Page images
PDF
EPUB

Is now generally recognized to be

The Leading Business Journal of the United States,

Without political bias or alliances, it seeks to subordinate legislation to the material interests of the people. It favors Freedom in Banking, Freedom in Commerce, and Freedom of Corporations; demanding for the individual and the association the largest liberty to buy or to sell, to lend or to borrow, any where and on any terms and conditions without legal restriction.

Its DOMESTIC MARKET REPORTS and its COMMERCIAL STATISTICS are fuller than those of any other paper.

It is the only journal that has ever succeeded in giving full and fresh REPORTS OF THE EUROPEAN and ASIATIC MARKETS.

It is acknowledged to be one of the ablest exponents of the BANKING AND FINANCIAL INTERESTS of the United States.

It is one of THE BEST MEDIUMS for COMMERCIAL ADVERTISING.

[blocks in formation]

The New York DAILY BULLETIN is exceeded in size by only two of the daily blanket sheets of the city. It is strictly a first-class paper. It gives unusual space and prominence to its market reports, which cover every important branch of trade, and is also an authority on commercial statistics.- New York Evening Post.

The features of THE DAILY BULLETIN are, the fullness and accuracy of its market reports, to which it gives more space than any general newspaper can afford to set apart for that purpose. The editorial department of THE BULLETIN is able, and its business and railroad news is full and fresh. - New York Tribune.

The NEW YORK DAILY BULLETIN. - An excellent commercial paper. - New York Times.

There is no better paper of its kind in this city or this country, and it is not surprising that the business community are finding it out. - New York Evening Express.

THE DAILY BULLETIN is now the acknowledged financial and commercial paper in this city, and has an array of facts and figures about markets and produce at home and abroad, that fairly bewilders the commercial editors of the dear old JOURNAL OF COMMERCE. - New York Star.

The BULLETIN is exclusively a commercial and financial journal, and aims, by excluding politics from its columns, and all such general news as is not pertinent to business affairs, and by giving great labor and large space to the various trade market reports, to become an authority on business aflairs among business men. The editorials in the BULLETIN are able, and are very extensively quoted, both here and in Europe. - N. Y. Evening Mail.

The BULLETIN is exclusively a commercial and financial journal, and as such furnishes complete and trustworthy reports of the various trade markets. Its editorials are always able and intelligent.-N. Y. Commercial and Financial Chronicle.

NEW YORK DAILY BULLETIN. This is one of the best and most trustworthy commercial papers published in New York City. Its size is now more nearly equal to its merits, and its enterprise cannot fail to win it still further patronage from the business community.- Utica Morning Herald.

We like the NEW YORK BULLETIN, and shall continue to like it, although it is enlarged. Its manageable size was one of its good features, and we hope it will not grow any bigger in the single sheet form. It is a rare thing among commercial papers, brimful of news in its own field, of fresh commercial intelligence interesting to every body. Commerce is not a dull subject, as the BULLETIN proves. — Springfield (Mass.) Republican.

THE NEW YORK DAILY BULLETIN is one of the best and most reliable commercial dailies published in the country. Extracts from its well-filled pages are frequently copied in the WHIG. No merchant who wishes to be well posted in commercial and financial affairs will ever regret his subscription to the BULLETIN. - Richmond Whig.

The NEW YORK DAILY BULLETIN is decidedly the ablest daily, designed as an exclusively commercial papar, in the country. Its columns are ever filled with the latest news from all sections, and its editorials are really the soundest and most instructive that grace any of our exchanges. — N. O. Picayune.

The NEW YORK DAILY BULLETIN is the only daily morning paper published at the North devoted exclusively to commercial and financial affairs. Making this department its speciality, it has won, by the marked ability and unflagging Industry with which it has been conducted, a prominent position in the front rank of commercial journalism, the title of which our readers will promptly accord it froin the extracts we constantly make from its columns for their information.— N. O. Times.

The NEW YORK BULLETIN has met with a substantial and deserved success as a paper devoted to financial and commercial interests. It now contains thirty-six columns of matter. Its business management speaks for itself, and its editorial columns are conducted with marked ability. - Cincinnati Gazette.

The NEW YORK DAILY BULLETIN.-The BULLETIN, as all know upon whom devolves the duty of making up commercial matter for a paper, is the most valuable, in material, of any other commercial issue in the country.-St. Louis Missouri Republican.

Terms of Subscription, $10 per annum.

Office, 5 & 7 South William Street, New York.

[graphic]
[graphic]

The most eminent writers of the day, such as Prof. Max
Muller, Prof. Tyndall, Dr. W. B. Carpenter, Hon. W. E.
Gladstone, Prof. Huxley, Edward A. Freeman, Frances
Power Cobbe, Richard A. Proctor, Matthew Arnold,
The Duke of Argyll, Alfred Russell Wallace, Charles
Kingsley, Arthur Helps, James Anthony Froude, Mrs.
Muloch, Anthony Trollope, Mrs. Oliphant, Miss Thacke
ray, Wm. Black, Thomas Hardy, Geo. MacDonald, Mrs.
Parr, Julia Kavanagh, Mrs. Macquold, Jean Iugelow,
Fritz Reuter, Erckmann-Chatrian, Ivan Turguenteff,
W. W. Story, Robert Buchanan, Tennyson, Browning,
and many others, are represented in the pages of

LITTELL'S LIVING AGE.

THE LIVING AGE has been published for more than thirty years with constantly increasing success. Commended in the outset by President Adams, Judge Story, Chancellor Kent, historians Sparks, Prescott, Bancroft, and Ticknor, and many others, it has never failed to meet the warmest support of the best men of the country, and has admittedly continued to stand "at the head of its class."

It has now absorbed its younger and only competitor, "EVERY SATURDAY," and will go onward in its special field with increased resources and vigor.

A weekly magazine, of sixty-four pages, THE LIVING AGE gives more than THREE AND A QUARTER THOUSAND double-column octavo pages of reading-matter yearly, forming four large volumes. It presents in an inexpensive form, considering its great amount of matter, with freshness, owing to its weekly issue, and with a satisfactory completeness attempted by no other publication, the best Essays, Reviews, Criticisms. Tales, Poetry, Scientific, Biographical, Historical, and Political Information, from the entire body of Foreign Periodical Literature.

During the coming year, the Serial and Short Stories of

THE LEADING FOREIGN AUTHORS will be given, together with an amount, unapproached by any other periodical in the world, of the most valuable Literary and Scientific matter of the day from the pens of the above named and many other foremost Essayists. Scientists, Critics, Discoverers, and Editors, representing every department of Knowledge and Progress.

In short, the LIVING AGE is invaluable as a time, labor, and money-saving publication. It furnishes the only satisfactorily fresh and COMPLETE compilation of a literature that is indispensable to American readers; - indispensable because it embraces the productions of

THE ABLEST LIVING WRITERS in all branches of Literature, Science, Art, and Politics. Attention is invited to the following recent Opinions of The Living Ago.

"Reproduces the best thoughts of the best minds of the civilized world, upon all topics of living interest."Philadelphia Inquirer.

Simply indispensable to any one who desires to keep abreast of the thought of the age in any department of science or literature."- Boston Journal.

In no other single publication can there be found so much of sterling literary excellence."-N. Y. Evening Post.

Still merits the most unqualified praise we can be stow."-N. Y. Times. The best of all our eclectic publications."- The Nation. N. Y

And the cheapest. A monthly that comes every week." -The Advance, Chicago.

"Grows richer and richer the longer it lives. There is no other known way of getting so much good reading for so little money"-Christian Register, Boston.

"We know of no way in which one can so easily keep well informed in the best English thought of our time, as through this journal."- Christian Union. N. Y.

"The best periodical in America."-Rev. Theo. L Cuyler, D. D.

The best periodical in the world." Alfred B. Street. "With it alone a reader may fairly keep up with all that is important in the literature, history, politics, and science of the day." The Methodist, N. Y

The ablest essays, the most entertaining stories, the finest poetry of the English language are here gathered together."-Illinois State Journal.

More than ever indispensable, in these days of frequent publication in expensive English reviews, of articles on the great questions of current inquiry, by such men as Max Muller, Huxley, Tyndall, and many others." -Milwaukee Daily Sentinel.

Its publication in weekly numbers gives to it a great advantage over its monthly contemporaries in the spirit and freshness of its contents.-The Pacific, San Francisco. "Of all periodicals in the world, if a man can take only one, he should by all means take LITTELL'S LIVING AGE.

There is nothing comparable to it in true value in the whole range of periodical literature."- Mobile Daily Register.

"It maintains its position, now held for many years, as the best periodical of select literature in the world. No other keeps so high a standard, or is edited with such unerring good taste. It is a thorough compilation of what is best in the literature of the day, whether relating to history, biography, fiction, poetry, wit, sci-ness as well as freshness, the best literature of the alence, politics, theology, criticism, or art."-Hartford Daily Courant.

It Lives articles from the great foreign quarterlies which its rivals have not room for. It also gives the best serial stories... It has no equal in any country."Philadelphia Press.

The more noted new novels appear as serials, and the more distinguished foreign thinkers in criticism, science, and art are represented in its pages.... It is the only compilation that presents with a satisfactory completemost innumerable and generally inaccessible European quarter lies, monthlies, and weeklies,-a literature embracing the productions of the ablest and most cultured writers living. It is, therefore, indispensable to every one who desires a thorough compendium of all that is admirable and noteworthy in the literary world."- Boston Post.

"A pure and perpetual reservoir and fountain of entertainment and instruction."-Hon. Robert C. Winthrop. PUBLISHED WEEKLY at $8.00 a year, free of postage. An extra copy sont gratis to any one getting up a club of five new subscribers.

CLUB PRICES FOR THE BEST HOME AND FOREIGN LITERATURE. ["Possessed of 'LITTELL'S LIVING AGE' and of one or other of our vivacious American monthlies, a subscriber will find himself in command of the whole situation." - Philadelphia Eve'ng Bulletin.] For $10.50 (covering prepayment of postage on both periodicals, instead of for $10.00 with postage not prepaid, as heretofore) THE LIVING AGE and either one of the American four-dollar monthly Magazines (or Harper's Weekly or Bazar, or Appleton's Journal, weekly) will be sent for a year; or, for $9.50, THE LIVING AGE and Scribner's St. Nicholas. LITTELL & GAY, 17 Bromfield St., Boston.

ADDRESS

71

[graphic]
[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

RE

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

fi

EVERY SATURDAY" merged
merged in LITTELL'S LIVING AGE.

[graphic]

MATING AGE and or one or other of our vivacious American monthlies, a subscriber will find himself in command of the whole situation."-Philadelphia Eve'ng Bulletin.] For $10.50 (covering prepayment of postage on both periodicals, instead of for $10.00 with postage not prepaid, as heretofore) THE LIVING AGE and either one of the American four-dollar monthly Magazines (or Harper's Weekly or Bazar, or Appleton's Journal, weekly) will be sent for a year; or, for $9.50, THE LIVING AGE and Scribner's St. Nicholas. LITTELL & GAY, 17 Bromfield St., Boston. ADDRESS

[graphic][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed][ocr errors][merged small][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][ocr errors][subsumed][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed]
« PreviousContinue »