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GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATIE
LIBRARY

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THE NEW

Educational Foundations

(Established 1888--Present form adopted May, 1916) WORLD-WIDE EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS

Editors

WILLIAM CHARLES O'DONNELL, Jr., Ph. D.
CLAYTON SEDGWICK COOPER, A. M.
MATTHEW PAGE ANDREWS, A. M.

LOUISE E. HOGAN (Home and School Department)

Editorial Counsellors and Contributors

UNITED STATES

ROBERT J. ALEY, Ph.D., LL.D., President University of Maine, Orono, Me., President National Education Association, 1916-1917.

JAMES W. BRIGHT, Ph.D., LL.D., Caroline Donovan Professor of English Literature, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.

COL. L. N. GIGNILLIAT, Culver Military Academy, Culver, Indiana.

M. P. E. GROSZMANN, Ph. D., National Association for the Study and Education of
Exceptional Children, Herbart Hall, Plainfield, N. J.

GEORGE HODGES, D. D., Dean Episcopal Theological Institution, Cambridge, Mass.
NEWELL DWIGHT HILLIS, D. D., L. H. D., Arbuckle Institute, Brooklyn, N. Y.
DAVID STARR JORDAN, Ph. D., M. D., LL. D., Stanford University, Cal.
DAVID B. JOHNSON, LL.D., President Winthrop Normal and Industrial College, Rock
Hill, S. C., (President National Education Association, 1915-1916.)

JAMES H. KIRKLAND, Ph.D., LL.D., D. C. L.. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
ALBERT B. MEREDITH, A. B., Asst. Commissioner of Education, Trenton, N. J.
FRANCIS TREVELYAN MILLER, Litt. D., LL. D., Author and Editor. Founder of
the Journal of American History, New York City.

MORRIS P. SHAWKEY, A. M., Supt. of Education, W. Va.

FRANK STRONG, Ph. D., LL. D., University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kans.

CHARLES F. THWING, LL.D., President Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio.

INSULAR

HENRY W. KINNEY, A. M., Supt. Public Instruction, Hawaii.

PAUL G. MILLER, Ph.D., Commissioner of Education, Porto Rico.

FOREIGN

E. B. SARGANT, Esq., London, England.

EMILE BOUTROUX, Member French Academy, Paris, France.

F. L. HAWKS POTT, D. D., St. Johns University, Shanghai, China.

PROFESSOR INAZO NITOBE, Imperial University, Tokio, Japan.

Note: Members of this board are not responsible for sentiments expressed in this magazine except such as are found in their own contributions and editorials.

Published Monthly except July and August by

Educational Magazine Publishing Company

W. C. O'DONNELL, Jr., Pres.; 8. M. VAN BRAKLE. Secy.
HENRY STERLING CHAPIN, Business Manager

Published at Cooperstown, N. Y.

Office 31-33 E. 27th St., N. Y.

$2.00 a year, 25c a copy. Foreign postage 20c extra. Canadian postage 10c extra per year. Entered as Second-Class Matter at the Postoffice at Cooperstown, N. Y.

Educators of the Country

speak for Patri's

"A Schoolmaster of the
Great City"

William Wirt, Superintendent of Schools, Gary, Indiana
"I have read the book with great interest and find it a vivid picture of the
difficult problem of actually doing in the school what we all know should be
done there. But the story does a great deal more than show the difficulty
of the problem. The successful way in which the difficulties have been
overcome is an inspiration ard should convince any teacher that the effort
is worth while. The great problem for us as teachers today is to actually
put into practice what we preach."

Albert Shields, Superintendent of Schools, Los Angeles, Cal. "It is a delightful thing to find a practical administrator who can see in the school organization not the end of education, but a necessary yet ever changing device for securing that end; whose understanding of the larger problems is so real that he will not permit rules or traditions or habits, however sanctified by long custom, to deflect his attention from the real objects of true education-the welfare of children. It is a book full of help and suggestion."

John Martin, Board of Education, New York City, N. Y.

"Were I an educational czar, I should issue an edict that every City Teacher
read this book three times during the vacation. If its spirit could take pos-
session of every school, a revolution would be effected more fundamental
than the glorious Russian Revolution."

A Schoolmaster of the Great City

By Angelo Patri

The Macmillan Company

$1.25

DIET FOR CHILDREN

A Complete System of Nursery Diet With Numerous Recipes;
Also Many Menus for Young and Older Children.

A Home and School Guide for Mothers,
Teachers and Physicians

By LOUISE E. HOGAN
(MRS. JOHN L. HOGAN)

AUTHOR OF

How to Feed Children, A Study of a Child, Children's Diet in Home and School, The Child in Sickness and Health, etc., etc.

16mo, Cloth, 160 Pages, Price 75 Cents, net

Contents of Diet for Children

Explanatory List of the Various Classes of Nursery Foods-Foods ForbiddenNursing and Mother's Food-Menus-Simple Supper Dishes for Summer and Winter-Diet in Illness-Peptonized Foods for Illness-Antidotes for PoisonsRecipes Broths and Soups-Cereals-Muffins, Bread, etc.-The Use of Vegetables in the Nursery-The Place of Fruit in the Nursery-Desserts.

The favor with which Mrs. Hogan's book has been received is evidenced by the following extracts from letters since the publication of this attractive volume.

RUPERT BLUE, Surgeon-General Treasury Department, Bureau of the Public Health Service, Washington.

"It seems to me that Diet for Children, by Mrs. John L. Hogan, should be found especially helpful to the intelligent mother untrained in dietetics.'

HARYOT HOLT DEY, President Woman's Press

Club of New York City, Chairman Committee on Industrial and Social Conditions, New York City.

"Mrs. Hogan, in Diet for Children, has made her collection of practical directions for the young mother with her characteristic discretion. The recipes are many of them so dainty and so delicate

that as a practical cook book of desserts it is simply splendid especially for the rapidly growing class of people who are cultivating a respect for their digestive organs and seeking rules in accord with simple living."

ANNA H. DRAYTON, Executive Secretary The
New York Training School for Community
Center Workers, New York City.

"I have a copy of Mrs. Hogan's Diet for Children. It seems to me most practical and comprehensive, so that a mother who had very little time could easily master its instructions without spending a great deal of time in finding the information for which she is in need."

ORDER BLANK

DIET FOR CHILDREN
LOUISE E. HOGAN

In order that you may examine this volume in the light of every-day use, we will be glad to send it to you on approval. You examine the book and if it proves of value to you, send us your remittance for the cost of the volume. We assume all risk.

THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY, 185 Madison Ave., N. Y. C.:

Please send me a copy of Diet for Children on 15 days' examination. I will return the book or send you 75 cents if I desire to keep it.

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