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Acid Phosphate.

(LIQUID.)

A preparation of the phosphates that is readily assimilated by the system.

Especially recommended for Dyspepsia, Mental and Physical Exhaustion, Indigestion, Headache, Nervousness, Wakefulness, Impaired Vitality, etc.

Prescribed and endorsed by Physicians of all schools.

It combines well with such stimulants as are necessary to take.

It makes a delicious drink with water and sugar only.

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THE MOST PERFECT OF PENS.

THE MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY.

Vol. XX.

CONTENTS FOR AUGUST, 1888.

Portrait of Roscoe Conkling.

Roscoe Conkling. His Home in Utica.

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No. 2.

Frontispiece.

PAGE

89

Rev. ISAAC SMITHSON HARTLEY, D.D.
ILLUSTRATIONS.-The Home of Roscoe Conkling in Utica-The Grounds of the Conkling Mansion
at Utica-The Entrance to the Conkling Mansion at Utica-The Drawing Room of the Conkling
Mansion at Utica.

About Philadelphia in 1750.

Personal Recollections of General Grant.

E. W. B. CANNING,

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The Conquest of the Mayas.
Part III. (Conclusion.)

Montejo in the Interior, and Foundation of Merida.
ALICE D. LE PLONGEON.

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Incidents of Border Life in Ohio. Louis Wetzell.
An Englishman's Pocket Note-book in 1828. What he Saw in America. Part V. .
Journal of Lieutenant Tjerck Beekman, 1779, Of Sullivan's Expedition Against the
Six Nations.
JAMES R. GIBSON, Jr.

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A Frenchman's Estimate of Washington in 1781. An Unpublished Portrait, and
Four Unpublished Washington's Letters.
ILLUSTRATIONS.-Washington Profile Portrait on Back of a Playing Card-Fac-simile of Two of
Washington's Letters to George Augustine Washington.

Minor Topics. John Van Arnam Taking Arsenic in the Court Room to Win a Case, by
A. D. P. Van Buren-Centennial of New Hartford, New York, by C. W. D.-Con-
cerning Shakespeare's Characters, by G. G. H.-The New England Primer, by
Clement Furguson-Decoration Day, a Poem by R. H. Stoddard.
Original Documents. Petition to the Earl of Bellomont, Governor of New York, dated
1698, from Mrs. Pierre Van Cortlandt.

.

Notes. Queer Leather and Strange Use-Zacatecas, extracted from "Notes on a Mexican Trip" by Miss Catharine Weed Barnes-About Marietta, Ohio-An Old Advertisement-Historic Kingston, New York.

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Societies. The Connecticut Historical Society-The New York Genealogical and Biographical Society-The Rochester Historical Society-The Rhode Island Historical Society.

Historic and Social Jottings.

Book Notices. American Fishes, by Goode-A Manual of the Constitutional History of
Canada, by Bourinot-Lives of the Presidents, Harrison, Tyler, Polk, by Stoddard-
Brief Institutes of General History, by Andrews-Greene's Short History of the
English People, Revised Edition-Constitutional History of the United States, by
Sterne-Collections of Virginia Historical Society, Vol. VII., New Series-Indiana
Historical Society-France and the Confederate Navy, by Bigelow-Yankee Girls in
Zulu Land, by Sheldon-Three Introductory Lectures on the Science of Thought, by
Muller-How to Judge a Picture, by Van Dyke-Memorial to My Honored Kindred,
by Darling-Missouri, by Carr.
Advertisements-Books, Schools, etc., 1 to 8—Periodicals and Miscellaneous, 9 to 18.
_Periodica

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BINDING THe magazine of ameriCAN HISTORY.-We can furnish Covers for Binding in dark green levant cloth, for 50 cents; sent by mail, postpaid. Back numbers exchanged, if in good condition, for bound volume in cloth (as above), $1.00; in half Turkey Morocco for $2.00-subscribers paying charges both ways. TERMS:-$5.00 a year, in advance; 50 cents a number. Postmasters receive subscriptions.

30 Paternoster Row,

LONDON, ENGLAND.

Communications should be addressed to
THE MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY,

Entered at New York Post Office as Second Class matter.

743 Broadway, New York City. Copyright, 1888, by Historical Publication Co.

WITH THE JULY NUMBER, 1888,

THE MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY

Opened its Twentieth Volume.

THE BEST HISTORICAL MAGAZINE IN THE WORLD.

HE Troy Budget of June 17, 1888, says: "The June number closes the nineteenth volume, and no library contains any series of nineteen volumes of more interest or permanent value than are the nineteen volumes of the MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY."

HE Pittsburg Christian Advocate of June 17, 1888, says: "We consider this Magazine one of the best we receive. In point of mechanical execution it is by all odds the best. It occupies its field alone, and so well does it do so that there is no need for any other to help it in its work."

ION'S Herald (Boston), of June 20, 1888, says: "We delight in this review; there are such choice chapters of American history told so vividly."

HE Lewiston Journal (Maine), of June 2, 1888, says: It is wholly devoted to the interests of our own country, and the matter is presented in such a form that it partakes of none of the dullness sometimes found in history."

HE Hotel Gazette, San Francisco, of June 5, 1888, says: 'This Magazine stands alone and unapproachable, and is as superior to the ordinary compilations as is an original portrait of Sir Joshua Reynolds to a specimen of composite photography."

HIS important publication, more than any other extant, is cultivating the taste for historic reading and the desire for historic knowledge among all classes of readers. It has become a positive necessity for schools, colleges, and libraries throughout the country, and it is recognized as an educating power. The monthly numbers, gathered into handsomely bound volumes, form a valuable library in themselves of the history of America. HE vast field for historic research in even so young a country as ours is well illustrated by the fresh and varying contents of each number of this indispensable magazine.

THE Northern Christian Advocate says: "No magazine in the whole list is better worth the money it costs measured by the amount of solid instruction that one may get from their pages."

HE New York Evangelist says: "The MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY is an honor to the accomplished Editor, and to the country at large."

HE Christian Union says of the February number for 1888: “Students of American history will greatly value this issue, which is of exceptional interest. It is devoted to Washington, and contains a great variety of very interesting material, most of which is new."

HE Teacher's Telephone says: “We feel a personal interest in the success of this grand publication, which is doing a work that no other journal attempts, and which involves great energy, research, and patient investigation."

Its

T holds the highest rank in the current literature of the time, and is without a rival in its special domain. contributions are from the pens of the ablest and most agreeable writers, and they are timely and diversified, fresh, scholarly, useful, and captivating.

TH

HE general circulation of the MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY is not only national, but international, reaching all classes and interesting all readers, whether old or young. It is illustrated and printed with such care that it is a pleasure to turn its beautiful pages.

HERE are two elegant volumes in each year, beginning with January and July; and with each successive volume an elaborate index is carefully prepared and added.

UBSCRIPTIONS for the MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY may begin at any time, and all booksellers and newsdealers receive them, or remittance may be made direct to the publishers. Price, 50 cents a copy; or $5.00 a year in advance.

HE price of the bound volume is $3.50 for each half year, in dark green levant cloth, and $4.50 if bound in half morocco. Subscription price, $5.00 a year.

Address MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY,

743 Broadway, New York City.

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