II. ILLUSTRATIVE EXTRACTS

Addison, Joseph, The Spectator, [209], [212].
Ames, Azel, How the Pilgrims Came to Plymouth, [144].
Baldwin, James, A Story of the Golden Age, [30].
Bryant, William C., To the Fringed Gentian, [158].
Buckley, Arabella, Fairyland of Science, [70].
Burroughs, John, Locusts and Wild Honey, [156];
Squirrels and Other Fur-bearing Animals, [192].
Cooper, James Fenimore, The Pilot, [71].
Dickens, Charles, A Child's History of England, [69], [75], [177], [188];
David Copperfield, [167], [169], [186].
Franklin, Benjamin, Autobiography, [43].
Garland, Hamlin, Main-traveled Roads, [174].
Gregory, Lady, Through Portugal, [182].
Hardy, Thomas, Far from the Madding Crowd, [179].
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, Mosses from an Old Manse, [83].
Hughes, Thomas, Tom Brown's Schooldays, [63].
Irving, Washington, Rip Van Winkle, [43];
Astoria, [81], [82];
Life of Columbus, [83];
Stratford-on-Avon (The Sketch-Book), [88].
Kane, Elisha E., Arctic Explorations, [70].
Leavitt, R. G., Outlines of Botany, [158].
Lockyer, J. N., Astronomy, [92].
Long, William J., Ways of Wood Folk, [31].
Longfellow, Henry W., The Courtship of Miles Standish, [82];
The Bridge of Cloud, [83];
Walter Von der Vogelweid, [85].
Lowell, James R., The Vision of Sir Launfal, [84].
Main, E., Cities and Sights of Spain, [204].
Merriam, Florence A., Birds through an Opera Glass, [160], [162].
Motley, J. L., Correspondence, [170].
Nicolay, Helen, The Boys' Life of Abraham Lincoln, [32].
Parkman, Francis, The Conspiracy of Pontiac, [180].
Prescott, William H., The Conquest of Mexico, [82].
Sheridan, Richard B., The Rivals, [58].
Thoreau, Henry D., Excursions, [165].
Whittier, John G., The Barefoot Boy, [84].
Yonge, Charlotte M., A Book of Golden Deeds, [93].

Printed in the United States of America.


The following pages contain advertisements of
a few of the Macmillan books on kindred subjects.

Tarr and McMurry's Geographies

A New Series of Geographies in Two, Three, or Five Volumes
By RALPH S. TARR, B.S., F.G.S.A.
Cornell University
AND
FRANK M. McMURRY, Ph.D
Teachers College, Columbia University

—————

TWO BOOK SERIES

Introductory Geography60 cents
Complete Geography$1.00

THE THREE BOOK SERIES

First Book (4th and 5th years) Home Geography and the Earth as a Whole60 cents
Second Book (6th year) North America75 cents
Third Book (7th year) Europe and Other Continents75 cents

THE FIVE BOOK SERIES

First Part (4th year) Home Geography40 cents
Second Part (5th year) The Earth as a Whole40 cents
Third Part (6th year) North America75 cents
Fourth Part (7th year) Europe, South America, etc.50 cents
Fifth Part (8th year) Asia and Africa, with Review of North America (with State Supplement)50 cents
Without Supplement40 cents

—————

Home Geography, Greater New York Edition50 cents
Teachers' Manual of Method in Geography. By Charles A.vMcMurry40 cents

—————

To meet the requirements of some courses of study, the section from the Third Book, treating of South America, is bound up with the Second Book, thus bringing North America and South America together in one volume.

The following Supplementary Volumes have also been prepared, and may be had separately or bound together with the Third Book of the Three Book Series, or the Fifth Part of the Five Book Series:

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Tarr and McMurry's Geographies

COMMENTS

North Plainfield, N.J.—"I think it the best Geography that I have seen."—H. J. Wightman, Superintendent.

Boston, Mass.—"I have been teaching the subject in the Boston Normal School for over twenty years, and Book I is the book I have been looking for for the last ten years. It comes nearer to what I have been working for than anything in the geography line that I have yet seen. I congratulate you on the good work."—Miss L. T. Moses, Normal School.

Detroit, Mich.—"I am much pleased with it and have had enthusiastic praise for it from all the teachers to whom I have shown it. It seems to me to be scientific, artistic, and convenient to a marked degree. The maps are a perfect joy to any teacher who has been using the complicated affairs given in most books of the kind." —Agnes McRae

De Kalb, Ill.—"I have just finished examining the first book of Tarr and McMurry's Geographies. I have read the book with care from cover to cover. To say that I am pleased with it is expressing it mildly. It seems to me just what a geography should be. It is correctly conceived and admirably executed. The subject is approached from the right direction and is developed in the right proportions. And those maps—how could they be any better? Surely authors and publishers have achieved a triumph in text-book making. I shall watch with interest for the appearance of the other two volumes."—Professor Edward C. Page, Northern Illinois State Normal School.

Asbury Park, N.J.—"I do not hesitate at all to say that I think the Tarr and McMurry's Geography the best in the market."—F. S. Shepard, Superintendent of Schools.

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