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Grammar. The building is of the same general character as the other, although the inside trimmings are of a more elaborate description. This building will not be entirely finished for another week, although it was deemed appropriate to dedicate both at the same time. Each of these structures has been furnished with a first-class Chickering piano-forte.

The services of the dedication began shortly after two o'clock, Mr. J. R. Scott presiding. After the singing of a hymn by the scholars of both schools together, a prayer was offered by Rev. Thomas F. Fales. Introductory remarks were made by Mr. Daniel French, on behalf of the building committee, and brief addresses by the Rev. L. P. Frost, the Rev. Daniel E. Chapin, the Rev. E. E. Strong, Mr. Josiah Rutter, the Rev. Dr. Thomas Hill, and Mr. F. M. Stone. After the singing of another hymn by the scholars, David H. Mason, Esq., of Newton, member of the Board of Education, made a long and interesting address, much of it being taken up with a retrospective view of past times, even going back to the primitive ages. Speaking of the present prosperity of Massachusetts, he said there were five thousand schools in the State, and eight thousand teachers; there are 270,000 children in process of education, and 30,000 graduating every year. About three millions had been appropriated during the year for schools and apparatus, and one and a half million besides had been spent by the city of Boston alone for the same purpose. After Mr. Mason had concluded, the ceremony of presenting the keys was performed, Isaac F. Scott, chairman of the building committee, in a few appropriate remarks delivering them to the Rev. Dr. Hill, who received them on behalf of the School Committee, and presented them to the principal of the Grammar School, Mr. William E. Sheldon. After receiving them, Mr. Sheldon delivered a very appropriate address to the company. He was followed by the Rev. James C. Parsons, principal of the High School. The exercises were then closed by the singing of an original hymn by the scholars. Boston Daily Advertiser.

WORCESTER. The regular monthly meeting of the Worcester Teachers' Association for December was held on Saturday afternoon, at the High School building, Mr. Geo. A. Adams presiding.

About seventy-five teachers were present, all of whom manifested a lively interest in the object of the meeting, and especially in several matters presented by Mr. Marble, the superintendent.

Miss M. S. Fitch, of the Salem street Grammar school, illustrated her method of teaching drawing by a class of thirteen scholars, whose hands moved promptly and uniformly to the counting of their teacher, leaving lines upon the blackboard which evinced a good degree of skill, considering the limited time they have been in training. Teacher and class received a hearty vote of thanks. The teaching of drawing in the Worcester schools was initiated last summer, when Miss Dyer, of Boston, a teacher highly accomplished in the art, visited the various schools and gave model lessons, and also gave special instruction to teachers on Wednesday afternoons.

The question in relation to the number of studies in the schools being too many was discussed with considerable interest by Mr. C. C. Foster of Lamartine street, followed by Messrs. Comins, Harrington and Marble. It was argued

that more mental labor is required of many scholars than they have physical strength to perform. Teachers expect their pupils to be as far advanced at twelve years of age as they themselves were at twenty. There was no necessity for this. Children would grow up to be useful and happy if they were not prodigies. Many come out of school enfeebled in body and unfitted for life's duties. It was better that the young man at twenty should be barely able to count his money, and reckon up his grocer's bill, and be robust, than that he should be a prodigy of learning at fifteen, and die at twenty.

The average age of scholars in the High School in Worcester is sixteen, and in the first grade of Grammar Schools fourteen. In the former school, scholars are pursuing three languages, and attending to two other branches of study also. It was intimated by the superintendent that the number of daily recitations is usually but three, and that some of the cases of loss of health might be explained by a careful inquiry into the pupils' habits of life; and broad hints were given in regard to evening parties, unwholesome diet, fashionable dressing, etc.

Several teachers of long experience in the city's service took part in the discussion, which assumed something of a conversational form, and although a few thought there were neither too large a number of studies nor too great an amount of study, the general conclusion was, that in nearly every school there are children whose parents would do well to look quite as closely to their physical development as to the accomplishment of the prescribed course of study in any given length of time.- Worcester Gazette.

A GOOD APPOINTMENT. —Mr. Thornton, the British minister at Washington, has been some months looking for a good mining engineer in this country, to be employed by the British government in surveying the petroleum regions of India, and to make borings there similar to the Pennsylvania oil wells. On the recommendation of Prof. Henry, Mr. Thornton has appointed Mr. Benjamin S. Lyman, of Philadelphia, formerly of Northampton, who will sail at once for India, by way of Europe, to be absent a year, at least, and perhaps two years. The oil regions of India are widely scattered, in Burmah, Siam, the Punjaub, and probably elsewhere, and the winter is the only good time for the work which Mr. Lyman has undertaken. He is one of the best mining engineers in America; is a graduate of Harvard College in the same class with his kinsman Theodore Lyman; and has since studied in the Frieburg mining school, and the Ecole des Mines at Paris, as well as had much practical experience in all parts of the United States and in Nova Scotia. The Indian government could not well have made a better selection, and we trust they will find out from Mr. Lyman that their petroleum can be brought into the market, and prove a profitable product.-Springfield Republican.

PSEUDONYMES. Mr. Dole, in his " Catalogue of the Skowhegan Library," gives the following list of the pseudonymes of native and foreign authors, and names changed by marriage.

American: Bill Arp, Charles H. Smith; Samuel A. Bard, Ephraim G. Squier; Walter Barrett, Joseph A. Scoville; Benauly, Benjamin Austin and Lyman Abbott, jointly; Carl Benson, Charles Astor Bristed; Cantell A. Bigly (Can tell a big lie), George W. Peck; Josh Billings, Henry W. Shaw; Dunn Browne, Rev. Samuel Fiske; Paul Creyton, J. T. Trowbridge; Shirley Dare, Miss Susan Dunning; Q. K. Philander Doesticks, Mortimer Thomson; Fat Cntributor, A. M. Griswold; Major Jack Downing, Seba Smith; Fleeta, Kate W. Hamilton; Frank Forester, H. W. Herbert; Mrs. Gilman, Mr. Ballou; Howard Glyndon, Miss Laura C. Redden; Barry Gray, R. B. Coffin; Grace Greenwood, Mrs. Sarah J. C. Lippincott; Harry Gringo, Lt. Henry A. Wise, U. S. N.; Gail Hamilton, Miss Mary Abigail Dodge; Marion Harland, Mrs. M. V. Terhune; Jennie June, Mrs. Jennie C. Croly; Orpheus C. Kerr (Office Seeker), R. H. Newell; Edmund Kirke, J. R. Gilmore; Sut Lovengood, Captain G. Harris; Helen Mar, Mrs. D. M. F. Walker; Ik Marvel, Donald G. Mitchell; Sophie May, Miss R. S. Clarke; Minnie Myrtle, Miss Anna L. Johnson; Petroleum Vesuvius Nasby, D. R. Locke; Dr. Oldham, of Greystones, Caleb S. Henry, LL. D.; Oliver Optic, Wm. T. Adams; Miles O'Reilly, Col. Chas. G. Halpine; Mrs. Partington, B. P. Shillaber; Florence Percy, Mrs. Akers; John Phoenix, Captain Geo. H. Derby, U. S. A.; Porte-Crayon, Gen. D. P. Strother; L. Pylodet (anagram), F. Leypoldt; Seeley Regester, Mrs. O. J. Victor; Job Sass, Mr. Foxcroft; De Kay Se (author of "Canetuckey"), Charles D. Kirk; Ethan Spike, Matthew F. Whittier; Talvi, Mrs. E. Robinson (Therese A. L. Von Jakob); Timothy Titcomb, Josiah G. Holland, M. D.; Trusta (anagram), Miss Elizabeth Stuart Phelps; Mark Twain, Samuel L. Clemens; A Veteran Observer, E. D. Mansfield; Artemus Ward, Charles F. Browne; Blythe White, Jr., Solon Robinson.

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Foreign: A. L. O. E. (A Lady of England), Miss Charlotte Tucker; Cuthbert Bede, Rev. Edward Bradley; E. Berger, Miss Elizabeth Sheppard; Bon Gaultier, Prof. W. E. Aytoun and Theodore Martin; Country Parson, “A. K. H. B.," Rev. A. K. H. Boyd; George Eliot, Mrs. Marian J. (Evans) Lewes; Holme Lee, Mrs. Harriet Parr; Mrs. Markham, Mrs. Elizabeth Penrose; Owen Meredith, Hon. Edward R. B. Lytton; Louise M hlbach, Mrs. Clara Mundt Nimrod, Charles J. Apperley; Old Humphrey, George Mogridge; George Sand, Amantine Lucile Aurore (Dupin Dudevant); January Searle, Geo. S. Phillips; Arthur Sketchley, Geo. Rose; Samuel Slick, Judge Thomas C. Haliburton; Stonehenge, John H. Walsh; Zadkiel, Lieut. Richard J. Morrison.

Names changed by marriage: Charlotte Bronte, Mrs. Nicholls; Augusta J. Evans, Mrs. Wilson; Marian J. Evans, Mrs. G. H. Lewes; Caroline Fry, Mrs. Wilson; Dinah Muloch, Mrs. Craik; Harriet J. Prescott, Mrs. R. G. Spofford.

IMPORTS.-The following statement issued by General Walker, Chief of the Bureau of Statistics, shows the aggregate value of imports into each customs district of the United States during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1869:

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A PHYSICIAN'S PROBLEMS.-By Charles Elam, M. D., M. R. C. P. Boston: Fields, Osgood & Co.

A book of more than ordinary interest. It deals with those great questions which relate to man's interior organization, his moral and intellectual predispositions. All its conclusions may not be accepted, but they are worthy of earnest consideration. To the wise educator of the race, they supply motive, and give a truer conception of the work to be accomplished.

The subjects of the various chapters are as follows: Natural Heritage, On Degenerations in Man, On Moral and Criminal Epidemics, Body v. Mind, Illusions and Hallucinations, On Somnambulism, and Revery and Abstraction.

THE STORY OF A BAD BOY. By Thomas Bailey Aldrich. Boston: Fields, Osgood & Co.

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The readers of Our Young Folks have been delighted with this story, have fallen in love with the "bad boy," who was not a bad boy after all, but a "first-rate fellow," as one of them assures us. It is a natural, healthful story of a real boy, and finely told. It has had thousands of readers, and in its present shape will have thousands more.

MIRTHFULNESS AND ITS EXCITERS; or Rational Laughter and its Promoters, By. Rev. B. F. Clark. Boston: Lee and Shepard.

Mr. Clark has been for thirty years pastor of the Congregational church in North Chelmsford. It is evident his whole attention has not been absorbed in theology. He can laugh himself, and he believes in helping others to a good laugh. He says he has enjoyed preparing the book, and shall enjoy still more from it, if it only sells rapidly enough to give him a good income. May he have that enjoyment. His book will do good wherever it goes. We would suggest if he can only get hold of the good stories floating about in regard to teachers, he might add a new chapter to the next edition.

THE B. O. W. C. By the author of the Dodge Club. Boston: Lee & Shepard.

Another book for boys. The mysterious letters denote, "The Brethren of the Order of the White Cross." The history of the Order and their remarkable experiences are detailed in that humorous and effective manner peculiar to the author of "The Dodge Club." Boys will like it.

SABBATH SONGS FOR CHILDREN'S WORSHIP. By Leonard Marshall, J. C. Proctor, and Samuel Burnham. Boston: Lee and Shepard.

This book has been prepared by gentlemen of musical ability, who have had large experience in Sabbath Schools. They seem to have displayed good judgment in the selection of tunes and poetry. "The Suggestive Exercises for Sunday School Concerts" are a new feature in a work of this kind.

SONGS OF GLADNESS FOR THE SABBATH SCHOOL. By J. E. Gould. Philadelphia: J. C. Carrigues & Co.

Excellent taste has also been displayed in this collection, both in the selection of music and appropriate words. It contains nearly six hundred hymns and tunes, and has been arranged to meet the wants of the various religious denominations.

HAYDN'S DICTIONARY OF DATES. Edited by Benjamin Vincent. Revised for the use of American Readers. New York: Harper & Brothers. This work first appeared in 1841. In 1866, a new edition, thoroughly revised by Benjamin Vincent, Assistant Secretary and Keeper of the Library of the Royal Institution of Great Britain, was issued. Later additions and corrections were added at the end of the volume. The work has now passed through the hands of competent American editors, who have incorporated these additions into the body of the work, and also much new matter, continuing its chronology to the present time.

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