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Of Nebraska, 214.

Of Nevada, 216.

Of New Hampshire, 222.

Of New Jersey, 229.

Of New Mexico, 376.
Of New York, 257.

Of North Carolina, 267.

Of Ohio, 281.

Of Oregon, 286.

Of Pennsylvania, 300.

Of Rhode Island, 310.

Of South Carolina, 316.

Of Tennessee, 325.

Of Texas, 333.

Of Utah, 379.

Of Vermont, 337.

Of Virginia, 347.

Of Washington Territory, 381.

Of West Virginia, 354.

Of Wisconsin, 362.

Of Wyoming Territory, 383.

Centennial Exposition:

Preparations for, lxxv.

Churches:

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Cities:

Remarks on education in, xxii.
Number of, xxiii.

Aggregate population of, xxiii.
School attendance of, xxiii.
School-age of, xxiii.

Statistical summary of, xxiii-xxvi.

Statistics of school-systems of, 614-698.

City normal schoo.s, xxxiii.

Co-education of the sexes, xlix.

Coleman, A. L., obituary of, 346.

Colleges:

In Alabama, 4.

In California, 17, 23:

In Connecticut, 40.

In District of Columbia, 390.

In Georgia, 65.

In Illinois, 100.

In Indiana, 111.
In Iowa, 116.
In Kansas, 121.
In Kentucky,1,
27.
In Louisiana, 135.
In Maine, 144.
In Maryland, 152.

In Massachusetts, 172.

In Michigan, 185.

In Minnesota, 190.
In Mississippi, 199.
In Missouri, 210.

In New Hampshire, 220.
In New Jersey, 227.
In New York, 248.

In North Carolina, 265.

In Ohio, 278.

In Oregon, 284.

In Pennsylvania, 294.

In South Carolina, 315.

In Tennessee, 323.

In Vermont, 337.

In Virginia, 342.

In Wisconsin, 359.

Colorado:

Report of W. C. Lothrop, superintendent pub-

lic instruction, 367.

Financial statement, 367.

Attendance, 367.

Teachers and teachers' pay, 367.

School-districts and schools, 367.

School-houses, 367-368.

Condition of school system, 367.

School laws, 367.

Politics in schools, 368.

County superintendence, 368.

Teachers, 368.

Teachers' institutes, 368.

Text-books, 368.

Graded schools, 368.

Teachers' libraries, 369.

School-government, 369.

Truancy and tardiness, 369.

Compulsory education, 369.

Facts from United States census, 369.
School-officials, 370.

Colored schools:

In Delaware, 55.

In District of Columbia, 387.

In Georgia, 69.

In Indiana, 110.

In Missouri, 207.

In Tennessee, 323.

Colton, Rev. H. M., obituary of, 44.
Commissioner of Education, report of:

Subjects of national inquiry, i-iii.
Educational statistics, iii-v.

Lessons from the Ninth Census, v-xii.
Facts from the statistical tables, xii-lxvi.

School-population, xiii, xiv.

School-expenditures, xiv-xvi.

Remarks on public-school systems, xvi-xxi.

Education in cities, xxii-xxvi.

Normal schools, xxvii-xxxiii.

Secondary instruction, xxxiy-xxxviii.

Business colleges, xxxiii.

Admission to college, xxxviii-xxxix.

Superior instruction, xxxix-xlvi.

Culture and its uses, xlvi-xlviii.

Demand for, lxvi.

Number of issued, lxvi.

Resolution of National Teachers' Association
in regard to, lxvi.

Female colleges, xlviii, xlix.

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Education in Chiua, Ixx-lxxiii.

Unpublished work of the Oflice, lxxiii.

The Office force and rooms, lxxiii, lxxiv.
The Vienna Exposition, lxxiv.

The Centennial Exposition in 1876, lxxv.
The great tires, lxxvi.

The health of the school-population, lxxvii-
lxxxi.

Public sanitary measures necessary, lxxviii.
Parks as sanitariums, lxxviii, lxxix.

The poor children in New York, lxxix, lxxx.
Maternal ignorance and infantile mortality,
lxxxi.

Veterinary instruction, lxxxi-lxxxiii.
Art-training, lxxxiii.

The supervision of education, lxxxiv-lxxxvi.
Recommendations, &c., lxxxvii, lxxxviii.

Compulsory education:

In California, 15.

In Colorado, 369.

In Connecticut, 34.

In Kansas, 119.

In Massachusetts, 169.

In Missouri, 206.

In North Carolina, 263.

In Texas, 332.

In Washington Territory, 381.

In Wisconsin, 358.

Condition of education in the different States:

Remarks on, xvi-xxi.

Congress, education of members of, viii..

Connecticut:

School-fund, 32.

Financial statement, 32.

Attendance, 32, 33.
Number of teachers, 32.
Pay of teachers, 32.

School-districts and schools, 32.
School-houses, 33, 34.
Signs of progress, 33.
Length of school year, 33:
Truancy and absenteeism, 33.
Compulsory education, 34.
Vaccination, 34.
Teachers' institutes, 34.
State teachers' association, 35.
Statistics favor free schools, 36.
Revision of school laws, 36.
"Common-school platform," 36.
Education and invention, 36.
Normal school, 36.

Industrial school for girls, 36.
State reform school, 37.
Soldiers' orphan home, 37.
School for imbeciles, 37.
Deaf and dumb asylum, 37.
Sheffield Scientific School, 37.
Collego students in, 37.
New Haven:

School accommodations, 37.
Supervision, 38.

Drawing, 38.

Evening-school, 38.

Ungraded school, 38.

Hartford:

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Connecticut-Continued.

Obituary notes:

Rev. H. M. Colton, 44.

Mr. John P. Brace, 45.

Professor James Hadley, 45-48.

Facts from United States census, 49.
Members Board of Education, 49.

City school-officers, (Hartford, New Haven,
Waterbury, Norwich, Middletown,) 50.
Conventions, institutes, and associations:
Educational, 419.

National Educational Association, 419.
General association, 419.

Officers of, 421.

Art-education, 422.

Closing exercises, 422.

Address of Japanese minister, 422.

Resolutions adopted, 423.

Elementary department, 423.
Discussion, 423.

Normal department. 424.

Department of superintendence, 425.

Department of higher instruction, 426.

Reception at Faneuil Hall, 426.

American Institute of Instruction, 427.

National Baptist Educational Convention, 428.

German American Teachers' Union, 428.
Of Superintendents of Blind, 435.

Culture and its methods, xlvii.

Curtis, A. J., obituary of, 187.

Cutter, Calvin, obituary of, 182.

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General statistics of, 430.
Compulsory education of, 431.
Danger from uneducated, 431.
Growth of institutions for, 432.
Conference of principals, 432.
Statistics of institutions for, 914.
Summary of statistics of, lxiii.
Asylums for:

In Arkansas, 12.
In California, 26.
In Connecticut, 37.
In Georgia, 65.
In Iowa, 117.
In Kentucky, 127.
In Maryland, 152.
In Mississippi, 199.
In Missouri, 208.
In New York, 244, 245.

In North Carolina, 256.

In Oregon, 285.

In Pennsylvania, 297.

In South Carolina, 315.

In Virginia, 345.

In Wisconsin, 359.

In District of Columbia, 391.

Delaware:

No superintendent of education, 51.

Auditor's report, 51.

School-laws, 51.

School-fund, 51.

School-statistics, 51.

Wilmington:

Report of president board of education, 52–54.

School-statistics, 52.

Grading of schools, 52.

School records and reports, 52.

Teachers' institute and normal school, 53.

Mode of appointing teachers, 53.

Boys' grammar school, 53.

Girls' grammar school, 53.

Night-schools, 53.

Cost of, 54.

Value of school-property, 54.
Organization of new board, 54.

Superintendent of public schools, 54.
New primary school-building, 54.
Increase of teachers' salaries, 54.
Saturday normal school, 54.

School No. 1, scientific lectures in, 55.
Free-hand drawing in public schools, 55.
Music, vocal, 55.

Prizes in grammar-schools, 55.

Dover:

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District of Columbia-Continued.
New public-school buildings, 385.
Dedication of Jefferson School, 386, 387.
Address of Superintendent Wilson, 386.
Letter of Thomas Jefferson, 386.
Address of Governor Cooke, 386.
Address of Hon. B. G. Northrop, 386.
Letter of President Grant, 387.

Colored schools of Washington and George-
town, 387.

Dedication of Sumner School, 388.

Address of Superintendent Cook, 388.

Address of N. P. Chipman, M. C., 388.

Address of Commissioner Euton, 388, 389.
Smithsonian Institution, 389.

American Union Academy of Literature, Sci-

ence, and Art, 389.
Columbian College, 390.

Howard University, 390.

Georgetown College/390.

Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb,

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Education and labor-Continued.

Lands, 584.

Labor becomes capital, 584.

Effect of education on labor, 585.
National wealth, 585.

Education and crime, article on, 586-595.

Education and pauperism, article on, 596-602.
(See also Education and Labor.)
Engineering. (See Scientific Schools.)
England. (See Great Britain.)
Evans, W. H., lxix.

Examinations for admission to college, xxxviii.
Expenditure for schools in South Carolina, 312.
For all the States compared, xv.
(See also Cost of Education.)

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Georgia-Continued.

A general public-school system, 63.
Prejudices to be removed, 63.
Peabody fund, 64.

Schools of Lincoln County, 64.
Need of school-houses, 64.
Scarcity of teachers, 64.
Wesleyan Female College, 64.
Greensborough Female College, 64.
Le Vert Female College, 64.
Southern Female College, 64.

Moore's Atlanta Actual Business College, 65.
Institution for deaf and dumb, 65.

Atlanta Medical College, 65.

Savannah Medical College, 65.
Medical college of, 65.

Emory College. 65.

University of, 65.

Address before the, ("Should the State edn-

Absence of national system, 457.

Society for the furtherance of education, 457.

Organization of the German school, 458.

General Educational Society, 458.

Uniform German school legislation, 458.

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Bavaria :

Increase of teachers' salaries, 463.

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Children in receipt of education, 488.

Scottish education commissioner's remarks
regarding age of children attending school,
488.

Inquiry limited to children between 5 and 13
years of age, 489.

Number of children 5-13 years of age re
ceiving education, 489.

Proportion of children 5-13 years of age re-
ceiving education in the several counties, 489.
Proportion lowest where Roman Catholics
most numerous, 490.

Proportion of different religious denomina-
tions able to sigu their names in the mar-
riage-register, 490.

Total number of children from 5-13 years
of age, and the proportion of such in the.
receipt of education, 490.

Whether the education of children has ad-
vanced since 1861, 491.

Educational statistics of Scotland, 1861, 491.

Proportion of children from 5-13 years of
ago in the several counties who were in the
receipt of education, 491.

Statistics of training-schools, 491.

Statistics of elementary schools, 1868-'71, 492.
Ireland:

Progress of education from 1861 to 1871, 492.
Education in the different provinces of Ire-
land, 492.

Religious persuasion of scholars and teachers
493.

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