THE 



Jtitprnatiottal ilnntl|li| Mu^azim 



Having been received with an unlooked-for degree of favor, the 



publishers announce that it will be continued with every 



appliance for its value and attraction, and with a 



determination on their part to render it altogether 



THE BEST PERIODICAL FOR POPULAR READING 

 IN THE UNITED STATES. 



The Publishers have the satisfaction of seeing, in the extraordi- 

 nary rapidity and extent of its sale, an 



Unmistakable sign of the pxiblic appreciation and 



approval. 



Jggf* Each number of the Magazine will contain 144 pages 

 octavo, in double column — 



A carefully-prepared Fashion Plate, 

 and other Pictorial Illustrations, will accompany each number. 



THE INTERNATIONAL 



Makes Three Volumes a year, of over 600 page."? each, at the 

 unprecedented low price of 



ONE DOLLAR A VOLUME. 



TERMS. 



Three Dollars a year, or Twenty-Five Cents a number. 



Liberal arrangements will be made with the Trade and Peri- 

 odical Agents for efforts in circulating the work. 



To CLUBS.— Two Copies a year for $5 : Five Copies, $10 : Ten 

 Copies, $20 ; and one copy to the person who sends the money. 



STRINGER & TOWNSEND, 



222 Broadway, New York 



®pinlona of ll^e J^ttBH. 

 The International for October. New York: Stringer & Town- 

 send. This is the best International yet issued, and the Inter- 

 national is the best American Periodical now published. It is an 

 invaluable Miscellany of original and eclectic matter, and cheap, 

 almost without a parallel. We commend it to our readers, with 

 the utmost confidence that they will find it all that we have 

 said, now and heretofore. — Southern Literary Gazette. 



International Monthly.— This great international magazine of 

 Literature and Art is published by Stringer & Townsend, 222 

 Broadway. The October number has been politely forwarded to 

 this office, and we are happy to bear testimony to its superior 

 excellence in every respect. It is seldom that such an amount 

 of really good matter is collected in so small a space, and sold 

 at so cheap a rate. — Sunday Atlas. 



The International Magazine.^The October number of this most 

 excellent monthly, has been already issued by Stringer & Town- 

 send, 222 Broadway. Its contents embrace the cream of all the 

 foreign and native magazines, and it is decidedly the best p'lb- 

 lication of the kind ever presented to the American public. The 

 present number is embellished with several engravings, and is 

 sold at retail for 25 cents — by the year $3. — Noah's Times. 



We welcome it as another valuable agent in the work of 

 originating and disseminating the sound and wholesome literature 

 of our language. — Wash. Rep. 



