. The Methodist magazine and quarterly review . on on recent and fossil infusoria, by , whose_ discoveries in this field have been so surprising. To the articles succeed twenty-five pages of miscellanies, com-*prising twenty-five distinct notices of much variety and interest;but which for want of room we cannot here particularize.—New-Haven Record. First Latin Lessons, containing the most important parts of the Grammar of Language, together with appropriate Exercises in the Translating andWriting of Latin, for the use of beginners. By Charles Anthon, New-York : H


. The Methodist magazine and quarterly review . on on recent and fossil infusoria, by , whose_ discoveries in this field have been so surprising. To the articles succeed twenty-five pages of miscellanies, com-*prising twenty-five distinct notices of much variety and interest;but which for want of room we cannot here particularize.—New-Haven Record. First Latin Lessons, containing the most important parts of the Grammar of Language, together with appropriate Exercises in the Translating andWriting of Latin, for the use of beginners. By Charles Anthon, New-York : Harper & Brothers. The Harmony of Christian Faith and Christian Character, and the Culture andDiscipline of the Mind. By John Abercrombie, M. D., F. R. S. E., author of Inquiries concerning the Intellectual Powers and the Investigation of Truth,The Philosophy of the Moral Feelings, &c, &c. New-York: Harper &Brothers. 1839. pp. 146. ERRATUM. In the last No., page 109, the word spelled avQpC-on-Cve should be OV&XJTOKroVOf. J. fitttsttAt fy ..ir/.r,•// .{• Uru: J// Muti ny far*. t/rw-Vark. METHODIST MAGAZINE AND EDITED BY S> LUCKEY AND G. COLES Vol. XXI, No. 3. JULY, 1839. New Series—Vol. X; No. 3. For the Methodist Magazine and Quarterly Review. ? ? SKETCHES OF SOUTH AMERICA: PY REV. J. DEMPSTER, A. M., MISSIONARY AT BUENOS AYRES.[Continued from page 185.]PART III. NO. II. The copper-colored race—which, in both Americas, amounts tonot less than six millions—is a mysterious portion of the family ofman. In seeking its origin the antiquary rinds himself without eventhe dim light of fable, which sheds its faint and scattered beams onthe infancy of most ancient nations that have long since beenextinct. Nor is it less singular in the striking uniformity of its long-settled character. Though this race has existed in nearly twothousand tribes, which have been distinguished by hundreds of dis-similar languages, it has retained a surprising similarity in the greatoutlines of


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