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"Not only the ablest and best, but also, as we suppose, the most popular, of American religious periodicals. At all events, it is safe to predict that it will soon have, if it has not already, greater influence than any other religious paper in the country.”. THE NATION (N. Y.).

THE CHRISTIAN UNION,

HENRY WARD BEECHER, Editor.

An Unsectarian, Independent, Weekly Journal, devoted to Religion, Morals, Reform, Foreign and Domestic News of the Church and the World, Literature,

Science, Art, Agriculture, Trade, Finance, etc., etc.

THE CHRISTIAN UNION is now the only weekly religious journal for which MR. BERCHER writes, or to which he in any way contributes. His editorial articles, frequent literary reviews, and characteristic

* Star Papers, *

are regular features of the paper; while every week are published the only reports of MR. BEECHER'S Friday-evening "Lecture-Room Talks" that he indorses as correct or personally authorizes. In the management and editorial conduct of that paper, MR. BEECHER is assisted by an able staff of skilful and experienced journalists; while

THE CONTRIBUTORS

Embrace well-known and eminent Writers from every Evangelical Denomination. This is therefore a paper for all Christians everywhere, being published in the interest of the whole body of Christ's followers. It seeks to interpret the Bible rather as a rule of life than as a Book of Doctrines.

IT IS A FAMILY JOURNAL,

and has something of interest for the whole household, young and old. The paper will be made, in various ways, the most attractive religious weekly published; it is already the most widely quoted throughout the whole country. It contains admirable contributed and editorial articles, discussing all the great topics of the day; fresh information on unhackneyed subjects; constant care and provision for the interest of those having at heart the success of Christian work among the impenitent, the suffering, and the poor; much matter of a high and pure religious tone; Poems; Household Stories and Chat for the little ones.

A HOUSEHOLD DEPARTMENT,

under the supervision and personal management of MRS. H. W. BEECHER; an interesting selected Miscellany; and much other wealth of material not here enumerated.

A New Serial Story, by Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe,

author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," "The Minister's Wooing," &c., &c., which is to be commenced during November, will alone be worth the cost of the year's subscription.

The form of the paper, SIXTEEN PAGES LARGE QUARTO, is so convenient for reading, binding, and preservation, that it has in this alone a special and peculiar merit not possessed by the large "blanket sheets"; while its literary attractions are not surpassed by any. Therefore it is growing in circulation more rapidly than any o her.

In short, we offer the handsomest, the most convenient, and the best religious weekly published for $3.00, and

Give Away

to every new Subscriber one of the finest Works of Art, and the very finest Portrait of Washington ever engraved, namely:

MARSHALL'S "HOUSEHOLD ENGRAVING OF WASHINGTON."

(A plate which cost Ten Thousand Dollars to engrave.)

Price, only $3.00 per Year.

SUBSCRIBE FOR IT!

GET OTHERS TO TAKE IT!

ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS BETWEEN THIS AND THE 1ST OF JANUARY WILL BE CREDITED
TO THE END OF THE YEAR 1871.

List of LIBERAL CASH COMMISSIONS and PREMIUMS sent on application.
SAMPLE COPIES sent on receipt of six cents for postage, or FREE to any one who will try to
raise a club.
Remittances should be made by Draft, Check, P. O. Money-Order, or Registered Letter.

J. B. FORD & CO., Publishers, 39 Park Row, New York.

COLTON'S SELECT FLAVORS Fruits and Spices.

They are the True, Rich Flavors of the Fruits, of remarkable strength and economy, requiring much less than of the ordinary Flavoring Extracts, and are securing an unparalleled and constantly increasing trade, and always reliable-thre Best. Colton's Rich Vanilla Extract is sought by many who prize the delicious purity. References from Families, Dealers, and Hotels, who use them, and say "Very Choice": Gov. Wm. A. Buckingham, Conn.; Gov. J. Y. Smith, Prov., R. I., Dr. J. G. Holland, the Poet, Springfield, Mass.; Julius Sayer, Newport, R. I.; and I. Miller & Sons, Saratoga Springs, N. Y., among the largest dealers in American and Foreign Luxuries and Fine Groceries. Proprietors of the following well-known Hotels: Delavan, Albany; Congress Hall and Clarendon, Saratoga; Fort William Henry, Lake George; Arlington, Washington, D C.; Massasoit, Springfield; Ocean, Newport; Profile, White Mountains; International, Niagara Fails, and many others who seek the Best. First-class Hotels, Confectioners, and Ice-Cream Makers seek them. Dealers in Choice Flavors treble their sales with them. Sold by Grocers and Druggists, Wholesale and Retail. J. W. Colton's N. Y. Depot, 71 Maiden Lane.

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YEAST POWDER

is rapidly superseding all other preparations for making elegant, wholesome, and delicious Biscuits, Rolls, Bread, Waffles, Griddle Cakes, Dumplings, Pot-Pies, Sweet Cakes, &c. Always ready for use. Saves largely in Milk, Eggs, and Shortening. Perfectly pure and healthy. No waste of food prepared with it. Try it. Ask for DOOLEY'S. Grocers and dealers everywhere keep it. Manufactured at 69 New Street, New York.

BEST STORY PAPER in the
UNIVERSE. Sold everywhere

WESTERN 6 cents. $3 a year. A $5

Prize to every subscriber. Send two stamps for specimens. BOSTON, MASS.

THE IMPROVED

WILSON

SHUTTLE SEWING MACHINE for simplicity, durability & beauty stands unrivaled! For stitching hemming, tucking, felling, quilting, cording, binding, braiding, gathering, gathering and sewing on gathers, it is unexcelled! AGENTS WANTED in every County in the United States where we have not one already employed. For particulars address Wilson Sewing Machine Co., Cleveland, O.; Boston, Mass., or St. Louis, Mo.

A DICTIONARY

By WILLIAM A. WHEELER.
1 vol. 12mo. $2.50.

This Dictionary has been welcomed by eminent critics as a work of very great value and interest both to scholars and general readers. It explains many of the allusions so frequently occurring in modern literature, the names of the Greek, Roman, Norse, and Hindu Mythologies; noted Fictitious Persons and Places, so interwoven with the best recent literature of England and America, and those of most general interest in the literature of other modern nations; nicknames of eminent characters in political and literary history, and those applied to parties and sects. **For sale by all Dealers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price, by the Publishers,

FIELDS, OSGOOD, & CO., Boston.

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With a Grover and Baker Machine, a woman can not only support herself comfortably, but a family. Its capacity for executing all kinds of work, its rapidity, its perfect reliability, adapt it particularly to the demands of family sewing, and a clever operator is never at a loss for the employment of herself and machine, at remunerative prices.

The value of the Grover and Baker Machine has been demonstrated by its steady advance in public estimation, until it now stands at the head of all its competitors. It has all the advantages of an elastic stitch, without the serious objection to a single thread, which is so liable to rip, or the lock stitch, which is so liable to break.

This elasticity renders it invaluable for woollens, flannels, piquès, and all that class of goods for children's wear which are used so much in the family, and which are so useless when disfigured by soiling or signs of shrinkage. The Grover and Baker Machine has become an established favorite in all large dress-making, furnishing, and outfitting establishments, because it does the work better, and the ladies prefer it.

FIELDS, OSGOOD, & Co.'s NEW

BOOKS.

HAWTHORNE - English Note

Books. 2 vols. $400.

"His power of accurate external, as well as internal, observation, his love of nature, his keen insight into the heart of life of all sorts, his fidelity to his own emotions, and the clear, lucid style in which he conveys what his eyes have seen, render his work about England (Our Old Home'] perhaps the best we have The Passages from English Note-Books, just published, is a continuation of the same work, or rather the same work in undress, where we have the impressions he received, fresh as they were set down at the time, and not as they were afterward elaborated for criticism and the public. They are, in a double sense, therefore, valuable, as records of what he saw and heard, and as uncommon revelations of his own rare and weird spirit.” — Putnam's Magazine.

COFFIN (Carleton) - The

Seat

of Empire. With Illustrations and an excellent Map. $1.50.

"The volume has been prepared in response to many requests for specific information concerning the 'physical features of the vast reach of country lying between the Lakes and the Pacific, not only in the United States, but in British America.' The country described includes the Red River region, Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia, - a country nearly all of which is capable of supporting a dense population, and whose climate, by reason of the Kuro-Siwo, the Gulf Stream of the Pacific,-is conducive to health and comfort even up to the sixtieth parallel of latitude; where gardens may be made early in May, and barley is ready for the sickle on the 21st of July; where nine bushels of potatoes produce one hundred and fifty, and barley is raised eighty-four bushels to the acre. Mr. Coffin is an enthusiast, and, after the manner of enthusiasts, presents his pictures in the most attractive lights; but his statements are based upon personal observation, or are supported by excellent authority. Few books will be published this season which will more agreeably combine amusement with instruction than these jottings of a journalist on a tour through regions comparatively unknown, but abounding in objects of artistic as well as utilitarian interest, and towards which circumstances have combined of late to attract the attention of the civilized world."-New York World.

MEDBERY-Men and Mysteries

of Wall Street. $2.00.

"Mr. Medbery's style is excellent. It is clear, strong, crisp, and vivid. It never lapses into dulness. His knowledge is ample, and thus we have the mysteries of the street related in the most entertaining manner. How the small speculators manage, how the big operators work, how combinations are made, how corners' are effected, the mysteries of 'puts' and 'calls,' of being short or long, the relations of outsiders and brokers, the methods of the Long Room, the Regular Board, and the Gold Room,-these and many other points are explained with as much clearness as is possible in mere exposition. An interesting chapter is devoted to Vanderbilt, Drew, Gould, Marston, Dr. Durant, and others of the great operators, together with a sketch of their most famous transactions. The whole volume is as interesting as a romance, and seems, much of it, like a record of Romance."— Albany Express.

BRYANT-Homer's Iliad.

UniTinted paper,

form with LONGFELLOW'S DANTE. bevelled boards, gilt top. 2 vols. $10.00. The two volumes in Half Calf, $ 20.00.

"It is just as well that a turn in the tide of fashion should have left the field of Homeric translation free and open for an American to pluck a laurel therein; and the candor of English scholars will rejoice in the opportunity of acknowledging a Transatlantic success in an experiment which at home has not seldom ended in failure. Under ordinary circumstances we might have hesitated to notice another version of the 'Iliad' or 'Odyssey,' lest the public should tire of so many harpings on a single string; but there is more than one reason why Mr. Bryant's version is entitled to have an exception made in its favor, not the least weighty of these being that he approaches his task with extraordinary modesty, and prefaces his work with notions in reference to translation as sound and sensible as they are unostentatious. Of living American poets, Mr. William Cullen Bryant is one of the most eminent, as well as one of the oldest in standing.

We congratulate our American kinsfolk on having a poet among them who in his green old age has produced a translation of the Iliad' worthy to live amongst the best experiments of the kind in our common language."— Saturday Review (London).

MISS PHELPS-Hedged In. $1.50. "We have read Miss Phelps's story with unmixed approval. There is a purpose in it and a power that ought to make it more popular than 'The Gates Ajar.' It treats a delicate, difficult, and commonly avoided subject the duty of society to fallen women-with so rare a delicacy and yet thoroughness from so heroic a standpoint, and with such a clear apprehension of the spirit and principles of Christ's teachings- and at the same time with a heart so full of sisterly sympathy and love toward the unfortunate class -that no true man or woman can read it and not be moved in the right direction. The work loses nothing in interest or power of impression by being wrought into a story."- Presbyterian Review.

MURRAY-Music-Hall Sermons.

$1.50.

"Sermons would recover their lost reputation were there many so vigorous and fresh as these. Mr. Murray is certainly a remarkably eloquent preacher, and his eloquence is of the best sort, that of good sense and just sentiment fitly and feelingly expressed. He is master of a style singularly clear, pure, and felicitous. In general, the literary quality of the discourse is uncommonly high, but is so without prejudice to the directness and simple cogency proper to the orator. There are passages that would do no discredit to Bossuet. In this respect, and as we think in most respects, he is decidedly to be ranked above Henry Ward Beecher."-Boston Commonwealth.

LOWELL
- Among my Books.
$2,00. CONTENTS, Dryden, Witchcraft, Shake-
speare, Lessing, New England Two Centuries Ago,
Rousseau and the Sentimentalists.

"A permanent addition to the literature of genial
scholarship and large-minded criticism.
With a never-failing grace, Mr. Lowell carries
the large burden of a ripe and widely gathered
scholarship, and while there is that in his man-
ner which must attract the unlearned, the wisest
of us cannot fail to gain instruction from his am-
ple stores."- Buffalo Courier.

For sale by all Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price, by the Publishers,

FIELDS, OSGOOD, & CO., Boston.

FRESH AND DELIGHTFUL BOOKS

FOR YOUNG FOLKS.

The Story of a Bad Boy. By THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH. Profusely Illustrated. $1.50. "Tom Bailey has captivated all his acquaintances. He must be added hereafter to the boys' gallery of favorite characters, side by side with Robinson Crusoe, and the Swiss Family Robinson, and Tom Brown at Rugby, while we older folks can laugh as heartily as anybody over his adventures, and relish his history much more than we do the real narratives of grown-up men and women. Aldrich's style has a fine flavorous humor, and without the least appearance of effort he draws continually upon an inexhaustible store of fun. There is a delightful air of reality about the places and incidents of his story."— New York Tribune.

Mr.

The Fairy Egg, And What it Held. By THREE FRIENDS. Finely Illustrated by LUCY GIBBONS. $1.50.

"What the Egg holds is a number of very charming tales about Little Bo Peep and Little Boy Blue, the Three Spanish Knights, the Old Woman's Journey, the Little Maid's Tales, the Musical Pie, the Man in the Moon, the Little Husband, the Adventures of Richard and Robin, Brindle's Leap, and the Little Bachelor,- all old friends in new and very attractive garments, with very nice pictures by Lucy Gibbons to set off their other beauties." — Cleveland Herald.

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The Trotty Book. By ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS, Author of "The Gypsy Series," "The Gates Ajar," etc. Profusely Illustrated by S. ExTINGE, JR., and LIZZIE B. HUMPHREY. $1.50. "The Trotty Book' is a thoroughly juvenile story, the hero of which is a little boy. His adventures and misadventures, including his marriage, are charmingly natural, and his exploits as artist and letter-writer are extraordinary at the least. He is a delightfully spoiled child." - Philadelphia Press.

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Cast Away in the Cold: An Old Man's Story of a Young Man's Adventures. By DR. ISAAC I. HAYES, author of "Arctic Boat Journey," etc. With Illustrations. Square 16mo. $1.50. Uniform with "Queer Little People."

"A story containing a great many exciting adventures, which are told in a very interesting manner. It is an exceedingly useful book. . . . . It is a first-rate book for boys; and old boys, if any such creatures there are, will find it very fine reading." Boston Traveller.

The Flower and the Star, and other Stories. By W. J. LINTON. With Illustrations drawn and engraved by the author. Square 16mo. $1.50. Uniform with "Red-Letter Days."

"A book in which the stories and the pictures are both so graceful and charming that it is impossible to say which are the most attractive."- New York Sun. Grimm's Goblins. With Illustrations in Colors, from Cruikshank's designs. $1.50.

"The little folks will be delighted with this addition to their stock of pleasant reading."-New York Times. Rainbows for Children. Edited by MRS. L.

66

MARIA CHILD. With twenty-eight Illustrations. $ 1.50.

The bright, pure, and simple style in which these little stories are told makes the book particularly commendable for children's reading." - Boston Traveller.

Snow-Berries. By ALICE CARY. With Illustrations. $1.50.

"A charming little book of mingled prose and verse, 'Snow-Berries' is one of the most fascinating b.oks of its kind."N. Y. Evening Post.

Leslie Goldthwaite. By MRS. A. D. T. WHITNEY. Illustrated by Hoppin. $1.75.

"The most charming story for girls we have ever read." Chicago Republican.

Red-Letter Days. By GAIL HAMILTON. Il

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For sale by Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price, by the Publishers,

FIELDS, OSGOOD, & CO., Boston.

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