38 
AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. 
[January, 
THE TRIBUNE FOR 1864. 
The New-York Tribune, first issued April 10, 1841, lias 
to-day a larger aggregate circulation than any other news¬ 
paper published in America, or (we believe) in the world. 
Compelled a year since to increase the price of its several 
Issues, or submit to the pecuniary ruin of its proprietors from 
the very magnitude of its circulation, it has probably since 
parted with some patrons to whom its remarkable cheapness 
was a controlling recommendation ; but others have taken 
their places, and it has now more than Two Hundred Thous¬ 
and subscribers and regular purchasers—an excess of at least 
Fifty Thousand over those of any rival. And this unprece¬ 
dented currency it has achieved by very liberal expenditures 
In procuring early and authentic intelligence, by the fearless 
expression of convictions, by the free employment of ability 
and industry wherever it might contribute to excellence in 
any department of our enterprise, and by unshrinking fidel¬ 
ity to the dictates of Justice, Humanity, and Freedom. 
By very large outlays for early and authentic advices by 
telegraph and otherwise from its own correspondents with 
the various armies of the Union, and by special efforts to 
urnish such information respecting Markets, Crops, new 
discoveries or improvements in Agriculture. &c., as must 
specially interest farmers, we have assiduously labored to 
make a journal calculated to meet the wants and subserve the 
interests of the Producing Classes. That end we have at least 
measurably attained; for no other newspaper exists in Amer¬ 
ica or Europe which is habitually read by nearly so many 
farmers and their families as is The Tribune to-day. Wo 
shall labor to increase both the number and the satisfaction 
of this by far the most numerous class of its patrons. 
During the existence of the Whig party, this paper support¬ 
ed that party, though always sympathizing with the more 
liberal, progressive, Anti-Slavery “wing” thereof. When 
new issues dissolved or transformed old organizations through 
the spontaneous uprising of the people of the Free States 
against the repudiation of the Missouri Restriction, The 
Tribune heartily participated in that movement, and was 
known as Republican. When the long smoldering conspira¬ 
cy to divide and destroy our country or reduce it entire to 
complete abasement to the Slave Power culminated In overt 
treason and rebellion, it naturally, necessarily regarded re¬ 
sistance to this conspiracy as paramount to all other consid¬ 
erations, and devoted all its energies and efforts to the main¬ 
tenance of our Union/ In every great controversy which has 
divided our country, it has been found on that side which 
naturally commands the sympathy and support of the large 
majority of school-houses and the decided minority of grog¬ 
shops, and so doubtless will be to the last. 
Ardently desiring and striving for the early and enduring 
adjustment of our National distractions, The Tribune leaves 
the time, the nature and the conditions of that adjustment 
implicitly to those lawfully in authority, confiding in their 
wisdom and patriotism, anxious to aid them to the utmost in 
their arduous responsibilities and not to embarrass them even 
oy possibility. Firmly believing in the Apostolic rule—“First 
pure, then peaceable”—holding that the total and final ex- 
lirpation of Slavery is the true and only absolute cure for 
our National ills—that any expedient that stops short of this 
can have but a transient and illusory success—we yet pro¬ 
pound no theory of “reconstruction” and indorse none that 
has been propounded by another—neither Sumner’s, nor 
Whiting’s, nor any of the various Copperhead devices for 
achieving “Peace” by surrendering the Republic into the 
power of its traitorous foes—but, exhorting the American 
People to have faith in their Government, to reinforce their 
armies and replenish their treasury, we believe that, if they 
but do their duty, a benign Providence will in due time bring 
this fearful struggle to such a close as will best subserve the 
true greatness of our country and the permanent well-being 
of mankind. 
The present session of Congress will be an exceedingly im¬ 
portant one, and we have made ample arrangements to lay 
before our readers what is going on in Washington, both in 
Congress and in the Departments. 
We respectfully solicit the subscriptions and active exer¬ 
tions of our friends, and of all whose views and convictions 
accord substantially with ours. 
DAILY TRIBUNE. 
Mall Subscribers, one year (311) issues. $8. 
SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE. 
One Copy, one year (104 issues). S3. 
Two Copies one year. S5. 
Five Copies, one year... 
Ten Copies, one year.50. 
An extra copy will be sent to any person who sends us a 
club of twenty and over. 
The Semi-Weekly Tribune is sent to Clergymen for $2.25. 
WEEKLY-TRIBUNE. 
One Copy, one year (52 issues).§2. 
Three Conies, one year. 
Five Copies, one year..-...»»• 
Ten Copies, one year.$1,>. 
Any larger number, addressed to names of subscribers. 
SI 50 each. An extra copy will be sent to every club of ten. 
Twenty Copies, TO one address, one year, $‘.35, and any 
larger number at same price. An extra copy will be sent to 
clubs of twenty. Any person who sends us a club of thirty 
or over, shall receive the THE SEMl-WEEKLi TRIBUNE 
gratis. 
To any person who sends us a club of fifty or over, THE 
DAILY TRIBUNE will be sent without charge. 
The Weekly Tribune is sent to Clergymen for $1.25. 
The. Post Offices where full Clubs cannot be formed either 
for The Semi-Weekly or Weekly Tribune, subscribers to 
the two editions can unite at Club prices, should the total 
number of subscribers come within out rule. 
THE TRIBUNE ALMANAC for 18G4 will be ready 
about Christmas. Price 15 cents; 10 copies post-paid, $1; 
100 copies, sent by express, $8. Cash orders solicited. 
Address, THE TRIBUNE, 
Tribune Buildings, New-York. 
THE NEW-YORK TIMES. 
Daily, (Morning and Evening,) Semi-Weekly 
and Weekly. 
Tlie most Enterprising and Reliable Fam¬ 
ily Newspaper in tlie United States. 
THE NEW-YORK TIMES is now recognized throughout 
the country as conspicuous among the journals of the City 
of New-York for the 
CHEAPNESS OF ITS ISSUES, 
THE 
ENTERPRISE OF ITS MANAGEMENT, 
AND THE 
PROMPTNESS AND 
AUTHENTICITY OF ITS NEWS. 
It pays unfaltering allegiance to the Union and the Con¬ 
stitution ; lending a steady, but discriminating support to 
the Present Administration of the Government, and advo¬ 
cating every timely effort to promote the Progress and Ele¬ 
vation of every portion of the Human Race. In this advo¬ 
cacy, it yields only to safe and conservative impulses, placing 
always the Public Good in advance <5f merely Humanitarian 
and Sectarian Considerations. No question of import to the 
welfare of the nation or society fails to obtain candid, inde¬ 
pendent and exhaustive discussion in the columns of this 
journal. 
In the Department of News, the first aim of the Times will 
continue to be the collection and publication of trustworthy 
intelligence from all parts of the World. 
ITS GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE, BOTH FOREIGN 
AND DOMESTIC, 
is confessed to be superior to that of any other American 
Newspaper. Its Letters descriptive of 
THE EVENTS OF THE WAR, 
its record of the Movements of the Contending Armies, their 
Marches, their Battles, their Retreats, its Lists of the Casual¬ 
ties ; its Delineations of Camp Life, have given a new and 
distinctive interest to that department of journalism. 
Its Reports of Congressional and Legislative Proceedings, 
of Financial, Commercial, and 
GENERAL INTELLIGENCE, 
oi important Legal and Criminal Trials, and of whatever 
may have special interest for the great body of the commu¬ 
nity, are full, prompt and reliable. 
But whether in the enunciation of opinions, or the state¬ 
ment of facts, the Times never loses sight of the obligations 
of public or private morality; never conciliates the judg¬ 
ment or taste of the vicious ; but seeks uniformly to furnish 
reading properly admissible into the Domestic Circle. 
TBbo Ncw-¥ovk Weekly Times, 
is a large and elegantly printed quarto sheet of eight pages 
or forty-eight columns—devoted to Politics, Literature and 
General News, and intended to be the BEST, as well as the 
CHEAPEST Family Newspaper in the United States. 
Especial attention is devoted to full, accurate and trust¬ 
worthy reports of the 
LIVE STOCK AND PRODUCE MARKETS, 
for which a special corps of Reporters is maintained. 
THE AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT 
is compiled from a variety of sources, many of them inac¬ 
cessible to the American reader, and furnishes valuable in¬ 
formation to the Farmer and Gardener. 
THE WEEKLY TIMES will be sent to subscribers to any 
part of the country on the following terms; 
One Copy one year.$3. 
Three Copies one year. 5. 
Five Copies one year. 8. 
Ten Copies one year.: .15. 
—and an Extra Copy to any Club of Ten. 
Twenty Copies one year.35. 
The Weekly Times is sent to Clergymen at.. .1 35. 
To any one who will send us a Club of Twenty, the Semi- 
Wef.kly Times will be sent gratuitously for one year. To 
any one sending us a Club of Fifty, the Daily Times will 
be sent gratis for one year. 
TSac SeaaBi-WccliBy Times, 
Published on Tuesdays and Fridays, and containing eight 
pages of reading matter in every number, is sent to Sub¬ 
scribers at the following rates: 
One Copy one year.$3. 
Two Copies one year. 5. 
Five Copies one year.....13. 
Ten Copies one year..33 50. 
The Semi-Weekly Times is sent to Clergymen at.3 35. 
Fresh names may at any time be added to CIuds, both of 
the Weekly and Semi-Weekly, at Club Rates. 
We employ no traveling Agents. Specimen copies sent 
FREE. 
Tlie Ncw-¥ork Daily Tianes 
is published Every Morning and Evening— price Three 
Cents; mailed at Eight Dollars a year; with Sunday 
Edition, Ten Dollars a year. 
TERMS—CASn, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. 
All letters to be addressed to 
II. J. RAYMOND Sc CO., 
Proprietors of the New-York Times, New-York. 
The Best Reading Books. 
J UST PUBLISHED. HILLARD’S READERS. 
NEW SERIES. 
HILLARD’S SIXTH READER. 
HILLARD’S FIFTH READER. 
HILLARD’S INTERMEDIATE READER, ILLUSTRATED. 
HILLARD’S FOURTH READER, ILLUSTRATED. 
HILLARD’S THIRD (PRIMARY) READER, ILLUSTRA¬ 
TED. 
HILLARD’S SECOND (PRIMARY) READER, ILLUS¬ 
TRATED. 
HILLARD’S FIRST (PRIMARY) READER, ILLUSTRA¬ 
TED. 
The Sixth Header, 
The main object of all reading-books is to teach the art cf 
reading. With this view, a wide range of selections has been 
made in this Reader, so that the pupils using it maybe train¬ 
ed to give proper force and due expression to every form of 
style, whether grave or gay, humorous or pathetic, elevated 
or familiar, declamatory or simple. Care has been taken to 
admit nothing which young persons would be likely to pro¬ 
nounce dull or tame. 
Biographical, Critical, and Explanatory notices are pre¬ 
fixed to most of the selections. They have been carefully 
prepared by Mr. Hillard, and are a valuable feature of the 
book. 
Tlie Introductory Treatise on Elocution prepared by Pro¬ 
fessor Mark Bailey, of Yale College, is a plain, practical, 
and useful treatise upon this difficult art, and cannot fail to 
be highly approved. 
The Fifth Reader. 
The same care has been taken in the selection of a variety 
of entertaining and choice pieces for the Fifth Reader as for 
the Sixth. Many excellent declamatory pieces are given. 
The diflicult words in each lesson are defined, and numerous 
careful biographical sketches and critical notes are found 
throughout the book. The Treatise upon Elocution is the 
work of Professor Bailey, of Yale College, and is easily un¬ 
derstood and practical. 
THE INTERMEDIATE READER. (Illustrated.) 
This Reader is designed for large towns and cities, where 
the grading of the schools may require an additional book. 
THE FOURTH READER. (Illustrated.) 
This reading-book is intended for the lower classes of our 
Grammar Schools, and the same general features are pre¬ 
served in it as are found in the other books of tlie series 
The Introductory Treatises in the Fourth and Intermediate 
Readers on Articulation and the training of the Vocal Or¬ 
gans will be found to be valuable helps. Spelling and De¬ 
fining Lessons are attached to each lesson in the Fourth and 
Intermediate IieaderM. They have been carefully prepared. 
THE THIRD PRIMARY READER. 
THE SECOND PRIMARY READER. 
THE FIRST PRIMARY READER. 
The Primary Readers were chiefly prepared by a gentle¬ 
man long engaged in teaching, and of much practical expe¬ 
rience in all that relates to education, but under Mr. Hillard’s 
direct and careful supervision. They contain lessons in 
Enunciation, with brief directions to teachers, and selections 
in verse and prose for reading lessons. Tlie Exercises in 
Enunciation are such as can easily be used by young chil¬ 
dren, with the aid of tlie teacher. 
These books are beautifully illustrated with original do 
signs by Billings, engraved by .John Andeew. The sale 
of nearly 
300,000 OF THE PRIMARY READERS 
since their publication a few years since, is an evidence of 
their popularity. 
In tlie Fourth, Intermediate, Fifth, and Sixth Readers, a 
few of the most approved selections in the compiler’s form¬ 
er series are reproduced, but the selections for the most part 
are derived from other sources, and the examination ot 
English literature has been very extensive to find a variety 
of pieces of intrinsic worth and permanent merit. 
Great care has been taken that the different numbers of the 
New Series should be carefully graduated to the ca¬ 
pacity of the classes for which they are designed. 
School Officers and Teachers are invited to address the 
Publishers. 
Copies of the books will be furnished for examination, or 
they will be sent by mail on receipt of the postage, which ie 
for the Sixth, 24 cents; Fifth, 20 cents; Fourth, 16 cents 
Third Primary, 12 cents; Second Primary, 8 cents; and Firs* 
Primary, 8 cents. 
The publication of the Old Series will be continued as 
heretofore. BREWER & TILESTON, 
181 Washington Street, Boston, Mass. 
A School Magazine Free! 
Clark’s School Visitor—Vol- VIII-—1864- 
Rev. Alexander Clark, Editor. 
Readings, Dialogues, Speeches, Music, 
Poems, Letters, Pictures, Sec., See. 
The Publisher of this popular DAY SCHOOL MONTHLY, 
in order to reach all parts of the country, will send the Vis¬ 
itor one YEAR FREE to one person (wlio will act as 
agent,) at any Post Office in tlie United States. The 
January Number appears in beautiful new dress, and with 
many improvements. Address, J. W. DAUGIIADAY, 
Publisher, ISOS Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa 
