TABLE 2.-Teachers and pupils in public normal schools. (Summary of similar columns of Table 5.) Income. The income from public sources considered as a total for the whole country shows but a small increase. The receipts from other sources given in the following table can not be compared with the total of a similar column in the report preceding this. In that the general question was asked, "Aid from other sources received within the year?" and the answers tabulated. In the present report the Bureau has computed the item from data given in answer to a series of questions. The amount expended for building and repairs is a new item and in several cases is included in one of the two other columns of Table 3. It will be observed that prima facie about one-third of the amount received was expended in buildings and repairs, but the fallacy of such figuring is easily shown by taking the case of the new school at Chico where the appropriation was $25,000, while the amount expended on buildings was $100,000. The State normal school at Framingham, Mass., expended $115,000, and the new school at Cneonta, N. Y., $114,000: in the case of the Massachusetts school the appropriation for the year was $14,000, while no appropriation for the year 1888-89 seems to have been made for the New York school. TABLE 3.-Aid from public funds and other sources (summary of similar columns of Table 6). The New York College for the Training of Teachers, New York City.-Provisionally the statistics of this college have been inserted in the table of private normal schools though they have not been included in the summary of that table following the precedent of the Bureau's report for 1887-'88. PRIVATE NORMAL SCHOOLS. Eighteen private normal schools report in all 1,324 students in secondary studies, 4 collectively report 74 students under kindergarten instruction, and 18 report 694 students in a commercial course. In answer to the inquiry as to the number of students in "other departments," 15 schools report 1,149 students. In the summary that follows, 1,328 students do not appear, as the principals of the schools reporting them were unable to classify them according to our scheme; nor has the number of commercial students been included in the figures of the following table. From these schools 315 normal pupils were graduated during the year. 57 Minneapolis, Minn.. St. Cloud, Minn. 59 St. Paul, Minn. Holly Springs, Miss 62 Tougaloo, Miss 63 Cape Girardeau, Mo. 64 Jafferson City, Mo... 66 St. Louis, Mo 70 Manchester, N.H..... * For 1887-88. Lincoln Institute*.. a The number in professional studies. .do. 1853 John M. B. Sill 16 11 ..do. 1868 Edward Searing 5 8 Teachers' Training Class 1887 Miss O. A. Evens 0 State Normal School 1869 Thomas J. Gray 4 9 Teachers' Training School 1883 Jane L. Terry 9 State Normal School 1860 Irwin Shepard.. 13 ...do. 1870 J. H. Henderson Normal Department of Tougaloo Uni- 1869 F. G. Woodworth 2 1 522763622-L (301) (301) 83 7 21 15 52 5 0 328 0 3 7 34 1 0 b For 1886-87. c Assumed. F. Louis Soldan.. George L. Osborne. George L. Farnham. d Twenty-six of these in commercial course. e Not including 120 pupils in the "preparatory department." 110 0 110 1, 197 104 411 0 0 328 411 805 78 0 |