MMICH 5. 



MOOSE'S HTGFUAL KEW-YOSKEK. 



LETTERS FROM A HUNGARIAN. 



•ton BrtAgt—Brngaria* Opera— < 



BMOJ&at— CrnnplttntnU. 



OlAS| Hungary, ScpL IS."?. 



Dkah FailFD Monur.;— A few week- BgO 1 I bit- 

 .. of Hungary, Buda-AM. Thaw arc 

 r,.,,.. i ei trains which .im!y leave Vienuofor 

 Petth,but Mm passage bjsteameronthe Danube is 

 far tin.' must pleasant, and tho scenery more pictur- 

 , q D( i:. ::,... Hi,;,, in tins oily [which I briefly 

 dan ribed in hit last,) I accordingly preferred the 



lt« 11 to the loc otlte,ond En three hours we 



■■■ English miles, tin- diMaiue between 

 hero and Postb, The scenery on both sidea of the 

 DuniiW, throughout Ibis trip, id ever vaniuEnn.l 



. h.iiiiui.- A I i N.xhvuy we saw umasaof ruined 



walls and towers on the top of a high, steep rock, 

 non called tfMfiyrarf, formerly/ (by the Romans. 

 .rfrz Alto. These ruin» ore nil that remain of the 

 ontx-ri.vor.tf residence fbniltintheeleTantb centu- 

 ry) o ■ Kings ol Hungary. Under Mattheh 



died 1400,) the mosl warlike and might; 

 duel of the Ma*yurs, tins residence was enlarge. 

 and embellished in the highest degree But, lik. 



luativ other furls mi'l castles, this stl Oligly fortified 



■, wa* destroyed in Die Itiili ccntuiy 

 by the Turk-. The Turks, ns well as the Romans 

 of a much Barmi period, Lave left manj a ti oca of 



tlii-n i ..iiih.nun-. in the littnl of tin- .'... 



Oinli.iiMug nc.uvi ll.e haven uf Test h, the I.e. ill h 



df ilu- H't-nt'i v ytuwa more nud more in tenet till 

 nLlii.il, tlio stately edifices of l'csili, lining the left 

 bunk of tin- Danube, the palace aud forts of liudu 



on the lofty lulls opposite, and the rust Su.spi n-iun 

 II ridge connect ing llmlu with 1'eslh, combine with 

 all their beauty and magnificence in producing n 



..:■■■■ ii '!■-■ i 



. almost erery 

 third person you meet play> it. 



l',Ufrthntti-ji.t,r Duntr, ("uiusl bumble sonant,' ) 

 said the host to me, as 1 left will, an "sel emj>MU 



■ umnend myaell I. These two 

 Strange though they sound to an BngUlb 

 the inp-1 ci.ninu.n salutations here iu coming and 

 going. These phrase* are, indeed, German, be, 

 tin- Hungarian the literal translation of the; 



used jmi i 



such thing, 

 thing, and v 



instead ofo 



in general, ' 



In addressing Indies uf wealth 

 men often use, instead of the above, 

 tiss your bond," though they do no 

 i, tun, it such ii huly ...ffi-i i yi>u uny- 

 (h-cline it, the same phrase is used, 

 11 No, thank you." Compliments, 

 it here in great abundance. Even 

 itomer, on entering or leaving a store, is 

 expected to "commend himself," for which the 

 merchant or clerk is your " most humble servant," 

 This system of compliments is also curried out in 

 traveling. Thus when a person leaves the Car or 

 steamboat at any intermediate station, he wishes 

 the company around In m a " yl uc</l khtweittrreUc" 

 — " a hnppy continuance of the journey "—how odd 

 and nwkwurd this sounds in our language. Well, 

 this abundance of compliments arises from the 

 more social character of the Hungarians and Ger- 

 mans generally. Hut enough of these; 1 have a 

 great many more curiosities yet to relate of Hun- 

 gary — of which more in my nest. 



Simon Tcska. 



ride 



l- I] abridge reeling on pontoons, like the 



one I do-enbid in my last, connected the t»V0 



hanks a short distance above the present bridge; 

 but us this had d> In- ■' i.pim-d " l-.r allowing boats 

 to pass through, and altogether taken out as soon 

 BB ice began to form in the river, the mercantile 

 population of Poslh, desiring In have an i a-v pas- 

 sage across to Budaat all times, nnd at all seasons, 



drier -1 upon lniihlmg a ctittttnry suspension 



bridge, sufficiently high above the level of tin- 

 nier to allow boats In puss under it. It was ac- 

 cordingly limit, between 1 £42 and "40, by the Etig 

 lish I"l. iueer, GubjTj i.i a oosl of near throe mil- 

 lions or dollars. The entire roadway of (lie bridge 

 is 1 , -j : ' 1 1 feel in length, resting upon four towers, 



The chains alone neigh thiily thunsnnd cut.— 

 There is a double aisle t. n foot passengers, the one 

 fur those coming frotu l'esth, the othoi foi thoafl 

 from Hilda. The fare across is only one KrcuJscr 



lime cent) During the late rerolntion the Ana- 



tiiini iitldlery hi-giin In ciiiiiiiniiide one of the 

 towers from the fort of Duda, but so solid and 

 massive is the structure, that the bridge received 

 no injury fiom the bombardment. 



.u ry a 



■ 1'csth * 



iyeta 



insig- 



niheant place, (JW^hur,/ being formerly the enpi- 

 tol or Hungary,) but now it is the most beautiful, 



wealthy, ami fi-cipietiled Ihinguiiun city— counting 

 i" 11 iiiiiat.itiii.i-i The great inundation oflfNW, 



Which destroyed :i,0m) huuses, and the bnmbunl- 

 ment(on the part of the Austrians) in 1849, was 

 the cause- of many new aud splendid mansions, 

 nin-l of which may be seen almig the liver. 



Tlie population is of a mixed character, and the 

 Geiuiuu is here spoken as much as the Hungarian. 

 Am out: the three theatres of l'esth, there is onh 

 one where Hungarian dramas are played, uud 

 Hungarian operas sung, fly the way, if you would 

 ' appreciate the lull, rotund melody of the 



. ') , ■ 





ti.. 



1 ol b u k with a i 



.onifortuble," (u 

 ■ Austria, is up- 

 fur two persons 

 in the parterre, 

 ready all 



plied 

 onlj ) 



dress-circle, and three galleries wen 

 occupied — such a Ibcalrcgoing people 

 gnrimis— and we were glud to obtain a convenient 

 plni ofoi standing 'here wiwowrethoaahundrcd 

 posture. The scenes, with all theii 



,! ' ■ ODS, won prepared OS > grand scale, the 



.. lull and excellent; mid the As.utic 

 hinuiiage ol the original Huns, sung by modern 

 artists, n as mosl pleasing to the ear. At the close 

 of every net the uudieucc, amidst loud applause, 

 Mlled out the principal actor, at whose appearance 

 ased, the nudience shout- 



latooai "threccheers," 



au.lliteiall, s^uit.e, ■■ l.„,g niay 1„ , , 



The whole play i Mto d ju ,„ „■ Tbu| , 



spent a ple^,,, , Vl , „ 



that, play _.., «!„,„ „,, , 



• ' ,l " , ' liberty) in , 



ldb< re, „,,d ,„,„o, 



Tl "' "•"»' Iir -■ ' 



the hotel J went into ou< of t i„ ,,.. , 

 ii..-. 

 I 

 ' l 



tnlna more 

 t may read 

 ■ 



■ 

 shew oaWr..., 



1 



Lwity not only to read the 



m the left hand, without obstructing the motion of 

 the wheel. Now place one of the ears, I), upon the 

 sharp point of the sluud. W, boldhlg ■ 

 firmly with the thumb and linger of il.<- right hand, 

 ,1,. of (lie wheel in a boriiontal posi- 

 tion, usees in the diagnun. Withdraw the band 

 Boriiontolly In a line with the avis, letting the 

 machine go, and it will retain its axis iu the hori- 

 zontal position, and begin slowly to rotate around 

 the point on which it rents. This rotary motion 

 around the stand will be accelerated until the 

 motion of the wheel is spent and it falls off, which 

 will require some four or live urinates, II UK B .■-.- 

 chine is in good order. The grand inquiries now 



Firnt. — Why docs motion gircn to the wheel A, 

 tend to keep the aiis in a horizontal position* 



Second,— Why does the machine rotate around 

 the point on which one end of its axis rests? 



Third.— Why is its rotary motion around the 

 stand acelemted? 



It is impossible for matter to put itself in mo- 

 tion — so it is also impossible for it to stop when 

 once put in motion, or to go slower or faster, or to 

 toke another direction ii'uiu that given it by the 

 force which set it in motion. Thus, matter, when 

 1 1 nt hi mot inn, nl ways moves in a straight lino in the 

 direction of the force given to it, with a uniform 

 city, unless some opposing force intervenes 

 retards it, or turns it out of its course. Now, 

 suppose the wheel is put in motion with a Telocity 

 equal to that of a ball discharged from a rifle, and 

 I particles move in the vertical plane, A, B ; 

 united force, continued in that direction, 



lich I 



intly r 



vill not only 



Tub little 



begins to study philosophy as soon as it is able to 

 handle a ball or a hammer, and thousands of ex- 

 periments hnve to be made before the law is fully 

 established in its mind that all things tend to go 

 one way, when let go. And it is just as much a 

 matter of surprise to the little innocent on its 

 mother's knee, that the apple, which has been 

 picked up for the twentieth time and again put 

 into its little hands, should ahrait* e/o Inwards the 

 floor, as it is to its older brother, who has " learned 

 a thing or two," to see the great balloon rise to the 



When nnee our notions are fixed with regard to 

 the laws which govern the material universe, either 

 hy our own experience and observation, or by 

 availing ourselves of the observations and experi- 

 ence of others, through hooks, or otherwise, and 

 the operations of those lows have become a kind of 

 iccond nature to us, it is extremely difficult for us 

 ogive up our opinions, and adopt different views, 

 rhe commendable decisiveness and stability of the 

 iiiman character requites that this should be so. 

 Sometimes, however, we see in the operation of 

 s Laws, our experience put at default; and 



lushed With : 



the s 



The Rotascope, though it is generally considered 

 by practical men as a "mere plaything" of no 

 practical utility, has engaged the attention of the 

 Scientific; World for a number of years, and it 

 ver fails to amuse and excite the wonder of every 

 le who has not before witnessed the phenomena 

 presents. Though Scientific Lectures have been 

 delivered, and learned articles published, describ- 

 ing the lidle machine and il- wonderful phenomena, 

 we have never seen a practictt demonstration 

 given of its wonderful perfoi munees, which are so 

 contrary to our experience. 



We propose, through the columns or the Rural, 

 in n series of articles, to give the result of our owu 

 observations and experiments with this little 

 "plaything," in a manner that will be instructive 

 to the voung beginner in the study of the laws of 

 Kuture — and perhaps giveahiut at some of the 

 pEUtiOsJ ases to which the principle might be ap- 

 plied— hoping, thereby to add. our humble mite to 

 treasury of knowledge, which the good men of 

 age nre storing up for the benefit of our race. 

 DUD* readers of the Ri RAX may not have seen 

 the Rotascope, a brief description of it may be 

 noneswry. it consists of i simple balance wheel, 



A, made of brass or uther metal, moviug on verv 



I. Adjusted bowings, r, r, in a bra&s fruinc or 



mi-, B, with ,i- little ineiiot, H-. possible; and a 

 stand, made hy fastening a pointed wire, W, up- 

 right into a block of wood, S, for the purpose of 



,:l l'[ B the machine wheu put in operation. 



Opposite euili end of the avle in e futenod lull, 



Ml s,-' D, D, on the upper side <>f the 



riOfc li, wiilu small iiideiilation on the underside 



■ rent its falling off when set in mo- 

 land la sel il in operation, a rery 



■ - 



Wfulljl in, hi, id the uxle, X, 



"J 1 "' U "' '-"".v with the right band, as in 



■pinning a top, while the frame or ring, B, is held 



ne the power of gravitation upon those 

 s themselves, but will enable them to carry 

 ne or ling, and, perhaps, considerable addi- 



,'eighl if applied, with them around "their 

 .-ourse," until the motion of the wheel is 



ind gravitation again resumes her sway. 



i revolving body tends ulways to keep its 

 xts parallel to itself, and hence a ball discharged 

 ■om a " twist-cut " rille, which gives 

 itnry motion, keeps its axis parallel with the rifle 

 arrel, until it meet- some opposing force; ond 

 : more apt to go straight to a great distance, thu 

 hull fired from a "smooth-bore" rille. by which 



er work 



PROTECT TOUR EYE -SIGHT. 



U blindness wan the result or c 



■ i One of the most enxhu 



em divine, having, fur some lime, been . 



to forego the pleasure of reading, has sj 



Bands "i dollars in value, and lost years < 

 consequence of Betting up several hours before 

 day, and studying by artificial light. His eyes 

 Derergot well. 



Multitudes of men uiul w. 

 eves weak lor life by the to 

 sight, reading small print 



ien have made theii 

 free use of the eye 

 1 doing tine sewing, 

 well to observe the 



Avoid all sudden changes between light c 



light 

 Never read by twilight, or m uoiilight, or of OTcry 



Never read or sow directly in front of the light, 



It is best to have the light fall from above, ob- 

 liquely over the left shoulder. 



Never sleep so that, on the first waking, the 

 eyes shall open on the light of a window. 



Do not use the eye-sight by light so scant that 

 it requires an effort to discriminate. 



Too much light creates a glare, and pains and 

 Confuses the sight. The moment you are sensible 

 ffort to distinguish, that moment cease, and 



Tb. 







In 



. pretended tha 



ANIMAL HEAT -CARBON AND OXYGEN. 



Ix an able lecture, delivered by the Rev. Dr. 

 Storrs, of Brooklyn, in the Cooper Institute, re- 

 cently, on the " Influence of Climate on Civiliza- 

 tion," he seemed to attribute much of the vigor of 

 races to the food required by their climate. The 

 idea conveyed seemed to be an endorsement of the 

 popular theory of animal heat, which is inculcated 

 in all the common books on physiology. These 

 compare the lungs to a furnace, in which air aud 

 carbon are brought into chemical union in pro- 

 ducing heat.. Tin- theory is simple and somewhat 

 beautiful, but not correct. The combustion of our 

 food-fuel does not take place in the lungs, in the 

 same manner that the fire is produced in the fur- 

 nace; the food of man is not fed into his lungs, 

 neither doea the oxygen of the air combine with 

 the food or carbon in the lungs, but passes into 

 the blood through their membrane tissue; car- 

 bonic acid and nunstuie being given out in ex- 

 change. All our food undergoes a chemical 

 change before it reaches the lungs in the form of 

 blood, and the warmth of the body comes from 

 the organic processes which make und unmake 

 nimal tissues. These facts, which would he 

 familiar to nil, lay the axe nt the root of the corn- 

 on furnace theory of animal heat. 

 Man requires the same elements for his food in 

 1 climates. The northern races eat much fat 

 hich is almost pure hydro-carbon; the [inhabi- 

 uts of tropical cl: 







Hindoos, in Iodia, live exclusively on vegetables, 

 of hot South Africa are the grealest 

 beef gormandizers iu the world, 



The temperature of man is 98' in all seasons in 

 the hottest and coldest climates. A change of this 

 uniform temperature of the human body is the 

 sign of disease. Man preserves his standard tem- 

 perature in the tropical and aretie regionsin virtue 

 of this peculiar organism which adjusts itself to 

 arying circurmstnnces, but the means by which 

 t does this is still involved in much obscurity. — 

 iVj'i nl-nc American. 



DEATH FROM WANT OF SLEEP. 

 The questio 



iveiii.l, ami 

 .ver.ug the 



how long enn a pei 

 oftener asked than 

 the difficulties and inhumanity of 

 i|uestions by experiment would se 



unsolved. A recent communication to a 

 British Society whose fields of operation are in 

 would seem to answer the inquiry. It is a 

 description of a cruel mode of punishment pecu- 

 liar to, ond webclievc. original with the Chinese. 

 It appears that a Chinese merchant had been con- 

 victed of murdering his wife and was sentenced to 

 die by being totally deprived of the privilege of 

 going to sleep. This paiuful and singular mode nf 

 quilting an earthly evistence was carried into exe- 

 unt Amoy under the follow i ng en rum si ii i ices 

 'ho condemned was placed in prison under the 

 of three of the police guard, who relieved 

 each other every alternate hour, and who prevented 

 ei isnnox from foiling asleep, night or day. IK* 



thus lived for nineteen day, without enjoying any 

 sleep. At the commencement of the eighth day, 

 his sufferings were so iutense that he implored the 

 authorities to grant him the blc-sed opportunity ol" 

 being strangulated, garroted, guillotined, burned 

 death, dn.WFicd, shot, quartered, bluwn up with 

 gunpowder, or put to death in any conceii able way 

 hich their humility or ferocity could invent. This 

 UI givea slight idea of the horrors of death from 



jin oi' sleep. 



UUP of v 

 but cannot exhibit a 



bos the properties of the s 



rub the eyes, 



If the eyelids are glued together on wakin 

 do not forcibly open them, but apply the s 

 with the linger— it is the speediest dilueut i 

 world— then wash your eyes and face in i 

 water.— llall't Journal of Ihulth, 



The PhT8TCAl StsTSU.— No keenness or culture 

 of intellect (says a recent writer) that does not 

 embrace the culture of health— no wealth, 

 morality, uud not even a religion, that docs 

 embrace the preservation of the physical system 

 from all deterioration, and its cultivation t 

 highest perfection, will ever last long. No i 

 or people will ever preserve the weight of influence 

 to which they arc naturally entitled among others, 

 without manliness of development as the only 

 reliable foundation of manliness and reliability nl 



il good. 



A PLEA FOR DOGS. -No, U. 



A WouHDXn SprniT, who (what Dog) Oak bi 



The dug is proud of his relation tn man, and -ei 

 a mean act. He has a high sense nf the trust 

 honor coufided to him. The following incident 

 (for the veracity of which we do not vouch,) i; 

 proof in point. A geutlemun near Roston, owuec 

 a large New Foundland dug, — on a certain ocea 

 sion he brought home a fine cut nf fresh beef, am 

 hung it away in an adjoining apartment ready foi 

 use. Cailn, by some strange misconception n 

 facts in the ease, entertained the opinion tbot ln'i 

 master intended this choice morsel, lobe serve* 

 out from time to his faithful dog. With this [del 

 in his brain, (for his excellent character forbids 

 any other supposition,! he argued, that he would 





oul.l .1 



j the trouble to si 

 as steward in the 

 > the camp, und se: 



isoned, and who c 



mi wanted for immediate purposes he care- 

 fully stored away for future emergencies. Time, 

 eveuler of secrets, ami the exponent of errors, 

 brought down a storm of indignation upon 

 Carlo's head, and made him to see and feel 

 that he hod fallen into a grave dietetic error, and 

 that his opinions were unsound, and not quite safe 

 , a rule of action. 



His Master cuts Kxcitkii. — His master, in a fit 

 of passion, called him all manner of hard Domes, 

 scolded him unmercifully, aud bid him leave his 

 house and never enter it again. Poor Carlo I lie 

 ever experienced anything like it before, lie 

 not bear it. He could have endured a beat- 

 ing, but to he called hard names, and actually ex- 

 pelled from home — driven out upon the false 

 lies of a cold and sel lish world — disinherited 

 and banished from the place he had guarded aud 

 protected both night and day foi long, lung years— 

 U u>at to» mwA. It broke, his spirits completely 

 he felt himself dishonored— disgraced. The no- 

 ble animal could not brook the oll'ence couinuiled 

 ?1 his pre v inn ■« good name, and standing in 



could ho do? lie revolved the matter very care- 

 fully over and over, aud nt last came to the manly 

 'ouelusion I,., bike his ow n life. 



Carlo Commits Si ir.niE. -He pre!.. 

 ol death and the real ol the grave, to alifedinnon- 



Ond und disgraced, by chaises so el net and loiter. 

 He became gh.ou.v and sad, an. 1 indulged in habit, 

 elancholv. and Ins countenance « . the vcm 

 ambrotvpe Ofwoel About sunset, as the Western 



a of c 



„.i,. un- 



placed his neck on the mil, and i 



fe was extinct 

 The dog has - 



ige. He readily forgets an injury, or wronir 

 I, the dog that is abused 

 to-day, will allert mi. ally Ink the hand of his roaster 

 to-morrow. Ho will not harbor ill will ,n bis 

 breast. He scorns such depravity. 



In *n we have said, wo wish not to be under 

 stood to idtocu'. ■ I cross- 



breed and whelp ol which the world is already too 

 full. Thousands of such exist, whose bones ought 

 to whiten and fortilixe the corn fields of their silly 

 owners. Our pl ea is for the thorough-bred dog of 

 Ins kind - the Cultiv.wd-tbe educated, und none 

 other. For all such w e ask at the !. 

 owners generous treatment. 



Is what Tutv Supraa.— Good dogs nre too 

 much abused. They often suffer for wont of food 

 Often too, they Buffer from great irregularity in 

 their meals, and iu winter, they are greatly out- 

 raged by exposure to pinching cold and frost — 



Hogs areveryseu.il. vet,.. old. Il„, v , uo „ T 



is practiced upon them in the severest wtntrv 

 months. Not long since, I knew an unmerciful 

 man, turn his young dog at night into his barn to 

 sleep, when the thermometer at 5 u'clock, P", H. 

 stood 24* below zero, (at 'J o'clock, same dm. u 

 stood 33* below.) The poor dog complained bit- 

 terly, und howled occasionally all night, from the 

 biting effects of extreme cold. Tlio penitentiary, 

 would afford suitable and adequate punishment 

 for such a brutish master. 



Tens the Kitchen into a Kbs.vki..— The kitchen 



night, is none too good a place for n good, faith- 

 ful dog, in the coldest months. His acute ear will 

 detect the tread of any reckless villain, who may 

 he prowling around the premises, and the sharp 

 Miis voice, will put them to flight Some 

 ke delight it. nets of Cruelty - their tiemlk.h 

 s seem lobe in their appropriate element 

 when inflictino, cruelty on dumb animals. The 

 poor dog is too often the victim of tin. n pussmuulo 

 ■age, or their cool and calculating cruelty. We do 

 erily believe, that if the eternal salvation of such 

 neu were suspended upon their humane treatment 

 o their dogs, they would be forever excluded (TOO 

 leaven, and wail in eternal misery. Boys,aB you 

 lesire mercy, show mercy to the faithful dog — 



iidshipund kill 



i, shu 



us vou would the Siroe,.-,, - breath, the companion- 

 ship of those young men who treat domestic aui- 

 molswitfa tyranny. It is a moral certainly, that 

 they will make unkind, tyrannical Iiu-.Ii.mmI . 

 Spring Side, VL, Feh., ts.yi. g. b. R, 



BOB-0-LINK OR EICE BIRD. 



Tins 



the favorite of nil the 

 young folks on account of itscliecif.il music, pretty 

 plumage, and lively uud curious manners, makes 

 itsuppearunco in this part of the country wiih the 

 mild weather of spring. He is not then fully clad 

 in his summer dress, but improves in appearance 





, precede. 





furthest bo'eal residence about the begiuuing of 

 June. It is said that the linb-n-link is found as Tar 

 west as the base of the Rocky Mountains, but not 

 in Oregon. The West India Islands furnish afavor- 

 able winter abode for this bird. 



The ad, ovs and orchards here are usually made 



vocal hy their lively song about the find i I May, 

 They rh-lrnv many nisei Is. which would otherwise 

 trouble the farmer. The rearing of the young be- 

 ing their chief business, this doca not take place 

 until thev have crossed the 4uth degree of north 

 latitude. 



The mating season is one of great interest, cal- 

 ling forth the most incessant strains of music from 

 the various competitors perched upon the femes and 

 tree-tops, and sometimes like Hie lark, hovering on 

 the wing. The males continue their song during 

 the lonely days of ineubutiou and rearing of the 

 young, after which, they begin to lay aside their 

 pied dress and appear in a more hum hie guih '" 

 undergoing this change they lose their musical 

 powers. About the middle of August lliey collect 

 in flocks aud begin their migration to their South- 



A Cukah amd Good Babomstb*.— Atruthfldswd 



cheap BarouuUr, interesting and instructive to 

 youth, may be made by taking a clean gloss bottle, 

 aod putting in it a small quantity uf finely pulrer- 

 incdolum. Then till uj> the bottle with spirits of 

 wine. The alum will be perfectly dissolved by the 

 alcohol, uud iu clear weather the liquid will bo as 

 transparent as tbe purest water. On the approach 

 „f ram, or cloudyweather, the alum will be visible 

 in a flaky "pirnl cloud in the centre of the fluid, 

 reaching from the bottom to the surface. This is a 

 cheap, simple, ami beautiful barometer.— RoflEBT 

 S.ioi. ahuwrilU, N. >*,, lSu'J. 



■ ' ■ I '1 best help is in him- 



i H bis on n heart, Us own soul, ins o*» reso- 

 lute purpose. The buttle cannot be fought by 

 proxy. A man's may he aroused by another - bis 



desire In improve i ndi un.-e hini-.'M he ev/i'ed 



hy another; but he must mould his own stuff; 

 quarry his own nature, make bis own character 

 What if a man fail in one effort f bet hun try 

 again! Let him trj again — trj often, and he c 



tell 



m, i, I I 





- ; v a^ferf 



