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Containing the best Reviews, Criticisms, Tales, Fugitive Poetry, Scientific, Biographical, and Political Information, gathered from the entire body of English, Periodical Literature, and forming tour handsome volumes every year, of immediate interest and solid permanent value.

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"Tenderloin,'' foie gras,' are phrases, we believe, which express the one most exquisite morsel. By the selection of these from the foreign Reviews,-the most exquisite morsel from each, -our friend Littell makes up his dish of LIVING AGE. And it tastes so. We recommend it to all epicures of reading."

From Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, May, 1867. "Were I, in view of all the competitors that are now in the field, to choose, I should certainly choose THE LIVING AGE. Nor is there in any library that I know of, so much instructive and entertaining reading in the same number of volumes."

From the New-York Times. "The taste, judgment, and wise tact displayed in the selection of articles are above all praise, because they have never been equalled."

From the Springfield, Mass., Republican. "We can do those among our readers who love ound and pure literature no better service than by referring them to this sterling weekly. It is decidedly the best magazine of the class published in the United States, if not in the world."

From the New-York Independent.

"No one can read, from week to week, the selections brought before him in THE LIVING AGE, without becoming conscious of a quickening of his own faculties, and an enlargement of his mental horizon. Few private libraries, of course, can now secure the back volumes, sets of which are limited and costly. But public libraries in towns and villages ought, if possible, to be furnished with such a treasury of good reading; and individuals may begin as subscribers for the new series, and thus keep pace in future with the age in which they live."

From the Syracuse, N. Y., Journal, 1867. "The cheapest and most satisfactory magazine which finds its way to our table. It is a favorite everywhere."

From the Mobile Daily Advertiser and Register, June 30, 1867.

"Of all the periodicals ever issued in America, probably none has ever taken so strong a hold upon the affections and interest of the more cultivated class of people, none has done so much to elevate the tone of public taste, none has contributed so much genuine enjoyment to its thousands of readers, as LITTELL'S

LIVING AGE."

From the Round Table, New York, Aug. 10, 1867. "There is no other publication which gives its readers so much of the best quality of the leading English magazines and reviews."

From the Chicago Journal of Commerce, July 4, 1867 "We esteem it above all price."

From the Illinois State Journal, Aug. 3, 1867. "It has more real solid worth, more useful informa. tion, than any similar publication we know of. The ablest essays, the most entertaining stories, the finest poetry of the English language, are here gathered together."

NOTICES.

From the Richmond Whig, June 1, 1867.
"If a man were to read Littell's magazine regularly,
and read nothing else, he would be well informed on
all prominent subjects in the general field of human
knowledge."

From the Daily Wisconsin, Milwaukee, June 15, 1867.
this country."
"The best reprint of foreign literature issued in

From the Church Union, New York, Aug. 10, 1867.

"Its editorial discrimination is such as ever to afford its readers an entertaining résume of the best current European magazine literature, and so complete as to satisfy them of their having no need to resort to its original sources. In this regard, we deem it the best issue of its kind extant."

From the Boston Journal.

"The weekly issues of THE LIVING AGE make four octavo volumes of about eight hundred pages each, yearly; and we venture to say that few volumes published in this country comprise so great an amount and variety of good reading matter of permanent value."

From the Congregationalist, Boston.

"No better present can be made for the enjoyment of a family circle through the year than a year's subwell filled with instructive articles on science, phiscription to LITTELL'S LIVING AGE. It is always losophy, theology from the reviews, stories by the most popular writers from the magazines, choice poems, brief biographies, and a selection of tid-bits of the most entertaining character. The bound volumes for the past year (1866) are among the most valuable books on our shelves."

From the Philadelphia Press.

"The volume for October, November, and December, 1866 (being the third quarterly of the fourth series, and the ninety-first of the whole), fully sustains the high character of the work. It contains the following serials: Nina Balatka' and 'Sir Brook Fossbrooke,' from Blackwood'; 'Madonna Mary,' from 'Good Words'; Village on the Cliff,' from the 'Cornhill Magazine'; and Old Sir Douglas,' from 'Macmillan.' THE LIVING AGE, we repeat, is a library in itself, worthy of its high repute."

From the New-York Home Journal, June 12, 1867. "LITTELL'S LIVING AGE, long distinguished as a pioneer in the republication of the choicest foreign periodical literature, still holds the foremost rank is a high one, and its contents are not only of interest among works of its class. Its standard of selections at the present moment, but possess an enduring periodical literature is ample and comprehensive; and value. Its representation of the foreign field of it combines the tasteful and erudite, the romantic and practical, the social and scholarly, the grave and gay, with a skill which is nowhere surpassed, and which is admirably suited to please the cultivated reader."

From the Protestant Churchman, June 27, 1867. linked with our memories of the old library at home, "Age and Life are alike its characteristics. It is and it seems to grow fresher and better in matter as it grows older in years. Once introduced into the family circle, it cannot well be dispensed with; and the bound volumes on the library shelves will supply a constant feast in years to come."

From a Clergyman in Massachusetts, of much literary celebrity.

"In the formation of my mind and character, I owe as much to THE LIVING AGE as to all other means of education put together."

Published EVERY SATURDAY, at $8 a year, FREE OF POSTAGE, by
LITTELL & GAY,

The only Paper in the Country devoted to the popularization of

NATURAL

HISTORY

A POPULAR, ENTERTAINING AND INSTRUCTIVE

MONTHLY

MAGAZINE,

Illustrated with Plates and Wood-Cuts.

PUBLISHED BY THE

Peabody Academy of Science, Salem, Mass.

Edited by A. S. PACKARD, Jr., A. HYATT, E. S. MORSE,

and F. W. PUTNAM.

THE FOURTH Volume of the NATURALIST (enlarged to 64 pages each number) commences with the number for March, 1870.

As the articles in the NATURALIST, though of a popular and non-technical character, are written by authorities on the various subjects, each volume forms an ILLUSTRATED ENCYCLOPEDIA OF NATURAL HISTORY of great value as a work of reference to the student and general reader, as well as to those more immediately interested in the STUDY OF NATURE. The NATURALIST is for the STUDENT, the TEACHER, the GENERAL READER, the AGRICULTURIST, the FARMER, the YOUNG, and the LOVER OF NATURE.

[Send for Circular containing testimonials, and an account of the Magazine and club rates with other magazines.]

TERMS:

The Subscription Price of the Naturalist is $4.00 a Year.

Subscription to Vol. 4 and any preceding volume, unbound,

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Single volumes, bound, $5.00, unbound, $4.00. Cloth Covers for any volume, 50 cents each.

SINGLE NUMBERS, 35

CENTS.

PREMIUMS AND CLUBS.

To any person sending us one new subscriber with their own subscription for Vol. IV. ($8.00), we will give any books advertised in our Agency List to the amount of $1.25. For two new subscribers ($12.00), we will give books from the list to the amount of $2.25, and at the same (viz: 75 cts. each on each new subscription) up to 10 subscriptions. For all above ten we will allow one dollar's worth of books for each new subscription.

To any one sending 10 subscriptions ($40.00) for Vol. IV., either from new or old subscribers, we will give a bound copy of Packard's Guide to the Study of Insects (price $6.00), or books on the Agency List to the amount of $6.00.

TO CLUBS of 5 to 9, at the rate of $3.50 for each subscription; of 10 to 19, at the rate of $3.25; of 20 and upwards, at the rate of $3.00, and a free copy to the person sending the money. [NOTE.-Clubs can be made up of old and new subscribers, and the copies will be sent to one or separate addresses, as desired.]

Remittances by mail at the risk of the sender, unless in the form of drafts on NEW YORK or BOSTON (if on any other place 25 cents must be added to pay for discounting), payable to the order of AMErican NaturALIST; a Post-Office Money Order, or in a Registered Letter,

We are compiling a RECORD of COLLEGES, ACADEMIES and SCHOOLS in the United States, with the names of their Professors, Principals, Superintendents and Teachers; and to the end that it may be as complete as possible, solicit correspondence from Educators, wherein they will give us the names of the Institutions with which they are connected, the distinctive characteristics (if any) of the same, and the names of their associate Teachers, etc. For such favors, we shall be pleased to reciprocate when in our power. Address

IVISON, BLAKEMAN, TAYLOR & CO.,

47 & 49 GReene strEET, N. Y.,

Publishers of the "AMERICAN EDUCATIONAL SERIES" of School Books, and Manufacturers of the celebrated "SPENCERIAN DOUBLE ELASTIC STEEL PENS."

Self-Instructing Drawing Lessons,

By JOHN D. F. BROOKS.

These lessons are designed expressly for all who may wish to acquire the first rudiments of this pleasing and valuable art; but more expressly for children. The object of this book is to teach an artistic mode of sketching from the first.

The author, a Teacher of Drawing in the Public Schools of Boston, has been at great labor and expense in forming an original digest of the system, to make the right way easy.

AN EXPERIENCED LADY TEACHER,

A NORMAL GRADUATE,

WOULD LIKE TO GIVE

LESSONS IN PENMANSHIP

In any of the principal cities in New England; or would teach the higher MATHEMATICS, higher ENGLISH, &c., in an Academy or Public High School.

Address Box 223, New London, Conn.,

Box 68, Chelsea, Mass., or

"Teacher," Room 18, Selwyn's Building, Boston.

Mass. Institute of Technology.

ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS, MONDAY, June 6, and THURSDAY, September 29. REQUISITES: Age, 16 years; a good English education, Algebra to Quadratics, and Plane Geometry.

COURSES: Civil, Mechanical and Mining Engineering; Chemistry; Architecture; and Science and Literature.

For Catalogue and Programme of Courses apply to

Prof. SAMUEL KNEELAND, Secretary,

BOSTON, MASS.

"In this country [England] as well as that which gave it birth, it is now generally admitted to be the best. In the copiousness of its Vocabulary, and in the clearness and accurate correctness of its Definitions, it has no rival; and it is in these points the value of a Dictionary consists."-London Bookseller, and Hand-Book of British and Foreign Literature, June, 1869.

Webster's Unabridged Dictionary,

3,000 ENGRAVINGS. 1,840 pp. ROYAL QUARTO.

10,000 Words and Meanings not in other Dictionaries.

More than thirty years of literary labor,-five by a distinguished European scholar upon the Etymologies,expended upon the late revision of Webster alone; and it now contains twenty-five per cent, more matter than any other one-volume English Dictionary published in this country or Great Britain.

A NATIONAL STANDARD.

Perhaps no opinions upon such a subject can be more satisfactory than those of our STATE SUPERINTENDENTS OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION, selected for their qualifications to take charge of the educational interests of the country,-more especially our great Common-School System,-watching constantly with intelligent scrutiny every influence bearing in this direction. Whose judgment can be more valuable, therefore, than those of such gentlemen, as to the ENGLISH DICTIONARY best fitted, in its DEFINITIONS, VOCABULARY, ORTHOGRAPHY, PRONUNCIATION, SYNONYMS, ILLLUSTRATIONS, TABLES, and other features, to aid in true mental culture?

Nearly every State Superintendent of Public Instruction in the Union, or corresponding officer, where such an one exists. has recommended WEBSTER'S DICTIONARY in the strongest terms. Among them are those of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Kansas, Missouri, Michigan, Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Carolina, Alabama, Arkansas, California, and also Canada,-TWENTY-SIX in all. We take pleasure in presenting the following from the very highest sources :

LATE EDUCATIONAL TESTIMONY.

"It (Webster's Dictionary) is worth more to me than any other ten books in my library-it is simply INDISPENSABLE. 'Webster' more than holds its own in Illinois. It is growing in favor all the time. It is the standard in all our schools and courts of law. In fact, it is substantially without a rival." Hon. N. BATEMAN, State Superintendent, Illinois, November 29, 1869.

"I esteem it one of the most complete and perfect books ever published. It is the acknowledged standard for all the uses of a dictionary in nearly all our colleges and schools."-Hon. O. HOSFORD, State Superintendent, Michigan, August 19, 1869.

"Excepting the Bible, I know of no work in the English language so valuable to the student, or professional man, or in fact to any one who can read the language in which it is printed, as Webster's New Illustrated Unabridged Dictionary." New Jersey has shown her appreciation of this work by purchasing 1,500 copies for her public schools. No library is complete without a copy of this valuable work upon its shelves, and no school-room can be considered as properly furnished unless there is upon the desk a volume of the Unabridged' accessible to pupils and teacher."-Hon. E. A. APGUR, State Superintendent, New Jersey, January 3, 1870.

"Webster is our Chief Justice' in all etymological appeals; his decisions are final. Others are referred to as expressing opinions only."-Hon. WARREN JOHNSON, State Superintendent, Maine, December 14, 1869.

"We have adopted Webster's Dictionaries as the standard in our schools."-Hơn, THOMAS SMITH, State Superintendent, Arkansas, December 4, 1869.

"I am free to say, that as far as I can judge, it is the most exhaustive and accurate dictionary of our language ever published. For the purposes of the professional or literary student, the school-room or the youthful pupil, its adaptation is complete."-Hon. Z. F. SMITH, State Superintendent of Kentucky, December 30, 1869.

"The English philologists of Europe and America have long placed Webster's Unabridged Dictionary' as the standard in Lexicography. The new Illustrated Unabridged Quarto, and the National Pictorial Octavo, in mechanical and artistic execution, in copiousness of definition, and in the completeness of their vocabulary, are superior to any previous editions. They are all the philologist can desire."-Hon. B. C. HOBBS, A. M., LL. D., State Superintendent, Indiana, December 11, 1869.

"A copy of Webster's Revised Quarto' should be owned by every family that has the least pretension to literary taste or culture, and especially by every teacher. Every Board of Education should place a copy of it in every school-room, as a piece of apparatus next in usefulness to the black-board, if not superior to it."-Hon. W. D. HENKLE, State Superintendent, Ohio, January 1, 1870.

"I have been in the constant habit of using the Unabridged' for fifteen years, and it is more indispensable to me now than ever. In compiling a series of Reading Books for schools, I was obliged to select some standard of spelling; and I had no hesitation in choosing Webster' as the most philosophic, the most consistent, and the most American."-Hon. M. A. NEWELL. Principal State Normal School and State Superintendent, Maryland, December 21, 1869.

"I can conscientiously recommend your whole revised series, and shall urge their introduction all over our State."-Hon. P. MCVICAR, State Superintendent, Kansas, December 27, 1869.

"I purchased a copy of Webster's Abridged Dictionary in 1833, when I was a medical student in Philadelphia. I regard it as almost a household god-side by side with my Bible it ever lies, and must so continue in some form."-Hon. H. B. CLOUD, M. D., State Superintendent, Alabama, December 16, 1869.

"Webster's Unabridged Dictionary has occupied a place at my elbow, on my writing-desk, for many years. During all this time I have deemed it a necessity. A copy of the New Illustrated edition now lies before me. It is a great improvement upon the lder editions, and as it now stands is unquestionably one of the noblest monuments ever reared by human labor and skill. It well befits the age of iron-clad ships, oceanic telegraphs, and Pacific railroads."-Hon. J. P. WICKERSHAM, State Superintendent, Pennsylvania, January 8, 1870.

"I consider the 'Unabridged' to be the first work of its kind in the United States, and a standard in Orthography, Orthoepy, and Definition. It is made the standard of Orthography in the publication of our laws. See Chap. 4, General Laws of 1864, last clause, sect. 2, which reads as follows,-On questions of Orthography, WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY shall be taken as the standard.'"-Hon. A. J. CRAIG, State Superintendent of Wisconsin, January 6, 1870.

Others of similar character are omitted for want of space, but will be given hereafter.

Can a teacher better promote the best interests of a pupil than by inducing him to possess himself of a copy of WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY, for permanent use, and frequent consultation? Published by G. & C. MERRIAM, Springfield, Mass. Sold by all Booksellers.

Also, now published, WEBSTER'S NATIONAL PICTORIAL DICTIONARY, 1,040 pp. Octavo. 600 engravings.

MADVIG'S LATIN GRAMMAR.

By THOMAS A. THACHER, Yale College. The most valuable treatise on the language yet published. Price, to teachers, $2.00.

ALLEN'S LATIN PRIMER.

A First Book of Latin for Boys and Girls. By J. H. ALLEN. PART I., containing an outline of Grammar in thirty progressive lessons; illustrated by easy narrative (History, Sacred). PART II., consisting of Dialogues (Latin and English), and selections for Reading, with Vocabulary; about 150 pages.

Allen's Latin Grammar. By W. F. & J. H. ALLEN. $1.25. Recommended by Harvard College, as indicating the amount required for admission. Allen's Latin Lessons. $1.25. Allen's Latin Reader. $2.50. Allen's Latin Lexicon (complete). $1.25.

Allen's Latin Composition (to be issued in April).

Craik's English of Shakespeare. $1.75. By W. J. ROLFE.

From the Harvard Catalogue for 1869-70: "For 1870, students may prepare themselves in CRAIK's ENGLISH OF SHAKESPEARE, or in Milton's Comus." Our World; or First Lessons in Geography. Revised edition, with new maps. By MARY L. HALL. 90c.

Anderson's United States and General Histories.

CINN BROS. & CO., Publishers,

13 Beacon Street, BOSTON.

STATE NORMAL SCHOOLS.

The Normal Schools at Framingham and Salem are designed for the education of female teachers; those at Bridgewater and Westfield, for the education of teachers of both sexes.

The course of study commonly occupies two years, or four terms, each term including nine teen weeks of school time and one week of recess. The course for college graduates is com pleted in one term. A person of marked ability and extraordinary acquirements may obtain a degree, in any one of the schools, in three-fourths, or even one-half of the time usually required. To those who intend to teach in the public schools of Massachusetts, wherever they have previously resided, tuition is free; and to pupils from this State, pecuniary aid is given, when needed. Most of the text-books required are furnished gratuitously from the libraries of the several schools.

will take place as follows:

THE PUBLIC EXAMINATIONS

At FRAMINGHAM, on Tuesday, Jan. 19, 1869, and July 6, 1869.
At SALEM, on Thursday, Jan. 21, 1869, and July 8, 1869.
At BRIDGEWATER, on Tuesday, Jan. 26, 1869, and July 13, 1869.
At WESTFIELD, on Thursday, Jan. 28, 1869, and July 15, 1869.
THE EXAMINATIONS FOR ADMISSION

will take place as follows:

At FRAMINGHAM, on Tuesday, Feb, 16, 1869, and Aug. 31, 1869.
At SALEM, on Thursday, Feb. 18, 1869, and Sept. 2, 1869.
At BRIDGEWATER, on Tuesday, Feb. 23, 1869, and Sept. 7, 1869.
At WESTFIELD, on Thursday, Feb. 25, 1869, and Sept. 9, 1869.

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