The Home Department of the Almanack comprises—I. Civil and Ecclesiastical; including the Government offices and the India House; together with the forms of procedure, and educational studies, requisite for obtaining Civil Appointments, and all matters connected with those appointments, from the commencing salary to the retiring allowance.—II. Military and Marine; including information of a similar kind respecting these services, and the Home Establishment of the East India Company.—III. Commercial; containing Lists of Merchants, Agents, Associations, &c, throughout the United Kingdom; likewise, the trades connected with India and the Colonies; and Tariff of Indian and Colonial produce.
The East Indian and Colonial Department embraces—I. Civil. The Government Lists of Bengal, Madras, Bombay, Ceylon, Hong Kong, Australia, New Zealand, Mauritius, and the Cape of Good Hope; Lists of Civil Servants and their appointments, and of Judicial Establishments, with a detailed account of the Benefit Funds.—II. Military. Staff and Field Officers; Distribution of the Army, including the Royal troops; Ecclesiastical Establishment; and all Benefit Funds.—III. Commercial. List of Mercantile Firms, Banks, Insurance Companies, Public Institutions, &c., in India and the Colonies; with the respective Tariffs, and Tables of Money, Weights, Measures, &c., and other miscellaneous information.
Religious and Educational.
THE PARENT’S CABINET OF AMUSEMENT AND INSTRUCTION.
A valuable and instructive Present for the Young. Each volume of this useful and instructive little work comprises a variety of information on different subjects:—Natural History, Biography, Travels, &c.; Tales, original and selected; and animated Conversations on the objects that daily surround young people. The various tales and subjects are illustrated with Woodcuts. Each volume is complete in itself, and may be purchased separately. In six neatly bound vols., price 3s. 6d. each.
“Every parent at all interested in his children must have felt the difficulty of providing suitable reading for them in their hours of amusement. This little work presents these advantages in a considerable degree, as it contains just that description of reading which will be beneficial to young children.”—Quarterly Journal of Education.
LITTLE STORIES FROM THE PARLOUR PRINTING-PRESS.
By the Author of “The Parent’s Cabinet.” Royal 18mo., price 2s. 6d. neatly bound in cloth.
“A very nice little book for children. The author has evidently been familiar with children, and brought himself to understand their feelings. No child’s book that we have ever seen has been so admirably levelled at their capacities as this admirably written little book.”—Weekly Chronicle.