WILLY WALLACH, Importer of Foreign, Manufacturer of and Dealer in Domestic Stationery, 36 PARK ROW, 4 BEEKMAN STREET, and 143 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. Sole Agent for the Celebrated Inks of VEUVE ADRIEN MAURIN ET G. TOIRAY, only successors to ADRIEN MAURIN at Paris. (Established 1790.) LA SYRIENNE. VIOLET BLACK COPYING INK. Giving the most perfect copies several months after writing. LA PERSANE. JET BLACK WRITING FLUID. Brilliant and Indelible. Specially recommended for the use of Bankers, Public Officers, and Book-keepers. N. B.-These two inks are free from the faults so commonly met with in any other inks at present known, are perfectly fluid, leave no sediment, and never thicken; do not corrode steel pens, and retain their properties under any climate. Put up in handsome stone bottles with extra corks. PRICE-PER Doz. LITRES, 12 66-100 QUARTS, 66 1.2 -12 66-100 PINTS, $9.00. THE PATENT EVERLASTING INDIA RUBBER COPYING SHEETS OFFER THE FOLLOWING ADVANTAGES: FIRST-A great saving of time, as any number of letters can be copied at once, and the paper being used dry, it can be handled quicker and better. SECOND.-A great saving in material, as brushes, blotting-board, and oil paper are not needed, and the copying books are not weakened by becoming saturated with surplus water. THIRD-The copies obtained are sharper, clearer, and more uniform than those made in the usual way. DIRECTIONS FOR USE. Wet a lot of the India-rubber sheets, and wring them well out, so that only a slight dampness remains (they must by no means be left wet, only slightly damp); put one of the damp India-rubber sheets in the copying-book, and on that place a dry sheet of the copying-book, and upon this the written letter, and repeat this operation as many times as you have letters to be copied. One sheet may be used to copy two letters, by placing one above, the other below it. The India-rubber sheets, if dampened in the morning and placed between tin, will remain damp all day long, and may be used four or five times without losing their dampness. These are manufactured in six sizes and four varieties in each size. Put up one-half-dozen in box opening at the end. Gilt edge and of extra quality paper. SIZES. 60 Leaves No. 3, 4 x5%- Nos. 5 and 7 have illuminated title pages. Styles marked Plain " have the word autograph stamped in gold on the Gilt" have in addition a border stamped in gold around the title. These are convenient flexible memorandums for Commercial Travellers, Students, and Reporters. They are made in three sizes; each size in Imitation and in Turkey Morocco. They open at the end with an elastic to keep the book closed when not in use. The insides or "Recruits” are ruled “faint " or dollars and cents, and removable. accounts with the Laundry. These are made in three varieties. For "Ladies," conGentlemen," containing a list of their garments; and for Family," containing both one for laundry and one to retain. Each style is made in thickness for twenty-six weeks $2.25 per doz. | Ladies', No. 52, PRICES. $3.50 per doz. | Gentlemen's, No. 26, $2.25 per dot. 5.00 per d Is the best and handiest Inkstand now in use for the following reasons: 1st. It is always closed and preserves the ink from contact with the air. 2d. Although closed, the ink is always accessible to the pen. 3d. Whether there is much or little ink in the inkstand, the pen always takes the same quantity, and not more than required. 4th. Ink is obtained quicker from it than from any other inkstand, a desideratum for rapid writers. 5th. No blots are made; any surplus of ink on the pen being drawn back by the funnel. 6th. The ink being stirred up every time it is used, always remains uniform and fresh. 7th. The inkstand may be dropped or upset without spilling a drop of ink. DIRECTIONS. To pour the Ink into the Inkstand: Take off the top by turning it to the left, and close it by pushing it slightly down, and then turn towards your right. To take Ink. Plunge the pen perpendicularly to the bottom of the porcelain funnel and press it slightly. The pen bearing upon the sides will not suffer. The necessary pressure is so little that after a short time it will be exercised unknowingly. The India rubber shield and funnel should be washed every two or three months, according to kind of ink used. N. B.-If by increased temperature, a little ink should remain in the funnel, it is only necessary to open the inkstand, to raise the rubber so as to let the air out, and then close it again. By following these directions everybody will soon acknowledge that this inkstand has a great and uncontestable superiority over all others. WILLIE WALLACH, 36 Park Row, 4 Beekman St., and 143 Nassau St., New York. MASON, BAKER & PRATT, PUBLISHERS, BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS, Blank Book Manufacturers, AND WHOLESALE JOBBERS In everything required by the Trade, 142 & 144 GRAND STREET, NEW YORK. Special care will be taken in filling orders by mail, with promptness, and at the lowest cash rates. Globes and Maps. Directory. Published once a month, in the Stationery Num E. Steiger.... ....22 and 24 Frankfort st., New York. (Schedler's celebrated Terrestial and Celestial Globes.) Ink Manufacturers. ber of the PUBLIshers' Weekly. Rates of inser-Noyes, Holmes & Co....................... tion, one year, $5.00 perline, exclusive of heading. Inkstands. .Boston. Jewett, St. John & Co..18 & 20 Liberty st., New York. Kindergarten Books and Materials. Am. Photo. Lith. Co.....103 Fulton street, New York. H. W. Longfellow & Co.114 Washington street, Boston. A. Trochsler & Co.......134 Washington street, Boston. Mathematical Instruments. Keuffel & Esser.... ..........116 Fulton street, New York. Novelties. M. Bradley & Co....... ...Springfield, Mass. J. H. Fearing & Co.............99 Court street, Boston. Paper (Printing, Writing, Wrapping, etc.) H. E. Elliott... .....26 S. 7th street, Philadelphia. H. K. W. Hall.. ........114 Washington street, Boston. Melvin Hard & Co.......44 Beekman street, New York. Riverside Paper Mills....26 S. 7th street, Philadelphia. J. M. Sherwood...... • 38 John street, New York. Paper Rulers. .Newark, N. J. Joseph Gillott & Son....... ......................Morrisania, N. Y. Die Sinkers and Seal Engravers. R. Laubenheimer............6 John street, New York. Electrotypers and Stereotypers. John Ambler............Io Courtlandt street, New York. John Casey.... ...........................................24 Beekman street, New York. Engravers (Steel and Copper). Louis Dreka...... .......1033 Chestnut street, Philadelphia. H. B. Hall & Sons... ..........62 Fulton Street, New York. Geo. E. Perine.........66 & 68 Reade street, New York. John Sartain...........728 Sansom street, Philadelphia. Engravers (On Wood). E. Steiger...........22 and 24 Frankfort st., New York. H. K. W. Hall..... Twine. ..............................114 Washington street, Boston. D. APPLETON & CO., 549 and 551 Broadway, New York, Publish this Day: I. PRINCIPLES OF MENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, WITH Their Applications to the Training and Discipline of the Mind, and the Study of its Morbid Conditions. By WILLIAM CARPENTER, M.D., LL.D, I vol., 12mo, 737 pages. Price $3.00 "Dr. Carpenter has won his reputation as a physiologist, largely from the clearness of his expositions, and the present work shows that his capacity in this respect is still vigorous. Its most scientific parts are attractive reading, and the extensive array of personal instances and incidents, which illustrate his positions, gives great fascination to the volume. "It is a hard book to lay down when once entered upon, and Dr. Carpenter may be congratulated upon having contributed so fresh a book upon such an important subject."—Popular Science Monthly. II. THE EXPANSE OF HEAVEN; A Series of Essays on the Wonders of the Firmament. By R. A. PROCTOR, B.A. I vol., 12mo. Cloth... Price $2.00 "A very charming work."-Standard. "Perfectly adapted to their purposes, namely, to awaken a love for science, and at the same time to convey, in a pleasant manner, some elementary facts.”—Church Herald. Either of the above, when not to be had in Bookstores, sent post-paid by mail to any part of the United States, on receipt of the price. |