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WEBSTER UNABRIDGED
PICTORIAL EDITION!

DICTIONARY

THE BEST

WEBSTER'S

UNABRIDGED

WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY.

NEW PICTORIAL EDITION.

We have just issued a new cdition of Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, containing

1500 Pictorial Illustrations,

BEAUTIFULLY EXECUTED.

9,000 to 10,000 New Words in the Vocabulary.

TABLE OF SYNONYMS, BY PROF. GOODRICH,

in which more than Two THOUSAND WORDS forming a fuller work on English Synonyms, of itself, than any other are carefully discriminated, issued, besides Crabb, and believed in advance of that.

Tables giving Pronunciations of Names of 8000 distinguished Persons of Modern Times.

PECULIAR USE OF WORDS AND TERMS IN THE BIBLE,
With other new Features' Together with all the Matter of
Previous Editions.

COMPRISED IN A VOLUME OF 1730 PAGES.

They

"We have scen specimen sheets of the Pictorial Illustrations. are well executed and will often be found useful in giving a much more correct idea of an object than can be obtained by a definition,"—New York Tribune, April 12, 18:9.

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We have seen specimen pages of portions in architecture and ornithology, and find them of artistic beauty, as well as of great practical value.—Christian Mirror, £pril 12, 1859.

"We have seen specimen slets of these Illustrations, and can hardly see how they can be improved in beauty or accuracy."-Boston Evening Transcript.

Sold by all Booksellers.

"GET THE BEST."

Springfield, Mass., July, 1859.

GET WEBSTER.
G. & C. MERRIAM.

THE

Vermont School Journal

AND

FAMILY VISITOR

Is intended to be what its name imports, a Journal of Educational News, and a welcome Visitor in every intelligent Family throughout the length and breadth of the Green Mountain State.

Its columns will be open to a candid discussion of every subject of

PRACTICAL INTEREST TO SCHOOLS OF ALL GRADES, from the Family, which is the first and most important School, to the College.

It will aim to furnish short and practical articles, so as to give a

PLEASING VARIETY TO ITS CONTENTS.

Subjects that require lengthy discussion will be treated each in a scries of articles.

Notices and Reports of Teachers' Institutes and Associations, and of other Educational Meetings, will be welcomed to its pages.

It is conducted by a Committee appointed by the Vermont State Teachers' Association, and is intended to be the organ of that body..

TEACHERS, PARENTS, SCHOOL COMMITTEES, AND SUPERINTENDENTS, will find it a convenient medium of communication for such subjects and items of interest as they may wish to bring before the public.

It will be published monthly. and will contain twenty-four pages, making, for the year, a neat volume of 288 pages.

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50 copies to one address,

Single copies will be sent to subscribers free of postage after the money is received.

Advertisements of Schools, School Books, School Apparatus, &c., will be inserted, in a neat and conspicuous manner, on reasonable terms.

Address all business letters and remittances to J. S. SPAULDING, Barre, Vt.; and all articles intended for publication, to A. E. LEAVENWORTH. Hinesburgh, Vt.

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PUBLISHED BY A COMMITTEE APPOINTED BY THE VER

MONT STATE TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION.

PRINTED AT THE FREEMAN OFFICE.

Address all business letters and remittances, to J. S. SPAULDING, Barre, Vt.; and all articles intended for publication, and Excoanges, to A. E. LEAVENWORTH, Hinesburgh, Vt.

DEC 15 1924

LIBRARY

Special Purchase Fund
School if & ducation

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"A good book is the precious life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed and treasured up on purpose to a life beyond life."-Milton.

"Books are men of higher stature,

And the only men that speak aloud for future times to hear."

—Mrs. Browning.

Yes, good books are worthy of this high praise. But good or bad, books and newspapers are now playing a most important part in popular education,-hardly second to that of the living teacher, whether in the pulpit or in the school-room. Their character and influence must not be left out of account, unless we can be content to see our efforts as teachers paralyzed and the public taste debased, or be willing to neglect a co-operative agency of greatest power.

The subject is one of no little difficulty, and we can here only throw out a few hints that may possibly prove suggestive to other minds.

Our people are fond of books. Few families are so poor that they can not point you to a parlor table or cupboard filled with them. But what are they? We will venture to say that in three-fourths of these little libraries, at least one-half of the books have been purchased of itinerant book-peddlers, or by subscription of agents, and are either the unsalable refuse of the cities, or compends of history, travels, third-rate novels, got up by some "enterprising house," especially for the popular market

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