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1. Anchors aweigh. U.S. Navy

2. China & ANU

6. Israelis reply

14. A week in wild Lochaber

23. A tragicall historie of the troubles and ciuile warres of the Lowe Countries, otherwise called Flanders : wherein is sett forthe the originall and full proceedyng of the saied troubles and ciuile warres, with all the stratagemes, sieges, forceble takynges, and manlike defenses, of diuers and sondrie cities, tounes, and fortresses of the same : together the barbarous crueltie and tyrannie of the Spaniard and trecherous Hispaniolized Wallons, & others of the saied Lowe Countreis, and there withall the estate and cause of religion, especially from the yere 1559 unto the yere 1581 : besides many letters, commissions, contractes of peace, unions, articles and agrementes, published and proclaimed in the saied prouinces

27. Guillelmi Neubrigensis Angli, canonici ad Regulam S. Augustini, De rebus Anglicis suis temporis, libri quinque : nunc primum auctiores xi : capitulis hactenus desideratis, & notis Ioannis Picardi Bellouacensi æquè canonici S. Victoris Parisiensis

38. A relation of some yeares travaile, begvnne anno 1626 : into Afrique and the greater Asia, especially the territories of the Persian monarchie, and some parts of the Oriental Indies and iles adiacent : of their religion, language, habit, discent, ceremonies and other matters concerning them : together with the proceedings and death of the three late ambassadours Sir D.C., Sir R.S. and the Persian Nogdibeg : as also the two great monarchs, the king of Persia, and the great mogol

41. A political catechism, or, certain questions concerning the government of this land, answered in His Majesties own words, taken out of his Answer to the 19 propositions, pag. 17, 18, 19, 20. of the first edition; with some brief observations thereupon : published for the more compleat setling of consciences; particularly of those that have made the late protestation, to maintain the power and priviledges of Parliament, when they shall herein see the Kings owne interpretation what that power and priviledges are

42. The popish royall favourite, or, a full discovery of His Majesties extraordinary favours to and protections of notorious papists, priests, Jesuits, against all prosecutions and penalties of the laws enacted against them : notwithstanding his many royall proclamations, declarations, and protestations to the contrary : as likewise of a most desparate long prosecuted designeto set up popery, and extirpate the protestant religion by degrees, in this our realm of England, and all his Majesties dominions : manifested by sundry letters of grace, warrants, writings under the kings own signe-manuall privy-signet, his privy-councels, and Secretary Windelbanks hands and seals, by divers orders and proceedings in open sessions at Newgate, in the King's Bench, and elsewhere (all extant on record in the Sessions-Books, Goal-Books, Crown-Office, where all who scruple their indubitable verity or reality, may peruse them for their better satisfaction; as likewise by the King's letter to the Pope, his marriage articles, oaths, and other pregnant testimonies, worthy publike knowledge and consideration)

43. The proceedings in the late treaty of peace : together with severall letters of His Majesty to the Queen, and of Prince Rupert to the Earle of Northampton, which were intercepted and brought to the Parliament : with a declaration of the Lords and Commons upon those proceedings and letters

45. Romes master-peece, or, The grand conspiracy of the Pope and his iesuited instruments, to extirpate the Protestant religion, re-establish popery, subvert lawes, liberties, peace, parliaments, by kindling a civill war in Scotland, and all His Majesties realmes, and to poyson the King himselfe in case hee comply not with them in these their execrable designes : revealed out of conscience to Andreas ab Habernfeld, by an agent sent from Rome into England, by Cardinall Barbarino, as an assistant to con the Popes late nuncio, to prosecute this most execrable plot, (in which he persisted a principall actor severall yeares) who discovered it to Sir William Boswell His Majesties agent at the Hague, 6 Sept. 1640. he, under an oath of secrecie, to the Arch-bishop of Canterbury (among whose papers it was casually found by Master Prynne, May, 31. 1643) who communicated it to the King, as the greatest businesse that ever was put to him

46. The Scots declaration to the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament : in answer to a declaration sent unto them by their commissioners now at London, from the honourable Houses of Parliament, expressing their care to prevent the effusion of Christian blood, and their affections to a reformation, both to kirke and state : and do confidently expect that England will now bestir themselves in the best way for a reformation of religion, and doe most willingly offer their prayers and utmost endeavours for furthering to great a worke, wherein Christ is so much concern'd in his glory, the King in his honour, the kirke and kingdome of England in their happines, & this kirke and kingdome in the purity and peace of the gospell : and whatsoever shall be required by this grave assembly, shall be most willingly performed by us.

48. The falsities and forgeries of the anonymous author of a late pamphlet, (supposed to be printed at Oxford but in truth at London) 1644 : intituled The fallacies of Mr. William Prynne, discovered and confuted, in a short view of his books intituled; the soveraignty of Parliaments, the opening of the Great Seale. &c. : wherein the calumnies, and forgeries of this unknowne author in charging Mr. Prynne with false quotations, calumniating falshoods, wresting of the Scriptures, points of popery, grosse absurdityes, meere contradictions, hainous treasons, & plain betraying of the cause, (not one of which is in the least degree made good by the calumniator) are succinctly answered, refuted

49. England's birth-right justified : against all arbitrary usurpation, whether regall or parliamentary, or under what vizor soever : with divers queries, observations and grievances of the people, declaring this Parliaments present proceedings to be directly contrary to those fundamentall principles, whereby their actions at first were justifyable against the King, in their present illegall dealings with those that have been their best friends, advancers and preservers : and in other things of high concernment to the freedom of all the free-born people of England