THE AMERICAN GARDEN. 



"THE LEADII& AIEEIOAI IEWSPAPEE." 



The lew- York Tribune 



FOR 1881. 



The Largest Circulation among the Best People, 



During the past year The New York Tribune 

 reached the largest circulation it ever attained, 

 with the single exception of a short period in the 

 first Lincoln campaign. It is a larger circula- 

 tion, and more widely distributed over the whole 

 country than any ever enjoyed by any other 

 newspaper in the United States. This fact may 

 be taken as the verdict of the American People 

 on The Tribune's political force, its fidelity to 

 sound principles, and its merits as a newspaper. 



For 1881, The Tribune will try to deserve 

 equally well of the public. 



Its well-known special features will be sedu- 

 ously maintained. Its Agricultural Department 

 will remain the fullest and best. The House- 

 hold and the Young Folks' Departments, the lit- 

 erary, scientific and religious features, the stand- 

 ard market reports, will all be kept up, and as 

 opportunity offers, extended. 



The Terms of The Tribune. 



Postage Free in the United States. 



Daily Tribune $12 00 



Daily Tribune, without Sunday edition — 10 00 

 Sunday Tribune 2 00 



THE SEMI- WEEKLY TRIBUNE. 



!Single copy, one year $3 00 



Five copies, one year 2 50 each 



Ten copies, one year 2 00 each 



THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE. 



'Single copy, one year $2 00 



Five copies, one year 1 50 each 



Ten copies, one year 1 00 each 



|S|© (due f 



The Tribune has never been equalled in the 

 ^substantial and permanent value of its premiums 

 to agents and subscribers, and it adds to Its list 

 this year two of the most desirable it has ever 

 offered. Note the following : 



THE 



Analytical Concordance to the Bible, on 

 an entirely nnv itlan, containing every word in 

 alphabetical order arranged under its Hebrew or 

 Greek original, with the literal meaning of each 

 and its pronunciation; exhibiting :S11,000 refer- 

 ences, 118,000 beyond Cruden ; marking ;}0,ono va- 

 rious readings in the New Testament; with the 

 latest information on Biblical Geography and 

 Antiquities, etc., etc., by Robert Voting, LL. D., 

 author of anew Literal Translation of the He- 

 brew and Greek Scriptures; etc., etc. 



In one handsome quarto volume, containing 

 over 1,100 three-column pages, very substantially 

 bound in cloth. It is at once a Concordance, a 

 Greek, Hebrew and English Lexicon of Bible 

 words, and a Scriptural Gazetteer. Every home 

 that has a Bible in it ought also to have this 

 great help to Bible-reading and study. 



This great work was originally published in 

 England in October, 1ST0, and was sold at *15. 

 We can now offer it in connection with The 

 Tribune at the following remarkably low rates : 



For S6 the Concordance and one copy of The 

 Weekly Tribune five years, or five copies one 

 year. 



For $11 the Concordance and one copy of The 

 Semi-Weekly Tribune five years, or five copies 

 one year, or ten copies of The Weekly Tribune 

 one year. 



For 820 the Concordance and twenty copies 

 of The Weekly Tribune one year. 



The postage on the Concordance is 40 cents, 

 which the subscriber will remit if wishing it sent 



by mail. Except lor short distances the mail will 

 be cheaper than the express. 



Our second new premium for this year is the 

 following ; 



The Library of Useful Knowledge, 



Embracing Chamber's Encyclopaedia complete, 

 omitting only some of the cuts, with extensive 

 additions by an able corps of American editors, 

 treating about 15,000 additional topics, thorough- 

 ly Americanizing the entire work, adding to it 

 over 25 per cent, of the latest, freshest, and most 

 valuable matter, the whole making 15 Hand- 

 some Octavo Volumes of ti by inches in 

 size, printed in large type on good, strong, calen- 

 dered paper, and neatly and substantially bound 

 in cloth. 



We can offer this valuable work in connection 

 with The Tribune as follows: 



I The Library of Universal 

 Knowledge complete in 15 octavo 

 For 815 -i volumes, substantially bound in cloth 

 I as above described, and The Weekly 

 [Tribune 5 years to one subscriber. 



i The Library of Universal 

 For 820 ' Knowledge, as above described, and 

 I The Semi- Weekly Tribune 5 years 

 L to one subscriber. 



| The Library of Universal 

 p.. I Knowledge as above described, and 

 9 1 ten copies of The Weekly Tribune 

 l one year. 



f The Library of Universal 

 Fov«28 ' Knowledge as above described, and 

 I twenty copies of The Weekly Trib- 

 L une one year. 



Five volumes of the work are now ready, the 

 sixth is nearly through the press, and the rest 

 will rapidly follow. 



PROMPT WORK. 



To induce quick work for this great premium 

 we make the following most extraordinary 

 offer: With the first 2,000 orders received for 

 The Library of Universal Knowledge we 

 will send free, as a present from The Tribune 

 Macanlay's History of England, in three handsome 

 volumes, printed on large type and good paper, 

 and neatly bound in cloth. 



jjjapifieeut (jiff I 



WORUES TER'S 



Great Unabridged Dictionary, 



THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE will send at sub- 

 scriber's expense for freight, or deliver in New 

 York City free, Worcester's Great Unabridged 

 Quarto Illustrated 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 ad- 

 vance, or five one-year subscript ions to THE 

 WEEKLY, or, 



$15 for a single five years' subscription in ad- 

 vance, or five one-year subscriptions to Til E 

 SEMI-WEEKLY, or one year's subscription 

 to THE DAILY, or. 



For one dollar extra the Dict'onary ran be sent 

 by mail to any part of the United States, while 

 for short distances the express is much cheaper. 



For any further information desired address 



THE TRIBUNE, 



New-York. 



1 



HAip's Periodicals. 



HARPER'S MAGAZINE, One Year |4 00 



HARPER'S WEEKLY, One Year 4 00 



HARPER'S BAZAR, One Year 4 00 



HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE, One Year. 1 50 



A COMBINATION 0FFEE, 



Harper's Magazine ) 



Harper's Weekly ^One Year $10 00 



Harper's Bazar 



In the Harper periodicals, taken together, we 

 have a comprehensive set of journals that cover 

 almost all of literature, art, life, and society. In 

 the Magazine we have till the best literary talent 

 of the world ; in the Weekly a thoroughly pure 

 and disinterested political publication; in the 

 Bazar an arbiter ot taste and fashion; and in the 

 Young People a delightful miscellany tllat will 

 always aid in the sweetest and pleasantest. of all 

 earthly hours, those spent in the companionship 

 of the little folks around the hearth fire and 

 within the sanctuary of home.— Salwdety Evening 

 Gazette, Boston. 



Surely, no cultivated home will be without its 

 means of entertainment where these periodicals 

 come as guests, and no home in which they are 

 taken can be classed as other than cultured. * * 

 * How fresh, how varied, and how stimulating- 

 are the four publications which we have men- 

 tioned !— Brooklyn Eagle. 



Remittances should be made by Post-Offiee 

 Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. 



HAl!I'liR\s FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY; 

 a weekly publieal ion, containing works of trav- 

 el, Biography, History and Fiction, at prices 

 ranging from 10 to St cents per number. Full 

 list of Harjirr's Franklin Si/narr Library will be 

 furnished gratuitously on application to Har- 

 per & Brothers. 



jar-HARPER'S CATALOGUE, comprising the 

 titles of between three and four thousand vol- 

 umes, will be sent by mail on receipt of Nine 

 Cents. 



Address HAEPEE & BE0THEES, 



Eranklin Square, New York, 



J". IEEE. CORT, 



220 and 222 Water St., Cor, Beekman St., 

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The AMERICAN BRICK SET and 



PORTABLE EUMACES, 



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All Goods Warranted. 



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