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Exhaustion

Horsford's Acid Phosphate

Is the most efficient remedy known for the relief of Bodily, Mental and Nervous Exhaustion.

Taken after exhaustive illness it acts as a wholesome tonic, giving renewed strength and vigor to the entire system.

Taken before retiring, quiets the nerves and induces refreshing sleep.

Sold by Druggists.

Genuine bears name Horsford's on wrapper.

Our Newest Text-Books

The Silver Series of Language Books

By ALBERT LEROY BARTLETT, A. M.
Consisting of

First Steps in English

For Third and Fourth Grades. Beautifully illustrated. 176 pp. Intro. price, 38 cents.

The author has clothed the dry facts of grammar in such a new dress, and illustrated its rules with such interesting examples that the dullest child must perforce learn to enjoy his lessons.

Essentials of Language and Grammar For Grammar Grades. 318 pp. Intro. price, 62 cents. This covers the technical essentials of grammar, and opens the way to constructive work in composition and rhetoric. The best literature is used for analysis, and with such skill as to create an ambitious literary taste.

First Steps in Arithmetic

By ELLA M. PIERCE, Supervisor, Providence, R. I. This unique text-book covers the earliest foundations of arithmetic, developing the child's "number sense' and enabling him to thoroughly master all possible number combinations between one and twenty. Price 36 cents.

Reading: How to Teach It

By SARAH LOUISE ARNOLD. Joint author of "Stepping Stones to Literature." 288 pp. Gilt, uncut edges, $1.00. A fresh, charming volume which aids teachers to appreciate the true import of the familiar task, and offers helpful suggestions for performing it.

LITERARY ITEMS.

-Messrs. Henry Holt & Co. announce for early publication a novel of the American Revolution by Elizabeth N. Barrow, entitled The Fortune of War; the scene is laid chiefly in New York city during the British occupation. Also selections from Lesage's Gil Blas, edited by Prof. W. U. Vreeland of Princeton, and eight of Baumbach's delightful Söumer Märchen edited by Dr. Edward Meyer of Adelbert, and Atkinson's Lessons in Botany, and Barnes' Outlines of Plant Life. Both books are simplified and abbreviated editions of well-known earlier books by the same authors, and are adapted to the needs of high school pupils.

-G. P. Putnam's Sons will soon issue Let There Be Light, the Story of a Workingman's Club, its search for the causes of poverty and social inequality, its discussions, and its plan for amelioration, by David Lubin. Six workingmen, experiencing the evils and imperfections of the industrial and social conditions under which they labor, meet to discuss those conditions and to seek the causes of those evils.

-Among the announcements of the Macmillan Co. we note: Brook Farm, its Members, Scholars, and Visitors, by Lindsay Swift, a history of the experiment in social reform known as Brook Farm, with a biographical and critical account of the distinguished persons associated with it -Dana, Curtis, Ripley, Alcott, Channing, Dwight, Margaret Fuller, Hawthorne, Hecker, Bronson, and also of many of the lesser known members and visitors. The Golden Horse-shoe. It is the story of recent American expansion told with unconscious force and lucidity throughout a series of letters exchanged by two young officers of the army from their respective posts in the Philippines and in Puerto Rico. Also An Ethical Sunday-School-a Scheme for the Moral Instruction of the Young, by Walter L. Sheldon, Lecturer of the Ethical Society of St. Louis; author of "An Ethical Movement."

-If, as some think, Mr. Rudyard Kipling has been the subject of too much laudation, a wholesome corrective is afforded in the keen and biting treatment which he receives at the hands of Mr. Robert Buchanan, in the paper called The Voice of the Hooligan, which The Living Age, for Jan. 6th, reprints from The Contemporary Review.

-The veteran geologist, Prof. Joseph Le Conte, of the University of California, has the first of two papers telling the story of what the Nineteenth Century has done in advancing Geological Science in the February number of Appleton's Popular Science Monthly. Prof. Angelo Heilprin contributes the first of two articles, giving the results of a second visit to the Klondike, to the February number of Appleton's Popular Science Monthly. A number of beautiful illustrations accompany the text.

-In the February Atlantic read first James Ford Rhodes's article on History, one of the freshest of papers on one of the oldest of themes; then W. J. Stillman's account of his own education; then ZitkalaSci's School Days of an Indian Girl, and you will pronounce the number unsurpassed among American magazines.

-The Forum for February contains many articles of great merit, nearly all written by well-known authorities. Lieut.-Gen. Den Beer Poortugael, of the Holland Privy Council, contributes the leading article on "The Relation of England to the Transvaal;" an able paper is furnished on "The People's Party" by Senator Marion Butler, Chairman of the People's Party National Executive Committee. Two papers on the Old-Age Pension Problem in England are contributed by two eminent men, the first by Michael Davitt, M. P., on "A Plea for Old-Age Pensions," and the second by Rt. Hon. W. H. Lecky, the brilliant English historian, on "Why I Oppose Old-Age Pensions."

-The February issue of The International Monthly contains the following articles: Art as a means of Expression, by W. J. Stillman. Japan's Entry into the World's Politics, by Garrett Droppers. The Opera in America and Europe, by H. T. Finck. The Future of the Short Story, by E. Charlton Black. Recent Work in the Science of Religion, by C. H. Toy.

SILVER, BURDETT & COMPANY, Europe, by H. T. Finck.

BOSTON.

PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK.

CHICAGO.

ANNOUNCEMENT

Twentieth Century Text Books

THE

'HE closing years of the present century are witnessing the beginning of a remarkable awakening of interest in our American educational problems. There has been repeated and elaborate discussion in every part of our land on such topics as the co-ordination of studies, the balancing of the different contending elements in school programmes, the professional training of teachers, the proper age of pupils at the different stages of study, the elimination of pedantic and lifeless methods of teaching, the improvement of textbooks, uniformity of college-entrance requirements, and other questions of like character.

In order to meet the new demands of the country along the higher plane of educational work with a complete and correlated series of text-books fully embodying the latest advances in our education the Twentieth Century Text-Books are now offered.

The general editorial supervision of the series has been placed in the hands of Dr. A. F. Nightingale, Superintendent of High Schools, Chicago, and Professor Charles H. Thurber, of the University of Chicago, men thoroughly conversant with every phase of secondary education.

The offer of a complete series of text-books for these higher grades of schools, issued under auspices so favorable, concentrating and co-ordinating such a force of able writers all working with one end in view, is an event worthy of the twentieth century, and a good omen for the educational welfare of the future.

Several of the volumes are now ready. Others will follow rapidly, the issue of which will be duly announced.

Send for complete prospectus giving full particulars.

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, 72 Fifth Avenue, New York.

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A FARM OR A FACTORY.

When you buy a farm, or build a factory, it is natural to consider all conditions, and to locate to the very best advantage. In the northern portion of Wisconsin there lies a vast stretch of undeveloped, or partially developed country, which is awaiting the settler and manufacturer to turn it into productiveness and wealth.

Thousands of acres of rich lands covered with fine hardwood timber are open to the settler, who can obtain as much as he desires at very reasonable figures and upon easy terms. Improvements, such as school houses and roads are being pushed and ten years of progress will make an astonishing change.

The earth's rich desposits of iron ore, clay, kaolin, and marl, together with hardwood timber, easily supply the wants of the manufacturer and offer a fine inducement for the location of a plant or factory.

THE WISCONSIN CENTRAL RAILWAY CO. running through this rich timber and mineral belt, has opened it to the world by offering quick and cheap transit to the principal markets of the

country.

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Books for Common Schools

GINN & COMPANY

Cyr's Readers.

Stickney's Readers.
The Finch Readers.
Blaisdell's Physiologies.
Frye's Geographies.
Montgomery's Histories.
Stickney's Word by Word
Spellers.

Wentworth's Arithmetics
Prince's Arithmetics.
Speer's Arithmetics.
Tarbell's Language Les-

sons.

Educational Music Course
Vertical Writing Books.
National Drawing Course

Teachers and School Officials who are looking for the latest and best Text-Books are cordially invited
to correspond with us. Descriptive circulars sent, postpaid, toany address upon application.....

GINN & COMPANY, PUBLISHERS

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Although this book contains much matter taken from the author's well known "Exposition of the Constitution of the United States," it is so greatly changed as to be virtually a new book, and it is called by a different name so as to avoid confusion with the older book.

With an addendum on Local Government in Kansas, written by a leading teacher of that state, and with some changes and omissions the new book has already been

ADOPTED FOR THE STATE OF KANSAS.

All the changes in the state government by constitutional amendments and by legislation, up to and including the Revised Statutes of 1897, just adopted (Aug. 21), are embodied in the new

CONSTITUTION OF WISCONSIN, which with the "Civil Government", will be designated as "Wright's Civil Government, Wisconsin Edition."

In ordering be careful to send for Wright's Civil Government, as "Wright's Combined Consti tutions of the United States and of Wisconsin," will still be sold.

All orders from Wisconsin for "Wright's Civil Government" will be taken by us to be for the Wisconsin Edition, unless it is expressly stated that the Wisconsin Edition is not wished. But in ordering from other firms it will be safer to designate the book as "Wright's Civil Government, Wisconsin Edition."

Price by mail prepaid for the Wisconsin Edition,

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$1.00

-75

Price by mail prepaid for the book without the Wisconsin Constitution,
MIDLAND PUBLISHING CO., Madison, Wis.

Address

Exhaustion

Horsford's Acid Phosphate

Is the most efficient remedy known for the relief of Bodily, Mental and Nervous Exhaustion.

Taken after exhaustive illness it acts as a wholesome tonic, giving renewed strength and vigor to the entire system.

Taken before retiring, quiets the nerves and induces refreshing sleep.

Sold by Druggists.

Genuine bears name Horsford's on wrapper.

-THE CUSTOM HOUSE AND MAIN STREET, by Nathaniel Hawthorne is number 138 of the Riverside Literature Series. The first of these papers appeared as introduction to The Scarlet Letter, and the other was intended to occupy a place in a collection of scattered sketches which was never made. (Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 94 pp.; 15c.)

-AUTHORS' BIRTHDAYS-Third Series, by C. W. Bardeen, (C. W. Bardeen, Syracuse, N. Y.; 367 pp.; $1.00), contains sketches and critiques of Franklin, Curtis, Whipple, E. G. Mitchell, Prescott, Celia Thaxter, Stoddard, Bert Harte, Theodore Winthrop, Stedman, Mark Twain and Higginson-twelve American authors and all worthy of niche in the temple of fame. These sketches are bright, sympathetic and inspiring, and we commend the book both for the purpose indicated in the title and for fireside enjoyment and instruction.

-COLLEGE REQUIREMENTS IN ENGLISH, third series by Arthur W. Eaton (Ginn & Co.; 64 pp.; 8oc.), contains the June examination papers in English of Harvard, Yale, the Sheffield Scientific School, Princeton, and Columbia, from 1895 to 1899 inclusive.

-THE RATIONAL WRITING BOOKS, six numbers, (Werner School Book Co.; 58c. per dozen), certainly present a beautiful, simple and legible writing, and we can well believe the claim of the publishers that it is also a rapid handwriting. The two earlier books contain capital pictures above the copy designed to interest the young learner in what he is writing; interest in later numbers is promoted by the information contained in the sentences; and practical forms, as letters, invitations, cash accounts, bills, receipts, etc., are introduced early.

SILVER, BURDETT & COMPANY.

The Foundations of English Literature.

BY PROF. FRED Lewis Pattee, Pennsylvania State College, 400 pp. $1.50.

A brilliant portrayal of the evolution of English Literature under racial, civil and religious conditions.

Introduction to the Study of Economics.

BY PROF. C. J. BULLOCK, Ph. D., Williams College. 511 pp. Intro. price, $1.28.

A profound study of underlying principles, especially adapted to the American student and the American citizen.

Elements of Descriptive Astronomy,

By H. A. Howe, Sc. D., University of Denver, Colo. 356 pp. Colored Plates. Intro. price, $1.36.

This book, graphic in style and illustrated with colored photographs, is as attractive as it is thoroughly scientific, Hawaii and its People.

BY ALEXANDER S. TWOMBLY. 384 PP.
Intro. price, 60c.

76 illustrations.

A timely narrative, giving vivid pen-pictures of the islands, their scenery, etc.; and the history, customs and traditions of the people.

First Steps in the History of our Country,

BY W. A. AND A. M. MOWRY. 312 pp. Intro. price, 60c. A forceful history for young readers told in the lives and deeds of 39 great Americans. It centres every epoch upon representative personages. Full of anecdotes and telling illustrations.

LITERARY ITEMS.

-The Evolution of the English Novel is the title of a book by Francis H. Stoddard, which The Macmillan Company will publish in a few weeks. It is one of the few serious attempts to study the inner life of the novel, and to work out the philosophy of its development.

-Perhaps the best estimate af Ruskin is that by Frederic Harrison in his Tennyson, Ruskin, Mill, and other Literary Estimates, just published by The Macmillan Company. He devotes three chapters to Ruskin as a master of prose and as a prophet.

-In the Macmillan's Pocket American Classics'' series the following volumes will appear this Spring: The Sketch Book; The Alhambra; Selections from Poe's Prose Tales; Franklin's Autobiography; The Vision of Sir Launfal, and The Deerslayer. This series is 18mo in size, a handy shape, and each volume is provided with notes, portraits and introductory aid for the studious reader.

-Among the announcements of Henry Holt & Co., we note The Practical Study of Languages, by Prof. Sweet, of Oxford; Specimens of Forms of Discourse, compiled and edited by Dr. E. H. Lewis, of the Lewis Institute, of Chicago; Thackeray's English Humorists, edited by Prof. Wm. Lyon Phelps, of Yale; and Tennyson's The Princess, edited with analytical questions, by Prof. L. A. Sherman, of the University of Nebraska.

-A forthcoming volume which will be welcomed by seriously inclined general readers, as well as by philanthropic workers, is Riis's Ten Years' War. It is to be published by Houghton, Mifflin & Co. No one among those who have battled with the slum has won greater respect for his sincerity, or greater regard for his knowledge of the subject, than Mr. Riis.

-Prof. N. S. Shaler, of Harvard University, is the author of a thoughtful article entitled The Transplantation of a Race, which appears in Appleton's Popular Science Monthly for March. It is a discussion of the forces which led to the introduction of the negro into America and the conditions attending his acclimatization. An extremely

SILVER, BURDETT & COMPANY, interesting and freely illustrated article on Roads is con

BOSTON.

PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK.

CHICAGO.

tributed to the number by Nelson P. Lewis, Engineer of Highways to the Borough of Brooklyn.

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