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Show VOL. I. Heiser, 'Wasatch' 'CoaKTv UTAni;M).Ni)AY.' Jui.v 7.,- 1890. No 4. ' r, -- . , THE SIX i f WIDE-bPE- PRO-- s N i ,YZQlli. . , . - cutting down die- architects' figures when. presented, mutilating his benuti-- . :ful designs, .chopping off a tower here antLa gable there, altering this method of approach and That ' extension; with a view to save money. ll was not fifteen years since Henry Hobson Richardson, "one of the most brilliant architects of the century, exclaimed. dmeday, in desperation: ,T will hereafter draw no plains Tor private houses, but devote my entire work to buildings intended for public or business purposes. I will no longer : be treated like a salesman belli tub a counter, and be told to take clown this or thatpeiece of goods at the whim of some buyer'' Art that is hump-pere- d is worthless; it Ls no longer art. James Russell Lowell has called- rhyme in peotry yoop-othought .suggesting the impossibility of. dearness and ease of expression of the poet is compelled to, rhyme his sentence, but the artestor. architect is worse off than the poet if he is forced. to accomplish a definite purpose and be limited by a - FKSSIONS. TAKEN FROM HARPER S YOUNG . . . iii " -- . ' HAT shall,! do with my bov?- is" J one of the questions which ' most frequently asked. Nearly all pro fessioils and most lines. q business are, that the young so overcrowded "man who has, reached that point yvhere- stands "he' must choose his dazed and haltinir unless somebodves-emptshoes arc read y for his f e et. - t r , 1-- am ; to-da- y . life-wor- k 1 y , , , . . Possibly 1 may help with a few bits of advice, for their appear to me tube half a dozen professions which are calling and ringing tones for men to enter. These are architecture, railroading, electrical, engineering, politics, .the ministry, dry-goo- . - and secondary education. To the boy who possesses a patient and independent spirit; a taste for drawing, a correct Cye for proportions, and a space of original ty, the grand profession of the archirtect now present 'the most enviable opportunities in varied fields. It. is said that in 11850 there were .three men in New York city who were taxed for $ i.oco.ooo, In 1880 there were .five hundred and twenty persons worth the same or .a greater amount, and before the rbeginingof century there will be over one- - thousand of them. u The inference to be drawn from these striking facts will be clear with a moments consideration. .Until-withia few years a man proposing to .build a: house has aim edthelargest, - best and most structure with the expenditure the least possible amount of money. f -- want of proper means for its execution. Did you not ever stop to think at wh t ej cell in any ration's history is peculiar,.School of art springs up and begins to (lourifh? rod the-next- , nr .continued TO BOYS DROWNED CAMiiKUbliUkG. Pa., July. 6. Ira and Dolcr C jnnger, two soils of William Gan gerof Waynesboro, aged o and i y s respectively, were drowned today in ' Antietam creek while fishing. , , n ; ds con-venie- nt f I |