The Kindergarten magazine . e a hand-some book made of your numbers. The offer made in the Juue number, granting a years subscription toany one sending in three new subscribers and was limited to dateof June 10, and no longer holds good. THE PARTHENON. A new Literary and Art paper. It has the exclusive right to pub-lish the Sermons of the Rev. Dr. Thomas, as well as the very valuablestudies in Form and Color by Miss Josephine C. Locke. Miss EstelleM. Huell, of the Philosophical Department of Welleslev College isnow contributing a very valuable series of papers on Esthetics whichevery Art


The Kindergarten magazine . e a hand-some book made of your numbers. The offer made in the Juue number, granting a years subscription toany one sending in three new subscribers and was limited to dateof June 10, and no longer holds good. THE PARTHENON. A new Literary and Art paper. It has the exclusive right to pub-lish the Sermons of the Rev. Dr. Thomas, as well as the very valuablestudies in Form and Color by Miss Josephine C. Locke. Miss EstelleM. Huell, of the Philosophical Department of Welleslev College isnow contributing a very valuable series of papers on Esthetics whichevery Art student should read. Studies in Plato and the Platonic Phi-losophy, by Thomas M. Johnson. Kindergarten and Mothers Class studies, by Elizabeth is also the only paper in Chicago that publishes literary and Art papersby distinguished London writers. The Womans Number soon to beissued promises the finest paper on GEORGE Sand ever published in thiscountry. KIXDHRGARTKX MAGAZIXE Vol. v.—ocTOP>i:k. 1892— SCIENCE IX THE COUNTRY DISTRICTS. AXDIDLV. if asked to name thescIio(j1 where I—as a teacher—seemto have been of the most help to mypupils, I should say, In the countrydistrict. If asked where the pupilswere the most appreciative, I shouldmake the same reply. If still further asked, Which ofyour schools has left the most pleasant memories ;—wherehave the pupils .seemed to best enjoy and thingsgo smoothest? my thouj^ht would at once turn to one ofmy first .schools in a countr>district. And why was it ? Certainly not because the ei>, hoard benches, fastened in two rows to oppo-site sides of the long room were inviting or comfortable !Nor because about one-third of the sixty-four pupils wasmade up of great boys and Kirls from the furrow and hay-fieldami another third were almost babies. Not even (although itdid wonderfully help) the teacher and pupils alljoined in such famous games of pum-pum-|>eel-away a


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpub, booksubjectkindergarten