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THE

MONTHLY BOOK CIRCULAR.

BOOKSELLERS, AGENTS, AND NEWSDEALERS, who desire a handy, cheap, and profitable advertising medium for the latest books in the market, will find this publication the best adapted to that purpose.

The MONTHLY BOOK CIRCULAR is issued at the beginning of every month, and contains the titles and prices of the principal books of the previous month, with announcements of forthcoming works for the current month, so classified as to show at a glance all the new publications in the various departments of literature.

The BOOK CIRCULAR is printed on tinted paper of light texture so that it can be sent with every book, magazine, paper, letter, circular, etc., without increasing the rate of postage, and it is certain that dealers who will adopt this cheap and effective mode for advertising their establishments, will find themselves amply repaid in a short time. The MONTHLY well distributed will not only increase the sales from their counters, but secure them orders for many books that they would not risk to purchases or the existence of which might pass unnoticed by their customers.

TERMS FOR EDITIONS TO SUBSCRIBERS.

Invariably Payable in Advance.

WITHOUT IMPRINT, BUT SPACE LEFT FOR HAND-STAMP. 100 Copies, Three Months.... $3.00100 Copies, Six Months....

200

86

66

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66

66

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$5.00 9.00

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Every additional 1,000 copies, 3 months, $15.00, ditto 6 months, $25.00.
Terms for 5,000 copies or more for any monthly edition will be given on application.
Subscribers desiring an extra number of copies for particular months will be charged pro rata.

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Any quantity from 100 to 1,000 copies will be sent post-paid, but for larger quantities, at the reduced rates, postage or expressage will be charged.

Editions with imprint can only be supplied per 250, 500, 1,000, etc., copies.

Instead of the usual imprints, extra front headings, with special arrangement and display, for which there may be space above the rules enclosing date, are made at the cost of, stereotyping, from 50 c. to $1. No orders filled without payment in advance, as the numerous small amounts will neither bear the trouble nor the expense of sending bills or of repeated statements, and collecting. Remittances should be made either by Post-Office Order, Draft on New York, or Registered letter.

The publication of the MONTHLY LITERARY BULLETIN heretofore issued from this office, is discontinued, the MONTHLY BOOK CIRCULAR having become more useful and popular with dealers.

For sample number, address

EDITOR PUBLISHERS' WEEKLY.

37 PARK ROW, NEW YORK.

“If Publishers would devote half the amount they expend in circulars, and the postage on them, which is a large item, to sustain a weekly Trade Journal and extend its circulation, they would double the benefit received from the expenditure.”—ROBERT CLARKE, Cincinnati, Ohio

THE PUBLISHERS' WEEKLY.

A Journal devoted to the interests of the Publishing, Printing, Stationery, News, Music, Art, and Fancy Trades, and Associated Branches. With which is incorporated the American Literary Gazette and Publishers' Circular. Established in the Year 1852.

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE PUBLISHERS' BOARD OF TRADE.

Price of Subscription, per annum, $3,00, payable in advance.
F. LEYPOLDT, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER, 37 Park Row, New York.

OPINIONS OF THE TRADE.

I fully appreciate the value of your excellent WEEKLY as well as your own personal services and sacrifices in the interest of the trade. We have all much to thank you for. You richly merit the united and constant support of the trade in every section of the country.-ROBERT Clarke.

I depend entirely upon the PUBLISHERS WEEKLY for my information, and I don't know how any bookseller who makes any pretension to keeping up with the times can do business without having its pages to refer to.-J. M. Davis, bookse.ler and stationer, Farmington, Me.

Your WEEKLY is the best thing of the kind that I have ever seen, and I could not get along without it. It is an indispensable article to any bookseller who desires to keep posted, and I would not be without it for five times the subscription price.-J. D. STANTON, bookseller, stationer, and dealer in wall-paper, window blinds, etc., Wheeling, W. Va. a We find your WEEKLY our best source of information regarding new books, and have it in constant use.-BROWN & FAUNCE, booksellers, stationers, and newsdealers, Toledo, O.

We desire to express heartily our appreciation of the work you are do ng in securing an exact record of American publications, and trust that you will receive from the various publishers the information you make it so easy for them to give.HURD & HOUGHTON, publishers, Riverside, Cambridge, M. You have laid the jobbers and retailers of the country under great obligations by your successful efforts to provide trade periodical so fully meeting their wants, and we hope they will show a substantial appreciation.-GRO. E. STEVENS & Co., publishers, booksellers, and stationers, Cincinnati, O.

We wish to compliment you on the completeness of your paper. It is becoming more and more valuable, and we are pleased to find that the booksellers of the smaller cities are being heard from.-LORING, SHORT & HARMON, publishers, booksellers, and stationers, Port.and, Me.

It is mainly because the WEEKLY is so good, so much better than anything we have had before, that we have wanted three copies, and have been vexed when we received only one or two.-SUMNER WHITNEY & CO., publishers and importers of law-books, San Francisco, Cal.

Your paper is now a real benefit to the public and the booktrade.-S. C. GRIGGS & Co., publishers, Chicago.

We wish to express our obligations to you for the efforts you make to promote the interests of the book trad-JOHN H. THOMAS & CO., booksellers and stationers, Dayton, O.

Your WEEKLY I regard as invaluable to the trade, and by me its weekly visit is highly appreciated. I rarely get a number without at once sending an order to my Toronto agents, it not direct to the publishers, for something announced therein, and generally have my orders in ahead of the receipt of the goods by them, and sometimes simultaneously with their own first information concerning the publication of the particular book. If publishers could be assured of such being the case pretty generally among your subscribers, perhaps more of them might be induced to advertise and push their business through its pages. The publishers ought more generally to make your WEEKLY the medium of communication with the trade, and then we might have something upon which we could depend. We ought to be kept well posted in what has been, is being, and is to be published, and unless publishers do unite upon one medium, it is next to impossible that they can all reach, or any of them reach every member of the trade, and that we can be properly informed of these matters. I should be glad if by any means a pressure could be brought to bear upon them wh ch would induce them more generally to comply.-S. E. MITCHELL, bookseller and stationer, Pembroke, Ont., Can.

We wish to thank you for the enterprise, and to express our nope that it will be successful. We, who are so far from the market, need such a paper. Now, if the publisher or manufacturer will tell us what they have, the trade can keep their goods.-MOSELEY & BRO., booksellers, stationers, and music dealers, Madison, Wis.

I am well pleased with the WEEKLY, and more than ever convinced that if the whole trade would unite in your support, we would find any other medium of information superfluous. I think it may interest you to learn that many retail dealers make up their orders for new books almost entirely from the WEEKLY.-W. G. BOYD, bookseller and stationer, Se ma, Ala

.

We follow up the WEEKLY with increasing interest and cannot see how any bookseller can get along without it; live ones can't.-B. EARL & SON., publishers, booksellers, stationers, and blank-book manufacturers, Fall River, Mass.

We are highly delighted with the WEEKLY, and would not be without it for double the price.-J. L. SIBOLE, with J. B. Lippincott & Co.

I consider the PUBLISHERS' WEEKLY the best of any that are published.-E. B. MYERS, law publisher, Chicago.

It would be impossible to tell you how much I prize the WEEKLY. I can't see how I ever did business without it.-A. J. WARD, book agent, Newport, R. I.

With the ANNUAL LIST and the PUBLISHERS' WEEKLY booksellers ought to keep themselves posted.-A. H. DOOLEY, bookseller and stationer, and newsdealer, chromos, frames, etc., Terre Haute, Ind.'

We cannot dispense with the welcome visits of your truly valuable WEEKLY.-BARBER & WHITCOMB, booksellers and stationers, Norwich, NY.

The WEEKLY has become a necessity with me.-GEO. W. GREEN, Jr., jobber and dealer in books, stationery, and fancy goods, Newburgh, N. Y.

We could not keep a book-house without the PUBLISHERS' WEEKLY ROBERTS & HILLHOUSE, booksellers and s.ationers, Kalamazoo, Mich.

We could not do without your WEEKLY.-J. W. BURKE & Co., publishers, booksellers, stationers, etc., Macon, Ga. We derive more benefit from the WEEKLY than from all the publishers' circulars received.-CRUMRINE & NICHOL, booksellers and stationers, Steubenville, O.

I do not want to miss a single number of the WEEKLY. It is more important to me than my "Daily Times."-W. W. WATKINS, bookseller and stationer, Cazenovia, N. Y.

I cannot afford to lose a single number of the WEEKLY.H. E. PRATT, bookseller and stationer, Binghamton, N. Y. We can't get along without the WEEKLY.-WEST, JOHNSTON & Co., booksellers & stationers, Richmond, Va.

We find that we look for the WEEKLY as a friend indeed every week, and must have it.-ROBT. A. HEIM & Co., Atchison, Kan.

Things are out of joint when the WEEKLY don't come regular.-F. A. TAYLOR, bookseller and stationer, St. Paul,

Minn.

The PUBLISHERS' WEEKLY is the most useful of any of the Literary Bulletins that I have ever had, and I think I have tried them all.-Cнas. E. HAMMERT, JR., bookseller,, stationer, etc.

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Printed in a convenient, portable size, strongly bound in
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AINSWORTH'S (WILLIAM H.) NOVELS. Seventeen volumes. 16mo, cloth....$12.00
AUSTEN'S (JANE) NOVELS. Five volumes. 16mo, cloth.....
BULWER'S (LORD LYTTON) NOVELS. Library Edition. Twenty-two volumes.
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COCKTON'S (HENRY) NOVELS. Three volumes. 16mo, half Roxburghe.......
DUMAS' (ALEXANDRE) NOVELS. Eighteen volumes in ten. 16mo, half Roxburghe. 15.00
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GRANT'S (JAMES) NOVELS. Twenty-seven volumes. 16mo, half Roxburghe....... 33-75
GRIFFIN'S (GERALD) NOVELS. Three volumes. 16mo, cloth.....
“GUY LIVINGSTONE"-Novels by the Author of. Eight volumes.

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HALLIBURTON'S (JUDGE) NOVELS. Three volumes.
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LEVER'S (CHARLES) NOVELS. Twenty-five volumes.
LOVER'S (SAMUEL) NOVELS. Four volumes. 12mo, half Roxburghe....
MARRYAT'S (CAPTAIN) NOVELS. Thirteen volumes. 16mo, cloth..
MAXWELL'S (W. H.) NOVELS. Nine volumes. 16mo, half Roxburghe.
RICHARDSON'S (SAMUEL) NOVELS. Three volumes.
SMEDLEY'S (FRANK) NOVELS. Four volumes.
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TROLLOPE'S (ANTHONY) NOVELS. Sixteen volumes.
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GEORGE ROUTLEDGE & SONS, Publishers, 416 Broome Street, New York.

the TRADE CIRCULAR

which is incorporated

Imerican Literary Gazette and Publishers' Circular,

Established in the year 1852.

OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE PUBLISHERS' BOARD OF TRADE.

F. LEYPOLDT, Editor and Publisher, 37 Park Row, New York.

Vol. V. No. 7. NEW YORK, Saturday, February 14, 1874.

WHOLE NO. 109.

È. P. DUTTON & CO.,

713 Broadway, New York,

Invite attention to the following new books:

Readings, Original and Compiled. By the author of "Rutledge." New edition. Price reduced to....

..$1.50 SOME WEEK-DAYS IN LENT. By the Rev. G. H. WILKINSON. Pap. 30 c.; clo. 75 c. HELPS TO A HOLY LENT. By the Rt. Rev. F. D. HUNTINGTON, D.D., Bishop of Central New York. 4th thousand. 208 pp.$1.25 "A rich treasury, filled with beautiful, living thoughts, the power and attraction of which will be confessed by all who give the work due examination."-Churchman. STEPS TO A LIVING FAITH. Letters to an Indifferent Believer. A tract for Parish use. By the Rt. Rev. F. D. HUNTINGTON, D.D. Paper 25 c.; cloth. ..75 c.

MRS. MAINWARING'S JOURNAL. A ROSARY FOR LENT; or, Devotional By Mrs. EMMA MARSHALL. 12mo...... .$1.50 "Mrs. Mainwaring's Journal' is a success. It is full of genuine feeling and holy earnestness, and is fitted to encourage and help those who find-and who does not?-earthly existence a mingkug of light and shadow."-Churchman. A LILY AMONG THORNS. By Mrs. EMMA MARSHALL. Just published......$1.50 BAPTISM TESTED BY SCRIPTURE AND HISTORY. By the Rev. WILLIAM HODGES, D.D. Third edition. Revised and improved. 421 pp .$2.00 "Ought to be in the possession of every one who is called upon to defend the position of the Church as to the subjects and mods of Baptism. It puts the case so clearly and powerfully that there is no room left for doubt."-Churchman. A DAY WITH CHRIST. By the Rev. SAMUEL COX. Bevelled b'ds, red edges..$1.25 "Done in so simple, fascinating, and graphic a fashion that the events all seem to acquire a new significance, and our conception of them is rendered much more vivid and com plete than when based only on detached narratives in different gospels."-The Arcadian.

......

CHRISTIAN COUNSELS. Selected from the Devotional Works of Abp. Fénelon. Translated by A. M. James. 16mo...... ...$1.25 "Characterized by an intensity of feeling a purity and nobleness of thought, an insight into the deeper religious sentiments, such as make them exceedingly precious."-Literary World.

For the Lenten Season. DEAR FEAST OF LENT. A Series of Devotional Readings. Arranged by the author of "Rutledge," "A Rosary for Lent," etc. 16mo. Bevelled boards, red edges.. .$1.50

Being

"It meets admirably the dfficulties which are felt by many
intelligent persons, who, for want of such wise and timely
counsel, lead a very unsatisfactory and unhappy life."—
Church and State.
AGGRESSIVE WORK in the CHURCH
OF CHRIST. With directions for conducting
Missions and organizing Brotherhoods and
Guilds, and an Introduction by Bp. Huntington.
By the P. B. MORGAN. 16mo. Bev. bds.. $1.00
THE CHOKED LIFE. Some Thoughts
for Lent. By the Rev. H. C. POTTER, D.D.
Paper....
15 C
Plain truths, plainly told, with equal delicacy and force.
LENTEN DISCIPLINE. By the Rev. H.
A. YARDLY, Chaplain and Professor in the
Berkeley Divinity School. Paper...........8 c.
DAILY HYMNS; or, Hymns for every day in
Lent. Bev. bds., gilt edges........ ..75 C.
LENT: A Precious Season. New ed. Pap... 10 c.

.......

Full lists of books for Lent or Catilogues of our own or the Church Book Society's publications, sent free on application.

JAMES R. OSGOOD & CO.'S

NEW

BOOKS.

Problems of Life and Mind.

The Foundations of a Creed. By GEORGE HENRY LEWES, author of "The Story of Goethe's
Life," "Bographical History of Philosophy," etc. Vol. I. 8vo. $3.00.

This volume is the first part of a very important work, embodying the author's investigations and studies for many years, in various fields of speculative and philosophical inquiry. The work attempts the transformation of Metaphysics by reduction to the method of Science, to meet "the great desire of this age for a Doctrine which may serve to condense our knowledge, guide our researches, and shape our lives, so that Conduct may really be the consequence of Belief." It gives the results of a remarkably wide range of reading, of acute and sincere thinking, and evinces at once the author's great acquirements, and his earnest desire to aid an inquiring age in securing an immovable intellectual ba

sis for faith.

Life of Mrs. Barbauld.

Memoir, Letters, and a Selection from the Poems and Prose Writings of ANNA LÆTITIA BAR-
BAULD. By GRACE A. ELLIS. 2 vols. 12mo. With steel Portrait. $5.00.

This memorial of Mrs Barbauld and revival of her most excellent works will be heartily welcomed by many. If her fame is less now than a generation agɔ, it is altogether fit that she should be recalled to the present generation of Americans; for she was one of the purest lights in English literature, and “her society was equally a benefit and a delight to all within her sphere." The Boston Transcript says:-"We have looked through the sheets of Mrs. Ellis' memoir, and have been pleased and surprised at the fullness and value of the material which she has gathered for exhibiting the admirable character and illustrating the life of Mrs. Barbauld. Part of this material the author obtained by personal efforts in England. As for the rest, she has diligently and with wonderful success culled out from contemporary literature and from the memoirs and letters of prominent persons of the time, many most interesting and striking evidences of the wide extent of Mrs. Barbauld's acquaintance and influence, and of the strength and depth of the attachment and respect with which she was cherished."

Euthanasy.

OR, HAPPY TALK TOWARDS THE END OF LIFE. BY WILLIAM MOUNTFORD, author of “Miracles Past and Present." New edition. I vol. 12mo. $2.00.

The object of this striking book is to realize somewhat the conditions, employments, and happi. ness of the future life, to lighten the burdens and griefs of the present by attempting vividly, yet reasonably, to anticipate the rest and satisfactions of the life to come.

"This is a book which will prove an incalculable treasure to those who are in sorrow and bereavement, and cannot be perused by any thoughtful mind without pleasure and improvement.”Christian Examiner.

Zelda's Fortune.

Vol. 37 in Osgood's Library of Novels. 8vo. Illustrated. Paper, 75 cents; cloth, $1.25. "Quite out of the range of ordinary novels. It is distinguished by unusual descriptive power, strong characterization, and a vigor of narration that enchains the reader's attention."

Sex in Education.

By DR. E. H. CLARKE. $1.25.

NEW EDITIONS OF

No book published within many years has excited the kind and degree of interest which Dr. Clarke's work has elicited. It has been sharply criticised, but its most pronounced opponents admit that it must do immense good; while its advocates deem it a work of incalculable value, their unanimous opinion being that "Every Mother and Every Teacher should read it."

FOR SALE BY BOOKSELLERS.

JAMES R. OSGOOD & CO., Publishers,

131 FRANKLIN STREET, BOSTON.

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