Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 30, 1894, Page 16

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1894. ‘The Greatest Stove on Earth @ Somronts \\"'{ 2 HOLDS FIRE 48 HOURS WITH SOFT COAL, 31-00, worth $2,00. 4 . [ ; 980- worth ¢% so. PORTIERES lees { THE ESTA E OAK X BED LOUNCES 3290; worth $6. 50. G I RN RSCRA : g $6.98, worth §12. 50 PICTURES And the Official Test. €INCLE LOUNCES 7“.4‘5, worth $3.50. X B R BB ke v 23 ; 33.90, worth §7.50. | ) L0 I f h " H ing Stoves. to de- FOLDING BEDS C . forimine, FTICET, how 1ong the stove would hotd (r; SECOND: 3 pelhi STEEL RANGES ~ how the several parts of the stove would act wider a ; $14.50, worth $25.00 a1 HOK el (s Bt ven Feuaitadly UL (Hey wereeNOEAIL e 1 $24.50. worth $45.00 i bA / over, 1 hoated them to the highost passible tomperature aAna ¥ g J cooled them off as rapldly as possible Under those most Z sove sts the expansion and contr fon did not affect the * 3 EXTENSION TABLES A ; Biajes n the least gurticaia 3 : - CENTER TABLES / 7 S 7 Il i The -[\(;L|‘r 5(\‘!?14}‘07\; Ix: l;:'IEuI fllnm' :7’1' l[Y"f‘ lhlfl-flll‘v‘_v \v.nlr-"- R W 98 /) A ouse, with about fifty fect of flue length, including stovepipn, — g o8 : 35-651 worth 812.50 e giving oxcellont dratght s ! £ 3 Cy worth g2, 50, il A e Lichirzod ono of theri with one and one-half small buck: ot ) )/ etfuls of conl stack on Tuesday evening, June 80th, 1891, ut 5 S i § ) 4 Bo'clock. When the fite was making large sheets of flime P fe7t PARLOR S ! SIDEBOARDS i 2/ () 7 7 the serew rogistors In the ush-pit were closed, the poker-hole i b uirs nm /4 f reglster in the foad-door was closad, and the' check rogister R 3“185, worth $20.00 VO I s e 5 ) in'the pipe collar was opened and all remalned 8 to the end ey ,‘317,50' worth $40.c0 of the test. 5o o e e e S S S S & S & o * * & > & 1 /) o X ‘I'|||(|llllm ffl|]nWIH'.:lTIHlmrln)' llfY.l‘rnmrllI‘l.l 4 ;)'l'l():'l( t 1 i / / ody of (he stove coutinued Lo he 8o warm that 4 hand cow 7 % LAMPS i i / ) ! 1ot tomfortably be liid upon 1t After thit time it began to ) e ? CHAMBER SUITS / r // cooloff. The lfve conls from the original charges o lack LT 95¢ b 4 ; ) / above referred to were visible until 10 o'clock wud 15 mine 2 5 #11 75 . 9 worth §2 50. “} TU E AW utes of the evening of that diy. ) YRS : ; P1reddy worth g20.00 A P It will therefore bo scen that this stove actually he'd fire 7 i / ¢ 3 B/ continuously for fifty-three hours and fiftsen minutes. This > e INCRAIN CARPETS i Pl e fs an extraordinury record,and one of which you can well be iy TP ) ROCKERS J: oud. Kespectfully submitted, 24 / 7 //" 8 / bt eapectiully SUONCONEAD BRUNE, Sup't. 950 C, worth 50C. 2 oty - 5 ) ; s worth ¢2.co. & and economy of fuel 25 per ¢ g ed. - AL 3 oy The 1804 improvements on s fire koeplag ;ZAQ;E)“ “?“s ] SOLE AGENTS FO? DHAUA, e WINDOW SHADES . y worth ¢8.50. : RN 4 (=] DA N R = 18¢, worth Lot e m—————————— BRUSSELS CARPETS PILLOWS OIL HEATERS BASE BURNERS BLANKETS » D ——> w 47¢, worth 9Jc. 38c, worth 75¢. $4.85 worth $8.50, $11.95 worth $2).00. 98¢, worth $225 EASY TERMS, c [ $0.00 worth of goods, 4 ; EASY TERMS. $1.00 week, §$1.00 per month. & 1 ¥ $10.00 worth of goods, $25.00 worth of goods, 4 ; £ A $1.00 week or $4.00 per month. $1.50 week, or $6.00 per month 4 A $25.00 worth of good: $60.00 worth of goods K 4 ’ 4 $1.50 week or $6.00 per month, $2.00 week, or $5.00 per month ; Ty $50.00 worth of goods 75.00 worth of goods ¥ g ~ y ¥ < ; ¢ b < e $2.00 week or. $5.00 per month. $2.50. week or $10.00 per month ' \ a g $75.00 worth of goods $100 worth of goods, P B s - 60 week of 0.00 per month. $3.00 week 0r$12.00 per month FORMERLY PEOPLE'S ; 4100 worth of e ‘_ e $200 worth of goods, 3 s o X ek or $12.00 per month, Send 10 cents to cover postage oa big '94 catalogue { $200 worth of goods k or $16.00 per month, AR ARSI SDF VSRSV LRIRE IS .. Q ites that are afforded them, and the Russian | from the director was then received asking | stitutin | n' THE YOUNGSTERS. ) ol g the name of Turgeni that ! D] K} flel ctiv.ty i volu- ow Jonet Y ondel e sk . N() EDUCA”ON IN RUSS]A newspapers ‘are constanily” fiiod el mon | oAt hou h i e Jecelved asking | stituting the name of Turgenict for that of | more dangorous field of actlvity (o the evolu- | krow Jones. Ivs a wonder he didi't a Gl Finally, tionists and liberals who are strivin to | her for a couple of hundred on account. ko ad plaints of inadequate accommodation in the | school, what would be taught in it, how | in 1561, on the fif it | ) ¥ g 3 A 3 e fifticth anniv £ the | overcome the paralys enc u- ¢ g 79 e Kalle Lottle—I wouldn't be a brunette like Sriie existing schools for all the children that pre- | many teachers would be employed, and how | distinguished Ru: Doet S RRE| ettt st Tusncotot heean Henry Siry, 17 years old, and Kate'Kalleo, || Letieh wotts s I d e a Lermontof, th: | cratic authority, and encourage the peasants ore marricd by tice Dottie (who has an elder sister)—Pooh! I sent themselves. The Zhitomir correspond.nt | many children would attend i counci e o o 0 5 v rs old, were marricd by a justice in i ’ The Government Has Euppr.ssed Free | of the Kiev newspaper, the Word, for ex: y attend. Replies to all ncil made a last attempt to honor litera- | to make a determined nd for their in- | Elzabethport, N. on Tuesday, with the | wouldn't be a_blonde like , ‘cause you these questions were promptly forwarded, | ture and dignify popular instruction by | dividual and e : oul . otte, ci 4 ¥ ok L X , | tur y 2 struction by | dividual and eoclal rights, it not for their | ing of th ctive parents, respect- | couldn’t be a brunette, but I can be a blonds JHGES i, Sohosle w1 Resding Gircles, ple, reports that ths schools of that town | and, In September, after some further cor- | asking permission to found a school which | politieal froedom. Only wpon this suppost | A0 thriving residents o Ellzabeth, | any time I want to! are mot large enough to hold one quarter of | respondence, the district d : should be kno v e vy X ) district director wrote to 0 © known as the “‘Lermontof school”; | tion is it possible to explain the unusual | N, J. Mamma—What did vou s % P Ine ,“n’f»‘&“’fi“m‘“"",‘.,,‘}é’:‘u’:} I‘L)m wlunm; them. | the patron of the proposed school that per- [ but a third time it met with a rebuff. | and extraordinary restrictions which it “J, and Mrs. Isaac Bell of w York \\va"l'l‘-’lh/lw:‘l 'uh“ ”, \wr:‘;’n'ilor;: 3’3?3 DARK SUPERSTITION AND IGNORANCE | from- the doogs ‘of the Moty aned away | mission fon it establishment would be | After citing from an official report of the | throws about private entcrprise in the feld | celebratod thelr golien wedding on 1 Willie—Why, that she didn't cut her pie I8 A Eromytie: doges toedtie A‘Il;\vn‘):‘lei(;n04ls|:i .:‘ul:;i :_(n:inlul 1lr the local authorities of the town friur(nnmrl toyn ‘mmtfl the facts above set | of popular education, and the apparent re- | Mr. pell in 18 sears old and. t | nalt as big pleces randma. T 5 cheols, | had no objection. Upon this the school was | forth the St. Petcrsburg Journgl Russkaya | luctance with which it permi he est: r. 15 3 NG ARL e add because there was no room for them. Zhiz ¥ ; iz REITLSELT S Sok grea ce and popularit 5 Mamma—What was the serm bo . 4 em. ed, but on the 28th of September | Zhizn remarks significantly that no official | lishment of primary schoc SIS gufly 4 2 4 AL AR the NecmBIie In Kazan, at the begi r sent edu- | anot R sEIhe o 3 % f by non Prima ols: and e late Isaae D r I e orning, ? e—We G054 k enoan Describes the Mliteracy of | [,ICAMN, at ihe beginnin \E)‘r'!'”llli\l?ll{‘ nt edu: another communication was rocelved from :I’I‘VJ(‘I;HI;‘"'\hl.\”||ml<)hv when - certain street | ibraries by the reprezentatives of the peogle | e o el L D (sl (WL T b el (R year, 5,8 the director saying that on account of the ostof-on-the-Don, which is filled with | in the cantonal and provincial assembl U % piiss cadatieliil the Empire—ehind All Other Natio admission to the public shchools, of which b 3 N L assambile land did the minister say about them? missio ) b 2 i ch | opposition of the local authoritles the school | houses of ill-fame, was called “Turgeniet | POPULAR EDUCATION DISCOURAC i 1Ay 3 Bk R Mothads of the Fifteenth Century— 1336 avere denied for want of room. In St | must b closed. On the Sth of Octobor the | et and no oficial encouragement has | st R 0 L gl D Lo e e Eele All An Array of Er for 360 vacant places in (!flflblzgr‘xl\l»‘rl"::;,‘(‘,z;'; ‘f_vmll authorities notified Mr. C—, and ‘IT:‘E"SD"‘(‘;":‘j“"'l'u“m:\'r“ ‘m;“\ that have been | recognized the importence of iR e e S U S T gl B A L will 1 while In Cronstadt there were school ac. | |roic. the director that they had no ob me changed tion, but feit financially unable itself to do | editor of the latter city and accepted his U - v s 23 = . : » o | editor of the latter ¢ a d hig ncle George—Are you learn commodations for only 700 out of the more | LtioR Whatever to the school, but it was | In the cases above set forth the objection | &l that should be done for its promotion, it | proposal of marriage, Which was performed | senool? Littie Noepnew. Yoo s "'l’)‘,"‘"l,": )¢ of no avail. On the 26th of October, si f th e id W B s et o 4 $HED 81000 L OhiIoEeat Spaa £ of n the 26th of October, six | of the government to the opening of the | Would gladly ome and courage | when they rode back from the funeral. It | Jearnin' to . s F 7 be mssigned | B0 B0 ionadren of school age. It this | months after the beginning of the negotl- | schools and the reading room was based | the establishment . of - sc the | tak s an cxpert to blue-pencil a courtship loarnin "o ait il ant nobuCu NN for the unsatisfactory economic condition iings prevails In the cities of the | ations, a peremptory order w ived | primaril b i foundling of v S Bacrttars, d make any nolse, an gt up an' sit dowiy /AR o A R R SR 3 P ptory order was received | primarily, perhaps, on the names that the | foundiing — of village 1iby cretary and Mrs. Carlisle are going to | march, an' lots of things ¢ the Russian peasant farmer the Mrst | ry Tn the provinee of Kostroma thees js | IO the director to close the achool. The | founders proposed to give them, but efforts | the £iving of popular lectures or readi have a wedding in their house this fall e ! e lace must be given, I think, to over regu- | only one school to every 126 square miles of school was closed, and the public spirited | to establish schools without attaching ob- | bY private individuals at their own Miss Mattie Thompsen, daughter of Coloncl | o e l' Juck, us he gazed at his 10 ation, restraint and Interference on the | aren. In the province of Kursk there are | chcial Mr — Who had planned and | jectionable names to them had been no more | bt such is not at all the csse in Russia. | Phil Thompson of Kentucky, is the han 2 | That 1 wowd do M1 g Akt et X6 of the Bovernment Newt i that 1n | 1040 schools for 6107 pearme iiiere AIC | organized It, was warned by his own superior | Successful. In December, 1893, a number of | The central government, instead of .inviting | bride-clect, and Mr. Will Xing?" “No, Jnck. Whatt " “Id ihereae AiE ono school, on an average. for sters eigh | L1t the establishment of free public schools | public spirited ~citizens in ' the Russian | and encouraging the co-oporation of private | Washington and now of Y st | Xing 9, Jack, ‘\hatg I'd increase int of Importance I should place the lack | 6, 2R00 et :)fl\';ztklu was not one.of his duties and was not, more- | Provinelal town of Chernigof undertook to | Individuals and local societies In the Louis, is the happy ma Miss Thompson | MY allowance to a quarter a wesk,” . 9 popular education. The Russian peasant | there fs only one xu:lmolllur every thirty- | onine “consistent with the dignity of a | establish in that place a secular Sunday ar enlightenment, virtually is a great favorite in the Carlisle home circle Fond Parent- Goodness, how you look, rmers, as @ class, are the most illiterate | eight settlements. It Is estimated by the | S inovnik school for poor working girls. The necessary | and discourages all such offers of aud lias been frequently its guest. onila. - Yaul kye fniliady ankle =Bl People in Europe. The reports of the Rus- | best authorities that, taking the Russlan | pavt iy’ o RUssian newspapers for the | weans were obiaimed, competent teachers A GG T N | SHows maty, etk ot (85t marsiage oti| PRl B ML A Py Z:n ministry of war show that in the ten | €MPIre as a whole, educational facilities are past ten years cases of this kind—or cases | °f unquestioned ‘“political trustworthines stablishment of a village library with such | Associate Justice White of the supreme [ ¥OUr new trousers on? T didn’t have the dave One would suppose that I wan, till my mi ; ucatona differing from this only in unimportant de- | Were engaged, and application was made to | & Detwork of bureaucratic red he form | court is the problem which his Washington | time. pa, to take ‘em of. » ear period from 1874 to 1884, 77 per cent of '\U;;‘:é:](‘arl:fl‘l';l)llvfl;:u fortieth part of the | tajls— might be quoted by the hundred, but | the ministry 'of public Instruction for per- | of official restrictions and conditions that | }.“rnj’n:.‘: siw into the secret are jus tm“ Fond Mother—-Yes, sir; I have a littls 8 young men drated into the army at the atde i R I have space, of course, only for a few | Wisslon to open the school. No attention | Private individuals and local societies often | discussing. Mrs. Linden Kent, the bride- | fellow who is only 10, and yet he writ @ge of 20 were unable either to| “WHERE THE RESPONSIBILITY RESTS. | typleal illustrations was pald to the petition. Tn 1803, and the | abandon their educational projects in despair. | to-be, and Miss Susie White, his sister, have | beautiful poetry. Old Editor—Well, there's Sead or write. In the province | The responsibility for this state of things Yln melkwmtl*r gfllxxn the town council of ::;éi:rwl'g’lfl?ln l:gr‘lil::n:"m{l tl".“mn‘ts were || Ak-008 well }:I'I',“;lr;l"Y";:‘Il‘f'l"{m'l‘ A r"|~! Rus- | peen ‘spending the summer quictly at one of | some hope for (hem when you catch ‘em ot Kiarkor | the broporten ey | rests mainly upon the central government, | Yenneselk proposed to have, for the bene. | Made to open a secular Sunday school in the | Sian re N aving h:d such an ex- | (o Virginia springs, from which resort Jus- | YOUNE, You can whip It out of ‘em easier 0 prop Tho well known Russian reactionist, Prinee | At 0f the common people, a course of free | ! Saorehe hutawith ueven less suc v a 8 easier to get permission to | {jce White returned to town the other day | then. fltrate recruits reached 85 per cent, In | Meshcherski sald recently in the Grashda. | POPUIAr lectures, or readings, and the well | |RASTIUED a8 the persons successively in- | Oben twenty rum shops than one school. for the ostensible purpose of selecting hi Proud Father (to friend)—This (s my the province of Kiev 86 per cent, and in the ""'": “It is incomparably more important 'GL‘:‘"RO,?""“;"’". l‘nlllllu‘nnn'n :)!rlkufi h:\'hn oir,fpfillllr"“‘::”:,"\l‘“:jr”f;‘"lw”m}fl::l::xl:flmx A MAN OF THE FIFTEENTH C JRY. | future home in this city. youngest boy. Frank, this is Mr. Jacksons t oeaRATILN R e so much to promote en| en- v Stwo 5t 5 as N e e 4 > la cd Burope: vhor e | Frank (brightly)—Is th 3 v Province of Kazan 97 per cent. But these that the_ pens s ahaulabbelayblegt o ithe, | R TS L B bought” and. gave to. the | they showed a disposition to promote the pub- | _ Whalever view may be taken of the cases | Th® last titled Buropean sehomicthe Branc (b ahiiy =118 that the man who figures do not give an adequate idea of the | JE SN Prcent guardianship of the | counuy sy expensive stercopticon and 200 | lle Welfare at their own expense, and were | APOVE set forth, It cannot, I think, b con- | hame of Miss Gould has been Hked by the | PO 7 ¥ iad more B dlliteracy of the population as a whole, for | ted: and this is the vicw that ne:.se:l.,"f& slides, In order that the proposed readings {1"!‘"9"“‘ one after another, into an aban- ;i;dp‘d,, l."n: s ?;"i‘;‘fi A yer Ardans Setni Count e Talleyrand Perigord. George Uncle Joo—Well, Rob, what havo yoi g’ reason that they do not include women. | taken by the government. No serious at- | MIght be illustrated. The project, however, | d0nment of their project. fuat ‘its people should be- edicaied, sither | A1d Howard Gould have denicd. how 1earned at school today; anything new? ey relate only o the flower of young | tempt Is belng made, and no serious attempt | WA® disapproved by the government, permis- | In November, 1833 Mr. M. B. D, | a'lis own eapense or the expmnin of o BT | his “news” by cable, and wcll they might, | Rob—Yep: how (o fix crooked ping in & Russlan manhood, and therefore show. the | e¥eT has been made by the czar or min- | 5100 {0 give the readings was denied, and [& prominent’ cifizen of Izhevsk. | Meanwhile the Rusoian pesibet je. for this particular scion of a truffled house is | cl.air so they'll sta £ stry of publlc Instruction to provide the | the stereopticon and slides were stored away | Province of Viatka, petitioned tho | peapeets. mean o e hinl e 0 somewhat weak-minded and not at all an Sunday School T lterary status of the class whose educa- | S OF UM inatruction to provide the | o (GICRITN Cless. government for leave to open in that pl Ho is & bellever in sorcery and. witenerniy; | cligible match for any cne, The Talleyrand- MRy Sehag tonal facllities have boen best. The great | educational facilities, even in their most | In 1882 a number of prominent gentlemen | & frée public library, for which the nccessary | ho murders in cold biood wretehed od | PETigords have been In a lot of nasty finan- mass of the population stands on a much lower | elementary form. The best measure of a | In the city of Kiev, Including the former as- | Means had already been contributed. In | women whom he regards as embodiments | Clal Scandals recently and a Freneh girl evel. From statistics compiled by the | government's desire to do a certain thing | sistant curator of the educational district | February, 1894, his petition was formally | op eholera ana plag #ihnsstonakille| ROUI Gauseibatore Alip swoyld ‘eiakezbton! 4 emstvos, or provincial assemblies of twenty | js the amount of money that it is willing to | and one of the professors in the local uni- | denied upon the ground that Izhevek was @ | phyeicians who try to' save him. the fate) | Mateh R rovinces in European Russia, between 1 spend in doing it, and judged by this stand- | versity, asked permission to establish in | V}lage. and there was no provision of law | ooniequences of his own sanitary meglect; | A Washington correspondent of the Cin- | ¢ ¢, v Etholr Ether il ek nd 1890, It appears that 91 per cent of teh | ard, the desire of the Russlan government | Klev, without expense to the government, a [ o 8Uthorize the establishment - of public | 1o buys pieces of the Savior's cradle and | citnati Enquirer revives the story that Miss | | ohildren, | mamma Mot hole population were flliterate, and that the | to educate its people s so weak as to be | number of popular schools to bear the name | !iPraries except in towns. The reason as- | hottled Egyptian darkness from wan. | Catherine Drexel, a daughter of the Phila you. nover have ohiiarent EiRe roportion of illiterate women reached 95 | hardly worth taking into account. In 188 | of the famous little Russian poet | SIETed by the government for its action | gering pilgrim peddicrs who pretend | delphia branch of the wealthy Drexel | mih A0 i Qb F cent. In other words there were only | the gentral government drew from its people | Shevchenko. Permission was denied. About | 148 OBVIOUSly a mere prefext, inasmuch ¢ | (o “have traveled in the Holy land, | family, I about to retira from the Catholic nety men In a thousand, and only twenty | 1o the form of direct and Indirect taxes | the sarhe time an inspector of public schools [ (*REVSI AUBONER Bominally a village, b and he no more conception | &isterhood which she founded. Coupled with omen in & thousand who could elther read | about $403,000,000. It returned to them In | in the Kiev district forwarded to the min- | § POPUIation of 40.000, and was fust as much | o¢'the achievements of modern science, even | the story is a rumor that she will wed the EDUCATIONAL or write In eight provinces out of the | the shape of facilities for elementary in- | istry of public instruction a petition from | g feS9 of & 1brary as it it had been | jn the field of material progress, than if he | husband of th ased Sister Blizaboth s jwenty the illiterate men numbered 950 per | struction a little less than $2,000,000 (3,902, | the peasants of Kirilofka—the home of y i, PN were an inhabitant of Matabeleland or the | A similar stor current @ short time och Pratt, a venerable citizen of Baltls ousand, and in twelve provinces the muin- | 575 rubles), or one two-hundredths part of | Shevehenko during a large part of his life— | RUSSIA AT THE FOOT OF THE LIST. | Soudan. He Is not stupid—he is not a | @80 and was pronounced without a shadow | more, signalizes his $gih year by spénding r of fliterate women exceeded 090 per | the annual budget. 1t this sum bad begp | bking permission to open a village 8chool | 1¢ wh compare the per capita allowance for | Mere senseless clod. He on the con- | of truth by the Philadelphia Ledger, which | $1,300,000 on a public library for the ey, jousand. In one-fifth of the villages 1in | gistpibuted among the people upon a pbr | (o t ead ffoet’s honor, and 18 give it his émentary instruction in Russia with the | LTary. man of warm feelings, vivid imag- | 18 good authority on Drexel family matters. Mrs, Stanford has pald off the last of th @ province of Tambof there was mnot a .m(r Bagis [t would Wyve given tg cych | arg. Permigsion wap Qenisd, and the 1. | @Wr caplta allowance for the same object in | atlon and great innate inellectual ca- | Princo Ispnberg-Bernsteln, that second | gepyg ‘of thé Stanford estate. As soon as ingle peasant who could read or write, of OH n f6f educational purposes thfée a spetér who forwarads the petition w ther countries, we. shall find that Russia not | PAcity; but so far as education and knowl- | cousin of The Austrian emperor, Francis | qigiribution of the estate is ordered she will ither X, and in the district of Dmitrof, | §a¥p-tenths kopeks, 6f about one and foyp- nfiag temoved from his place. hly stands at the faot of the llat, but thar | 8dE® of the world are cobcerned, it may be | Joseph, who flourished for some weeks In | pegin operations iu a new fleld. Then, undi vince of Orgl, there were only twenty- | fnhd cents. In 1504, ten years later, :‘;, In Auffust, 1893, a little group of Intelll- | she fs disgr.cefully behind even such coun- | 4oubted whether he is any more advanced | Chicago, and afterwards made a long stay | her personal supervision, the erection rfi mey Who could read and write in a An(ra{\ overnment had intreased its eX- | gent people i the town of Orel planped an | tries as Spain, Italy and Japan. See, for ex- | than his ancestors were in the ‘“good old | in New York, bad to go home without ac- | nearly $500,000 worth of new bulldingh a pu ‘lgl«:'x;n z:. T B Lk peu toor lm;’lfirlmnr)‘ sehools (6 §2366,000, | gVeqng's entertainment 1o the form n{b- ample, the following table which I have taken | 4aYs" of Ivan the Terrible. It Is unreason- | complishing the objects of his visit—the TATISTIOS I} R CASE. ,133,000 rubles), gui her—You want to go te leaven, don't you, Flossle? Little Ofrl (from the tenth floor flat of the Uppertem 1ent house)— Are there—are there any ors there | the early extension of the university to th 1 but inasmuch as the | llo Pegdings from the works of the dis- | from an excellent series of articles entitled | @18 to suppose that, In the storm and str capture of an American heiress. He times its present magnitude will be begun, It Rusela be compared with us r gnwman hat ingreased In the meantime | {n ed novelist Ivan Turgenlef. They | “A Fateful Question,” recently published in | Of the flerce struggle for existence which is | gent over here by a Vienna matri . The gift of Dr. Simeon B. Bgll of Kansas uropean countries upon the basis ot 1l{ft- y 18,000,000, this larger sum, if distributeds| proposed to call this entertainthent a | the St. Peiersburg newspaper, Russkaya | "OW 8oing on throughout the world, | bureau, which expended $200,000 on City, Kan,, of land in the Kansas metropolis acy, as shown In the returns of the ; among the pedple, would have glven to | “Turgenif Evening'" to make a suitable | Zhizn: such a man can possibly lold his own | with the expectation of large returns wlen | vajied at’ §100,000 to the State univers uiting officers, it will be seen that, in point | each pergon, for educational purposes, an eh.r:e for_admission, and to devote the gto- Annual against the sharp, intelligent competition of | the marriage came off. His name Wwas | of Lawrence, enables that worthy institul education, she occuples the very last | even smaller allowance than that provided | ceeds to thé estabiishment of a free public M I R LT trained, enlightened, energetic and self- | coupled with that of a daughter of George | tg 4t once found a medical school and entes lace In the list. The figures, given by ro{flm the budget of 1884 feading room which should bear Turgenief's Slomantary rvelmnl worker of western Europe or the | A, Pullman. more fully into university work. of. Yanzhul, are as follows: i 1681 the total expenditures of the cen- | name. The project met with dificulties from | Countries. instruction United States. 1t his economic condition Is | “iryo gietoh gives a pleture of a curious | Fenry Wade Rogers, who has bien presis Iiiterate Recruits | tral government for all objects amounted | the very first. The curator of the educa- | United States e o sLes lnn"-‘lufu"!vcw o his official “guardians,” | y,qqing ceremony which has been celebrated | gent of the Northwestern university & ver e (j $3.87 per capita of the population, of | tional district, to whom the program of the | Fngland. eotland, famony o o s kB "'"“‘”"f"‘.‘““l’; he 1s lgnorant and op- | 4 Christ church, under the auspices of the | Gyanston, 1L, was dean of the Miehigan <o 88 | @hich ane-halt of 1 per cent went for the | entertainment was submitted, disapproved of | yitlinc: Tiiviiie and ihe Noteriands o6 to 39 | ressed: - e Is like a handicapped runner | N\ 'Zeqland Dress Reform assoclation. The | university law school for elght years, and s support of primary echools. In 1§94 the | the selections made from Turgenief's works, | Hungary, Sweden, Norway and France 32 to .63 [ 10 & free-for-all race who starts behind the | e “Migs Kate Walker, and tife bridegroom, | studjed his profession in the office of Judge total expenditures were $4.57 per calta, of | and would not allow them to be read, and | Lial¥ S 7 45 | last of his competitors, and who must run | ypy R, Wilkinson, had already joined | Tuofas M. Cootey, which only forty-four-hundredths of 1| the minister of public Instruction forbade [ SRR~ iriryy yreee 18} | a8 best he can with a yoke around his neck | hynas by publishing a_pamphlet on “Dress | * puy Lijite J. Martin, vice-principal of & ar cent. were devoted to primary schools. | the use of Turgenief's name. and refused | & %1 | 8nd & bandage over his " ussn (from the central government) s Reform and What It Implies”” The enter- PP P T Frant(s g other words the central governmeht de- | to authorize the proposed regdings. Russia (trom all sources tncluding the o R . | prising bride, iike Strephion in ‘“Patience,” | SIri¥ hif oo, ‘AN | h resigned her place to enter Gottingen univems' | voted to elementary instruction in 1884 50 [* R LITERATURE AND AUTHORS. central goverament). . e, was divided into two parts, as it were, the _"),“1.,( a ,.“..L..( Only three or luo’ur n-: . ¥ cents out of every $100 expended, while it | ATE F = | A government which has an annual revenue upper part of ber dress consisting of the | pave heratofore been gdmitted to this German o R Y ‘:3 was willing o assign for that purpose in | The hatred of fl:‘e Iluuunhxn\‘vr‘nn::nt for | of mi)ru than ugw.‘:og,uux ag \\.}nch ap- OCUNNUBIALITIRS. conventional bride’s veil, and the lower )u|uk univgrsity's privileges, Miss )?rlln " & o we take nterhational comparison the | 1894 only 44 cent: t - | 1terature and authors, as shown in its pro- | propriates pnnually fof the elémeiitary {h- y = 2 ing fnto a modified pair of breeches. Her ¥ ot Vasi ol 2 aumber of children attending school In pro- | Jenteq. | | oot OUt Of every H00 ex- | Lo of & “Shevehenko Behoal,” and ity REEC R ok Serole. loka \hgn 2 Genth ger | A walter in a Chicagd restaurant has been | (0 10 i My Fradinte of Ve, Soliase: And EY NN 3 2 costume was gf stoge-plue bengaline, with s 4 tion to population, Russla makes ap even B A refusal to permit a “Turgenief Evening” capi(a cértainly cappot fegard popylap edu. | arrested for abducting an heiress. He re- | (RS, WL T CROQERU, WAL IR Ureq | 8, salary of 32,000 & yéar fo contine hes : whowlng thay in the repdrts of the re- STRIRING BXAMPLES, & “Turgenlef Reading Room, [s & hhtred | cations as & matisr of much iBpohta grets now that he left his tray to g0 t0 the | oty ‘gola, Bho wore & beautitul wreath of | of ‘exserimental peychology: o in- th i "‘ rlun m:om meh:m“agué:m& of wl aulnrl C‘" “"zlti?fimhm’\‘:::w; vflcm;l;l:\:.«: of long standing, and it furnishes a curious | But the attitude of the Russian govern. | “CUSS jasmine instead of the time-honored orange %o pop ed States per | C—, and significant proof of the fact that, in | ment toward education in general, and cdu- | NeWs of th> engagement of Mme. Lillian | bloxsom, and, aithough gloves were discarded, | . Dr; deorgo W. itz, who has been chosen te & In western Eutope \t Fanges from | Sensor would not allow the mewspaper from | the official mind, anything like cnlighten. | cation of the massea In pariicular, secms to | Nordica (o Zoltan Dorie, the young German | b yelt was worhoonot. hawever, over the face, | Gl the new p ost of moedical {nSpeEEEN, 1 per cent for Italy to 21.2 per cent for | Which I quote this case to give full names | ment or free thought is & me to the | be an attitude not so much of indifterence | teror, who sang with ler in Bayreuth, is | |.:"thrown back, and falling in long, gracefui [ Harvard university, in g young man, & grades wvaria, In Japan it Is 7.6 per gent, and | elther of persons or places), resolved to open, | security of the state. On 28th of May, | as of suspiclon, apprehension and hostility, | arnounced from London. Very 1little is | foias over the shoulders. The bridesmaid | 8t of the Harvard Mudical school, and in_Bulgaris, where the peopls have | at his own expense, & free primary school | 1580—the elghty-first auniversary of the | It appears to be afraid that if it promotes | known of Dorne in this country. wort a wuit of cream silk, with a lace collar, | tructor in, physitlogy aid Byt 8 8 .nrct for centurles to the domina- | for poom children. He provided or collected | birth of the great Russian post, Pushkin— | elementary instruction among the peasants dy Margarct Grosvenor, who has become | The lady in whose house the wedding took | kewrence €eientifie KeAnor Fh WO AR N of Turk, it 18 65 per cent. In | the necessary funds, engaged a competent | the town council of Saratof asked the minis- | and creatcw a large reading and thinking | engaged to the young prirce of Teck | place wore & brown cashmere sult, trimmed |40ty 1o inadtee jate eveny Case of o t barely reaches 2.7 per cent. man with & teacher's certificate to take | ter of public instruction for permission to | class it will increase the feeling of popular | (rother of the duchess of York), is 4 daugh- | with handsome braid. The suits were nearly | 4mong tho studench, st o tee SReE Sl 868 lliteracy of the Russian peasants charge of tho school, and then wrote to the | call one of the Saratof schools the “Pushkin | discontent, add greatly to the difficulty of | ter of the duke of Westminster, whose in- | all of the same design, neatly-fitting knick. | cases Bave Broper tecich ondition & ‘“ attributable to any lack or inclination | istrict director of public instruction for per- | school” and to put up a bust of the eminent | maintaining an effective censorship, render | come Is sald to exceed $3,000 a day. ers. long coat, with revers, and a long vest, | Will look APl L b.‘".:,_!‘ ke Qisposition on their part to learn. On | mission. Month after month ed without | author in the principal school room. Per- | the people more impatient of the “wis> and Palsley—So Jones is engaged to the hoir- | the coat being edged with cord to match the | uUniversity T 'd‘l* 1 SHE EVEa duty » they avail themselves with the | & reply, and in August the pelition for leave | mission, of course, was refused. In 1857 the | prudent guardianship” which Is “so neces- | ess! Well, T never thought be cared o much | material. Most of the gentlemen were in | ' Eive & friendly WECHIOE aml"’“{":._“ sagerness of all the educational facil- | te open the school was renewed. A letter | councll ‘made avother simiar request, sub- | sary” for them and open a far wider and [ for dollaré and oents! Baisley—You don't | knicker costume, who may b pat

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