A recent numberof the Cornhill Magazine, of London, contains the following interesting description of this class: As New York is the largest city in America, we naturally find more of this class there than anywhere else.
A recent number of a city journal, contained the following account of the system of bringing up and adopting out illegitimate children in New York.
We will cite a few facts by way of illustration: A recent number of "The Christian Era" states that there has been twenty-two thousand more deserters from the Baptist Church than conversions to it within the brief period of five years.
According to a recent number of the London Graphic, there is in Berlin a Singhalese who baffles all investigations by physicians by the impenetrability of his skin.
In a beautiful eulogy of Helen Keller in a recent number of Harper's Magazine, Charles Dudley Warner expresses the opinion that she is the purest-minded girl of her age in the world.
These are exactly like those of the Norwich dwarf and of the skeleton in the Heidelberg Museum which I described in a recent number of the 'Archives.
According to a recent number of La Liberte, a young woman of Pennsylvania, although only sixteen years old, weighs 450 pounds.
In a recent number of The Nineteenth Century, Sir William W.
The farther details of the transaction are given in a thoughtful and calm article in a recent number of The Independent by Rev.
This French child-woman is quite left in the shade by one described in a recent number of a western medical journal, who from her birth had regular monthly changes, and the full physical development which marks the perfect woman!
Hammond of New York mentions, in a recent number of the Journal of Psychological Medicine, several instances, from his own practice, of affections in the child caused by the mother's milk.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "recent number" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.