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SIX OCTAVES - SIZE: Height, 4 ft. 5 in.; Length, 4 ft. 8 in.; Depth, 2 ft. 3 in.

THE CASE is a beautiful design of an Upright Piano, exactly like illustration, manufactured of solid Cherry, ebonized and highly polished. THE MUSIC is produced upon TWELVE OCTAVES of Reeds (aided by a double Right and Left Coupler), so constructed, tuned, and voiced as to imitate as nearly as possible a stringed instrument, operated by a full SIX OCTAVE compass of Keys. This instrument excels all others in elasticity of touch, and THE MOST RAPID MUSIC CAN BE PLAYED with perfect ease. It responds at once to the touch, combining an easy action with QUICKNESS OF ARTICULATION. The tone is smooth, full, and rich, not harsh nor ear-piercing. IT IS THE BEST ACCOMPANIMENT FOR VOCAL MUSIC, being subordinate to the voice, instead of covering it up, and the tone is pure and flexible. The instrument can be played with perfect ease by ladies, as the pedals (a new invention for which application for patent has been made) are operated without exertion, in a perfectly natural position. Adjustable additional pedals for children are sent with every instrument. Knowing this Piano-Organ will please the public, we are determined to introduce it at once and make the following offer :

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If you will remit $95.00 within one month from the date of this Magazine,
by Draft, Post Office Money Order, or by Ex-
press, prepaid, we will ship you this instrument
with adjustable stool and book, IMMEDI-
ATELY ON RECEIPT OF ORDER.
Test trial given and money returned if instru-

ment is not just as represented and perfectly satisfactory. The regular

price of this instrument, as compared with other manufacturers, could not be less than $145. Visit the factory and select, or order by mail, and mention this magazine.

We recommend this instrument because we know its merits, but we keep in stock and SHIP PROMPTLY on receipt of order all our different styles of Organs for the Parlor, the Chapel, the Church, or the Sabbath School. Pianos for $220 and upwards. Send for Illustrated Catalogue. Visitors are always welcome at this mammoth Factory. Address or call upon

W. P. HADWEN, Manager,

Daniel F. Beatty Piano and Organ Co.

WASHINGTON, NEW JERSEY

United States of America.

SEVENTIETH YEAR.

The North American Review discusses those topics which at the time are uppermost in the public mind, and about which every intelligent person is desirous of acquiring the fullest and most trustworthy information.

It addresses itself to thinking men in every walk of life—to all who would reach well-reasoned, unpartisan conclusions on subjects of public interest.

It presents both sides of questions, thus insuring the largest view of all matters in controversy, and enabling the reader to judge understandingly on which side, in the conflict of opinions, the truth lies. It engages the services of authors who by their studies or their opportunities are specially qualified for the thorough discussion of the subjects on which they write.

WHAT IS SAID OF IT.

It seeks to give the most advanced thought of the period on both sides of all disputed questions, and in carrying out this intention it enlists the ablest pens of representative men in every department of knowledge. - Herald (New York City).

The Review has this peculiarity, that its articles are always on topics that the public want to hear discussed, and each is always written by the very person the public want -to hear on the particular topic which be discusses. Tribune (Bismark, D. T.).

It is the great summarizer, not only of national affairs, but of the progress of the world. It is the great editorial commentator on everything that can interest the patriot and cosmopolitan. - Post-Dispatch (St. Louis, Mo.).

Every number sets the minds of thinking people at work with an activity that none of its competitors seem to equal, and its contents are talked about in cultivated circles until its successor appears. -- Post (Boston, Mass.).

We do not believe that a magazine was ever published in this country or any other, with the ability, interest, and timeliness which now characterize the North American. Evangel (San Francisco, Cal.).

By virtue of its variety, importance, solidity, and brilliancy of contents, it unquestionably stands at the head of the serial publications of the United States. — Journal and Courier (New Haven, Conn.).

No one who desires to keep himself informed concerning

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It seems to have no difficulty in keeping its position at the head of the periodical literature of the United States. - Academy (London, Eng.).

Its readers are sure of nothing but well-digested and well-arranged thought in its pages. - Congregationalist (Boston, Mass.).

Its pages are as fresh as newspaper columns, while it has all the profundity of the stately review. - News (St. John, N. B.).

Its contents are so intrinsically interesting that one can easily ascertain the reasons for its success. - Gazette (Cincinnati, O.).

Every article has a bearing upon some topic of which men are talking and thinking. Evening Post (New York City).

No other magazine has such a faculty for getting hold of live, fresh, interesting contributions. — Times (Cincinnati, Ohio).

It is full of masterly disquisitions on the great questions that occupy the minds of the world. Sun (New York City).

RECENT CONTRIBUTORS.

Laurence Oliphant.
President J. C. Welling.
Professor Goldwin Smith.
Rev. Dr. Leonard W. Bacon.
Chief-Justice H. H. Chalmers.
Bishop A. C. Coxe.
Lyman Trumbull.
Senator W. B. Allison.

President Andrew D. White.
W. H. Mallock.

Dr. Henry Schliemann.
Dr. William A. Hammond.
Judge Joseph Neilson.
Dorman B. Eaton.
Richard A. Proctor.
Senator J. I. Mitchell.
Steele Mackaye.

Governor B. R. Sherman.
Senator George F. Hoar.
Senator John T. Morgan.
David A. Wells.
Judge Charles P. Daly.
John Fiske.

Rev. Dr. Edward Eggleston.
Harriet Beecher Stowe.
George W. McCrary.
W. W. Story.

Senator L. Q. C. Lamar.
Benjamin F. Butler.

President S. C. Bartlett.

Senator George F. Edmunds.

Professor E. S. Holden.

Rabbi Gustav Gottheil.

Admiral D. D. Porter.

Rev. Dr. James Freeman Clarke.
James G. Blaine.

Rev. Dr. E. E. Hale.

Leslie Stephen.
Frederick Douglass.
George Ticknor Curtis.
Richard Henry Stoddard.
Professor George P. Fisher.
Senator Angus Cameron.
O. B. Frothingham.
Henry James, Jr.
Alexander H. Stephens.
Richard H. Dana.

Bishop W. C. Doane.

Professor Francis Bowen.

George S. Boutwell.

Dion Boucicault.

George W. Julian.

Senator T. O. Howe.

Thomas Hughes.

Professor W. G. Sumner.

T. W. Higginson.
Richard Grant White.
Rev. Dr. Howard Crosby.
Walt Whitman.
Mark Pattison.

Bishop B. J. McQuaid.
James B. Eads.

Judge Dwight Foster.
Julia Ward Howe.
Henry Bergh.

Judge E. A. Thomas.

Elizabeth Stuart Phelps.
Gail Hamilton.

Professor Isaac L. Rice.

John Welsh.

Clarence Cook.

Governor J. H. Murray.
Dr. Dio Lewis.

Published Monthly

30 LAFAYETTE PLACE, NEW YORK.

$5.00 a Year.

We are beginning to arrive at some faint sense of Hawthorne's greatness, — immeasurably vaster than that of any other American who ever wrote. -The Nation (New York).

HAWTHORNE'S WORKS.

Riverside Edition.

An entirely new edition of the Works of NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE, from new electrotype plates. With an original full-page Etching and a new vignette Wood-cut in each volume, and an excellent new Steel Portrait of Hawthorne. In twelve volumes, crown octavo, gilt top. Price of each volume, $2.00. The set in cloth, $24.00; half calf, $48.00. This is an excellent Library Edition of Hawthorne's Works. Its typog raphy and binding commend it to all lovers of tasteful books, as its contents commend it to all who appreciate the best literature.

The volumes have Introductory Notes by Mr. GEORGE P. LATHROP, Mr. Hawthorne's son-in-law, and author of "A Study of Hawthorne," who is peculiarly qualified to furnish such information as readers desire concerning the origin of Hawthorne's novels, short stories, and other works, and the circumstances under which these were written.

One of the volumes has an admirable Steel Portrait of Hawthorne, just made from a photograph in possession of the family, and each of the other volumes has an original characteristic Etching by an eminent American artist, and a vignette Wood-cut.

The order of the volumes is as follows:

I. TWICE-TOLD TALES.

2. MOSSES FROM AN OLD MANSE.

3. THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES, and THE SNOW IMAGE.

4. THE WONDER BOOK, TANGLEWOOD TALES, and GRANDFATHER'S

CHAIR.

5. THE SCARLET LETTER, and THE BLITHEDALE ROMANCE.

6. THE MARBLE FAUN.

7, 8. OUR OLD HOME, and ENGLISH NOTE-BOOKS.

9. AMERICAN NOTE-BOOKS.

10. FRENCH AND ITALIAN NOTE-BOOKS.

II. THE DOLliver Romance, FANSHAWE, SEPTIMIUS FELTON, and in an Appendix, THE ANCESTRAL FOOTSTEP.

12. TALES AND SKETCHES, THE LIFE OF FRANKLIN PIERCE, a full BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH by Mr. GEORGE P. LATHROP, and INDEXES.

For sale by all Booksellers. Sent, free of cost, on receipt of price by HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY, PUBLISHERS,

BOSTON, MASS.

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Every Librarian, and every person wish

THE

Family Library of British Poetry

From Chaucer to the Present Time. Edited by JAMES T. FIELDS and EDWIN P. WHIPPLE.

1 vol. royal 8vo, 1028 pages. With Steel Portraits of Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, Pope, Goldsmith, Burns, Wordsworth, Scott, Byron, Tennyson, and Mrs. Browning. Cloth, handsomely stamped, $5.00; half calf, $9.00; morocco, or tree calf, $12.00.

This is beyond comparison the fullest and best single-volume collection of British poetry ever published. It contains as much as twelve ordinary volumes, yet the type is large enough for easy reading. The editors have taken great pains to include in this book the best work of all British poets of distinction. any

The following extracts from journals of high standing will show how this Family Library is regarded by competent judges:

There is every reason why the book should become the standard collection of British poetry for home use. . . . It required a knowledge of English history and English thought, of the nature of the soil from which the poetry grew; in brief, the book required the education and cultivated taste of one who knows and loves English literature. It is this background of preparation, the richly-stored mind, and the mature judgment shown in the selections which make the book a real literary work. Boston Advertiser.

No previous single-volume anthology has ever approached it in the quantity, variety, and comprehensiveness of its materials; or has contained so large a propor. tion of what is distinctly BEST in the poetry of our mother tongue. The Eclectic Magazine.

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If a more magnificent volume of poetry than this has ever been compiled and published, it has not been our

ing to add the best books to his Library, should good fortune to see it. We have found nothing in have this Catalogue.

HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & Co. will send to any address, without charge, Catalogues of their Educational, Law, Medical, and Religious Books;

Also a MONTHLY BULLETIN describing their New Publications.

the volume to disappoint our highest anticipations, and much, very much, to admire and praise. Christian Advocate (New York).

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

BOSTON, MASS.

HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY

INVITE THE ATTENTION OF BOOK-BUYERS TO THEIR

STANDARD AND POPULAR BOOKS,

Embracing the works of hundreds of authors, including the following
EMINENT WRITERS:

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Complete Dramatic and Poetical Works. William Cullen Bryant.

Translation of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, in three editions and various bindings.

John Bunyan.

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The Vicar of Wakefield, in three editions.

The Pilgrim's Progress, in two illustrated edi- Arthur Sherburne Hardy.

tions.

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But Yet a Woman.

Bret Harte.

Complete Works-Novels, Stories, and Poems. Nathaniel Hawthorne.

Complete Works, in two editions and various styles of binding.

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Important Religious and Biographical Writings. Augustus Hoppin.

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Auton House, Travel Pictures, Two Compton
Boys.

Blanche W. Howard.

One Summer, and One Year Abroad.

William Dean Howells.

Novels, Essays, and Travels.

Thomas Hughes.

"Tom Brown" Books and Manliness of Christ.

William M. Hunt.

Talks on Art, First and Second Series.

Henry James, Jr.

Novels, Short Stories, and Travel Sketches.

Anna Jameson.

Essays in Art and Literature.

Sarah Orne Jewett.

A Country Doctor, Play-Days, etc.

Samuel Johnson.

Oriental Religions: India, China, Persia.
Omar Khayyam.

Rubáiyát, magnificently illustrated by Vedder.
Also the poem separately in a cheap edition.

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