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ROYAL ROUTE,

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CHICAGO, ST. PAUL, MINN'POLIS, & OMAHA

AND

CHICAGO AND NORTHWESTERN RAILWAYS

Passengers over the ROYAL ROUTE have all the luxuries of Modern Railway Travel PALACE DINING CARS, Luxurious SMOKING CARS and SLEEPERS and Elegant Day and Night Coaches for passengers who do not ride in Sleeping Cars, with no change of cars for any class of passengers between Minneapolis, St. Paul and Chicago, and no change of cars between St. Paul and Council Bluffs, withthrough Sleepers to Kansas City If you wish the best traveling accommodations always buy tickets.

THE ROYAL ROUTE.

F. B. CLARK,

Gen'l Traffic Manager.

REVISED READERS & SPELLER

"Many series of Readers have appeared since the first publication of McGuffey's, but McGuffey's still more than hold their own in the affection and patronage of the public. The grading of McGuffey's Readers has never been surpassed, nor has the interesting character of the matter. In singleness of purpose, in the adaptation of means to ends, in catching and holding the attention of children, in filling the bill of 'reading made easy,' McGuffey's Readers stand unrivalled and alone."

Superior Features of McGuffev's Revised Series.

1. Adaptation to the modern methods of teaching.

T. W. TEASDALE,
Gen'l Pass. Agent.

SAINT PAUL, MINN.

Also adopted,

City of New York,
City of Brooklyn,
Hoboken, N. J.
Paterson, N.
Calais, Me.
Lewiston, Mc.
Dubuque, Iowa.
Burlington, Iowa.
Iowa City.
Sedalia, Mo.
St. Joseph, Mo.
Silver City, N. M.
Columbus, O.
Toledo. O.
Fort Wayne, Ind.
Beaver Dam, Wis

and now used in he public schools of
City of Cincinna
City of St. Lonis,
Portland, Me.
Topeka, Kan.
Hyde Park, Mass.
Joliet, Ill.
Springfield, Ill.
Charleston, Ill.
Leavenworth, Kan.
Hutchinson, Kan.
Los Angelos, Cal.
Duluth, Minn.
Sandusky, O.
Terre Haute, Ind.
Charlotte, Mich.

City of San Francisco.
St. Paul &Minneapolis.
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Atlanta, Ga.
Dallas. Texas.
Gainesville. Texas.
Murfreesboro, Tenn.
Meriden, Miss.

Covington, Ky.

Lexington, Ky.

Maysville, Ky.
Charlotte, N. C.
Dayton, O.
Evansville, Ind.
Sturges, Mich.

2. Consistent use of the most familiar system of diacritical marks. AND 3.000 OTHER CITIES & TOWNS. Introduction of carefully engraved Script Lessons.

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Unequalled gradation of the series, and of each book of the
series.

Greater variety of the best Reading Matter than is found in any
other series. More than two hundred of the best writers
represented.

Nearly three hundred Illustrations by the best artists.
Typography. Printing and Binding of unrivalled excellence.

EXTENSIVE USE.

McGuffey's Readers have at various times been officially adopted or recommended for use by state superintendents and boards of education in nearly one-half the States of the Union, and are now in general use; in several States they are practically in exclusive use in all the schools.

McGuffey's Revised Readers are now officially adopted or authorized for use in the public schools of

Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky,
Arkansas, South Carolina, Louisiana.

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ST. PAUL BOOK AND STATIONERY COMPANY,

ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR

SCHOOL SUPPLIES.

Rand, McNally & Co's School Maps,

Including a fine sectional map of Minnesota. Most complete, substantial, and handsomest school maps ever published.

CORNELL'S OUTLINE MAPS.

Perfect in execution, low in price, and commended by all who have used them.

GLOBES.

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The celebrated Schedler Celestial and Terrestrial Globes. All grades and prices from $1.20 to $165. The only American Globes that received medals at the International Expositions of Paris, 1867, Vienna, 1873, Philadelphia, 1886. Paris, 1878.

SLATED CLOTH, SLATED PAPER, AND LIQUID SLATING,
All of the Best Quality,

White and Colored Crayons, Erasers, Pointing Rods, Clocks, Bells, School
Registers, Reward Cards, etc., etc.

THE MINNESOTA READING CIRCLE BOOKS sold by us at the
same price fixed upon by the Executive Board.

We can furnish any of the above me itioned articles, as well as all book and stationery supplies, promptly and at the lowest possible rates. Send for circulars and address all communications to St. Paul Book and Stationery Co.,

127 E. 3d STREET, ST. PAUL, MINN.

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WR

SAINT PAUL

RITE to the undersigned for Annual Prospectus and Catalogue for 1883-1884. It contains matter of interest to every person who is desirous of obtaining a sound business education. COLLEGE BLOCK, 253 & 255 NICCLLET AVENUE

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CC Curtiss

Our New School Aids are the

best and
cheapest system for conducting schools in

good quiet order. Each set contains 150 pretty
chromo credit cards, 50 large beautiful chromo
merit cards, and twelve large, elegant, artistic
chromo excelsior cards, price per set, $1; half
set, 60 cents. 500 new designs brilliant artistic
chromo school-reward, excelsior, merit, cred-
it, diploma, birthday, Easter, friendship, re-
membrance, address, visiting, Christmas, new
year, scripture and gift cards at 5, 10, 15, 20 and
25c per doz n. Large set samples, 20c. If you
do not care to o der samples, send any amount
you wish, stating number and kinds of cards
wanted, and we will sur ly please you. Price-
list, order-blanks, return-envelopes free. All
Stamps taken. Please
postpaid by mail.
send a trial order. FINE ART PUB. Co.. WAR-
REN, PA.

EAPOLIS

CHICAGO

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BAILWAY: WHY

WARNER'S BLOCK, THIRD & WABASHA STS.

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Chicago Correspondence University, An institution furnishing instruction to "any person in any study."

THROUGH DIRECT CORRESPONDENCE WITH EMINENT SPECIALISTS (College Professors). To learn of present courses of study and vacancies to teach, send 10 cents for sample copy of our first-class Literary and Educational Journal.

N. B.-Schools and families supplied with
teachers FREE. Address
THE CORRESPONDENCE UNIVER-
SITY JOURNAL,

(AGENTS WANTED.) 162 LaSalle St., Chicago.

ROYAL ROUTE,

CHICAGO, ST. PAUL, MINN'POLIS, & OMAHA

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MUSIC WITHOUT A TEACHER.

"Let all play now who never played before,

And those who've played before now play the more,"

BY USING

SOPER'S INSTANTANEOUS GUIDE

TO THE PIANO AND ORGAN,

Which enables any persons, old or young, to play at sight, without previous study. It will each you more music in one day than you can learn from a teacher in a month. The Guide it so very simple that any child ten years old, knowing its A, B, C's, can learn to play a tune in ifteen minntes. Its very simplicity commends it to all. Every house having a piano or organ hould have one. It will prove an object of interest and amusement to every member of the family where it finds a place. We don't expect to make you "stars," but start you and develop your capacity. Thousands will find it easy to become musicians when they once get correctly started. This the Guide will do at once. Its sales extend from Maine to California, and from Canada to Mexico. Every mail brings words of praise for it. A lady writes: "It ought to be in the reach of every one. Thousands would bec me interested in music who would never otherwise. My daughter learned to play in 25 minutes." A gentleman who ad listened for years to his wife and daughter without being able to strike a nate himself, learned to play 20 tunes one Sunday while his family had gone to church. A lady writes: "Your Guide has brought much happiness to my family. asband says it is the best purchase he ever made. My children derive much happiness and pleasure from it." It is adapted to Piano, Organ, or Melodeon. The best evidence of its merits are the large sales daily made by such leading New York houses as R H. Macy & Co., 6th Avenue and Fourteenth street; Ehrich Bros., Twentyfourth street and 8th Avenue, and Ridley & Sons, Grand and Allen streets. The Guides are sold

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in handsome folio sets, with twenty (20) pieces of popular music. for $1 Ask your book and NO CHANGE OF CARS music stores for it. If they havn't it, make them order it for you, or send direct to the publish ers, who will send it by mail, postpaid, on receipt of price. Just think of it! The Guide and Twenty (20) Pieces of Popular Musfc for One Dollar. You would pay more than that amount to any first-class teacher for a singie les son.

HEARNE CO., Publishers,

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The publishers of the School Supplement purpose issuing a new book on the subject of Arithmetic to offer as a premium with their paper. Rather than pay an individual author a sum of money to prepare such a book as they require, the publishers have divided the sum Six Hundred Dollars-which they have decided to offer, into One Hundred and Twenty Priz es, arranged in eight groups of $75 each. To correspond with these eight groups of prizes. they have divided the whole subject of Arithmetic into the following eight departments: 1. Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication, Division.

2. Factors, Multiples, Fractions, Decimals.

3. Denominate Numbers.

4. Practical Measurements.

5. Percentage, Trade Discount, Profit and Loss, Commission and Brokerage.

6. Interest, Partial Payments, True and Bank Discount, Stocks.

7. Insurance, Taxes, Exchange, Proportion, Partnership.

8. Miscellaneous Practical Exercises and Problems.

Each group of prizes the publishers have subdivided as follows: Five first prizes of $10 each; five second prizes of $3 each; and five third prizes of $2 each. All teachers and students may compete for these prizes upon the following conditions:

Each must send to the publishers, as early as possible, a set of ten examples in Arithmetic based upon the work included in some one of the eight departments already named. The correct answers (not solutions) to the ten examples must also be given. The examples need not necessarily cover the wnole work of the department. Each comp titor may enter for prizes in as many departments as he choses, but no one competitor will be awarded prizes in more than five departments.

The Prizes will be Awarded for the fifteen best sets in each department. The rbitrators will take into consideration the originality and practical character of the exan. ples, and their general adaptation to public, grammar, and high-school work.

The Three Hundred sets of examples which the arbitrators consider the best will be published in book form. Each set will be printed complete, and the name of the compiler will be inserted with it. Together with the Three Thousand Exam les secured in this way, the book will contain an entirely new and novel treatment of the whole subject of Arithmetic. The printing and binding will be the best that modern workmanship can turn out.

Every person who sends a set of sets of examples must send therewith One Dollar as his or her subscription to the School Supplement for one year. A copy of the Arithmetic will be mailed Free to every subscriber on the second day of February, 1885. The latest date for receiving sets of examples in departments 1, 2, 3 and 4, will be January 5th, 1885, and in departments 5, 6, 7 and 8, the latest date will be January 10th. 1885. The One Hundred and Twenty Prizes will be mailed by P. O. Order or bank draft to the winners on the second day of February, 1885. The complete results of the competition will be published in the Supplement. Any further information or explanation necessary will be sent cheerfully upon application. The School Supplement is without exception the best school paper published. Though its publication was commenced less than a year ago, its fame has already spread from California to Newfoundland, and from British Columbia to Florida. Its subscribers represent every state and province. The Supplement is an educational journal on an entirely new plan. It is profusely illustrated and contains lessons on all the school subjects, The current numbers contain biographies of noted authors and statesmen, with large beautifully engraved portraits; short stories for the school room; interesting sketches, maps and illustrations; readings and recitations; lessons in practical arithmetic and grammar; hundreds of sentences for correction; illustrated lessons in astronomy, standard time, correspondence, mensuration and railroad geography; anecdotes of authors; practical exercises for primary pupils; prize competitions for pupils' work, and numerous miscellaneous articles. Sample copies will be sent to those who have not seen the paper for Eight Cents in stamps.

SPECIAL OFFER.

The publishers will continue to mail a new book FREE to all their subscribers on the first day of February of each year. A few hundred copies of their 1884 book still remain on hand. It is an Examination Manual, and it contains over 2,000 questions and exercises in all the common and high school brances. This is a very valuable book, many thousand copies having been disposed of during the year. It contains 175 pages, beautifully printed and bound. A copy will be mailed free to every new subscriber until the stock is exhausted. Those, then, who subscribe at once, whether competing for the arithmetic prizes or not, will receive one book by return mail, on the 2d day of February, 1885, and the SCHOOL SUPPLEMENT for one year-all for One Dollar. Please enclose eight cents in stamps with your one dollar, to pay the postage of the Examination Manual. Mail all letters to either one of the following addresses:

EATON, GIBSON & CO., Educational Publi hers, BUFFALO, N. Y.,

TORONTO, CANADA.

The SUPPLEMENT and premium books are mailed from both places. All letters are answered promptly. [Mertion this paper.]

BETWEEN

St. Paul & Portland

on any class of ticket.

EMIGRANT SLEEPERS FREE.

The only All Rail Line to the YELLOWSTONE PARK

For full inf rmation as to Time, Rates etc. address, CHAS. S. FEE, Gen'l Pass. Ag't, St. Paul, Minn.

3

NEW GAMES

IMPROVED GEOGRAPHICAL CARDS, IMPROVED HISTORICAL CARDS. Each of these games consists of 200 cards with full directions, in handsome box. In addition to forming an intensely interesting game, any one can, by their use, in a short time and without effort permanently acquire all the leading facts of geography and history.

THE GAME OF MYTHOLOGY. Designed to enable persons to become familiar with the principal characters of Mythology in an interesting and easy way. Price, $1,00 each, post-paid, or the three by express, prepaid, for $2.50. Send for Descriptive Circulars.

PETER G. THOMSON, Cincinnati, O,

TEACHERS'

INSURANCE AND AID ASSOCIATION!
POLICY, ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
COL. F. W. PARKER,

Principal Cook Co. Normal School, Normal-
ville, Ill.
MRS. EMILY C. STEVENS.
Principal of the Scammon School, Chicago,
PROF. W. B. POWELL,
Superintendent of East Aurora (Illinois)

Ill.

Schools.

HENRY H. BELFIELD, Principal North Division High School, Chi

cago.

PROF. JOHN W. COOK,

Editor Illinois School Journal, Normal, Ill. PROF. CHARLES I. PARKER, Superine ndent Oakland (Illinois) Public schools.

PROF. A. HARVEY, Superintendent of Schools, Paris, Illinois, Assessments for death losses graded from 70 cents to $1.70, according to age, including a special fund for purpose of aid in case of distress. Members forward all assessments for death losses and aid to the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank, of Chicago, whieh fund can not be drawn upon, except by the beneficiary, for the purpose named and then only upon the authority of the Executive Committee. Misappropriation of funds an impossibility. The general features of the plan, as made known in the descriptive circulars, combine to make it the most thoroughly reliable and practicable of any plan ever offered. Send for circular. Agents wanted. W. G. FARRAR,

Sec'y, 24-182 Dearborn St., Chicago, IllJ. H. GOODRICH, Sup't of Agencies.

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