6 Farmer, Brace <? Go's Publications. 



liar to each ; the confusion and difficulty unnecessarily occasioned by the use of ele- 

 mentary works differing widely from each other in language and structure, will be 

 avoided, and the progress of the student rendered much more rapid, easy, and satis- 

 factory. 



No series of Grammars, having this object in view, has heretofore been prepared, 

 and the advantages which they offer cannot be obtained in an equal degree by the 

 study of any other Grammars now in use. They form a complete course of element- 

 ary books, in which the substance of the latest and best Grammars in each language 

 has been compressed into a volume of convenient size, beautifully printed on supe- 

 rior paper, neatly and strongly bound, and are put at the lowest prices at which they 

 can be afforded. 



The elementary works intended to follow the Grammars namely, the Latin 

 Reader and the Greek Reader are also on the SAME PLAN ; are prepared with special 

 references to these works, and contain a course of elementary instruction so unique 

 and simple as to furnish great facilities to the student in these languages. 



NOTICES. 



From PROF. C. S. FENNEL, Antioch College, Ohio. 



Bullions' books, by their superior arrangement and accuracy, their completeness 

 as a series, and the references from one to the other, supply a want more perfectly 

 than any other books have done. They bear the marks of the instructor as well as 

 the scholar. It requires more than learning to make a good school-book. 



From J. B. THOMPSON, A. M., late Rector of the Somerville Classical Institute, N. J. 

 I use Bullions' works all of them and consider them the best of the kind that 

 have been issued in this or any other language. If they were universally used we 

 would not have so many superficial scholars, and the study of the classics would be 

 more likely to serve the end for which it was designed the strengthening and 

 adorning of the mind. 



From A. C. RICHARDS, ESQ., Clay Co., Ga. 



We think Bullions' Latin Grammar, in the arrangement of its syntax and the con- 

 ciseness of its rules, the manner of treating prosody, and the conjugations of the 

 verbs, superior to any other. If his Greek Reader is as good as the Latin Reader, we 

 shall introduce it. 



It is almost superfluous to publish notices of books so extensively used. 



Within the last few months Dr. Bullions' English Grammar has been introduced 

 into the Public, and many of the Private Schools, the Latin School, the English 

 High School, the City Normal School, of the city of Boston ; Normal Schools of 

 Bridgewater and Westfield; Marlborough Academy; cities of Salem, Newburyport, 

 &c., Mass. ; Portsmouth. Concord, and several academies in New Hampshire ; and 

 re-adopted in Albany and Troy, New York. They are used in over seventy acade- 

 mies in New York, and in many of the most flourishing institutions in every State of 

 the Union. Also, in the Public Schools of Washington, D. C., and of Canada, in 

 Oregon and Australia. The classical Series has been introduced into several col- 

 leges, and it is not too much to say that Bullions' Grammars bid fair to become the 

 Standard Grammars of the country. 



THE STUDENTS' SERIES. 



BY J. S. DENMAN, A. M. 



Cents. 



THE STUDENTS' PRIMER 7 



" " SPELLING-BOOK 13 



' " FIRST READER 13 



" SECOND " 25 



" " THIRD " 40 



" " FOURTH " 75 



" FIFTH " 94 



" " SPEAKER. .. 31 



