LEA AND li LAM CHARD'S PUBLICATIONS. 



ENCYCLOPAEDIA AMERICANA. 



The numerous subscribers who have been waiting the completion of this 

 volume can now perfect their sets, and all who want 



A REGISTER OF THE EVENTS OF THE LAST FIFTEEN 

 YEARS, FOR THE WHOLE WORLD, 



can obtain this volume separately: price Two Dollars nncut in cloth, or 

 Two Dollars and Fifty Cents in leather, to match the styles in which the 

 publishers have been seUing sets. 



Subscribers in the large cities can be supplied on application at any of the 

 principal bookstores ; and persons residing in the country can have their 

 sets matched by sending a volume in charge of friends visiting the city. 



Complete sets furnished at very low prices in various bindings. 



" The publishers of the £ncyclop;edia Americana conferred an obligation on the pubhc when, 

 fourteen years ago, they issued tlie thirteen volumes from their press. They contained a wonder- 

 ful amount of information, upon almost every subject which would be Likely to occupy public 

 attention, or be the theme of conversation in the private circle. Whatever one would wish to 

 inquire about, it seemed only necessary to dip into the Encyclopedia Americana, and there the 

 outhne, at least, would be found, and reference made to those works wliich treat at large upon the 

 subject. It was not strange, therefore, that the work was popular. But in fourteen years, great 

 events occur. The last fourteen years have been full of them, and great discoveries have been 

 made in sciences and the arts ; and great men have, by death, commended their names and deeds 

 to the fidelity of the biographer, so that the Encyclopaedia that approached perfection in 1832, 

 might fall considerably behind in 1846. To bring up the work, and keep it at the present point, has 

 been a task assumed by Professor Vethake, of the Pennsylvania University, a gentleman entirely 

 competent to such an undertaking ; and with a disposition to do a good work, he has supplied a 

 supplementary volume to the mam work, corresponding m size and arrangements therewith, and 

 becoming, indeed, a fourteenth volume. The author has been exceedingly industrious, and very 

 fortunate in discovering and selecting materials, using all that Germany has presented, and resort- 

 ing to every species of information of events connected with the plan of the work, since the pub- 

 lication of the thirteen volumes. He has continued articles that were commenced in that work, 

 and added new articles upon science, biography, history, and geography, so as to make the present 

 volume a necessary appendage in completing facts to the other. The publishers deserve the 

 thanks of the readers of the volume, for the handsome type, and clear white paper they have used 

 m the publication."— J/hited States GazelU. 



" This volume is worth owning by itself, as a most convenient and reliable compend of recent His- 

 tory, Biography, Statistics, &c., ifec. The entire work forms the cheapest and probably now the 

 most desirable Encyclopadia published for popular use." — New Yorh Tribune. 



" The Conversations Lexicon (Encyclopiedia Americana) has become a household book m all the 

 intelligent families in America, and is undoubtedly the best depository of biographical, historical, 

 geographical and political information of that kind which discriminating readers require."— Siffi- 

 man's Journal. 



" This volume of the Encyclopedia is a Westminster Abbey of American reputation. What 

 names are on the roU since 1833 V'—N. Y. Literary World. 



" The work to which this volume forms a supplement, is one of the most important contributions 

 that has ever been made to the literature of our country. Besides condensing into a compara- 

 tively narrow compass, the substance of larger works of the same kind which had preceded it, it 

 contains a vast amount of information that is not elsewhere to be found, and is distinguished, not 

 less for its admirable arrangement, than for the variety of subjects of which it treats. The present 

 volume, which is edited by one of the most distinguished scholars of our country, is worthy to 

 foUow in the train of those which have preceded it. It is a remarkably fehcitous condensation 

 of the more recent improvements in science and the arts, besides forming a very important addi- 

 * an to the department of Biography, the general progress of society. <tc., iw " —Albany Argus. 



