CAPITAL, $200,000. OFFICE No. 6 BROAD STREET, NEW-YORK THIS COMPANY INSURES ALL KINDS OF BUILDINGS, HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, MER CHANDISE, VESSELS IN PORT, AND OTHER PROPERTY, AGAINST LOSS BY FIRE. HENRY QUACKENBOSS, Sec. GEORGE S. DOUGHTY, Pres. DIRECTORS. EUGENE PLUNKETT, Vice-Pres. Abraham Van Santvoord, Wm. A. S. Van Duzer, HENRY QUACKENBOSS, Sec COUNTING-HOUSE, Library and Office Furniture, FREDERICK CLARK, Successor to the old established house of JOTHAM CLARK, No. 94 BROADWAY, near Wall Street, New-York. Continues to manufacture, and keep constantly on hand, every variety of DESKS, TABLES, BOOK-CASES, SECRETARIES, WARDROBES, Arm-Chairs, Settees, Stools, Cushions, &c. Banking-Houses furnished, and any style of Desks, &c., made to order. PRINCE'S PROTEAN FOUNTAIN PATENTED JANUARY 23, 1835. T. G. STEARNS, GENERAL AGENT, PEN. 271 BROADWAY, CORNER OF CHAMBERS STREET, NEW-YORK. ADVANTAGES.-An incorrodible and durable Ink Reservoir, made of Protean, under Goodyear's patent, filled with ease and rapidity, supplying the pen for six or eight hours, and saving about one-third of the time. A Gold Pen of the best quality, with a holder of the most beautiful, light, and elastic material OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. A MAGIC PEN-It is light, graceful, easily regulated, and, in all respects, a complete and well-finished article.-N. Y. Independent. Eureka Eureka!! We have found it at last; a Fountain Pen that will write for hours without once dipping in an ink-stand.-Knickerbocker Magazine. The Pen must have a great run. Any pen that runs for eight hours at a dip may be said to have a great run; but this pen will become a tried and valued friend-will save the temper of the business-man, and preserve the composure of the irritable poet.-Hartford Courant. This pen, among pens, is what Colt's Revolvers are among pistols. One will fire a dozen shots, and the other write a dozen sheets, with a single charge or loading.-Author of Major Jack Downing. Exhibits throughout a high degree of perfection in every detail, as well as a happy application of natural laws in its general principles.-New-York Tribune. Sent by mail on receipt of any of the following prices: $3, $3,50, $4 and $1,50. TEXT-BOOK In the Public Grammar Schools OP BOSTON AND NEW-YORK CITIES. Recommended by the State School Commissioners of New-Hampshire. THE favor with which this little book has been received by the public, and the success with which it has been used in Schools, have been remarkable. Its design is to lessen the difficulties which the young scholar invariably experiences on his first induction into the study of Grammar. It begins at the lowest round of his understanding, and leads him upward in an agreeable and attractive manner until he is able to pursue a more comprehensive plan of instruction. It teaches one thing at a time," and is in this manner enabled to teach many things in succession. To teachers, it will be of great convenience and utility, and to scholars it will afford an unusual facility in mastering the difficult philosophy of our language. It is always a favorite in the class-room. From S. H. Taylor, LL. D., Principal of Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass. "It seems to me happily adapted, by its simplicity and clearness, to make the study of grammar intelligent and profitable even for the child. It is for Grammar what Colburn's First Lessons' is for Arithmetic-it makes the principles clear without burdening the mind with the technics. I know of no work so well adapted for those beginning the study of Grammar. You have done a valuable service to the young in the preparation of it; and I am confident that you will find a rich reward in the conviction that you have made the study of Grammar, which has so often been found perplexing and disheartening, adapted to the comprehension of the child, as well as attractive and pleasant. "I rejoice at every such successful effort as this in the cause of education. From The North American Review. Aug. 17, 1854," "Our schools suffer no imposition so egregious as in the cumbrous grammatical text-books in common use. They serve no earthly purpose except to overtask the verbal memory, and to obscure the mental perception of the pupil. The Grammar now before us is an honorable exception. Its definitions are as simple as language can make them, and are, in every instance, illustrated by examples carefully analyzed. Its rules of syntax are few, concise, and comprehensive. It contains no irrelevant matter, and could be studied with interest and profit by an intelligent pupil of seven or eight years of age." From the Rev. S. Saltmarsh. CANTON, N. H., July 20, 1855. "DEAR SIR-I have to acknowledge the receipt of a copy of your ELEMENTS OF GRAMMAR. The excellence of your little book having been suggested to me some months since, I procured a copy for examination, and being satisfied of its worth above any other Grammar for beginners with which I am acquainted, introduced it into our schools. I am happy to say that its practical working has confirmed my estimate of its worth. I trust the time is near when it shall displace in the hands of the younger scholars the books which now serve mainly to bewilder and confound the young mind. There is, indeed, no royal road to knowledge,' but there is a natural and logical road, and I congratulate you on having found it." Price, 25 cents. Copies sent by mail, postage paid, on receipt of price by the Publishers, DANIEL BURGESS & CO., No. 60 John Street, N. Y. JUST PUBLISHED, TOWERS' GRAMMAR OF COMPOSITION; OR, Gradual Exercises in Writing the English Language. THIS takes hitherto unoccupied ground, and consists mostly of Exercises in grammatical forms, being a practical application of the principles of Grammar, on a new plan, to establish the HABIT of writing correctly. After this habit is fixed, the next important step in Composition is ARRANGEMENT. This is taught in a manner ENTIRELY NEW, giving but ONE PROCESS AT A TIME, SO simplifying the work as to render essential aid to the teacher in imparting a correct and systematic method of thinking and writing. Price, 63 cents. Copies for examination sent by mail, post-paid, on reeeipt of half the retail price by the publishers, DANIEL BURGESS & CO., No. 60 John Street, N. Y. THE EXFERIENCE OF A CONSERVATIVE FAMILY IN FANATICAL TIMES; INVOLVING SOME ACCOUNT OF A CONNECTICUT VILLAGE, THE PEOPLE WHO LIVED THERE, AND THOSE WHO CAME THERE FROM THE CITY. BY BENAULY. ELEGANTLY ILLUSTRATED. I vol., 12mo, 456 pp. Price, $1,25. BRIEF EXTRACTS FROM LENGTHY NOTICES. "Cone Cut Corners" is a very witty and very singular [Philadelphia Bulletin] story of American life, [Utica Gazette], in the pages of which, wisdom. folly, sense, and nonsense, have all their scope and chance, [Boston Bee], end whatever moral it wishes to inculcate is so clearly designated that the reader will not be troubled to search for it.-[Cleveland Leader.] Dickens himself, if acquainted with the ins and outs of Connecticut life, could never have produced any thing better than [Boston Post] the conversations and sketches contained in it, [Phil. Christ. Chronicle], which are graphically drawn, [Boston Uncle Sam], possessing originality and spirit, [Boston Journal], and will answer for many places besides Cone Cut Corners. -[Boston Chronicle.] As a temperance novel, [New-York Sun], (start not, solid men of Boston!) [Boston Post], it inculcates a great lesson.-[N. Y. Evangelist.] Although a Maine-Law Tale, [American Citizen], the easy style in which it is written, [Boonesboro' Odd Fellow], and the kindly, genial humor which pervades the whole, [Portland Transcript], renders it an agreeable companion, [N. Y. Saturday Courier], who hits off various virtues and vices in an amusing style.-[Pittsburgh Christian Advocate ] The book is written in a very racy style, [Alton Courier], aad aims at living folly, and hits its plum-[Detroit Dem. Enquirer.] It is handsomely printed [Chicago New Covenant], and bound [Detroit Herald) and illustrated in an original and pleasing style.-[N. Y. Courier and Enquirer.] "CONE CUT CORNERS" is for sale by the Booksellers generally. OR, A MASON BROTHERS, Publishers, 23 Park Row, N. Y. OLIE; THE OLD WEST ROOM. THE WEARY AT WORK AND THE WEARY AT REST. BY L. M. M. 1 Volume, 12mo, 525 pp. Price, $1,25. BOOK FOR THE HOUSEHOLD. "Olie we think we hear the unsophisticated reader exclaim; 'Olie! world is Olie?" [N, Y. Saturday Courier.] What in the It is one of those quiet stories of a calm life, [Phil. Sunday Dispatch,] Which is indebted for the interest it excites more to its delicate and refined sentiment than to the thrilling scenes and startling circumstances which form the stock in trade of a large class of fiction writers. [N. Y. Chronicle.] Olie, the heroine, is no child of romance, no ideal creation, but a living, breathing personage, [Boston Sat. Evening Gazette.] And she awakens our interest and our symyathies accordingly. [Life Illustrated.] The book describes a variety of scenes and characters, [Boston Puritan Recorder,] Yet there is no striving after effect, no bathos, and no overpowering mass of verbiage, "sound and fury, signifying nothing." [U. S. Mining Journal.] In short, it is a simple tale, and one which will strike a chord of sympathy in the reader's heart. [Poughkeepsie Eagle.] The dialogue is unaffected, the plot simple and natural, [N. Y. Sat. Courier,] And the contrasts and coincidences are grouped together with good effect; [Boston Trans. ;] A vein of piety runs through the entire volume; [N. Y. Sunday Times ;] And although there is nothing in the story to stir up the blood by thrilling descriptions or fearful incidents, [Phila. Sun. Dispatch,] Yet it will enchain the attention of the reader, [Boston Journal,] And make him wiser and better. [Boston Uncle Sam.] The volume is full of varied and striking coincidences as they naturally occur in ordinary life, artistically narrated, [Boston Transcript,] And written in that easy, graceful style that at once commends itself to the reader, by ensting his sympathy, and challenging his approbation. [Banesboro' Odd Fellow]. MASON BROTHERS, 23 Park Row, N. Y. OF NEW PUBLICATIONS OF BANKS, GOULD & CO., N. Y., AND GOULD, BANKS & CO., ALBANY. AMOS & FERARD'S LAW OF FIXTURES, AND OTHER PROPERTY, PARTAKING BOTH OF A REAL AND PERSONAL NATURE. Second Edition, 3 00 HILLIARD ON REAL PROPERTY. VERY MUCH ENLARGED WITH NOTES AND REFERENCES. Two Volumes. Fourth Edition, - 12 00 BARBOUR'S SUPREME COURT REPORTS. VOLUME SEVENTEENTH, 3 50 REPORTS OF DECISIONS IN CRIMINAL CASES. BY AMASA J. PARKER, JUDGE OF SUPREME COURT OF NEW-YORK, 5 00 We particularly invite the attention of the Profession to our large Assortment of LAW BOOKS, Ancient and Modern, and at LOW PRICES. OF NEW-YORK. OFFICE, 111 BROADWAY, Trinity Building. INCORPORATED APRIL 12, 1842. Accumulated Assets, $3,000,000. Amount of Claims by Death paid since organization, over $,1500,000. QUARTERLY STATEMENT the Affairs of THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF New-York, for the Quarter ending 31st July, 1855. Paid Expenses, including Bent, Salaries, Medical Fees, Postage, Exchange, Advertising, Commissions, State and City Taxes,. 16 Claims by Death, and Additions to same, $20,636 85 46 Reduction of Premiums and Annuities,. F. S. WINSTON, President. |