The rights, duties and relations of domestic servants and their masters and mistresses : with a short account of servants' institutions, &c. and their advantages / by T. Henry Baylis.
- Thomas Henry Baylis
- Date:
- 1873
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The rights, duties and relations of domestic servants and their masters and mistresses : with a short account of servants' institutions, &c. and their advantages / by T. Henry Baylis. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by The University of Leeds Library. The original may be consulted at The University of Leeds Library.
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![THE BAR EXAMINATION JOURNAL. THE BAR EXAMINATION JOURNAL, containing tlie Examination Papers on all the subjects, with Answers, set at the General Examination for Call to the Bar. Edited by A. D. Tyssen, B.C.L.,]\I.A.,ofthc Inner Temple, and Sir 11. K. Wilson, Bart.,M.A., of Lincoln’s Inn, Barristers-at-Law. Published in Numbers, 8vo., 3s. each, by post, 3s, 1J., after the respective Examinations for Calls to the Bar in each year. Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,10 and 11 Trin. 1871 to Mich. 1875, both inclusive, may now be had. *** Copies of Vol. I. of the Bar Exaviination Journal, containing Nos. 1 to 6, complete with Indexes, Sfc., may be had, jn'ice 18s. cloth. Copies of Vol. II. of the same, containing Nos. 7 to 11, complete with Indexes, Sfc., may also be had, price IGs. cloth, —♦— THE Brcliminarji ^ramimvtimt |ountal STUDENT'S LITERARY MAGAZINE. Edited by JAMES ERLE BENHAM, Formerly of King’s College, London; Author of “ The Student’s Examination Guide, &c. Now Complete in Eighteen Numbers, containing all the Ques- tions, with Answers, from 1871 to 1875, and to be had in 1 Vol. 8vo., price 18s. cloth. Nos. I. to XVIII., containing the following Ai’ticles by the Editor, may still be had, price Is. each, by post Is. \d. “The Imperfections of the Orthography of the English Language.” “ Lectures on the Origin of the English Language.” “ What Endow- ments are essential to those aspiring to become Barristers and Solicitors?” “The Study of the English, French and Latin Languages.” “ How to become an Orator; with Selections from the Speeches of Lord Brougham, Pitt, Curran, Daniel O’Connell, the late Earl of Derby, Mr. Gladstone, Mr. Disraeli, and others.” “How many Hours a Day do you recom- mend me to study?” “The Improvement of the Memory.” “What leads to Success in Life?” “Brains; Quantity or Quality.” “The Power of Imagination.” “ The Amalgamation of the Two Branches of the Profession.” “ The Advantage of Education.’ ’ “ Common Sense;” “The New Jury Bill.” “Ladies as Lawyers!” “Psychological Enquiries.” “Eminent Lawyers.” “Rhetoric.” “Quotations by Authors and Advocates.” “ Men of Genius deficient in Conversation.” “ The Choice of a Profession, and its Influence on the Mind.” “ The Incorporation of the Inns of Court and the proposed Law University.” “Orthography of Proper Names.” “Absence of Mind.” “A Pre- dilection for One Author.” “Accommodation for Law Students in Courts of Justice.” “ The School Board.” “ Inequalities of Genius.” “ Mysterious Personages.” “ Synopses of leading Authors, Statesmen, Poets, and Philosophers, and Ancient Classical Writers.” “Memoirs of Charles Dickens, the late Lord Lytton, and John Stuart Mill.” Besides other Articles, Reviews, &c. he.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21526825_0152.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)