Address editorial communications to EDITORS of MASS. TEACHER, Boston; letters relating to advertising to JOHN P. PAYSON, Chelsea; those relating to subscriptions or publishing to D. W. JONES, Roxbury. I. PRIMARY. II. INTELLECTUAL. III. COMMON SCHOOL. GRAMMAR SCHOOL, (where only one Written Arithmetic is used.) THIS SERIES PRESENTS THE LATEST AND MOST IMPROVED METHODS OF TEACHING ARITHMETIC. A NEW CHAPTER ON THE METRIC SYSTEM OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES, Prepared by H. A. NEWTON, Professor of Mathematics, Yale College, has been added to the Written Arithmetics. It is also published in a pamphlet form for those already supplied with EATON'S SERIES, and can be used in connection with any other Arithmetics. Single copies 10 cents. Very liberal terms for introduction. These Arithmetics are used exclusively in the Public Schools of BOSTON, the States of CALIFORNIA and NEVADA, and very extensively throughout NEW ENGLAND and the WEST. They have lately been introduced to be used in the Public Schools of PHILADELPHIA and recently adopted in SEVERAL HUNDRED CITIES and TOWNS in different parts of the country. QUESTIONS ON THE PRINCIPLES OF ARITHMETIC. Designed to indicate an outline of study and to facilitate a thorough system of reviews. By J. S. EATON, 15 cents. QUESTIONS ON GEOGRAPHY. Adapted to any text book. Uniform with the above, 18 cents. * THE AMERICAN UNION SPEAKER. Containing selections in Prose, Poetry, and Dialogue, for Recitation and Declamation. By JOHN D. PHILBRICK, superintendent of the Boston Public Schools. $2.50. "Mr. Philbrick, of Boston, has just got out an Excellent Speaker, which promises to be a great boon to the upper classes of schools." — Extract from the Report of Rev. James Fraser, on the Common School System of the United States, lately presented to the British Parliament by command of Her Majesty. * THE PRIMARY UNION SPEAKER. Beautifully Illustrated. Containing the choicest Selections in Prose and Poetry, for Primary Schools and Families. By JOHN D. PHILBRICK, author of "American Union Speaker," etc. 65 cents. * WORCESTER'S ELEMENTS OF HISTORY. Ancient and Modern. By J. E. WORCESTER, LL.D., author of "Worcester's Quarto Dictionary." A new edition brought down to the present time. Containing a full and accurate history of the Great Rebellion. $2.00. Recently adopted for exclusive use as the Text-book on General History for the Public Schools of the Stute of Maryland. THE BOSTON PRIMARY SCHOOL TABLETS. 10 numbers. By JOHN D. PHILBRICK, Superintendent of the Boston Public Schools. 85 cents each. * BRADBURY'S TRIGONOMETRY AND SURVEYING. For High Schools and Academies. By W. F. BRADBURY, Cambridge. $1.50. * Specimen Copies sent for examination on receipt of half price. Copies of Eaton's Arithmetics mailed, postage paid, for examination, on receipt of 13 cents for Primary, 45 cents for Common School, 20 cents for Intellectual, 60 cents for High School, 50 cents for Grammar School. Very liberal terms for first introduction. TAGGARD & THOMPSON, 29 Cornhill, Boston. ADOPTED IN Cambridge, Salem, Springfield, Worcester, AND Fifty Other Important Cities and Towns in New England. TESTIMONY OF THE CITY OF WORCESTER. OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT OF WORCESTER, MASS., OCT. 16, 1867. DEAR SIR: In answer to your question as to how Guyot's Geographies are working in our schools, I have the pleasure of saying that in my opinion the results have already more than justified the action of our Board in adopting * them. Their full benefits will not, however, be realized in the present year, nor in the next:- we may look for better and better work at the hands of both teacher and pupil for years to come, as they become more and more familiar with the spirit and system of these excellent books. Yours truly, B. P. CHENOWETH. * Guyot's Geographies superseded Warren's Geographies in Worcester in May last. Prof. GUYOT's series now includes the following Text-Books: I. Primary; or, Introduction to the Study of Geography. One quarto volume, with over 100 elegant illustrations. II. The Intermediate Geography. In one quarto volume, elegantly illustrated, containing forty-five Maps, of which twelve are fullpaged Maps, engraved in the highest style of the art, colored politically and physically, embra cing colored diagrams for the construction of the Maps of each Continent, and also colored diagrams, with full instructions for drawing the Maps of the separate States of the United States. III. Common School Geography. In one royal quarto volume, with numerous illustrations, containing twenty-three Maps, of which five are double-page Maps, engraved in the highest style of the art, colored politically and physically, embracing also diagrams for the construction of Maps of each Continent. TO TEACHERS. Teachers desiring to examine these Text-Books can procure them at the following prices: THE PRIMARY, 75 cents; THE COMMON SCHOOL GEOGRAPHY, $1.50; THE INTERMEDIATE GEOGRAPHY, $1; or the three books will be sent together to teachers for $3. Pamphlets containing testimonials from instructors who have practically tested Prof. GUYOT's Geographical Text-Books will be sent to any address. C CHARLES SCRIBNER & CO., ADDRESS 654 Broadway, New York. GILMAN H. TUCKER, At E. P. DUTTON & CO.'s, 135 Washington Street, Boston, New England Agent. GOVERNOR EVERETT ON COMMON SCHOOLS. EDITOR'S DEPARTMENT. — SALUTATORY, 24; MASSACHUSETTS TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION, 25; AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF INSTRUCTION, 25; NEW SUB- SCRIBERS, 25; COMPOSITIONS, 25; OBJECT TEACHING, 28; ANNUAL MEETING OF STATE TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION, 30; WHAT A TEACHER SHOULD DO.. SHOULD NOT Do, 33; EXAMINATION QUESTIONS, 34; VOLS. PROCEEDINGS AMERICAN INSTITUTE, 35; QUESTIONS IN ANALYSIS, 36; INTELLIGENCE, 37. BOOK NOTICES.-FRENCH'S ELEMENTARY ARITHMETIC, 39; PUTNAM ARITH- METIC DRILL AND REVIEW CARDS, 39; EVIDENCES OF CHRISTIANITY IN 19TH CENTURY, 40; LECTURES AND PROCEEDINGS OF AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF INSTRUCTION, 40; LADY'S ALMANAC FOR 1868, 40; U. S. MUSICAL REVIEW, 40: PRANG'S CHROMO, 41; OUR SCHOOL-DAY VISITOR, 41; WATERDALE Neigh- BORS, 41; LAWRENCE COLLEGIAN, 41; CLAUDIA, 41; TOMMY HICKUP, 41; BILLY GRIME'S FAVORITE, 41; DOTTY DIMPLE AT HER GRANDMOTHER'S, 41. Five copies, $6.25; Ten copies, $12.00, and each additional copy $1.20. Specimen copies furnished gratis to any wishing to subscribe. Back volumes, commencing with 1856, bound in cloth, $1.50. Back volumes, previous to 1856, bound in cloth, $5.00. Subscribers must give notice when they wish the Teacher discontinued. THE NATION. E. L. GODKIN, Publisher, New York. A Weekly Journal, containing Literary, Artistic, and Scientific Intelligence; Criticisms of Books, Pictures, and Music; Foreign Correspondence, and Deliberate Comments on the Political and Social Topics of the Day. Five dollars per annum. Our Subscribers, $4.00. THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY, devoted to Literature, Science, Art, and Politics. CHARLES DICKENS will furnish an original story for 1868. Four dollars per year. Our subscribers, $3.00. OUR YOUNG FOLKS: a Monthly, containing something in every juvenile department. Two dollars a year. Our Subscribers, $1.50. OUR BOYS AND GIRLS: a Weekly Magazine, edited by Oliver Optic. $2.50 per year. STUDENT AND SCHOOLMATE: a Monthly, devoted to pleasing Boys and Girls. A Dialogue and a Speech marked for Declamation in every number. One dollar and fifty cents per THE NURSERY: a genuine child's Magazine, richly illustrated, containing original contri- butions, and adapted to the tastes of children of a tender age. Monthly. By Fanny P. Seaverns. $1.50 a year. We will send it to our subscribers for $1.00. THE AMERICAN NATURALIST: the admirable Monthly of the Essex Institute, Salem. Adapted both to scientific and ordinary readers; it is neither below the one nor above the other. Three dollars a year. Our Subscribers, $2.50. Subscribers wishing to take any of the above Journals can order them of us at the reduced 2,000 ems are reckoned one page. One Page, one insertion, $7.00; One Page, six months, $36.00; One Page, one year, $72.00; Cover Pages, 50 per cent extra; First and Last Pages of Advertising Sheet, 50 per cent extra; extra ems, 75 per 1,000 ems. All communications relating to advertising must be sent before the 15th of the month pre- Brave words have been uttered in Boston. The Atlantic Monthly for December contains an article written by Col. Higginson, in which he plainly intimates that literature as an art has as yet no place in America. The Colonel is a soldier. His military record is full of brave actions, but none requiring more courage than to write as he has just written. But he neither stands alone nor first. To a civilian innocent of the smell of gunpowder, it was given to do a braver thing. A few weeks earlier, Charles Eliot Norton, not in the anonymous pages of his review, but face to face with an Athenian audience, in the city of Boston, said (if the reporter of the Daily Advertiser may be credited), that as yet Americans are incapable of doing the thinking for America, still less for the world, as they had supposed. The seal is at last broken. The voice of just and fearless criticism begins to be heard in the land. Those who assumed guardianship of the national taste and judgment only to betray the sacred trust by pandering to national conceit, are, thank God, either dead or silent. Never, until it can be truly said, are we again likely to hear it pronounced by a competent judge that the productions of American artists equal the best efforts of ancient or |