SCHOOL SUPPLIES. free to Teachers. Catalogue mailed Speakers, Recitations, Dialogues, Plays, Marches, Drills, Exercises, Celebrations, Entertainments, Games, Songs, Teachers' Books and Dictionaries. Reward and Gift Cards, Drawing, Sewing, Number, Reading, Alphabet and Busy-work Cards, Reports, Records, Certificates, Diplomas, Drawing Stencils, Blackboard Stencils, Colored Pegs, Sticks, Beads, Papers, Stars, Festooning, Drapery, Flags, Rama, Sewing Silkette, Needles, Scissors, Blackboards, Erasers, Crayons, Maps, Globes, all School Goods. Address to A. J. FOUCH & CO. WARREN, FA Not Tired of Democracy Some continental observers are asking with a superior air if the presidential campaign of 1912 does not make the American people doubt the wisdom of this manner of choosing their chief magistrate. The elective plan, they say in substance, puts up the greatest office of the nation as a prize to be grasped by the hand of ambition and conferred by the favor of the mob. And they want to know if we are not tired of such a plan. No. Not a bit. The campaign of 1912 has many undesirable features. It is in many ways a good deal of a nuisance. But better the campaign of 1912 than the only other alternative, the so-called hereditary principle. 66 Not even a presidential primary can do as many queer things as heredity can when it comes to choosing public servants. The elective plan is the plan of common-sense business and every-day life applied to government. The hereditary plan is a plan which no civilized people has ever dared to apply to anything but government, and perhaps landholding. The English Radicals, in fighting the House of Lords had a song which showed how the hereditary principle" would work when applied to other things than government. Here is one stanza: There was a famous surgeon, and his eldest son was blind And deaf and dumb from childhood, likewise vacant in his mind; But these failings mattered nothing, when his father's course was run He succeeded to the practice as The Only Way I really don't know what to do I've had his adenoids cut out, His tonsils are gone, too, His 'pendix vermiform's removed Now what else can I do? of Publishers of School Books, Manufacturers and Dealers in School Supplies and Equipment. This will be a great convenience to subscribers in sending orders. When writing for circulars, catalogs or other information by mentioning THE SCHOOL JOURNAL every time you write you will get special attention. Two lines, one year, $5.00, each additional line $2.00. Regular advertisers in THE JOURNAL are entitled to one line under two classifications. Additional lines, $2.00 a year. N. Y., Cin., Chicago, Boston, terial, etc. New York Springfield, Mass. Dictionaries and Cyclopedias American Seating Company, Schermerhorn New York Teachers' New York A. J. Fouch & Co., Warren, Pa. American Seating Company, Albert Teachers' Agency, N. Y., Chicago, Boston, Phila. N. Y. B'kboards, Crayons, Erasers Phys. and Chem. Apparatus School Bells Chicago, Ill. Watervliet, N. Y. New Haven Normal School of Gym Bells Syracuse, N. Y. Tonic New Haven, Conn. Horsford Acid Phosphate Typewriters Records, Blanks, Stationery A French Grammar for Schools and Colleges By M. M. BEEBE, Ph.D. PROFESSOR OF FRENCH IN THE COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS, SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY Scholarly, accurate, concise, comprehensive, and based on the natural method of teaching, it is without question the grammar to meet the growing demand for a more practical treatment of the subject. The aim of the author has been twofold: first, to bring the student into touch with the conversation of the French daily life; second, to teach French grammar as it is taught in France. One of our correspondents who has a wide experience in.fitting students for college writes: "I consider it splendidly adapted to classes in High School and beginning college work. To me it appeals particularly because of its practical nature, its exercises and vocabularies being arranged to give the student a knowledge of words and ideas current in every-day French life. The arrangement is admirable, progressive, clear and concise and sufficiently full for all ordinary needs. I do not hesitate to endorse the book." Price $1.10 IVES-BUTLER COMPANY Address the Publishers 31-33 East 27th St. New York CHARLES FRANCIS PRESS, NEW YORK |