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45 MAIDEN LANE, NEW-YORK,

STATIONERS AND PRINTERS,

MANUFACTURERS OF

PATENT SPRING-BACK ACCOUNT BOOKS, WRITING PAPERS and STATION. ERY of every description for Business, Professional or Private Use. DIARIES and DAILY JOURNALS. Gold Pens, Chessmen. Pocket Cutlery, Drawing Materials and Paper, Mourning Paper and Envelopes, Cards, Portfolios, Writing Desks, Expense Books, Time Books, Wash Books, Copying and Seal Presses.

COPY YOUR LETTERS.

Use our Improved Manifold Letter Writer. Letters and Copies are written at the same time.

PATENT COPYABLE PRINTING INK. Indispensable for Bankers, Merchants, Transportation Companies and others. Blanks printed with this Ink will copy in an ordinary copying Press.

PATENT SAFETY CHECKS.

Cannot be altered without instant detection.

Patent Composition for Printers' Inking Rollers.

Does not harden, shrink or crack.

P. O. Indelible Stamping Ink, Black, Blue and Red. Duplicating Order Books and Ink Sheets, Reporters' Manifold. WE SUPPLY EVERYTHING IN OUR LINE. ORDERS SOLICITED.

CYRUS H. LOUTREL. FRANCIS & LOUTREL.

45 Maiden Lane, New-York.

THE BEST

JAMES PYLE'S Washing Compound

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FOUR POUNDS

ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

BACK NUMBERS

OF

THE TRIBUNE ALMANAC

Can be furnished on application.

PRICE TWENTY-FIVE CENTS. ALMANAC FOR 1884, 30 CENTS.

THE LEADING PAPER.

Heartily Republican in Politics.

Devoted to American Farming and Manufacturing and American Homes.

THE STANDARD AUTHORITY.

THE TRIBUNE will be sent, postage paid, to mail subscribers in all parts of the United States at following reduced rates:

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SEMI-WEEKLY, $2 50 a year; in club of ten, $2 a year, with extra copy to man sending

club.

WEEKLY, $1 25 a year; in clubs of ten, $1 a year, with extra copy to man sending club. Counting postage, about two cents a copy on all editions. The most, in quantity and value, for the least money, of any paper in America.

THE TRIBUNE this year is cheaper than ever, and better than ever. It has not reduced character with price. A trusted, clean, wholesome family paper, it has long enjoyed the largest circulation among the best people-the industrious, frugal, and moral, whom every community recognizes as its best citizens-and it means to keep and increase this circulation by continuing to deserve it.

THE TRIBUNE is the leading New-York paper-complete in news, strong and sound in comment, pure in tone, large and legible in print-spending money lavishly for news, and as lavishly for brains to handle it. It gives, with absolute fairness and all possible accuracy, the news of the whole world best worth the attention of intelligent men and women; and is recognized as the authority on political, business, bank, railroad, and financial, literary, educational, scientific, social, and religious intelligence.

THE TRIBUNE is heartily Republican; and believes that the restoration of the Democratic party to power, after twenty-four years' exile, would be as disastrous as a revolu tion. Every important material interest in the country dreads such a change in 1884. THE TRIBUNE confidently believes it can be prevented, and to that end asks your aid.

THE TRIBUNE is always on the side of morality, good order, reform, and progress. It warmly sympathizes with every practical effort to restrict the traffic in intoxicating liquors. It always favors the cause of honest labor; and in the interest of the American Workingman supports a Protective Tariff. It has no interest, for or against corporations, to hinder its taking the just and fair course, best for all the people and the whole country. It is the organ of no person or faction, is under no control save that of its Editor, and knows no obligation save that to the public.

THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE has been for a third of a century the favorite of our substantial rural population. It has a larger and wider circulation than any other weekly issued from the office of a daily in the United States. A complete weekly newspaper of sixteen and sometimes twenty or twenty-four pages, its agricultural matter is believed by farmers to be the best published. It contains full markets and many features of interest in the home circle. This year two series of special articles will be printed, one for young men, the other for farmers. Every grown man knows by his own experience that young men would make greater progress in life if they knew the practical maxims that ought to govern them, and which have actually governed the men who have risen from poverty by their own exertions to the positions of power or wealth. THE TRIBUNE will print, in the course of the year, the lives of a number of prominent men, written either by themselves or from their lips, with this object in view. The other series will be upon important Farming topics.

THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE is the best substitute for the Daily. It has all the matter of the latter of more than transient interest, and all the special features of the Weekly. Sixteen to twenty pages.

THE TRIBUNE will be indispensable during the Presidential canvass.

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