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NEW BOOKS..

SCIENCE.

Troeger's Science Book is a reader and guide, not only for pupils but for teachers as well. It presumes what is a fact, that the average teacher has had little, if any, training in science studies. It treats of Birds, Insects, Plants, Mineralogy, Geology, Physics, Chemistry, Astronomy and Meteorology. Such objects are required as the children can find in almost any neighborhood. The introduction contains an outline of instruction in these sciences, systematically arranged for all grades and with due reference to the work in geography. This course of Science Work has been thoroughly tested, and can be put into practical operation in any school. This volume is intended for the Third and Fourth Year, but as a beginning, it is suitable in the succeeding grades. Price by mail, 50 cts.

The season of the coming of the flowers, (the true object lesson in the study of Botany) suggests the propriety of examining Abbie G. Hall's Lessons in Botany and Analysis of Plants. It is one of the most interesting works of the kind yet published. It leads to careful observation. It creates enthusiasm in the subject. It encourages investigation of the uses of plants. It gives valuable test questions in connection with each subject. It gives the pronunciation of technical terms. It contains a plain, simple key which is quite complete for all amateur work. It is artistically illustrated and beautifully and substantially bound. Price, by mail, $1.00.

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ARITHMETICS.

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The Revised Model Elementary and New Model (complete Arithmetics, by H. H. Belfield, A. M., Ph. D., Director of the Chicago Manual Training School, have proved a sucThese text books were prepared by a teacher of successful experience, and have already been introduced into many of the leading schools both east and west. ercises and problems are varied, well graded, practical, business-like and numerous. Fundamental principles are emphasized, explanations simple and methods direct, inducing pupils to gain, by experience, such knowledge as will enable them to make their own definitions and rules. Useless subjects are omitted so that essentials may be better taught. Both teachers and pupils like them. Revised Model Elementary, 50 cts.; New Model Arithmetic, 65 cts., post paid.

TO SUBSCRIBERS. Discontinuance.-The JOURNAL will be sent to every subscriber until ordered stopped, and until all arrearages are paid.

Remittances.-Money can be forwarded by checks, drafts, postoffice orders, or postal notes.

Missing Numbers.—Should a number of the JOURNAL fail to reach a subscriber by the fifteenth of the month, he or she should at once notify the publishers, and the missing number will be sent.

Change of Address.-When a change of address is desired, the subscriber must give both the old and the new address.

Court Decisions.-The United States Court has decided that subscribers who do not give express notice to the contrary are considered as wishing to renew their subscriptions. That if subscribers order the discontinuance of their periodicals, the publisher may continue to send them until all arrearages are paid. That if subscribers neglect or refuse to take their periodical from the postoffice to which they are directed, they are responsible until they have settled their bills and ordered them discontinued. That if subscribers move to other places without informing the publisher, and the papers are sent to the former address, they are held responsible. Price. The subscription price is $1.00 a year.

Journal Clubbing Rates.

To our subscribers who wish to take some other publication with the WISCONSIN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION We offer the following clubbing rates:

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by mail, $1.35

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50 cts. 30 cts. 50 cts.

Webster's Academic Dictionary.

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Thompson's Teacher's Examiner.

*1.50 2.00

50 cts,

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FRANK H: HALL'S ARITHMETIC READER Is something comparatively new, but it fills a want. It is prepared especially for use in the classes of the second grade. It induces the child to think of the words he reads. It gives readiness in the use of arithmetical language. It gives the child a vocabulary for expressing the ideas of number work. It gives readiness in the fundamental operations, which is invaluable in the whole course of mathematics. It is one of the best means of teaching a child to get thought from print. Post paid, 22 cts.

BOOKS FOR TEACHERS.
The Virtues and Their Reasons, cloth,
Mrs. M. D. L. Haynie's Syntax and Analysis,
Christie's Astronomy, .

Colbert's Fixed Stars or Map of the Heavens
Boltwood's Topical Outline of General History.
J. M. Callahan's Outlines of U. S. History.

Address

25 cts.

GEO. SHERWOOD & CO.,

307 and 309 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Illinois.

Mention this Journal.

SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE FOR 1893.

PARTIAL PROSPECTUS.

Frances Hodgson Burnett will contribute the first serial to appear in a magazine from her pen for many years, entitled The One I Knew The Best of All."

H. C. Bunner will furnish a series of six sketches entitled "Jersey Street and Jersey Lane." Illustrated.

Robert Grant will relate the further experiences of Fred. and Josephine in "A Sequel to the Reflections of a Married Man." Illustrated.

Harold Frederic will contribute a political novel of great power, entitled The Copperhead.

By the Author of "Jerry." Miss S. B. Elliott, the author of Jerry," will write a realistic story of life among the Tennessee mountaineers, "The Durket Sperret."

Personal Reminiscences. Some Unpublished Letters of Carlyle to Edward Irving and others, dealing with a part of Carlyle's life far different from that brought out in the recent literature of Carlyle reminiscences. Recollections of Lincoln and Sumner. By the late Marquis de Chambrun. Both articles are full of new matter. An Artist in Japan. By Robert Blum, who has returned from a residence of nearly two years in that country. Abundantly illustrated by the author. Historic Moments, which have been a feature of the magazine during 1892, will be continued by some particularly striking papers, among them several by the great war correspondents, William H. Russell, Archibald Forbes, and others.

The World's Fair in Chicago. A series will be published later in the year giving the impressions made by the exhibition upon different observers of note, both American and foreign; and many of these observers will be also artists who will illustrate their own articles.

The Illustrations of the year will represent the work not only of the well-known illustrators, but many drawings will also appear by artists who are best known as painters.

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The Atlantic for 1893

Will contain, among other attractions,

Old Kaskaskia, a Serial Story by Mary Hartwell Catherwood, who will be favorably remembered as the author of "The Lady of Fort St. John." It begins in the January number.

James Bryce, M. P., will consider "American Influence on English Political Institutions." This is a field in which Mr. Bryce is a master.

Studies in American Biography, which are a feature of the Atlantic, will be continued by papers on George William Curtis by Sherman S. Rogers, etc.

The Feudal Chiefs of Acadia, by Dr. Francis Parkman. This eminent historian has written a narrative of the events in Colonial history on which Mrs. Catherwood's "Lady of Fort St. John" is based. The first part will appear in the January Atlantic.

Improvement of Living. Papers by thoughtful writers on The Preservation of Country Beauty, on Libraries, Art Museums, Museums of Science, etc.

Education. A prominent place will be given to the discussion of educational topics. Among other subjects, papers on the structure and decoration of school-houses, school gardens, etc., will be presented.

Literature. Special studies in English Literature and impartial criticism of current literature will constantly ap

pear.

Special Contributors whose names should be emphasized are: Dr. Holmes, Stedman, Aldrich, Bynner, Prof. Shaler, Miss Repplier, Carl Schurz, Bradford Torrey, Olive Thorne Miller, Mrs. Deland, Percival Lowell, Miss Thomas, Mrs. Wiggin, Lafcadio Hearn, Theodore Roosevelt, George H. Palmer, Miss Preston, Thomas M. Cooley, Edward Everett Hale, John Fiske, Rudyard Kipling, F. Marion Crawford, and John C. Ropes.

TERMS: $4.00 a year in advance, postage free; 35 cents a number. With new life size portrait of Whittier, Lowell, Hawthorne, Emerson, Longfellow, Bryant, or Holmes, $5.00; each additional Portrait, $1.00.

The November and December numbers sent free to new subscribers whose subscriptions for 1893 are received before December 20th,

Postal Notes and Money are at the risk of the sender, and therefore remittances should be made by money-order, draft, or registered letter, to

Houghton, Mifflin & Company,

4 Park St., Boston, Mass.

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CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS, DESIGN PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS, etc.l For information and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO., 361 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Oldest bureau for securing patents in America. Every patent taken out by us is brought before the public by a notice given free of charge in the

Scientific American

Largest circulation of any scientific paper in the world. Splendidly illustrated. No intelligent man should be without it. Weekly, $3.00 a year; $1.50 six months. Address MUNN & CO., PUBLISHERS, 361 Broadway, New York City.

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Wisconsin Academy THE SCHOOL AND COLLEGE BUREAU.

Corner of State and Gilman Streets,

MADISON, WIS.

ACCREDITED TO ALL COURSES

OF THE UNIVERSITY.

We give thorough preparation to students desiring to enter the University or to teach.

FALL TERM OPENS SEPT. 5, '92.

Send for our new catalogue containing information regarding courses, terms, etc.

WEBSTER M. POND,

CHARLOTTE M. RICHMOND,

211 Wabash Avenue, Chicago.

It pays to register in an Agency that has a large patronage, and that secures the election of its teachers to good positions by recommending them. That's what we do. From Prof. John J. Schlicher, Merton, Wis.

I have made an engagement with the Mount Morris College officials to take their position at .... dollars. Accept my thanks for your efficient work. You are the man I shall call on again when in need of a position.

From G. S. Albee, Pres. State Normal School, Oshkosh, Wis. The position in History in this school will be tendered to Mrs. A. E. Thompson by our board to-day, and if she declines, we will tender it to Miss Bennett. (Both ladies had been recommended by us.) I thank you sincerely for your courtesy in selecting and presenting such candidates for our consideration.

From Edward Searing, Fres. State Normal, Mankato, Minn. Two of the teachers whom you recommended, Mr. Koehler of Ohio, and Mr. O'Shea of New York, I have engaged. The aid you have rendered me has been much above my expectations. I think you have done an excellent service for our school.

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Any of the above sent by mail, prepaid, at the above rates. A reduction when sent in quantities.

MIDLAND PUBLISHING CO., 23 E. MAIN ST., MADISON, WIS.

The Evolution of Dodd

.25

S. S. Hebbard's Wisconsin under French Dominion
A. O. Wright's American Constitutions.

1.00

1.00

THE CENTURY MAGAZINE IN 1893. School Algebra

IT would be hard for a person who cares for good reading to make a better investment than a year's subscription to The Century Magazine. No region is too remote, no expense too great, if it will only produce what the Century's readers want. This is the policy that has made it, as the Pall Mall Budget, of London, says, "By far the best of the magazines, English or American.'

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The November number begins a new volume and contains the first chapters of a powerful novel of New York society, called "Sweet Bells Out of Tune," written by Mrs. Burton Harrison, the author of "The Anglomaniacs.' In this story the fashionable wedding, the occupants of the boxes in the Metropolitan Opera House, the "smart set" in the country house, are faithfully reflected, and the illustrations by Charles Dana Gibson, Life's well-known cartoonist, are as brilliant as the novel.

In this number begins also a great series of papers on "The Bible and Science," opening with "Does the Bible ccntain Scientific Errors?" by Prof. Shields, of Princeton, who takes decided ground that the Bible does not contain scientific errors of any moment, and who most interestingly states the case from his point of view. Other articles in this series will include one in the December (Christmas) number, "The Effect of Scientific Study upon Religious Beliefs."

An important series of letters passed between General Sherman and his brother Senator John Sherman is also printed in November, which number contains also contributions from the most distinguished writers, including an article by James Russell Lowell, which was not quite completed at the time of his death. The suggestion which Bishop Potter makes in the November Century as to what could be done with the World's Fair if it were opened on Sunday, is one which seems the most practical solution of the problem yet offered.

The December Century is to be a great Christmas number,-full of Christmas stories, Christmas poems, and Christmas pictures, and in it will begin the first chapters of a striking novel of life in Colorado, "Benefits Forgot," by Wolcott Balestier, who wrote "The Naulahka'' with Rudyard Kipling.

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Papers on good roads, the new educational methods, and city government are soon to come.

Four dollars will bring you this splendid magazine for one year, and certainly no cultivated home can afford to be without it. Subscribers can remit directly to the publishers, The Century Co., 33 East 17th St., New York. They should begin with November, and so get first chapters of all the serials, including, "Sweet Bells Out of Tune."

Advertising Rates.

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By C. A. VAN VELZER, Professsor of Mathematics, and C.
S. SLICHTER, Assistant Professor of Mathematics in the
University of Wisconsin.

This book just from the press is intended for use in High
Schools and Academies, fills a place in the schools of the
State more in line with the work of the State University
than any other work can.

Price, $1.00. Sample copy sent to teachers or school officers, with a view to introduction, on receipt of 75 cents. TRACY, GIBBS & CO., Publishers,

MADISON, WISCONSIN.

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THOS. CHARLES & CO.

A CHRISTMAS PRESENT

A year's subscription to EDUCATION would be a delightful and sensible Christmas gift for your friend. If you wish one magazine for your friend and another for yourself, just see our combination ofiers.

TO NEW SUBSCRIBERS:

EDUCATION and the ARENA for $6.00.

EDUCATION and the REVIEW OF REVIEWS for $4.00,
EDUCATION and WIDE AWAKE for $3.50.

EDUCATION and GOLDTHWAITE'S Geographical
Magazine for $3.50; or, both new, for $3.00.

Address, Publishers

EDUCATION,

50 Bromfield Street, Boston. Mass,

Publishers' Column.

FIVE THOUSAND PAGES OF THE VERY BEST LITERATURE.

PRIZE OFFER

To subscribers for the WISCONSIN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION for the best essay, not exceeding one thousand words, on "The Advantages to be Derived from Having American Literature Read in the Public Schools of the United States.''

A complete set of the "Riverside Literature Series."' consisting of fifty-eight single and four double numbers, and comprising over five thousand pages of complete masterpieces chosen from the writings of Longfellow, Whittier, Emerson, Holmes, Lowell, Scott, etc., will be given free to that subscriber for the WISCONSIN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION who sends to us within one month from the date of this paper the best essay on the subject indicated above. The essay receiving the prize will be published in this paper.

At the request of several subscribers we have decided to give one more month for the above competition. Information of assistance to those competing for the prize will be cheerfully sent on application. Address,

WISCONSIN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, Madison, Wis.

A few good agents can find work with us in selling school supplies or in canvassing for select subscription books. Midland School Supply Co., Madison, Wis.

Columbian Exposition Excursion Company. The Columbian Exposition Excursion Co., A. O. Wright, Treasurer, wish to be placed in correspondence with teachers who expect to visit the World's Fair, and especially with teachers who can organize parties of friends to go together. We have decided to set apart some of our cottages for smaller parties thah 24, in answer to numerous requests to do so. We are now ready to arrange for parties of 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 or 12, as well as for larger parties. Our rooms are nearly all assigned for the latter half of June and for the whole of July, so that we prefer to assign rooms for teachers in other periods, wkere it is convenient.

Teachers who wish to get up parties to occupy one or more of our cottages, and receive fair pay for their trouble and expense in doing so, should correspond with us at

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SCHULZ ON HISTORY.

Supt. W. H. Schulz, of Sauk county, has just published a valuable little book on the "Science and Art of Teaching United States History." It is full of aids to the teacher of this subject. We will send a copy by mail to any address for 50 cents. MIDLAND PUBLISHING CO.,

Madison, Wis.

WANTED.-A first-class agent for this journal in every county who will work for us exclusively and who will attend every teachers' meeting and examination. The success of any educational journal depends largely upon the agent in that particular county. No person should ask for the agency unless he has some business ability and is willing to engage earnestly and conscientiously in the work.

FOR SALE. One set of Appleton's Encyclopedias, 30 volumes, bound in half Russia. They are nearly as good as new; and will be sold at half price. One-fourth cash, balance six and nine months time. Write to, or inquire at this office.

We notify subscribers when their time is out. If they do not wish to continue the Journal it is very easy to send us a postal card asking us to discontinue it. But most subscribers wish to continue their subscriptions and would be annoyed to be obliged to notify us that they wish it continued.

The Midland Publishing Co. are having considerable amusement with the efforts of unauthorized persons to get the answers to the problems in Jackson's Test Yourself in Arithmetic.

From one city where the Superintendent was testing certain classes with this work, a series of letters came, all intended for the same end, to get these answers. Several persons wrote each for a copy and the answers "to use in my school," enclosing stamps to pay for it. The stamps were returned. One young lady signed a fictitious name, and sent one stamp for the answer only, saying that a friend had given her a copy of the book, and she wished to see if she had solved the problems correctly, by comparing her answers with Mr. Jackson's. How did we know that she had signed a fictitious name? The name was too pretty, and she had it directed to the general delivery instead of to her street and number, and the whole turn of the letter was plainly an effort to deceive in spite of beautiful penmanship and correct orthography.

One or two Madison boys came to the office and said their teacher had sent them over to get a copy of the answers. The boys were told that that trick would not work.

In these cases the teachers had not requested the Midland Publishing Co. to protect them from these methods of evasion by pupils.

Subscribers to the Journal should always inform us at once on moving to a new place. Give old post office address as well as the new one; otherwise it is difficult to find your name on our list. We make mistakes as well as other people; but usually the angry subscriber, who has not received his paper, has himself to blame for it, for not informing us when he changes his address.

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