It adopts a simple, direct, natural way of unfolding the subject, and
cannot fail to interest the children in all they see around them.
The "Story of Washington" is a little gem. The children would be
delighted to read it for themselves, and the illustrations are such that
children understand. It is beautifully bound for such a cheap little
book, and surely ought to find favor wherever it is carefully examined.
INVENTION AND DISCOVERY.
TYPEWRITER FOR BOOKS.--We have for years had typewriters that would
write on loose pages of paper, but the making of a perfect machine that
could write in bound volumes has not been successfully accomplished
until the present time.
A typewriting machine can write much more quickly than any penman--and
the work it does has the advantage of being easy to read, whereas very
few people write a clear and legible hand.
In office work much of the writing to be done is making entries in books
and copying into ledgers.
All this has had to be done by hand, and it has of course taken a much
longer time to do.
By means of this new invention books can be kept and entries copied with
the same neatness and speed of an ordinary typewriter.
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