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JOSEPH GILLOTT'S

STEEL PENS.

GOLD MEDAL, PARIS EXPOSITION, 1878.

SOLD BY ALL DEALERS.

PARYS

ARTISTIC USE in fine drawings, Nos. 659 (the celebrated Crowquill), 290 and 291. For
WRITING, Nos. 303, 604, and Ladies', 170. For BROAD WRITING, Nos. 294, 389, and
Stub Point, 849. For GENERAL WRITING, Nos. 404, 332, 390, and 604.
HENRY HOE, Sole Agent.

SEPH GILLOTT & SONS, 91 John Street, N. Y.

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A JUPIL OF

NEW ENGLAND

CONSERVATORY

desires an engagement to teach Voice and Piano. Address,

MISS M. K. HURLEY,

Liberty, Virginia.

DONIGAN & WEAKLEY Builders' Hardware, Tools, etc. Also Athletic and Sporting Goods of all kinds.

Agents for A. J. REACH & Co's Base Ball Goods.

Agents WRIGHT & DITSON's Lawn Tennis. Full line of Fishing Tackle. Cor. Church & Cherry Sts,

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Nashville, Tenn.

NASHVILLE,

BIRMINGHAM.

and nearly all the leading schools of Kentucky and Tennessee.

Write us for prices, terms, and complete de scriptive catalogue, before buying desks, maps, globes blackboards, or anything needed in the school-room.

We can save you over 75 per cent. on Webster's Unabridged Dictionery.

SIDNEY SCHOOL FURNITURE CO.,
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CENTRAL TEACHERS' EXCHANGE.

P. O. Box 228, MCKENZIE, TENN.

Recommends good teachers to school officers, and schools to parents. No charges to employers. Registration free. Send 2 cents for Circular.

ONE DAY'S WORK.

Vacancies filled: Orono, Me., Prof. of Physics, $1500; Lady Prin., Waterman Hall, $1,000; Teacher of Latin, Shattuck Hall, $800; Prin. Wheatland, Ia., $800; Director of Music, Galloway College, $1,400, 4 positions for grade teachers, $40 to $55. Number of registrations received, 7. Number of vacancies, 38. Number of teachers recommended for positions, 18. Send for blank or state your case plainly, send credentials, and we will begin work for you at once. The demand upon us for teachers during the months of July and August is always much greater than the supply. Address,

C. J. ALBERT, Manager, School and College Bureau,

ELMHURST, ILLINOIS.

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*SOUTHWESTERN+ JOURNAL OF EDUCATION

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

VOL. IX.-No. 11.

NASHVILLE, JANUARY, 1892.

Harper and Burgoss's Inducted Latin
Primer. For Younger Students. By
Wm. R. Harper, Ph. D., President
University of Chicago, and Isaac B.
Burgess, A. M., Boston Latin School.
1 Vol., 12mo, Half Leather, 424 pages.
$1.00.

{

J. L. LAMPSON, Editor. WHEELER PUBLISHING CO., Publishers.

AN OPEN LETTER TO TEACHERS OF LATIN. DEAR SIR: Permit us to call your attention to the announcement above made, of the publication of Harper and Burgess's Inductive Latin Primer. This book contains features essentially new and progressive, and has been prepared by practical teachers to meet certain definite weaknesses, which have been found to exist in other First year books. 1. Do you or your pupils ever grow weary of the "scrappiness" of the reading matter in your manual? If so, you will be interested in a book which is from the first based on one connected narrative, to which interest is added by illustrations and cross referehces.

and insures preparation for Caesar by simply following where he leads.

2. Do you find your vocabularies too long for thorough use and mastery? If so, you will value a book in which the average number of words in the first fifty lessons is only

seven.

3. Do you not find that your pupils are almost swamped by a mass of inflectional forms at the very beginning of their study? Then you will appreciate a book in which the first eighteen lessons contain an average of less than two new endings to a lesson.

4. You are probably preparing to read Caesar. Have you ever examined your First Year Book to see whether the author emphasizes the words, inflectional endings, and syntax which are needed in reading Caesar? Do so. The result will surprise you and help you to understand why so little seems to have been done when you come to begin Caesar in earnest. The perspective of your book is like that of a Chinese picture, which has no foreground nor background. For an explanation of this statement compare, for instance, the summary of the third declension in Lesson lxii in the "Primer" with the treatment of the same declension in your First Year Book.

5. Do you find that your pupils can often repeat paradigms very glibly without the slightest power to recognize or use the forms of the paradigms in sentences? This is much less likely to occur where, as in the "Primer," the pupil is not taught to repeat paradigms until he has found the forms which compose them in the text of Caesar.

6. Do you not need some method of unifying and fixing your pupils without the tedium of exact repetition? Please examine the "Review Lessons" of the "Primer." They form an entirely unique feature.

7. Are your pupils well fitted in English grammar? The "Primer" has bound with it "Studies in English Grammar," which are always at hand either for connected study or for reference. In these "Studies" the nomenclature of Latin grammar is employed. They are constantly referred to in the Latin lessons. You will find by examination that English grammar has never before been treated in this way in any Latin book.

In a text-book on so novel a plan, great care has been taken to furnish to teachers and pupils all necessary directions for its use. Valuable explanations are found in the "Preface," the "Suggestions to Teachers," the introductory notes to lessons I and Ix, and in numerous foot-notes wherever occasion demanded. These directions are commended to your thoughtful attention. They may be condensed into one short sentence "Make the TEXT of Caesar the basis for your work."

We cordially invite correspondence regarding the work, believing that this method will be found permanently the best. Specimen pages and circulars will be sent free, and

The "Inductive Primer" is everywhere based on Caesar, special terms are made for introduction.

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY,

806 and 808 Broadway,

NEW YORK.

PUBLISHERS,

137 Walnut Street,
CINCINNATI.

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YOU ARE IN A BAD FIX, but we will cure you if you will pay us. message tor the Weak, Nervous and Debilitated who by ealy Evil Habits, or later Indiscretions,, have trifled away their vigor of body, Mind and Manhood, and who suffer all those effects which lead to Premature Decay, Consumption or Insani ty. If this means you, send for and read our book of life, written by the great Specialist

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PENSIONS!

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Southern Teacher,

A practical monthly journal always full of choice Educational food for earnest teachers Es

Rumford Chemical Works, Providence, B. 1. tablished in April 1877. H. D. Huffaker (Supt.

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CAUTION-Be sure the word "Horsford's" is printed on the label. All others are spurious. Never sold in bulk.

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of Schools) Editor and Business Manager. $1 a
year with prenium. Teachers Monthly report
Cards to Parents printed on heavy card-boards 50
cents per 100. The Journal and Southern Teach-
or both one year for $1.25.

THE SOUTHERN TEACHER,
Chattanooga, Tenn

BLACKBOARDS.

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ALL GOODS FIRST-CLASS.
Samples Free.

PATENTS

MUNN & CO., of the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, continue to act as Solicitors for Patents, Caveats, Trade Marks, Copyrights, for the United States, Canada, England, France, Germany, etc. Hand Book about Patents sent free. Thirty-seven years' experience. Patents obtained through MUNN & CO. are noticed In the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, the largest, best, and most widely circulated scientific paper. $3.20 a year. Weekly. Splendid engravings and interesting information. Specimen copy of the Scientific Amer ican sent free. Address MUNN & CO., SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN Office, 261 Broadway, New York

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SIDNEY SCHOOL FURNITURE CO.,
SIDNEY, OHIO.

CENTRAL TEACHERS' EXCHANGE.

P. O. Box 228, MCKENZIE, TENN.

Recommends good teachers to school officers, and schools to parents. No charges to employers. Registration free. Send 2 cents for Circular.

ONE DAY'S WORK.

Vacancies filled: Orono, Me., Prof. of Physics, $1500; Lady Prin., Waterman Hall, $1,000; Teacher of Latin, Shattuck Hall, $800; Prin. Wheatland, Ia., $800; Director of Music, Galloway College, $1,400, 4 positions for grade teachers, $40 to $55. Number of registrations received, 7. Number of vacancies, 38. Number of teachers recommended for positions, 18. Send for blank or state your case plainly, send credentials, and we will begin work for you at once. The demand upon us for teachers during the months of July and August is always much greater than the supply. Address,

C. J. ALBERT, Manager, School and College Bureau,

ELMHURST, ILLINOIS.

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A JUPIL OF

NEW ENGLAND

CONSERVATORY

desires an engagement to teach Voice and Piano. Address,

MISS M. K. HURLEY,

Liberty, Virginia.

DONIGAN & WEAKLEY Builders' Hardware, Tools, etc. Also Athletic and Sporting Goods of all kinds.

Agents for A. J. REACH & Co's Base Ball Goods.

Agents WRIGHT & DITSON'S Lawn Tennis. Full line of Fishing Tackle.

Cor. Church & Cherry Sts, Nashville, Tenn.

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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,
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National School Agency,

Atlanta, Ga.

Furnishes schools with Teachers without charge,
Aids Teachers to secure positions, Rents and sell
School property, and publishes the Educationa
Monthly. Teachers registered free.

Wide acquaintance with schools and educators, extensive experience in the work and a large follow ng of superior teachers and entablished patronage give unsurpassed facilities for suggesting the righ eacher for the right place. Write for circulars. Mention the S. W. Journal of Education.

PUBLISHED IN 1891.

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AN ANSWER TO A HOST OF INQUIRERS.

PHYSICS BY EXPERIMENT.

An Elementary Text-Book for Schools. By EDWARD R. SHAW, Ph.D., Principal of the Yonkers, N. Y., High School and Lecturer, School of Pedagogy, University of the City of New York.

320 Pages. Cloth. 12mo. Price for Introduction, $1.00. This book makes the study of Physics fascinating to the pupil. It cultivates observation, leads the student to reason upon what he observes, to develop invention in devising new ways of showing the application of laws, and to make the

THE NEW AMERICAN TEACHERS' AGENCY, knowledge gained readily available for use.

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It gives a systematic and ample treatment of the subject of elementary physics. Following the experiments is a full text, in which the laws observed are stated and discussed. Problem and questions accompany the sections and chapters.

The illustrations have been made expressly for the work, and are not the con ventional ones.

Excepting the air pump, the apparatus necessary for performing the experiments may be obtained at an expense not exceeding $15.00.

Specimen Pages showing the plan of the work and the character of the illustrations, will be sent on application. Copies for examination may be had at the Introduction price.

EFFINGHAM MAYNARD & CO., Pubs.,

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

SUBCRIBE FOR THE

SOUTHWESTERN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION.

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