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THE

INVESTORS'

SUPPLEMENT

OF THE

COMMERCIAL AND FINANCIAL

CHRONICLE

is issued once a month with the CHRON

ICLE, and consists of a complete Exhibit of State, City, Railroad, and Miscellaneous Stocks and Bonds, with remarks upon the Finances of each State, City, Railroad, or other Company. It is issued to regular Subscribers of the CHRONICLE only, and no single copies are sold.

With the first of January, 1877, commences the twenty-fourth volume of the leading Financial Newspaper, the

Commercial and Financial

CHRONICLE.

The CHRONICLE is a weekly journal of 32 pages, published in convenient form

PUBLISHED AT THE OFFICE

OF

THE LIVING LIVING AGE.

Historical Sketches of the Reign of George II. By Mrs. OLIPHANT. Price $1.00. Contents: Queen Caroline; Sir Robert Walpole; Lord Chesterfield; Lady Mary Wortley Montagu; Alexander Pope; The Young Chevalier; John Wesley; Commodore Anson; Bishop Berkeley; Samuel Richardson; David Hume; William Hogarth. John Stuart Mill's Inaugural Address, at the University of St. Andrews, on University Education, 25 cts. Portrait in My Uncle's DiningRoom, from the French; and other Tales. I vol. 38 cts.

Clarence D'Orville; or, From the
Palace to the Steppe. A Novel of
Russian High Life. Translated from "BIS
IN DIE STEPPE" of Karl Detlef; and "CLE-
LIA," from the German of A. Wels. i vol.
38 cts.
A County Family. By the author of
"Lost Sir Massingberd," etc. 50 cts.
By NORMAN MCLEOD,
The Starling.
D.D., editor of "Good Words." 38 cts.
Nina Balatka. The Story of a Maiden
of Prague. 38 cts.

A House of Cards. By Mrs. CASHEL
HOEY. 75 cts.

The Tenants of Mallory. By J. S.
LE FANU. 50 cts.
Against Time.
SHAND. 75 cts.
Lettice Lisle. 38 cts.

By ALEXANDER INNES

All for Greed. By the Baroness BLAZE

to file and bind, and is devoted, in its edi-Linda Tressel. By the author of "Nina torial discussions and carefully-prepared Balatka." 38 cts. Reports and Statistics, to comprehensive and practical information on all matters relating to

BANKING,

TRADE,

RAILROADS,

INVESTMENTS.

A FILE COVER,

to hold current numbers of the CHRON

ICLE for six months, in order to preserve them for binding in semi-annual volumes, is furnished gratis to each new subscriber paying in advance for one year.

DE BURY.

38 cts.

Old Sir Douglas. By the Hon. Mrs. NORTON. 75 cts.

The Claverings. By ANTHONY TROLLOPE. 50 cts.

Madonna Mary. By Mrs. OLIPHANT. 50 cts.

Any of the foregoing publications sent, POSTAGE FREE, on receipt of price. Wholesale Dealers supplied on liberal terms. Address,

LITTELL & GAY,

17 Bromfield St., Boston. 10 Per Cent Net.

Kansas, Missouri and Iowa Improved Farm FirstWe guarantee as an assurance that we loan not to exceed one-third of

Mortgage Coupon Bonds Guaranteed.

the actual value. In many years' business have never lost a dollar. No customer ever had an acre of land

fall upon his hands. No customer of ours ever wai ed a day for interest or principal when due. Send for particulars. References in every State in the Union, who will confirm the above facts. J. B. WATKINS & CO., Lawrence, Kan., or 72 Cedar Street, New York.

Subscription price, including postage. $10.20 per year. Specimen copies, 25 BOOKS. D. VAN NOSTRAND, 23

Cents.

William B. Dana & Co., 79 AND 81 WILLIAM STREET,

NEW YORK.

Murray and 27 Warren Streets, New York, Publisher and Importer of Scientific Books. Send ten cents for Catalogue of works in Architecture, Astronomy, Shipbuilding, Meteorology, Chemistry. Geology, Drawing, Electricity, Engineering, Mathematics, Coal, Iron, Hydraulics, etc., etc.

$55 $77 Ja Week to Agents. Samples FREE.

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ISSUED EVERY SATURDAY, THE LIVING AGE gives fifty-two numbers, of sixty-four pages each, or more than Three and a Quarter Thousand double-column octavo pages of reading-matter yearly; enabling it to present with a combined freshness and completeness nowhere else attempted,

The best Essays, Reviews, Criticisms, Tales, Sketches of Travel and Discovery,
Poetry, Scientific, Biographical, Historical, and Political Information,
from the entire body of Foreign Periodical Literature, and
from the pens of the Foremost Living Writers.

The ablest and most cultured intellects, in every department of Literature, Politics, Science, and Art, find expression in the Periodical Literature of Europe, and especially of Great Britain. The Living Age, forming four large volumes a year, furnishes, from the vast and generally inaccessible mass of this literature, the only compilation, that, while within the reach of all, is satisfactory in the COMPLETENESS with which it embraces whatever is of immediate interest, or of solid, permanent value.

It is therefore indispensable to every one who wishes to keep pace with the events or intellectual progress of the time, or to cultivate in himself or his family general intelligence and literary

taste.

Extracts from

The Christian Leader, N. Y. says:

"This magazine keeps splendidly to its purpose, offering a cheap and at the same time a very thorough and comprehensive means of keeping abreast with the march of modern thought. For some, indeed, it is an invaluable economizer of time; since it selects out of the overwhelming productions of able minds those writings in politics, philosophy, history, poetry, fiction, art, which will give the largest return for the precious half hours that can be devoted to them. The foremost living authors are represented in its pages, and certainly it would be difficult to find a better investment for a little portion of the money we set aside for upper-story furnishing than a yearly subscription to this admirable weekly." The Congregationalist, Boston, says: -

None of the eclectics can be matched with this as to substantial value and interest.. For entertaining stories, choice poetry, scientific, critical, biographical and political papers, it is unrivalled."

The Advance, Chicago, says:
"Every weekly number of Littell's Living Age' now
a-days is equal to a first-class monthly. For solid merit,
it is the cheapest magazine in the land."

The Methodist, N Y., says:

"If there be any person who can take but one periodical, and yet desires the widest range of reading, and the greatest variety of subjects, this journal will come the nearest to satisfying him."

The Lutheran and Missionary, Philadelphia, says:
"An extraordinary value marks many of the articles
of this publication, because they are the productions of
the ablest men of our times."

The Christian Union, N. Y., says:

"We know of no way in which one can so easily keep well informed in the best English thought of our time as through this journal."

The Pacific, San Francisco, says it is

The single best expenditure for a literary periodical

that can be made."

The Congregational Quarterly, Boston, says:

Christian families often inquire where they can find & comprehensive periodical, affording a great variety of matter, and exerting an elevating and Christian influence: to all such we say, you will find it in the issue of Messrs. Littell & Gay."

The Watchman and Reflector. Boston, says of it:-
Always good, but never so good as now."

Rev. Henry Ward Beecher says:

Were 1. in view of all the competitors that are now in the field, to choose, I should certainly choose "THE LIVING AGE.... Nor i here in any library that I know of, so much instruse and entertaing reading in the same number of volumes."

The South Western Presbyterian, New Orleans, says: — "It stands now where it has stood ever since we can remember, in the front rank, in fact almost without a rival. in American 1 erature.... We doubt whether the English languag. can present a work of the kind, which is of equal vai e."

The Episcopalian, Philadelphia, says:

"No volume of literature reaches us that we prize so highly."

Notices.

The Liberal Christian, N. Y., says it

Stands sole and alone in its excellence as a collection of the best things in the periodical literature of our time." The N. Y. Tribune says: -

"Its pages teem with the choicest literature of the day, selected with wide knowledge and admirable tact, and furnishing a complete introduction to the best thoughts of the best writers whose impress is deeply stamped upon the characteristics of the age. No reader who makes himself familiar with its contents can lack the means of a sound literary culture."

The Philadelphia Inquirer says:

"It furnishes the cream of the literature of the world, and so fully supplies the wants of the reading public that through its pages alone it is possible to be as thoroughly well informed in current literature as by the perusal of a long list of monthlies. Littell's Living Age is particularly well adapted to the needs of the busy American nation, with whom the leisure for extended reading is greatly restricted, while at the same time the taste for reading is almost universal, and when one is confined to the choice of but one magazine out of the brilliant array which the demands of the time have called into existence, it is indeed an injustice to one's self not to make selection of Littell's Living Age, wherein is condensed what is most valuable of the best of them. The exceeding cheapness of this excellent publication is another recommendation in its favor, putting it within reach of all."

The NY. Evening Post says:

It is, beyond all question, the best compendium of the best current literature." The N. Y. Bulletin says:-

"It brings the reader in communication with the best intellects of the day, and presents him with their choicest thoughts at small cost."

The Boston Advertiser says:

"It is superfluous to praise The Living Age to those who know it. Its character is well established, and its continued and increasing prosperity may be considered as evidence of the growth of sound literary culture in the country."

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Published weekly at $8.00 a year, free of postage. to any one getting up a club of five new subscribers.

An extra copy sent GRATIS

ADDRESS

LITTELL & GAY, 17 Bromfield Street, Boston.

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