazette, the resuscitated Owl, the new daily paper to be started by Mr. Donald Nicol-the Glow-worm, not to speak of other more impalpable ventures, have furnished inexhaustible topics to the table talkers, and literary intelligencers, and loungers, and flâneurs of the weekly and daily press. That journalism has not yet accomplished all that is possible under that state of complete freedom which it now enjoys is pretty obvious; and those who tell us that there is no room for new projects will probably find a few years hence that they have been no better prophets than their predecessors of this school. In fact, some of our provincial cities already produce larger sheets, with news and advertisements certainly better arranged, than those of their metropolitan contemporaries; and though their literary talent is generally inferior, the physical characteristics of their issues plainly indicate what may yet be accomplished in cheap journalism. The circulation of the principal cheap daily newspaper in London-the Daily Telegraph-is known to be very large; but it would be paying an ill compliment to English energy to suppose that the new movement will end here. Its readers complain that the news columns are inundated with advertisements; that its parliamentary reports are too much abridged, and that its intelligence is crowded, and not easy to be read without strong eyesight. The Morning Star is less chargeable with these faults, and is distinguished by a high tone of moral and political principle; but its views in political economy and political philosophy generally are too far in advance of its time to be widely popular. The Standard is the largest of the present cheap daily papers of the metropolis, and gives eight columns more than any of its contemporaries but its political views are not such as find favour with the multitude of readers. While these facts are notorious, and while success in journalism is as all know highly profitable, it is not to be wondered at that projects for new papers are continually heard of. |