166 
THE CULTIVATOR. 
1852. 
“ Best Dictionary ©f the English Slanguage.”— London Morning Clii'on. 
SB 
a <' 
A NATIONAL STANDARD. 
WEBSTER’S QUARTO DICTIONARY, 
Tlae Eniirc Work riiakrMged, 1456 Pages, Crown (iuarto, 
Six. Dollars. 
WEBSTER'S DICTIONARY, UNIVERSITY EDITION, |175. 
WEBSTER’S ACADEMIC DICTIONARY, - - - - 125. 
WEBSTER’S HIGH SCHOOL DICTIONARY,- - - 0 83. 
WEBSTER’S PRIMARY SCHOOL DICTIONARY, - 0 45. 
WEBSTER’S ELEMENTARY SPELLING-BOOK, - - 010. 
Forming a Complete Series, and affording a National Standard, thus securing 
Uniformity of Orthography and Pronunciation for the millions that 
are to constitute this vast Republic. 
0? THE SPELLING-BOOK ONE MILLION COPIES ARE SOLD ANNUALLY. 
The leading Series of School Books published in this Country , are based upon 
Webster's System. 
*** There is no other acknowledged Standard in this country or Great Britain ; and the 
following, among many others, show the views of prominent gentlemen through the country, 
on this subject:— 
“ We rejoice that it bids fair to become the Standard 
Dictionary to be used by the numerous millions of 
people who are to inhabit the United States .”—Signed 
by 104 Members of Congress. 
“ We recommend it to all who desire to possess THE 
MOST COMPLETE, ACCURATE, AND RELIABLE 
DICTIONARY OF THE LANGUAGE.” 
Daniel Webster, Lewis Cass, Thomas H. 
Benton, and thirty other members of the United 
States Senate. Millard Fillmore. Theo¬ 
dore Frelinghuysen, Chancellor of University 
of N. York. William H. Campbell, Ed. N. Y. 
Dist. School Journal. George N. Briggs, Gov. 
Massachusetts. William B. Calhoun, Sec. of 
State, Massachusetts. Richard S. Rust, Com. 
Common Schools, N. Hampshire. Theodore F. 
King, Sup. Schools, N. Jersey. Robert C. 
Winthrop, Speaker U. S. House of Rep. Ed¬ 
mund Burke, Com. Patents. John Young, Gov. 
New York. Christopher Morgan, Sec. State 
& Sup. Com. Sch. N. York. Alvah Hunt, Treas. 
N York. Rev. Samuel II. Cox, D.D. Lyman 
Beecher, D. D., Pres. Lane Seminary. Calvin 
E. Stowe, D. D., Prof. do. Rev. Hem an Hum¬ 
phrey, D. D., late Pres. Amherst College. Rev. 
Ezra Keller, D. D. Pres. Wittenberg College, 
Ohio. M. A. Diehl, Prof, in do. N. A.Gieger, 
Prof, in do. Benjamin Labaree, D. D. Pres, of 
Middlebury College ; and other distinguished gen¬ 
tlemen. 
Gov. Wood, of Ohio , in his Jlnnual Message, January 
1852, remarks : 
“ It is admitted to be the most valuable work of the 
kind extant, by the learned men both here and in Europe; 
and its general use in our schools would break down all 
1852. 
SOLD BY ASTjTj BOOKSELLERS. 
CP 
provincialisms, so to speak, and produce uniformity and 
elegance in the use of our language. Words would then 
be used by every one in the same sense in which they are 
defined by that able lexicographer.” 
Gov. Eaton, of Vermont: 
“I had the gratification of seeing Webster’s Dic¬ 
tionary adopted as the Standard Dictionary for the 
Schools of Vermont. I was gratified—because I felt that 
this work was worthy to be a Standard; that it afforded 
a safe harbor after long tossing upon a sea of doubt and 
uncertainty ;—a secure resting place from the fluctuations 
to which our language has long been subjected, and to 
which, without this work, it would still, as much as ever, 
be exposed.” 
Hon. F. W. Sherman, State Superintendent of Schools 
in Michigan: 
“ This work has been adopted as the Standard Dic¬ 
tionary in the schools and colleges of most of the States 
of the Union ; and State officers in charge of the system 
and subject of Education, in various States, have recom¬ 
mended appropriations for its purchase by the legislature.” 
Secretary Morgan, of Mew York: 
“ As a Standard of orthography and orthoepy, its 
claims to general adoption have been recognized by the 
most eminent scholars and statesmen of our land ; and as 
a purely American work, prepared at great expense, and 
emanating from a source entitled to the highest credit and 
respect, it commends itself strongly to the adoption of 
our School Districts generally.” 
Professor Stowe, a/ Cincinnati: 
“The Standard, wherever the English language is 
spoken, it deserves to be, must be, is, and will be.” 
'A ESP” Dr. Webster’s Educational Books are believed by intelligent judges to have done more 
/ than any other cause whatever, to secure that freedom from provincialisms, and uniformity in 
^ the pronunciation and use of language, so remarkable in the United States, especially consider- 
\ ing the great and constant influx of foreign population. 
C) gggp Gentlemen interested in popular education, Superintendents, Teachers, Parents, and 
y others, are respectfully invited to consider the adaptation of Dr. Webster’s Series of Dictionaries, 
(o &c., above mentioned, to secure and perpetuate this desirable uniformity. 
“ A 7¥©ble Ulonumcnt of Erudition.”— London Literary Gaz. 
