The farmer's every-day book; or, Sketches of social life in the country : with the popular elements of practical and theoretical agriculture Also, five hundred receipts on hygeian, domestic, and rural economy . race and blood as their oppressors.—Syracuse Star. The Coal Miners, the Needlewomen, the Coolies, the Factories, and the Press Gangs are eachdescribed in tnrn. Volume after volume of romance has been written, and day after day spent indebate, upon these topics, but we doubt if they ever have been so fully represented before, in alltheir length and bredth. Its scenes are pictures from re


The farmer's every-day book; or, Sketches of social life in the country : with the popular elements of practical and theoretical agriculture Also, five hundred receipts on hygeian, domestic, and rural economy . race and blood as their oppressors.—Syracuse Star. The Coal Miners, the Needlewomen, the Coolies, the Factories, and the Press Gangs are eachdescribed in tnrn. Volume after volume of romance has been written, and day after day spent indebate, upon these topics, but we doubt if they ever have been so fully represented before, in alltheir length and bredth. Its scenes are pictures from real life.—Albany Evening Jour. Great Britain ought to be ashamed to talk of American slavery, so long as her factories con-tinue to be scenes of such horrible degradation and suffering.—Albany Argus. This is a large, well printed volume, mainly compiled from official documents. Some of themore exciting descriptions are illustrated by spirited wood engravings, though this is hardlyneeded, for more revolting pictures of degraded humanity than the author has sketched, no oneneed desire to read.—Dollar Newspa/per. Published by MILLER, ORTOIV & MULLIGAN, Auhurn and Buffalo, THE AUSTRALIAN CAPTIVE. Or, 15 Years Adventures of Wm. Jackman, Including liis Eesidence among the Cannibals of Xnvt^ Land. with Portaits and other Illustrations. Edited by Rev I. Chamberlain. Muslin, 392 pp. 12nio. Price Sl;-5. OPINIONS OF THE PRESS —BRIEF EXTRACTS, The glowing accounts from this new Opbir have been so well authenticated that the statement?la this volume will gain ready credence.—RocheMer Democrat. This is a neat volume of some 400 pages, containing a new chapter in the history of adventure .the hero being the first civilized man who ever returned from a forced and lengthened residencfamong the anthropophagi of Xew Holland, and told the story of what he saw and sufiered,—Evral New Yorker. He gives a most glowing account of the manners and customs of the barbarous people amonpwhich h


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Keywords: ., bookauthorblakejoh, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, bookyear1854