lllr, UAl.MLr i '.MM 1 ,w.i n i. imi. Schools, Colleges and Gymnasiums of the Modern Athenians r-.. . - - 1 L. sjg Hreeel college girls (Copyright, 19tl, by Frank G. Carpenter. T1IEXS (Special Correspondence of The A j)ee.) The shoes of Aruericu are now largely blacked by young Greeks. Every town of any size in our country has Its Greek bootblack establishment, and the work is done by boys who are, shipped there by contract and whose wages are sent back home to their parents. In talking with these little fellows you will find them as bright as new dollars, and If you can speak Greek you will discover that alraost all ltave bad some education. Not a few have gone to school at the night schools at Athens and other Greek cities, and many have begun the study of the classics at home. Athens swarms with bootblacks and newsboys; they have come here from ah over the country to earn their own living. I see tbem working at their books on the streets during their spare moments, and it is not an uncommon thing for a newsboy to practice writing in a copybook while waiting for the papers to come from the press. $ The Night Schools of Athens. -I venture there Is no nation whose children are so anxious for an education as this, and none where the peopleare more ready to give it. There are three night schools for poor boys in Athens alone, with branch schools In other towns throughout Greece. I went to a school last night which held 500 boys, rang ing in ages from 10 to 14, and I saw one class of 150 going through gymnastic exercises and drill on the street outside. They had an excellent director. They were straight and well developed and they marched well, their shoulders thrown back. Entering the buildings, I was taken from room to, room, finding each filled with thirty or forty boys as brlgat as any to be found in America. My guide Was a director of the Greek National bank, who de votes his evenings to this work. Each class stood up as wa entered and they rose again as we left. In some rooms they were studying arithmetic, in others geography and in others how to read and write Greek. I was told that the school was attended by about 800 bootblacks each year. Taught to Save Money. These boys get an education at no cost to them except what they pay for their books. They are taught habits of thrift. Tbe teachers have a savings bank and each boy can deposit and have his own bank account. The other day one of them left for America, taking along 1,200 francs, or $240, which he had saved in this way. I was surprised at the teaching and the high class of some of the studies. ' The ordinary branches are the same as those of our graded schools, but in addi tion tbey read the classics and many of them can quote Homer and Demosthenes. There is a map of Greece in every school roonuand the children are instructed In Greek history and they follow tbe news papers more closely than our boys at borne. The Greek Common School System. The Greeks are now spending a great deal on mod em education. According to law all boys between tbe ages of 5 and 12 must attend school, and there are now primary schools, secondary schools and col leges almost everywhere. There are altogether 5,000 or 6,000 teachers, and the school children are num . bered by the hundreds of thousands. There are pri vate gymnasiums and commercial schools, normal schools and agricultural schools. There are trade schools at Athens and Patras run by tbe government, and there is a university here which has more than 2,600 students. No Civil Service for Teachers. One of the political Jobs given out by the govern ment is that of school teaching; this is not governed by civil service rules, and a new set of instructors is .usually brought In with each change of government. The schools of each district are looked upon as a kind of a political perquisite of the ministry and they are farmed out for votes. Another objection lies in the school books, which are changed every year or so, new books being written. There are annual competitions for the writing of school books and the publication of such books Is so profitable that there is talk of making the business a state monopoly, the government fixing the price of each book. Teachers' Wages in Greece. The salaries of the school teachers here are ex ceedingly low, w hile the requirements as to their edu cation are high. The director of a primary school now receives about $30 a month, and if the director is a woman -ibis sum is cut down to $24. Women are not popular as school teachers, and the girl teacher loses social easte, as some of the Greeks look down on women who inujtt work for their bread. As the schools rise the wages of teachers Increase. Some receive $40 and $50 a month and the directors of the gymnasiums get from $40 to $70 a month. In the higher schools the expenses of students are very low. In the univer sity the tuition for the four-year course is only $128, with an examination fee of $50 for tbe legal and medi cal branches. A diploma costs $10, and one can, out side bis living expenses, ga through college for a total ,of about $150. 1 am told that the education In the higher schools it excellent, and that it compares fa vorably with that of our own academies and colleges. Schools for Girls. At to the education of tut girls, it it not so gen- : V'V nrimETics eral as that for boys. Only about one-sixth of the primary schools are girls' schools, and the number who frequent them is under 4 0,000. The girls do not. as a rule, go to school with the boys, and each sex has Its own school house. There are some advanced schools for females. The best Is the Arsakeion. the head of which Is here at Athens, with branches at Patras. I.arissa and Corfu. The Arsakeion Is the Smith, Vassar, Wellesley or Bryn Mawr of Greece. It has altogether about 2,000 students, of whom 1,300 are In the branch here at Athens. The number In cludes, however, the kindergarten and day scholars as well as those of the college proper. Durins my stay I have gone, through this Institu tion. It is a training college for teachers as well, and It has a three-year normal course. One of the compul sory studies Is music, as are also sewing and house work. The courses are so varied that a girl may go in at 6 years and graduate at something like 20. having a complete education according to the Greek standard. I am surprised at the knowledge of the classics shown by these girls. They are taught ancient Greek, and they can read fluently Homer, Plato and Xenophon. The older girls speak, read aful write French, and not a few English. As to the fees of the Arsakeion. they are low. Day scholars pay from $1 to $5 a month, and boarders only $20 a month, which includes everything, rooms, meats snd even the books. I was taken through the school by the daughter of a directress, a beautiful girl of the GreeV type. Thirteen Hundred Greek Maidens. I wlBh I could Show you these 1,300 Grecian maid ens whom I saw at this Vassar of Athens. Tbe girls " of this country are notably handsome, and those of the Arsakeion, coming out of the well-to-do classes of the people, would be esteemed fine-looking in any part of the world. They have fine forms, kept so by the compulsory gymnastics, rosy cheeks from the pure air of the Mediterranean, and features as classic as those of the ancient Greek statues. The girls speak a Greek which is more refined than the modern Greek heard on the streets. They read the classics at sight, and little ones of 12 and 13 mouth Herodotus and Homer. Indeed, the way the modern Greek girl talks strikes every stranger as somewhat uncanny. It makes one think of the remark of the American woman as to the precocity of the Parisian: "Why, in Paris, even the smallest children talk French." Tlte HiU School for Girls. Another remarkable female school here at Athens was founded by an American missionary just about eighty years ago. This is the Hill School for Girls, one of the most popular in Greece and now under government regulations. It contains about 200 pupils, of whom more than one-third are boarders. The ages range from 6 to 17, and the students come from dif ferent parts of the country. All are taught modern Greek, French, and English, and also the regular studies of our schools at home. The school does not proselytize nor Interfere with the religion of the Severe Punishment for Crime N THESE merciful days, when a man who i publishes a cruel 'and malevolent libel on the king escapes with a few months' im prisonment, it seems scarcely credible that only forty-one years ago the punishment ordained by the law for high treason was that the offender should be drawn on a hurdle to the place of execution, and there should be hanged by tbe neck until he was dead; that than his head should be sev ered from bis body; that the body be divided into four quarters and that his head and quarters be at the dis posal of the crown. ' Such waa the punishment of high treason within the memory of the elderly man of today, says a Lon don Tit-Bits. In earlier times the culprit did not es cape so easily, for he waa taken down from the gal lows while still alive, disemboweled and his entrails burned before his eyes. And this waa by no means the worst fate that might befall a criminal In the so-called "good old days," at one John Roose, a cook of Henry VII's day, found to his cost. Roose was convicted of the heln lous crime of putting poison in the broth Intended for the family of no lest reverend a personage than the bishop of Rochester. For such a crime hanging, drawing and quartering was too merciful a punish ment. "Something lingering, with boiling oil." or at least water, was decided to be the punishment that best fitted the crime; and with this object- special act of Parliament was passed ordaining boiling ajlve as the punishment for this felony. John Roose t piated bis sins in a cauldron of hot water, and a few years later, in 1542, one Margaret Davy met the same terrible fate at SmitbQeld. So gravely was the crime of poisoning regarded in these days of old that, it is recorded, a Scotsman, one Thomas Bellie, and his son were banished for life for administering poison to a couple of noisy ht-us be longing to a neighbor. These were indeed days when the man of violent temper or criminal tendencies must operate warily. If by any evil chance he came to blows and drew blood within the precincts of he. king's palace he was Inev itably condemned to lose hit right hand; and a statute of 33 Henry Henry VIII regulated the whole gruesome ceremony, with all lta functionaries, from the surgeon who was to amputate the offending member to the in dividual who used the searing irons.lhe yeoman of m 'm X l ? : ... 3.ri4 i yv rife H ............ . - - h i . ... -x II iWW "'- v-'J f yxx . -,. . ., .4 . ' I ,Vsw l QXADIDIT.AC ATffi2fS--mH0JX3mL SEAT 55000 - SPECTATORS pnptlfl. r has a. Greek church connected with It, where a practical sermon Is preached every Sunday. r s An American Archaeological School. It will surprise many to know that some of our leading colleges have had an archaeological school here for the last thirty years. Each of the colleges sends students to the school-to spend a year In study and research concerning ancient Greece and Greek his tory. They make excavations and have certain terri tories allotted to them, where they dig over the ruins, finding statues, buildings and other relics of a time when Greece was at the height of its glory. The colleges which support this school are Har vard, Yale. Brown, Amherst, Johns Hopkins, Colum bia, the College of New Jersey, the College of the City of New York and Wesleyan, to which have been added Dartmouth and Cornell, and also the universities of Michigan, Pennsylvania, Virginia and California. The Greek-"Friendly to Americans. This country has always been friendly to us, and Americans have been studying Greek here since our beginning as a nation. When Thomas Jefferson was president Nicholas Biddle visited Greece, and there was an American named Howe who was surgeon gen eral of the Grecian fleet In the Greek war for inde pendence. Henry M. Baird published a book on "Mod ern Greece" as far back as 1852, and Prof. Felton of Harvard, another American, wrote a volume entitled "Greece, Ancient and Modern." Charles K. Tucker- the scullery who made the irons red-hot at hls fire, and the sergeant of the cellar, who was provided "with a pot of red wine to "give the same party, after his hand is so stricken off and the stump seared." Mutilation was a favorite form of punishment In those good old days, following, no doubt, the Scrip tural penalty, "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth." Thus the slanderer's tongue waa pulled out, so that he could at least utter slander no more; the Ireland's Population BLUE BOOK dealing with the vital statis tics of Ireland shows that during 1909 the excess of births over deaths was 27,786, and that the loss by emigration amounted to 28,676, which waa greater by 5,381 A than in 1908 but less than the average number 37,141 for the previous ten years. There would, acording to these figures, appear to have been a de crease of 890 persons in the population on December 31, 1909. The population of Ireland to the middle of the year was estimated at 4,371,570. The marriages registered in Ireland during 19o!t numbered 22,50, the births 102,739, and the deaths 74,973. The marriage rate was 5.18 a thousand of the estimated population, showing a decrease of .02 as compared with mat ror dui an imreaae oi 06 as compared with the average rate for the previous ten years; the birth rate was 23.5 a thousand, being .2 above that for the preceding year and .3 above the average for the pievious ten years, while the death rate (17.2 a thousand) was .4 below the rate for the previous year and .6 below the average rate for the ten years ended 1908. Of the 22,650 men marrieti during the year 379, or 1.67 per cent, were under age, while of the women married 1,550, or 6.84 per cent, were minors. Of the 102.759 children whose births were regis tered in Ireland during the year 1909 99,997. or 97.3 per cent, were legitimate and 2,762, or 2.7 per cent, were illegitimate, the latter being .1 above the cor responding average percentage for the preceding ten years. Thete results bore favorable comparison with the returns for most other countries. London Post. man, who wa our United States minister to Greece before 1870, gave ua a work on "The Greeks of To day," and Bayard Taylor and others have described the country. What the Americans Are Doing. ' 1 ' ' ' During my stay here I have called at the American school. It is now carried on in a building belonging to the institution, situated beyond the king's palace on the slope of the hill, facing Mount Hymettus. The house cost about $40,000 and is surrounded by a beautiful garden. Entering a large hall, steps of Pentelic marble lead"by easy flight to the second floor, where are the library of the school and the offices of the director. The library is one of the. best equipped private ones of tbe klod In Athens, and it has, I should say, about 2,000 volumes. Tne present director of the school, Mr. Hill, is a graduate of the University of Vermont, and later on of Columbia, and be has with him eight other professors, who represent Dartmouth, Johns Hopkins, Harvard, Princeton, Columbia and some other colleges. There is one woman among the graduate students, a Miss Stone, who is making a specialty of the topography of ancient Greece, and who has traveled extensively throughout the interior. The director of the school tells me that its allow ance is not sufficient to carry on a great archaeological work. It has something like $2,000 a year and with this it is trying to excavate Old Corinth, which, when In its prime, held half a million, and was the largest city of Greece. The Americans have been working in Old England adulterer's nose was cut off, and he who destroyed the sight of a one-eyed man lost both his own eyes. By the Coventry act (22T and 23 Charles II, c.l) any person who shall maliciously put out eye, silt tbe nose or disable any limb of another, with intent to maim or disfigure him, was to pay for the wrong with his life. By another act the man who fought with weapons in a church had one of his ears cut of; if he had already lost both ears, as many a malefactor had, ho was branded in the cheek with the lette "F." By an act of Queen Elizabeth's reign the forger was condemned to stand in the pillory, to have his ears cut off by the common hangman, his nostrils slit up and scared and to be Imprisoned for life; and by a statute of 21 James I an unfortunate bankrupt was nailed by an ear to the pillory for two hours and then his ear was cut off. If an enterprising farmer was foolish enough to send any of his live sheep out of the country, he paid a terrible price for hit rashness, for his goods were forfeited, he was sent to Jail for twelve months, and on recovering his liberty his left hand was cut off In a public market and nailed up there as a warning against the danger of illicit exports. If he offended a second time he paid for his daring with his life. If he ''Set covetous eyet on a neighbor's sheep and an nexed one of tbem he was unceremoniously hanged by the neck until he was dead. Indeed, thousands of unfortunates paid with their lives for thefts much more insignificant. ' In 1726 Edward Burnworth, a highwayman, re fusing to plead, waa loaded with boards and weights. . For more than an hour he bore a mass of metal weighing nearly 400 weight, when human flesh could bear the agony no more,. and he prayed to be put to the bar again. He pleaded "Not guilty." but was, nevertheless, found guilty, and ended hia days on the scaffold. This cruel punishment survived to George U s time. There were many other barbarous punishments, quaint and barbarous old-world punishments, from the 40-shilllng fine inflicted in Scotland on the wicked player of foot ball and golf, and the Imprisonment for a year for a third offense of using Jhe Book of Common Prayer, to the ordeal of fire, in which Queen Emma, accused of a criminal intrigue with tbe bishop of Winchester, walked with bandaged eyes over nine red-hot plowshares to prove her innocence. ther for more than ton ycRrs. After vl;i 1 hope to describe what they have done.' in. addition to tlie'Anieikan bpIiohI. ling the Kite 11 m lcr oiner nations nave similar institutions. The ricutn are spending eight or ten times as much as we are, and their archaeologists have laid out over $1H0,ikh) in their works at Delphi. The (ieriiiiina li.ivr an archaeological institute which has spent Jjoii.ooo in digging up old Olympia, and the Ausirians aihl Kus sians have recently entered this held. Mixlcrit AthletiiH in (ireece. All the schools hero are now teaching athletics They have their regular gymnastic exercises daily and this is bo of those for both girls and boys. Ths students are required to take long walks, and every school must have a gymnasium, which is maintained at the cost of the state. All the schools near the sea teach swimming, and it is required that the inter mediate schools practice rowing and shooting. During the last weeks of every Lent gymnastic competitions are held all over Greece, and the old sports are being revived. V A school of gymnastics has been founded In Athens to teach the training masters of the various institutions, and female teachers are obliged to learn ah about athletics.' Athens has two gymnastic clubs, one of which has a gymnasium to which any one fan bo admitted on the payment of 20 cents a month, and there Is a spe cial section for girls, who practice the Swedish move ments under the direction of a committee of women. There are forty or more other clubs scattered over Greece, some of which are subsidized by the govern ment, and every now and then games are held in the great new stadium, which has been erected by an Egyptian Greek named Averof. Alliens' Great Athletic Field. This structure is one of the finest athletic grounds of the world. I went out to Bee it this afternoon. It is situated between Mount Lykabettos and the Acropo lis, on the very site where was the great stadlon of the past. It is of the same size and probably of the same character. Imagine a marble amphitheater which will seat 65,000 spectators and has an arena 600 feet long. The marble scats rise up the sides of a natural amphi theater made by the hills, and over it shines the blue sky of Greece. The arena itself is of the shape of a great horseBhoe, with long ends. It is covered with black sand, and this forms a striking contrast to the silver white of the marble. --Jt was here that the Olympic games of some years ago were run, and here will be held Bomo of those of the future. -s- A Talk With the Grand Chamberlain. The crown princo of Greece is at the head of na tional athletic matters. He Is absent from Athens at this writing, but I have had a talk with his grand chamberlain, Count Mercatl, as to what this country expects to do in the Olympic games of the future. He tells me that tho government is rather hard up for money, but that it s anxious to have one of the great international athletic contests of the near future held here. Said he: "Our people are liberal and without prejudice, and some of the nations feel that they are more sure of having a square deal at Athens than anywhere else. This Is especially so of the Americans, who Justly maintain that they were unfairly treated in London." I asked as to the accommodations and as to whether Athens could take care of the crowd that would come to such a competition. Count Mercatl replied: "At our last Olympic games we used the exposition ball in the palace grounds, almost adjoining the stadlon, for the foreign athletes. This was made into a great dormitory, and It could be so used again. The hotels would take care of the strangers, and in addi tion the people of Athens, who are very hospitable, would open their houses to them. Yes, I think we can take care of all who may come." Can a Greek Win the. Marathon? I asked the grand chamberlain some questions ss to tho possibility of the modern Greek in tbe ring and on tho track. He replied: "I think we have a fair chance at the Marathon and that we can hold our own in all sorts of wrehtlint;. We are not the equals of tbe Greeks of tbe past, and we have not their harmonious physical development nor their staying powers. On short runs we are dis tanced by the athletes of some other na(inns. You must remember that we art not old as an independent government, and that for 400 years or mora we wore under the rule of the Turks, who frowned on all phy sical exercises and prohibited Kmnastic truiuing. To day we make as much of athletics as any other nation and we are especially rigid us to the athletic training of our schools. In the Greek colleges every student at the end of two years after admission undergoes a physical examination, and if he cannot show evidences of his gymnastic training he must remain where be Is. I do not think that the case in any college Of other countries. " FRANK G. CARPENTER. V (