THE POSSIBILITY OF A SCIENCE OF CASUISTRY.
By ERNEST NORTHCROFT MERRINGTON, B.A. Crown 8vo, cloth, 2s. 6d.
A SHORT HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY.
By H. E. BARFF, M.A. Demy 8vo, cloth gilt, 7s. 6d. (post free, 8s.).
TRANSCRIBER NOTES:
Punctuation has been normalized without note.
Alternate and/or archaic spellings have been retained.
Page 72: “horse’s” changed to “horses’” (so hard on the horses’ feet).
Page 175: “resouces” changed to “resources” (for its mineral resources.)
Page 177: “supples” changed to “supplies” (enabled the early settlers to obtain supplies).
Page 193: “suppresssion” changed to “suppression” (wanton impertinence that would require suppression.)
Page 195: “swagsmen” changed to “swagmen” (to ration the swagmen as they pass along).
Page 241: “dessicated” changed to “desiccated” (the land became desiccated, the lakes lost their freshness.)
Page 254: “crystaline” changed to “crystalline” (the auriferous area is confined to veins traversing a crystalline diorite).
Page 257: duplicate “the” removed (would include all the palæozoic, metamorphic).
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Page 14: “setlement” changed to “settlement” (made its way from settlement to settlement).