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their thousands expended on them, whilst Geography, the science which is most important to man; and last but not least, Ethnology, after the nature of every living, creeping and crawling thing has been investigated for ages, springs up, and asks why man should be neglected, and at last claims and takes possession of her position, as the first and most interesting of human sciences.
After taking up so much of your space, the pith of my object in addressing you, will be found in the postscript, as is often the case; and it is to recur to the hint contained in the remarks in your last number, on the propriety of collecting all the societies under one roof, to the great diminution of their expenses and obtaining a