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DEC 27 1892 +

REAR OF EDUCAT

JOURNAL OF EDUCATION

DEVOTED TO EDUCATIONAL INTERESTS THROUGHOUT THE SOUTHWESTERN STATES.
Entered at the Postoffice at Nashville, Tennessee, as second-class mail matter.

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"A novel, useful and interesting illustrated manual.”.
Brooklyn Daily Eagle.

WEBSTER'S PRIMARY DICTIONARY (New Edition)............48
WEBSTER'S COMMON SCHOOL DICTIONARY (New Edition)...72
WEBSTER'S HIGH SCHOOL DICTIONARY (New Edition)......98
These new editions are based on the great "Webster's
International Dictionary."

Books sent prepaid on receipt of price.

ENGLISH CLASSICS FOR SCHOOLS.

An important new series-already issued or in course of
preparation. Adequate notes; large type; handsome.
printing; uniform binding in boards; lowest prices.
MACAULAY'S SECOND ESSAY ON THE EARL OF CHATHAM.
ADDISON'S SIR ROGER DE COVERLY PAPERS.
IRVING'S SKETCH Book-Selections.
SCOTT'S IVANHOE.
SCOTT'S MARMION.

SHAKESPEARE'S JULIUS Cæsar.

SHAKESPEARE'S TWELFTH NIGHT.
BAILEY'S MENTAL ARITHMETIC........

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An entirely new two-book series embodying what is now considered the best in methods of teaching arithmetic. "Edcuational Bulletin" of new publications free on request.

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY,

NEW YORK.

CINCINNATI.

CHICAGO.

use TEXT-BOOKS based upon a thorough, intelligent study of the subject and the requirements
of the present, rather than upon a traditional submission to out-grown standards? Must the pro-
gressive teachers of to-day be made to travel at the stage-coach rate of teaching already antiquida-
ted?

WHY NOT
BOOKS FULL OF LIFE AND THOUGHT

WENTWORTH'S ARITHMETICS. Their motto is mery, their method is learn to do by doing. They are fresh, and abreast of the best
thought of the time. MONTGOMERY'S AMERICAN ISTOKY. Within fifteen weeks after publication, the publishers had to go to press
with the 295,000th copy. STICKNEY'S READERS. Better suited than any other to the nature of the developing child, they preserve his
natural life of feeling and expression. CLASSICS FOR HILDREN. Choice literature, judicious notes, large type, firm binding, low prices
nearly forty volumes are now ready. STICKNEY'S VD BY WORD. An improved spelling course in two numbers, both conservative
and original. GRAVE'S NEW GRADED SPELLE A thoroughly practical spelling book devoted wholly to its proper work. ELE-
MENTARY LESSONS IN ENGLISH. Bright, prac and interesting at every stage of the course. The only series with teachers editions.
TARBELL'S LESSONS IN LANGUAGE. Expressic rough written forms made as natural as thought and speech. An adequate amount
of technical grammar too. THE NEW NATIONAL MUSIC COURSE. Recently examined and indorsed as the best by the highest musical
authorities in Germany. GAY'S BUSINESS BOOK-KEEPING. As the title indicates, this prepares for business, and teaches methods as
are, not as they could be practiced. COPY BOOKS AND SPELLING BLANKS. The very best in principle and in mechanical excellence
Send for our common school Catalogue.

BOSTON.

GINN & CO., Publishers.

NEW YORK.

CHICAGO.

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Agents Wanted in Every Community

TO SELL BOOKS!

Teachers who expect to have a vacation at an early date, should write to us for Terms on our Books.

2 Daily Trains From MEMPHIS,

Making direct connections with all trains from the EAST.

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TO

We Have Agents Making $200 Per Month. FT. WORth, waco,

WILL PAY AGENT SALARY OR COMMISSION. Teachers who want Books to make Presents, or to replenish their own Library, should join our Library Association and get benefit of Wholesale Rates.

THE SOUTHWESTERN PUBLISHING HOUSE.

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OR INTERMEDIATE POINTS.

THE ONLY LINE receiving passengers at Memphis without a long and disagreeable omnibus transfer across the city. THE ONLY LINE with through sleeping car service between MEMPHIS and the SOUTHWEST.

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W G. ADAMS,

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DO YOU READ

NEW BOOKS PUBLISHED IN 189/ THE COSMOPOLITAN,

Differential and Integral Calculus, by Prof. George A. Osborne.
Greek Prose Composition, by Prof. F. E. Woodruff.

A Commercial Geography, by John N. Tilden.
Rudimentary Ethics, by Dr. Geo. M. Steele.

Algebra Tablets, by Prof. Frederick Anderegg.
Health Lessons for Beginners, by Supt. O. M. Brands.
Outlines of Rhetoric, by Prof. J. H. Gilmore.

Scott's Marmion, by Mary Harriott Norris.

Macaulay's Earl of Chatham, by W. W. Curtis, A. M.

Johnson's History of Rasselas, by Dr. Fred. N. Scott.
Six Place Log Tables, by Prof. Webster Wells.
Number System of Algebra, by Dr. H. B Fine.
English Versification,, by Rev. James C. Parsons.
First Lessons in Language, by Southworth and Goddard.
Plane and Spherical Trigonometry, by Prof. E. Miller.

College Prose Composition (Part II.), by Walter Miller, A. M.

Leach, Shewell & Sanborn.

PUBLISHERS,

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REED & KELLOGG'S

That Bright, Sparkling Magazine? The Cheapest Illustrated Monthly in the World.

25 Cts. a Number.

$2.40 Per Year.

Edition for Dec. 1890, 100,000 Copies.

The COSMOPOLITAN is literally what the New York Times calls it, "At its price, the brightest, most varied and best edited of the Magazines."

AN UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY
For New Subscribers, for One Year Only.
The Cosmopolitan, per year.
$2.40
Southwestern Journal of Education...... 1.00

The price of the two publications...
We will furnish both for only.................

..3.40 2.40

This offer is only to new subscribers to THE COSMOPOLITAN, and only for one year.

"It has more articles in each number that are readable, and fewer uninteresting pages, than any of its contemporaries.'-Boston Journal.

"The Cosmopolitan" furnishes for the first timein magazine literature, a splendidly illus trated periodical at a price hitherto deemed impossible. Try it for a year. It will be a liberal educator to every member of the household. It will make the nights pass pleasantly. It will give you more for the money than you can obtain in any other form. Do you want a firstclass magazine, giving annually 1536 pages by the ablest writers. ith more than 1300 illus

Complete Course in the Study of English,trations, by the clev est artists—as readable a

THE COURSE COMPRISES:

Reed & Kellogg's One Book Course in En-
glish,

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Reed & Kellogg's Higher Lessons in English, Kellogg's Text-Book on English Literature.
All the books in the COMPLETE COURSE are by the same authors, and
the method employed is simple, direct, progressive, and consecutive. Each book
is a complete unit on its subject, but at the same time it is a natural step in a com-
pact, thorough, logical course of instruction.

Experienced teachers know of the unhappy transitions, the troublesome interruptions and conflicts necessarily attending the use of a series of text-books prepared by different authors. Especially is this true of the department of English, in which are so many attempts at originality of method, so many diverse presentations of individual views and vagaries, that in pissing from one author's textbook to another's the pupil's time is squandered in unlearning what he has once learned and accepted as absolute truth.

The general plan of the Reed & Kellogg Series of "Introductory Language Work" to Rhetoric and English Literature, has been carefully thought out and wrought out by men who are making the study of English and the method of teaching it their life work. This course aims from beginning to end, to build systematically the best possible foundation for good speaking and writing, and at the same time to afford the best possible training of the reasoning faculties.

magazine as money ca make a magazine that makes a specialty of liv subjects?

"The marvel is how t e publishers can give so much for the money."-Phila. Evening Call. Send $2.40 to this office, and secure both The Cosmopolitan and S uthwestern Journal of Education.

IF YOU WANT A

Free Scholarship

In Terrell College, Decherd, Tenn., Mountain City Business College, Chattanooga, or the National Normal Univer

sity, Lebanon, Ohio, write at once to

SUPT. H. D. HUFFAKER, Editor Southern Teacher, Chattanooga, Tenn.

The Publishers would be pleased to give teachers and school officers further particulars Teachers Attention!

regarding these books and would respectfully invite correspondence when changes in textbooks are contemplated.

EFFINGHAM MAYNARD & CO., Pubs.

771 Broadway and 67 & 69 Ninth St., N. Y.

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Mention this Paper.

Vanderbilt University.

Teachers of one year's standing admitted to the Academic Department without tuition fee. Ten ellowships, $100 each with free tuition, open to graduates wishing to pursue higher courses. For nformation or catalogue address

WILS WILLIAMS,
Nashville, Tenn.

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Dee &

The

SILVER, BURDETT & CO.'S

Examination Questions.

1. What do you know abont our publications?

2. Have you used all of our text books in your school?
3. Will you use, next year, the Normal Course in Reading, by
Supt. W. B. Powell and Miss Emma J. Todd.

4. Do you know that the Normal Music Course leads all others?
5. Do you know that Progressive Gymnastic Day's Orders by C.
J. Enebuske presents the best system for physical culture?
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VOLUME X.

NASHVILLE, TENN., DECEMBER, 1892.

No. 9.

Of the many clever papers that come to us, Printers' Ink,

Southwestern Journal of Education. published by Geo. P. Rowell & Co., New York, is one of

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DISCONTINUANCES--Any subscriber wishing to stop his paper must notify the Publishers, and pay up all arrears; otherwise he is responsible for payment as long as the paper is sent.

HOW TO REMIT-To secure safety, it is important that remittances should be made by checks, drafts, post-office orders, express money orders, or registered letters, made payable to the Publishers.

MISSING NUMBERS.-Should a number of the JOURNAL fail to reach a subscriber, he will confer a favor upon the Publishers by notifying them of the fact, upon receipt of which notice the missing numbers will be sent.

CHANGE OF ADDRESS-When a change of address is desired, both the old and the new address of the subscriber should be given.

ALL LETTERS pertaining to the Editorial Department, and all communications for the pages of the JOURNAL, should be addressed to the Editors. All letters pertaining to the business management of the JOURNAL, should be addressed to the Publishers.

WHEELER PUBLISHING COMPANY,

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THAT Superintendent Garrett has been able to do great good with the money appropriated by the last legislature and the Peabody Board of Trust for institute work, is shown from his report to Dr. Curry, General Agent of the Peabody Board. He says:

During the summer of 1892 twenty-nine State Institutes were held. Twenty of these Institutes were for white teachers, covering a period of thirty-five weeks; nine were held for colored teachers, covering a period of seventeen weeks. In many of these counties the Institutes were supplemented by county Institutes, continuing the work one or more weeks, and making the total period cover about seventy weeks. At most of the Institutes the attendance of visitors was large, including almost the entire population of the vicinity. It is estimated that the total attendance of white visitors was about 4,000, and the total attendance of colored visitors was about 540. This, added to the attendance of enrolled members, shows that the Institutes reached directly about 11,129 people."

the cleverest. It is a paper for advertisers, and one would think that its contents would have little interest for a teacher, but they use so much brains editing it that it can appeal successfully to all professions and all classes interested in the development of an idea. The wide-awake teacher can learn something from it by seeing how practical business men are approached by the man who wants to catch his advertising patronage. Methods used in business will often suggest methods for the school-room, or for enlisting the interest of patrons.

THE Sixth Annual Meeting of the Public School Officers' Association, of Tennessee, will be held in the State Capitol at Nashville, Tenn., December 13 15, 1892. The officers are: Chancellor W. H. Payne, President, Nashville; Hon. Thomas H. Paine, Vice-President, Jackson; Prof. Frank Goodman, Secretary and Treasurer, Nashville. The Executive Committee is composed of H. D. Huffaker, Chairman, Chattanooga; E. M. Wright, Greeneville; Miss Nellie O'Donnell, Memphis; A. S. Abernathy, Pulaski; C. S. Douglass, Gallatin. The committees will report on the folNeeded Reforms in Tennessee Public lowing subjects: School Work; Literature, its Importance in the Schools; Tennessee Educational Exhibit at the Columbian Exposition; Teachers' Department, University of Tennessee, by Hon. Frank M. Smith, Knoxville; Peabody Normal College, by Chancellor W. H. Payne, Nashville; How to Establish and Maintain Good Secondary Schools; The Function of the Public Schools; City Schools; Tennessee School for the Blind, by Superintendent S. A. Link, Nashville; University of Tennessee, by President Charles W. Dabney, Knoxville; Amendments to the School Laws; Means of Increasing Attendance Upon the Public Schools; Grading the Schools, address by State Superintendent W. R. Garrett. This Association, first established by Superintendent Frank M. Smith, has accomplished much for the schools of the State and the County Superintendents. By its means school officers have been brought together, their horizon enlarged, and, above all, made to feel that they are part of the machinery of a system that has itself been strengthened by such a feeling on the part of school officers.

COLUMBUS DAY.

The celebration of Columbus Day was almost universal. The Public School, the greatest discovery since the time that Columbus found a new world, was very properly the medium by which this great national demonstration was carried out, and it was by it that the greatest tribute waa ever paid to any man. It was the most advanced idea of the nineteenth century doing honor to the greatest thought of the fifteenth. It was a lesson in patriotism, and every American heart was made glad and proud by contemplating what this country has given to the world in the brief sum of its existence.

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