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GREAT NATIONAL WORK:

A Library of American Literature

Compiled and Edited by EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN and ELLEN MACKAY HUTCHINSON.

In ten elegant, large octavo volumes of over 500 pages each, handsomely illustrated with full-page portraits. This work is a choice collection of the best selections that can be made from all that has been written by American authors. It is arranged chronologically, so that the reader may at a glance view the course of our literature from its inception in 1607 to its present variety and eminence. It contains the finest examples of American thought and imagination. A complete library in itself, of engrossing interest throughout, and every line of which reflects the best intellect of the period in which it was written. No set of books has been more favorably received by the public and the press. There is nothing which surpasses

it for the library, a gift, or a holiday present. It is adapted

to the wants of all classes of readers. It is and must remain the standard collection of our national literature. The price is only $3.00 per volume, in the best cloth binding, and it will be delivered to the address of subscribers in all parts of the country without additional charges. For other styles of binding, prices, etc., please send for descriptive circulars, specimen pages, samples of portraits, etc., which will be sent FREE; or if you desire to see the work, and judge of its merits for yourself, we will be pleased to send you a set on approval, or have one of our solicitors call with specimens for your inspection, as you may direct, and we will do so free of charge. Please call. or address W. E. DIBBLE & CO.,

No. 134 Van Buren St., Chicago.

Letters from Distinguished Authors.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, WASHINGTON, March 1, 1889. Having had occasion to make critical use of Stedman'sHutchinson's Library of American Literature, I have found the selections embodied in the series admirably representative of the writers of each period. The very wide field covered by the publication has required the best critical judgment in the choice of specimens, and that judgment is everywhere apparent. Very respectfully, A. R. SPOFFORD, Librarian of Congress.

OAK KNOLL, DANVERS, MASS., 9 Mo., 14, 1888.

I have been looking over the noble volumes with hearty satisfaction. So far the great work is admirably done. The plan and execution seem to me deserving of unqualified praise. A breath of the New World blows through it. JOHN G. WHITTIER.

GREENCASTLE, IND., March 16, 1889.

In addition to subscribing for the work, I take great pleasure in giving a general recommendation to the Library of American Literature, compiled by Edmund Clarence Stedman and Ellen Mackay Hutchinson. The work contemplates no less than the collection into ten volumes of the best specimens of all the authors who have distinguished themselves in American letters between the epoch of the planting of the Jamestown colony and the present day. It is not a criticism upon literature but the literature itself. The skill of the work consists in the selection and the arrangement. In these respects it distances all rivalry. So faithfully has the editorial work been accomplished, and so justly has the relative value of the excerpts been determined, that the compilation as a whole may be said to have made an end of literary industry in this direction. If I mistake not, this Library of American Literature so called will be regarded by the present and next generation as the best aggregate expression of what the American mind has produced in the two hundred and eighty years of its activity. Respectfully, JOHN CLARK RIDPATH.

WANTED A GENERAL AGENT in every

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sive territory, for "A LIBRARY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE," by Stedman and Hutchinson, in 10 large volumes, illustrated with 160 full-page portraits of distinguished authors. This standard publication favorably received by the press and public generally has no equal for success. Sample pages, portraits, etc., sent free. W. E. DIBBLE & CO., 134 Van Buren St., Chicago, Ill.

THIS VALUABLE STANDARD WORK IS SOLD ONLY TO SUBSCRIBERS. AGENTS WANTED. W. E. DIBBLE & CO.

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REV. JOSEPH CUMMINGS, D.D., LL.D., President.
Fall Term begins September 11, 1889.
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The latest edition has 118,000 Words in its vocabulary, about 3,000 more than any other American Dictionary. It contains 3,000 Illustrations in the body of the work (nearly three times the number found in any other American Dictionary), and these are repeated and classified at the end of the work.

WEBSTER IS STANDARD AUTHORITY

In the GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, and with the U. S. SUPREME COURT. It is recommended by the State Sup'ts of Schools in 36 States, and by the leading College Presidents of the U.S. and Canada. It is the only Dictionary that has been selected in making State Purchases.

SPECIMEN TESTIMONIALS.

CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE, of the U. S. Supreme Court, says: Webster's Unabridged Dictionary is recognized as Standard
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GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, Washington, Oct. 1886.-Webster will continue to be the Standard in the use of the English
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The Diary of Philip Hone.

Edited by BAYARD TUCKERMAN. In 2 vols., large Svo, $7.50. Philip Hone, a member of an old Knickerbocker family, was one of the few men of his time in America who had the leisure to keep a diary and the varied experience to make such a record valuable to posterity. He held the office of Mayor of New York, and for many years was high in the counsels of the Whig party, and was closely identified with the leading interests of the city. His diary extends from 1828 to 1845. The political life of these years is commented upon by one who was familiar with its inner workings. Daniel Webster, Martin Van Buren, with a score of their prominent contemporaries, are familiarly described and conversations with them recorded. A graphic description is given of the famous Tippecanoe election, in which Hone took an active part on the side of Harrison.

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The Life of John Davis, the Navigator.

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Between Two Loves.

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Taken Alive, and Other Stories.

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A narrative of the military operations of the War for the Union from its outbreak to the end of the Peninsular Campaign. By WILLIS J. ABBOT, author of "Blue Jackets of 61," "Blue Jackets of 1812," "Blue Jackets of '76." 4to, with 28 full-page Illustrations by W. C. JACKSON. $3.

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The Golden Days of '49.

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The Manners and Customs of the Ancient
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