Rev. Zexter Clapp, 3 Roxbury,
SOUTHERN QUARTERLY REVIEW.
Abercrombie's Essays, 522. Agriculture, 262.
Agricultural Prospects of South-Caro- lina; her resources and her true poli- cy, 118-148; regular decline since 1833 in quantity of cotton grown there,119; competition with the Gulf States hopeless, 120; production of cotton in Texas rapidly increas- ing, 123; rice, the most important staple of South-Carolina, next to cotton, 127; new products she might resort to, when no longer able to depend on her cotton crops, 127-135; union of manufactures with agriculture her true policy, 135-141; moral and physical in- fluence of manufactories, 141— 145; negroes easily made useful in cotton factories, 146.
A Manual of Ancient and Modern History, 258.
American Shepherd, The 516. An Issue with the Reviewer of "Nott's Caucasian and Negro Races," 148- 190; Chrysostom's principle for interpreting the beginning of Ge-
nesis, 157; chronology of Archbi- shop Usher adopted by the British Parliament, 165; epoch of Menes, first king of Egypt, discussed, 168 -175; defence of Dr. Nott's opi- nion, that Shem and Ham were twins, 179; whether Cush was the progenitor of the Negroes, 180; the physical differences of men as old as the oldest record of our spe- cies, 184; creation of new races of men since the flood not improba- ble, 185; universality of the De- luge, 188.
Arnold, Dr., miscellaneous works of,
Barnes' Notes, 252. Brownson's Quarterly Review, 258. Bush's Anastasis, 522.
Church, Dr., on Education, 255. Coit's Puritanism, 519.
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