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The Great
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This is the genuine, unabridged, illus- | any cyclopedia that will not submit to a
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Though the Britannica is complete in itself, this Supplement, from the hands of about 150 American scholars and writers of highest reputation is generally wanted.

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Special Inducements.

Good for 60 Days.

In order to increase our circulation largely, we offer the following special inducements to all new subscribers to the EDUCATIONAL NEWS.

1. We will send the weekly Educational News, a trial subscription, one year for one dollar.

2. For $1.50 and 10 cents for postage, we will send the weekly Edu· cational News for one year and a copy of Raub's Methods of Teaching, worth $1.50.

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Please note that the EDUCATIONAL NEWS is a weekly journal during 10 months of the year, and a semi-monthly during July and August. Forty-eight issues, 768 pages, of the paper, constitute a year.

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VOL. X., No. 4.

To the Reader:

PHILADELPHIA, PA., JANUARY 27, 1894.

$1.50 A YEAR

Please read our special offers on last page of this paper.

If you will accept any of these offers and subscribe for the weekly EDUCATIONAL NEWS within sixty days, we will allow you four months' time to make payment of subscription.

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EVERY NEW SUBSCRIBER TO THE

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who sends in his subscription before February 1st will receive the paper fifteen months for the price of a year. you can get a weekly journal at the price

Remember of a monthly.

Philadelphia, Pa.

$75.00 to $250.00 PER MONTH

can be made working for us. Spare hours turned to go od account. This is of especial interest and value to teachers Never mind about sending stamp. Address B. F. JOHNSON & CO., Richmond, Va.

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SCHOOL

BUSINESS A

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Samples sent free to teachers.
New Price List of School Supplies, Chromos, Plain,
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Annual --
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Cloth binding, 8vo., 524 pp., price, $1.75, postage prepaid.

FOR SALE AT

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Club agents wanted.

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Men and Women of Ability and Push of the reading world-that portion of it, at least,

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HARRIET B. SWINEFORD,

Late Teacher of Literature in State Normal School,
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THIS book, lately issued from the press, con-
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ionship. It will be reflected in a great many ways. And
no one should care to conceal it, either.

The habitual reader of the sensational novel, though per-
haps beyond danger of being moved to attempts at imita-
tion, will none the less, reveal without fail in language, act,
or expression, the drift of his private companionship. There
is an almost imperceptible influence developed that will
quite unconsciously develop sensationalism in the impres-
sionable minds of youth.

For the purposes of the teacher there are three grades of
.52 general reading matter. Ist, that grade which from its di-
53 rect influence for the bad should be studiously avoided; 2d,
.53 that which from its lack of influence direct, is as evil indi-
.54 rectly in developing a mental lethargy unworthy of any
teacher; and 3d, that which from its direct appeal to the
better impulses of life should be sought out and cultivated.
Those who are familiar with samples of the first grade car
.....57 hardly fail to recognize them. It is not intended to limit
..58 the class to actually vicious books, but to include those
59 that tend to develop and call into life elements in human
nature quite foreign to our present necessities of life. The
second class includes all these wishy-washy productions,
the chief harm in which is their weak shallowness and ener-
vating influence. Devotees of this literature are not apt
to become criminals, for thought is dwarfed rather than
preverted, and they become the ciphers in society. To the
third class must be accorded the credit of all the building
up of the intellectual age credited to literature in any form.
No modern teacher ventures to dispute the importance Here are found the teachers' aids and tools; here are the

of the influence exerted by the literature met with outside materials for building up the private self; here the truly

the school room.

At the same time, there are not a few great works, essays, poetry, and novels, that have proven

who fail to appreciate the figure their own reading cuts in themselves 'evers to elevate the intellectual standard a little.
the development of the pupils. It is not necessary to go The human intellect is, first of all, a mirror that reflects
to the teacher's library to know what it contains in sub-back the images it has received from other sources, chief of
A teacher is in a certain sense a public character, which perhaps, are books and the periodical press. This

much more closely watched, judged, and criticised than is particularly true of any profession like the teacher's that

the ordinary individual. In country towns particularly, is a constant drill of the reflecting powers. This is the

the chances are that a pretty good idea of what periodicals cause of the direct influence. The indirect comes from the

he or she takes is more or less current.

successfully conceal the character of his

No person

can cloudiness of the mirror that transforms the reflection of all

literary companquarters, and destroys the clear cut images of beauty that

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