The Florida School Journal, Volume 10

Front Cover
V.E. Orr, 1896
 

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Page 154 - and of the general public, IT IS THE BEST FOR PRACTICAL PURPOSES, BECAUSE Words are easily found * * * Pronunciation is easily ascertained, Meanings are easily learned * * The growth of words easily traced, and because excellence of quality rather than superfluity of quantity characterizes Its every department. * * * GET THE BEST.
Page 95 - How it is that anything so remarkable as a state of consciousness comes about by the result of irritating nervous tissue, is just as unaccountable as the appearance of the jinnee when Aladdin rubbed his lamp.
Page 212 - Dictionary.^ IT IS THE BEST FOR TEACHERS AND SCHOOLS, BECAUSE Words are easily found. Pronunciation is easily ascertained. Meanings are easily learned. The growth of words easily traced, and because excellence of quality rather than superfluity of quantity characterizes its every department. It is thoroughly 'reliable.
Page 82 - about his neck and he were drowned in the midst of the sea than that he should offend one of these little ones.
Page 136 - a work which in all the stages of its growth has obtained in an equal degree the favor and confidence of scholars and of the general public. IT IS THE BEST FOR TEACHERS AND SCHOOLS, BECAUSE Words are easily found. Pronunciation Is easily ascertained. and because excellence of quality rather than superfluity of quantity characterizes Its every department.
Page 116 - the headache arising from a disordered stomach, or that of a nervous origin. Dr. FA Roberts, Waterville, Me. says : " Have found it of great benefit in nervous headache, nervous dyspepsia and neuralgia; and think it is giving great satisfaction when it is thoroughly tried." Descriptive pamphlet free on application to itu
Page 76 - Acid Phosphate Overworked men and women, the nervous, weak and debilitated, will find in the Acid Phosphate a most agreeable, grateful and harmless stimulant, giving renewed strength and vigor to the entire system. Dr. Edwin F. Vose, Portland,
Page 192 - but the place Where shining souls have passed imbibes a grace Beyond mere earth ; some sweetness of their fames Leaves in the soil its unextinguished trace, Pungent, pathetic, sad with nobler aims, That penetrates our lives and heightens them or shames.
Page 176 - Dr. E. Cornell listen, Philadelphia, Pa., says: " I have met with the greatest and most satisfactory results in dyspepsia and general derangement of the cerebral and nervous systems, causing debility and exhaustion.'
Page 191 - affording sustenance to both brain and body. Dr. E. Cornell Esten, Philadelphia, Pa., says: "I have met with the greatest and most satisfactory results in dyspepsia and general derangement of the

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