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Besides, the principal, Professor Schnedermann, (teacher of chemistry,) there are 16 teachers, three of whom bear the title, professor.

In I there are 9 pupils for the full course-4 for single branches.

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With the Gewerbschule, is joined what is called, BAUGEWERKENSCHULE, i. e. a school for carpenters and masons, (journeymen,) lower class: 29 pupils. Arithmetic: 6 hours from the first rules as far as quadratic equations.

Geometry, 4 hours; General Architecture, 8 hours; Lineal and ornamental Drawing, 4 hours; Doctrine of Projection, 4 hours; German, 3 hours. Upper Class, 31 pupils.

Mechanical Physic, 6 hours, with particular attention to architecture. Doctrine of construction, 6 hours; Sketches of Architectural Plans, 4 hours; Modeling, 6 hours; Embossing, 4 hours; Drawing, 4 hours; Perspective, 2 hours; German, 2 hours.

and a so-called

Mechanische Baugewerken and Werkmeister schule.

Third class 18 pupils; (Miller's machine builders, locksmiths, etc., journeymen.) Arithmetic, 6 hours; Geometry, 4 hours; German, 3 hours; Drawing, 4 hours; Geometrical Drawing, 8 hours; Natural Philosophy, 4 hours. Second class: 17 pupils.

Mathematics and Mechanics, 12 hours; Machine Drawing, 8 hours; Surveying, 4 hours; Mechanical Technology, 4 hours; Model Drawing, 4 hours; German, 3 hours.

First class: 13 pupils.

Machines, 8 hours; Mechanical Drawing, 8 hours; a, construction of rails, 4 hours for railing; b, spinning and weaving, each in 4 hours; c, construction of pipes and wells, 4 hours; Drawing, 4 hours; Embossing, 4 hours; Model Drawing, 4 hours; Book-keeping, 2 hours.

SUNDAY SCHOOL IN CHEMNITZ.-There is a Sunday school in this largo manufacturing city, with 1284 students, arranged in 40 classes, viz.:

13 classes in Drawing,

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Natural Philosophy,

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Composition,

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History,

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Geography,

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Book-keeping,

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French Language,

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The expenses of the school amounted in 1856 to 1.500 thalers.

NEW REGULATIONS RESPECTING NORMAL SCHOOLS.-The department of public instruction has issued new regulations for the normal schools, in the same general spirit of the Prussian regulations, but not quite so conservative.

HONOR TO A SUCCESSFUL TEACHER.-Dr. Georgi, director of the Institution for the Blind in Dresden, has been presented with the Danebrog order, by the King of Denmark-the institution with that at Paris having been reported as the best in Europe, by a commission appointed to examine all in different countries.

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BURGHER SCHOOL AT LEIPSIC.-This school embraces in its organization two burgher schools, and a real school, under Dr. Vogel as principal, assisted by one vice-principal, 70 male and 8 female assistants. In 1800 there were 2511 pupils in 53 classes. The real school had 174 pupils, under 12 teachers, and two didates," as assistants. These candidates, have passed favorably their examination as teachers in high schools, and are now teaching for one year on trial before they can be appointed to a place as principal.

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AUSTRIA.

EMPLOYMENT OF CHILDREN IN PUBLIC EXHIBITIONS.-Children have been forbidden to be employed in theatres and other public exhibitions. Several decrees from the ministry of instruction indicate educational progress, especially in the real schools.

GALICIA, with a population of 5,100,000, has more than 3000 common schools, 67 higher schools, 55 institutes, and 62 charity schools.

THE TYROL Contains 1030 German, and 812 Italian schools.

HUNGARY contains 8,190 common schools; of which 3,500 are Magyar, 2,600 Slavonic, 900 German, 240 Romanic, and 950 mixed. Much is being done to improve the school system, particularly by the establishment of new schools for girls.

PESTH has a complete real school of six classes, and also a school fund of $70,000.

BAVARIA.

The Public Real Schools of Nuremberg consist of,-1. A provincial industrial school, with 163 pupils; 2. An agricultural school, with 93 scholars; 3. A polytechnic school, with 200 students; 4. A city commercial school, with 300 pupils; 5. The royal school of arts.

INFANT SCHOOLS IN MUNICH.-There are five infant schools, (besides two in the suburbs,) attended by 780 children, who are educated and fed.

A SCHOOL OF HISTORY has been attached to the University of Munich, under the direction of Prof. Sybel.

FRANCE.

CITY SCHOOLS IN PARIS.-There are in Paris 277 city schools, with 50,542 pupils, supported at an annual expense of 1,323,400 francs.

FRANKFORT-ON-THE-MAINE.

STATISTICS.—Frankfort has 1 gymnasium; 7 protestant, 4 catholic, and 2 Israelitish public schools; 38 private schools; 3 infant schools; a school for the deaf and dumb, and another for the blind.

BADEN.

GYMNASIA AND REAL SCHOOLS.-There are in the Grand Duchy, out of a population of 1,356,953, 1,074 pupils in the gymnasia, and 1,872 in the real schools. The real school of Heidelberg has 14 teachers and 219 pupils, of whom only six are in the highest class.

HAMBURG.

KINDERGARTEN.-Doris Lütken, a pupil of Froebel, has a kindergärten, in two sections: I. For children of from three to six years, who come at 10 A. M. and remain until 2; and, II. A transitory class, for children of from six to eight. There are two courses: the first in learning to read; the second lasts to the eighth year, when the boys graduate, and the girls enter the school of the institution. Lessons in this second course: Monday, 9-11, stories from history, and writing; 11, singing and plays; 12, dinner; 1, reading; 2, handiwork. Tuesday, 9-11, drawing, writing, and arithmetic; 11, gymnastics and plays; 1, reading. Wednesday, 9-12, geography, writing, paper-work, and plays; 1, reading. Thursday, as Monday; together with biblical narratives. Friday, as Tuesday. Saturday, as Wednesday, with natural history.

No. 10-[VOL. IV. No. 1.]—17.

There are four other public kindergärten in the city. Elsewhere public crêches are very rare.

Tuition and board, at Keilhan, (institution of Mesdames Froebel and Middendorf for young ladies,) one hundred thalers for six months, one hundred and eighty for a year.

GRAND DUCHY OF HESSE.

NORMAL SCHOOL FOR JEWISH TEACHERS.An association has just been formed for erecting a Jewish normal school.

ITEMS.

THE NINTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GERMAN TEACHERS, convened this year in Frankfort, on the 3d, 4th, and 5th of June, was attended by 422 teachers, 212 of whom were from Frankfort, and most of the rest from the neighboring states; the two Hesse, 83; Nassau, 50; Baden, 9; Bavaria, 9; Austria, 4; Saxony, 1; Wurtemberg, 6; Thuringia, (the Saxon duchies,) 12; Waldeck, 4; Hanover, 1; Brunswick, 2; Oldenburg, 2; Coethen, 1; Lübeck, 2; Hamburg, 4; and 13 from places in Germany not named. There were also in attendance, 1 from England, 2 from France, 1 from Switzerland, and 1 from Sweden. Lanekhard of Weimar, the editor of the "Reform," (the new educational quarterly,) was in the chair. A discourse of Director Frohlich of Berne, on the homesickness of Germans in Switzerland, on their educational propaganda, and on the institutions of learning in that country, seems to have excited the greatest and most general interest. Lanekhard also spoke on instruction in drawing. No debates. Next year the assembly will convene in Weimar.

SCARCITY OF TEACHERS.-In Kiel, (Holstein,) teachers for the common schools are in such demand, that pupils in the "preparanden," (preparing for admission to the teachers' seminaries,) are employed. In the district of Potsdam, (Prussia) the school authorities have been compelled, from the scarcity of teachers, to arrange a half-yearly seminary course for young men from 19 to 30 years of age. In some of the cantons of Switzerland, upwards of one hundred teachers have abandoned their schools for other vocations, on account of insufficient salaries.

DAILY AND YEARLY EXPENSES OF A SCHOOLMASTER.-The German School Gazette gives the following items of the expenses of a German schoolmaster, father of three little children, with a fixed income of $135.00, (180 thalers, besides a house, (with three rooms,) and a small additional income as sexton:

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EXPENSES IN ETON COLLEGE IN 1560.

IN ACCOUNT OF THE EXPENSES OF THE TWO BROTHERS, MR. HENRY AND MR. WILLIAM CAVENDISH, SONS OF SIR WILLIAM CAVENDISH, OF CHATSWORTH, KNIGHT, AT ETON COLLEGE, BEGINNING OCTOBER 21ST, 2D ELIZ ABETH, 1560. (From a contemporary manuscript.)

The following curious document, illustrative of the manners as well as of the schoolboy expenses of the time, is taken from the Retrospective Review, vol. xvi., p. 149. Mondaie the xxist of October.

In primis bread and beare.
Boylid mutton and pottage
One breast rost mutton
One lytull chekyn.

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Apud cenam duo filii Fraunc. Knolles milit. ibi fuerunt.
Tewseday xxiid of October.

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It. for Thomas Folow dynner at the inne the same day
Note that Mr. Henry and Mr. W". Cavendysh his brother, wb ther man,
dyd begonne ther bord at one Ryc. Hilles the xxiiid day of October,
and must pay for them twayne xs. and iiis. iiiid. for ther man wekely,
over and besydes the woode burned in ther chamber.

It. the Frydaie the xxv of the same på for eight yardes black fryse at
xxd. the yarde

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It. for the making of the same ii gownes

It. the xxvii day for ii qwere whyte paper

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It. rec. from Mr. Fletwod ii yardes fryseado at viiis. the yard.
It. pd for iiii yardes black cotton at viiid. the yard

It. for the makyng of ii fryseado coates

It. for iiii duss. buttons to yo coates

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It. for iii yardes jane fustion.

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It. for canvas to lyne the bodyes

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It. for iii yardes cotten to lyne the same dubletts

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It. for sylk to styche the same dubletts and makyng lowpes for the holes
It. for iiii duss. black sylk buttons for ther dublets

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It. for one oz. di. [1ł ounce] sylk to styche the same hose

It. for makyng the same hosen.

It. p for ii combes to my masters

It. for a breykfast for the cumpanye of formes in the scole according to the use of the scole

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It. the xxix' for ii payr showes for Mr. Henry and Mr. Wm. agaynst All
Hallowtyde

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It. geven to a man to see bayre bayting and a camell in the colledge, as other schollers dyd

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It. the xvit day of November på for carryage of the chamber stuff from the warff

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It. pd for whyte and black threde

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It. pd for ii payr knytte hose for Mr. Henry and Mr. W. Cavendysh
It. pd for ii payr of showes agaynst Ester for Mr. Henry and Mr. W".
Cavendysh

It. the xxiiiit day of November på for iii pound cotten candell
It. for iii loode wodde ii bylletts iiiis. viiid. and the iii fagot iiiis.
Ma that Mr. Henry and M. W. Cavendysh his brother, and ther
s'vant, did begon ther bord in the colledge xxvt day of November,
an' supradicto.

It. pd for eyght claspes and holders of ireons for my m2 feld bedde
It. the xvt day of December for ii pond candell.

It. the xxt day of December for ii qwere whyte papur for the gentlemen
to write uppon

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It. pd for ii payr showes for Mr. Henry and Mr. W". Canvendysh agaynst
Chrystenmas

It. pd the xxit of December for a cople say gyrdells
It. pd for one Isope Fabulls

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It. pd to my oste Hyll for iiii wekes bord of Mr. Henry and Mr. W".
Cavendysh, and ther s'vaunt, endyng the xxt day of November

It. for quarterydge in penne and ynke, brome and byrche

It. pd the xx of Januarie for ii pond candell

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It. pd the xxvii' day of Januarie for ii payr showes for Mr. Henry and
Mr. Wm. Cavendysh.

It. pd the same day for one qwere whyte paper

It. pd the xvt day of Februarie for one pond candell

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It. pd for di. elne [half an ell] fyne holland to mend the gentlemen sherts w*
It. for di. elne course Holland to be lyning for ther collers
It. for the woman's paynes in doyng the same eyght sherts
It. the xit day of Miche p' for ii qwere whyte paper
It. the xxt day of Mrche for one pond candell
It. pd for neldes [probably needles].

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It. for ii duss. threde poynts for them

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It. pd the last day of Mrche for quarterydge, viz. byrche, brome, and ynke
It. pd for tewe duss. black sylk bottens for mending the doubletts .
It. pa the xxt day of Apryll for mendyng both ther showes
It. pd the fyrst day of May for whyte threde and blak
It. pd the xviii' of May for ii payr showes agaynst Wytsontyde for Mr.
Henry and Mr. W".

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It. pd the vit day of June for sawlyng of one of Mr. Henry's showes

It. pd for one qwere whyte papur the xiit of June

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It. pa the xxiiit of June for Mr. Henry and Mr. Wm. ther quartorrydge,

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It. pd to my oste Hyll, for one quarter comens endyng the xxiid of May xiiis. iiiid. It. pd for my lytul masters washeng for the same quarter

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It. pd to the bursers of Eyton College for one quarter bord dew at the anunciation of our Lady last.

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It. pd for one gyrdell to Mr. Wm. Cavendysh the iiiit of Julye
It. for mendyng both their showes.

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It. pd for ii payr showes for Mr. Henry and M. Wm. his brother the xxvit of Julye

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It. pd for a Tullies Attycum for Mr. W".

It. pd for one quere whyte papur

It. pd the xxviii' of September for one lb. candell

It. pd for ii payr of showes for Mr. Henry and Mr. Wm. his brother at
Mychalmas

It. for ther quarterydge in penne, ynke, byrche, and brome

It. pd the viii of October for sawling of ii payr of my lytull mayster's
shoes

It. pd the xxt day of October for ii bunches of wax lyghts
It. pd xxiii of November for the bord of Mr. Henry and Mr. Wm. and
ther man for one moneth bord

It. to a carter to carry the stuff to the watersyde

It. to Frenche of Wyndsore for carryeng the stuff to London

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