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The following books have just been recommended for use in the Schools of Kentucky by the State Board of Education:

Mitchell's Geographical Text-Books.

NEW, ACCURATE, INEXPENSIVE.

The Series Comprises-For Public Schools:

I. New Primary Geography,

II. New Intermediate Geography, (with map drawing).

III. New Physical Geography.

Retail Price $0.80 1 80

1 88

NOTE. The above books make a complete, practical, and elegant series for Public Schools; sufficiently full in details; well adapted to the various grades in the city or country; containing beautiful maps, topical arrangement of matter, and unequaled in mechanical execution. examine before adopting Geographies.

Mitchell's New Outline Maps and Key, small series..

Mitchell's New Outline Maps and Key, large series....

Please

$10.00

20 00

Also, Butler's Pictorial United States,

338 pages-with 8 full-paged copper-plate Maps, and 70 Illustrations.

RETAIL PRICE $1 50 EXECUTIVE OFFICE, Nashville Tenn., October, 21, 1875. I have read" BUTLER'S PICTOTIAL HISTORY," and I do not hesitate to pronounce it one of the best School Books I have ever examined: the simplicity of its arrangement and its historical accuracy will not fail to commend it to the public patronage.

JAMES D. PORTER

EXECUTIVE OFFICE, Little Rock, Ark., Nov. 17, 1875. I received "Butler's Pictorial History of the United States," and have read it I most heartily recommend it as a work of great merit. As a compendium it is well written, and is most admirably arranged. I am convinced it will meet with favor wherever it is read.

A. H. GARLAND

VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY, Nashville, Tenn., December 23, 1875. You will please excuse my delay in acknowledging the receipt of a copy of "Butler's Pictorial History of the United States." It pleases me much. The grouping together of facts is natural, the style terse, without being obscure, there is animation in the descriptions of men, places, and events, the pictures are helpful. A student of ordinary memory and judgment will be able to arrange the particular features of this history into a system, and at the end can take a general view from the beginning.. At one point the critical reader, from my stand point, might look for an objection, but the usual dead fly is not in this ointment, if so, I fail to find it. The statements of the book seem to be impartial, as between North and South, East and West. It is a history of the United States, not of a section, and is one of the few school books that can be used in Boston or Charleston.

EN MCTYEIRE

Special Rates for Introduction.

Sample copies sent on one half the.retail price. Counties, Towns and Districts, can secure uniformity at slight expense. Correspondence and visits of all interested in education respectfully invited. Address,

J. H. BUTLER & CO., Publishers, or 0. G. WILSON, Dayton, O., or J. W. PANLETT, Knoxville, Tenn.

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The most eminent living authors, such as Prof. Max Muller, Professor Tyndall, Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, Dr. W. B. Carpenter, Professor Huxley, R. A. Proctor, Frances Power Cobbe, The Duke of Argyll, James A. Froude, Mrs. Mulock, Mrs. Oliphant, Mrs. Alexander, Miss Thackeray, Jean Ingelow, George MacDonald, William Black, Anthony Trollope, Matthew Arnold, Henry Kingsley, Francis Galton, W. W. Story, Aurbech, Ruskin, Carlyle, Tennyson, Browning, and many others, are represented in the pages of

LITTELL'S LIVING AGE. January 1, 1877, the Living Age enters upon its 132d volume, with the continued commendation of the best men and journats of the country, and with constantly increasing success. In 1877 it will furnish to its readers the productions of the foremost authors above named, and many others; embracing the choicest serial and short stories by the leading foreign novelists, and an amount unapproached by any other periodical in the world, of the most valuable literary and scientific matter of the day, from the pens of the leading essayists, scientists, critics, discoverers and editors, representing every department of knowledge and progress.

The Living Age, (in which its only competitor, Every Saturday, has been merged) is a weekly magazine of sixty-four pages, giving more than three and a quarter thousand double-column octavo pages, of reading matter yearly. It presents, in an inexpensive form, considering its amount of matter, with freshness, owing to its weekly issue, and with a satisfactory completeness attempted by no other publication, the best essays, reviews, criticisms, tales, sketches of travel, and discovery, poetry, scientific, biographical, hostorical and political information, from the entire body of foreign periodical literature.

The importance of the Living Age to every American reader, as the only satisfactory fresh and complete compilation of an indispensable current literature-indispensable because it embraces the productions of

THE ABLEST LIVING WRITERS

Is sufficiently indicated by the following recent opinions:

"Simply indispensable to any one who desires to keep abreast of the thought of the age in any department of science or literature.'-Boston Journal.

A pare and perpetual reservoir and fountain of entertainment and instruction."-Hon. Robert C. Winthrop.

"The best periodical in America."-Theodore L. Cuyler, D.D.

"It has no equal in any country."-Philadelphia Press.

In no other single publication can there be found so much of sterling literary excellence."New York Evening Post.

"It produces the best thoughts of the best minds of the civilized world, upon all topics of living interest."-Philadelphia Inquirer.

Incomparable in the richness, variety and sterling worth of its articles, and equal to several ordinary magazines in the amount of matter presented."-The Standard, Chicago.

"The best of all eclectic publications."-The Nation, New York.

"And the cheapest; a monthly that comes every week."-The Advance, Chicago.

"With it alone a reader may fairly keep up with all that is important in the literature, history, politics, and science of the day."-The Methodist, New York.

"The ablest essays, the most entertaining stories, the finest poetry of the English language, are here gethered together."-Illinois State Journal.

"It is the only compilation that presents, with a satisfactory completeness, as well as freshness, a literture embracing the productions of the ablest writers living; it is, therefore, indispensable to every one who desires a thorough compendium of all that is admirable and noteworthy in the literary world."-Boston Post.

"Ought to find a place in every American Home."-New York Times.

Published weekly at 38 a year, free of postage.

EXTRA OFFER FOR 1877.-To all new subscribers for 1877 will be sent gratis the six numbers of 1876, containing, with other valuable matter, the first installment of a new and powerful serial story "The Marquis of Lossie," by George MacDonald, now appearing in the Living Age from advance sheets.

Club prices for the best home and foreign literature.

"Possessed of the Living Age and one or other of our vivacious American monthlies, a subscriber will find himself in command of the whole situation."Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.

For $10 50 the Living Age and one or other of the American four-dollar monthlies (or Harper's Weekly or Bazar) will be sent for a year, both postpaid; or, for $9 50 the Living Age and Scribner's St. Nicholas, or Appleton's Journal. Address LITTELL & GAY, Boston.

A POPULAR ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF NATURAL HISTORY AND TRAVEL.

ANNOUNCEMENT FOR 1877.

THIS journal of popular natural science will continue to be published by.

Messrs. H.O. Houghton & Co., Riverside Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, under the editorial management of Dr. A. S. Packard, jr., with the assistance of eminent men of science.

Since January, 1876, the amount of matter given in each number has been increased over former volumes. The typographical dress and illustrations which have heretofore given character to this magazine, have been improved, and it is of a thoroughly popular nature, so as to interest the general reader as well as the young naturalist. It will continue to be a journal of science education and for the use of science teachers.

ITS FEATURES FOR 1877.

In 1876 the latter half of the magazine was entirely remodeled, and a department of geography and travel added. The Department of Botany will be edited, as formerly, by Prof. G. L. Goodale, of Harvard University. That of Microscopy will be edited, as heretofore, by Dr. R. H. Ward, Troy, New York. Arrangements have been made to report the proceedings of scientific societies with great promptness. A digest of the contents of foreign scientific journals and transactions will also be given each month, together with the latest home and foreign scientific news.

The attention of publishers and teachers is called to critical notices of scientific books, to which especial attention will be given.

ARTICLES FOR VOL. XI., 1877.

By Professors Asa Gray, J. D. Whitney, N. S. Shaler, W. G. Farlow, G. L. Goodale, of Harvard University; Professors O. C. Marsh, A. E. Verrill, of Yale College; Mr. A. Agassiz, Hon. Lewis H. Morgan, Col. Theodore Lyman, Mr. L. F. Pourtales, Mr. S. H. Scudder, Professors E. D. Cope, F. V. Hayden, A. Hyatt; Drs. Elliott Coues, W. H. Dall, C. C. Abbot, Rev. S. Lockwood, J. A. Allen, H. Gillman, C. C. Parry, R. E. C. Sterns, O. T. Mason, and other leading naturalists, are either in hand or promised. Notes from abroad will occasionally be contributed by Mr. Alfred W. Bennett, the distinguished English botanist.

Note.-The ten volumes which have been published form at elegantly printed and illustrated Library of American Natural History, invaluable for school, college and public libraries. They contain standard articles by Agassiz, Dana, Wyman, Gray, Whitney, Leidy, Cope, Hunt, Dawson, Newberry, Marsh, Verrill, Morse, Gill, Coues, Scudder, Hagen, Dall, Schaler, Brewer, Ridgway, Parry, Caton, Abbott, Farlow, Lockwood, Grote, Ward, and many other scientists.

Terms-35 cents a number; $4 a year, postage free. Bound volumes $5; vols. I to X, $40; unbound $30. Back numbers supplied. Remittances by mail should be sent by a money order, draft on New York or Boston, or regisistered letter, to H. O. Houghton & Co., Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass. H. O. HOUGHTON & COMPANY, corner Beacon and Somerset sts., Boston. HURD & HOUGHTON, 13 Astor Place, New York. The RIVERSIDE PRESS, Cambridge.

KEHOE, The Printer,

MAYSVILLE, KY.

-[This magazine is printed at his office.]

DO YOU want to buy a Piano? an Organ? any kind of School Apparatus? Webster's Dictionary? School Furniture? Save twenty per cent. by adECLECTIC TEACHER CO., Carlisle, Ky.

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School Bulletin Publications.

The 6,000 Regents' Questions, 1866-1876, complete,..

The same separately, Arithmetic, Geography, Grammar, Spelling, each....
The Arithmetic Questions, on separate cardboard slips.....
Common School Law: the Standard Text-Book, 2d edition.
Studies in Articulation. By James H. Hoose, Ph. D. 3d ed..
Ryan's School Record, per fourteen sheets.

The School Bulletin, (specimens 10c.) per year.

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