September 7, 1888.] 



SCIENCE. 



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ONE LANGUAGE FOR THE WHOLE WORLD. 



WOJRLD-ENGLISH 25 cents ; HAND-BOOK OF WORLD-ENGLISH 25 cents. 



PBXISS COMMEWTS. 



So set down, our tongue is the best 

 for the world to unite upon. — Brooklyn 

 Eagle. 



The idea of Mr. Bell has much to 

 recommend it, and the presentation is 

 charmingly clear. — Auurican, Phila. 



The result is a lani^uage wliich can- 

 not fail lo meet with acceptance. — 

 Boston Traveller. 



Has the merit of great ingenuity. — 

 Railway Age. 



His treatise, as a study of English 

 orthoepy, condenses the result of much thought and experience in small compass. 

 • — The Critic. 



World-English deserves the careful consideration of all serious scholars. — 

 Modern Language .Votes. 



Dr. Bell's World-English can be read at sight. — Montreal Gazette. 



World-English is the English language unburdened of its chaotic spelling. — 

 Popular Science Monthly. 



We commend it to the attention of teachers. — Ottawa Globe. 



Foreigners will find our words wholly disarmed. — Public Opinion. 



"WORLD-ENGLISH, is, as its name implies, a new 

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It is the invention of Prof. Alexander Melville Bell, the 

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 generally accepted as the Universal Lan guage. 



Its great superiority over " Volapuk,'' or any other 

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Ex-President Andrew D. White, of Cornell University^ 

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"World-English "and " Hand-book of World-English " 

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