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THE PEOPLE'S LIBRARY.

“The editors and publishers should receive the thanks of the present
generation, and the gratitude of posterity, for being the first to prepare in
this language what deserves to be entitled not the ENCYCLOPÆDIA
AMERICAN, but the PEOPLE'S LIBRARY.”

N. Y. Courier and Enquirer.

Just Published, by Carey & Lea,
And sold in Philadelphia by E. L. Carey & A. Hart; in New-York by
G. & C. & H. Carvill; in Boston by Carter & Hendee; in Baltimore by E.
J. Coale, & W. & J. Neal;
in Washington by Thompson & Homans; in
Richmond by J. H. Nash; in Savannah by W. T. Williams; in Charleston
by W. H. Berrett; in New-Orleans by W. M'Kean; in Mobile by Odiorne
& Smith;
and by the principal booksellers throughout the Union.

VOLUME 9,
CONTAINING ABOUT 1,500 ARTICLES,
(To be continued at intervals of three months,)
OF THE
ENCYCLOPÆDIA AMERICANA:
A
POPULAR DICTIONARY
OF
ARTS, SCIENCES, LITERATURE, HISTORY, AND POLITICS,
BROUGHT DOWN TO THE PRESENT TIME, AND INCLUDING A COPIOUS
COLLECTION OF ORIGINAL ARTICLES IN
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY:
On the basis of the Seventh Edition of the German
CONVERSATIONS-LEXICON.

Edited by FRANCIS LIEBER,
ASSISTED BY
EDWARD WIGGLESWORTH and T. G. BRADFORD, Esqrs.

IN TWELVE LARGE VOLUMES, OCTAVO, PRICE TO SUBSCRIBERS,
BOUND IN CLOTH, TWO DOLLARS AND A HALF EACH.

EACH VOLUME WILL CONTAIN BETWEEN 600 AND 700 PAGES.

“THE WORLD RENOWNED CONVERSATIONS-LEXICON.”

Edinburgh
Review
.

“To supersede cumbrous Encyclopædias, and put within the reach of the poorest
man, a complete library, equal to about forty or fifty good-sized octavos, embracing
every possible subject of interest to the number of 20,000 in all—provided
he can spare either from his earnings or his extravagancies, twenty cents a week,
for three years, a library so contrived, as to be equally suited to the learned and
the unlearned,—the mechanic—the merchant, and the professional man.”

N. Y.
Courier and Inquirer
.

“The reputation of this valuable work has augmented with each volume; and
if the unanimous opinion of the press, uttered from all quarters, be true, which
in this instance happens to be the case, it is indeed one of the best of publications.
It should be in the possession of every intelligent man, as it is a library
in itself, comprising an immense mass of lore upon almost every possible subject,
and in the cheapest possible form.”

N. Y. Mirror.