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THE LARGEST AND CHEAPEST.

Notwithstanding the fact that the size of THE TRIBUNE has been increased more than one quarter, the price will remain the same.

Now is the Time to Subscribe for The Great Family Newspaper.

THE NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE

Is printed on a large double-medium sheet, making eight pages of six broad columns each. It contains all the important Editorials published in THE DAILY TRIBUNE, except those of merely local interest; also Literary and Scientific Intelligence; Reviews of the most interesting and important New Books; the Letters from our large corps of correspondents; the latest news received by Telegraph from Washington and all other parts of the country; a summary of all important intelligence in this city and elsewhere; a Synopsis of the Proceedings of Congress and State Legislature when in session; the Foreign News received by every steamer; Exclusive Reports of the Proceedings of the Farmers' Club of the American Institute; Talks about Fruit, and other Horticultural and Agricultural information essential to country residents; Stock, Financial, Cattle, Dry Goods and General Market Reports; making it, both for variety and completeness, altogether the most valuable, interesting and instructive WEEKLY NEWSPAPER published in the world.

The Full Reports of the American Institute Farmers' Club, and the various Agricultural Reports, in each number, are richly worth a year's subscription.

TERMS:

Mail subscribers, single copy, 1 year-52 numbers.............................................
Mail Subscribers, Clubs of five....

$2.00 9 00

Ten copies, addressed to names of Subscribers............................................................................................. 17 50
Twenty copies, addressed to names of subscribers............................................................................................ 34 00
Ten copies, to one address......................................................................................................................................
16 00
Twenty copies, to one address............

An extra copy will be sent for each club of ten.

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THE NEW YORK SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE is published every TUESDAY and FRIDAY, and contains all the Editorial articles, not merely local in character; Literary Reviews and Art Criticisms; Letters from our large corps of Foreign and Domestic Correspondents; Special and Associated Press Telegraph Dispatches; a careful and complete summary of Foreign and Domestic News; Exclusive Reports of the Proceedings of the Farmers' Club of the American Institute; Talks about Fruit, and other Horticultural and Agricultural Information; Stock, Financial, Cattle, Dry Goods and General Market Reports, which are published in the DAILY TRIBUNE. THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE also gives in the course of a year, THREE or FOUR of the

BEST AND LATEST POPULAR NOVELS,

by living authors. The cost of these alone, if bought in book form, would be from six to eight dollars. If purchased in the ENGLISH MAGAZINES, from which they are carefully selected, the cost would be three or four times that sum. Nowhere else can so much current intelligence and permanent literary matter be had at so cheap a rate as in THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE. Those who believe in the principles and approve of the Character of THE TRIBUNE can increase its power and influence by joining with their neighbors in forming clubs to subscribe for THE SEMI-WEEKLY Edition. It will in that way be supplied to them at the lowest price for which such a paper can be printed.

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2 copies, do. do.

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5 copies, or over, for each copy.....................................................

Persons remitting for 10 copies $30, will receive an extra copy for 6 months.
Persons remitting for 15 copies $45, will receive an extra copy one year.

.$4.00

THE NEW YORK DAILY TRIBUNE is published every morning and evening (Sundays excepted) at $10 per year; $5 for six months.

TERMS-CASH IN ADVANCE. Drafts on New York, or Post-Office orders, payable to the order of THE TRIBUNE, being safer, are preferable to any other mode of remittance. Address

то

THE TRIBUNE, New York.

ADVERTISERS. Merchants, Manufacturers, Real Estate Owners, Schools, and all others who desire to reach Customers in all parts of the Country, as well as in the City, will find it to their interest to ADVERTISE in

THE NEW YORK

TRIBUNE.

The circulation of THE TRIBUNE is larger than that of any other Newspaper, and it is read by the most enterprising, thrifty, and industrious classes. Advertisements inserted in each of the editions of THE TRIBUNE, DAILY, SEMI-WEEKLY, and WEEKLY, will be read by nearly a million of people, and no investment pays a business man so well as the money he spends in advertising.

CIRCULATION OF THE TRIBUNE.

Monday, Sept. 24...... Daily.. .46,600 copies.
Tuesday, Sept. 25...... Daily....... .45,750 do.
Tuesday, Sept. 25.......Semi-Weekly,27,000 do.
Wednesday, Sept. 26... Daily........45,260 do.
Wednesday, Sept. 26... Weekly.....127,750 do.

.........

| Thursday, Sept. 27.....Daily.. 44,770 copies.
Friday, Sept. 28........ Daily. ........ 45,010 do.
Friday, Sept. 28........Semi-Weekly, 27,000 do.
Saturday, Sept. 29......Daily...... 47,410 do.

The above is the precise number of copies of THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE printed and circulated during the past week.

PRICE OF ADVERTISING IN THE TRIBUNE.-DAILY TRIBUNE, 20 cents per line. SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE, 28 cents per line. WEEKLY TRIBUNE, $1 per line, each insertion. No advertisement inserted in The Weekly for less than $5. THE TRIBUNK. No. 154 Nassau Street, New York.

Address

Demorest's Young America!
Ever success to thee!

Mentor and guide to the steps of youth,|

DEMOREST'S

Demorest's Young America!

"YOUNG AMERICA." Each boy and girl will read and prize it,

Oh! thou wilt lead to the font of truth-A

Rise the star of the free.

Eagerly, long, impatiently

Sought we thy treasures bright;

Monitor to every teacher,

NEW ARTISTIC & SPLEN- Oracle to every parent;
DIDLY ILLUSTRATED

MONTHLY MAGA-
ZINE FOR

Rich its pages with instruction,

Every branch of useful knowledge.

BOYS AND GIRLS. See how brilliant are its features;

Teeming with beauty they come at last The Parents' Monitor, True philosophy it teaches;

Shining like gems of light.

Young America! glorious name!
O'er thee sparkles a crown of fame;
Unsullied and pure its jewels glow,
None but the good its worth can know;
Go, little monthly, and tell them so,

America! thou sunny clime!

My inmost soul with rapture thrills;
E'en now I hear thy welcome lay
Resounding sweetly far away
In triumph o'er thy templed hills.
Contentment, union, liberty
Are twined, forever twined with thee.

Teachers' Oracle, and Such a monthly ne'er was equaled.
Children's Museum of
Philosophy, Art, Science
and Literature.

Young America! children's museum
Young America, without frivolity
Adapted to the capacity of very Onward in their mental culture,

or exaggeration. Its contents will Up the hill of science leading;
be found to sparkle with interest,
its illustrations to charm with Nove!, pure, and full of interest,
beauty, and the whole to inspire Grand the truths each page discloses.
with energy, incite to virtue and

intelligence, and prove a "well

spring" of pleasure in every house-America! with beauty glowing,

hold.

Price, single copies, 15 cents; Many pictures drawn exquisite, yearly, $1.50; each additional Each a gem of truth portraying; copy, $1, or 5 copies for $5. YOUNG

AMERICA and DEMOREST'S LADIES' Rich in poems, stories, music,
MONTHLY MAGAZINE together, $4. Introducing all that's pleasing.

Address

W. JENNINGS DEMOREST, Come and prove this comely volume,
No. 473 Broadway, New York. All its merits half unfolded.

A Word to Teacher's and Incidentally to Parents.

We have looked in vain among the various magazines of the day for one exactly suited to the capacities of children of all ages. The articles interesting to boys and girls from thirteen to fifteen are generally so so worded as to be beyond the comprehension of younger readers; while, on the other hand, the articles written for the juveniles are in many instances so silly that the older children think it beneath their dignity to read them.

We believe it possible, and have begun in good earnest to make it practicable, to teach the young grand and glorious truths in interesting yet comprehensive language.

Children are often blamed for being curious and inquisitive. Why are they so inquisitive? Because the budding soul is constantly reaching out with an infinite longing after the beautiful and grand. Shall these sparks of the divine mind be quenched? They may be effectually quenched after a while, and the child grope in darkness so long that it will become morally blind and cease to seek for light.

In our prospective magazine—YOUNG AMERICA—we propose to enlighten the young as well as amuse; in fact, to embody within its pages all the available talent possible to make it the most perfect work of its kind yet issued.

Our principal object in addressing you is to enlist your sympathies and obtain your co-operation in carrying out our plan. Teachers love children, and they know what children love, and what their different capacities need at different stages of their growth. We want teachers to give us some of their best ideas; we want articles from teachers' pens-short, vivid, natural, descriptive, and such as will interest at the same time that valuable information will be imparted. Teachers will you do it-not think about it, but do it? Send us on a short article at once; not more than one or two written pages-descriptive of any incident, or illustrative of any branch of Science, Art, History, Biography, Mechanics, or Philosophy, adapted and made familiar to the capacities of children. For any such article, which is accepted, we will furnish a yearly subscription to YOUNG AMERICA. Teachers, let us hear from you.

We desire especially the co-operation of teachers in our undertaking, as it is our aim and determination to furnish such a periodical as they can with pride and satisfaction put into the hand of their pupils; and we confidently rely upon securing such a subscription-list as will astonish the world and prove what our Young America can do in the way of appreciating and encouraging the true, the artistic, and the beautiful in literature. We do not doubt that nearly every scholar under your control could be induced to become a subscriber if you felt that you could conscientiously and zealously urge them to do so; and it will be our earnest aim and object to produce such a periodical for children as will justify the highest expectations that may be raised in regard to it. We expect to number many teachers among our subscribers, and we hope that all these, with others who are not subscribers, will present the subject to their pupils, and offer to be the medium through which a club may be sent.

A large and beautiful colored steel engraving given free with the first number, and both mailed free on receipt of the price. First number now ready. Each single subscriber, at $1.50, will be entitled to a Microscope of highly magnifying powers, with a heavy glass cylinder to confine living objects-sent by mail; or a package of Magic Photographs.

I.

A COMPENDIUM OF ENGLISH LITERATURE,

CHRONOLOGICALLY ARRANGED,

From Sir John Mandeville to William Cowper.- 775 pages.

II.

ENGLISH LITERATURE OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY,

EMBRACING THE CHIEF DECEASED AND LIVING AUTHORS OF THE FIRST HALF OF THE
NINETEENTH CENTURY.-778 pages.

III.

A COMPENDIUM OF AMERICAN LITERATURE,

UPON THE SAME PLAN, EMBRACING

The Chief Deceased and Living Writers of our Country.--784 pages.

IV.

A COMPENDIUM OF CLASSICAL LITERATURE,

CONSISTING OF CHOICE EXTRACTS, TRANSLATED, FROM THE BEST GREEK AND ROMAN WRITERS,
WITH BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, ACCOUNTS OF THEIR WORKS, ETC., ETC.-622 pages.
PART I.-Greek: from Homer to Longinus.
PART II.-Latin: from Plautus to Boethius.

V.

THE POETICAL WORKS OF JOHN MILTON,

WITH A LIFE OF THE AUTHOR.

PRELIMINARY DISSERTATIONS ON EACH POEM; NOTES CRITICAL AND EXPLANATORY; AN INDEX TO THE SUBJECT OF PARADISE LOST; AND A VERBAL INDEX TO ALL THE POEMS.-688 pages.

VI.

HYMNS FOR SCHOOLS,

WITH APPROPRIATE SELECTIONS FROM SCRIPTURE, AND TUNES SUITED TO

THE METRES OF THE HYMNS.

The Hymns in this collection, one of which is adapted to each day of the year, have been selected by Professor Cleveland with remarkably good taste. Some of them are familiar, and will be loved and sung as long as the English language endures. The rest, culled from the great stores in his possession, are the choicest that can be found. In literary merit and poetic excellence, it is the very best selection of Sacred Lyrics extant. In the selection of tunes, Professor Cleveland has confined himself to a few good old tunes, easy to be sung, and favorites with all denominations. It is an 18mo., substantially bound.-270 pages.

These books have been warmly recommended by the first scholars, critics, and educators of our land, and have been introduced extensively into our high schools and colleges.

Besides school editions of the first five works, others are published upon finer paper, and bound in various styles of beauty, for the Household Library.

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We will supply Teachers at the Wholesale Prices. Copies by mail at retail, postage paid. They are without rivals. Not being required to take the place of other books in use, we introduce them at wholesale prices only.

J. A. BANCROFT & CO.,

512 ARCH STREET, PHILA.,

J. W. SCHERMERHORN & CO.,
430 BROOME STREET, N. Y.,
PUBLISHERS.

RIDER'S COMPOSITION PAPER.

THE use of the English Language, spoken and written, is sadly defective, even in our Schools. The Teacher who has a sincere desire to improve his pupils in "Good English" will have an invaluable aid in Mr. Rider's method of correcting compositions. Under the old plan the teacher passes weary and almost profitless hours writing out corrections which may not be understood by the pupil, even if he takes the trouble to read them.

The principle embodied in Rider's Composition Paper is that the pupil and not the teacher, shall correct the composition. At the head of the page is a table of usages, rules and laws which are liable to be neglec ted, each appropriately numbered or lettered. The work of the teacher is to underline or bracket the faulty words, and place in the margin a symbol which shall direct the pupil to the proper item in the table. Then the pupil can, at his leisure, examine and analyze the principle violated, and make the necessary correction. Thus he inevitably becomes technically and thoroughly familiar with the requirements of the English Language.

As a time-saving invention for the teacher, it is most important, besides reducing composition to an orderly and scientific method.

Three styles-"First Series," "No. Two" and "No. Three",-lately issued, are receiving an enthusiastic welcome.

The tables are neatly printed at the head of large sheets of letter paper, properly ruled with blue and red

lines.

I. THE FIRST SERIES

Is intended for such beginners in the Art of Composition as may be careless in penmanship, in spelling, in the use of capitals, etc., etc. Its proper use will prevent the pupil from falling into habits of indifference to the scores of little faults which are easy to acquire but difficult to mend.

II. THE SECOND SERIES

Reviews the greater points of the first and attends to selection of words, grammatical construction, formation of sentences, paragraphing, condensing, etc., etc.

III. THE THIRD SERIES,

Without forgetting the errors corrected in the first and second, has reference to Rhetorical correctness and eles gance, and the cultivation of the very best style of finished English Composition.

Price, per quire, by Express,...
Specimen Sheet by Mail, Prepaid,..

........50 Cents.

5

66

J. W. SCHERMERHORN & CO., Publishers,

430 BROOME ST., New York.

WATSON'S MANUAL OF CALISTHENICS.

IT contains an extended and varied course of physical exercises, without apparatus. The INTRODUCTION embraces all needful directions, rules and explanations for instructors and pupils, with sections on phonetics and respiration. Throughout the book the exercises are arranged in accordance with well-known principles of anatomy, physiology and hygiene. They have been thoroughly tested in our schools, securing the happiest results. These exercises, practised habitually and energetically, cannot fail to yield to youth grace, agility, suppleness, a ready hand, as well as robust health, solid strength, and power of endurance. Almost any school-room or parlor will suffice for the exercises. For those who wish to use the piano to enliven the exercises, there are several pieces of music prepared by the best masters.

The book is profusely and richly illustrated from original designs. It is printed on superior tinted paper, and bound in best style. A reviewer writes: "This is the most elaborate and satisfactory attempt yet made to apply practically to educational purposes the great truths of physiology, relating to physical culture and training. The work has evidently been prepared by one who is conscious of the requirements of the learner, and has studied the most effectual way of meeting and supplying them. To those in authority, whose influence would be effectual in promoting the circulation of this book, it becomes a positive duty so to do by every means in their power. All who have the physical welfare of the human race at heart, and understand how powerless the intellect is to contend against the burden of a feeble and emaciated frame, are equally interested in its teachings, and answerable, each in his own sphere, however small it be, for the consequers of neglecting them."

Copies for examination will be mailed on receipt of $1.00.

J. W. SCHERMERHORN & CO., Publishers, 430 Broom St., N. Y.

1. Early Autumn on Esopus Creek, N. Y. 2. Late Autumn in the White Mountains. 3. Une Set of Six American Landscapes.

Companion Pictures. Size, 9x18. Price $12.00 per pair. After Oil Paintings by A. T. BRICHER of Boston.

Size of each, 42x9. Price, per set of six copies, $9.00. After oil Paintings by A. T. BRICHER, representing Sawyer's Pond, White Mountains, Souvenir of Lake George, Twilight on Esopus Creek, Mount Chocorua and Lake, N. H., on the Saco River, N. Conway, N. H., on the Hudson near West Point.

4. Group of Chickens. Companion Pictures. Size, 10x14. Price, $10.00 per pair. After Oil 5. Group of Ducklings. Paintings by A. F. TAIT.

6. The Linnet.

Companion Pictures. Size, 8x10. Price, $6.00 per pair. After Water-color 7. The Bulfinch. S Paintings, by W. CRUIKSHANK, of London, England.

8. Bird's Nest and Mosses. Companion Pictures. Size, 11x15. Price, $3.00 per pair. After 9. Ferns and Mosses. Water-color Paintings by Miss ROBINS.

10. The Baby.

11. The Sisters.

Companion Pictures. Size, 7x92. Price, $8.00 per pair. After French Watercolor Paintings.

12. Album of Cuba. Size, 10x13. Price, $4.00. Containing four views of great beauty and excellent execution. Mounted on white board. Representing Trinidad de Cuba, Castle at the entrance to Cienfuegos, Santiago de Cuba, Baraco Isla de Cuba.

L. PRANG & CO.'S

Holiday Publications,

SOLD IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL BOOK AND PICTURE STORES
THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY.

ALSO SENT BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF PRICE.

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JUVENILES, PICTURES, TOY-BOOKS, GAMES.

The Christmas-Stocking Library. Six elegant tiny Illustrated Extension Books of A Visit from St. Nicholas, Story of Hans the Swapper, Who Stole the Bird's Nest, Old Dame Duck's Lecture, In the Forest, Farm-Yard Story. Put up in an equally elegant box. Price, $2.00 per box.

Doll Series. Books in the shape of a Paper Doll, richly illustrated. Red Riding-Hood, Robinson Crusoe, Goody Two Shoes, King Winter, Cinderella. Price, 40 cts, each.

Old Mother Hubbard. A New Version, by RUTH CHESTERFIELD. Very amusing and full of good morals. The most elegantly illuminated juvenile, the very book for a holiday gift. Quarto, bound in cloth, bevelled edges, full gilt stamp. Price, $3.00 per copy.

Prang's Album Cards in Oil Colors. Comprising a list of 70 different sets, each set of 12 cards, of Flowers, Mosses, Birds, Autumn Leaves, Animals, Scenery, &c., &c. 50 cis. per set. Sunday-School Cards for the Christmas Tree. in great variety, at prices of 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, so cts. per set. LARGE SUNDAY-SCHOOL ROOM CARDS. We have now a very desirable

assortment.

Prang's American Albums. For preserving conveniently a large number of Album Cards, from 24 to 1,000, at a moderate cost from 50 cts. to $15.00.

Book Marks, for Bibles and Prayer Books, most exquisite in execution, put up in envelopes of 3 different marks. Price, 50 cts. per envelope.

Psaligraphy. The art of cutting pictures in black paper. System of Mr. G. SCHMIDT. Put up in an elegant box, containing full instructions, scissors for cutting, and a great variety of specimens for the study of this most pleasing and fashionable art. Price, per box, $5.00.

L. PRANG & CO.,

BOSTON, MASS.

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