Wr anara ART IN NEW YORK. THOUSANDS OF STUDENTS ARE FLOCKING INTO THE SCHOOLS. The; Have Their Privations, and They Also Wear Long or Tous!ed Hair and Make Themselves as Uncon- ventional as Possible for a Time. The fall yf the art schools attracts hundreds of art stu- dents, and, judging by the number of names already enlisted on tho reg- : 1 isters of the +} opening { largest schools and the lately, it though thore will be between 3,000 and 4,000 | New York city this two-thirds of this With the return real Bohem- There studios looks as art students in winter. At least number are women. of the art student ian is no class of sh nts w the deprivati or live the iife 0 inconvenie 3 ) 1id-to-mouth overs } areatl artist u another of £0 vd foo i. the continual lord who rents vi or ntti room or atid rhiy dol inter the hardest 3 In the summer man have their homes to return £0 » do 1 rent ti § have left nature. Those senson vv ¥ | £1 t } Some ret FLIRTATIOUS MODEL. ied hard ti $ chools would Hol 1 had it been { we. thie perseverence of the & them. men with % iis tuition, Lo sleep in one of the art schools Or None of them had nore than a dollar after his year's tuition was paid, and two of them lived for three months at the rate of 10 conts per for food. Tod y this their health, the ould be ary to get the n od down to a scientific be after consider. able hard st inany references to books on diet, they decided that they could the greatest iy sett " and still i boys aaw that nec live for length of time on graham bread and apples. One of these men lived for two months on $L.70. To most peo- ple this would seem like the most *abiect poverty. But there were not All three accomplished their end. One isan instructor in one of the best Xsowa schools for manual training, 16 second is an illustrator on a magazine, and the third sells his wall paper designs for the best prices that ure given for such work. Portrait painters will seldom take up pot boiling alyng cheir own lines as sacrilege to their art. They would pot boll boiling portraiture asa means of ex- istoence. He may be compelled to degrade the art of the studsnts ia the next department him, and will turn out poor designs for wall papers, carpets, initial letters and advertiso- ments. In return the student who is studying designing would rather try his hand at bad portraiture than to put unclassic designs on the market. to of men stu- know this, and with great interest B time the sketch class, | dent. Perhaps in students will join their forty or them The young man cuts themselves as zine and rubs the paint off his as nn decoration his studio The girl begins to think—par- she has been earning her 1 grt 1111 to try matrimony. ha will never not her equal in every on she may possibly } she holds t ghe marry to dress hor- and srl ya gins becomingly, ROUGH RIDING. The Way Australian Mustangs Are Broken In. he ro. and the umulated pus, the covered and the whe Chambers REyINL ® the of the ac EXCHANGING IDEAS, he tries to make himself and those around him believe has got there Fthrough his absent-mindedness, He ' likes to tell of the hard times he hag | had to get the money to pay his tu- | ition, and of the opposition of his par 1 ants’ will, | The girl student usually comes on i with a wedded-to-art expression, | tousles her hale, buys the biggest palette she can find, and drapes her uncorseted form in what she believes animal amd the money, bu incensed him arrested for and the fine and eosts amounted to $38, ~{ Chicago Herald, bors were so £4 1 ¥ sf voy erueity to animais in Search of Salt, Frank Cushing, of the United States National Bureau of Ethnology, be. leves that the necessity of proces Ling salt had much to do with the migration of interior tribes. In the {folk-lore of the Zuni there isn sal goddess, who is the daughter of the | geonn, and salt itself, they believed, i was derived from the sun, Perhaps | we do not give suffieient credit to the | methods of the interchange of com- modities which must have existed in the onarliest periods. [New York Times, a CLEANING PARIS, How the French Capital's Streets are Kent Clean. When it that the pavement Paris is clean ev and that 200 mien are em- said entire surince is of swept ery morning, to ac- complish this only 8 ployed al find tion of these only for a few hours each day. it hardly needs saying that the vice i8 con tic y ever most a large propor- street-cleaning ser WOK PORES O reet-cloaning the city has been divided into 150districts, calle “ateliers, KE aver by an official tonnler,’’ the proper car territory ate Some Splendid Timboar, onst xeeptionaily uit ii to «! New York Tribune. Fabulous Troazure tion of pinte for Gocasions nl Windsor g fabulous in value. > Russin's “ ¥ § 1y ¥ noiand 8 Colivd nt aintoe sownethi splay surprised oven if Its di 1t ie generally reckoned to be worth about S10,000,000, and it is no un- usual thing for a stato banquet at of half a million in the room There aro two state dinner gers vices, one of gold and one of silver, says the Omaha Bee, The gold ser vice was purchased by George 1V,, and will dine 120 persons. plates alone of this service cost over $12, 500, On state occasions there are usu. ally placed on the dining table some very beautiful gold flagons, captured from the Spanish Armada, which are now, of course, of pricelegs value, while the great silysr wine-cooler, and welghing 700 ounces, always corner of the apartm ornaments thor way ofa p valued nt head f £13 As sideboard pretty trifles in tl precious O00, and n with a tongue of slones tiger s " iid : and dinmond teeth. ingot The Sense of ! the Insbruel Te surpnss 1 $ JIE I LLY Eaiaerin more i 3 3 3 Es 9 g dealers in this country inst ify years or leading | have standing orders to send him the best of what comes to them, and they willingly doso. What he does not | take is sent to the British Museum { as the second best buyer. While it is difficult to seb a price on a scien. tific collection, it Is said by those P who should know that Mr. Bemoent's | cabinet is worth at least $125,000," A HORRIBLE COMBINATION. | last night?’ asked the new boarder. Oh, that!” responded the season boarder, ‘that was only the stutters onet,"=={ Indianapolis Journal, Jananess Window Artisia, tf atuddins In of ti free tho pan as New seaweed seasoned whipped sin skced as rock ire wh i ¥ i in vines attar of DreRArves cherry™ hot with i “§ i181 h marmalade nliums nickied i Wit i Boston Herald, AT, oe An aged sea eapiain whose home is in this city, is troubled with a pecus larity of vision, which is common 10 all skippers and ship's officers high rank who have had long experi ence on the sea. In this particular instance the eaptain complains that through long use of the telescope, the hing been drawn from the left eyo ints the ove phich peers so eagerly Ho says he ean discern objects at an enor mous distance with his right eye, but lef =| Philadelphia Record. ¥n all Porsia there are only twenty
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers