. First Steps in Latin: A Complete Course in Latin for One Year, Based on Material Drawn from Caesar's Commentaries, with exercises for Sight-Reading, and a Course of Elementary Latin Reading . l, Pittsburgh. GREENOUGHS VIRGIL Bucolics, and Six Books of the >Eneid, Illustrated, with Vocabulary. Mailing Price, $ ;Introductory, $ ; Allowance, 40 cents. (Also complete, and in other editions.) Superior to any previous American edition.—Professor Shi;rtleff, OberlinCollege. INTRODUCTORY BOOKS. Referring to the Grammar : L,eightons and Tetlows Lessons (each $).Complete : Allens New Me


. First Steps in Latin: A Complete Course in Latin for One Year, Based on Material Drawn from Caesar's Commentaries, with exercises for Sight-Reading, and a Course of Elementary Latin Reading . l, Pittsburgh. GREENOUGHS VIRGIL Bucolics, and Six Books of the >Eneid, Illustrated, with Vocabulary. Mailing Price, $ ;Introductory, $ ; Allowance, 40 cents. (Also complete, and in other editions.) Superior to any previous American edition.—Professor Shi;rtleff, OberlinCollege. INTRODUCTORY BOOKS. Referring to the Grammar : L,eightons and Tetlows Lessons (each $).Complete : Allens New Metliod (90 cts.), Leightons First Steps ($),Collar & Daniells Beginners Book ($). GINN & COMPANY, Publishers, Boston, New York, and Chicago. LA 1 IN. 91 A lien & Greenoughs New Ccesar. Seven books. Illustrated. Edited by Prof. ^Y. F. Allen, of the Uni-versity of Wisconsin, J. H. Allen, of Cambridge, and H. P. Judson,Prof, of History, University of Minnesota, with a special , pabularyby Prof. J. B. Greenough, of Harvard College. 556 pages, red edges,bound in half morocco. Mailing price, $ ; for Introduction, §;Allowance for an old book in exchange, 50 The publication of the new Caesar was the third step toward theperfecting of a series which, even in its first draft, was received byeminent authorities as marking a new era in the study of Latin;and, like the first two steps,—the new grammar (revised in 1S77),and Greenoughs Virgil (issued in 1881), — it has been most cor-dially approved by scholars and teachers, as the opinions quotedbelow will indicate. The prime object of this edition is to help the student with eachsentence, to put before his mind the same picture which that sen-tence suggested to the intelligent Roman reader. The Commentaries are simply a military history., — a stoiy ofbattle and siege. Hence it is clear that to read the book under-standingly the student should have a definite notion of a Romanarm J and its methods. So that whil


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