Penman's Art Journal and Penman's Gazette . tthe newspapers of his own country wouldbe using thousands of forest trees daily tosatisfy the demands of millions of home affairs, the probable depletion ofour American forests should be kept in, and paper-making wood owght not How iH this, Brother Pclrevf An exchange says that when the citycoimcil of Keokuk proposed to buy cyclo-pedias for use in the public schools, onemember, an alderman, was opposed to it, ashe did not believe the scholars couldride the blamed things. A CcleNllal Cltv .%Uoat. At Canton, China, some 2.^0,000 peoplelive


Penman's Art Journal and Penman's Gazette . tthe newspapers of his own country wouldbe using thousands of forest trees daily tosatisfy the demands of millions of home affairs, the probable depletion ofour American forests should be kept in, and paper-making wood owght not How iH this, Brother Pclrevf An exchange says that when the citycoimcil of Keokuk proposed to buy cyclo-pedias for use in the public schools, onemember, an alderman, was opposed to it, ashe did not believe the scholars couldride the blamed things. A CcleNllal Cltv .%Uoat. At Canton, China, some 2.^0,000 peoplelive continuously upon boats, and manynever step foot on shore from one yearsend to another. The young children havea habit of continually falling overboard,and thus cause a great deal of trouble ineffecting a rescue, while in many instancesthis is impossible, and a child is is an over-populated counti7 andthe Chinese have profited by this drowningproclivity iu reducing the svuplus popula-tion. They attach floats to the male chil-. ensis gets her place and her salary from aiiKi/i who is wilUng to g^ve her the one andable to give her the other, and who hasthe privilege of choice in matters of between two girls, the one having cleanhands, white teeth and a sweet breath, andthe other being too busy looking after hersluggish liver to give proper attention tocleanliness, the na^ty man would bemost likely, other things being equal, totake the former; and then the latter mightnot get to be a girl amanuensis at was what Mr. Packard meant. Nefvspaper Trotu the Log;. In reading a daily newspaper, says theStationer, one can scarcely realize the in-gredients that enter ioto the compositionof the material on which it is general conclusion is, that a sheet ofpaper is made of rags, ground into pulp,ana then mixed with ingredients sufliricntto get the requisite quality and back in the forties such was thecase, and there are many printers an


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