1865.] 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
391 
Two ]Vew Books 
Bt OLIVER OPTIC! 
NOW READY. 
THE T.4JVKEE MIDDY, 
or, 
Tile Adventures of a Naval Officer. 
A Sequel to THE S.4.IL0R BOY. Peiot— JljO. 
■WORK AND WIN : 
or 
NODDY NEWMAN ON A CRUISE. 
Being Number Poor of the favorite Woodville Stobtrs. 
Peick— 11.25. 
Two New Pmcly Books ! 
1.ITTL.E PRIDV'S DOTTY DUrPLE, 
l-ITTLE PRUDY'S STORY BOOK— 
Completins the Series. — Price, each 75 cents. 
In Press !— Will be pablistted Dec. lOtll. 
" FIGHTING JOE." 
By OLIVER OPTIC. 
A aequel to Soldier Bot axd Youns Liectenant. 
Pbice-$1.50. 
Published by LEE & SHEPAKD, Boston. 
For Sale by all Boofcsellers. Sent by mail, postage paid, 
upon receipt of advertised piice. (Please refer to -adver- 
tisement in November No. for a more complete list of books.) 
(1 
The Human Face Divine.' 
?5 
A New System of Physio2:noray,— Eyes, Ears, Nose, Lips, 
Month, Head. Hair, Eyebrows, Hands, Feet, Slcin, Comples- 
lon, -with all " Si?ns of Character, and How to Read Them," 
giveu in 
THE PHRENOLOGICAL JOURNAL, 
SAMUEL R. WELLS. Editor. 
Ktlinolog^, Natural History of Man, nations and 
races described. Illustrations. 
Physiology, Heart, Lune:s, Stomach, Bones, Muscles, 
and Xervons System. 
Plu-enology, and the Temperaments, Jfan's Inlellec* 
tnal, Social, and Moral Nature. 
Physiognomy, with all the Tatioos "Signs of Charac- 
ter, and How to Read Them.'* 
Psychology* the "Science of the Soul," Man's rela- 
tions to this life, and the life to come." 
ZW^ A new Volume, the 43d. commences with the Jan. No. 
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r.^iT-o ..i.vj-> rtrCx contams in addition 
dition to the 
■customary attractions, a comic illustrated article 
^ijy Orpheus C. Kerr, the prince of humorists, and a 
^ capital funny thinff on Balloons. Sir Morton Peto'a 
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CANVASSERS WANTED— To tnke orders for 
Victor's HISTORY OF THE REBELLION. Endorsed by 
the President, Cabinet, Members of Congress. Governors, 
Generals, Bancroft the Historian, and by tho Prti^sjicneral- 
ly. This work still is the conceded STANDARD.. All 
who have compared the different Htstoriesof the War. {even 
the authors themselves) acknowledge the siiperioritv of 
Victor's. Also, to take orders for Victor's HISTORY of 
AMERICAN CONSPIRACIES from 1760 to 1860. (the onlv 
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the Incidents and Anecdotes of the War, and for portraits of 
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The EviNTNG Post is also a good Literary Neivs- 
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WILLIAM CtJLLEN BRYANT and PARKE GODWIN. 
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Address WM. C. BRYANT & CO., Publishers, 
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Every Child on the Continent should have it 1 
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Magazine continues a favorite as of old. and increases in 
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ARTHUR'S HllE MIGAZINE 
For 1S60. 
It is with pleasure we are able to announce a much larger 
circulation for the "Home Magazine" during the year 1865 
than it hasevpr b*ifQr« nyjiinpi-); and also a more heartily 
cipTesserrapproval, hy suoscnbers aua i^e pr«>», ur i.o iv,L.i 
and character. During the next vear we shall bring into its 
pagesastillMOREVIGOliOL'S LITERARY LIFE— A HIGH- 
ER EXCELLENCE— A BROADER SPIRIT, and a more ear- 
nest advocacy of All Things Pure and Noble. 
As heretofore, our aim will be to produce 
'2. illagajine for ^.mericaii l^omcs, 
not too didactic and heavy, but cheerfuL animated, and 
social— a friend, dropping in Upon quiet hours, with some- 
thing always pleasant and profitable to sav. 
A new serial by MISS VIRGINIA F. TOWNSEND will 
be commenced In the January number, entitled 
" PETROLEUM." 
The Home Magazine for 1S66 will be enriched not only 
with the bent fn-Ucles the Editors can produce, but will num- 
ber among its contributors many of 
77ie Leading Writers of the Country, 
Our magazine is not simply a literary periodical. It taives 
higher ground, and seeks to make literature the handmaid 
of morality and religion, always teaching, whether by means 
of story, poem, or essay, that only by the "Golden Rule" 
can man live to any mse or good purpose. If you open your 
door to its \isits, it will be 
A TRUE FRIEND IN YOUR HOUSEHOLD. 
As heretofore, it will be embellished with Steei, Engrav- 
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Adclress T, S. ARTHU^R & CO., 
323 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, 
^HE HERAXiD OF HEALTH AND 
* JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CCLTCRE, 
for 1S66, will be greatly enlarged an^l improved. In no 
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MILLER, WOOD & CO., 15 Laight-St., N. V. 
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size, iSc. roWLER & WELLS. 389 Broadway. N. Y, 
THE WORLD, 
An Independent Democratic Daily, "Weekly 
and Sellli-^Veekly NtAvspaper. 
After four years of civil war, forced upon the people of the 
United States by the violence of sectional parties, we now 
enter upon a new era of unity and of progress. North and 
South, a cordial co-operation of all honest men is needed to 
repair the waste of war, to establish our Peace through the 
triumph of sound constitutional principles in the adminis- 
tration of the government, and our Unity by guarding all 
that makes Union desirable. 
The great Democratic Party, whose history In the past Is 
the liiotrt-prtC T"-''va\a i><-r.ar'><-<t-7'. ^f t prritnrial PTt«ne!nn and 
of poblic order in America, etanda now, as it has ever etood, 
the Party of the Nation, superior to all sectional passions In 
its loyalty to the rights of co-equa) States and to the liberties 
of the indi\idual citizen. Once more its voice will be heard, 
once more its adherents will be rallied to Its time-honored 
standards in every city and town of the Northern and of 
the Southern States. 
To the principles of this great Democratic Party of the 
Nation, THE WORLD has borne firm witness throughout the 
ordeal of civil war. It will now be devoted to the not less 
arduous task of applying those principles to the solution of 
the many and weighty questions— financial, social, political— 
which come upon us with the return of peace. Faithful to 
the real interests of all sections, it will be enslaved by the 
prejudices and blinded by the prepossessions of none. 
That the principles of American Democracy should thus 
be uttered, with no weak or uncertain voice, here in the 
great metropolitan center of American enterprise and com- 
merce, is a matter of such importance to every citizen as 
must recommend THE WORLD to the co-operation and 
support of good men in all sections of the Union. 
Whatever skill can de\ise or enterprise accomplish will 
contribute to make THE WORLD what it is our resolve that 
it shall continue to be— ffti? he^t Xeicspaper of the Day. 
Competent correspondents at every commercial and polit- 
ical center of both hemispheres, who are always instructed 
to make the fVeest and promptest use of the telegraph, will 
keep our readers fully informed of the doings and the pro- 
gress of mankind In all parts of the globe. 
EDITIONS. 
The Daily World affords a complete compendium oC 
and commentary upon, the news of every day. 
The Sejo-Weeklt World is a large quarto sheet, same 
size as Dailt. containing all its news, correspondence, edi- 
torials, commercial and market news, cattle market and 
pro\'ision reports, and a fresh and entertaining miscellany ol 
nt^rAtnrp Published Tuesday and Friday. 
The Weeklt World, a largc qnorto ahftRt. same size as 
Dailt, has now the largest circulation of any weekly jour- 
nal published save one. Its extraordinary success since ita 
union with the New York Argus has justified the most lib- 
eral expenditures, which will make it unrivaled in interest 
and value to farmers. Published Wednesday. 
1. Its Market Reports embrace the New York, Albany, 
Brighton and Cambridge Live Stock Markets; the New- 
York CouNTRT Pkodtjce and General Produce Markets; 
special and valuable Hop Intelligence; a department of 
Agricultural Reading ; all together composing an un- 
rivaled handbook of current information for the Farmer, 
Live Stock or Produce Dealer, the Country Merchant, etc. 
2. Its Rkadixg FOR THE Famtlt CIRCLE embraces the 
fi-eshest and best Stories, Poetry. Religious Reading, etc. 
3. Its Digest of the News is not, like most city week- 
lies, a mere waste-basket of tlie Dailt ; only matters of in- 
terest and Importance are chosen from the Daily, while the 
mass of its contents are prepared especially for the Weekly, 
In every post-offlce district there should be found some ac- 
tive, public-spirited Democrat, who will confer a benefit 
upon us, his neighbors, and the cause, by making a deter- 
mined effort to form a club of four, ten, twenty, or fifty for 
the Weeklt World, at our greatly reduced rates. 
GREAT REDUCTION IN TERMS, 
DAILY WORLD. 
One copy, one year, by mail TEN DOLLARS. 
SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD. 
One year one copv, , FOUR DOLLARS. 
Four copies, one vear TEN DOLLARS, 
Ten copies, one year. TWENTY DOLLARS. 
WEEKLY WORLD. 
One copy, one year TWO DOLLARS. 
Four copies, one ve.ar SEVEN DOLLARS. 
Ten copies, one vear FIFTEEN DOLLARS. 
Twenty copies, one vear, to one address — *3.'i DOLLARS. 
Fifty copies, one year, to one address . . FIFTY DOLLARS. 
An extra copy of the Weekly Edition furnished to clubs 
of twenty or more. 
For clubs of fifty the Semi-Weefclj', and for clubs of one 
hundred the Daily, will be sent to getter up of a club. 
Additions maybe made to clubs at anytime during the 
year at the regular club rates. 
Changes from club lists can only be made by request of the 
person receiving the club pacKages. AM such requests must 
name the edition, pos^offlce. and State to which it ha-j pre 
viously been sent, and inclose twenty-five cents to pay for 
changing to separate address. 
Orders for any of the Editions of The Wonu) may be sent 
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traveling agents. Money sent by mail ^vill be at the risk of 
the senders. Orders and letters should be addressed to 
THE W^ORUO, 
35 Parh Row. Ne-w York* 
