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NOTE.-Nos. 33 and 35 only of the following Extras are in pamphlet form. Numbers omitted are out of print.

No. 33.-Centennial Orations: Evarts. Storrs, Adams, Beecher, and Poems by Bryant, Taylor, Whittier, and Holmes. In pamphlet. 25 cents; sheet, 10c. No. 35.-Guide to the Centennial Exhibition. In pamphlet, 25 cents; sheet, 10 cents.

No. 37.-Hypotheses of Evolution: Professor J. W. Draper on Evolution; Professor Marsh on Vertebrate Life in America. In new form, folded sheet, 10c. No. 38.-First Principles in Finance. Resumption Demanded; General Garfield's Speech; Popular Finance; Dealing with the Difficulties of "An Ola Reader." In new form, folded sheet. 5 cents.

No. 39.-Archæology and Art contains: Cesnola in Cyprus;" "Treasure Tombs at Mycenae," "Schliemann at Mycenae." In new form, folded sheet, 10 No. 40.-The Phonograph (Illustrated). By Professor Arnold. Fast Printing Presses (Illustrated). New form, folded sheet. Price, 10c.

cents.

No. 41.-The Paris World's Fair of 1878, graphically described by George W. Smalley. Cincinnati's Great Musical Festival, by John R. G. Hassard. Price 10c. postpaid.

No 42.-Greenback Fallacies. Destructive Tendencies of the Greenback party. Eminent men OD Irredeemable Paper Money. Price 5 cents; $1 per hundred. In new form folded sheet.

No. 43.-Southern War Claims. $650,000,000 Demanded by the Solid South. Price 5 cents, or $1 per hundred. In new form folded sheet,

No. 44.-The Cipher Dispatches. The Florida, South Carolina and Oregon secret telegrams. with the keys that translate them. Price, 5 cents, or $2 per hundred. In new form folded sheet. Also in pamphlet form, 40 pages, large type. Price, postpaid, 25 cents.

No. 45.-Campaign Issue. Speeches of Senator Conkling, President Hayes and Vice-President Wheeler. Price 5 cents.

No. 46.-The Prophetic Conference. Verbatim reports of the different papers read and delivered. Issued in sheet form at 15 cents. The demand for this extra has been such as to warrant THE TRIBUNE in issuing it in a handsome octavo volume of 120 pages, printed in good type. Price, postpaid, 25 cents.

No. 47.-Cyprus: Its Ancient Arts and History. Forty illustrations. This Extra contains an interesting series of lectures delivered by General Di Cesnola at Chickering Hall. In new form folded sheet. Price, postpaid, 10 cents.

No. 48.-Why the South is Solid: Letters from a TRIBUNE Staff Correspondent on Fraud and Intiimidation in the South. In sheet form only. Price, postpaid, 5 cents.

No. 49.-Texas and Colorado; New Fields of Industry; Openings for Settlers in Two Great States. Letters of Mr. E. V. Smalley and Mr. Z. L. White to THE TRIBUNE. In new form folded sheet. Price, postpaid, 10 cents.

No. 50.-Saratoga meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Fossil Study. Professor Marsh's Address on Palæontology. The Silurian Age, profusely illustrated. In new form folded sheet. Price, postpaid 10 cents.

No. 51.-The New Far West: Gold in the Black Hills; Montana and Utah-In twenty-eight interesting letters from Mr. Z. L. White, giving the most recent and trustworthy information about these mining countries. Price 10 cents,

No. 52.-Songs for the Stump. Bourbon Ballads, with music. Price, postpaid 10 cents.

No. 53.-The Black List. Repudiation in the Solid South. Price, postpaid, 5 cents.

No. 54.-The Finance Primer. A B C of Finance. Price. postpaid. 5 cents. No. 55.-The Chisolm Tragedy. Mrs Chisolm tells how her husband was brutally murdered by a Southern mob.

No. 56.-The Republican Standard. Speeches by Senator Conkling, Vice-President Wheeler, President Hayes and Ex-Governor Fenton. Frice, postpaid, 5 cents. No. 57.-Mr. Conkling's Brooklyn Speech; Mr. Beecher's Speech; Rebel War Claims to date; State Rights in Congress: Over Twelve Hundred Millions demanded by the South, &c., Price, postpaid, 5 cents.

Illustrated Publications.

53, 55 & 57 PARK-PLACE, N. Y.

1880.

Rates of Subscription, Postage Paid.

WEEKLIES.

FRANK LESLIE'S ILLUSTRATED NEWSPAPER.

84.00

The only Pictorial Record of Current Events, devoted to News, Literature,
Art and Science.

FRANK LESLIE'S CHIMNEY CORNER....

4.00

The best American Family Journal, Story Paper and Home Friend. FRANK LESLIE'S ILLUSTRIRTE ZEITUNG.

4.00

In the German Language. A weekly compendium of news and literature. FRANK LESLIE'S LADY'S JOURNAL.

4.00

The highest exponent of fashion and taste.

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Cheap and entertaining. Devoted to fiction. Every article complete.

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FRANK LESLIE'S ILLUSTRATED ALMANAC FOR 1880..

A charming annual, with colored plates.

FRANK LESLIE'S COMIC ALMANAC...

A racy annual compendium of fun, humor and information.

25

10

The various publications of this house embrace a wide range of popular reading. The illustrations are of the highest order, by the most skillful artists. The literary matter is contributed by authors and writers of great reputation and acknowledged popularity. Most liberal outlays are made to secure the best talent in the market, both instructive and amusing.

No "travelling agent" is authorized to collect money for our publications. Remit by money order, draft on New-York, or registered letter, at our risk. Address

FRANK LESLIE'S PUBLISHING HOUSE

53, 55, 57 Park-place, New-York.

99

"The Leading American Newspaper. THE NEW-YORK TRIBUNE FOR 1880.

During the coming Presidential year THE TRIBUNE will be a more effective agency than ever for telling the news best worth knowing, and for enforcing sound politics. From the day the war closed it has been most anxious for an end of sectional strife. But it saw two years ago, and was the first persistently to proclaim the new danger to the country from the revived alliance of the Solid South and Tammany Hall. Against that danger it sought to rally

THE OLD PARTY OF FREEDOM AND THE UNION It began by demanding the abandonment of personal dislikes, and set the ex ample. It called for an end to attacks upon each other instead of the enemy; and for the heartiest agreement upon whatever fit candidates the majority should put up against t'e common foe. Since then the tide of disaster has been turued back; every doubtful State has been won, and the omens for National Victory were never more cheering. The Solid South and its Northern allies favored Repudiation, and we have kept the Public Faith. They favored Inflation, and we have restored Specie Payments. They sought to break down the safeguards of the ballot-box, and we have maintained the election laws.

THE TRIBUNE'S POSITION.

Of THE TRIBUNE's share in all this, those speak most enthusiastically who have seen most of the struggle. The Michigan State Committee officially urged the cir culation of THE TRIBUNE as the best means of educating the voters and bringing out the vote. The Mame Republicans declared that no other agency made so many votes. Ohio, Pennsylvania and New-York tell the same story.

THE TRIBUNE 18 now spending more labor and money than ever before to hold the distinction it has long enjoyed of the largest circulation among the best people. It secured, and means to retain it, by becoming the medium of the best thought and the voice of the best conscience of the time, by keeping abreast of the highest progress, favoring the freest discussion, hearing all sides, appealing always to the best intelligence and the purest morality, and refusing to cater to the tastes of the vile or the prejudices of the ignorant.

SPECIAL FEATURES.

The distinctive features of THE TRIBUNE are known to everybody. It gives all the news. It has the best correspondents, and retains them from year to year. It is the only paper that maintains a special telegraphic wire of its own between its office and Washington. Its use of the Ocean Cables during the coming year for foreign news will be more marked than ever. Its scientific, literary, artistic and religious intelligence is the fullest. Its book reviews are the best. Its commercial and financial news is the most exact. Its type is the largest; and its arrangemeat the most systematic.

The Semi-Weekly Tribune

is by far the most successful Semi-Weekly in the country, having four times the circulation or any other in New-York. It is specially adapted to the large class of intelligent, professional or business readers too far from New-York to depend on our papers for the daily news, who nevertheless want the editorials, correspondence, book reviews, scientific matter, lectures, literary miscellany, etc., for which THE TRIBUNE is famous. Like THE WEEKLY it contains sixteen pages, and is in convenient form for binding.

The Weekly Tribune remains the great favorite of our substantial country population. It revises and condenses all the news of the week into readable shape. Its agricultural department is more carefully conducted than ever, and it has always been considered the best. Its market reports have long been the recognized authority on cattle, grain and general country produce. There are special departments for the young, and for household interests; the new handiwork department, already extremely popular, gives unusually accurate and comprehensive instructions in knitting, crocheting, and kindred subjects; while poetry, fletion and the humors of the day are all abundantly supplsed. THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE is now so arranged as to make two complete and separate papers of eight pages each, the first containining the news and politics; the second, the correspondence, fiction, poetry, household departments, etc. Both sides of the family can thus enjoy the paper at the same time. The verdict of the tens of thousands of old readers who have returned to it during the past year is that they find it better than ever. Increasing patronage and facilities enable us to reduce the rates to the lowest point we have ever touched, and to offer the most amazing premium yet given.

See Terms and Premium Offers on Next Page,

Postage Free in the United States or Canada,
DAILY TRIBUNE (including Sundays) one year.
DAILY TRIBUNE (without Sundays), one year..
SUNDAY TRIBUNE, one year...

Single copy, one year..
Five copies, one year...
Ten copies, one year..

Single copy, one year..
Five copies, one year.
Ten copies, one year..

THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE.

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THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE.

$12.00 10 00 2.00

.$2.00
1 50 each

1 00 each

.$3.00

2 50 each

200 each Any number of copies of either edition above ten at the same rate. Additions to clubs may be made at any time at club rates. Remit by Draft on NewYork, Post Office Order, or in Registered letter.

AN AMAZING PREMIUM

THE TRIBUNE has always dealt liberally with its friends who have used their time and influence in extending its circulation. The low price at which the paper is offered leaves but a small margin to be used in commissions and premiums, yet by special arrangements with publishers, and by making very large purchases for cash, we are now able to announce additions to our Premium List, surpassing in liberality any heretofore offered by THE TRIBUNE or any other paper. We take pride in calling attention to the following:

CHAMBERS'S ENCYCLOPÆDIA, a Dictionary of Universal Knowledge for the People, in 14 volumes, together with six volumes of additional matter which is now being prepared, bringing it down to date, making 20 volumes in all, and rendering it the latest Encyclopædia in existence. The first fourteen vol umes will be an exact reprint, omitting only the cuts, of the very latest (1879) edition of Chambers's Encyclopædia. The six additional volumes will contain several thousand topics not found in the original work, besides additional treatment of many there presented. This portion is designed to meet the special wants of American readers, supplying the natural deficiencies of the English work. We offer this great work (the 20 volumes complete) upon the following terms: S CHAMBERS'S ENCYCLOPÆDIA, as above, 20 vols., substantially bound in cloth, and THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE 5 years, to one subscriber. CHAMBERS'S ENCYCLOPÆDIA, 20 vols., as above, and THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE 5 years to one subscriber.

For $12.

For $18.

For $18.

For $27.

CHAMBERS'S ENCYCLOPEDIA, 20 vols., as above, and ten

copies of THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE, one year.

CHAMBERS'S ENCYCLOPEDIA. 20 vols., as above, and twenty copies of THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE, one year.

CHAMBERS'S ENCYCLOPÆDIA, 20 vols., as above, and THE For $26. DAILY TRIBUNE two years, exclusive of the Sunday Edition. With DAILY TRIBUNE two years,

Four volumes are now ready, and the others will be issued at the rate of about two volumes per month. We will deliver them in New-York City free, or send them by mail or express to any address at subscriber's expense. The postage will be 10 cents per volume. By express, in packages, they can be had mucli cheaper.

A Magnificent Gift---Worcester's Unabridged Dictionary Free,

THE NEW-YORK TRIBUNE will send, at subscriber's expense for freight, or deliver in New-York City free, Worcester's Great Unabridged Quarto Illus Trated Dictionary, bound in sheep, edition of 1879, the very latest and very best edition of that great work, to any one remitting

$10 for a single five years' subscription in advance, or five one-year subscriptions to THE WEEKLY, or

$15 for a single five years' subscription in advance, or five one-year subscrip→ tions to THE SEMI-WEEKLY, or one year's subscription to THE DAILY exclusive of the Sunday Edition, or

$30 for a single three years' subscription, in advance, to THE DAILY TRIBUNE. exclusive of the Sunday Edition.

For One Dollar extra, for postage, the Dictionary can be sent by mail to any part of the United States, while for short distances the express is much cheaper.

Specimen copies of THE TRIBUNE sent free. We want an Agent at every Post Office where we have not one now at work. Address (See Prospectus on preceding page.) THE TRIBUNE, New-York.

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For Contents and Index, see the other side of this page.

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