LETTERS FROM OUR YOUNG FRIENDS.

Dear Editor:

Is it asking too much of you, or is it out of your line of work to give your readers some information in regard to the old library at Tel-el-Amarna; and something about the present reigning family of Egypt, as to its origin and its political relations to the European powers?

If you have not room for a note on these, where could I obtain best account of them?

(Mrs.) A.H.B.V.
Minneapolis, Minn., May 7th, 1897.

Dear Madam:

Tel-el-Amarna is the ruin of a residence of Amenophis IV. in Central Egypt. In the winter of 1887-88 there were discovered there about three hundred clay tablets, covered with cuneiform inscriptions which have since been deciphered.

They contain the diplomatic correspondence of Kings of Babylon, Assyria, Palestine, and other countries of Western Asia with the Egyptian court.

The word library applies not only to books, but is often used to indicate a collection of inscribed tiles or bricks.

2. Mehemed Ali was made Viceroy of Egypt and Pasha of Three Tails in 1806.

He resigned in favor of his son Ibrahim Pasha in 1849.

Ibrahim died the same year, and was succeeded by Mehemed Ali's favorite grandson, Abbas Pasha, who died in 1854, and was succeeded by his brother Said.

In 1863 Said died, and was succeeded by his nephew Ismael, who promoted the Suez Canal.

In 1866 the Sultan of Turkey, who is the nominal ruler of Egypt, made this family hereditary Viceroys of Egypt.

In 1879 Ismael abdicated in favor of his son Mohammed Tewfik, who died in 1892 and was succeeded by his son Abbas.

Under this family, Egypt, though nominally tributary to Turkey, has enjoyed all the advantages of an independent kingdom.

Editor.

Dear Editor:

Will you be kind enough to answer the following questions in an early issue of your Magazine, and greatly oblige.

1. Is a Japanese born in this country a citizen?

2. When may a United States Senator have two votes upon one question?

A Subscriber.
Burlington, Ia., May 4th, 1897.

Dear Friend:

In reply to your inquiries.

1. Article 14 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States says:

"All persons born ... in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States, and of the State wherein they reside."

2. For the answer to this question we applied to the highest possible authority, namely, to the Hon. Thomas B. Reed, Speaker of the House of Representatives. He has very kindly favored us with the appended reply:

Editor.
Speaker's Room, House of Representatives.
Washington, D.C., May 22d, 1897.

Your letter of inquiry has been received. A United States Senator may have one vote only at one time on

any question. On questions like the ratification of a treaty, where two-thirds are required for affirmative action, one vote in the negative counts for as much as two in the affirmative. Very truly,

T.B. Reed.

Dear Editor:

My teacher subscribed for your paper for our school. I like it very much, as we learn a great deal about the world and what is going on in it. I wish the powers would keep their hands off the Cretan trouble, as they have had a time of it under the Turkish rule. I hope the Cubans will gain their freedom, don't you? Your respectful reader,

John H.
Salem, Oreg., April 10th, 1897.

Dear John:

The Cretan matter seems nearer solution now, and it is to be hoped that all the trouble may result in better conditions for the people of the island.

I certainly do hope the Cubans will gain their freedom, for I think their cause is a just one.

Editor

Dear Editor:

Mrs. B—— takes your paper and she reads it to me every time it comes. I hope you will have more about Cuba this week coming than you did last week. I hope that Spain won't get her $40,000,000. I also hope that next time when the Greeks retreat from some place they will do it better than at Larissa. I wish that there were some >more about the big Python. It is nice that Mr. Havemeyer has got a Little Venice on Long Island. At the Tennessee Centennial it must be fine fun to go up in those cars! I hope that Mr. Mayer will get out of Germany before he will go into the army. Do you think that America can get him out? I hope so. I wish that your paper would come two or three times a week instead of only

once. I hope to get one or two subscribers next winter, for I am going to school, and I will ask the boys there. Please put this letter in your newspaper. I hope Mr. McKinley will send some American men to Cuba, and I do hope that Spain will have lots of Carlist troubles and South Africans too. I hope that you will get lots of subscribers.

Wishing you very good luck to your paper, I am ever

Your interested reader,
H.T.

Dear H.T.:

Our country promises to take care of all her citizens, and so we have not the slightest doubt young Mayer will be properly looked after.

As soon as our Ambassador in Germany has given the German Government satisfactory proof that young Mayer was born in this country, there is very little doubt that he will be excused from serving in the German army.

You are a very good little boy to be so full of sympathy for Cuba, but you must not wish any harm to Spain—for that is not good of you. You must remember that there are always two sides to every question. If we could look at the Cuban war from Spain's point of view, we should perhaps think that the Cubans were a rebellious, tiresome people who had cost Spain much money; and the lives of many brave men. We might perhaps think that they deserved punishment, and that General Weyler was only trying to do the best he could for his country, and was not punishing the Cubans more than they deserved.

I say, we might think this if we were Spaniards, and the war was taking our dear friends away from us and making us poor besides.

As we are neither Cubans nor Spaniards we are able to look calmly at the whole affair, and judge it without any personal feeling creeping in to prejudice us. We have decided that Cuba ought to be free, and that hers is the righteous cause, but for all that we must not wish harm to Spain.

Spain believes she is in the right, or else she would not be willing to make the terrible sacrifices she is making.

As long as she believes she is right we should not call her hard names and wish her ill. We ought instead to pray that the good God may show her the right way, and give her the courage to walk in it.

Editor.

Dear Editor:

I want to ask you about the seals; do you think the seals will be killed any more? I want to ask you where the seals are caught besides the Bering Sea? And don't you think the bicycle car will be in Baltimore? I am afraid it will be no good. I want to know how a car with one wheel that they call a bicycle train runs. Yours truly,

Charles C.G.
Baltimore, Md., May 14th, 1897.

Dear Charles:

The seal question has puzzled many wiser heads than ours; and no one has arrived at a proper solution of it yet.

We tell you in our paper this week of a new plan that has been suggested to prevent the mothers and puppies from being killed.

Seals are found in nearly all waters, but the seal whose fur is so valuable to us is found only in the North and South Pacific oceans, and not in the Atlantic.

Seals are found in the Mediterranean Sea, the Caspian Sea, along the European shores of the Atlantic; off the coast of Greenland, and off the Atlantic coast of the United States, but these seals have not the under fur we described to you in The Great Round World, and are of little market value compared with the Pacific Ocean seals.

We do not understand your question about the bicycle car. Explain it more fully, and we will do our best to answer it.

Editor.

Dear Editor:

I am very much interested about Spain and Cuba and the Philippine Islands, and about the elephants that live in India. I have lately taken your paper, which comes every week. I have read the first paper over and I like it very much.

Yours truly,
J.S.F.

Many thanks.

Dear Editor:

I am very much interested in your little paper. It has a great deal in it for such a little paper. I give it to my teacher. I do not write many letters so far away as you are, as I live on the other side of the Great Lakes. I like most of all to hear about the wars, and hope that Cuba and Greece will win.

I think I had better close now.

Yours truly,
Alwina S.
Mankato, Minn.

Dear Alwina:

Do not think that you must not write to us because you are far away. For that very reason there must be numbers of things going on around you which would be strange to us, and which we would much

like to hear about. Write often, and let the kind post-office show you that you are not so very far away, after all.

Editor.

Dear Editor:

Being much interested in your paper, The Great Round World, with its clever and helpful articles, I write to obtain some information about the "Jingoes." What does the name mean? Where did it originate, and what have they to do with Cuba?

Your earnest reader,
Prue.
Tarrytown, N.Y.

Dear Prue:

You will find Jingoes and Jingoism described in the article on the passing of the Morgan resolution in this number.

Editor.

Dear Editor:

I have read in The Great Round World about the little singing mouse and was very much interested with it.

We have not heard much of the Cuban war lately, and the first account of it that you get please put in the paper.

Yours truly,
Edmund M.
Brooklyn, N.Y., May 20th, 1897.

Dear Edmund:

We will give you the Cuban news whenever there is any to tell. You will find much to interest you about Cuba in this number.

Editor.

Revised List, with Prices, of School-Books that will be taken in Exchange for Subscriptions to "The Great Round World."


ARITHMETICS
Sheldon'sComplete20
Stoddard'sMental5
"Intellectual10
Thomson'sNew Practical15
"Commercial30
Wentworth'sMental10
"New Practical20
"High School30
White'sNew Elementary15
" New Complete20


ALGEBRAS
Boyden'sElementary20
Bradbury'sBeginners'20
Brooks'(red cover)25
Milnes'First Book20
"High School35
Ray'sNew Elementary25
Robinson'sNew Elementary35
Wells'Academic35
"College50
"Higher35
Wentworth'sFirst Steps20
"Elementary25
"School30
"Higher40
"College40
"Complete40
White'sNew Algebra40

BOTANY
Apgar'sTrees30
Bessey'sElementary25
"Briefer35
"Large50
Dana'sWild Flowers50
Gray'sHow Plants Grow25
"Revised Lessons30
" " Manual50
" Lessons and Manual (1 vol.)65
Vine'sBotany75
Wood'sBotanist (red cover)50
"Class Book " "75

LATIN and GREEK
Allen and
Greenough's
Cæsar (after 1890)40
Cicero "40
Grammar (revised)40
Chase and
Stuart's
Cicero (after 1893)35
Cæsar "35
Horace "35
Virgil " (6 bks.)35
Collar and
Daniel's
Beginners' Latin Book30
First Latin Book30
Coy's FirstLatin Book25
Frieze'sVirgil (with Vocabulary, after 1893)40
Goodwin's
Anabasis (after 1895)50
Greek Gra. (after 1895)50
Greenough's
Horace35
Virgil (with Vocabulary)40
Harkness'
Cæsar (after 1894)40
Cicero "40
Latin Gram. (after 1890)35
Tuel &
Fowler's
First Book30
White'sFirst Greek Book30
"Beginners' Greek Book50

GRAMMARS
Brown'sRevised First Lines10
"English20
Butler'sSchool English25
Hart'sGram. and Analysis15
Hyde'sFirst Book10
"Second " (with Sup.)20
"Advanced15
Maxwell'sFirst Book15
"Intro (green cov.)15
"Advanced "25
Metcalf'sElementary20
"English Grammar25
Reed'sIntroductory15
Reed and
Kellogg's
Elementary (after 1890)15
"Higher (after 1890)25
Smith'sEnglish (revised)10
Whitney'sEssent. of Gram.15
Whitney &
Lockwood's
20

COMPOSITION, RHETORIC, AND LITERATURE
Brooks'English Literature10
Genung'sRhetoricseach 35
Hart's large " (red edge) " 35
Kellogg'sRhetoric (343 pp.)30
"Literature35
Lockwood'sLessons in Eng.35
Matthew'sLiterature35
Shaw'sNew " (rev.)40
Swinton'sStudies in Lit35
Waddy'sComposition35
Westlake'sLiterature15

GEOMETRY, TRIGONOMETRY, ETC.
Chauvenet'sRev. Geometry30
Davies'Legendre (after 1885)40
Loomis'Revised Geometry25
Olney'sNew Elem. "30
Wells'Rev. Plane Geometry.30
" " P. and S. Geom.50
"(old ed.) " "25
"Rev. Trigonometry30
Wentworth'sNew P. Geom.25
" " P. and S. Geometry50
"Trig., Surv., & Tables40

GEOGRAPHIES (With North and South Dakota)
Appleton'sPhysical35
"First Book15
"Elementary20
"Higher35
Barnes'Elementary15
Barnes'Complete25
Butler'sElementary20
"Complete35
Cornell'sFirst Steps10
"New Primary15
Frye'sElementary20
"Complete40
Guyot'sNew Physical50
Harper'sIntroductory15
"School35
Houston'sNew Physical40
Longman'sGeography25
"Atlas40
Maury'sElementary15
"Manual35
Monteith'sFirst Lessons10
"Introductory15
"Manual25
"New Physical30
Rand &
McNally's
Primary15
" " Larger30
Redway's30
Swinton'sPrimary15
"Elementary20
"Introductory15
"Grammar School30
"Complete30
Tarr'sPhysical40
Tarbell'sElementary20
"Larger40
Tilden'sGrammar School20
Warren'sNew Primary15
"Brief25
"Common School30
"New Physical50

CHEMISTRY, PHYSIOLOGY, AND PHYSICS
Appleton'sPhysics80
Avery'sSchool Physics40
"Complete Chemistry40
Blaisdel'sPhysiologies (cloth cover, Ginn's Edit.)20
Barker'sCollege Chemistry30
"Physics50
Carhart and
Chute's
Physics30

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