k I 1 VOLUJIE OXFOKl) V.'El)NESi)AY, EE15RUARY 23, 187G. NUMJ5Eli ■iEX'a'isA€TS rataii aw aeujsess iSEILaVElJKO BEI'OKi; 'B'JIE AMEKSCASf SSfS'l’S'l’CTE ©F SS- S'l’lJtJC’l’BOW, AT WOJSTSS. AW- AMiS, BIASS., MS" P. A. ESSAII- SOURSWE, EE. PSiESSiOEWT OF SVIEEIABiS COEEEGE, JIASS. It is supposed that education will prevent a waste of labor; that the educated workman in any productive employment will put his blows in the right place and strike them at the right time, so that his labor shall be more ef- iicient for the good of himself and the world than the ill-directed ef forts of the ignorant man. To make labor efficient, schools are established for the education of workmen in every industrial pur suit. It is plain, however, that the world, as a whole, is still far enough from making all labor as jM'oductive and effective for good as it ougl’.t to be. Through ig norance, carelessness, pride, and dishonesty, a large portion of the labor performed is wasted, in tliat it fails to produce the desired re sult or at least adds nothing to the rational enjoyment or progress of the race. Wo have to observe for a single day to find too abun dant illustrations of this subject. A hundred ignorant laborers, working under their own direc tion, or rather without direction, in any of the groat industrial pur suits of the ago, would starve if depending uuon the products of their own labor, while that same comjjanj', directed by an oi’gan- iziiig brain, ■would support them selves in comfort and leave a liandsome surplus for their em- ])loyer. Through the carelessness of servants, property is daily de stroyed ; througli the carelessness of owners and guardians of prop erty, ships are sunk, cities burned, and there is a constant, needless waste of property through rust and decay. All such loss is waste of labor. Pride wastes labor for show and dishonesty •rvastes labor on poor material or by so cheat ing in quality of work as to make good material of no account. So we might enumerate a list appall ing in magnitude, untill we should feel like joining the crusade to re duce the liours of labor, that men might learn not to waste it, if for no other purpose. If ten hours of labor are not sufficient to ena ble the able-bodied men and wo men to support tlie world, if we could stop the waste through ig norance, carelessness, pride, and dishonesty, eight hours would be better. After allowing for all needless misdirection and waste, we do not believe that we now get more than six efficient liours out of the ten during whioli men really do toil. It is safe to say that more than oue-third of the time and strength of all who la bor is spent in vain. Does this same waste appear in our own work, the work of edu cation, the object of which is to save all v,"ast6 1 In all honesty, ■we must say yes. Perhaps I might add, there is waste here from the same causes I have al ready mentioned: ignorance, care lessness, pride, and dishonesty. I might also add that there is waste oftentimes ftom the necessity of the case. It often happens, in ordinary work, that we have to labor at a disadvantage. The same is true in education. A. poi’tiou of this ivaste from all tliese causes is duo to failure on the iiart of the teacher, parti}" it is duo to the student, and partly to the parent or guardian. We can only point out the conditions of the waste, and the share be longing to each delinquent will readily appear. The first source of waste I mention is imperfect teaching. I do not so much refer to tlie defective knowledge imparted in the school room, although this is often pain fully apparent to those \vho at tend examinations, especially in the progressive natural sciences— I do not so much refei' to this as to the wretclied habits of study formed in some schools. There are schools without system, w'ith- out any standard of accurate scholarship, and without any en thusiasm ; for a genuine entlmsi- asm for study is impossible under any false system of instruction. The second point I make is the teaching of tmiiuportcmt things. Poor text-books come in hero for their share of blame. Small text-books, containing only those essentials of the subjects treated of, only tliose parts that have life in them, that cannot be elimina ted without leaving the subject imperfect, are rare It takes a brave man, and one merciless to wards himself, to make a small, simple, but thorough text-book. Such books we must have, if we use text-books at all. If one doubts tlie propriety of thus cut ting down text-books, let him take his best scholar after com pleting an ordinary Ijook and ask him to write out all ho knows on the subject. The bock be makes will be small; and, in general, the larger the text-boolc lie lias used, the snniller v/ill be the book which represents his own knowl edge of the subject. I have but two points more to make, and these relate especially to the teacher. There is failure to secure energetic work and the best results from lack of enthusi asm. Without this no teacher can have the best success, how ever learned and faithful and hard-working' he may be. En thusiasm is the heat that softens the iron, that every blow may tell. Euthusiasin on the part of the teacher gives life to the student and an impulse to every mental ])ower. It gives the work of tlie school-room a quickening impulse, and by this impulse makes the student a gatherer wherever he goes. It gives to the student in dependent power; power to go alone. When this is accomplished, there is no more waste in lifting, dragging, or driving. It was the enthusiasm of Linnauis that filled his lecture-room with students from all parts of Europe, and then sent them over tliff world to gather new treasures for them selves and their master. It was tlie enthusiasm of Agassiz that clothed the commonest things with new life and beauty; that char med every listener and trans formed the aged and the young, the ignorant and the learned, into joyful learners. Another man, with the same learning, the same devotion, and equal labor, niiglit not accomplish ono-tentli as much, because ho failed to enkindle that interest that quickens every men tal powei»and lights the fire of latent geniu.s, which, once enkin dled, reveals to its possessor truths far beyond tlie range of those wliose minds liai'e never been touched by this life-giving power of entbusiasm. It is said one loses this enthusiasm after a while. Then he ouglit to stop teaching. If he cannot grow eu- tluisiastic presenting the plainest rules of arithmetic and Latin for the fiftietli time to a new mind, then he is unfit for his work, and should spend his streuglh on stone or clay, which can only yield to force, but never take form at the mere glow of enthusi asm in the worker. But, last of all, there is a waste that brings loss and sorrow to tlie world. This is neglect of moral and religious instructiou in con nection with intellectual trainiirg. Who are the men who are caus ing humanity to blush by their dishonesty and corruption, pois oning the world at the same time that they are cheating it and as tounding it ? Wli}', men who are educated, but who despise the slow methods of honest gain and reject the old-fashioned morality of the Bible. There must be a searching for the foundations; and that instruction or that edu cation which does tiot make prom inent as well as betievo- lonco ; law as ivell as liberty; hon- esty as well as thrift, cxiA purity of life as well as enjoyment, should be stamped by every true educa tor as a v.’asto and a curse ; for so it will prove in tlie end.—Bureau of Education. T5ac Afric-aan Coast. The surf on the African coast says a letter writter, is ever a wonder and a danger. There is no coast in any part of the world which posseses less ports or har bors of refuge. You may travel a thousand miles almost without finding a cove or harbor wliere a ship could anclior quietly without being rocked by waves. Try along the whole of the grain, the Ivor}-, the gold and the slave coasts, and there is not one port. But fortunately for ships trading to those places, there is seldom a hurricane or a gale blowing, so that they are able to anchor.— There is never any dead calm, though the sea in the morning is stirred up into wavelets by by the breeze from oceanward. During the night it is moved by land breeze, so that ships anchor ing ill the roadstead are ever to be seen rolling uneasily; they are never at rest. Unceasingly the long line of waves are to be traced rolling onward to tlie shore, gathering strengtii as they advance nearer until, receiving the ebbing water flowing from the beach from preceding seas, there is a simultaneous coiling and rolling, and at once the long lino of water is precipitated with a furious roar on the land. Where the ivater meets a rock a tall tower of sprav and foam is sudenly reared, the wave lino is broken and is in mad confusion. Where the beach is smooth and of sand you may trace a straight unbroken line of foam, ncarlv a mile long.—iY. BIISFOKTFWES «)F tJIEE'.lT VEiATJOiVS. The ribbon loom is an inven tion of tlie sixtoeiitli century, and on the plea that it deprived many workmen of bread, was prohibited in Holland, in Germany, in the dominions of the Gliurcli, and in other countries of Europe. At Hamburg the Council ordered a loom to bo publicly burned. The stocking loom shared the fate of the ribbon loom. In England the patronage of Queen Elizabeth was requested for the invention, and it is said that the inventor was impeded rather than assisted in his undertaking. In France opposition to the stocking loom was of the most base and cruel kind. A Frenchman who had adopted the invention ma.nufiic- tured by the loom a pair of silk stockings for Lo^liIs XIV. They were presented to the French monarch. Tlie parties, however, who supplied hosiery to tiie court caused several of the loops of tlie stockings to be cut, and thus brought the stocking-loom into disrepute at headquarters. I’ablo forks appear so necessar}’ a part of the furniture of the din ner-table that one can scarcely believe that tlie tables of the six teenth century were destitute of them. They tvere not, however, introduced until the commence ment of tlie seventeenth century, and then were ridiculed as super- flous and effeminate, while the person who introduced them to England was called Furcifer. They were invented in Italy, and brought thence to England ; nap kins being used in that century b}" the polite and fingers by the multitude. The saw mill was brought into England from Holland in 1663 ; but its introduction so displeased the English that the enterprise was abandoned. A second at tempt was then made at Lime- house, and the mill was erected, but soon after its erection it was pulled down by a mob. Pottery is glazed by throwing common salt into the oven at a certain stage of the baking. This mode of baking was introduced into England in 1690 by two brothers, who went to Staffbrd- sliire from Xuremberg. Their success and their secrecy so en raged their neighbors that perse cution arose against tliem, and became so strong that they were compelled to give up their works. Tlie pendulum was invented by Galileo ; but so late as the end of tlie seventeenth century, when Hooke brought it forward as a standard of measure, it was ridiculed, and passed by the nick name of “Svving-Swaiig.”—JSf. C. Breshgterian. ElVCO’CSSAbEMEAT F®K BOATS. It is said of James Watt, the inventor of the steam-engine, that when a boy be seemed idle and mischievous, and was often re proved for it. When taking off' the lid of the kettle and putting it on again, and holding a cup or silver spoon over the steam, he was told by his aunt to take a book or to employ himself more usefully, though liis mind was then busy ivitli the greatest prob lem of tlie age. If boys show a calculating or inventive genius they should he encouraged to de velop it, oven tliougli it take time from books. The father of Eli Whitney, on his return from a journey, in quired as usual into the occupa tions of his sons during iiis ab sence. He received a good ac count of all except I'lli, who it was said bad been busy making a fiddle. “Alas,” said tlie father, with an ominous shake of his liead, “I fear that Eli will have to take his portion out in fiddles.” IIow little aware was the father tliat his boy’s occupation was the dawning forth of an inventive genius to be ranged amongst tlio most effective and useful in tlio world. It is related of Chantry, the celebrated sculptor, that when a boy, he was observed by a gen tleman very attentively engaged ill cutting a stick with a pen knife. Ho asked the lad what he was doing, and with great sim- plicit}" but courtesy, be replied, “I am cutting old Fox’s head.” Fox was the school-master of the village. On this the gentleman asked to see what he liad done, aid pronouncing it excellent, presented the youth with a six pence. Let parents study the disposi tions of tlieir cliildreii, learn the “bent of their genius,” and then • enoou-age them in all proper ways to develop themselves. We should never “despise the day of small things.”—Otis. ■WWMMJIiS ix “ The proper study of mankind is man,” said Pope, and we are so “ fearfully and wonderfully made” tliat the study of tlie body alone is no very easy lesson, to say nothing of the soul. Siqiposing your age to be fif teen, or thereabouts : Y”ou have 200 bones and 600 muscles; your blood weighs 25 pounds ; your heart is five inches in length and three inches in di ameter ; it beats seventy times per minute, 4,200 times per hour, 100,800 times per day, and 36,- 792,000 times per year. At each beat a little over two ounces of blood is thrown out of it; and each day it receives and dis charges about seven tons of that wonderful fluid. Your lungs will contain a gal lon of air, and you inhale 24,000 gallons per day. The aggregate surface of the air-cells of your lungs, supposing them to be spread out, exceeds 20,000 square inches. Tlie weight of your brain is tliree pounds ; when you are a man it will weigh about eight ounces more. Y'our nerves exceed 10,000,000. in number. Your skin is composeij of three layers, and varies from Qne-fourth to one-ei^ith of an inch in thick ness. liie area ofj your skin is about 1,700 in'ches. Each square inch'contains about 2,600 sweiit- ing tubes or perspiratory pores, each of wlikd' may be likened to a little drain-tile one-lourtb of an inch long, making an aggregate length ir. the entire siiri'aco of }'our body of 88,541 feet, or a tile, ditch for draining the body almost seventeen nfilcs long.— Science of Jlealth. BS