December 7, 1888.] 



SCIENCE. 



A TEMPORARY BINDER 



for Science is now ready, and will be mailed 

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We call attention to the new form of Accident (indem- 

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 cover weekly allowances of from $10 to {25. according to 

 occupation, at a cost of only £6 a year exclusive of the 

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 as a rule, carry life insurance, and the ordinary accident 

 policies issued by companies, paying a sum in case of 

 death, is not so desirable as one of these indemnity policies 

 in case of accidents, which are so plentiful in this fast age 

 with its railroad horrors, fast driving, electric wires and 

 other countless forms of danger to which the public is con- 

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 by the Insurance Department of New Yorlt State, shows 

 that the management is liberal with its policy-holders 

 ■ ■ 'is action. The Association also de- 

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SILIS,SATli,!El!ETS 



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LJ!UJ!IJ.IJi--J.J i .lJl.l:li.-lJ 



, 67 PARK PLACE, NEW YORK 



ONE LANGUAGE FOR THE WHOLE WORLD. 



WORLD-ENGLISH : 



THE UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE. 25 CENTS. 



Every one has heard of the butcher who, after a long 

 search for his knife, at last found it in his mouth : so 

 speakers of English have been seeking for a universal 

 language, when, lo ! it is in their mouths. The intelligi- 

 bility of English words has been obscured by a dense 

 mist of letters. This is now dispersed by A. Melville 

 Bell, who has already won a world-wide reputation 

 through his invention of "■Visible Speech," the great 

 boon to deaf-mutes. Professor Bell calls this new discov- 

 ery- of his " World-English," and the result is a language 

 which cannot fail to meet with acceptance, and at once 

 supersede the supposed necessity for " Vol.TpiJk," or any 

 other artificial language. No language could be invented 

 for international use that would surpass English In gram- 

 matical simplicity, and in general fitness to become the 

 tongue of the world. It is already the mother-tongue of 

 increasing millions in both hemispheres, and some knowl- 

 edge of the language is demanded by all educated popula- 

 tions on the globe. Social and commercial necessities 

 require that the acquisition of this knowledge shall be 

 facilitated, and it is believed that Professor Bell's inven- 

 tion has removed the last impediment to English becom- 

 ing the universal language, for which vague desires have 

 -long been entertained, although hitherto only futile ef- 

 forts have been made. 



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

 says ; " 1 believe that the highest interests cf Chri-tian 

 civilization and of humanity would be ser\*cd by its 

 adoption. China and Japan would be made English- 

 speaking peoples within fifty years, and so brought with- 

 in the range of Christianizing and civilizing idea<, in the 

 largest sense. All existing missionary work is irivial as 

 compared with this. For your svstcm would throw wide 

 open those vast countries, as, indeed, all the countries of 

 the world, to the whole current of English and Ai 

 thought " 



For Diliisloii ot EngUsli ilroiglioiil llie World 



THE UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE 



This " Hand-Book of World-English " is the Complete, Simple, 

 and Efficient Medium. 



FOREIGNERS 



Will Acquire, by Means of this Hand-Book, a 

 PERFECT PRONUNCIATION OF ENGLISH. 



For Prliary Sctiool Ppils aDd Illiterate Adnlts 



World-English is a Royal Road to Reading. 



To Teacliers of Iiglisli aid Modern Langnages 



This Hand Book will be of Primary Importance 

 as a Phonetic Directory. 



DEFECTS OF SPEECH 



Will toe Readily Corrected by Means of the Artlcula- 

 live Dlrecll us in this Haod-Book. 



HAND-BOOK OF WORLD-ENGLISH, 



25 CENTS. 

 The plan of this little book is altogether new. Letters 

 and sounds are so associated, in all the exercises, that from 

 the mere knowledge of letters a learner cannot fail to 

 pronounce words with certainty. English reading will 

 thus be easily acquired, whether by natives or foreigners, 

 children or adults. 



The general resemblance of World-English to Literary 

 English is such that any reader of the latter deciphers 

 the former at sight, or, at most, after a few minutes' 

 study of the new letters. A like re-ult may be antici- 

 pated for those who shall learn to read from World-Eng- 

 lish. They will transfer their power of reading to the 

 literary form of the language, almost without effort. The 

 < rthographic aspect of words will, besides, be so fixed in 

 the eye, by contrast, that spelling will be remembered as 

 — what it really is — a pictorial association with words. 



No special training is required to qualify teachers for 

 using this book. The subject can even be successfully in- 

 troduced in the kindergarten and the nursery*. This 

 phonetic mode of initiation in reading cannot be too 

 strongly urged on the attention of School Boards on both 

 sides of the .Atlantic. 



The ordinar>' orthegraphy of each word is interlined 

 with the World-English version throughout the Exer- 

 cises and Readings. 



So set down, our tongue is the best for the world to 

 unite upon. — Brooklyn Ea^le. 



The idea of Mr. Bell h.is much to recommend it, and 

 the presentation is charmingly clcir. ■ American, Phila. 



The result is a language which cannot fail to meet with 

 acceptance — Boston Traveller. 



Has the merit of great ingenuity. — Railway A^r. 



His treatise, as a study of Engli.sh orthoepy, condenses 

 the result of much thought and experience in small com- 

 pass. — TAe Critic. 



World-Eneli^h dc.<^r>-es the careful consideration of ail 

 serious scholars. — Modern LaMgva^ Xotet. 



World- Enjilish b the English language unburdened of 

 its chaotic spelling. — Popular Science Mentkly. 



We commend it to the attention of teachers.— ^//attra 

 Glol>e. 



'■ U\r:d£ngiish'* and ''Hattd-Bock of Wc rid- English" can be h.ui of all booksd't-rs, or -.vill be sent for 50 cents, fos! free, by the publisher, 



3Sr. ID. C. no J3G-ES, 4V Xjafa^^e-biDO I^laoe, ITe^JN^ ""S^onrDs:. 



