School; a magazine devoted to elementary and secondary education . rease in our winter friends. This bird is a charming creature, andwell worth the careful study of every nature student as opportunitypresents itself. The cardinal and rose-breasted grosbeak can be moreappropriately discussed in a succeeding number of The School. Internal Evidence.—At a certain college custom ordains that atexamination time each of the candidates shall write the following pledgeat the bottom of his papers: I hereby declare, on my honour, that I have neither given norreceived assistance during the examination. No


School; a magazine devoted to elementary and secondary education . rease in our winter friends. This bird is a charming creature, andwell worth the careful study of every nature student as opportunitypresents itself. The cardinal and rose-breasted grosbeak can be moreappropriately discussed in a succeeding number of The School. Internal Evidence.—At a certain college custom ordains that atexamination time each of the candidates shall write the following pledgeat the bottom of his papers: I hereby declare, on my honour, that I have neither given norreceived assistance during the examination. Now, recently it so happened that a young fellow, after handing inone of the papers, suddenly remembered that in his haste he had omittedto write the oath. On the following day, therefore, he sought out oneof the examiners, and told him that he had forgotten to put the requiredpledge on his paper. The old man looked at him over the top of his glasses and drylyremarked: Quite unnecessary. Your paper in itself is sufificient evi-dence. Ive just been correcting it!. \e\v Iliblic School, Oshawa. New Public School, Tori Mope. The Schoolhouse JAMES A. ELLIS, , THE preparation of the following paper on The Schoolhouse isbased on my many years of experience as a specialist in SchoolArchitecture. In addition I have quoted from two otherauthorities on schoolhouse planning, namely, Mr. Wm. B. Ittner,St. Louis, and Mr. Beverly S. King, New York. The schoolhouse is the greatest and most important workshop in theworld. The raw material taken into this workshop consists of little ones are susceptible to diseases of every kind; their bodiesand minds are in a stage of development. It is from this tender rawmaterial that the future statesmen, the professional men, the mechanics,the business men, the fathers and mothers of the future are manufac-tured. How very important it is, therefore, that the schoolhouse, the work-shop, should be as nearly perfect in design, co


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishertoron, bookyear1914