' % WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION 1893 CHICAGO CATALOGUE OF THE RUSSIAN SECTION Published by the Imperial Russian Commission, Ministry of Finances S.-PETERSBURG l8 93 Printed by order of the Imperial Russian Commission for the participa- tion of Russia at the Worlds Columbian Exposition 1893, Chicago. Printed: by I. Libermann, (sheets I 11 and 19 36) and by P. Soikin, (pages I XVI and sheets 1218). The Imperial Order for Russia to participate at the World's Columbian Exposition, 1893, Chicago, according to the invitation of the Government of the United States of North America, issued on May 31, 1891. The organization of the Russian section at the Exposition was conferred, under the chief authority of His Excellency, the Minister of Finances, to the Department of Trade and Manufactures, to which a special Commission was incorporated under the Presidency of the Di- rector of the above mentioned Department, consisting of dele- gates appointed by the Ministries participating at the Exposition, and of officials of the Ministry of Finances, named by His Excellency the Minister. At a new invitation, that followed, a Ladies Committee was appointed by the High Order- of Her Imperial Majesty the Empress, to organize at the Exposi- tion the Russian section of Women's Work. Bv consent of j His Imperial Highness the Grand Duke Vladimir Ale- xandrovich, President of the Imperial Academy of Arts, the general management of the Russian exhibits at the Department of Fine Arts was taken under the care of this Academy. And special Committees were created at the participating Minis- tries to settle the arrangment of their respective sections. It was the High Wish ol His Imperial Majesty the Emperor, that the Russian exhibitors should profit of all aid and assistance to participate at the Exhibition. According to this Graceful Order it is the Crown thas was to answer all the expenses of transport of the exhibits from St. Petersburg to Chicago and return, their insurance on the way, installa- tion in the buildings and management during the Exposition; and it were Government officials that were induced to take care of this transport, installation and management. Railway and steamship companies allowed besides great reductions in freights for conveying the goods from the home of the exhibitors or from their Works to the reception stores of the Imperial Com- mission at St. Petersburg. The degree of the participation of Russia in the various Departments of the Exposition is to be seen from a list of the exhibitors disposed by the groups of the classification, inclu- ded at the end of this Catalogue. The Departments, groups and classes, to which the articles sent correspond, are also designed previously the name of each exhibitor. The numbers given to the exhibitors agree with the installation of their exhibits, which does not always follow the classification. Short notes are inserted for most of the exhibitors, containing data about the time of establishment of their 'industries, its pro- gress and value per annum, the number of hands employed, machines and appliances used, and also the markets, on which their fabrics depend. And as concerning the institutions of non- industrial character, short notions are given about the time they were founded and their progress. In case of the name of an exhibitor being repeated, the number and page are designed, where the above mentioned notes are to be found. An alpha- betical index of the exhibitors follows the above. It has been decided, according to the international charac- ter of the Exposition, to keep in this Catalogue to Russian money and measures. Comparative scales of the Russian and foreign units, both of money and measures, follow. LIST 1 OF THE IMPERIAL RUSSIAN COMMISSION FOR THE PARTICIPATION OF RUSSIA AT THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION 1893, CHICAGO. His Excellency V. Kovalevsky, President, Director of the Department of Trade and Manufactures, Actual Councillor of State. MEMBERS appointed by: The Minister of Finances: H. E., P. Glukhovsky, Chamberlain, Imperial Russian Com- missioner General at the World's Columbian Exposition, 1893, Chicago. Member ot Council of the Minister of Finances, Actual Councillor of State. H. E., W. Timiriazev, Vice-Director of the Department of Trade and Manufactures, Actual Councillor of State. H. E., N. Zabugm, Vice-Director ot the Department of Customs, Actual Councillor of State. H. E., N. Labzin, Emerited Professor of the Practical Technological Institute in St. Petersburg, Actual Coun- cillor of State. A. Kobelliatzky, Chief of Division at the Department of Trade and Manufactures, Assessor of College. The Ministry of War: H. H.. L. Verkhovtsov, Privy Councillor. The Ministry of Public Domains: H. E., N. Solsky, Director of the Imperial Agricultural Museum in St. Petersburg, Actual Councillor of State. A. Pletniev, Councillor of State. The Ministry of Marine: D. Mertvaho, Post-Captain. The Ministry of Public Instruction: Prince S. Volkonsky, Gentleman of the Emperor's bed chamber, Councillor of Court. L. Dymsha, Assistent Professor of the Imperial Univer- sity in St. Petersburg, Assessor of College. The Ministry of Ways of Communications: V. Sumarokov, Director of the Department of Railways, Councillor of State. J. Lodijensky, Secretary, Councillor of Court. LIST OF THE LADIE'S COMMITTEE APPOINTED BY HIGH ORDER OF HER IMPERIAL MAJESTY THE EMPRESS OF RUSSIA FOR ORGANIZING THE RUSSIAN SECTION OF WO- MEN'S WORK AT THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPO- SITION 1893, CHICAGO. M-mc B. Vyshnegradsky, President, wife of Actual Privy Councillor. M-me A. Naryshkin, wife of Great Chamberlain. M-me E. Naryshkin, Lady of Honor of Her Imperial Ma- jesty the Empress of Russia. M-me B. Kochubey, widow of Privy Councillor. M-mc M. Durnovo, wife of General of Infantery. Princess M. Shakhovskoy, Maid of Honor of Her Imperial Majesty the Empress of Russia, delegate of the Ladies Committee at the Exposition. Miss M. Vassilchikov, Maid of Honor of Her Imperial Ma- jesty the Empress of Russia. H. E., W. Timiriazev, Secretary, Actual Councillor of State. IMPERIAL RUSSIAN COMMISSIONER GENERAL AT THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION 1893, CHICAGO. H. E., P. Glukhovsky, Chamberlain, Member of Coun- cil of the Minister of Finances, Actual Councillor of State. IMPERIAL RUSSIAN DELEGATES AT THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION 1893, CHICAGO. Of the Ladies Commitee, appoinded by the High Order of Her Imperial Majesty the Empress of Russia for orga- nizing the Russian Section of Women's Work at the Worlds Columbian Exposition. Princess M. Shakhovskoy, Maid of Honor of Her Impe- rial Majesty the Empress of Russia. Of the Educational and Charitable Institutions of the Empress Mary. M-me T. Semechkin, Chief of the Alexander Gymnasium for girls in St. Petersburg. O. Aderkass, Councillor of Court. Of the Ministry of Finances: H. E., J. Janzhul, Ordinary Professor at the Imperial University in Moscow, Actual Councillor of State. H. E., L. Kirpichev, Director of the Practical Technological Institute in Kkarkov, Actual Councillor of State. VIII D. Konovalov, Professor at the Imperial University in St. Petersburg, Councillor of State. N. Langovoi, Professor at the Practical Technological In- stitute in St. Petersburg, Councillor of State. A. Gattsuk, Adjoint Professor at the above mentioned Institute, Councillor of College. G. Zelenkov, Councillor of Court. V. Tishchenko, Assistent Professor at the Imperial Uni- versity in St. Petersburg, Assessor of College. A. Rebinder, Secretary of College. V. Glavach, Teacher of Music at the Imperial Univer- sity in St. Petersburg. Of the Ministry of War: J. Gerd, Councillor of State. G. Andreiev, Councillor of Court. M. Guedeonov, Captain. 'Of the Ministry of Interior: W. Bernhardt, Civil Engineer. Of the Ministry of Public Domains: A. Pletnev, Councillor of State. A. Zhigalkovsky, Councillor of Court. Count J. Stenbok-Fermor, Councillor of Court. J. Lebedkin, Assessor of College. Count J. Rostovtsev, Secretary of College. A. Konshin, Secretary of College. W. W 7 illiams, Assistent Professor at the Petrovskaia Agri- cultural Academy near Moscow. G. Sleskin, Assistent Professor at the above mentioned Academy. A. Grebnitsky, Assistent at the Forestry Institute. E. Micherlikh, Chief Manager of the agricultutal machines, tools and implements storehouse ,,Rabotnik" (workman)- N. Borodin, of the Ural Cossacks Troups. Of the Imperial Appanages: B. Fedorov, Councillor of Court. Baron G. Pillar von Pillhau, Honorary Councillor. Of the Chief Administration of the Crown studs and horse- breeding: Th. Izmailov, Captain of Cavalry of the Imperial Guard. Of the Ministry of Marine: D. Mertvaho, Post-Captain. N. Ogloblinsky, Lieutenant. E. Kolbassiev, Lieutenant. Of the Ministry of Public Instruction: Prince S. Volkonsky, Gentlemen of the Emperor's bed- chamber, Councillor of Court. L. Dymsha, Assistent Professor at the Imperial Univer- sity in St. Petersburg, Assessor of College. E. Kovalevsky, Secretary of College. Of the Ministry of Ways of Communications: - H. E., A. Niuberg, Ordinary Professor at the Institute of Engineers of ways of communications of the Empe- ror Alexander the I st in St. Petersburg, Actual Coun- cillor of State. N. Vosnessensky, Adjoint Professor of the above mentio- ned Institute, Councillor of Court. A. Florin, Councillor of Court. P. Protopopov. Honorary Councillor. Of the State Paper Manufactory: H. E., J. Nenninguer, Assistant Chief of the Manufactory, Actual Councillor of State. G. Skamoni, Head Master at the photographic and litho- graphic Works. G. Gogenfelden, Head Master. Of the Committee of the Central Asiatic Exhibition 1891, at Moscow: A. Nedykhliaiev, Secretary of the Committee. XT COMPARATIVE SCALE, I. Russian, American, English, French and German units. of money by the legal weight of clean gold included in them. i.oo Russ. rouble = o.77 Am. dollar= 38.06 Engl. Fr. francs- 3.24 Germ, marcs. i dollar = 1.29 roubles. i (240 pence) = 6.30 roubles. i franc = 0.25 rouble. i mark = 0.3 1 rouble. i rouble contains 100 copecks, the value of which can be easily deducted from this scale, by dividing the given figu- res to 100. Tne prices in the Catalogue are given not in metallic value, but in bank notes actually in use. As their priqe differs from the ones mentioned above, and actually keeps to about R. met. i.oo == R. bank note 1.50, the following scale will help to transfer the prices of the Catalogue to foreign money. i.oo rouble 0.51 dollar =25. 5 8 pence =2. 66 franc 2.16 marc. i dollar = 1.93 roubles. i (240 p.) 9.45 roubles. i franc = 0.37 rouble. i mark 0.46 rouble. XII II. Russian, American, English and French lineal measures. i sazhen = 3 archines == 16 vershoks = 7 feet =2.33 yards = 2.13 metre. i arshin == 2.33 feet = 0.78 yard 0.71 metre, i vershok =- 1.75 inches 0.05 yard 4.44 c. metre, i versta = 0.66 mile = 1.07 k. meter. i foot = 0.14 sazhen 0.43 arshine = 6.88 vershoks. i inch = 0.5 7 vershoks. i yard == 0.43 sazhen*- 1.29 arshine == 20.64 vershoks. i metre - 0.47 sazhen == 1.41 arshines = 22.56 vershoks. i c. metre = 0.22 vershoks. i mile == 1.50 versts. i k. metre 0.93 verst. III. Square measures. i sq. sazhen = 49 sq. feet = 5. 44 sq. yards =4. 5 5 sq. metres, i dessiatina = 2400 sq. sazh. =2.68 acres =1.09 hectares, i acre == 0.37 dessiatina. i hectar = 0.91 dessiatina. IV. Capacity measures. i chetvert = 8 chetveriks - 5 .96 amer. bushels = 2.09 hectolitres. i c! elverik=o.74 amer. bushels 0.26 hectolitres. i bushel = 0.17 chetvert =1.34 chetveriks. i hectolitre = 0.48 chetvert - 3.84 chetveriks. i vedro 3.25 amer. galons=2.7i engl. galons 12.30 litres. i amer. gal. = 0.30 vedro. i engl. gal. == 0.37 vedro. i litre = 0.08 vedro. V. Weights. i berkovets^io poods = 4Oo russ. pounds 3.22 cent. = 0.16 engl. ton = o.i 6 metr. ton =163. 80 k. grams. i pood =-0.3 2 cent. 36.08 engl. pounds (avoir du poids) = 16.38 k. grams. i russ. pound 0.90 engl. pounds (avoir du poids) -0.41 k. gr. i cent. = 0.31 berkovets= 3.10 poods 124 russ. pounds. i engl. ton 6.25 berkovets = 62.50 poods. i metr. ton = 6. 2 5 berkovets = 62.)O poods. i engl. pound (avoir du poids)^!.!! russ. pounds. i kilogram = 0.06 poods = 2. 44 russ. pounds. 1. The expression nature met in this Catalogue by some grain exhibits means the weight of grain per chetvert. 2. The strenght of the spirits in Russia is determinated by Tralless' Hydrometer. The excise actually imposed is 10 co- pecks per degree, i. e. 0,01 part of a vedro of waterfree alcohol. 3. The excise on manufactured tobacco, cigars and ciga- rettes varies accordingly to their sorts. XIV CONTENTS. CTPAH. Introduction Ill List of Imperial Commission V List of Ladies Committee VII List of Delegates VIII Comparative scales of Russian and foreign units ot mo- ney and measures . . . .... XII List ot Exhibitors and exhibits: Department A: Agriculture, Food and Forestry ... i Department B: Horticulture . . . . 109 Department D: Fish and Fisheries 127 Department E: Mines and Mining 137 Department F: Machinery 159 Department G: Transportation 171 Department H: Manufactures 183 Department W: Women's Work 287 Department J: Electricity: 249 Department K: Fine Arts 355 Department L: Liberal Arts . . 381 Additional List of Exhibitors 459 List of Exhibitors disposed by the classification ... 481 Alphabetical Index 539 DEPARTMENT A. AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY. Agriculture and Forestry. Department A. Groups i, 5, 9, 15 and 17. Classes i, 3 5, 7, 9, 32, 60, 83 and 93. 1. PETROVSKAIA AGRICULTURAL ACADEMY. near Moscow. 1. Samples of seeds of cereals, grasses and beans. 2. Phosphate fertilizers. 3. Fleece. 4. Statistics. The Academy was founded in 1865 for scientific instruc- tion in agriculture. It has a farm of 203 dessiatines, 120 of which are cultivated, and 246 dessiatines of forest. The Academy being a high class school, only students who have completed their studies in middle or upper class schools are eligible for admission. Department A. Groups i, 5, 8 and 18. Classes i, 35, 7~9, 32, 46 and 95. 2. EXPERIMENTAL FARM OF THE INSTITUTE OF AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY. Gov. of Lublin, suburb New Alexandria. 1. Samples of seeds of cereals and grass. 2. Samples of seeds of lupine, Pskov flax, horse beans, In- dian corn and hemp. 3. Ears of Indian corn and samples of various plants. The farm exists since 1869, and has 155 dessiatines of land, of which 75 are tilled and 20 are meadows; the remainder consisting of wood, pasture and untillable ground. The live stock consists of 40 head of milch cattle, princi- pally of the Alhau breed and 1 1 home-bred farm horses. The machines and implements are partly of Russian man- ufacture and partly imported. There are 12 male and 4 female labourers employed throughout the year. The products find markets in the neighbourhood and in other parts of Russia. Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 3. IMPERIAL AGRICULTURAL MUSEUM. St. Petersburg. Photographs and plans. The Museum was founded in 1859 for the diffusion of agricultural knowledge by means of public lectures and by its collections, verbal explanations of the latter being given at its exhibitions, and likewise for promoting the best meth- ods of culture and introducing the use of improved ma- chines and implements. 4 Department A. Groups 1,5,9 and 18. Classes i, 3 5, 7, 9, 32, 60 and 95. 4. KHARKOV AGRICULTURAL FARM (Ministry of Imperial Domains). Gov . and district of Kharkov. 1. Seeds of cereals and grasses. 2. Sheaves of grain. 3. Samples of merino wool. 4. Photographs. The object of the farm is to serve as a model for good husbandry, for the improvement of the breeds of cattle, and for introducing the use of the best classes of agri- cultural machines, as also of seeds of higher qualities. The farm consists of 578 dessintines of land, 4 dessiatines are homestead, 3 constitute orchards, 9 dessiatines kitchen gardens, 180 tilled ground, 101 meadow land, 26 peat-bogs, 135 forest, 54 dessiatines of pasture land and 65 untillable. Many-year alternation syscem. Department A. Groups i and 8. Classes 3, 5, 7, 9 and 46. 5. KAZAN AGRICULTURAL FARM. Gov. and district of Ka^an. Agriculture. 1. Rye of various kinds in sheaves and seeds. 2. Oats of various kinds in sheaves and seeds. 3. Millet and vetch seeds. The farm was established in 1845; has 721 dessiatines, of which 193 consist of tilled ground, 115 of meadow land, 94 of pasture, 226 of forest and 3 of gardens and hop gardens. Improved grain-growing system; rotation period, 8 years. There are farming implements, which are princi- pally of foreign manufacture, thrashing machines with horse gear. There are 20 permanent labourers and 20 additional hands are employed during the summer only, and 20 farm horses. There is a small stud and large horned cattle (155 Alhau cows and 2 bulls), pigs (5 Berkshire and 5 Polish-Chinese sows and 2 hogs), sheep (10 Oxfordshire- down ewes and 2 rams); poultry (15 hens Scotch Greys" and 2 cocks), kept exclusively for breeding purposes, the offspring being sold to improve the breed in the neigh- bourhood of the farm. The milk is used for feeding the calves and making Bockstein cheese, cream, butter and curds. Girard cans and Lavalles separators are used for collecting the cream. In the culture of forestry, fruit and vegetables no pecuniary gain is sought; shoots are sold to private persons and establishments, and distributed to schools gratis with a view of promoting gardening and the culture of hops. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 3, 4, 5 and 9. 6. GORETSK AGRICULTURAL FARM (Ministry of Imperial Domains). Gov. of Mogilev, near the town Gorky. Agriculture. 1. Rye, wheat, barley, oats, beans and clover, in grain. 2. Rye, wheat, barley and oats, in sheaves. The farm is kept by a school, established in the year 1848, it has two farmhouses with 660 dessiatines, of which 9 are homestead, 6 are orchards and kitchen gar- den, 332 are tilled ground, 99 meadowland, 61 are forest, 1 06 pasture and 47 untillable. The crops are varied. Department A. Groups i, 5 and 9. Classes i. 3, 5, 7 9, 32 and 59. 7. MAR UN SKY AGRICULTURAL FARM (Ministry of Imperial Domains). Gov. and district of Saratov. Agriculture. 1. Rye Probshtai and local. 2. Wheat of various kinds. 3. Table vetch. 4. Oats of various kinds. $. Flax. 6. Millet of various kinds, beardless darnel and vetch. The farm, which belongs to a school, was founded in 1864, and consists of 884 dessiatines, of which 12 are homestead, 438 are tilled, 192 of meadow land, 127 des- siatines of pasture, 37 of forest and 12 untillable. The far- ming machines and implements are of improved type. The crops are varied at long intervals. The cattle are of Simenthal and East-Frisland breeds; the sheep of the Merino, Kara- kul and Oxfordshire-down breeds and the pigs Berkshire and Polish-Chinese breeds. Department A. Groups i and 4. Classes i, 2, 7, 8 and 29. 8. FARM OF THE AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL OF UMAN. Gov, of Kiev, Uman district. Agriculture. 1. Seeds of forage beet of various kinds. 2. Kernels and ears of Indian corn Chinkvantino and Penn- sylvania. 3. Seeds of Champagne winter wheat. 4. Seeds and sheaf of Alpine winter rye. 5. Seeds and sheaf of ordinary buckwheat. Established in 1859. Department A. Group i. 9. CHIEF SUPERIXTEXDEXCY (Ministry of War). SL Petersburg. Instruments for testing the quality of grain. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 2, 6 and 7. 10. CAUCASIAN AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. Samples of grain. Department A. Group i. Classes 3, 5 and n. 11. YELETS ZEMSTYO. Gen', of Orel, to-H'H Yelets. Grain storehouse elevator. 1. Rye and oats of various kinds, uncleaned and cleaned in the storehouse. 2. Rye flour. The storehouse was established in 1888. Up to 1892 the annual maximum quantity of grain passed through the elevator amounted to 1.700,000 poods. The receipts amoun- ted to 40,500 roubles wnile the working expenses of the ele- vator were 27,000 roubles. Maximum amount of work ca- pable of being performed by the elevator per hour: receiving or delivering grain, including cleaning 5,000 poods: dres- ing rye or wheat 800; winnowing 600 poods and grin- ding 75 poods. Steam engine (30 H. P.), cleaning and winnowing machines, aspirators and a mill with 3 grind- stones. Russian Grain received, sale in Russia. 8 Department A. Groups i, 5 and 18. Classes i, 3 5, 7, 32 and 95. 12. UFA GOVERNMENT MUSEUM. Town Ufa. 1. Rye, oats, barley and wheat, in sheaves. 2. Rye, oats, lentil, spelt, millet, barley, hemp, peas, buck- wheat, wheat, flax and buckwheat grits. The above samples are from the districts of Ufa, Zlatoust and Belebey. Department A. Groups i and 18. Classes i 5 and 95. 13. RIGA EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Toun Riga. 1 . Samples of grain. 2. Hemp seed. Department A. Groups i and 18. Classes 15. 7 and 95. 14. ROSTOV EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Town Rostov on Don. Samples of grain, millet and flax seed. 9 Department A. Groups i, 5 and 18. Classes 25, 32 and 95. 15. ODESSA EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Odessa. 1. Indian corn of various kinds. 2. Barley. 3. Oats. 4. Colza. 5. Rye. 6. Flax-seed. 7. Peas and kidney-beans. Department A. Groups i and 18. Classes i, 3 5 and 95. 16. NIKOLAIEV EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Gov. of Kherson, "own Nikolaiev. Samples of grain from the governments of Kiev, Poltava, Kharkov, Kursk, Ekaterinoslav, Taurida and Kherson. The yearly export averages over 33,000,000 poods, of the value of 27,000,000 roubles. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 4 and 5. 17. M O L L E R. Commercial samples of grain. 10 Department A. Groups i, 9 and 18. Classes I, 3,, 4, 7 9, 60 and 95. 18. STENBOCK-FERMOR, Count J. Gov. and district of Kherson. Agriculture. 1. Samples of grain and grass seeds. 2. Samples of unwashed merino wool. The size of the estate, exclusive of the parts rented, is 5.400 dcssintines, of which about 3,000 are virgin soil serving as pasture for 5,000 sheep, 3 50 heads of cattle and 1 20 horses. It has a steam thrashing machine with a portable engine of 10 horse power, and a steam mill with one pair of stones, used exclusively for grain produced on the estnic. There are also reaping and mowing machines, horse rakes, various ploughs with one or more shares. Sowing in rows and deepening the soil is being introduced. Department A. Groups i, 5 and 18. Classes i, 3, 5, 7, 8, 32 and 95. 19. SATIN, A. Gov. and district of Tambov. Agriculture (Ivanovskaja Farm). Sample seeds of rye, wheat, peas, buckwheat, vetch, lentil, millet, sunflower and Indian corn. The larm was established about a hundred years ago; seed culture was introduced in 1886. Annual average yield of i , 1 70 dessiatines 97,350 poods, value over 68,000 roubles. Ploughs, extirpators and harrows are used for til- ling purposes. Sowing machines for seed scattering and sow- ing in rows. A 10 H. P steam thrashing machine of Kleiton's system and another 10 H. P. hydraulic trashing machine invented by exhibitor. No permanent labourers kept; work done by term and day labourers. Seeds are supplied from Moscow, Warsaw and Paris, and undergo a preliminary trial in plots of ground which have been duly tested. Produce sold in Russia. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 7 und 9. 20. OFROSIMOV, A. Gov. of Orel, Dmitrov district. Agriculture. 1. Spring wheat Imperial: sheaf and seeds. 2. Sheaf and seeds of bushy red millet. 3. Sheaf and seeds of forage vetch. The products are sold on the spot, or in other places to order. Department A. Group i. Class 5. 21. KUROVSKY, E. Goi>. and district of Tambov. Agriculture. Rye seed. Department A. Group i. Class 9. 22. GOILOV, L. Gov. of Bessarabia, Orgeiev district. Forage plant Mogora (seeds and hay). 12. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 5, 7 9 23. T U R B I N, I. Gov. of Orel,, Yelets district. Agriculture. 1. Seeds and samples of hay of May and August crops of beardless darnel. 2. Seeds of red clover. 3. Red Orenburg millet and a sample of the plant. 4. Common Russian rye. 5. Spring wheat Ghirka. Farm established in 1872. Area 350 dessiatines, of these 40 dessiatines, which are irrigated in spring, are dar- nel growing land, about 10 dessiatines are partly forest and partly built upon and the remainder are sown with grain and clover. Average yield of seeds: 200 500 poods of darnel, 50 300 poods of clover, 2,000 4,000 poods of rye, 1,500 2,500 poods of millet, 1,000 5,000 poods of winter wheat, 300500 poods of spring wheat, 2,000 4,000 poods oi oats; and 12,000 19,000 poods of hay of two mowings. Gross receipts 8,000 15.000 roubles per annum. 6 workmen and 2 workwomen, besides day la- bourers. Millet, clover and darnel seeds sold in Yelets and other towns for sowing purposes. Department A. Groups i, 5, 6 and 18. Classes i, 3, 5, 32, 34 and 95. 24. STROGANOV, Count P. Gov. and district of Tambov. Agriculture. i. -Samples of grain: wheat, rye, oats, peas, lentil, hemp and millet. 2. Grain in sheaves. 3. Smoked hams. Farm established 1887. Annual yield ol grain 112.000 230,000 poods, value 70,000 130,000 roubles. Income de- - 13 - rived from rent, meadows, cattle, and wood 120,000 to 200,000 roubles per annum. There are plougus, harrows, sowing machines and steam engines. The working of the farm requires the following amount of labour: men 23,100 days, women 13,800 days, minors 1,200 days and horses 26,300 days. Sale of produce in Russia and Baltic ports. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 3 5 and 7. 25. KHOKHLOV, A. Siberia, province of Semipalatinsk. Agriculture. 1. Seeds: oats, barley, wheat, millet, rye, and Siberian buck- wheat. 2. Description of above seeds. Farm since 1881. Land cultivated by machinery. 12 nomad Kirghiz workmen are employed. Oats sold in Semipalatinsk, and other products on the spot. Department A. Group i. Class i. 26. OUKHIN, N. Gov. of Samara, Navousensk district. Spring wheat, Bieloturka. Farm since 1865.. Area 2,500 dessiatines. Ploughs used for tillage, harvesting by reapers and hand; thrashing by steam thrashing machine; 150 workmen and 30 work women employed during summer, besides 600 casual day laburers. Sale of produce in Russia. 14. Department A. Groups i and 5. Classes i, 4. 5 and 32. 27. B I E L I A V S K Y. Samples of grain. Department A. Groups i and 16. Classes 5 and 87. 28. B E R G, Count Th. Gov. of Livonia, Juriev district. Agriculture. 1. Centrifugal assorter, exhibitors system. 2. Zaqnits winter rye. 3. Collection of different kinds of rye. 4. Pamphlets on the improvements in the quality of rye; instruments for testing the quality of grain: scales; dio- phanoscopes etc. Sale of assorters, as a new invention, mostly in Russia. Department A. Groups i and 8. Classes 3 and 46. 29. KLEINMICHEL, Count C. Gov. of Chernigov, suburb Pochep. Agriculture. 1. Oats in seeds and in sheaves. 2. Pressed hops. 3. Pamphlets on the culture of hops. The estate owned by the exhibitor since 1839. Cul- ture of hop^ introduced in 1887. Average of 3,500 dessiatines 245,000 poods of oats of the value of 122.000 roubles; and 5.0007,000 poods of hops of the value of 125.000 175,000 roubles. Ploughs Sack system. Machines for sowing in rows and reaping, also thrashing machines. Hops pressed by 2 steam and 2 hand pr. (8 H. P. portable engine). 600 permanent workmen and from 900 to 1,500 day labourers are employed at the hop plantations: these are increased during harvest time to 2,100. The seeds are home-grown. Sale in Russia ting oats, which are exported to Germany, and hops, sold .merica and England. Department A. Group i. Classes 1 7. 30. SIXADIX. Samples of grain. Department A. Group i. Classes i. 5. 9 and n. 31. TERESCHEXKO. X. Gov. of f r ohjn, Zhitomir district; and gov. of Skvirsk district, Andrushovsk estate. Agriculture. Seeds and sheaves of winter wheat and of red clover. Estate purchased in 1875. Average yield: 25.000 poods of rye-value 15,000 roubles: 140,000 poods of wheat- value 112.000 roubles: 150,000 poods ol oats, value 90,000 roubles: i5.ooopocds of barley, value 9.000 roubles: 6.000 poods of peas, value 6,000 roubles: 22.000 poods of miller, value 1 1 ,000 roubles; i .000 poods of vetch, value 800 roubles: 800 poods of espartset seeds and 600 poods of clover seeds, value 6.000 roubles: 8.000 poods of sugar beet seeds, value 48.000 roubles and 2.250.000 poods of sugar beet, value 281,000 roubles. Total value 578.800 roubl. 600 day labourers employed during winter which are in- creased to 5,000 per day in the summer during the work at the sugar beet plantations. The beet is used at the exhibitor's Andrushovsk sugar works. Wheat sold in Odessa and Koenigsberg, oats on the spot and in Odessa. 16 Gov. of Kursk, Rijlsk district, Volfinsk estate. Agriculture. Grain and sheaves of wheat of various kinds and Austra- lian bats. Average yield: 80,000 poods of wheat, value 72,000 rou- bles; 70,000 poods of spring sown wheat, value 63 ,000 roubles; 70,000 poods of oats, value 42,000 roubles; 8,000 poods of rye, value 5,500 roubles; 6,000 poods of millet, value 3,000 roubles; 2,500 poods of flax seeds, value 3,500 rou- bles; 45,000 poods of sugar beet seeds, value 26,500 rou- bles; and 1,300,000 poods of sugar beet, value 228,000 rou- bles. Total value 444,000 roubles. Workmen from 300 in winter to 4,000 in summer, during work on sugar beet plantations. The wheat is supplied to the exhibitor Tetkins flour mill; and the beet to the exhibitor Tetkins sugar works. Oats sold on the spot. Gov. of Kursk, Rylsk district, Tetkin village. Steam flour mill. ~~~53 T^^^ 1 . Flour of various qualities. ffiT^C* ^ r #-? ^ 2. Middlings. 3. Wheat. "^S^/frrT t> 4. Bran, fine and coarse, and furfur. Established in 1877. Grinds 1.000,000 poods yearly, value 1,000,000 roubles. Steam engine (80 H. P.); 25 sets of rollers, 18 purifiers, 3 millstones (French), 64 flour dressers, 2 american brush machines, 16 scourers, 6 ven- tilators, 2 separators (Eurika) for bran, i dismembrator. Employed JOG workmen in two sets. 400,000 poods of wheat ground from the exhibitor's estates in the gov's of Kursk, Chernigov and Ekaterinoslav; the rest purchased in the gov's of Kursk, Kharkov and Ekaterinoslav. Sale in Russia, bran partly exported to Prussia. Department A. Groups i and 4. Classes i 5, 9 nnd 29. 32. TERESCHENKO, Th. Gov. of Vciyn, Zhitomir district, Korovinsk and Chervomwij estates. Agriculture. 1. Wheat, rye and oats. 2. Beet seeds. 3. Clover seeds. Korovinsk estate: fanning since 1875: area (10 farms) 16,406 dessiadnes, of which 506 are homestead and gardens, 5,387 tilled, 844 of meadows, 7,179 of fo- rest, 1,642 of clearings and brush-wood and 839 untill- ablc grounds. Chervormoy estate: farming since 1870; area (17 farms) 14,920 dessiatines, of which 284 are homestead and gardens, 8,295 are tilled, 1,056 of meadows, 3,945 of forest, 796 of clearings and brush- wood and 543 of untillable grounds. Many year alternation system; partly 3 soil system. The grounds are fertilixed principally with farm-yard manure, partly with green manure and artificial superphosphates, prepared on the estate from bonedust. Cultivation by horses and oxen. Implements of Russian, foreign and partly home manufacture. Weeding and harvesting of beet and corn mostly by hand ; thrashing by steam thrashing machines. Average yield of both estates: about 250,000 poods of wheat, value 225,000 roubles; 70,000 poods of rye, value 49,000 roubles; 310,000 pooc's of oats, value 186,000 roubles; about 3.200,000 poods of sugar beet, value 376,000 roubles; 8,000 poods of beet seeds, value 32,000 roubles; about 1,000 poods of clover seeds, value 6,000 roubles. In summer 5,000 7,000, in autumn 7,000 9,000 workmen ore employed, of which 30"' are male, 55"/ female and 15% children. For the renewal of beet the seeds are brought from Paris and the seeds of the wheat Bppatka from Hungary. Oats local. Home seed culture is bea ming introduced. Sale in Odessa, Koenigsberg and partly to the local flour mills. The beet is supplied to the exhibitor Korovinsk sugar works. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 3, 4 and 5. 33. PERSHIN, I. Gov. of Enisseisk, Krasnoyarsk region. Peasant farming. 1. Wheat Krasnoturka, local. Yield 1 6 fold Nature 10 poods 7 pounds*. Price 40 copecks per pood. 2. Oats Australian, from imported seeds. Yield 10 fold. Nature 7 poods i pound. Price 30 co- pecks per pood. 3. Barley Himalaya, bare, from imported seeds. Yield 14 fold. Nature 10 poods 10 pounds. Price 40 copecks per pood. 4. Barley, local. Yield 1 6 fold. Price 20 copecks per pood. 5. Summer rye Hasselburg, from imported seeds. Yield 8 fold. Price 25 copecks per pood. The first three samples are from clay soil, the fourth and fifth from a black-earth soil, on elevated exposed ground. Department A. Group i. Clasess i, 3 and 5. 34. ALEXEIEV, I. Gov. of Enisse.isk, Krasnoiarsk region. Peasant farming. 1. Wheat common, local. Yield 25 fold. Price 45 50 copecks per pood. 2. Wheat Krasnoturka, local. Yield 40 fold. Price 50 copecks per pood. Per chctvert, equal to 5.961 american bushels (Winchester). 19 3- Wheat Russian, local. Yield 30 fold. Nature 10 poods 6 pounds. Price 50 copecks per pood. 4. Oats, local. Yield 40 fold. Nature 7 poods 15 pounds. Price 27 30 copecks per pood. 5. Rye, local. Yield 35 fold. Nature 9 poods 12 pounds. Price 25 copecks per pood. From sand soil on elevated ground. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 3, 4 and 5. 35. SALOMATOV. Gov. of Enisseisk, Krasnoyarsk region. Peasant farming. 1. Wheat, local. Yield 15 fold. Price ground 35 40 copecks per pood. 2. Oats, local. Yield 15 fold. Price 21 copecks per pood. 3. Barley, local. Yield 1 8 fold. Price 20 copecks per pood. 4. Spring rye. Yield 10 fold. Nature 9 poods 6 pounds. Price 20 22 copecks per pood. From clay soil on ridges and declivities surrounded by young birch and other trees. 20 Department A. Group i. Classes i, 3 and 5. 36. CHERNIAIEV, E. Gov . of Enisseisk, Krasnoiarsk region. Peasant farming. 1. Oats mixed from local seeds and Australian, imported in 1890. Grown on clay soil on southern declivities, among scattered birch and willow trees. Yield 15 fold. Nature 6 poods 10 pounds. Price 20 23 copecks per pod. 2. Spring rye, local. From clay soil on level, clear ground. Yield 9 fold. Nature 9 poods 18 pounds. Price 20 22 copecks per pood. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 3, 4 and 5. 37. ANTONOV, K. Gov. of Enisseisk, Krasnoiarsk region. Peasant farming 1. Wheat, local. From clay soil on ridges sirrounded by birch trees. Yield 8 fold. Price ground 40 50 copecks per pood. 2. Oats, local. From black-earth soil on level ground, near a ridge. Yield 7 fold. Price 20 copecks per pood. 3- Barley, local. From black-earth soil on level ground, at the foot of ridges. Yield 10 fold. Price 20 copecks per pood. 4. Rye, local. From clay soil on southern declivities. Yield 12 fold. Price 20 copecks per pood. 5. Spring rye, local. From black-earth soil on level ground, near a ridge. Yield 8 fold. Nature 9 poods 1 1 pounds. Price 20 copecks per pood. Department A. Groups i and 5. Classes i, 3, 5 and 32. 38. SAZANOV, E. Gov. of Enisseisk, near town Krasnoyarsk. Agriculture. 1. Spring wheat Sinekoloska. Yield 15 fold. Nature 10 poods 26 pounds. 2. Wheat Chernokoloska. Yield 15 fold. Nature 10 poods 6 pounds. 3. Spring wheat Bielokoloska. Yield 15 fold. 4. Spring wheat Krasnoturka. Yield 13 fold. 5. Spring wheat Golokoloska. Yield 13 fold. 6. Black bushy oats. Yield 25 fold. y. Spring rye. Yield 1 6 fold. Nature 9 poods 25 pounds. 8. Peas. From clay soil. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 3 and 5. 39. MAIAKIN, E. Gov. of Enisseisk, Achinsk region. Peasant farming. 1. Spring wheat, local. From black-earth soil on level ground. Yield 4 fold. Price 55 copecks per pood. 2. Rye, local. From clay soil, well mellowed after two crops; on hiily ground. Yield 8 fold. Nature 9 poods 4 pounds. Price 35 copecks per pood. Department A. Group i. Classes i and 5. 40. OBZHORIN, S. Gov. of Enisseisk , near town Achinsk. Agriculture. 1. Wheat, local. Nature 10 poods 12 pounds. 2. Rye. 9 } Department A. Group i. Classes i and 3. 41. PRIANISHNIKOV. Gov. of Enisseisk, mar town Achinsk. Agriculture. 1. Wheat, Chernokoloska. Nature 10 poods 36 pounds. 2. Oats, local Nature 7 poods 15 pounds. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 3 and 5. 42. MELLER, M. Gov. of Enisseisk, Minussinsk region. Peasant farming. 1 . Wheat Imperial, seeds from Minussinsk museum. Yield 4 fold. Nature 10 poods 10 pounds. Price 30 copecks per pood. 2. Wheat, name unknown, seeds from Minussinsk museum. Yield 6 fold. Price 39 copecks per pood. 3. Oats, local. Yield 6 fold. Price 20 copecks per pood. 4. Rye, local. Yield 6 fold. Nature 9 poods 16 pounds. Price 16 copecks per pood. 5. Spring rye, local. Yield 7 fold. Nature 9 poods 16 pounds. Price 16 copecks per pood. From black-earth soil on ridges. Harvest was low, owing to drought. In favorable years the yield attains: Imperial wheat 20 fold, wheat second sample 15 fold and more, oats 15 fold, rye 20 fold and spring rye 12 fold and more. 24 Department A. Group i. Classes i, 4 and 5. 43. JAGOVKIN, A. Gov. of Enisseisk, Achinsk region. Peasant farming. 1. Spring wheat Krasnokoloska, local. Nature 10 poods n pounds. 2. Spring wheat Bieloturka, local. Nature 10 poods 20 pounds. 5. Spring wheat Sinekoloska, from imported seeds. Nature 10 poods 6 pounds. 4. Spring wheat Chernokoloska, from imported seeds. Nature 10 poods 4 pounds. 5. Wheat Golokoloska, local, long since acclimatised. 6. Wheat awned Krasnokoloska, from imported seeds. Nature 10 poods 18 pounds. 7. Rye Viekshinsk, from imported seeds. Nature 9 poods 14 pounds. Department A. Groups i and 18. Classes i, 3, 4, 5 and 95. 44. GROMADZSKY, K. Gov. of Enisseisk, Kansk region. Agriculture. 1. Spring wheat Red Sibierka, local. Yield per dessiatina 126 poods 30 pounds. Price 1 8 20 copecks per pood in grain and 20 25 copecks per pood for flour. 2. Wheat Golokoloska from imported seeds. Yield per dessiatina 131 poods 10 pounds. Price 25 30 copecks per pood in grain and 35 75 copecks per pood for flour. 3- Oats Sibieriak, local. Yield per dessiatina 130 poods. Price 12 14 co- pecks per pood. 4. Barley red, local. Yield per dessiatina 145 poods. Nature 8 poods 5 pounds. Price 10 12 copecks per pood. 5. Barley bare, from imported seeds. Yield per 200 square sazhens (0.225 acre) 14 poods. Nature 9 poods 30 pounds. 6. Rye, local. Yield per dessiatina 123 poods 30 pounds. Nature 9 poods 7 pounds. Price 10 n copecks per pood in grain, and 12 14 copecks per pood for flour. 7. Spring rye, local. Yield per dessiatina 159 poods 20 pounds. Nature 9 poods 2 pounds. Price 10 n copecks per pood in grain and 12 14 copecks per pood for flour. 8. Poppy grey, from imported seeds. Yield per 200 square sazhens (0.225 acre ) 5 poods 30 pounds. Farming established 3 years ago on land rented from Crown. The cultivated tract is hilly surrounded by forest and watered by two springs flowing from the summit of a hill. Department A. Group i. Classes i and n. 45. OKULOV, J, Gov. of Enisseisk, Minussinsk region. Alexeievsk steam flour mill. 1. Wheat in grain. 2. Samples of flour, i, 2 and 3 qualities. 6 sets of rollers, steam engine (16 H. P.), 100,000 poods of wheat ground, purchased on the spot. Sale in the gov. of Enisseisk. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 3, 5, 7 andn. 46. FROLOVA, M. ^Tzimmerman economy". Gav. and district of Tambov. Agriculture. 1. Samples of seeds of various kinds of wheat, oats and millet. 2. Russian rye flour from home grown grain. Area 4,000 dessiatines. Yearly 1,000 dessiatines sown with winter and 1,000 with spring grain. Seed culture since 1884. Department A. Group i. Class n. 47. MANSFELDT, D. Moscow, Samples of flour. Department A. Groups i and 2. Classes i, u and 15. 48. GALUNOV, A. Gov. of Jarosicw, Rybinsk district. Steam flour mill. 1. Samples of materials: wheat of various kinds. 2. Samples of products: semolino, flour of different sorts and bran. Established in 1884. Annual production 1,000,000 poods of flour, value 2,000,000 roubles. Steam engine (100 H. P.), 39 sets of rollers, 4 mill stones. 24 workmen 27 in two reliefs by 8 hours each. Wheat purchased in the gov's of Samara, Saratov, Astrakhan and in the province of the Don Cossacks. Sale in St.-Petersburg, Moscow and Rybinsk. Department A. Groups i, 9 and 18. Classes i, 3 8, n, 59, 60 and 95. 49. BERENDT and C. Gov. of Kiiriand and town Libau. Agriculture and steam mill. 1. Samples ol dressed and sifted rye and wheaten flour. 2. Pearl barley, buckwheat grits and rice. 3. Wheat, rye, barley, oats, flax, hemp, millet and sun- flower seeds. 4. Flax and hemp. 5. Sheep and Camel wool. Steam mill established in 1880. Value of annual pro- duction 2,000,000 roubles. Steam engine (500 H. P.). 13 mill stones, n sets of rollers, 3 dismembrators, 50 auxiliary machmes. 100 workmen and 50 workwomen. Materials from interior governments of Russia. Sale in Russia, Germany, Sweden, Norway, England, France, Hol- land and Belgium. 28 Department A. Groups i and 2. Classes i, n and 15. 50. WEISS, CH., firm ,,Starr and O. Riga. Maccaroni manufactory. 1. Kuban wheat and flour. 2. Maccaroni and vermicelli of Kuban flour. Es:ablished in 1887. Annual production 7,000 9,000 poods of maccaroni, value about 32,000 roubles. Steam engine (20 H. P.), five pairs of mill stones, hydraulic com- pressing, and other machines. Typography, packing case workshop. 18 workmen and 12 workwomen. Russian wheat ground. Sale in Russia. Department A. Groups i and 2. Classes i, n and 15. 51. SHMIDT, brothers. District and town Saratov. Steam and water flour mills. 1. Wheat: Kuban and Russian. 2. Chaff and husks. 3. Bran. 4. Semolino, coarse and fine grinding. 5. Flour of various kinds. Steam mills in Saratov established 1879; water mills in the dis:rict of Saratov established 1848. 3,000,000 poods of wheai: ground per year, value 3,000,000 roubles. Steam engines and turbins, 300 workmen. Materials Russian, prin- cipally local; sale in Russia. 29 Department A. Groups i and 2. Classes 3, u and 15. 52. BUNAKOV, A. Orel. Flour mill. 1. Semolino. 2. Flour of various sorts. 3. Bushy oats. Established in 1880, Grinds 100,000 poods of wheat per year, value 200,000 roubles. Water and steam mo- tors, 8 sets of rollers, 2 mill stones, 3 purifiers, i dis- membrator, 30 flour dressers, 30 workmen, 5 workwo- men and 10 minors. Local grain ground. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group i and 2. Classes i, n and 15. 53. TALDYKINA, C. Gov. of Orel, lelets district. Steam flour mill. 1. Flour of various sorts. 2. Middlings, coarse and fine, dust and bran. 3. Winter wheat, cleaned and uncleaned. 4. Spring wheat, cleaned and uncleaned. 5. Wheaten points. Firm exists since 1837. The mill grinds during loVa months per year 63.0,000 poods of wheat, value 750,000 roubles. Compound system steam engine (150 H. P.), tur- bine (70 H. P.), 14 sets of china and 7 sets of metal- lic rollers, 2 French millstones, 31 workmen. Wheat lo- cal und from the south of Russia. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group i. Class n. 54. LIBERMAN, brothers G. and A. Gov. of Tavrida, Metitopcle. Steam flour mill. Flour. Established in 1885. Grinds 370,000 poods of wheat per year, value about 259.000 roubles Steam-engine (30 H. P.), 9 sets of rollers, 4 sets of mill stones, purifiers and dres- sers etc. 14 workmen in two reliefs Materials and sale local. Department A. Group i. Class n. 55. BARANOV, J. Province of Kuban, Batalpashinsk region. Flour mill. Flour of different sorts. Mill exists since 1887. Grinds 200,000 poods of wheat per annum, value 250,000 roubles. Water motor (30 H. P.), 6 Vienna sets of rollers. 16 workmen. Wheat from North Caucasus. Sale in Russia, but mostly in North Caucasus. Department A. Groups i and 2. Classes n and 15. 56. WEINSTE1N, E. and SONS. Odessa and Cher son. Flour mills. Products of the flour mills. The mills exist: in Cherson since 1852, in Odessa since 1867. About 2,000,000 poods of wheat ground per year, value 2,700,000 roubles. 8 steam boilers, 2 steam engines (350 H. P.), 32 sets of rollers, 12 sets of millstones etc. 50 workmen and 18 workwomen. Russian wheat ground. Export to England, Egypt, Turkey, Syria and sale in Amour province, Baltic gov's, Caucasus and at local markets. Department A. Group i. Class n. 57. CHUMAKOV, M. and SONS. Town Kostroma. Steam flour mill. Flour of different sorts. Established in 1871. Grinds 1,200,000 poods of wheat per year, value 1,5 00,000 roubles. 2 steam engienes (120 H. PA 49 set; of rollers, 6 millstones 50 workmen. Russian wheat ground. Sale in Finland and other parts of Russia. Department A. Group i. Class u. 58. BORELL, E. Gov . of Saratov, Kamyshin and Aikarsk districts and town Saratov. Steam and water flour mills. 1. Samples of grain, not ground and in various stages of grinding. 2. Samples of flour of various kinds. Firm exists since 1874; steam-mill in Saratov, established in 1889, steam mill in Kamyshin district in 1892, and the water mill in Atkar district in 1883. 3,500,000 poods of wheat ground per year, value 4,000,000 roubles. 2 steam engines (1000 H. P.), 3 steam boilers, 3 turbines (225 H. P.), sets of roller and various machines for pu- rifying and sorting grain. 76 workmen. Wheat purchased in the gov's of Saratov and Samara. Sale in Russia. Department A. Groups i and 3. Classes i, 3 and 24. 59. STATION FOR MELIORATION AND AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENTS. Gov. of Sediets, estate Sobieshin. 1. Sand sorghum, seeds and ears. 2. Wheat, seeds and ears. 3. Oats, local and Canada, seeds and ears. Seeds sown in small plots of grounds for experiments; sale in small quantities, local. Department A. Groups i, 4 and 5. Classes i, 29 and 32. 60. SOCIETY OF AGRICULTURAL COLONIES. Former estate of the count Kinsky. Gov. of Sedtets, mar Ivangorod,. Agriculture. 1 . Seeds and ears of wheat of different kinds 2. Seeds of white forage carrots and forage beet. 3. Kidney beans, seeds. Average yield 1800 poods of wheat, value 2,700 rou- bles; 50 poods of carrots seeds, value 300 roubles; 50 poods of beet seeds, value 3 oo roubles; 20 poods of kidney bean seeds, value 40 roubles. Total receipt 3,340 roubles. Local sale to landowners for sowing. Department A. Group i. Classes i and 5. 61. GURSKY, J. Gov. of Warsaw. Agriculture. 1. Wheat Pulavka and Vyssoko-Litovsk. 2. Rye Probstei. Average yield: 5,000 poods of wheat; 15,000 18,000 poods of rye and 7,000 poods of oats, value 20,000 roubles Sale in Warsaw and Lodz. 34 Department A. Group i. Classes i, 3 5. 62. S ORES HI N. Samples of grain. Department A. Groups i and 8. Classes i and 46. 63. KRONENBERG, Y. Gov. of Warsaw, Vlotslav district. Agriculture. 1 . Samples oi wheat Pulavka, seeds and ears. 2. Samples of hops. Average yield: 42,000 poods of wheat, value 42,840 roubles and 400 poods of hops, value 8,000 roubles. Export to Prussia (Dan&ig) and sale in Warsaw. Department A. Group i. Classes i, 4 and 5. 64. ZHURAVSKY, J. Gov. of Ptotsk. Agriculture. 1. Wheat Pulavka. 2. Two rowed barley, local. 3. Rye Probstei. Average yield: 6,000 poods of wheat, value 6,000 9,000 roubles; 5,000 poods of barley, value 5,0006,000 roubles and 2,400 poods of rye, value 2,000 2,500 roubles. Sale of wheat in Warsaw and Prussia (Dantsig), of barley in Moscow and Warsaw and of rye on the spot. - 35 - Department A. Group i. Class i. 65. BONETSKY, A. Gov . of Warsaw, Groetsk district. Agriculture. Seeds and ears of wheat Pulavka. Average yield (from 400 poods sowed) 3,400 poods, value 3,740 roubles. Sale local. Department A. Groups i and 5. Classes i, 3 5 and 32. 66. POTOTSKAIA, Countess M., nee Princess Sapiega. Gov. of Grodno, Brest district, estate Vijssoko-Litovsk. Agriculture. Samples of wheat, rye, oats, peas in seeds and sheaves. Average yield 20,000 poods of various seeds. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department A. Group i. Class i. 67. LENARTOVITCH, A. Gov. of Radom. Agriculture. Seeds and ears of wheat Sandomirka. Average yield 3,500 poods, of which 2,000 poods are sold as seeds at 2 roubles 50 copecks per pood in Poland and south-western governments of Russia. The remainder is sold on the spot at local prices. Department A. Group i. Classes i and 5. 68. KOZLOVSKY, V. Gov. of Warsaw, Skernevits district. Agriculture. 1. Seeds and ears of Pulavka wheat. 2. Rye Selected. Average yield 6,000 poods of wheat and 7,000 poods of rye, value about 12,000 roubles. Sale at Warsaw and export to Dantsig. Department A. Group i and 4. Classes i, 5, 29 and 30. 69. Y AN ASH, A. Gov. of Warsaw. Agriculture. 1 . Seeds and ears of wheat Pulavka. 2. Seeds and ears of rye Selected. 3. Seeds of sugar beet. 4. Seeds of forage white carrot with green top. Average yield: 5,000 poods of wheat, value 6,250 roubles; 4,000 poods of rye, value 4,000 roubles; 6,000 poods of beet seeds, value 7,000 roubels; 100 poods of forage car- rots' seeds, value 800 roubles. Total value over 41,000 roubles. Sale in Poland, the beet seeds also in South Western Russia. 37 Department A. Group i. Class 3. 70. LUBENSKY, J. Gov. of Kalisb, estate Star^henits. Agriculture. Oats, seeds. Average yield 3.000 pouds, value 2,400 roubles. Sale local. Department A. Group i. Class 4. 71. KRASSINSKY, L, Count. Goi'. of Piotsk. Agriculture. Seeds and ears of two-rowed barley. Department A. Groups i and 5. Classes 4 and 32. 72. OKHENKOVSKY, Ch. Gov. of Siedlets. Agriculture. 1. Two-rowed barley, local. 2. Peas Victoria. Average yield 1,200 poods of peas, value 1,800 roubles and i, 600 poods of barley, value 1,500 roubles. Sale in Warsaw and export to Prussia (Dantsig). Department A. Group i. Class 4 73. BRANITSKY, Count X. Near Warsaw, Agriculture. Seeds and ears of two-rowed barley, local. Average yield 6,000 9,000 poods, value i rouble i rouble 25 copecks per pood. Department A. Group i. Class 7. 74. ZAKRZHEVSKY, N. Gov. of Kaiish. Agriculture. 1 . Seeds and ears of grey millet. 2. Seeds and ears of seradella, common. Average yield about 500 poods of millet, value 800 roubles and 1,200 poods ot seradella, value 1,200 roubles. Sale in Poland and export to Prussia. Department A. Group i and 5. Class 7, 9 and 32. 75. VYDZHGA, J, Gov. of Linblin. Agriculture. 1. Orange peas. 2. Red and white millet. 3. Grey and white vetch, seeds. 39 Department A. Group i. Class 8. 76. COTARBINSKY, V. Gov. of Warsaw. Agriculture. Seeds and heads of timothy (Phleum palustre). Average yield about 200 poods of seeds, value 800 1,000 roubles. Sale in Warsaw and Kiev. Department A. Group i. Class 8. 77. KHRAPOVITSKY. Seeds of forage' plants. See JY 89. *==!- Department A. Group 2. Class 16. 78. ROSTOVTSEVA, J. Gov. of Orel, Jelets district. Potato flour mill. Potato starch flour. Established in 1 878. Machine work by steam. About 25,000 poods of starch annually extracted from 180,000 poods of potatoes, value 30,00050,000 roubles. Potatoes from the exhibitor's estate. 80 100 workmen. Sale in Russia. 40 Department A. Group 2. Class 15. 79. WEISS (Starr and C.). Macaroni. See JV 37. Department A. Group 5, Class 32. 80. PETROVSKAIA AGRICULTURAL ACADEMY. Seeds of beans. See N? i. Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 81. INSTITUTE OF NOVAIA ALEXANDRIA. Seeds of beans. See J\ 2. Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 82. S A T I N, A. Seeds of beans. See N 19. Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 83. CHARKOV FARM. Seeds of beans. See Ns 4. Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 84. MARIINSKY FARM. Seeds of beans. See JS& 7. Department A. Group 5. Class 52 85. ODESSA EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Seeds of beans. See JV 15. Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 86. STROGANOV, Count. Seeds of beans. See JN 24. Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 8Y. BELIAVSKY. Seeds of beans. See JS[ 27, Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 88. SOCIETY OF AGRICULTURAL COLONIES. Seeds of beans. See J\ 60. Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 89. KHRAPOVITSKY, count E. Gen.', and district of Grodno. Agriculture. 1. Early peas. 2. Lupine of different sorts. Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 90. POTOTSKAIA, Countess. Seeds of beans. See JV 66. Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 91. OKHENKOVSKY. Seeds of beans. See J\ 72. Department A. Group 5. Class 32. 92. VYDZHGA, J. Orange peas. See JV 75. Department A. Group 4. Class 29. 93. IMPERIAL APANAGES. Sugar beet. See JN 180. -s i- : 43 Department A. Group 4. Class 29. 94. TERESHCHENKO, Th. Sugar beet. See JY 32. Department A. Group 4. Class 29. 95. SOCIETY OF AGRICULTURAL COLONIES. Sugar beet. See JV 60. Department A. Group 4. Class 29. 96. Y A N A S H. Sugar beet. See JV 69. Department A. Group 4. Class 29. 97. GLUSSKY, G. Gov. of Kieiets, estate Ver^hbitsa. Seed of sugar beet: Vilmorin blanc and Klein Wausleben. Average yield 15,000 20,000 poods, value 100,000 roubles. Sorting laboratory, choice of shoots by polarisa- tion. Meteorological station. Sale in Russia and export to France and Belgium. 44 - Department A. Group 4. Class 29. 98. DZENGUELEVSKY, J. Gov. of Warsaw, town Sokhachev. Agriculture. Seeds of sugar beet. Average yield 30,000 poods of seeds, value 150,000 roubles. Depariment A. Group 4. Class 29. 99. MAIZEL, V. Gov. of Kielets, estate Br^bosuvka. Seeds of sugar beet. Average yield 30,000 poods of seeds, value 200,000 roubles. Sale to sugar works in Russia, export to France, Belgium and Hungary. Department A. Group 4. Class 30. 100. GRADENVITS, V. Gov. of Kdets, Stopnitsk district. 1. Seeds of forage carrots, cleaned and uncleaned. 2. Seeds of forage beets of various kinds. Average yield 600 1,000 poods of forage carrot and as much of forage beet seeds. Sale in Russia and abroad. 45 - Department A. Group 4. Class 30. 101. DOBRZHANSKY, J. and Son. Gov. of Kielets, Agriculture. Cleaned and uncleaned seeds of forage giant carrots, white with green top. Average yield, of own and rented lands, about 1000 poods of seeds, value about 10,000 roubles. Sale in Kiev, Warsaw and export to Prussia. Department A. Group 4. Classes 29 and 30. 102. FRYCH, K. Gov. of Kielets. Agriculture. 1 . Seeds of forage carrots, white with green top. 2. Seeds of forage beet of different kinds. Average yield about 600 poods of carrot seeds, value 4,000 roubles and 1,200 poods of beet seeds, value 4,800 roubles. Sale in Russia, export to Austria and Germany. : ;,' '. Department A. Group 4. Classes 29 and 30. 103. AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL OF UMAN. Seeds of root crops. See JV 8. - 4 6 - Department A. Group n. Classes 66 and 69. 104. SARADZHEV, D. Towns Tijlis, Vladikavkaz Erivan and Ki^liar. Spirit rectifying, liqueur and grain brandy distilleries. 1. Grain brandy Vodka" and liqueurs of various kinds. 2. Cognac and grape spirit. The distilleries were founded in Vladikavkaz in 1883 and in Tiflis and Erivan in 1887. Production 15,000,000% per year, value 2,000,000 roubles inclusive of excise. Work conducted by steam machinery. At all the destilleries 160 workmen are employed. Materials from gov's ot Tiflis, Eli- zavetpol and Erivan and from the province of Tersk. Sale in Russia. See Dep. B. JV 295. Department A. Group n. Classes 66, 69 and 70. 105. WOLFSHMIDT, A. Riga. Grain brandy, liqueur and spirit rectifying distillery and yeast manufactory. Grain brandies, cordeals, balsams and liqueurs. Distillery established in 1845. Value of annual produc- tion 5,500,000 roubles. The distillery contains 5 distilling and 3 rectifying apparatus, 40 filters, 120 various tanks, 5 pair of m.Ustones, 5 assorters, a mak kiln, 6 steam boi- lers and 5 steam engines (305 H. P.). The distillery is lighted by electricity with 3 dynamo machines. Employed 300 workmen. Materials: rye, malt, barley and raw spirit from the neighbouring gov's and Indian corn from the Caucasus. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia, and export to America, Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Turkey, Austria, England, Egypt and India. Department A and F. Groups n and 69. Classes 66, 68, 70 and 421. 106. KELLER and C. S. Petersburg. Spirit rectifying, grain brandy and liqueur distillery. 1. Spirit dehydrated to 97%. 2. Grain brandy. 3. Bottling apparatus. The distillery was established in 1863. In 1892 703,000 vedros of spirit, grain brandy and liqueurs were sold, value 4,604,000 roubles inclusive of excise, as also 37,000 vedros of rectified spirit of 95%, value 62,000 rou- bles exclusive of excise. There are 3 steam boilers (190 H. P.), 3 rectifying apparatus of Savalle, Vernicke and Belgian construction and 174 copper clarifying apparatus. Electric lighting machines (30 H. P.). Employed 210 workmen and 170 workwomen. Raw spirit 32,ooo,ooo/o per year supplied from Russia, principally from the Baltic gov's. Sale in Russia and abroad. .Department A. Group u. Classes 66 and 69. 107. NATUSS, F. and C. 5". Petersburg. Distillery. Grain brandies and liqueurs of various kinds. Distillery established in 1839. Production over 242,000 vedros per year, value 1,584,800 roubles. There are 2 steam boilers, 3 pumps, 40 copper clarifying apparatus, 3 copper apparatus for distillation. Employed 100 workmen and 90 workwomen. Raw spirit supplied from Russia, 280.800 vedros per year, value 307,151 roubles exclusive of excise. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group n. Class 68. 108. TERESHCHENKO, Th. Goi'. of Voiyn, Zhitomir district. The Chervonnoie distillery. Spirit of molasses, rectified. Established in 1874. There are 3 steam boilers (90 H. P.), i steam engine (20 H. P.) distilling columns, rec- tifying apparatus etc. Value of annual production about 130,000 roubles, exclusive of excise; 20 workmen. Molas- ses from the exhibitor's sugar works. Sale on spot, in Russia, partly to Vladivostok and abroad. See JV 32. Department A. Group u. Classes 66 70. 109. BALK, Ch. Riga, Grain brandy and liqueurs steam distillery. Balsams, liqueurs, spirit, grain brandy and cordials of dif- ferent kinds. Established in 1815. Production 5,000.000 %> of spi- rit per year, value 500,000 roubles. Steam boiler (30 H P.), steam pump, 2 rectifying apparatus, n copper purifying tanks; 47 workmen, 3 workwomen and 10 mi- nors. Sale in Russia. 49 Department A. Group n. Classes 66, 68 and 69. 110. YOLK OVA, A., firm ,,Gothard Martini*. 5\ Petersburg. Spirit-rectifying, liqueurs and grain brandy distillery. 1. Liqueurs. 2. Kiev cordials. 3. Spirit. 4. Table and bitter brandies. Distillery founded in 1818. Value of annual produc- tion 1,000,000 roubles. The spirit is re:tilied by Vcrnicke's steam apparatus and by charcoal process; 25 copper puri- fying apparatus, i steam motor, 2 steam boilers (32 H. P.). charcoal reviving furnace, charcoal pounding machine; bottl- ing by hand machine; 61 workmen and 37 workwo- men; 12 horses. Materials principally Russian, rum form England; cognac from France. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group n. Classes 66, 68 70. 111. L A N G E, K. and C. 5". Petersburg. The New-Kalinkin grain brandy and liqueurs distillery. Brandies, cordials, balsams, spirit and liqueurs. Established in 1878. Production about 320,000 vedros, value 2,016,000 roubles per year. Steam engine (8 H. P.), 2 rectifying Savalle columns, 2 steam boilers and dynamo for electric lighting; 90 workmen and 45 workwomen. Raw spirit principally supplied from tiie Baltic gov's. Sale in Russia. 50 Department A. Group n. Classes 66, 69 and 70. 112. ROGGER, P. Pskov. Distillery. Brandies, liqueurs, cordials, balsams and purified brandy. Established in 1883. Value of annual production 150,000 roubles; 10 workmen. Sale in Russia and export. Department A. Group n. Class 65. 113. RABOTKIN, P. Moskow. Wholesale storehouse of clarified grain brandy and spirit. Various clarified table brandies. Firm exists since 1883. Production per year 200,000 vedros 40%) strong, value 1,000,000 roubles, inclusive excise. A Herbst's copper purifying apparatus and another wooden cylindrical exhibitors system; 60 workmen and 40 workwomen. Raw spirit supplied from distilleries in the adjoining gov's. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group u. Class 66. 114. SM1RNOV, S. Moskow. Steam distillery and wine-cellar. 1 . Spirit. 2. Brandies of different kinds. See Dep. B. JY 269. Department A. Group u. Clashes 66, 67 and 69. 115. SMIRNOV, P. Moskow. Wholesale storehouse of clarilied table brandies and spirit, and liqueurs and brandies distillery. Spirit, cordials and brandies of various kinds. Established in 1864. Production 2, 000,000 vedros 40% strong, value 1 5 ,000,000 roubles per year; 4 steam boilers (i 60 H. P.) and 100 cylinders for rectifying table-brandy and spirits; 1,200 workmen. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department A. Group n. Class 69. 116. TSHAPLINSKY, M. and M. Gov. of Kiev, Zvenigorod district. Ratafia, fruit liqueurs oi various kinds. Production established in 1850 as a home industry. Fruit from own garden's. Sale to order. Department A. Group n. Classes. 66, 69 and 70. 117. BLOSSFELDT, S. Riga. Grain brandy distillery. Grain brandies, liqueurs, cordials of different kinds, balsams. Established in 1 888. Value of annual production 90,000 100,000 roubles, i distilling apparatus, 3 pyrifying appa- ratus, 2 boilers etc.; 5 workmen and 1 1 workwomen. Rus- sian materials. Sale in Russia; export to Germany, Hol- land, Danemark, Belgium, England, France and Sweden. Department A. Group .11. Class 66. 113. BOGATYREY, J. Gov. of Moscow, town Volokolamsk. Wholesale grain-brandy storehouse. Clarified table brandy. Established in 1864. Annually 30000 vedros clarified, value 180,000 roubles; 8 workmen. Raw spirit supplied from Moscow and the sov. of Tver. Local sale. Department A. Group n. Classes 66 and 70. 119. B O L M A N and C. 6". Petersburg. Brandies and liqueurs rectifying distillery. Spirit, cordials, balsam and brandies of various kinds. Established in 1877. Annual production 100,000 vedros. value 6 roubles 10 copecks to 50 roubles per vedro. Steam rectifying apparatus, steam boiler (20 H. P.), steam engine (3 H. P.), 20 purifying apparatus, 4 filtres, 6 metallic cy- lmdres;35 workmen and 30 workwomen. Materials Russian and partly foreign. Sale in Russia and expert. Department A. Group n. Class 66. 120. A V A N E S S O V, Brothers. Transcaspian province, town Askhabad. Wholesale grain brandy and spirit storehouse. Purified grain brandy. Firm exists since 1885. Production 250,000% per annum, value 50,000 roubles. Cold purifying by filtration through charcoal in wooden vats; 10 workmen and 4 mi- nors. Raw spirit from Turkestan, from Samarkand distil- leries and from Vladikavkaz. Sale in the Transca.^pian pro- vince. 54 Department A. Group n. Classes 66 and 68. 121. VOROGUSHIN, N. Gov . of Tula, Chern district. Distillery. Rectified table brandy and rectified grain and potatoes spirit. Distillery owned by the exhibitor in 1880. Yearly production 65,900 90,000 vedros 40% strong, value 45,000 60,000 roubles exclusive of excise. Steam engine, (20 H. P.), boiler with 2 boiling cylindres. Henze's potatoes steaming apparatus, distilling and rectifying stills; 40 work- men. Grain and potatoes from the exhibitor's e.tate (area 1,500 dessiatmes), but partly purchased from the adjacent kndowners. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group u. Classes 66 70. 122. YON, J. S. Petersburg. The Riga liqueur and brandy distillery. Brandies, spirit and liqueurs. Established in 1865. Two boilers (20 H. P. each), 40 purifying apparatus, charcoal reviving stoves, 2 Savalle's recti- fying columns; 100 workmen. Yearly production value 1,000,000 roubles. Raw spirit supplied from the Baltic gov's. Sale in Russia and export to the United States of North America. Department A. Group n. Classes 66. 67 and 69. 123. MEGVINOV, S. Ti/Ks. Brandy, cordials and spirit-rectifying distillery. 1. Grain and Indian corn table brandy. 2. Cordials and liqueurs. 3. Bitters and other brandies. 4. Rum. See Dep. B. N? 296. Department A. Group n. Classes 66 and 69. 124. S MI E TAN IX, G. Novgorod. Brandy distillery and wholesale storehouse. 1. Brandies of various kinds. 2. Pine-apple liqueur. 3. Kiev cordials. Distillery exists since 1865. Production 160,000 vedros of brandy per annum, value 900,000 roubles. Hand work; 20 25 workmen and 5 10 workwomen. Materials Russian and sale in Russia. - 56 - Department A. Group n. Classes 66 and 69. 125. STALNOV, J. Novgorod. Brandy distillery and wholesale storehouse. Liqueurs and purified brandy. Distillery exists since 1861. Yearly production 3,000 4,000 vedros of liqueurs and brandies, and about 100,000 vedros of rectified brandy, value 610,000 roubles. Machine and handwork: 18 workmen. Raw spirit supplied from the Baltic and Southern gov's. Sale in the gov's of Novgorod and Pskov. Department A. Group n. Classes 66 and 68. 126. THE MARIINSK DISTILLERY COMPANY. Gov . of Tambov, town Lipetsk. Brandy and spirit rectifying distillery. 1. Rectified spirit. 2. Table brandy. The company exists since 1886. Annual production 24,000,000 /o of spirit, value 420,000 roubles and 200,000%) of brandy, value 16,000 roubles. Steam engine (35 H. P.); 200 workmen. Materials, potatoes and grain local. Sale in Russia. 57 Department A. Group n. Classes 66 and 69. 127. C H I S T I A K O V, St. and C. Gov. of Perm, toiun Ekaterinburg. Brandy and spirit rectifying distillery. Spirit, brandies and fusel oil. Brandy distillery established in 1886; spirit rectifying distillery in 1889. Production 200 vedros of brandy per 24 hours. Department A. Group n. Classes 66 and 68. 128. SHERESHEVSKY, J. Grodno. Wholesale brandy storehouse and spirit rectifying distillery. Brandies and spirit. Production since 1859; 2, 500,000 /o per annum, value 325,000 roubles; 25 copper pyrifying cylinders and a steam distilling still; 25 workmen. Materials local and from adja- cent gov's. Sale in the gov's of Grodno and of Poland. I Department A. Group n. Classes 66 and 68. 129. VANIUSHINA. Grain brandies and spirit. Department A. Group n. Class 69. 130. TIMOFFEIEVSKY, Brothers. Mcskou 1 . Cordials and liqueurs. Department A. Group 11. Class 70. 131. VIKEL, W. Helsingfors. Punch. Prndu:tion since 1869. Hand and machine work, value 30,000 roubles per annum; 12 workmen. Material arrack 25 pipes supplied from Holland. Sale in Ru?sia and ex- port to Germany. Department A. Group 10. Classes 64 and 65. 132. LAN IN, N. Mcskow. Manufactory of artificial mineral waters and champagne. Mineral waters. See Dcp. B. JN 290. Department A. Group 12. Class 73. 133. DUR DIN'S, J. IMPERIALLY CONFIR- MED ASSOCIATION. 6". Petersburg. Beer and mead brewery. Russian porter. Brewery established in 1839. Production 700,000 ve- dros of beer and mead, value 700,000 roubles per annum. Steam motor (60 H. P.); 250 workmen. Materials supplied, barley from Poland and the Baltic provinces, hops from Poland, Volyn. Bohemia and Bavaria. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 134. SKVORTSOV, N, Saratov. Steam Oil Mill. 1. Sunflower oil. 2. Oil cake. 3. Sunflower kernel. 4. Sunflower seeds. The mill exists since 1886. About 500,000 poods of sunflower seed (from the districts of the gov. of Saratov) treated yearly, and 110,000 120,000 poods of oil. 230,000 250,000 poods of oil cake obtained, value 600,000 roubles. Steam motor (25 H. P.), 10 hydraulic presses; 60 workmen. Sale in Russia. Oil cake exported to Germany. - 60 Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 135. MARI1NSK AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL. Goi'. and district of Saratov. Sunflower seeds. The seeds are received from the Saratov and Balashov districts and from the town Voronezh. Department A. Group 18. Classes 95 and 96. 136. TAIROV, J. and ALIKHANOV, K. Jijlis. Oil and soap works. 1. Oil of different kinds. 2. Seeds. 3. Oil cake. 4. Soap. Established in 1880. Value of annual production 180,000 roubles. Steam engine (joH. P.), presses, sets of grinding stones, pumps, pounders, winnowers, boilers, etc.; 30 workmen and 2 workwomen; Oil seeds supplied from the Caucasus; caustic soda, potash etc. from England. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia; part of the oil cake ex- ported to England. 61 Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 137. V A A G, A. and Sons. Gov. of Saratov, Tsaritsin district, suburb Dubovka. Mustard manufactory. 1. Mustard meal. 2. Mustard oil. Established in 1850. About 60,000 poods of m istard ground per year, value 120,000 roubles. Horisofital steam engine (25 H. P.) Tange's system; 30 permanent work- men and 10 hired per day. Mustard seed supplied from the gov. of As:rakhan. Sale local and partly abroad. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 138. PETROV, Th. Gov. of Voronezh, town Korotoiak. Oil mill. Sunflower oil and sunflower oil cake. i Established in 1862. Production annually 25,000 poodj of sunflower oil, value 125,000 roubles. Steam mill (20 H. P.), 2 Anglo-American hydrauLc presses, 2 steam kettl- es, 2 presses, hydraulic pump, rolls, i stamping press; 24 workmen in two reliefs. Material lo;al. Sale /joi,. oil in Russia, of oil cake principally abroad. 62 Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 139. PSKOV AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. Linseed. See N> 197. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 140. KHARKOV AGRICULTURAL FARM. Flax. See Js 4. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 141. NOVOALEXANDRINSK INSTITUTE. Oil seeds. See JS r 2. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 142. MUSEUM OF THE GOV. OF UFA. Oil seeds. Sec js& 12. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 143. ROSTOV EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Oil seeds. See A 14. - 6 3 - Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 144. RIGA EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Oil seeds. See jY 13. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 145. ODESSA EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Oil seeds. See JV 15. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 146. NIKOLAIEV EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Oil seeds. See jYs 16. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 147. STENBOCK-FERMOR, Count. Oil seeds. See X 18 Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 148. SATIN. Oil seeds. See J\ 19 - 6 4 - Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 149. STROGONOV, Count. Oil seeds. See JV 24. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 150. BE REND. Oil seeds. See JV 49 . Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 151. VORONIN, B. and Son. Gov. of Saratov, town Tsaritsin. Mustard mill. Mustard seed and mustard oil. Mill founded in 1884. Value of annual production 200,000 roubles. Steam engine (25 H. P.); 30 workmen and 6 workwomen. Materials from the gov's of Astrakhan, Stavropol and Saratov. Sale in Russia. Department A. Groups 3, 17 and 18. Classes 17, 90, 93 and 94. 152. IMPERIALLY CONFIRMED BONE CALCINING COMPANY. Bone oil and fat. See J\ 166. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 153. SHVEITSER. Oil seeds. See jv 196. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 154. TROITSK SCHOOL. Oil seeds. See JV 199. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 155. L I U T O V. Oil seeds. See JV? 202. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 156. SHISHKOV. Oil seeds. See N 194. Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 157. PLESHANOV. Oil seeds. See Department A. Group 18. Class 95. 158. LURIE. Linseed and drying oil. S ee Dep. H. M 493. - 66 - Department A. Groups 17 and 18. Classes 90, 96 and 97, 159. SUNTSOVS, V. and A, Brothers. town Viaika. Soap, glue and candle works. Steam ground paint and drying oil manufactures. 1. Soap of various kinds. 2. Glue prepared from hide scrapings. 3. Tallow candles. Works fonded in 1872, trading since 1829. Annual production: 12,000 poods of soap, value 44,400 roubles; 1,500 poods of glue, value 7,200 roubles; 3,500 poods of tallow candles, value 18,000 roubles; i ,000 poods of drying oil, value 4,800 roubles; total value 75,300 roubles. Steam boiler (25 H. P.); steam engine (6 H. P.); 6 paint grin- ding machines; 10 workmen. Materials local and from the Nizhni-Novgorod fair. Sale local and at the fairs of Nizhni-Novgorod and Kotelnich. Department A. Group 18. Class 97. 160. OSHURKOVS, Brothers and C. Gov. of Perm, town Ekaterinburg. The Ural stearine and chemical works. Stearine candles. Works founded 75 years ago, owned by the present Company since 1883. Production 35,000 poods of candles per annum, value 250,000 roubles; 2 autoclaves, 4 steam engines, 2 steam donkey engines, 5 steam boilers, 24 mould- ing machines for candles, 3 stills for fatty acids, apparat- us ior preparing chemically purified glycerine etc; 100 workmen and 50 workwomen. Materials from Siberia and 3 /4 of production sold in Siberia; the remainder in Euro- pean Russia. - 67 - Department A. Group 18. Classes 96 and 97. 161. ZHUKOV, A. 5". Petersburg. Stearine and soap works. Candles and soaps of different kinds. The stearine works exist since 1877 and the soap- works since 1866. Value of annual production of the stea- rine works 900,000 roubles, and of the soap works 1,200,000 roubles. Machine work by steam (165 H. P.); 200 workmen and 30 workwomen. Raw material Russian; sale in Russia. Department A. Group 18. Classes 94, 96 and 97. 162. KRESTOVNIKOVS, Brothers. Ka^an. Stearine soap and chemical works. Stearine and palm - oil candels, oleine, chemically pure glyce- rine white and yellow and soap. Works founded in 1855; annual production 380,000 poods of candles, 30,000 poods of oleine (neutral), 64,000 poods of different kinds of glycerine, 200,000 poods of soap, 100,000 poods of surphuric acid, 100,000 poods of obic- acid; total value 5,000,000 roubles. Works include 1 8 steam boilers (800 H. P.), 10 steam engines (200 H; P.), 20 hydraulic presses, 6 autoclaves, 8 distilling apparatus, vacuum apparatus, 10 soap boilers, gas works, saw mill, mechanical and boiler making workshops, naphtha tanks capable ot holding 400,000 poods; 1 20 moulding machines and sulphur chambers; 920 workmen and 5 80 workwomen. Raw mate- rial from Russia, Central Asia, Mongolia and Siberia. Sale in the interior of the Empire, in Central Asia and export to Persia. See Dep. H. N 492. Department A. 'Group 17. Class 93. 163. PETROVSKAIA AGRICULTURAL ACADEMY. Phosphorate fertilizers. See JV i. Department A. Group 17. Class 95. 164. KULOMZIN, A. Gov. of Kostroma, Kineshma district. Phosphate steam and water mills. 1. Phosphate stone in raw state. 2. Phosphate stone calcined, pounded and sifted. 3. Phosphate dust. 4. Siftings of phosphate dust. Three mills working respectively since 1887, 1891 and 1892. Total annual production 120,000 poods, value 40,000 roubles; 4 kilns for the calcination of stone, 5 pounders and 1 1 grinding apparatus; 85 workmen. Local materials. Sale principally in the gov's of Central Russia, partly in the North-Western gov's, in Finland and Crimea. - 69 - Department A. Group 17.' Classes 92 and 93. 165. CRUMING, A. town Lib au. Fertilizing compounds manufactory. Samples of fertelizing compounds. Established in 1889. Handwork. Production 20,000 poods per annum, value 9,000 roubles; 8 workmen. Mate- rials: 300,000 poods of dung and guano- local, 6,000 poods of phosphorate form the gov. of Smolensk and 2,000 poods of bone dust from the gov. of Orel. Sale in adjacent gov's. Department A. Group 17. Classes 90 and 93. 166. IMPERIALLY CONFIRMED BONE- CALCINING COMPANY. 5". Petersburg. The Gutuiev and Riezvy bone-calcining works. Bone-black, ammonia products, bone oil, glue, fat and bone dust. Company founded in 1874. About 1,000,000 poods of bones treated per annum, value of products amounting to about 1,000,000 roubles; 4 steam engines (200 H. P.), 3 air and 4 hydraulic-pumps, 8 steam boilers, 2 vacuum- pans, 8 extractors and 16 papine digesters; a double revi- ving furnace; 4 pounding machines; 5 desintegrators; 6 sets of grind- stones and a crushing mill; 300 workmen and 45 workwomen. Bones supplied principally from S. Peters- burg and its environs, likewise from Moscow and the gov's on Volga. Sale in Russia and export to England, Germany and Sweden. 70 Department A. Group 17. Class 93. 167. LURIE. Gov. of Minsk, town Pinsk. Chemical works. Superphosphate. See Dep. H. JN 493. Department A. Group 17. Class 90. 168. SUNTSOV'S, O., Brothers. Glue. See NS 159. Department A. Group 17. Classes 90 and 91. 169. SAVIN, V. Gov. of Tver, town Ostasbkov. Russia leather manufactory. 1. Cow-hair, white, red and black. 2. Glue prepared from leather- waste. See Dep. H. JV 579. Department A. Group 17. Classes 90 and 91. 170. FOFONOV, M. Wool, hair and glue. See Dep. H. JV& 598. Department A. Group 17. Class 91. 171. Z HI LIN, Z. Gov. of Vologda, town Veliki Ustiuv. Bristle manufactory. Bristles. Established in 1840. Production 1,000 poods, value 100,000 roubles per year; 70 workmen. Materials princi- pally from Siberia, partly from the North-Eastern gov's of European Russia. Sale in New-Jork. London and Hamburg. Department A. Group 17. Class 91. 172. SI NAD IN. Lamb skins. Department A. Group 7. Classes 41 and 44. 173. VERESHCHAGIN, N. Moscow. Dairy appliances workshop. Dairy appliances of Siberia iron, tinned on the premises. Workshop established in 1871. Value of annual pro- duction 14,000 20,000 roubles. Caldron for tin and several ovens for heating acids; hand machines for working iron, hand drop hammers, hand mechanical scissors; furnaces; 10 workmen and i aprentice. Iron supplied from Siheria on special order; tin from England. Sale in Russia. 72 Department A. Group 3. Class 20. 174. B A L A S H O V, C. Gov. of Kiev, Cherkassij district. Beet-sugar works. 1. White sugar: fine, medium and coarse. 2. Utfel, molasses. 3. Yellow sugar of various kinds. 4. Lime flour, saccharate and alcali. 5. Saturating refuse, limestone, cotton filter cloth, granular pitch. 6. Album of photographs and plans of the works. Established in 1876; 2,600,000 poods of beet worked into 300,000 poods of white raw sugar per annum, value 1.200,000 roubles; 9 steam boilers (900 H. P.); 15 steam engines (237 H. P.); 22 diffusion vats capable of 190 vedros each, 7 evaporating vats, 4 coolers for obtain- ing sugar from molasses according to Stephen's ' separa- tion system; 535 workmen, 139 workwomen and minors. Beet grown in the exhibitor's estates and puschased in the neighbourhood. Sale to refineries and 50,000 poods expor- ted to England and Italy. Department A. Group 3. Class 20. 175. KURDIUMOV. Gov. of Chernigov, Konotop district. The Nicolaiev sugar works. Raw sugar. Works founded in 1845. Production 150,000 poods of raw sugar per year, value 550,000 roubles exclusive excise. Work by diffusion; 20,000 poods of beat treated per 24 hours; 10 diffusion vats capable of 165 vedros each; defecat- ing and saturating repeated, the latter continuous; filter- presses with alkalizing; the juice from the mechanical filters is passed through granular pitch without washing, according to Abraham's system; evaporating by triple effect; 14 centrifugals with top-gear; 9 steam-engines (200 H. P.); 6 combined steam boilers (480 H. P.); 298 workmen and 51 workwomen. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 3. Class 20. 176. BOTKINS IMPERIALLY CONFIRMED ASSOCIATION. Gov. of Kursk, Bidgorod district. Beet sugar works. Raw sugar of different kinds. Works founded in 1882. Out of 160,000 180,000 berkovetss of beet 200,000 250,000 poods of raw sugar are produced per annum, value 850,000 1,000,000 roubles. Works include 9 steam boilers, 18 diffusion vats, 5 evapo- rating apparatus Relief's system, 10 saturating vats, 3 va- cuum pans, 19 filter presses, 15 centrifugals for bleaching raw sugar, 1 5 various steam engines with the latest impro- vements. During the working season (3 4 months) 440 workmen, 10 workwomen and 50 minors employed, besi- des 100 hired by day. Beet grown by proprietor and pur- chased in the neighbourhood. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 3. Class 20. 177. TERESHCHENKO, Brothers. Gov . of Chernigov, Glukhov district and town Tula. Sugar refineries. Samples of refined sugar in loaf and lump. The Chernigov sugar refinery founded in 1865 and that ot Tula in 1879. Annual production 1,500,000 poods, value 7,500,000 roubles. The works include 15 steam boilers (950 H. P.), 26 steam engines (435 H. P.), 5 vacuum appara- tus, 1 8 centrificals, 41 drying apparatus, 1 8. sawing and chopping machines, 40 large filters. During working season 1,100 hands employed daily. Raw sugar supplied from the South Western gov's of Russia. Sale in Russia. 74 Department A. Group 3. Class 20. 178. TERESHCHENKO, N. Gov. of Kursk, Rytsk district and gov. of Voiyn, Zhitomir district. The Tetkino and Andriushevo beet-sugar works. Raw sugar white. The Tetkino works established in i86i;and the And- riushevo in 1873. About 775,000 poods of raw sugar manufactured per annum, value 3,000,000 roubles; 48 steam engines (668 H. P.); 34 steam boilers; 60 diffusion vats; 41 centrifugals; 22 saturating vats; 26 filter presses; 14 mechanical and 16 charcool filtres, evaporating and vacuum pans, molasses apparatus; 6 furnaces and 3 coolers. During operations 1,200 workmen employed. About 8,000,000 poods of beet, partly from exhibitors plantations, treated per year; raw sugar partly sold in Moskow, partly supplied to the exhibitor's Tula and Mikhailovo refineries. Department A. Group 3. Class 20. 179. TERESHCHENKO, Th. Gov. of Volyn, Zhitomir district. Beet sugar works. Raw sugar. The works were founded in exhibitor's estates: Tcher- vonoie in 1870, and in Korovino in 1879. Production 500,000 525,000 poods of raw sugar per annum, value 2,000,000 roubles; 20 steam engines; 26 steam boilers (1896 H. P.j; steam pumps, diffusion vats, saturating boilers, filter- presses, centrifugals and other machines and apparatus; 930 workmen and 40 workwomen; besides 150 employed out of the works. Beet supplied from the plantations at the estates, in which the works are built and likewise purchased from the local landowners. Sale in Russia. See JN 32. 75 4 Department A. Group 3. Class 20. 180. IMPERIAL APANAGES. 6". Petersburg. The Timashevo beet-sugar works. 1. Beet roots. 2. Samples of products illustrating the successive processes of the sugar manufacture. 3. Refined sugar. The works are situated in the Buguruslan district of the gov. of Samara and were established in 1881, renovated in 1888. Production 300,000 poods of refined sugar per annum, value 1,650,000 roubles; 16 steam engines (200 H. P ); 590 workmen and 50 workwomen. Materials about 840,000 poods of beet grown on the property of the works and 230.000 poods of purchased crystalline raw sugar. Sale in the gov's of Samara, Ufa, Orenburg and Perm. Department A Group 3. Class 20. 181. THE KHARKOV SUGAR-REFINERY ASSOCIATION. Gov. and district of Kharkov. Sugar refinery. i Refined sugar. Works exist since 1876. Annual production 800,000 poods ot refined sugar, value 4,000,000 - - 4,800,000 roubles; 3 vacuum pans, 24 filters, 6 steam boilers, 10 steam engines, 5 lifts, 17 centrifugals and 53,000 forms; 535 workmen, 48 workwomen and 15 minors. Raw sugar supplied from gov's of Kharkov and Kiev. Sale in Russia and export to Persia. 76 - Department A. Group 3. Class 20. 182. TOLSTOY, M., Count. Gov. of Tambov, Lebedian district. Sugar works. Raw sugar. Works exist since 1842. Annual production 75,000 100,000 poods of raw sugar, value 400,000 5 00,000 roubles; 1,000 berkovets of beet treated per 24 bours; 270 workmen. Material: 75,000 100,000 berkovets of beet supplied from the exhibitor's and other neighbouring estates. Sale local and in Moscow. Department A. Group 3. Class 20. 183. RYZHOV. Raw sugar. Department A. Group 3. Class 17. 184. IMPERIALLY CONFIRMED BONE CALCINING COMPANY. Bone black. See JV 166. t 77 Department A. Groups 3 and 8. Classes 27 and 45. 185. VRUBLEVSKY, I. Warsaw. Gingerbread and chocolate steam works. Gingerbread and chocolate. Established in 1842, value of annual production 100,000 roubles; 2 steam engines (14 H. P.), 5 various machines, 30 workmen. Materials: honey, sugar, flour, value 60,000 roubles, Russian; cocao and vanilla, value 30,000 roubles, from Hamburg. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department A. Group 3. Class 27. 186. BITRIKH, C. under firm of ,,Bartels". Moscow. Baker and confectioner. Confectionery, marchpane and sweet meats. t Firm exists since 1833, owned by exhibitor since 1873. Handwork. Yearly production, value 175,000 roubles; 40 workmen, 16 workwomen and 12 minors. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 3. Class 26. 187. RUSSIAN BEA BREADING SOCIETY. 5". Petersburg. Frame bee-hive. Established in 1891 for promoting rational methods of bee breading in Russia. Department A. Group 3. Class 26. 188. S. PETERSBURG BEA BREADING MUSEUM. 5". Petersburg. Appliances for bea breading. Department A. Group 3. Class 26. 189. LOMAKIN, V. Kharkov Apiary and workshop of apiarian appliances. 1. Comb honey in glass frames; wooden frames. 2. Zinc netting, exhibitor's construction. 3. Small winter hive. 79 4. Various kinds of artificial comb. 5. Various appliances for apiaries. 6. Directions for the use of these appliances. The apiary exists since 1886, the workshop since 1888. Work done by exhibitor, assisted by 2 3 workmen; 30 to 40 poods of honey is annually collected in glass frames a pound weight each, value 600 800 roubles. The work- shop executed orders in 1892 to the amount of 2,000 roubles. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 3. Class 26. 190. KHOKHLOV, A. Siberia; Semipatatinsk region, Zaisan district, Apiary. 1. Collection of honey plants. 2. Collection of queen-bees, bees, drones, pollen, queen-bee cells and comb. 3. Horiby: in comb (in glass frames) and extracted by centri- fugal apparatus. 4. Model of a bee-hive. 5 . Photographs of the apiary and its description in Russian and English. Apiary established in 1881. Annual yield from 100 hives, 100 poods of honey, value 800 roubles and 8 poods of wax, value 165 roubles. Manual labour. The hives are all with frames; 2 workmen: i apiarist and i kirguees nomad. Sale local and in the frontier town of the Chinese Empire, Chuguchak. Department A. Group 3. Class 26. 191. BOLOTNIKOV, S. near Ka%an. Apiary. 1. Models of hives of various systems. 2. Appliances for apiaries. 3. Artificial comb. 4. Yellow wax. Apiary directed personally by exhibitor since 1871. For 6 weeks in summer I workman is hired. Sale of honey begun in 1875 amounting from 25 40 hives to 6 poods per annum, value 45 50 roubles; since 1879 about 10 hives are sold besides honey per annum, value 100 120 roubles and since 1880 various appliances, value 25 roubles. The hives are with frames. Artificial comb manufactured from own wax on American rollers. Materials all purchased in Kazan. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 6. Class 34. 192. STROGONOV, Count. Hams. See N 24. Department A. Group 6. Class 36. 193. ROMAN, I. Anchovies and preserved food preparations. Preserved deer tongues. See Dep. D. N 320. 8 1 Department A. Group 6. Class 36. 194. T U O R L A. Finland, Abo, Tuot'la. The ,,Tuorla" preserved food works. Preserved food preparations of various kinds. Works exists since 1891. Production 2,000 poods per annum, value 16,000 roubles. Machine work, steam engine (6 H. P.), 4 workmen and 15 workwomen. Sale in Finland and abroad. Department A. Group 9. Class 59. 195. S U T H O F, C. and C. Narva, Pskov and Yaroslavl. Merchantile house. Samples of Pskov, Livonia, Zavelits, Yaroslavl, Griazovets, Kostroma and Kashin flax. The firm exists more than 100 years. Sale of flax ,m Russia; export to Germany, Austria, Belgium, England and France. Department A. Group 9. Class 59. 196. SHWEITSER, E. Smolensk and Kursk. Hemp and tow. Flax, hemp, tow and seed dressed since 1855. Employs about 100 scutchers from the gov's of Smolensk and Kaluga. Russian materials. Export to England, Holland, Belgium, France, Sweden, Norway, Austria and Germany. Department A. Groups 9 and 18. Classes 59 and 95. 19T. THE PSKOV AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. Pskov. 1. Samples of flax from the gov. Pskov. 2. Samples of flax stalks with heads and without heads. 3. Samples of flax retted in cold water and dried. 4. Linseed: assorted, cleaned and uncleaned. 5. Hemp. Department A. Group 9. Class 55. 198. KLETN1EV, N., Engineer technolog. Gov. of Smolensk, Via^ma district. Agriculture. Models: flax scutcher and press Guetze's system; flax scut- cher, flax brake for horse gear and stand for flax scut- ching by handwork, of exhibitor's system. Department A. Group 9. Class 59. 199. THE TROITSK PRIMARY AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL. Gov. of Smolensk, Yukhnov district. 1. Flax in sheaves in various stages of treatment. 2. Linseed. 3. Flax fibre, broken and scutched. 4. Pressed flax. 5. Belgium scutcher. The school founded in 1889; production 600 poods of flax per annum, value 6,000 roubles. The breaking is done on a Pskov horse brake and a hand brake of the Lecoute type; hand scutching, pressing by hand screw press; 574 men, 262 women and 189 minors workdays per annum. Flax harvested on the property of the school, 25 dessiatines are sown per year. Department A. Group 9. Class 59. 200. B E R E N D. Flax and hemp. See Department A. Group 9. Class 59. 201. K A SHIN, N. The New Kostroma Linen Manufactory Association. Kostroma. Samples of flax, raw and hackled of various kinds from the gov's of Kostroma, Vologda and Tver. 8 4 - Department A. Groups 9 and 18. Classes 59 and 95. 202. L I U T O V'S, M. Sons. Gov. of Smolensk, Vuisma district and gov. of Moscow, Volokolamsk district. Steam oil mill, flax scutching and hackling factory. 1. Linseed oil and linseed cake. 2. Linseed for oil and sowing. 3. Flax of various kinds: broken, hackled, dew and cold water retted. 4. Flax stalks. The oil mill exists since 1891; the flax scutching and hackling factory since 1860. Production: 600,000 poods of seed, value 1,000,000 roubles and 250,000 poods of flax, value 1,000,000 roubles treated per annum. Oil pressing done by machinery, flax dressing by hand; 200 workmen and 150 workwomen. Local materials. Sale of oil in the interior of Russia, oil-cake and flax products exported. Department A. Group 9. Class 59. 203. S H I S H K O V, N. Gov. of Samara, Stavropol district. Curly flax pulled and samples of winnowed seed. The flax was sown on long unploughed meadows irriga- ted in spring by the Volga. Department A. Group 9. Class 59. 204. PLIESHANOV, J. Gov. of Samara, Busuiuk district. T. Curly flax with heads, pulled and mown. 2. Winnowed and assorted linseed. Department A. Group 9. Class 60. 205. THE KHARKOV FARM. Fleece. See JV? 18. Department A. Group 9. Class 60. 206. STENBOCK-FERMOR, Count. Fleece. See J\ 18. Department A. Group 9. Class 60. 207. THE PETROVSKAIA AGRICULTURAL ACADEMY. Samples of wool. See N i, Department A. Group 9. Class 60. 208 PRIDANOV. Wool. Department A. Group 9. Class 60. 209. DE VIS HEY, M. Orenburg. 1. Camel's hair ,,tainack", from young camels. 2. Camel's mane, chuda a . 3. Camel's hair, common. 4. Wool from Ordin sheep short ,,djebala". Department A. Group 9. Class 60. 210. KRIVSKY, P. Gov. of Saratov, mil. Borgij. Sheep breeding. Fleece of an ,,Infantado" ewe. There are 5,000 heads of thoroughbreed merino ,,Inian- tado" with soft, silky wool. Breeding rams are sold from 30 to 500 roubles per head. Department A. Group 9. Class 53. 211. MINDER, G. Wool. See Dep. H. N> 466- Department A. Group 9. Class 60. 212. F O F A N O V, M. Wool. See Dep. H. J\ 598. Department A. Group 9. Class 60. 213. MELKONOV-ESEKOV, G. Province of the Den Cossacks, Nakhichevan. Wool-washing establishment. Washed wool of various colors. Establishment exists since 1838. Production per year 40,00060,000 poods of wool, value 350,000 450,000 roubles. Handwork; no chemicals used in the washing; 50 workmen, 850 workwomen and 100 minors employed. Unwashed wool supplied from Russia. Export to America, England, France and Italy. Department A. Group 9. Class 61, 214. SHAVROV. Collection of sericulture. 88 - Department A. Group 8. Class 46. 215. K R U P A R, E. Gov. of Volyn, Dubno district. Hop culture. Hops. Plantations exists since 1887. Annual yield 200 poods of hops, value 3.500 4,500 roubles. Sale abroad. Department A. Group 8. Class 46. 216. KLENEVSKY, J. Gov. of Lublin, near Novo- Alexandria. Hop culture. 1 . Hops in their natural state. 2. Hops dried and pressed. Hops cultivated since 1880. Annual yield 2,800 poods; value 70,000 roubles. About 1,000 labourers employed dur- ing summer. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 8. Class 46. 217. THE KAZAN AGRICULTURAL FARM. Hops. See N 5. Department A. Group 8. Class 46. 218. B R A G H I N, B. and Sons. Gov. of Ria%an, Egorievsk district. Culture of hops. Bohemian hops, harvest of 1892. The firm exists since 1832. From 600 to 750 poods of hops harvested annually, value from 15,000 to 20,000 roubles. From May till September 45 workmen and 85 work- women are employed. Hops, besides own, are obtained from the gov. of Moscow, Bogorodsk district. Sale to breweries in Russia. Department A. Group 8. Class 46. 219. KLEINMICHEL, Count. Hops. See JS6 29. Department A. Group 8. Class 46. 220. THE IMPERIALLY SANCTIONED FIRST HOP CULTURE SOCIETY. Direction board in Kharkov, branch office in Warsaw. Hop culture. 1 . Samples of hops from the gov's of Moscow, Riazan, Volyn, from the Vistula gov's, from the North-East, the West and the South of Russia. 2. Pressed hops. 3. A pamphlet, published in English on the state of hop culture in Russia. The Society exists since 1 890. All the appliances used for preparing, pressing and packing the hops are of newest and improved constructions. The number of workmen varies according to the quantify of hops bought and treated The hops are obtained from all parts of Russia. Sale in European Russia, in Siberia and Central-Asia; export to Austria, Germany and France. Department A. Group 8. Class 40. 221. KRONENBERG. Hops. See JVT 63. Department A. Group 8. Class 46. 222. THE NOVO-ALEXANDRIA INSTITUTE. Hops. See NO 2. Department A. Group 8. Classes 48, 51 and 52. 223. S A F A R O V, M. Ti/Ks. Tobacco factory. 1. Tobacco cut and cigarettes. 2. Tobacco leaf from the factory's plantations. Factory exists since 1873. The plantations established: in the government of Tiflis in 1880, in the gov. of Ku- ta'is in 1884, in the Transcaspian province in 1886. The factory treates over 12,000 poods of tobacco per annum, value 350,000 roubles; 15 hand and mechanical tobacco cutting machines of foreign construction, a petroleum motor (12 H. P.); 250 workmen, 30 workwomen and 20 minors employed. The tobacco in leaves is supplied from the Caucasus, the Transcaucasus and the South of Russia, partly from Turkey; the other materials are Russian and foreign. Sale in Russia, export to Persia. Belgium and other countries. 91 Department A. Group 8. Class 48. 224. FEDOSEIEV, J. Yaita district, estates ^Ai Gursuf" and ^Castropot 1 " . Tobacco leaves. The estates are owned by exhibitor in 1887. Average yield 350 poods of tobacco, value 8,000 roubles. Sale in Moscow. Department A. Group 8. Classes 51 and 52. 225. ASLANIDY, I. and A., Brothers. Province of the Don Cossacks, Rostov on the Don. Tobacco factory. Tobacco of various kinds and cigarettes. Factory established in 1874 in Stavropol in the Cau- casus; since 1884 transferred to Rostov on the Don. Produc- tion per annum 15,000 poods of tobacco, out of which 50,000,000 of cigarettes are made, value 600,000 roubles. Steam motor for tobacco cutting fio H. P.); cigarettes made by handwork; 5 tobacco cutting machines; 120 workmen, 250 workwomen and 35 minors employed. Leaf tobacco supplied from Europe and Turkey, from the Caucasus, the Crimea and the Transcaucasus. Sale in Russia; export to Persia and England. Department A. Group 8. Class 51. 226. VOLCHANSKY, V. Gov. of Kursk, town Stary Oskot. Tobacco factory. Smoking tabacco ,,Makhorka". Established in 1887. Manufactured 10,000 poods annu- ally, value 70,000 roubles. Machine and handwork. Two hand machines and two horse machines; one oven; 9 workmen and 15 workwomen. Raw tobacco supplied from the gov's of Kursk and Poltava. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 8. Class 51 and 52. 227. DZHIGIT, E. and D. Elmterinoslav. Tobacco factory. Tobacco and cigarettes. Factory established in 1856. Production 10,000 poods of tobacco and 15,000,000 cigarettes per annum, value 400,000 roubles. Machine and handwork. Benzin motor (5 H. P.); 4 mechanical English tobacco cutting machines, 4 hand machines; 75 workmen and 75 workwomen. Raw tobacco supplied: Turkish from Odessa. Russian from the Crimea, Bessarabia and the Caucasus. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 8. Class 51. 228. CHUMAKOV'S, M., Sons. Kostroma. Tobacco factory. Tobacco ,,Makhorka" for smoking and as snuff. Factory established in 1840. Production 100,000 poods annualy, value 620,000 roubles; steam engine (15 H P.), 4 rollers, I millstone, 10 motors, 3 choppers; 70 work- men, 30 workwomen and 10 minors employed. Raw tobacco supplied from the gov's of Poltava and Chernigov. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 8. Classes 48, 51 and 52. 229. T U R S H U, E. Gov. of Kharkov, Sumy district and town. Tobacco factory and plantations. 1. Tobacco leaves and seeds. 2. Tobacco and cigarettes. Factory established in 1880, the tobacco plantations in 1884. The factory treates 5,000 poods of tobacco, value 250,000 roubles per annum. The plantations, 40 dessiatines, yield 3,000 poods, value 36,000 roubles per annum. Manual labour; 14 tobacco cutting machines; 95 workmen, 250 workwomen and 5 minors. Leaf tobacco, besides that obtained from own plantations from Turkish seeds, is supplied from Turkey, Bessarabia and the Caucasus. Sale in Russia and export. 94 Department A. Group 8. Classes 48, 51 and 52. 230. BOGDANOV, A. and C., Association. St. Petersburg. Tobacco factory. 1. Tobacco leaves. 2. Tobacco products. Factory established in 1864; the Association in 1884. Production 7,682,000 cigars, 502,000,000 cigarettes, and 3,156,000 pounds of tobacco par annum, value including excise 5,100,000 roubles. Steam motor (20 H. P.), gasmotor (8 H. P.), 420 workmen, 2,612 workwomen. Raw tobacco imported from Turkey and Havannah, and received from the Crimea, the Caucasus, Bessarabia and the gov. of Chernigov. The paper supplied from Paris, the remaining materials are Russian. Sale in Russia and export to foreign conutries, where the tobacco monopoly system is not in force. Department A. Group 8. Classes 51 and 52. 231. Z A R I T S K Y, A. Gov. of Kiev, town Cherkassy. Tobacco factory. 1. Tobacco and cigarettes of different kinds. 2. Makhorka for smoking and snuff. Factory established in 1877. Annual production 65,000 poods of tobacco and makhorka, value 1,000,000 roubles. Machine and handwork; benzin-motor (5 H. P.), 6 me- chanical tobacco cutting stands, i paper cutting and i ciga- rette case making machines; 3 grindstones and 3 machines for manufacturing makhorka; 175 workmen, 1 60 workwomen and 40 minors employed. Raw tobacco supplied from Bes- sarabia, the Crimea and the Caucasus; makhorka from the gov's of Poltava and Chernigov. Sale in Russia. 95 Department A. Group 8. Classes 51 and 52. 232. KUSHNAREV, I. Province of the Den Cossacks, Rostov on the Don. Tobacco factory. Tobacco and cigarettes. Factory exists since 1853. Manufactures 62,000 poods of tobacco and 160,000,000 cigarettes, value 3,000,000 roubles per annum. The tobacco is cut by 19 steam and 15 band machines. Steam motor of American system (30 H. P.). Cigarettes made by hand; 225 workmen, 750 workwomen and 225 minors employed. Raw tobacco in leaves supplied from European Turkey, Macedonia, the South coast of the Crimea, Bessarabia and from the Cuban province. Sale in Russia and in Transcaucasus; export to Germany, Belgium, Japan, Persia and other countries. Department A. Group 8. Classes 51 and 52. 233. MIRZABEKIANTS, G. and M., Brothers. town Baku. Tobacco factory. Tobacco and cigarettes of various kinds. Factory established in 1868. Production 100,000,000 cigarettes and 600,000 pounds of tobacco per annum, value 900,000 roubles. Benzin motor (8 H. P.); 7 tobacco cutting machines, 3 whetstones, i paper press, 2 paper cutting machines, 2 lithographic printing machines, i gilding machine and i transferring machine; 420 workmen, 10 workwomen and 20 minors employed. Raw tobacco 23,000 poods, supplied from Crimea, Bessarabia, Tashkent. Turkey, and the Caucasus. Sale in the Caucasus, the Transcaucasus and the Transcaspian province, in Bokhara and in the principal towns of European Russia. 96 - Department A. Group 8. Classes 51 and 52. 234. SHERESHEVSKY, I. Grodno. Tobacco factory. Cigars, cigarettes, tobacco, snuff and makhorka. Factory established in 1862. Annual production 16,000,000 cigars, 1 80,000,000 cigarettes, 250,000 pounds of tobacco, 2,500,000 pounds of makhorka and 800,000 pounds of snuff, value 1,600,000 roubles. Machine work; 2 portable engines (25 H. P.), 30 spindles, 20 tobacco cutting machi- nes, 20 machines for making cigarette cases without gum, 4 grindstones and many other machines; 400 workmen, 900 workwomen and 200 minors. The tobacco is Turk- ish and American (30,000 pounds), Crimean and Cauca- sian (750,000 pounds) and from the gov. of Chernigov and Poltava (3, 500,000 pounds of makhorka and bakun). Sale in Russia and abroad. Department A. Group 8. Classes 51 and 52. 235. MURATCHAIEV, K. and NAZAROV, Kh. Province of Kuban, vit. Aimavir. Tobacco tactory. Tobacco and cigarettes of various kinds. Factory exists since 1881. Manufacture per annum 7,000 poods of foreign tobacco, 150,000 poods of local tobacco and 15,000,000 cigarettes, value 250,000 roubles including 120,000 roubles excise. Petroleum motor (4 5 H. P.) Otto Deiss' system, 3 tobacco cutting machines, 2 similar machines worked by hand; 65 workmen, 75 workwomen and 30 minors. Tobacco in leaves, local and foreign, purchased in Odessa. Sale in Russia. - 97 - Department A. Group 8. Class 51. 236. SINADIN. Tobacco. Department A. Group 8. Class 49. 237. VIKTORSON, A. Moscow. Cigarette cases of various kinds. The manufactory was established in 1875. Production per annum 350,000,000 cigarette cases, value 120,000 roubles. Materials cut by machinery; cigarette cases worked by hand; 100 workmen kept at the manufactory, besides 2,000 employed outside. Materials Russian and French. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 8. Class 45. 238. WEISS, Ch., firm Starr and C. Riga, Chicory factory. Chicory, dried chicory roots, ground and roasted chicory, chicory coffee. Factory exists since 1860. Production 60,000 80,000 poods annually, value 250,000 roubles. Steam engine (30 H. P.), 12 roasting apparatus, 4 grinding machines, i drying kiln and i printing press. Lighted by electricity; 3 1 workmen and 38 workwomen. Chicory roots grown on land belonging to the factory, and obtained in the neighbourhood, dried roots purchased in the Rostov district, gov. of Jaroslavl. Sale in Russia and in Sweden and Germany. - 98 - Department A. Group 8. Class 45. 239. SELIVANOV, A. Gov. of Jarosiavl, town Rostov. Chicory roasted and dried, ground and in roots. Started in 1880; 100,000 poods sold annually, value 260,000 roubles. Steam boiler (20 H. P.), steam engine (16 H. P.), 6 copper cylinders for roasting chicory, 2 assorters, 2 sets of cast-iron rollers for grinding the chicory, and i mechanical drying apparatus; 85 workmen. Dried chicory roots obtained on the spot. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 8. Class 45. 240. B O R M A N, M"" T. St. Petersburg. Roasted coffee of various kinds. Established in 1876. Production 1,000 poods, value 20,000 roubles per annum. Machine and handwork. Raw coffee imported from West-Indies and the Southern States of North America; chicory and barley from the South- West of Russia. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 8. Class 45. 241. VRUBLEVSKY. Chocolate. See N? 185. Department A. Group 8. Class 45. 242. P E R L O V, S. Moscow. Tea merchants. Tea of various kinds. The firm exists since 1873. Over 40,000 poods of tea sold per annum, value 3,000,000 roubles. About 300 workmen and 80 minors employed. Tea imported from China. Sale in Russia. Department A. Group 8. Class 45. 243. P E R L O V, B., and Sons. Moscow. Samples of tea of various kinds, weighed out. Established in 1787. 2,000,000 pounds sold per annum, value 4,000,000 roubles; 500 workmen employed. The tea is imported from China and India. Sale in Russia and abroad; stores in Vienna, Paris, Berlin and 70 tea-stores in different towns in Russia. Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 244. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND RURAL INDUSTRY of the Ministry of Public Domains. St. Petersburg. Publications. Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 245. IMPERIAL AGRICULTURAL MUSEUM. Publications. SeeN3. IOO Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 246. THE WARSAW MUSEUM OF INDUSTRY AND AGRICULTURE. Warsaw. Two first volumes of a large Agricultural Encyclopaedia, published by the Museum. Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 247. THE PETROVSKAIA AGRICULTURAL ACADEMY. Publications. See N i. Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 248. THE IMPERIAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF MOSCOW. Moscow, Publications. Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 249. N E U M A N, M. Gov. of Volyn, town Dubno. 1. Pamphlet on hop growing in Russia and abroad. 2. Popular manual on hop growing. 3. Trade in hops and hop exhibitions. 4. Proof sheet of the journal: ,,The Hop growing and Brewing Messenger". 101 Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 250. MANSFELD. Journal. See Jfc 47. Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 251. NEISHTUBE. Publications. Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 252. TRILSKY, A. Warsaw. 1. Agricultural journal ,,Gaseta Rolnicsa" for 1891. 2. Agricultural journal ^Kurjer Rolnicsy" for 1891. 3. Various publications on agriculture. Journals edited since 1860 by exhibitor. Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 253. ZHILINSKY. Maps. Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 254. WEISS, von-Weissenhoff. Maps. 102 Department A. Group 15. Class 83. 255. D O K U C H A I E V, B., Professor of the Imperial University of St. Petersburg, and SIBIRTSEV, N. 1. Samples of the soil of different parts of Russia. 2. Soil charts. 3. Sections of soil. 4. Pamphlets. Analysis according to Professor Dokuchaiev's method have been conducted since 1876. The black soil zone of Russia and the land bordering on it, as also different localities in Northern and Southern Russia have been stu- died. Detailed examinations of the soils have been made in the gov.'s of Nizhni-Novgorod and Pokava, and to a certain extent also in the gov.'s of Voronezh, Saratov, Khar- kov, Ekaterinoslav, Smolensk, St. Petersburg, Vladimir etc. The following is a statement of the nature of work accomplished: genesis or origin of the soil; natural standards of the soil and its classification; relations of the soils to the geology ot the country, to the vegetable and animal kingdoms, to the formation of the surface, to the climate and to the water; chemical and physical analysis of the soils; the soils and agriculture; soils, forestry and water exploitation; valua- tion and taxation of grounds, according to the natural resources of the soil. Department A. Group 16. Class 84. 256. THE VOTKINSK WORKS. Ploughs. See Dep. E. JV 336. Department A. Group 16. Class 87. 257. BERG, Count. Assorters. See J\ 28. 103 4 ' . , ' - ;' i 'iff^ f ffrTfr*rf i ...... ,.,../'..,..,' : ; '..,.. '/% nil i MIIUI, 01 I',!'*:; /.' --v .;>; IKlH .1 M |.o,l t.\ II,. In,, . ,,,,,,1. . .! lii/mn ; I hill .1 .'"I . '-! I.M . :;! .,. , ,)tl Illll ... Ill ll 1,1,1 r . , i|.l. . . HTlpIl (1 Inn! 8f, 01 H -I mi. Ir . 1 1 1. iii : l>v peasants. \ t \fW i i v i if, n6 and 117. :c\') i ill iMi-i KI \i. APPANAGES, V'. Petersburg. I In-Kn^'hskaia I'li.shcha. . (V Grodiio, Pru^bamj district. i is aiul thick polished boards of pine, -ammo oak. dm. ordinary ash and pedun- ;otu 107 10 514 years old. i V Idoi and linden tree. _' : - ; /: :: - 9. Photographs of trees, ot barking pine trees, of felling divi- sions, of pitch distilling furnaces, of the way of trans- porting logs from the forest to the river etc. The forests of the Velsk region occupy an area of 1,409,772.8 dessiatines in the Shenkursk district of the gov. of Arkhangelsk and of 971,880.9 dessiatines in the Solvychegodsk, Ustiug, Velsk, Kadnikov and Totma dis- tricts of the gov. of Vologda. The principal species of trees growing are pine, fir and larch trees; in a less quantity birch, aspen and alder tree are met. The pine and fir trunks fit for building purposes are partly sold on the spot, but those fit for lumber are floated down the river Sevemaia Dvina and its tributaries to the Arkhangelsk harbour for export. The pine tree of fuel age is barked for obtaining raw turpentine and rosin and the wood used for distilling pitch, pek and turpentine. The birch tree is used for obtaining tar. The yearly production equals 5,000 poods of rosin and raw turpentine, 720,000 poods of pitch, 20,000 poods of pek, 15,500 poods of turpentine, 60,000 poods of birch tree tar and 9,000 poods of soot. All the distilling industry is left to the local peasants; the Appanages receive their income only from selling the wood materials. From the products of distillation the pitch and pek are mostly floated to Arkhangelsk for export; other products depencl upon interior markets, but mostly are supplied to Moscow and St. Petersburg. The revenue from the sale of trees, trunks, logs, lumber and other wood material is 300.000 roubles per annum. III. Forests in the gov's of Simbirsk and Penza. 1. Samples of seeds of pine, fir, ash and maple tree. 2. Photographs of wood nurseries and of wood plantations. 3. Photographs of the houses of the forest rangers. The forests occupy an area of 726,000 dessiatines. The principal species of trees growing are pine, fir, oak, lin- den, birch, aspen, elm, alder and willow tree. The wood on the felling divisions is mostly renewed by nature, but on spaces, where the wood growing does not get renewed 5 10 years after felling, the wood is planted or sown. The wood nurseries exist since 1861, but have been increased since 1874 and occupy at present an area of 13 dessiatines and the plantations of wood from those nurseries an area of 2,502 dessiatines. 106 Department A. Group 19. Class 113. 261. SHEVYREV. Samples of damaged forest trees. Department A. Group 19. Class 115. 262. MIASSOYEDOV. Implement invented by exhibitor for transplanting trees with clod. Department A. Group 19. Ckss 116. 263. AVGUSTINOVICH. 1. Samples of pine from boggy ground before and after drying. 2. Photographs. Department A. Group 19. Class 116. 264. TIKHOMIRNOV, M' me . Samples of articles, made of linden bast. Department A. Group 19. Classes 99 and 100. 265. THE RIGA EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Samples of timber. 107 Department A. Group 19. Class no. 266. BULDAKOV, S. St. Petersburg. Boot and shoe trees. Department A. Group 19. Class 108. 26Y. KOLAKOVSKY, J. Gov. of Liublin, mar Novo-Alexandria. Medicinal herbs and decoctions. See Depart. B. JV 307. Department A. Group 19. Class 108. 268. KELLER. Medicinal herbs. See. Depart. H. J\ 511 io<8 )EPARTMENT B. HORTICULTURE, VITICULTURE, POMOLOGY, FLORICULTURE ETC. [UHIVE1 Horticulture, Viticulture, Pomology, Floriculture etc. Department B. Group 20. Classes 125, 127 and 131. 269. S M I R N O V, S. Moscow. Steam brandy distillery and wine merchants. 1. Red and white wine of various kinds. 2. Berry liqueurs. The firm exists since 1812. Yearly production, value 8,000,000 roubles; 2 steam boilers (70 H. P.)> 4 steam pumps. Bottling and corking done by steam power; 450 workmen employed. Materials Russian, wine supplied from the Caucasus and Crimea. Sale in Russia and abroad. See J\ 114. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 270. LEONARD, M" 16 O. Gov. of Bessarabia, Kishimv district. Vineyards and wine manufactory. White and red wines. Vineyards exist over 30 years. The must is pressed in a French press. Sale in Kishinev and Odessa. in Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 271. TOMULETS, G. Gov. of Bessarabia, Kishinev district. Wine manufactory and wine merchants. Bessarabian wines wihte and red. The firm exists since 1874. Manufacture per annum 5,000 vedros of young wine, value 15,000 roubles. Power and hand presses. Sale in Russia, Department B. Groups 20 and 21. Classes 126, 127 and 139. 272. D E R O Z H I N S K Y, M. Gov. of Bessarabia, Orgeiev district. Vineyards, wine manufactory, orchard, and iruit drying. 1. Wines red and white. 2. Dried fruits Production of wines since 1861, value 15,000 roubles, and dried fruit, value 8,000 roubles per annum. Three wine- cellars, 3 handpresses, 3 drying kilns, 30 150 workmen, 25 100 workwomen and 10 20 minors. Grape and fruit from own vineyards and orchard and purchased in the neighbourhood. Sale in Russia. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 273. G O I L O V, L. Wines red and white. See ^303. 112 Department B. Group 20. Class 129. 274. THE IMPERIALLY SANCTIONED WINE MANUFACTORY ASSOCIATION. Odessa. Russian champagne. Established in 1890. Annual production 250,000 bottles, value 500,000 roubles; 50 workmen and 10 workwomen employed. The wine is supplied from Bessarabia, the Crimea and the Caucasus. Sale in European Russia and Siberia. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 275. THE IMPERIAL NIKITSKY GARDEN. Yalta. Samples of Magarach wines. Department; B. Group 20. Classes 123, 126 and 127. 276. FEDOSEIEV, I. Yalta district. Estates Ay-Gurzuf" and ,,KastropoK 1. Preserved grapes in liquid Paul-Petit". 2. White and red wines of the Southern coast of the Crimea. Estates owned by exhibitor in 1887. Annual production 2,000 vedros of wine, value 30,000 roubles. The wine is manufactured by 3 presses and machines imported from France: 20 workmen and 20 workwomen. Sale in Moscow. 113 Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 129. 277. V I S H N I A K O V, V. and C. Moscow. Wine merchants. Crimean wines, white, red and champagne. Established in Moscow since 1891. 500,000 bottles of wine sold per annum, value 300,000 roubles; 41 workmen. The wine, 30,000 vedros is supplied from the South coast of the Crimea. Sale in European Russia and Siberia. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127 278. MINI ASH IN, A., firm Aiushta". Yalta district, v'dl. Aiushta. Vineyards and wine manufactory. Wine, red and white of various kinds. Established in 1889. Old vineyards exist for 20 years; wine trade since 1848. Total yearly revenue 30,000 35,000 roubles. Presses and mills for the grape, shut and open tanks, 12 permanent workmen, besides 60 75 hired per day. The grape is supplied from own and rented vine- yards. Sale in Aiushta and St. Petersburg (since 1885). Department B. Group 20. Classes 126, 127 and 128. 279. LE-DANTU, E. Yalta district. Vineyards and wine manufactory. Wines of 1888 and 1889 years havest. Production since 1886, 3,500 vedros yearly, value 20,000 roubles. Handwork, husk separating machine (fouloir-egrappoir), 3 presses French system Mabile, and filters Retif a Lyon system; 16 permanent workmen employed in winter; besides 30 workmen and 20 minors hired per day in summer. Sale in Russia. 114 Department B. Group 20. Class 126. 280. T R I P O L S K Y, Th. Gov. and district of Ekalerinoslav. Vineyards and wine manufactory. White wine ,,Topily". Vineyards exist since 1869, area 10 dessiatines. Production i ,000 3,000 vedros of wine per annum. Machine work. The must is expressed by presses; 10 workmen, 10 workwo- men and 6 minors. Sale on the spot and in Kharkov. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126, 127 and 129. 281. S O K O L O V, D. Province of the Don Ccssacks. Wine manufactory. 1. Don table wine. 2. Champagne. 3. ,,Tzymlianskoie" wine, red and white. Annual production 40,000 vedros, value 350,000 roubles. Gas and hand machines and appliances; handwork; 50 workmen, 20 workwomen and 20 minors. The grape used is exclusively local, 50,000 poods per annum. Sale in Russia. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 282. TATUZOV, A. Gov. of Tijlis, Tetav district. Wine trade and wine manufactory. Wine white and red. Production since 1842; 3,000 vedros per annum; 15 workmen. The grape is supplied from the exhibitor's vine- yards and purchased from other neighbouring vineyards. Sale in Tiflis and Batum. 115 Department B. Group 20. Class 127. 283. XIAZIANTS, J. Gov. of Baku, Shemakha district and town Baku. Wine manufactory and wine stores. Red wine of various kinds. The wine stores exist since 1889; the vineyards since 70 years. Annual production 100 barrels, value 7,000 roubles; 20 workmen and 30 workwomen. The grape is supplied from the exhibitors and other local vineyards. Sale in Russia. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 284. T E R- A R U T I N O V, X. Gov. of Tiflis, Telav district. Wine manufactory. Kakhetia wines, white and red. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 285. K E V O R K O V, A. town Erivan. Vineyards and wine manufactory. Wines white and red. Established in 1888, 4,000 vedros yearly, value 10,000 roubles. Handwork: 8 workmen. Average yield 200 300 vedros of pure wine per dessiatina. Sale local, in Tiflis and Odessa. 116 Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 286. GODIEV, L. St. Petersburg. Wine merchants. Kakhetia wines, white and red. Wine trade since 1883; 20,000 vedros sold yearly, value 200,000 roubles. Handwork; 50 workmen. Young wine supplied from Kakhetia. Sale in Russia. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 287. ANNENKOV, M. Karacui, in Bokhara. Vineyards and wine manufactory. Wines white and red. Established in 1886. Production 20,000 bottles per annum, value 12,000 roubles. French presses; 40 workmen. Wines from exhibitor's vineyards, local vines cultured. Sale in Russia. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126, 127 and 129. 288. STAHL, Brothers. Estate Alcadar near Sebastopol, wine trade in St. Petersburg. Vineyards and wine manufactory. 1 . Crimean wines, white and red. 2. Crimean champagne. 3. Kakhetia wines, red and white. Wine trade established in 1881. Production 40,000 vedros per annum, value 150,000 roubles. The must is pressed by presses, the wine manufactured according to the French system; 30 workmen. The wine for trading, besides own manufacturing, is supplied from Alushta and the envi- rons of Yalta; the Caucasian wines from Kakhetia and Matrassa. Sale in Russia. 117 Department B. Group 20. Classes 126, 127 and 129. 289. A I V A Z O V, E. and C. Province of the Don Cossacks, Novocherkassk region. Wine manufactory. Wines, white, red and champagne. Established in 1882, yearly 10,000 17,000 vedros, value 80,000 100,000 roubles. The must is extracted by a hand mill and presses; 15 workmen employed, besides 30 40 hired per day duirng the gathering and crushing of the grape. Grape local, sale in Russia. Department B. Groups 20 and 21. Classes 129 and 143. 290. LAN IN, N. Moscow. Artificial waters and champagne manufactory. 1. Aerated mineral, fruit and berry waters. 2. Russian champagne. Firm exists since 1852. Annual production 1,000,000 half-bottles of mineral waters, 1,200,000 half-bottles and 600,000 bottles of fruit and berry waters and " 200,000 bottles of champagne. Value of sale 300,000 roubles per annum. There are 16 large apparatus capable of manufac- turing 20,000 bottles of waters per day; 100 workmen. Material Russian. Sale in European Russia, Siberia, Trans- caucasus, Asia and export. 118 Department B. Group 20. Classes 126, 127 and 129. 291. LYSSENKOV, A. Povince of the Don Cossacks, town Novocherkassk. Don wines, white, red and champagne. Established in 1887, 10,000 vedros yearly, value 50,000 roubles. Hand and machine work; 15 workmen and 4 minors. Local grape used. Sale in Russia. _ t i ^i'-- i^ Department B. Group 20. Class 129. 292. BRAZHNIKOV'S, P. and V. Kiev. Sparkling wines manufactory. Russian champagne. Established in 1864. Production value 55,000 roubles per annum. The wine is aerated by a machine of the n La-Chappelle" system; 12 workmen employed. Wine supplied from the South coast of the Crimea. Sale in Russia. - 119 Department B. Group 20. Classes 126, 127 and 131. 293. IVANOV, I. Gov. of Taurida, Feodosia district, Sudak. Wine manufactory and wine merchants. 1. Wines red and white. 2. Brandies. Grape for wine supplied from exhibitors vineyards; over 10,000 vedros per year of wine also purchased for storing in the neighbourhood; 2,000 and more day workmen employed in cutlivating the vineyards. Sale in Russia and export. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126, 127 and 131. 294. KEMPNER, M. and I., Brothers. Warsaw. Wine stores. 1. Russian cognac. 2. White and red wines of various kinds. Established in 1878. Annual revenue about 110,000 roubles; 20 workmen and 4 workwomen. The xvine is supplied from the Crimea, the Caucasus and from Bessa- rabia. Sale in Russia. 120 Department B. Group 20. Class 131. 295. S A R A D Z H E V, D. Tiflis and Kiestiar. Cognac distillery. 1. Cognac. 2. Spirits of wine. Distilleries established in Tiflis in 1887, in Kiesliar in 1889. See ,N 104. Department B. Group 20. Class 131. 296. M E G V I N O V, S. Tiflis. Brandy and spirit rectifying distillery. 1. Cognac of various kinds. 2. Grape alcohol, grape brandy, wine. The firm exists since 1854. Production 4,ooo,ooo/o per annum, value 545,000 roubles exclusive of excise. There are 8 steam boilers Russian plant; 200 250 workmen employed. The wine and alcohol are supplied from the gov's of Elisavetpol, Erivan and Tiflis about 500,000 /o and from Kiesliar about 800,000 /o. Sale in Russia and principally in the Caucasus. 121 Department B. Group 20. Class 131. 297. S O G O M O N O V, A. and Brothers. Gov. of Eti^avetpol, Shusha distr. and Tiflis. Brandy and spirit rectifying distillery. 1. Spirits of wine 96% strong. 2. Caucasian cognac. The brandy distillery established in 1880, the rectifying distillery in 1 885. Production per annum 2,000,000 / of fruit and grape alcohol and 300,000 /o of cognac, value 115,000 roubles exclusive of excise. The distilleries include a distilling apparatus, 2 rectifying columns with tanks of 700 vedros capacity, 2 fire cognac apparatus of 120 vedros capacity, 2 steam boilers (30 H. P.); 50 workmen. Materials local. Sale in the Caucasus and in Russia. Department B. Group 20. Class 131. 298. THE IMPERIAL". War sau. Russian cognac distillery. Cognac. Established in 1890. Value ot annual pi 'eduction 200,000 roubles. Grape supplied from Bessarabia and the Caucasus; 12 workmen, 18 workwomen and 4 minors. There is a large rectifying apparatus. Sale in Russia. Department B. Group 26. Class 192. 299. CUFALT, G. Riga. Book with plans of gardens. Department B. Groups 21 and 23. Class 138. 300. THE MINISTRY OF PUBLIC DOMAINS. St. Petersburg. Wax models of fruits and vegetables. Department B. Group 21. Class 143. 301.SHONHOV, O. Gov. of Kuriand, tou'n Goldingen. Berry wines. Department B. Group 21. Class 139. 302. DEROZHINSKY, M. Dried fruits. See JV 272. Department B. Groups 20 and 21. Classes 126 128 and 139. 303. GOILOV, L. Gov. of Bessarabia, Orgeiev district. 1. Dried plums. 2. Wines of various kinds. Fruit drying since 1884. Production 1,000 2,000 poods of plums, and 500 800 poods of apples per annum,, value 10,000 15,000 roubles; 6 ovens with 12 drying- kilns. Fruit supplied from exhibitor's orchards. Sale in Russia. See JV 273. 123 Department B. Group 21. Class 140. 304. TER-IOANISSIANTS, M. Tiflis. Manufactory of fruit compotes and preserves. 1. Fruit compotes. 2. Fruit candied. 3. Fruit marmalade, without sugar. Production since 1864. Handwork; small drying oven. Production value 15,000 roubles per year. In summer 100 workmen and 200 workwomen employed; in winter 40 50 workmen and minors. Local materials; fruit princi- pally from the exhibitor's orchards. Fuel charcoal. Sale in Russia. Department B. Group 21. Classes 133 and 141. 305. PROKHOROV, A. Gov. of Tula, town Bietev. Pomology and gardening; dried iruits and vegetables. 1. Preserved fruits and vegetables dried by fire: pressed vegetables, fresh - cabbage soup, Russian beet -root soup, fruit compote, apples. 2. ,,Bielev" pure apple marmalade. Established in 1889, \alue 30,000 roubles per annum. Fire-drying apparatus Rider's system. About 100 workmen employed from August till November. The fruits and vege- tables are principally supplied from the exhibitor's orchards and gardens, partly purchased. Sale in Russia. Department B. Groups 21 and 23. Classes 140 and 176. 306. VOLGUIN, D. Tiflis. Preserved vegetables. 1. Compote of vegetables. 2. Sauce of fruits. 3. Tomatoes 4. Badinjans. Established in 1878; handwork, 3,000 poods per annum, value 30,000 roubles; 30 workmen. Local materials. Sale in Russia. Department B. Groups 21, 23. Classes 139, 176. 307. KOLAKOVSKY, I. Gov. of Liublin, near Novo- Alexandria. Dried fruits and vegetables factory. 1. Dried berries and infusions from them. 2. Dried mushrooms. 3. Dried potatoes. 4. Dried fermented cabbage for the army. Established in 1887; 500 poods yearly, value 5,000 roubles; 3 Rider's drying apparatus; 20 workwomen. Sale in the Vistula gov's. Department B. Group 23. Classes 176, 177. 308. ROMAN, I. Anchovy and preserved food-preparations. Canned green pease and white mushrooms. See JV32o. Department B. Group 23. Class 176. 309. K O K U I E V, N. Jaroslctvl. Dried vegetables. *&' Prepared mixtures of dried vegetables for various soups. Established in 1890, yearly 150 200 poods, value 2,000 2,500 roubles; 3 Rider's drying appartus and hand shredding machines; 3 workmen and 6 8 workwomen. The raw vegetables partly supplied from own gardens, partly purchased. Sale principally in Moscow, but also local and in other towns of Russia. Department B. Group. 23. Class 177. 310. WOLF, A., Successor of Price. Moscow. Mustard factory. Mustard ot various kinds. Factory exists since 1844, owned by exhibitor in 1864. Production value 40,000 roubles per annum. Benzine motor, 5 grinding machines; 10 workmen. Russian materials. Sale in European Russia, Finland, Siberia and the Caucasus. 126 )EPARTMENT D FISHERIES, FISH PRODUCTS AND APPARATUS OF FISHING. Fisheries, Fish products and apparatus of Fishing. Department D. Groups 38 and 40. Classes 254, 262, 273 and 275. 311. ASTRAKHAN ADMINISTRATION OF THE FISHING AND SEAL CATCHING INDUSTRIES. Astrakhan. Fishing and seal catching industries. 1. Models oi various fishing appliances. 2. Seal and fish oil of various kinds. 3. Isinglass and dried spine of sturgeons. 4. River and sea clothing. - 129 - Department D. Group 38. Classes 254 and 255. 312. SOLNYSHKOV, S. Gov. and district of Nizhni Novgorod. Fishing rods. Industry since 1880. Hand work. Production per annum, value 1,200 roubles; 25 workmen and 25 minors. See Dep. H. JV 485. Department D. Group 38, 39 and 40. Classes 254, 262, 267, 272, 273 and 276. 313. BASILEVSKY, Th. Gov. of Astrakhan, Krasnodar district. Astrakhan Sinemorsk fisheries. 1. Draw nets, nets, gear and other fishing appliances. 2. Herrings. 3. White sturgeon and sturgeon caviar. 4. White sturgeon isinglass. 5. Dried spine of white sturgeon and sturgeon. Firm established in 1861. Annual catch in waters owned by the exhibitor in the Volga estuary, about 75,000,000 various fishes, from which 3,000 poods of caviar^ 300 poods of dried spine, 200 poods of isinglass, and 4,000 poods ot oil are yearly produced; total value 1,500,000 roubles. There are 100 draw nets, 8 steamers, 420 lish boats 4 barges, 6 lighters, n fish salting boats with ice cellars, 13 stores, 8 large and small fish-storing rafts; 150 various build- ings. Nets drawn by hand; 6,000 workmen, 1,800 work- women and 200 minors. Sale in the towns Tsaritsin, Saratov, Kazan and at the Nizhni Novgorod fair. Department D. Group 40. Class 278. 314. SOLOVKY CONVENT. Gov. of Arkhanget. White Sea and Soiovky Islands. Sea-calves' skins and belts. Department D. Group 39 and 40. Classes 267 and 270 273. 315. STEPANENKO, N. Province of the Don Cossacks, town Rostov on Den. Fisheries. 1. Pressed caviar. 2. Salted and dried back of sturgeon; fishes: rybets" and ,,seliva". 3. Sturgeon pickled. 4. Isinglass and dried spine of sturgeon. 5. Models of fishing appliances and samples of cables. 6. Plans and photographs. Established in 1850. Yearly production: 3,000 3,500 poods of caviar pressed; 300,000 400,000 fishes n seliva",and 100,000 150,000 fisher ,,rybets" caught; 2,500 3,000 poods of backs of sturgeon and other fishes salted and dried; 2,000 2,500 poods of different fishes and 150,000 herrings pickled, and 50 poods of sturgeon spine dried, total value '300,000 400,000 roubles. Handwork; 150 160 workmen, 17 1 8 workwomen and 20 40 minors. Fish caught in Azov sea. Sale in Russia. 131 Department D. Group 40. Class 272. 316. CHILIKIN, V. Kerch. Fish-curing establishment. 1. Pickled and salted herrings. 2. Pickled fish ,,sultanka". Established in 1880. Annual receipts 25,000 roubles. Handwork; 50 workmen and 20 workwomen. Fresh fish obtained from adjacent fisheries. Sale in Russia. Department D. Group 40. Class 272. 317. ZHADAN, I. Province of Cuban, Temriuk region. Pickled herrings. Value of annual production 3,000 roubles. Herrings caught near Kerch with nets; 35 workmen. Sale in Kerch. Department D. Group 40. Class 272. 318. BUZHISKY, S. Province of Cuban, Temriuk region. Pickled herrings. Value of annual production 3,000 roubles. Herrings caught near Kerch with nets; 35 workmen. Sale in Kerch. Department E. Group 40. Class 272. 319. KRAUSP, C. Revat. Fish curing establishment. Reval anchovies. Established in 1860, value 8,000 roubles per year. Handwork; 2 workmen and 5 workwomen. Anchovies caught in the jrnlf of Reval. Sale in Russia. Department D. Group 40. Class 272. 320. ROMAN, I. 5". Petersburg, Astrakhan, Odessa, Ki^iiar (Cauca- sus) and gov. of Kovno, Novoalexandrov district. Anchovy and preserved food preparations establishment. 1. Different fish dried. 2. Green peas and white musherooms. 3. Deer tongs. The industry exists in S. Petersburg since 1877; in Astrakhan since 1882; in Odessa since 1886; in Kizliar si'.ice 1887 and in the gov. of Kovno since 1892. Annual production 100.000 cans of various preserved food prepa- rations, value 50,000 roubles. Steam boilers, presses, ma- chines; 20 workmen. Fish supplied from the Caspian, Black, Baliic and White seas. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department D. Group 40. Class 272. 321. DUBININ, B. Odessa. Fisheries and fish curing and canning establishment. 1 . Brill pickled and in tomato. 2. Mackerel pickled and in oil. 3. Sterliad pickled. The firm exists since 1835, the establishment since 1884. Handwork; 200,000 cans of preserved fish sold an- nually, value 100,000 roubles; 25 workmen and 10 work- women. Fish supplied from own fisheries on the Black Sea and in the mouths ot the tributaries. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia. Department D. Group 40. Class 272. 322. DANIELSON, D. Riga. Preserved fish manufactory. Anchovies. Established in 1889. Production from 8,800 cans, value 4.620 roubles in 1889 90 has attained 87,000 cans, value 48,500 roubles in 1891 92. Machine and handwork; ma- chine for making tin cans; 3 workmen, 10 workwomen and 2 minors. Fish caught in Riga gulf. Sale in Russia. Department D. Group 40. Class 273. 323. LIANOSOV, G. and PRIDONOV, A. Bozhi-Promisly Fishery Company. Gov. of Baku, estuary of the river Kura. 1. Stellated sturgeon caviar, pressed. 2. Shyp" (kind of sturgeon) caviar, pressed. 3. Sturgeon, white sturgeon and stellated sturgeon isinglass. 4. Dried spine. The Fisheries are of long standing; rented by the exhibitors since two years; fish caught, prepared and salted by hand; 800 workmen. Sale in Astrachan, Odessa and Moscow; salmon sold in Berlin. Department D. Group 40. Class 272. 324. BAYL, J. Gov. of Tavrida, Dnieprovsk district. 1. Fish preserved in various ways. 2. Tomato pure. Production since 1892.111 the first 7 months 89,000 cans sold, value 40,000 roubles. Handwork. From i May till 15 October 120 workmen, 15 workwomen and 25 minors; in the remaining months 35 workmen, 10 workwomen and 8 minors employed. Materials principally Russian. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department D. Group 40. Class 272. 325. BRATUS, M. Province of Kuban, Elsk region. The fisheries yield 1,000 3,000 roubles per year. Fish supplied from Rostov on Don. Sale in harbor town Eisk. Department D. Group 40. Class 273. 326. VLASINKO, C. Province oj Kuban, Eisk region. Pressed caviar. Established in 1882. Yearly 15 poods of caviar obtained from 200 poods of lish, value 1,800 roubles. Fish caught by automatic hooks near Eisk and Rostov on Don; 12 work- men. Sale in Russia. Department D. Group 40. Class 273. 327. RIADNIN, C. Province of Kuban. Fishery. Pressed caviar. Fishery since 1890. Yearly 400 poods of fish caught by automatic hooks near Eisk and Rostov on Don, yielding 20 poods of pressed caviar; tatal value 3,100 roubles; 12 \vorkmen. Sale in Russia. 136 - )EPARTMENT MINES, MINING AND METALLURGY. Mines, Mining and Metallurgy. Department E. Group 67. Classes 411 and 412. 328. MINING DEPARTMENT OF THE MINISTRY OF PUBLIC DOMAINS. 6". Petersburg. 1. Obelisk, showing the amount of gold obtained from 1745 till 1872 in European Russia and Siberia. 2. Pamphlets and maps. Yield of gold (1745 1892): in European Russia 458,843.989 kilogramms, West Siberia 109,990.414 kilo gramms and in East Siberia 1,097,231.692 kilogramms. During the last 10 years the total yield of gold varied in the following manner. o-ci- iff 2 " "= a - _ O W s _^ -*- of April 26, i87> Depanncnt F. Group 70. Class 41 369. ZIMIX X . En&neer. Mode] of an anti-fire appliance adjustable to town wa- ter mains (a steam pump with hose) with an automatic contrivance for arresting the consumption of water drawn from the pipes for domestic purposes during a fire. The system is adopted in the towns ****, aod Tsa- " ". Department F. Group 69. Class 422. 370. RAUZER, A., firm ,,Miller, Fugelzang andO". Moscow. Iron and copper boiler works. Automatic injector of the ,,Rauzer, Biber and Sokolov" system. Works established in 1872. Yearly production 10,000 poods of copper articles, value 200,000 roubles, and 30,000 poods of iron boilers and boiler mountings, value 150,000 roubles; 2 steam engines (18 H. P.), 26 diffe- rent lathes and 10 forges. About 200 workmen. Material from St. Petersburg and Polish works. Sale in Russia. Department F. Group 69. Class 413. 371. NOBEL, E. and Ch. St. Petersburg. O Mechanical, and boiler work and foundry. 1. Petroleum motor of 3 1 /* H. P. 2. Appliance for forcing draught and fire bars for naphtha heating. 3. Stop valves ,,Nobel" system for water, and naphtha conduits. 4. Naphtha hearth. Works established in 1862. Value of various ma- chines and appliances manufactured per annum 850,000 roubles; 5 steam motors (170 H. P.), 7 steam hammers, 264 various lathes, 2 rollers, 6 presses, 16 benches, 20 forges, 3 cupola furnaces, 5 smelting furnaces; 600 work- men. Cast-iron imported from England, and purchased at Finland and Ural works; steel and iron supplied from St. Petersburg iron works. Sale in Russia and the Caucasus. 164 Department F. Group 69. Class 416. 372. DELONE, N. St. Petersburg. Appliance for the multiplication of power (levers on hinges). Exhibited as an invention. Departments F, G, H and L. Groups 69, 85, 86, us, 120, 147, 152. Classes 413, 420, 499, 531, 542, 715, 716, 726, 754, 829 and 889. 373. THE ST. PETERSBURG METALLIC WORKS, Imperially Sanctioned Company. St. Petersburg. Parts of machines, metallic articles, projectiles, drawings -and photographs. The company was established in 1857. Yearly pro- duction, value 2,000,000 3,000,000 roubles. Since its establishment it has executed 260 orders for steam, wa- ter and air heating; 230 bridges, in all 667 arches; 142 iron structures for roofs, steeples, domes etc.; various supports for floors, ceilings and stancheons; fire-proof roofs and ceilings of corrugated iron, 770 steam boilers, over 300,000 steel drawn projectiles of various sizes, nearly 1,000 gun-carriages, a floating crane for lifting 100 tons weight (for the port of Sebastopol); elevators and grain stores, hydraulic turrets and armour fittings for iron clad ships. The workshops and the office buildings cover 16,500 square sazhens of ground. There are 20 steam en- gines (310 H. P.), ii steam boilers with a heating surface of 5,000 square feet, 2 dynamos, i electric motor, 6 steam- hammers, 5 mechanical forging stands, a forging machine and a hydraulic forging press, steam lathes, a forging en- gine and hydraulic forging press, 4 mechanical presses, 2 hydraulic presses (200 atm.), 4 hydraulic rivetting ma- chines (80 atm.), 20 welding and heating furnaces, 2 cu- pola furnaces, each capable of casting 250 poods of cast iron per hour, 6 drying apparatus, 80 smiths forges, 358 mechanical stands, 220 lock smiths vices. The workshops and storehouses are connected by rails; there are 40 cranes and lifts; 1,000 1,500 workmen employed. Materials Russian. Sale in Russia. Department F. Groups 74. Class 466. 374. THE STATE PAPER MANUFACTORY. Typographic articles. See Dep. H. JVs 459. Department F. Group 75. Class 470. 375. VOX-BOOL, N. Publisher. St. Petersburg. Album of chromolithographic and water color illustrations of J. S. Turgeniev's ,, Notes of a Sportsman", by P. Sokolov, artist. The illustrations are executed in H. Markus' establish- ment of graphic arts. Department F. Group 75. Class 470. 376. DIUSTERDIK. Album of chromolithographs. 1 66 Department F. Group 76, Class 476. 377. MIRONOV, C. Moscow. Album of wood engravings. Handwork of the exhibitor, value 500 roubles per an- num. Sale in Moscow. Department F. Group 76. Class 475. 378. KROISS, F. St. Petersburg. Photozincography. Photo-mechanical works. Fstablished in 1888. Production value 30,000 roubles per year. Gasmotor (4 H. P.), 8 workmen. Zinc-sheets and copper from abroad; chemical preparations foreign and Russian, Department F. Group 75. Class 470. 379. SOLOVIEV, M. Moscow. Chromo-tvpo-lithography. Chromo-lithographical works: images, portraits ot Their Imperial Majesties, pictures etc. Fstablished in iSSi. Production value 75,000 roubles per year. Steam engine (8 H. P.), 5 steam printing ma- chines of French system, 3 hand printing presses of Ber- lin construction, i glazing machine, 2 hand presses for typography; roo workmen and minors. Russian paper and Russian and foreign paints used. Sale in Russia. - 167 - Department F. Group 75. Classes 469 and 470. 380. MARKS, A. Editor of the Journal ,,Niva". St. Petersburg. Typo-lithography. 1. Publications with illustrations. 2. Journal ,,Niva". 3. Pictures (originals by Russian artists) and chromolito- graphs. 4. Portrait of A. Rubinstein. 5. Samples of galvanoplastic work. 6. Color scales. 7. Photographs. The journal is issued since 1869, typolithography esta- blished in 1 88 1. Yearly receipt 500,000 roubles. 3 gas motors (67 H. P.), 2 rotary and 1 1 steam printing ma- chines, ii hand printing presses, polishing machine for stones, paint-grinding mill, 2 double grooving machines and 7 machines of American system for binding; 174 workmen and 42 workwomen. Paper Russian. Sale about 96% in Russia and 4/ abroad. Department F. Group 74. 381. BENKE, A. St. Petersburg. Typography. -; Samples of typographical work. Established in 1870. Production value 70,000 80,000 roubles per year. Book-bindery; 4 steam printing ma- chines, 2 American printing presses, glaxing cylinder, gas- motor (4 H. P.), 3 hand presses and other machines; over 2,000 poods of type; 60 workmen, 10 workwomen and 10 minors, all Russians. Material Russian and foreign. Sale in Russia. 1 68 Department F. Group 75. Class 470. 382. STABLER and PATTINOT. St. Petersburg. Chromo-lithography. Pictures. Established in 1872. Production value 35,000 roubles per year. Steam motor, 6 lithographic steam presses and 6 lithographic hand presses; 50 workmen. Sale in St. Petersburg. Department F. Group 75. Class 469. 383. POLIANIN, .P. St. Petersburg. Engraving and steam printing workshop. Samples of engravings, stamps, seals etc. Established in 1887, handwork, value 10,000 roubles per year. 6 workmen and 4 minors. Material Russian and partly foreign. Sale in Russia. Department F. Group 77. 384. KOSTIKOV-ALMAZOV, A. Town Omsk. 1. Aeranaut apparatus called ,,vietrostat". 2. Model of a portable stove for cremating bodies on battle fields. 3. Model of a stove for cremating impurities and bodies. 4. Model of a petroleum stove for heating rooms. 5. Model of an adjustable dam. 6. Model of a trap ladder for crossing bogs and swamps. 7. Model of a floating bridge for a wharf for discharging goods. 8. Model of a filter for purifying thick muddy water. 9. Model of water, wind and horse power motors. 10. Model of a conical wheel with moveablc teeth. n. Model of a watering pump. 12. Models of ploughs and harrows (for Siberia). 13. Drawings, designs and photographs. 14. Account of the works of the exhibitor. Department F. Group 76. Glass 471. 385. FISHHR, CH., ,,firm Diagovchenko". Moscow. Phototype. Samples of photo-mechanical work. See Dep. L. JV 939. 170 DEPARTMENT G TRANSPORTATION. RAILWAYS, VESSELS. VEHICLES. Transportation. Railways, Vessels, Vehicles, Department G. Group 86. Glasses 537 and 540. 336. THE MINISTRY OF MARINE. Model workshop. St. Petersburg. i. Model of the boat ,,Diedushka Russkaho Flota", Grand- father of the Russian fleet, scale 7* inch to a foot. Peter the Great's boat, known as the ,,Grandfather of the Russian fleet" is one of the most precious monuments ot Russian history. It was in excursions made in this boat that Peter the Great gained his love for naval mat- ters which led to the foundation of the Russian fleet. Length of the boat 19' 9"; width 6' 5"; depth of keel 2' 8". 3. Model of the iron clad ,,Nayarin^, scale l /.i inch to a foot. Built at a private ship-yard in St. Petersburg: launched in 1891.. Length along GWL 347' 6", width including armour plate 67'; depth 25'. Displacement 9476 tons. Engines oi 9000 indicated horse power; contracted speed 15^2 knots; 30 guns including Hotchkiss' quick firing guns and guns of 12" 35" calibre. Projected cost including engines and artillery < 560,000. 3- Model of the iron clad ,, Emperor Alexander II". scale '/s inch to a foot. Built at crown yards at St. Petersburg; launched in 1887. Length along GWL 333' 7", width including ar- mour plate" 67', depth at stearn 24' 6", at helm 22' 6"; displacement 8749 tons. Engines built in St. Petersburg, indicated horse power 8288; speed 15.3 knots. 30 guns including small Jarrington and 12" 30" calibre guns. Cost including armour plate, artillery and engines ^'685,000, 4. Model of the it class iron clad belted cruiser .,Rurik'\ Built at the crown yards at St. Petersburg. Length along GWL 426', width including armour plate 67', depth to keel 25' 9"; displacement 10,933 tons. Hngines 13,250 indicated horse power; contracted speed 18 knots. 44 guns including Hotchkiss quick firing guns and 8" 35" calibre. Cost of vessel with engines 590,000. ). Model of a torpedo boat, scale i" to a foot. Type used in the Imperial Russian fleet for raising and lowering torpedoes into the water. Workshop established about 1714. Handwork, 20 work- men and 6 minors. Models made for the Ministrv of Marine. The Galerny Ostrov Ship-Yard. Portions ot a ship's side, showing the method of separat- ing the brass shectinir from the steel hull. The Cronstadt Rope -works. Lines, cordage, marlines, hawsers etc. (Irons! ihll. Established in 1787. Yearly production 43,978 poods of hempen* goods, value 321,234 roubles; 4,000 poods of steel-hawsers, value 40,000 roubles; 5,000 poods of torpedo-nets, value 91,930 roubles. Machine and hand- work. Two steam engines of 35 and 50 H. P. The tar- ring of the yarn done by steam. Number of working days per annum: men 64,000 and women 400. Hemp supplied from central Russia; wire from St. Petersburg; tar from Finland. Work executed for the Russian Xavv. 174 4 Department G. Groups 85 and 86. Classes 531 and 542. 387. THK ST. PETERSBURG METALLIC WORKS. 1. Photographs of a floating bridge. 2. Photographs of barbct appliances and album of drawings. See Dep. 1 ; . JV 373. Department G. Group 85. Class 532. 388. GOTH. J. St. Petersburg. Rope-works. 1. Rigging. 2. Hemp yarn ot various kinds. 3. Tow. Established in 1800. Annual production 150,000 poods, value 800,000 roubles. 3 steam engines (100 H. P.), 200 workmen, 30 workwomen. Russian material. Sale in Russia; export to Germany, Sweden, Norway, France, England, Turkey, U. S. North America , Brazil. Argen- tine, Japan and China. Department (i. Group 85. Class 532. 389. SOLNYSHKOV, X. Go-c. and district of Nizhni Novgorod. Iron chains. Handwork, established in 1891; 10 forges, mechanical press lor testing chains. Production 6,000 poods of chains per annum, value 20,000 roubles; 35 workmen. Iron sup- plied from Ural and Siberia. Sale in Russia. fe5lVBK:iT7j 175 /> J ^^ oir < Department G. Group 83. Class 523. 390. USHIN'S, N., Successors. 5/. Petersburg. 1. Hemp thread and yarn. 2. Twine, ropes, oil cloth, bast-string, mat-sacks, matting- floor carpets .and felt. 3. Tar and turpentine. Trading since 1830. Materials supplied from the gov.'s of Nizhni Novgorod, Vologda and Tver. Department G. Group 85. Class 532. 391. CORIAKIK, J. Kharkov. Rope-works and hemp yarn manufactory. 1. Ropes of hemp and wire. 2. Hemp belting, tarred and untarred. Established in 1881. Value of yearly productions 350,000 roubles. Steam engine (75 H. P.), 8 rope mak- ing machines, 2 systems of spindles, 6 bobbins, 4 warp machines, 3 hackles., 8 looms, 300 spinning wheels; 250 workmen and 45 \vork\vomen. Local material. Sale in Russia. - 176 - Department G. Group 83. Classes 515 517. 392. NELLIS and FRESE. St. Petersburg. Carriage Builders. 1. Cabriolet. 2. Sledge. ]. Coach. Established in 1827. Value of yearly production 250,000 roubles. Handwork. 12 forges, steam engine (2 l /2H. P), drilling and turning lathes and other appliances; 1 50 work- men. Steel and varnish received from England, silk stuff and leather from France, timber from America and Ger- many. Sale in Russia, mostly in St. Petersburg. Department G. Group 83. Class 523. 393. VOLK and O. Moscoiu. Harness and saddlery workshop. 1. Harness for 3 horses abreast, ,,troika". 2. Harness for a pair, town driving. 3. Two sets of harness for one horse, town driving. 4. Lady's saddle. j. Cossack saddle. Workshop etablishcd in 1890. Hand work; 40 Work- men. Russian material, sale in Russia. 177 - Department G. Group 83. Class 523. 394. DEMENT, M. and son. 1. Single harness. 2. ..Troika" harness. Moscow. Production since 1869, yearly 2,500 tawed skins, 1,500 patent leather, 1,500 various saddles, 200 various harnesses, and 200 trunk-beds, value 110,000 roubles. Hand work; horse gear for stocking the tawed leather, 34 various pits, machine for embossing leather, 5 sewing machines; 85 workmen. Raw hides from Moscow and Nizhni-Novgorod fair. Sale to the War Department, tawed leathers sold in Moscow. See Dep. H. J\ 600. Department G. Group 83. Class 523. 395. TSIMMERMAN, R. Harness and saddlery workshop. Moscow. 1. ,,Troika" harness. 2. Russian harness for pair and lor single driving. 3. American harness for pair and for single driving. Hand work, since 1817, value 100,000 roubles per year. Material foreign and Russian. Sale in Russia and export. 178 Department G. Group 83. Class 523. 396. KUSNETSOV, A. 5/. Petersburg. Manufactory of leather, military harness and visors. Russian harness for single driving. Sec Dep. H. A? $95- Department G. Group 83. Class 523 397. GRIGORIEV, W. St. Petersburg. Coachmen's livery workshop. 1. Two coats lined with fox fur trimmed with beaver. 2. Three summer coats: kaftan, armiak and cossackin. 3. Two caps. 4. Persian sash. 5. Coat, sash, shirt-riant and cap for yamschik (coachman). Established in 1850. Annuul production, value 20,000 roubles. 7 workmen and 4 minors. Russian materials and sale in Russia on order. - I 79 Department G. Group 85. Classes 516 and 517. 398. MARKOV, W. Moscow. Carriage Builder. 1. Sledge in Russian style. 2. Sledge in Louis XIV style. 3. Small ,,My Lord". Established in 1784. Yearly production value about 200,000 roubles. Hand work; 10 forges and several hand machines; 150 workmen. Russian and foreign materials. Sale in Russia, partly to Persia. Department G. Group 80. Class 502. 399. BRONSHTHIN, D. 1. Railway and pocket leadclinches. 2. Control lock. Exhibited as invention. Department G. Group 80. Class 501. 400. THEODOROVICH, H., engineer tcchnolog. Gov. of Kherson, town Nikolaiev. Permanent indicator connected with sheave gear and brass-bearing. The indicator is adjustable to the axles of railway car- riages and was made by the exhibitor, \vho is the chief of works belonging to a raiKvav. 1 80 Department G. Group 80 Class 500. 401. GUINTSBURG, B. engineer. St. Petersburg. Model of sleeping car, J f) of natural size. Invention ot the exhibitor patented in Russia, United States of North America, England. France. Austria and Hungary; deposed for patent in Germany, Italy, Sweden and Norway, Spain, Canada and East-Indies. Department G. Group 80. Class 500. 402. HITS ON I, P., manager of workshops of the St. Petersburg- Warsaw railway. 5^. Petersburg. Two railway car axles. Exhibited as invention. Made in the workshops of the St. Petersburg-Warsaw railway. - 181 Department G. Group 83. Class 517. 403. SEMENOV, G. Moscow. Carriage Builder. Sledge, Established in 1854. Hand work, value 50,000 roubles per annum; 50 workmen. Material mostly Russian, partly foreign. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia and export. DEPARTMENT H MANUFACTURES, Manufactures, Department H. Group 96. Class 598. 404. KRAISER, C. joiner. FEDOROVITCH, G., gilder. MICHELSON, J., carver. BABURIN, J., artist. Riga. linage case in new-Russian stvle. Department H. Group 94. Class 595. 405. FROLOV, A. architect.. St. Petersburg. Mosaic workshop. Mosaic images. Made mostly by hand, since 1890, about 30,000 square vershoks per year (i square vershok = 3.06 square inches) in a finished state, value 45,000 roubles. 16 lathes, cut- ting machines, gasomotor etc.; 30 workmen and 6 minors. Smalt mostly prepared in 'St. Petersburg, partly received from Italy. Sale in Russia. - 185 406. MUMRIKOV, P. Gov. of Vladimir, Viasnikov district, village Msteru. Image works. Images in cases, with foil ornaments. Established in 1887. About 1,000 images made by hand- work per year, value 2,000 roubles; 2 workmen and 2 workwomen. Materials pi rchased on the spot. Sale in Russia. 407. MUMRIKOV, J. Gov. of Vladimir, Viasnikov district, village Mstera. Image works. Images on cypress wood, gilt and embossed. Established in 1880 work by hand, 100 images per year, value 2,000 roubles; 6 workmen and 2 minors. Sale in Moscow and at the Nizhni-Novgorod fair. 186 - 408. PANKRISHEV, J. Gov. of Vladimir, Viasnikov district, village Mstera. Image works. Images. Established in 1872, work by hand, 300 images per year, value 5,000 roubles; 8 workmen. The cypress wood is purchased at the Nizhni-Novgorod fair, gold-sheeting and paints obtained from Moscow. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 90. Class 569. 409. POSSE, O. St. Petersburg. Carved gilt frames. Production since 1872, by hand work, value 20,000 rou- bles per year; 15 workmen and 2 apprentices. Materials purchased and sale in Russia. Department H. Group 96. Class 598. 410. ABROSSIMOV, S. ,SY. Petersburg. Gilding, joiner's and carving workshop. 1. Carved and gilt wooden frame. 2. Two dragons (pedestals) bronzegilt, cut out of wood. Production since 1868, by hand-work to the amount oi 15,00020,000 roubles per year; 30 workmen and 10 workwomen. Department H. Groups 90 and no, Classes 565, 566. 6y^ and 695. 411. TUCALI-V, X. Gov. of Kostroma, Makariev district. Painter's workshop. Furniture in Russian style and small wooden articles. Hand work, established in 1850, value 25,000 roubles per year. There are 6 ovens. Employed 10 15 workmen. Various turned articles from wood procured on the spot. Sale in St. Petersburg. Moscow, London, Berlin and Rot- terdam. 188 Department H. Group 91. Class 577. 412. LIPPOLD, A., artist. St. Petersburg. Portraits on China ot Their Imperial Majesties The Emperor and Empress of Russia. Department H. G r oup 92. Class 582. 413. IMPERIAL STOXE CUTTING WORKS OF EKATERINBURG, AND STONE POLISHING WORKS OF KOLYVAN. of Perm and Tomsk. Five vases with pedestals of jasper, horn stone and marble. The stone cutting works ol Ekaterinburg were founded in 176=,; the polishing works of Kolivan in 1787. Yearly pro- duction value 47,000 roubles. All the work, except the smaller articles, is made by machines (watermotors ); 120 workmen. Stones obtained from mines in the Ural and Altay mountains. The articles are manufactured for the Imperial Cabinet, under the direction of which the- works are placed. These articles are either for the decoration of the palaces, or are given away as presents by order of His Majesty The Emperor. 189 Department H. Group 92. Class 582. 414. SVECHNIKOV, A. Gov. of Perm, Osinsk district. Stone ware workshop. Various small articles of selenite and other precious stones. Production by hand work, value per annum 1,200 roubles, 4 workmen, 2 workwomen and 2 minors. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 92. Class 582. 415. PERSIANINOV, A. Gov. of Pen/:, Ekaterinburg. Stone ware workshop. 1. Vases of Colcan jasper. 2. Candlesticks, ashpots, inkstands. 3. Blotting presses of Oriss jasper, a glass and a knife. Workshop exists since 1863. Production value per annum 15,000 roubles. Hand work; 6 workmen and 4 mi- nors. Jasper obtained trom mines and pits of Orenburg steppes and Altay mountains. Sale in Russia. 190 t Department H. GROUP 92. Class 583, 416. KORCHAKOV-SIVITSKY, V. Gov. of Kiev, Radomiesl district. Labradorite ware workshop. Articles of labradorite; boards, columns, vases, paperweight, jewelry, sleevclinks, knobs etc. Labradorite beds on the estate of the exhibitor disco- vered in 1846, works founded in 1849. Value of annual production about 35,000 roubles. Work done exclusively by hand; 60 70 workmen. Only local stone used. Sale in Russia, uncut stone exported to Austria. Department H. Groups 90 and 92. Classes 572 and 582. 417. IMPERIAL STONE CUTTING MANUFAC- TORY. Peterkhov. 1. Three cupboards: mahogany, plane-tree wood and am- boin, with bronze ornaments and mosaic panels. 2. Vases of nephrite, rockcrystal, horn stone and white quartz. 3. An agate stone ashpot. Established in 1775. Value of yearly production 40,000 roubles. 2 turbines (30 H. P.), 40 machines and lathes, smelting furnace, hearth, dryingshed and boiler for melting lead; 64 permanent workmen and 1 1 temporary. Gems (rom Siberia. Articles worked exceptional}' for the Imperial Court; the surplus sold. 191 Department H. Groups 97 and 98. Classes 605 609 and 612. 418. GRACHEV, M. St. Petersburg^ Gold and silver ware chased and enameled: images, vases, services, groups, goblets, cigar-cases, knives, spoons etc. Works established in 1848, handwork, value 500,000 roubles per year; 200 workmen. Material Russian and fo- reign. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Group 93. Class 585. 419. MELTSFR, A., firm ..X. Shtange". St. Petfrsburg. Bronxe ware workshop. Bronze groups from Lanscret models. Industry since 1783; 50,000 articles produced per year, value 130,000 roubles. Hand and machine work. Gasmo- tor (8 H. P.), smelting furnace, i forge, 3 hearths, 10 tur- ning lathes, 3 large presses, 2 drilling and i planing machi- nes,, 2 polishing stands and 20 various hand machines; 100 workmen. Russian and foreign material. Sale in Rus- sia and export. Department H. Group 92. Class 581. 420. MIKE SHIN, M., academist. St. Petersburg. Bronze model (unica) l \ le size of the monument to the Empress Catherine II in St. Petersburg. The model is unique, belonging to the author exhi- bitor, an academist sculptor and painter, and member of the Imperial Academy of Arts. Department H. Group 96. Class 598. 421. SHUTOV, A. St. Petersburg. Artistical carving on wood and joiner's workshop. Model of monument to the Emperor Alexander II in Moscow. Established in 1848. Handwork, value 10,000 15,000 roubles per annum; 10 15 workmen. Sale by orders. See Nr. 438. .. ;: ;. Department H. Group 92. Classes 581 and 582. 422. KOPIEVSKY, C. Reval. Granite and marble works. 1. Chicago Coat of Arms in Carrarc marble. 2. Black granite slab. Established in 1874. Yearly production 265 monuments, crosses, marble tables etc., value 14,000 roubles. Hand work; 26 workmen. Material Russian and also from Bel- gium and Italv. Sale in Russia. 193 Department H. Group 97. Classes 604 and 605. 423. MARSHAK, J. Kiev. Gold and silver ware workshop. 1. Silver steamer, model, inkstand. 2. Velvet blotting book with silver ornaments. 3. Silver dish. 4. Gold Scotland skeleton. Established in 1878. 4 rolling and 2 polishing machines, 2 turning lathes, 2 wire-drawing benches, i press machine, i hearth, 2 smelting ovens, various hand tools; 45 work- men, 1 2 workwomen and 13 minors. Materials, gold, silver and copper, in foreign coin and in fragments, purchased on the spot, parti)- imported from Hamburg in ingots. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 93. Class 585. 424. FEDOROV, A. St. Petersburg. Bronze ware workshop. i 1. Two candelabras. 2. Inkstand. 3. Two candlesticks. Established in 1873. Hand work, value 20,000 roubles per annum; 35 workmen. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 97. Class 604. 425. KORSININ, G. St. Petersburg. Silver goblets gilt. Handwork, since 1889, value 4.000 roubles per year; 4 workmen and 2 minors. Materials bought and products sold at St. Petersburg. Department H. Group 90. Classes 566 and 569. 426. ZHLSSHL, A. St. Petersburg. Gilding, carving and joiner's workshop. 1. Gilt and carved image case, containing image. 2. Door ot an iconostasis. 3. Mirror and oval frames, carved. 4. Gilt image case, under the form of a Russian cottage ,,izba", and image case with dome. 5 . Carved and gilt church reading desk. 6. Portraits in frames and various gilt frames. 7. Carved table support (Louis XV) and round gilt table (Louis XVI). Established in 1874, hand and machine work, value 25.000 roubles per annum, 20 hand machines; 18 work- men. Sale in Russia and export. - 195 Department H. Group 97. Class 608. 427. KLINGERT, G. and LEVITT, J. Moscow. Articles of enameled silver. Workshop since 185$. Machine and handwork (4 stoves and forges), value 400,000 roubles per year; 200 workmen. Silver purchased at the Stock Exchange in Moscow, enamel from abroad. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Group 97. Class 608. 428. DALMAN, A Si. Petersburg. Silver niello, enamel and filigree articles. Manufacture since 1880, hand-work, value 200,000 roubles per year; 75 workmen and 15 minors. Materials bought in St. Petersburg. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Groups 97, 100 and 106. Classes 605, 607, 628 and 665. 429. KHODJEVAX, K. St. Petersburg. Caucasus silver articles, stalls and embroideries. Production since 1873, hand work, value 200,000 rou- bles per year. Materials from Caucasus. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Groups 97 and 98. Classes 605, 609 and 612. 430. OVCHINNIKOV, M. and A. Moscow. Manufactory of silver and gold articles. Groups, pitchers, services, vases, etc. Manufactory founded in 1851. Value of annual pro- duction over 800,000 roubles from 300 poods of silver Handwork; 130 workmen and 60 apprentices. Materials Russian and from Hamburg. Sale in Moscow and St. Petersburg. Department H. Groups 92 and 93. Glasses 582 and 585. 431. VIiRFKL, CH. St. Petersburg. Bronze foundery and stone cutting manufactory. Articles of bronze and stone. Established in 1842. Production, value 100,000 - 150,000 roubles per year. Hand and machine work; two steam engines (27 H. P.). About 100 workmen. Precious stones brought from Siberia, Caucasus, Altai, gov. of Kiev and other localities. Sale in Russia, America, Eng- land. France and Germany. 197 Department H. Group 94. Classes 591 and 594. 432. NECHAIEV-MALTSKV, J. Gov. of Vhidimir, Melenkov district. The Gusscvo Crystal Manufactory. Decanters, teapots, tumblers, wineglasses, champainglasses, chandeliers and other articles of crystal. Established in 1757. Production yearly about 1,700,000 articles, value 250,000 roubles. 4 glass furnaces and 10 potteries; work by hand; 170 polishing and cutting lathes, steam engine (20 H. P.); 490 workmen and 43 minors Materials from Russia. Sale in Moscow, St. Pe- tersburg and at the fairs ot Nizhni Novgorod and Irbit. Department H Group 91. Classes 576 and 577. 433. KUZNETSOV, M. and GO. /// vii i' ions i, r (>c'.V of Russia. Six porcelain manufactories. Samples of porcelain and crockery ware. The manulactories were founded or purchased bv the Company: i . in Pokrov district, gov. of Vladimir in 1832; 2. in Riga in 1843; 3- inKorchevadistrict.gov. of Tver in 1870; 4. in Kharkov district in 1886; 5. in Dmitrov district, gov. of Moscow (formerly Gard- ner's) and 6. in Slaviansk, gov. of Kharkov both in 1892. About 40,000.000 articles produced per year value 3,000.000 roubles; 16 steam engines (600 H. P.), 26 boilers; 177 grindstones and 66 cylindrical rollers, 56 water presses, 30 stirring machines. 22 clay crushers, 4 slicing machines, 10 pounders, n drills, 14 printing machines, 67 furnaces and 170 kilns; 5,000 workmen, - : 9 8 - 1,500 workwomen and 500 minors. In addition to mate- rials, purchasedin Russia, clay and flint are imported from England, Holland, Prussia and France. Sale in Europe and Asiatic Russia, the Caucasus; and export to Persia, Tur- key and the Balkan peninsula. Department H. Group no. Class 695. 434. LUKUTIN, N. Moscow district. Workshop of lacquered papier-mache articles. Lacquered papier-mache articles with paintings. \Yorkshop founded in 1817. Handwork. Yearly 2,500 3,000 articles produced, value 15,000 18,000 rou- bles; 26 workmen. Materials Russian. Sale in Russia and export. Department H. Group 91. Class 576. 435. SEMENOV, I. St. Petersburg. Painting on porcelain dishes. Production since 1858. Hand work, value 6,000 roubles per year; 3 kilns; 4 workmen and 3 minors. Material por- celain Russian. Sale in St. Petersburg. Department H. Groups no and 116. Classes 695 and 733. 436. VISHNIAKOV, P. and Sons. Moscow district. 1. Lacquered articles of papier-mache, with paintings. 2. Iron trays. Hand work since 1825, value 15,000 roubles per an- num; 35 workmen and 5 minors. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 92. Class 581. 437. BERGMAN, V. Helsingfors. Workshop of monuments. Monument for a grave. Hand work. Production since 1863, value about 48,000 roubles per annum; 40 workmen. Local material and sale in Finland. Department H. Group 96. Class 598. 438. SHU TOY, A. St. Petersburg. Artistical wood carving and joiner's workshop. Crucifix. See Nr. 421. 200 Department H. Group 98. Class 614. 439. BERNSTEIN, Brothers. Warsaw. Amber ware, amber. Hand work since 1789, value 25,000 roubles per an- num; 5 workmen. Amber obtained from the gov. of Lomzha. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Group 108. Glass 68 1. 440. AKSENOV, ST. Pro-vine i' of Ibf Don Cossacks, Taganrog region. Priest's cane. Hand work ol the exhibitor. Since 1875 made 17 canes and 2 deacon candles. Department H. Group no and 116. Classes 695 and 733. 441. VISHNIAKOV, V. Moscoiu district. 1. Lacquered articles of papier-mach6. 2. Metallic trays. Hand-work since 1825, value 8,000 roubles per year; 3 kilns, lathes, presses etc. 16 workmen and apprentices. Materials from Moscow, sale in Russia and abroad. 201 Department H. Group 106. Class 669. 442. KOLONIN'S, P. Sons. Moscow. Workshop of gold embroideries. Winding sheet, worked in silver and gold on velvet, representation of Our Savior in the grave. Established in 1867. Handwork, value 40,000 roubles per year; 20 workwomen. Materials purchased in Moscow. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Group no. Class 693. 443. VORONOVA, M-me N. St. Petersburg. Dolls. Department H. Group no. Class 69}. 444. NIKOLAIEVA, M-me E. St. Petersburg. Dolls. Handwork of the exhibitor. Department H. Group 90. Class 567. 445. SEMECHKINA, M-me T. Etching on wood. Oak chiffonniers, with scenes in etching. St. Petersburg. :- - St. Petersburg. Department H. Group 93. Class 585. 446. RENNER, L. Forge and locksmith's workshop. 1. Lantern supports, rosettes and branches in forged iron. 2. Photographs. Handwork since 1882, value 5,000 roubles per annum; 6 workmen and 6 minors. Russian iron used. Sale in Russia, == *. 20; Department H. Group 90. Classes 565, 567 and 569. 447. DE-KAMILLI, G., sculptor. St. Petersburg. Furniture workshop. 1 . Cabinet cupboard. 2. Hanging bookshelves. 3. Screen. 4. Basrelief. 5. Mirror frame. Established in 1875. Handwork, value 20,000 roubles per year; 20 workmen. Materials local. Sale in St. Peters- burg. Department H. Group 92. Class 583. 448. VEITSENBERG, A., sculptor. St. Petersburg. 1 . Marble statue: ,,Evening Twilight". 2. Marble busts: ,,Ideal", ,,Rcal" and ,,Marussia" (Molly). The exhibitor is honorary free associate of the Imperial Academy of Arts. 20 1 Department H. Group 90 Classes 565 569. 449. MELTSER, T. and. O. St. Petersburg. Furniture joiner's workshop. Furniture. Established in 1884. Hand and machinework; 160 200 workmen. Materials Russian and foreign. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 90. Class 567. 450. GREEKBERG, CH. St. Petersburg. Furniture workshop. Lady's writing-tahle, chair and small cupboard to match, of pear wood. Handwork since 1856, value 40,000 100.000 roubles per year; 35 workmen, $ workwomen and 2 minors. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 90. Classes 566 and 567. 451. LOVITON, X. St. Petersburg. Furniture workshop. 1. Carved oak buffet in Russian style. 2. Oak table in Russian style. 3. Oak carved pulpit. 4. Oak chest in ancient Russian style with figures. 5. Walnut wood carved cupboard 6. Hanging pear wood carved cupboard, style Louis XVI. 7. Barometer with pear wood carved case. Established in 1874. Handwork, value 200,000 roubles per year; 50 workmen. Materials Russian and from America. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 90. Classes ;66 and 567. 452. LEVITT, J. Furniture. 453. LAMANSKAIA, M-me A. St. Petersburg. 1. Portrait of the author. 2. Portrait of Mrs. Katalai. 3. Cupid. 4. Genre picture. 454. SALOMON, M-me C. Gov. of Tambov, town Shdtsk. Picture etched on wood, copy: ,, Blessing children". 455. ONUFRIEVA, M-mc N. St. Petersburg. Picture in oil colors: ,,Le labour a Bakhmuth". 456. MULTANOVSKY, J., engraver-artist. St. Petersburg. Engravings on wood. H=>:-=S- 457. EZERSKY, V. Gov. of Petrokov, town Novoradomsk. Two pictures. Production from 30 40 pictures per year, value i.ooo roubles; 2 4 workmen. : :;: : Department H. Group. 90. Class 566. 458. GONCHAROVA, M-me H. Gov. of Simbirsk, Kurmy^hsk district. Local home industry's. Furniture, decorated with wood mozaicwork. 1. Table in Persian style. 2. Round table. .. 3. Tea-table. 4. Four topbaords for tea tables. 5. Six round topboards for tables. Hand work at home of local peasants. Sale at fairs in the neighbourhood. Departments F. and H. Groups 74 and 89. Classes 466 and 559. 459. State Paper Manufactory. St. Petersburg. 1. Typographic, lithographic and other prints. 2. Copper and iron electro types. 3. Banknotes at present in circulation. 4. Postage stamps and post cards. 5. Share certificates and bonds. 6. Municipal and police stamps. 7. Photographs. 8. Samples of paper. 9. Samples of work executed by scholars of the establish- ment; drawings and engravings. The manufactory \vas founded in 1818; reorganized in 1 86 1. acting since on commercial basis, the Crown giv- ing orders and paying for their execution mostly at the rate of a copeck per sheet. Halt oi the clear profit is re- tained as income by the Treasury lor the cost of building and equipment, which arnmounted at the above mentioned date of reorganisation 1861, to upwards of 4,500,000 rou- bles. The other half is distributed between the em- ployers and workmen as gratuities. The manufactory is not subsidized by the Crow r n. Yearly 43,000 poods of paper are produced, over 260,000,000 sheets printed, about 850 poods of printing type and blanks cast and over 122 poods of Galvanic-stereotypes engraved. Annual value of production 2,700,000 roubles. There are 57 steam en- gines (1000 H. P.), 25 steam boilers. 6 gasmotors (66 H. P.), portable engine (50 H. P.), 8 'boilers and 8 bleaching boilers, 120 printing machines, 3 dynamos, 15 engraving machines and appliances. Own water courses, gasworks, electric lighting, mechanical workshop. Employed 2,353 workmen, 717 workwomen and 241 minors. Mate- rials principally Russian, but a small part foreign. Sale to Government offices and private institutions in Russia. 208 East Russia. The Eastern Russian section is decorated with paintings, representing either views of the Russian Asiatic possessions or ancient Asiatic buildings. 1. On the entrance arch: view ot the entrance to the Mai- draissai, ecclesiastical school, ,,Shir Dar" in Samarkand. 2. Beyond the arch is a space surrounded by walls, and representing a model of the interior of the Maidrais- sai ,,Tille-kara" in Samarkand. 3. On the second arch is a view of the Maidraissai ,,Kha- nin" in Samarkand. 4. Beyond the second arch to the left is a picture repre- senting the ancient water course of the river Zarav- shan, near Samarkand. 5. Opposite the second arch is a view of the: ,, Shri- ne of Tamerlan". 6. Beyond the second arch to the right is a gallery erect- ed on six columns, and built according to the model of the gallery in ,,Shir-Budan", near Bukhara. The outside walls ot the section are decorated with paint- ings. 7. ,,A street in Samarkand andKlapovnik", a native prison. 8. ,, Citadel in Samarkand". 9. ,, Mosque Khazyr". 10. ,, Entrance to the Mosque of Tamerlan". 460. COLLECTIONS FROM THE CENTRAI ASIATIC EXHIBITION of 1891 at Mos- cow. 461. COLLECTIONS OF A. NEDYKHLIEV, Secretary of the Committee of the Central Asia- tic Exhibition at Moscow. 209 462. COLLECTIONS, sent by the Governor Gene- ral of Turkestan. Department A. Group i. Classes I, 4, 6, 7, 9 and n. 1. Winter wheat from the Tashkent and Aulieatinsk di- stricts. The quantity ol seeds required tor sc-ving is 12 poods per dessiatine; sowing in September; ripens by the end of May or begining of June; undergoes irrigation twice in spring; a yield of 20 fold is considered good. 2. Spring wheat, local and Mecca. 3. Winter barley. Seeds sown 12 poods per dessiatine, twice irrigated during spring. Yield 8 to 20 fold. 4. Spring barley. 5. Rice seeds. 6. Grits of rice of different sorts. 7. Seeds of red millet ,,kunak", (Setaria italica). The seeds cf ,,kunak" soaked in boiling water, make the so called ,,kuzhu" of which one or two handfulls suf- iices tor the daily food of a wandering nomad. 8. Millet meal. 9. Lucern. Lucern forms the most important forage plant for set- lers farming. Not over 3 poods are sown per dessiatine, early in spring either on grounds especially prepared in the autumn, or over winter wheat immediately after ir- rigation straight into water, in which the good seeds sink and after the water has soaked in, take foot. The first summer yields 2 and the following 5 crops. Ever}- two years the grounds sown with lucern are well ferti- lized with not less than a pood ot rich manure to a square sazhen, and after every two mowings the grounds are twice irrigated. Under these conditions each mow- ing yields during 12 to 15 years not less than 250 sheaves of hay weighing 7 pounds each. i. c. about 1.320 poods per dessiatine every summer. 210 Department A. Group 2. Class 16. i. ,,Shiriash'\ flour from wild bulbs. Owing to the abundant quantity of dextrine it con- tains, this flour dissolved in water yields an exellent glue. Department A. Group 3. Classes 24 and 27. 1. ,,Kurmak" or ,,gumay" (Sorghum halcpensc). 2. ,,Tarandzhobin" or ,,yantakshakar". A s\veet substance gathered from the plant ,.Alhagi ca- melorum"; used in confectionary. 3. ,,Varvarda", ,,varvarda sanzhabil", ,,bodashi-kandalat" and ,,peta-kandalat". National sweetmeats prepared from tarandxhobin. 4. ,,Gulkant'\ Prepared of hashish with sugar syrup. A favourite dainty of the native women, although strictly forbidden to them. 5. ,,Ak-bodriak". Grains oi maize diluted in a hot kettle; used as a dessert. Department A. Group 8. Class 51. 1. Native tobacco ,,ak-tambaku", 2. Native snuff ,,kok-tambakif". ' Oi' UJTI7EK Department A. (iroup 9. Classes >.} and 59. 1. Fibre not fully ripened, denned and uncleaned librc of cotton ,,Chudo'\ hybrid of Upland, irom the provinces of Fergana and Samarkand and from Bukharia. 2. CK-aned and unrleaned fibre of Egyptian cotton, of the varieties vellow ,,Malafy" and black - seeded ..K'ara- chigit". 3. Cotton bolls and rleaned fibre of local varieties from Bukharia and Khiva. 4. Stalks and fibre of ,.Kendyr tl gathered before blossom- ing and after ripening. The bush ,,Kuulyr" (Apocymum) ^ro\vs \vikl on {he- banks <>l" the- rivers S\r ami Aimi-Daria, attaining a height of 6 feet. It's fibre is remarkable for its strength, is but little a lice ted by damp, bleaches excellently and acquires, when bleached, a jloss greatly resseniblin<_', silk. 5. Silk, coionns. Department A. Croup 16. Class 84. \ pick with handle. Department A. (/roup i(S. (Jass 9> Seeds of poppy, hemp, camelme and kund/hut. Department A (iroup 19. (llass 1. Marena roots 2. Saf-flower seeds. 'I'he dried flowers of this plant vicld a red dve ,,carta- ' insoluble in water, principally used for dviiii; silks. ~ 212 }. Seeds of wild plants: ,,Kermck" (Rheum Emodii) and ,,Taran" (Rheum spiciforma). The roots contain a tanninc substance, employed by dyers lor fixing colors. |. Seeds of ,,Ispariak", yellow larkspur (Delphinium hy- bridum var.: Sulphureum) grows wild and yields a good yellow dye. 5. ,,Tukhmiak". Mowers of the tree Sophora Japonica; yield a good green dye. 6. ,,Galy buzgunch". Gallnut, growing on leaves of the pistachio tree. Its decoction serves as a mordant for black and other dyes. 7. Bark of the halanstine ,,Anarpust". Serves as a mordant for black dve. Department B. Group 21. Classes 133, 137 and 139. 1. Pistachio almonds and walnuts. 2. ,,Dzhida", fruit of a wild olive tree. 3. ,,Chiliak", fruit of a shrub. Is used as sweet-meat and as a medicine. 4. ,,Kishmish", stoneless raisins of different kinds. 5. Dried prunes. 6. ,,Uriuk" and ,,ashtak", dried apricots. 7. ,,Donak" and ,,shur-donak", apricot kernels. ; A. : 213 Department B. Group 23. Classes 172 174. 1. Seeds of onions, carrots, turnips and beet-root. 2. Seeds of beans. 3. Seeds of mellons and pumpkins. 4. Seeds of red pepper. 5. Seeds of aromatic plants, ,,kashnuch" (Basil) and ,,/ira". Department H. Group 89. Class 556. Writing and wrapping paper. Department H. Groups 90 and 91. Classes 571 and 574. 1. Samples of wall and ceiling painting. 2. Gypsum tiles. Department H. Group 90. Class 565. 1. Painted round table. 2. Painted foot-stools. 3. Wooden pulpits. Department H. Group 96. Classes 598 and 60 1. 1. Carved tables, caskets and frames,. 2. Wooden banisters painted. 3. Worked copper articles: basin, jugs, pails and caskets. 4. ,,Kaliamdam", pen-case. 214 Department H. Group 100. Classes 625, 628 and 630. 1. Silk, silk and cotton fabrics: ,,benorias", ,,bekosob", ,,druia", ,,iagruia", ,,susa", ,,shaisli", ,,kanaus" and ,,fanza". 2. Velvet and satin. 3. Coverlets, handkerchiefs and scarfs. 4. Silk yarn, skeins and on reels. 5. Silk refuse. Department H. Group 102. Class 638. Cotton fabrics. 1. ,,Alacha", ,,zeinabe-alacha", ,,mata", ,,koliama" and ,,astarchir'. 2. Printed counterpane made of ,,astarchit" and ,,mata". 3. Belts ,,bilbak". 4. Turbans ,,sallia". 5. Shawls. Department H. Group 103. Classes 641, 646 649 and 650. Wool fabrics. 1. ,,Armiachina", stuff woven made of camels wool. 2. Material made of sheeps wool. 3. Curtains. 4. Carpets ,,palasse" and stair carpets. 5. Turban made ot goats down. Department H. Group 104. Classes 652655. Dressing-gowns, belts and slippers. 215 Department H. Group 106. Classes 665, 669 and 670. Embroideries. 1. Belts, coverlets, tablecloths, cushions, purses, dressing- gowns, horsecloths and slippers. 2. Coverings for sofas. Departments G and H. Groups 83, 108 and 119. Classes 523, 678, 680 and 751. 1. Saddle with accessories. 2. Leathern trunks ,,iakhtan". 3. Leathern cases for cups and bottles ,,tarkiash". 4. Purses. 5. Knives and steel. Department L. Group 150. Class 854. Book bindings. Department A. Groups i, 5, 9 and 18. Classes i, 3 6, 32, 53, 59 and 95. 463. DONSKOY, A. Province' of Syr-Daria, district Tashkent. XiroJsk estate on the spring Yalangash, Seed culture. 1. Spring wheat Mecca from irrigated ground. 2. Winter wheat Aulietinsk from unirrigated ground. 3. Oats Chinese from irrigated ground. 4. Spring barley Arabian, from irrigated ground. 216 5- Winter wheat Abyssinian, from irrigated ground. 6. Rice Chinese Imperial, from dry ground. 7. Winter and spring peas. 8. Ears of cereals. 9. Linseed from irrigated ground. 10. Flax fibre. 11. Cotton American. Seed culture introduced in 1886, production value 3,000 4,000 roubles per year. Sale local and at neigh- bouring markets. Department A. Groups i and 18. Classes i, 4, 9 and 95. 464. SELEZNIEV, E. Tashkent district. Agriculture. 1. ,,Kara-Bugdai", wheat: Mecca, Chernouska and Chinese. 2. Barley beardless Hymalaya, Mellon and Chevalier-Gallet. 3. Buck-wheat and Mohar, blackmillet. 4. Linseed Issyk-Kul and Sicilian. Farming since 1886; area 100 dessiatines sown with cotton, 55 dessiatines per year, barley, wheat, millet, flax, rice and ,,mata" (Soja hispida); production value 8,000 roubles per year; tillage by machines. Hands employed per year: men 600 - 700 days, women and minors 400 500 days. Sale of products in Turkestan, cotton in Moscow. 217 Departments A and H. Groups 9 and 21. Classes 61, 139 and 141. 465. VVEDENSKY, A. Tashkent district. Seed culture and fruit drying. i. Raw silk, silk combings and floss silk; cocoons and gran. 2. Dried fruits. 3. Soy from mellon and pomegranate. 4. Description and plans of a fruit drying apparatus. Production since 1888; 1,000 poods of dried fruit, va- lue 8,000 roubles and 2,000 xolotnicks of grain, value i.ooo roubles per annum; fruit drying apparatus ot exhibi- tor's system; employed 10 workmen. Sale local; in 1892 100 poods of dried fruits sent to Moscow and ,300 poods to Siberia. Departments A and H. Groups 9 and 102. Classes 53 and 638. 466. MINDER, G. Trans-Caspian Province, Merv Oasis. Cotton Plantation. 1. Cotton uncleancd and cleaned. 2. Yarn ,,Medio" Nr. 34. 3. Same yarn unwound in twists. Plantation established in 1889; 350 dessiatines sowed in 1892 yielded 4,000 poods oi cleaned cotton Various agricultural implements; 50 oxen and 40 horses; 25 saw-ing gins, horse gears; steam engine (12 H. P.). 63 Perma- nent workmen (9 Russians and 54 natives) and 200 300 hired per day during irrigation and harvest time. Ori- ginal seeds American; Egyptian seeds hare been tried. Sale in Moscow. 218 Department H. Group 90. Class 565. 467. SOROKIN, A. Moscow. Furniture workshop. Sofa and two arm chairs in Oriental style. Started in 1871, production value 200,000 230,000 roubles per year; 60 70 workmen. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Groups 90 and 106. Classes 565 and 665. 468. BARILUSSOV, I. St. Petersburg. 1. Sofa and two chairs. 2. Carpet. 3'. Different embroideries. Embroideries worked by hand, production value 450,000 roubles per year; no workmen and 50 workwomen. Materials supplied from the Caucasus and the Trans- Caspian province. Sale in Russia and abroad. Departments F, H and L. Groups 72, 98, 100, 103, 104, 106, 113 and 158. Classes 434, 612. 627 630, 641. 652, 665, 669, 717 and 927 935. 469. BERAGASHVILLI, R. Town Kutais. 1. Silk fabrics. 2. Silk mantles, shawls, necker-chiefs, handkerchiefs, scarfs, ,,bashlyk's" (Caucasian hoods), gloves, belts etc. *. Silk looms. 219 4. ,,Burka's", Caucasian felt cloaks. 5. Gold embroideries: table cloths, tobacco-pouches, watch- cases, purses and slippers. 6. Paintings in embroidered gold frames. 7. Wool fabrics. 8. ,,Bashlyk's" made of local cloth. 9. Figures in national costumes: Kartalin man and Kartalin woman, Guri man and Guri woman, Imeretin man and Imeretin woman and Mingrcl woman. 10. Ancient weapons. 11. Ladies belts made of beads. 12. Bracelets and studs. 13. BeKs, daggers, knives, pipes, mouth pieces, brushes etc. 14. Mounted silver horns wine goblets for banquets. 15. Candlesticks. 1 6. Ash-trays of stag-horn and boars jaws with modern silver mounting. 17. Wooden jugs and other utensils mounted with ancient silver filigree. 1 8. Wooden cups with modern silver mountings. 19. Various narrow necked jugs. 20. Musical instruments. 21. Georgian cradle. 470. COLLECTIONS FROM EASTERN SI- BERIA, sent by the Governor General of the Pri-Amur province. Manufactures. Department H. Group 116. Class 733. 471. SAMGUIN, A. Moscow. Bell foundry. Bells. Foundry owned in the familly of the exhibitor since 1783, exact date ot establishment unknown. Yearly 8,00013,000 poods of bells cast, value 136,000 220,000 roubles; 3 melting furnaces, 4 turning lathes. 4 horse gears; 34 45 workmen, besides others hired per day. Tin supplied from abroad, copper from Russian works, principally Demidov's; partly old copper used. Sale mostly in Russia. Department H. Group 116. Glass 733. 472. OLOVIANISHNIKOV, I. Yaroslav. Bell foundry. Brass bell. Established in 1766. Yearly production 15,000 poods ot church bells, value 250,000 roubles; 2 melting fur- naces, horse gear; 50 workmen. Materials: 13,000 poods ol Russian copper, 2.500 poods English tin. Sale in Russia. 221 Department H. Group n6 r Class 732. 473. ORLOV, V. Moscow. Water heating apparatus. Established in 1885. In 1892 manufactured 40 appa- ratus, value 18,000 roubles; 10 workmen. Copper and tin purchased in Moscow. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 115. Class 726. 474. BATASHOV'S, V. Successors. Tula. Samovar (tea urns) works. Samovars, cups and trays. Established in 1840. Production 70,000 80,000 samo- vars per annum, value 800,000 roubles; steam engine (12 H. P.), portable engine (12 H. P.), 70 turning lathes and mechanical stands, 200 vices, various hand tools; 400 workmen, and about 1800 working outside. Materials Russian and foreign. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Croups 116 and 119. Classes 733 and 747. 475. BATASHOV, N. Tula. Samovar and lock smith's hardware factory. j Samovars, trays, locks, hardware fittings for doors, win- dows, ovens etc. Established in 1825. Production by hand work, value 160,000 roubles per annum; horse gear, 11 smith's for- ges, 10 bellows, 163 vices, 84 anvils, 17 turning lathes, 1 8 presses, 2 stamping presses. 3 drilling machines, 100 iron moulds for samovars; 250 workmen. Materials Rus- sian. Sale in Russia and export. Department H. Croups 115 and 116. Classes 726 and 733. 476. ALHNCHIKOV, I. and ZIMIN, N. Gov. of Vladimir, Pokrov district. Copper and brass ware factory. 1 . Samovars. 2. Various small articles. 3. Samples of brass and wire. Established in 1865. Production 40,000 poods of va- rious copper articles per year, value 500,000 roubles. Steam engine (25 H. P.), water motor (120 H. P.); 350 400 workmen. Materials 28.000 poods of copper Irom Siberia and Caucasus; 14,000 poods of zinc from Sosnovitsy. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia and abroad. Department H. Groups 115 and 116. Classes 726 and 733. 477. KOLCHUGIN, A. Gov. of Vladimir., Pokrov district. Copper and brass ware factory. Samovars, trays, basins, kettles and saucepans. Established in 1827. Yearly production value 500,000 roubles; 4 turbines (So H. P.), 4 sets of rollers, 2 large presses, 12 small handpresses, 40 stamping presses and turning lathes, hydraulic press and 9 forges; 200 work- men. Materials Russian and foreign. Sale to the Mi- nistry of \\'ar and private purchasers in Russia and Central Asia. Department H. Group 119. Class 751. 478. CONDRATOVS, D. Successors. Gov. of Vladimir, Murom district. Steel ware factory. Cutlery: table knives and forks, pen knives, clasp, pocket and garden knives; knives for shoemakers, artizans etc. Established in 1830. Yearlv production, value 550,000 400,000 roubles; 2 steam engines (90 H. P.)," 6 steam hammers, 3 sheave hammers, 15 hand presses, 3 me- chanical stands, 30 forges, 150 polishing wheels, 2 steam boilers and other machines and appliances; 800 work- men. Steel supplied from England. Sale in Russia. 224 Department H. Group 113. Class 715. 479. THE OLONETS MINING REGION. Gov's. of Olonets and Wiborg. Alexander, Konchezer, Valazmin and Suoiarv mining works. Artillery projectiles. See Dep. E. jfe 335. Department H. Group nj. Class 717. 480. THE ZLATOUST SMALL ARMS FAC- TORY. (Mining Department of the Ministry of Public Domains). Gov. of Ufa, town Zlatoust. Swards, daggers, knives etc. See Dep. E. A p 332. Department H. Groups 113, 115 and 120. Classes 715, 716, 726 and 754= 481. THE ST. PETERSBURG METALLIC WORKS. Imperially sanctioned Company. St. Petersburg. 1) Projectiles. 2) Metallic parts of appliances for steam heating. 3) Drawings of air closets. See Dep, F. JV 373. 22S Department H. Group 113. Class 718. 482. LEJEUNE, W. and G., under firm ,,W. W. Lejeune". St. Petersburg. Gun makers. Double-barrelled sporting hammerless gun Ivashintsev's system. Established in 1794. Makes 10 guns yearly, various sporting appliances and undertakes repairs; total value 20,000 roubles. Hand work; 4 lathes and other machines; 15 workmen employed. Gun barrels imported from Eng- land, Germany and France. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 118. Class 746. 483. VON-DERVIS. 5/. Petersburg. Horse shoe and screw spikes factory. 1. Iron shoes. 2. Steel screw spikes tor horse shoes. 3. Spanners for the same. Factory founded in 1890. Production 1,000,000 horse shoes, 3,000,000 spikes and 25,000 poods of horse shoe nails per year; value 500,000 roubles. There are 4 steam engines (120 H. P.), 50 stands, 8 hammers, 4 furnaces, 8 forges; 100 150 workmen are employed. Iron and steel supplied from Russian and Swedish works. Sale in Russia. 226 Department H. Group 118. Class 746. 484. KONDAKOV, V. 5/. Petersburg. 1. Models ot horse shoes. 2. Pamphlets and drawings of the invention. Exhibited as an invention. (Patented in the United States of North America, September 2Oth 1892, sub JV? 482 and 845). Department H. Group 117. Classes 735 and 737. 485. SOLNYSHKOV, ST. Gov. and district of Ni~hni Novgorod. Wire-gauze and chain works. Wirc-gau/c, netting, iron and copper wire and chains. Established in 1877. Value of annual production 40,000 roubles. There are 80 hand machines, 40 reels, 10 fur- naces, mechanical testing press; 120 workmen, 40 work- women and 20 minors employed. The thick iron and copper wire is obtained in Russia, sale likewise in Russia. - 227 - Department H. Group 1 1 6. Class 733. 486. KHVASTUNOV, S. St. Petersburg. 1. Copper kettles with iron frying pans. 2. Descriptive pamphlets in Russian and French. Department H. Group 99. Class 624. 487. MAKAROVSKY, N. Ufa. Watchmen's time recorders, invented by exhibitor. Apparatus manufactured at Chetunov's works in Mos- cow; 348 recorders sold in 2 years to different institu- tions and persons viz: to prisons, manufactures, banks, hospitals etc. Price 18 25 roubles per recorder. Department H. Group 115. Class 726. i ,488. PLENSKE, J. St. Petersburg. Apparatus for heating and boiling liquids and food over petroleum, benzine and gas lamps, as also over flame of gas burner. Apparatus is not yet ior sale and is exhibited as an invention. Department H. Group 87. Class 549. 489. BROCARD, H. and < O. Moscow. Perfumery works. Samples of perfumery. Works established in 1864. Value of yearly pro- duction 1.500,000 roubles. Steam motor (50 H. P.), 15 soap boilers. 6 presses, 12 different machines etc.; 50 workmen and 100 workwomen 'employed. Russian fat and oil treated; essences and pomatum from France and Germany. Sale in Russia, France, Germany, Turkey and Austria. Department H. Group 121. 490. CASSATK1N, A. Moscow. Metalic capsules for bottles and various vessels and uten- sils; pewter and lead paper, coloured tin-foil etc. Established in 1879. About 6.000,000 capsules and 2,000 poods of metallic paper manufactured per annum, value 15.000 roubles. Works include i steam engine (6 H. P.), 2 rolling machines, 6 stands and 2 dying rooms; 20 work- men. Lead and tin imported from abroad. Sale in Russia and partly in Roumania and Turkey. 229 Department H. Group 121. 491. MUMRIKOV, V. Gov. of Vladimir, Via^niko-v district, Mstcrtt. Tinsel of various, colors in sheets and unworked sheets. Production since 1890; handwork, value i.ooo roubles per year; 2 workmen and 2 minors employed. The ma- terial, red copper in bars from Moscow. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group. 87. Glass 543. 492. KRESTOVNIKOVS, Brothers. Ka^an. Stearine, soap and chemical works. Sulphuric and oleic acid. See Dep. A. .\ 162. Department H. Group 87. Classes 544 and 545. 493. LURIE, S. Gov. of Minsk, town Pinsk. Chemical works. 1. Crystallized soda. 2. Glauber's salt. 3. Hemp and linseed drying oils. 4. Linseed oil. 5. Various varnishes. 6. Various siccatives. 7 . Superphosphate . Hstablished in 1885. Annual production value 120,000 roubles. Machine work. Steam engine, 6 workmen. Ma- terial Irom Russia, Germany and France. Sale in Russia. See Dep. A. .Ni- 158. 230 Department H. Group 88. Class 552. 494. SINITSYN, P. Gov. of Orel, town Bolkbov. Varnish works. Spirit varnishes and polishes of various kinds. Works established in 1889. Manual labour. Production per annem 1,500 pood, value 25,000 roubles. The works include 5 vats, 10 filters and 3 boilers; 4 workmen. The materials supplied: spirit from Bolkhov, pitch from Vo- logda and Briansk and from abroad. Sale in Russia. -*"-. =* Department H, Group 87. Class 549. 495. OSTROUMOV, A. Moscow. Soap works. Soap of various kinds. Established in 1885. Annuitl production 40,000 dozen pieces, value 100,000 roubles. Machine work; gas motor (6 H. P), 2 workmen and 2 workwomen. Materials supplied from Moscow. Sale in Russia, export to France, England, Turkey, Switzerland and Roumania. 231 Department H. Group 87. Glass 549. 496. ELIASHEV, R. St. Petersburg. Chemical laboratory. 1. Scent, eau-de-Cologne, toilet water. 2. Soap, tooth elixir, tooth powder. Laboratory established in 1875. Production by hand- work, value 100,000 roubles per year; 6 workmen and 12 workwomen. Materials from Russia and imported from France, Italy and partly from Germany. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 87. Classes 547 and 549. 497. IVANOV, A. Moscow. Chemical laboratory. 1. Eau-de-Cologne, extract of pines, rafinistrole. 2. Soaps. 3. Salves. Established in 1868, hand work, production value 100,000 roubles per annum; 20 workmen. Materials from Russia and abroad. Sale in Russia. 232 Department H. Group 87. Class 549. 498. RALLE, A. and O. Successors. Moscow. Perfumery and soap works. Scent, toilet water, soap, pomatum, eau-de-Cologne and tooth paste. Established in 1843. Value of annual production 1,500,000 roubles. There are 2 steam engines (looH. P.), 4 steam boilers (200 H. P.), 35 different steam and hand machines, 9 soap boilers, I drying machine; workshop for making cases and card-board boxes (7 steam and 12 hand machines); the Avorks are lighted by electricity (2 dy- namos), 300 workmen and 125 workwomen. Mate- rials from Russia, France, India, America, Africa, value 150,000 roubles per year. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia, France, America and Asia. Department H. Group 87. Glass 550. 499. HIRSHMAN, L. Gov. of Kiuiand, town Goldingen. The Vulcan match works. Safety matches (Swedish). Established in 1878. Production about 60,000,000 boxes of matches annually, value 360,000 roubles. There are 105 machines and a steam motor (49 H. P.); 219 workmen, 148 workwomen and 83 minors employed in the works and about 250 outside. Material partly Russian and partly foreign. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 87. Class 550. 500. LOGUINOV, W. Gov. of Perm, to-icn Ekaterinburg. Safety Swedish matches and phosphorus matches. Established in 1867. Value ot annual production 135,000 roubles, exclusive of excise. Partly machine and partly handwork. Steam boiler (12 H. P.), steam engine (8 H. P.), 25 various other machines, 4,000 match fra- mes; 150 workmen and 50 workwomen, besides upwards of 150 families employed outside the works. Materials local and Irom St. Petersburg; sale in Siberia, Bokhara and China. Department H. Group 87. Class 550. 501. LAPSHIN, W. Gov. and district of Novgorod. -' o The Iraida match factory. Safety Swedish matches. Works exist since 1876; 200,000,000 boxes produced annually, value 1,200,000 roubles. The works contain 3 steem engines (71 H. P.), wood sawing machine, 30 rollers, 5 chopping, 17 planing, 3 drilling and i mortis- ing machine; 20 box making. 4 paper cutting machi- nes; a typography (2 printing machines); 700 workmen, 900 workwomen and 50 minors. The materials besides. Russian are imported, gum from Arabia, paraffin and chlorate ot" potassium From England. Sale in Russia. 234 Department H. Group 88. Class 553. 502. OLOVIANISHNIKOV, J. Gov. and district of Jaroslavl. Two white lead works. White lead. Founded in 1827 and 1892. Annual production 55,000 poods, value 220,000 roubles. Six furnaces for roasting the lead and hand machines for casting the white lead; 270 workmen. Lead procured from abroad. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 88. Class 553. 503. VAKHRAMEIEV'S, N. Successors. Jaroslavl. White lead factory. Chemically pure white lead in powder. Factory exists since 1850, produces 25,000 poods, va- lue 75,000 roubles per annum; 22 hermetic chambers, 50 tables, mill with ventillator, steam motor. Foreign lead. Sugar of lead of Russian production. Sale in Russia. 235 Department H. Group 87. Classes 544 and 545. 504. THE TENTELEVSKY CHEMICAL WORKS. Near St. Petersburg, village Tentdevo. Chemical works. 1. Chemical products. 2. Crystals of blue copperas, salammoniac in lumps, sul- phate of aluminium. 3. Platinum articles. Works {bunded in 1875. Production over 1,006,000 poods of various chemical products per annum, value 1,500,000 roubles. Various steam motors, pumps, ovens, mills, presses, n large steam boilers. Fuel coal, about 1,000,000 poods per year. About 500 workmen em- ployed. Russian and foreign materials. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 87. Class 548. 505. TSYPKIN, S. Gov of Vilno, Svientsiany district. Pharmaceutical laboratory. Glycerine-gelatine capsules. fc_ Laboratory started in 1887; 25,000 capsules manufac- tured annually by handwork, value 1,000 roubles; I work- men and 2 workwomen. Russian material and' sale in Russia. - 236 - Department H. Group 87. Class 548. 506. REINHERTZ, A. St. Petersburg. Chemical laboratory. 1. Mustard plasters. 2. Gelatine capsules ot various kinds. The laboratory exists since 1885. Hand work (hand machines and forms of different kinds). Value of annual production about 20,000 roubles; 6 workmen, 4 work- women and i minor employed. Materials Russian and partly German. Sale in Russia, export to Germany and Italy. Department H. Groups 87 and 88. Classes 546, 549 and $62. 507. BREMME, Brothers. 5^. Petersburg. Chemical works. 1. Ethers. 2. Fruit essences. 3. Dyes for coloring and printing woolen, silk and cot- ton goods. 4. Chemical products for preparing dyes. Works founded in 1886. Steam boiler (25 H. P.). steam engine (15 H. P.), pumps, filterpresses. centrifugal appa- ' ratus, distillating stills etc.; 40 workmen. Materials from Russia and imported. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 87. Class 549. 508. RKPMAN. R. Gov. of Saratov, T~arit^\n. district. Etherial oils and extracts works. 1. Etherial oil from mustard seeds. 2. Dry extract of liquorice. Works founded in 1872. Hand work. Value of annual production 1,000 roubles; 4 workmen. Local material. Sale in St. Petersburg and Moscow. Department H. Group 87. Classes 544 and 545. 509. YASSINSKY, J. Moscow. Soda and chemical works. Soda ot various kinds. Acetic and nitric acids. Salts, verdigris, chloride of barium, charcoal powder, artificial cinnabar, litharge. \Vorks exist since 1888 Annual production 56,000 poods of soda, value 68.000 roubles and other products, value 24,000 roubles. Steam boiler (8 H. P.) heated by naphtha luel, Nobel's system, steam engine (8 H. P.), cen- trifugal machine, a grinding machine, Blakes crushing machine and an American one, ventillator, filter press and 20 rdinarv presses. 2 evaporating furnaces with naph- tha fuel, 10 various furnaces; 18 workmen. Materials Russian with the exception of saltpetre, tin, lead and with- erite imported from England, blue copperas imported from Sweden, aniline dves from Germ an v. Sale in Russia. 238 - Department H. Group 87. Classes 545 and 548. 510. PELL, A., Doctor of chemistry. St. Petersburg. Chemical laboratory. 1 . Preparations of belladonna, hyosciamous, liquorice, fern and spur of rye. 2. Preparations ot mercury. 3. Preparations ot iron. 4. Preparations ot spermine. 5. Russian etherial oils. Value of annual production 90,000 roubles. Steam engine (12 H. P.); 30 workmen and $ workwomen. Rus- sian materials. Sale in Russia and export. Department H. Group 87. Classes 547 and 548. 511. KOLLHR, R. Moscow. Pharmaceutical and chemical works. Pharmaceutical and chemical preparations. Value oi annual production 250,000 roubles; 2 steam boilers (66 H. P.); 30 workmen and 40 workwomen. Sale in Russia. 2 39 - '.Department H. Group 87. Class 544. 512. LIUBIMOV, SOLVAY and Co. Imperially sanctioned Joint-stock Company for manufactu- ring soda in Russia. Gov. of Perm, Solikamsk district and Gov. of Ehaterinoslav, Bakhmut district. The Beresnikov and Donets soda works. Calcined soda. The works were founded in the gov. oi Perm in 1883 and in the gov. ot Ekaterinoslav in 1892. They yield an- nually about 2,400,000 poods of calcined soda. 1,000,000 poods of which are converted into caustic soda, value ot total production about 5,000,000 roubles. Steam engines (i,oooH. P.); 720 workmen, 40 workwomen and 40 mi- nors, without counting the hands employed in providing the raw materials tor the works. The materials are Rus- sian, with the exception ol sulphate ol ammonia, imported to the Donets works irom abroad. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 87. Classes 544 and 545. 513. USHKOV, P. and C., chemical, works Asso- ciation. Gov. of Viatlza, near town Jelabuga. Alum, alumina, pottasium and sadium bichromate, chloride of lime, copper, blue copperas, green copperas,-sulphate, potash, colcothar, caustic soda, chrome allum. The works were founded in 1850. Annual production amounts to 300,000 poods, value 2,500,000 roubles. Steam and water power employed; 1,500 workmen; Materials principally from the Ural, sale in Russia. 240 Department H. Group 87. Classes 543 548. 514. SMIRNOV, S. Gov. of Vladimir, Ivanovo- Vo^nessensk. Chemical laboratory. j Samples ot chemical products. The laboratory was founded in 1881. Annual produc- tion 2,000 3,000 poods of chemical preparations, value 10,000 12,000 roubles. Besides exhibitor, 4 workmen employed. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 87. Class 548. 515. MIRZAIANTS and O. Gov. of Erivan, Alexandropol district. Insect powder called ,,Aragats" and the flowers of the plant ,,Aragats", dried and in two stages of the treat- ment. Production started in 1849, value 50,000 roubles per annum. "Water-mill with six sets of mill-stones; 30 work- men; in summer during harvesting of flowers 200 work- women and minors employed. Sale in Russia. 241 Department H. Groups 91 and 120. Classes 574. 578 and 755. 516. GRANTSOV, C. Gov. and district of Warsaw. Brick- and pottery works. 1. Bricks of various kinds. 2. Pavement tiles. 3. Drain and canalisation pipes, made of a new material. Works founded in 1866. Common, machine, shaped and fire bricks, drain and canalisation pipes, and pave- ment tiles manufactured, value 300,000 roubles per an- num. The works include 20 stirring machines, 15 ma- chines of various systems. 6 steam engines (150 H. P.) 6 presses for pressing fire-bricks, pavement tiles etc.; 6 kilns, of which 2 are gas kilns; 300 workmen, 85 work- women. 75 minors employed. Clay procured on the spot, sale in Russia. Department H. Group 91. Class 574. 517. RASTERIAIEV, G. Gov. of St. Petersburg, Shlusselburg district. Brick works. -: Bricks for building purposes. Works founded in 1852. 14 chamber kilns with chim- neys. Yearly production 3,000,000 bricks, value 30,000 rou- bles. Hand work; 100 workmen, 80 workwomen. Sale in St. Petersburg and environs. 242 Departement H. Group 89. Class 556. 518. VARGUNIN, Brothers. St. Petersburg gov. and district. The Nevsky paper mill. Mill founded in 1840. Machine work. Steam engine (800 H. P.), paper making machines. Production value 1,500,000 roubles per year. 280 workmen, 255 workwo- men and 20 minors. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 89. Class 561. 519. FREIBERG, A., firm ,,August Lira". Riga. Account books factory. Account books and school copy books Firm exists since 1833. Value of yearly production 126,000 roubles. Machine and hand work; 35 workmen, 30 workwomen. Russian material, only a small amount foreign. Sale in Russia. 243 Department H. Group 106. Class 668. 520. NATANSON, Brothers. Dvinsk. Linen, cotton and nickel button manufactory. Specimens of various buttons for under-clothing. Established in 1868. Manufactures 360,000 grosses of various buttons per annum, value 90,000 roubles. Hand- machines; 20 25 workmen, 250 workwomen, 50 60 minors. Linen and batist from England, latten and sheet zinc from Germany, the other materials Russian. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 106, Class 665. 521. PLIATER-ZIBERG, Count J. Dvinsk district. Needle factory. Needles of various kinds. Factory founded in 1879. 300.000,000 needles manu- factured yearly, value 300,000 roubles. 2 steam engines (60 H. P.). Sewing machine needles manufactured since 1887; 450 workmen. Materials local, value 45,000 rou- bles, and imported from England, Value 15,000 roubles per annum. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia. 244 Department H. Group 108. Class 680. 522. THE VOLOGDA PERMANENT HOME INDUSTRY EXHIBITION. Vologda. 1. Horn ware. 2. Birch-bark ware. Work of local peasants home industry. Department H. Group 102. Class 638 523. BURYLIN, D. Gov. of Vladimir, Ivanovo-Vo^nessensk. Cotton mill. Fustian, cheviot and moleskin of various kinds. Hand manufacture since 1812, machine work since 1876. Production 200,000 pieces per annum, value 600,000 rou- bles; 3 steam engines (180 H. P.), 5 steam boilers (250 H. P.), 1620 spindles, 2000 looms, 4 printing machines, 20 dyeing vats; 500 workmen, 140 workwomen. Russian materials, excepting a portion of the dyeing substances im- ported. Sale in Moscow, St. Petersburg, at the Nizhny Novgorod fair, in Siberia and Asia. 245 Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 524. MARAKUSHEV, C, firm ,.Kokushkin and Marakushev". Gov. of Vladimir, Jvanovo-Vosnessensk. Weaving, bleaching and cotton-printing mill. Samples of prints, dimity and calico of different kinds. Mill founded in 1840. Annual production exceeds 28,000,000 arshins of print and calico, value 2,00,000 roubles. The mill includes 6 steam engines (120 H. P.), 10 steam-boilers (350 H. P.), 834 weaving looms; 550 workmen, 320 workwomen. Yarn from Moscow and St. Petersburg; dyeing materials Russian and foreign. Sale in Moscow and at the fair of Nizhny-Novgorod. Departement H. Group. 102. Class 638. 525. ZUBKOV'S, N. Successors. Gov. of Vladimir, Ivanovo- Vosnessensk. Cotton weaving, bleaching and cotton printing mills. Hand work since 1825. The mills founded: the cotton printing mill in 1838; the cotton weaving mill in 1872. Yearly production 300,000 pieces of print and various cot- ton fabrics, value 1,500,000 roubles. The mills include 4 steam engines (no H. P.), 10 steam boilers, i por- table engine (10 H. P.), 832 .calico-weaving looms, 15 different machines; in the bleaching department: 6 boiling vats, 6 washing vats; lime, acid and wringing machines with drying cylinders; in the engraving department: 25 pantographs, rolling and other machines, 5 cotton prin- ting machines with drying apparatus and other machines and appliances; 591 workmen, 327 workwomen, 2 minors. Material Russian, partly foreign. Sale in Russia. 246 Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 526. GANDURIN, A. and Brothers. Gov. of Vladimir, Ivanovo- Vo^tiessensk. Cotton printing and calico weaving mills. Samples ot prints of various kinds. Mill founded in 1828. The calico weaving department since i88. The mills produce yearly 150,000 pieces of print, value 800,000 roubles. There are 6 steam boilers (240 H. P.), 3 steam engines (70 H. P.), 2 printing machines, 2 engraving machines, 4 pantographs and 2 ca- lenders, 7 various other machines and 340 weaving looms; 400 workmen and 200 workwomen. The cotton yarn Russian, the dyes partly foreign. Principal market Mos- cow and the fair of Nizhni-Novgorod, whence the goods pass to the Caucasian, Persian and Central-Asia markets. Department H. Group 102. Class 6-28. 527. .G ARE LIN, N. and Sons. Gov. of Vladimir, Ivanovo-Vo^nessensk. Cotton spinning, calico-weaving and printing mill. Prints and different fabrics. Industry founded in 1751; cotton printing mill in 1843; cotton spinning in 1848, weaving in 1867. Annual pro- duction 46.000 poods of cotton yarn, 237,000 pieces of calico. 300,000 pieces of print, value 2.000,000 roubles. There are 10 steam boilers, 8 steam engines (177 H. P.), 28,232 spindles, 485 weaving looms, $ cotton printing machines, 3 calenders etc.; 979 workmen, 687 workwo- men and 12 minors. Raw cotton imported from Ame- rica, Egypt, the East-Indies, Tashkent, Khiva and Bo- khara. Other materials Russian. Wood and peat full. Lighting by gas derived from naphtha. Sale in Russia. 247 Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 528. DERBENIEVS, N. Sons. Gov. of Vladimir, Ivanovo-Vo^nessensk. Calico weaving and printing mill. Samples of cotton fabrics. Production 65,000 poods of calico, value 1,300,000 roubles and 360,000 pieces of calico prints of own ma- facture, value 600,000 roubles per year. 3 steam en- gines (69 H. P.), 9 boilers (300 H. P.), 4 printing ma- chines, 2 drying-stoves, 3 calenders, 2 hydroextractors, 13 dying tanks, 806 mechanical weaving looms and other machines and appliances; 900 workmen and 670 workwomen. Materials Russian, dyeing materials partly (about 4,500 poods) from abroad. Sale in Russia and in Hamburg- Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 529. GARELIN, J. and Sons, Association. Gov. of Vladimir, Ivanovo- Vo^nessensk. Calico weaving, bleaching and cotton printing mills. Samples of cotton fabrics. : The cotton printing mill exists since 1855, the calico weaving 1873, the bleaching since 1879, Association foun- ded in 1883. Value of annual production 2,150,000 rou- bles. 9 steam engines (191 H. P.) with 17 steam boilers (820 H. P.), 1,196 weaving looms, 5 printing machines with 1,775 engraved copper rollers, 6 boiling tanks and various other machines; 917 workmen, 1,054 workwo- men and 3 minors. Materials Russian, chemicals and dyes principally foreign. Sale in Russia. 248 Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 530. THE ASSOCIATION OF THE KUVAIEV MANUFACTORY. Gov. of Vladimir, Ivanovo- Vo^nessensk. Cotton printing, dyeing and bleaching mill. Prints of various kinds. The mill founded in 1817. Production in 1892 amoun- ted to 975.000 pieces, value 5,400,000 roubles. There are 1 6 steam boilers (1,200 H. P.), 18 steam engines (800 H. P.), 8 printing machines, 2 plushing machines, 10 bleaching tubs and 2 bleaching apparatus, 30 dyeing laths and 20 washing machines, 4 apparatus for indigo, 4 tea- seling, 12 different finishing, 20 engraving machines, 13 drying apparatus etc.: 1,5001,600 workmen. All mate- rials Russian, excepting a part of the dyeing materials, which are foreign. Sale local, in Moscow and at the Nizhnv Novgorod fair. Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 531. IASIUNINSKY, V., E. and A., Association. Gov. of Vladimir, Shuia district. Cotton printing, weaving and spinning mills. Yarn, calico, fustian, calico prints and fancy fabrics. The cotton printing mill founded in 1822, the cotton weaving mill in 1881, the cotton spinning mill in 1890. Value of yearly production 3.300,000 roubles. The mills include 10 steam engines (962 H. P.), 24,276 spindles, 676 looms and 5 cotton printing machines; 1,030 work- men, 643 workwomen and 77 minors. Raw cotton from Egypt, America (30,000 poods), Asi-atic and Russian pro- vinces. Chemicals and dyes Russian and foreign. Sale in Russia. 249 Department H. Group 102. Class 6.58. 532. MALIUTIN'S, A. Sons. Gov. of Moscow, Bronits\ district. Cotton yarn and weaving mills. 1. Samples of cotton and yarn of various kinds. 2. Samples of cotton fabrics. Yarn mill founded in 1843, weaving mill in 1869. Production 290,000 poods of yarn and 38,000,000 ar- shins of woven goods per annum, value 4,500,000 5,000,000 roubles. 4 steam motors (2,350 H. P.), 102,960 spindles, 1,300 looms; 2,500 workmen, 1,660 workwo- men and 40 minors. Cotton supplied from America and Asia. Sale in Russia and Central Asia. Department H. Group io2. Class 638. 533. THE ZUIEVO MANUFACTORY Associa- tion oi J. Zimin. Gov. of Moscoiu, Bogorodsk district., village Zuievo. Crimson dyeing and calico printing mill. 1. Crimson plush. 2. Crimson print. Established in 1840. Production 450,000 pieces of plush and prints per annum, value 2,970,000 roubles. The mill includes 6 steam engines (60 H. P.), 4 oil tanks, 10 boil- ing tanks, 7 washing stands, 6 dyeing tanks, 4 wringing extractors, 2 drying machines with 47 cylinders, 3 prin- ting machines; 250 300 workmen and 350 400 work- women. Calico from Russian mills, sale in Russia. Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 534. VORONIN, J. St. Petersburg. The Resvy-Ostrov Manufactory. Flannelet (cotton flannel) of various patterns. Production since 1880, 25,000,000 arshins per an- num, value 1,500,000 1,800,000 roubles. Steam engine (200 H. P.), 683 looms; 510 workmen and 615 work- women. Cotton yarn (80 90,000 poods) from Peters- burg cotton mills. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 535. KHLUDOV, A. Gov. of Smolensk, Dukhovschina district. The Yartsevo Manufactory Association. Cotton fabrics, yarn and coarse callico. Established in 1875. Production per annum 150,000 poods of yarn, value 2,000,000 roubles; 300,000 pieces of goods, value 1,250,000 roubles and 6,000 poods of wadding, value 30,000 roubles. Steam motors of 1,700 in- dicated power, 72,400 spindles, 1,245 looms; 1,500 work- men, 1,500 workwomen and 240 minors. Cotton from America 100,000 poods, from Egypt 40,000 poods and Central Asia 30,000 poods per annum. Sale in Russia and Central Asia. 251 Department H. Group 102. Class 638 536. THE IMPERIALLY SANCTIONED SHUIA MANUFACTORY ASSOCIATION. Gov. of Vladimir, Shuya. Mechanical weaving and calico printing mills. Samples of colton fabrics. The printing mill exists since 1860; owned by Asso- ciation in 1878, the mechanical weaving mill established in 1883. Production per annum 400,000 pieces of ca- lico and various cotton fabrics, value 1,480,000 rou- bles and 600,000 pieces of prints, value 3,600,000 rou- bles. The mills include 14 steam engines (760 H. P.), 1,000 looms, ii printing machines, 5 bleeching boilers; 12 steam boilers, with a heating surface of 13,000 square feet; 1,025 workmen and 363 workwomen. Materials Russian, excepting dyes and chemicals imported from abroad. Sale in Moscow. Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 537. THE PROHOROVS TREKHGORNAYA MANUFACTORY Imperially sanctioned Asso- ciation. Moscow. Samples of cotton fabrics. Established in 1798. Produce 800,000 pieces per annum, value 6,500,000 roubles. The mill includes 40 steam en- gines of 6250 H. P., 25 steam boilers, 800 looms, 17 printing presses, steam pumps etc.; 2,300 workmen, 600 workwomen and 20 minors. Russian materials. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia. 252 Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 538. PAL, Ch. St. Petersburg. The Alexandro-Nevskaia Manufactory. Cotton goods. Firm established in 1837. Production 600,000 pieces per annum, value 3,000,000 roubles; 2 steam engines (800 H. P.), 1,200 workmen. Russian materials; part of the chemical products from abroad. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 102. Class 639. 539. DEMIDOV, W. Imperially sanctioned Asso- ciation. Gor. of Vladimir, Viasniky. Linen weaving and yarn spinning mills. 1. Linen thread and yarn. 2. Linen fabrics. The weaving mill founded in 1831, the spinning mill in 1865, the Association in 1884. Yearly production, value 2,150,000 roubles. The mills include 5 steam engi- nes (1,160 H. P.) 1 8 steam boilers, 136 twisting and spinning stands, 327 looms etc.; 1,600 workmen and 1,000 workwomen. Russian materials. Sale in Russia. * t > 253 Department H. Group 102. Class 639. 540. THE ROSTOV LINEN MANUFACTORY ASSOCIATION. Gov. of Jaroslavl, Rostov. Linen yarn and linen fabrics. Manufactory established in 1879. Production, value 1,300.000 roubles per annum. Steam engines (700 H. P.), 20,000 spindles, 100 weaving looms, 1,000 workmen, 150 workwomen and 50 minors. The flax from gov. of Jaroslavl and adjacent govs. of Tver, Kostroma and Vo- logda, 125,000 150,000 poods per annum. Sale in Rus- sia, principally in Moscow. Department H. Group 102. Class 659. 541. SAKIN, P. Gov. and. district of Jaroslai'L Linen weaving and bleaching mill. Linen of various kinds. Mill established in 1870. Yearly production 25,000 pieces, 50 arshins each, value 450,000 roubles. ^Tbe mill includes 2 steam engines (180 H. P.), 120 automatic looms. 200 workmen, 90 workwomen and 10 minors. Materials Russian, and partly foreign. Sale in Moscow. t 2)4 Department H. Groups 101 and 102. Clashes 633 and 639. 542. SENKOV, S. Gov. of Vladimir, Viasniky. Linen weaving mill. Linen and jute fabrics. Established in 1765. Production value 600,000 700,000 roubles per annum. The mill includes two steam engines (215 H. P.), 255 various looms with preparatory and finishing machines, calender, machines for sewing sacks and arpauling; bleaching, washing and wringing machines etc.; 5 steam boilers; 340 workmen, 240 workwomen and so minors Yarn from the interior. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 543. KONSHIN, N. Imperially sanctioned Asso- ciation. Gov. of Moscow, Serpukhov. Cotton-spinning, weaving, printing and dyeing mills. Samples of cotton goods of various kinds. Production by hand work started since 1822; machine work since 1859, the spinning and weaving mills esta- blished in 1860. Production per annum 110,000 poods of yarn, 450,000 pieces of calico, 750,000 pieces of print, 100,000 pieces of bleached and dyed goods,value 8,800,000 roubles. The mills include 83,306 spindles, 2,373 looms. 1 6 printing presses, 39 dying vats. Steam motors (1,072 H. P.). 31 boilers; 2,872 workmen, 1,257 workwomen 255 - and 304 minors of both sexes. Cotton supplied 31%) from America, S/ fr m Egypt, i9/o from Russian pro- vinces in Central Asia. Sale in Russia, Siberia, Persia, Bokhara and theTranscaspian province. Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 544. BARANOV, J., Sokolovskaya Manufactory Association. Gov. of Vladimir, Alexandrov district. Print-dyeing, cotton spinning and weaving mill and chemical works. Samples of cotton fabrics. Established in 1876. Production per annum 840,000 pieces ot prints, value 6,000,000 roubles; 100,000 poods of cotton yarn, value 1,700,000 roubles, 550,000 pieces of calico, value 2,750,000 roubles and various chemical pro- ducts, value 300,000 roubles. 11 steam engines, 19 steam boilers, 40,254 spindles, 990 looms and 7 printing ma- chines; 2,500 workmen, 1,200 workwomen and 20 mi- nors. Cotton imported from America, Egypt and from Centra, Asia. The chemicals partly of own manufacture; partly purchased in Russia and Germany. Sale.jn Russia. Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 545. MOROZOV, V. and Sons Association. Gov. of Vladimir, Pokrov district. Cotton spinning, weaving and bleaching mills. 1. Raw cotton in various stages of treatment. 2. Yarn. 3. Lasting, cretonne, velveteen, sateen, moleskins, calico, and other fabrics. 4. Wadding. The mills were Ibunded gradually since '1837. Produc- tion value 7,500,000 roubles per annum. 6 steam engines (2,650 H. P.), 24 steam boilers, 73,000 spindles, 1,871 automatical looms, bleaching boilers, various other ma- chines; 4,377 workmen, 2,552 workwomen and 9 minors, besides others employed outside the mills at home in se- veral districts of the gov.'s of Vladimir and Moscow. Raw cotton, 350,000 poods yearly is imported from America, Egypt, India, Central Asia and from the Caucasus. Part of the chemicals also imported. Sale in Russia, export to Persia and China. Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 546. PAVLOV, C. Gov. of Vladimir, Pereiaslavl-Zalessky. Crimson print mill. Crimson prints of various kinds. Mill founded in 1869. Production about 150,000 pieces per annum, value 1,000,000 roubles. 2 steam boilers (85 H. P.), steam engine (30 H. P.), 4 boiling tanks, 3 wash- ing, i wringing, 3 printing and other machines; 175 workmen, 50 workwomen and 5 minors. Materials from Moscow. Sale in Moscow and Nizhny-Novgorod. Department H. Groups 102. Class 638. 547. ZUBOV, V. Imperially sanctioned Association. Gov. of Vladimir, Alexandrov. Crimson dye and printing mill. Crimson goods: prints of various kinds and smooth plush. Mill established in 1832, owned by Association in 1888. Production 300,000 pieces per annum, value 2,000,000 roubles. Steam motors (120 H. P.); 450 workmen, 150 workwomen. Materials Russian and partly foreign. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia; export to Persia. '!=f?H=* - Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 548. THE BOGORODSKO GLUKHOVSKAIA MANUFACTORY COMPANY, founded by Z. MOROSOV. Gov. of Moscow, Bogorodsk district. Cotton spinning, weaving, bleaching, dyeing and printing mills. Tissues, materials for napkins, moleskin, tick, cotton cloth, prints, cretones etc. The Company exists since 1855; the crimson-dyeing and printing mills since 1862; hand weaving since 1875. Production per annum: 500,000 pieces woven, value 7,000,000 roubles; yarn, excluding that supplied to the Company's weaving mill sold for 1,600,000 roubles; 1,050,000 pieces dyed, value 6,900,000 roubles; total va- lue 15,500,000 roubles. The mills include 44 steam en- gines (3,105 H. P.), 50 steam boilers, 98,650 spinning and 7,240 twisting spindles, 2,100 mechanical and 1,500 hand looms, besides 1,930 in the villages, 20 bleaching boilers, 450 dyeing vats, 170 various bleching and 8 calico print- ing machines, 12 blacksmith's hearths, i smelting furnace for cast iron, etc.; gas works, 3 dynamos, turbine (12 H. P.) working a flour mill with 2 sets of mill stones, 258 - boiler works, 40 portable engines (400 H. P.) for treat- ing peat; 6,685 workmen, 4,915 workwomen and 270 minors, besides 1,930 working in villages and at two machine weaving mills; 1,500 employed in summer in working peat and 300 in the kitchen gardens and fields; total number 15,600 workmen. Cotton is obtained: from Kokan 98,000 poods, from Egypt 75,000 poods, Savan- nah, Orleans and Upland 70,000 poods, Texas 3,450 poods, Khiva and Bokhara 14,000 poods, Tashkent and Samar- kand 5,500 poods, the Caucasus 4,000 poods, and Smyrna 1,500 poods, in total 302,500 poods. Dyeing and bleach- ing materials mostly Russian, but a small part foreign. The yearly supply of fuel: 5,500 cubic sazhenes of wood, 6,000 cubic sazhenes of peat, 1,800,000 poods naphtha re- fuses, pure naphtha for preparation of lighting gas 65,000 poods used. Sale in Russia, West-China, Mongolia, Cen- tral Asia, Persia, Asiatic Turkey, Roumenia and Bulgaria. Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 549. MOROZOV'S, S. Son and Co. Gov. of Vladimir, Pokrov district. Association of the Nikolska'ia Manufactory. 1. Yarn and raw cotton. 2. Calico, lasting, sateen, manch ester velvet and other fabrics. Production started in 1797, mills founded in 1830. Receipt in 1891 1892 for sale of yarn, fabrics and wad- ding 14,625.572 roubles. 35 steam engines (5,363 H. P.), 2 turbines (100 H. P.), 129,360 spindles, 1,960 automat- ical and 250 hand looms, 127 mechanical dyeing vats, 26 squeezing rollers and cotton printing machines etc. About 18.000 workmen. The raw cotton treated (489,933 poods, value 4,669,600 roubles) is from America, Egypt and local. Dyes and other materials partly Russian, value 1,174.000 roubles, partly foreign value 316,000 roubles. Sale in Russia, Central Asia, partly in China and Persia. 359 Department H. Group 103. Classes 641 and 644. 550. POLIAKOV'S, A. Imperially sanctioned Asso- ciation. Gov and district of Moscow. The Znamenskaia manufactory. Samples of woollen and mixt woollen fabrics of various kinds. Established in 1850. Production 4,000,000 arshins per annum, value 2,000,000 roubles; 2 steam motors, 600 mechanical looms; 800 workmen and workwomen; no minors admitted to work. Woollen and cotton yarn Rus- sian. Sale in European Russia, Siberia and the Caucasus. Department H. Group 103. Class 641 and 646. 551. BIELOV'S, V., Imperially sanctioned Asso- ciation. Moscow. Furniture, woollen and clothing goods manufactory. Established in 1814. Production 30,000 pieces per an- num, value 800,000 roubles. 200 automatical looms with various appliances; 250 hand looms, steam mo- tor (30 H. P.) with 2 boilers; 400 workmen, 250 work- women, 100 minors. The yarn and silk from interior, and partly from abroad. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia, export to Persia. 260 Department H. Group 102. Class 638. 552. BALAKIN, GR. Moscow. Weaving mill. Samples of stuffs for furniture. Established in 1883. Producti -n value 250,000 350,000 roubles per annum. 250 Jackard looms, 300 workmen, 150 workwomen. Materials mostly Russian, Sale in Rus- sia and the Levant. Department H. Groups 101 103. 553. THE IMPERIALLY SANCTIOED ASSO- CIATION OF THE MOSCOW DYE-MILL. Gov. and district of Moscow. Dye-mill. Samples of various dyed stuffs. Mill (bunded in 1852, the Association in 1880. About 200,000 pieces of stuffs dyed, printed and dressed per an- num, value 800,000 roubles. 15 steam engines, 10 steam boilers, 120 various machines. Heating by peat, obtained from own bogs; 500 workmen, 100 workwomen. Che- micals and dyes principally Russian. Sale of dyed stuffs in Russia and Asia. - 261 Department H. Group 105. Class 641. 554. THE NARVA CLOTH MANUFACTURE ASSOCIATION. Gov. of St. -Petersburg, Jamburg district. Cloth manufactory. Samples of cloth, castor, beaver, reps, sateen etc. Established in 1845 by Baron Stieglitz, owned by As- sociation in 1880. Production 12,900 pieces of cloth and different felt stuffs per annum, value 1,800,000 roubles. Machine work. The manufactory includes: i turbine (300 H. P.), a similar turbin (700 H. P.) is being construc- ted; 1 8 weaving machines with all the appartenances i. e. looms, and vats; 619 workmen, 392 workwomen, 7 mi- nors, part of them work outside the manufactory; wool 28,000 poods per annum is received from the South of Russia, from Poland, gov. of Estland, Germany and Eng- land. Sale in European Russia and Bulgaria. Department H. Group 104. Classes 652 and 656. 555. THE TECHNICAL COMMITTEE OF THE CHIEF SUPERINTENDANCY, Ministry of War. St. Petersburg. 1. Four cards of samples of cloth. 2. 6 uniforms. 3. Samples of ready made soldier's boots, - 262 Department H. Group 103. Classes 641 and 644. 556. HEINTSEL, J., Joint Stock Manufacturing Company. Gov . of Petrokov, Lod^. Weaving Manufactory. Wool and mixt wool fabrics. Established in 1866. Production 80,000 pieces of stuffs per annum, value 3,500,000 roubles; 10 steam boilers (1,400 H. P.), 5 steam engines (500 H. P.), join- ers and locksmiths workshops; 541 workmen and 622 workwomen. Yarn obtained from local and foreign spin- ning mills. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 100. Classes 628 and 629. 557. BOCHAROV, J. Gov. of Moscow, Bogorodsk district. Samples of siura, fay, satin, bengaline and damask. Established in 1818. Machine and hand work. Steam finishing and dyeing manufactory; 300 hand looms. Produc- tion of various silk stuffs, value 300,000 roubles per annum; 200 workmen, 100 workwomen and 45 minors. Mate- rials Russian and foreign. Sale in Russia and abroad. -263 Department H. Group 100. Classes 626, 628 and 629. 558. MUSSI, P. and Successors of GUJON, P. Imperially sanctioned Association. Moscow. Silk manufactory. Silk fabrics and silk in skeins. Manufactory exists since 1840. Production in 1891 92 was 400,000 arshines, value 1,050,000 roubles. Machine and hand work; 2 steam motors (150 H. P.), 800 looms and 4,500 spindles; 895 workmen and 357 workwomen. Raw silk imported from France, Italy, China and Japan. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia. Department H. Group 100. Classes 628 and 629. 559. ZAGLODIN, Brothers G., N.and S. Near Moscow- Brocade mill. Brocade. Mill established in 1864. Production value 300^000 rou- bles per annum. Hand work; 280 Jackard looms; 280 workmen. Materials Russian. Sale in Russia and Asia. 264 Department H. Group 100. Classes 625 and 629. 560. SAPOGHNIKOV, V. Gov. and district of Moscow and Moscow. Silk stuffs and gold and silver brocade manufactory, silk twisting and dyeing mills. 1. Samples of silk stufis and brocade. 2. Silk yarn, silk in skeins and cocoons. Hand weaving since 1837; machine weaving, silk twi- sting and dyeing since 1875. Production 314,410 arshines per annum, value 967,800 roubles. Steam engine (40 H. P.), turbine (35 H. P.), 125 mechanical looms, 280 hand looms, 2 calenders and other machines. In the neighbour- ing villages 300 looms. 360 workmen, 295 workwomen and 40 minors. The tw r isting and dyeing mills include 2 turbines (55 H. P.), 6,360 spindles, 16 windles; 25 work- men and 75 workwomen. The cocoons supplied from South-Russia, Italy, France and the Caucasus. Sale in Russia. Departments H. Group 105. Class 660. 561. GRINVALDT, P. St. Petersburg. Fur-dressing workshop. Furs. The firm exists since 1843. Production value 3,000,000 roubles per annum. Hand and machine work. 200 work- men. Furs from the Commodore Island, Kamchatka, Si- beria, California, Australia (Queensland). Sale in Europe, America and Asia. - 265 - Department H. Group 105. Classes 660 and 662. 562. GRINVALDT, E. St. Petersburg. Fur trade and fur dressing workshop. Samples of various furs, fur articles. Firm founded in 1892, separated from the above men- tioned firm. Machine and hand work. Furs are purchased from the Russian Association of Sea-bear Industry, from Siberia, California and Australia. Sale in Europe, Ame- rica and Asia. Department H. Group 105. Class 660. 563. POPOV, J. St. Petersburg. Workshop for stuffing birds and animals. Various stuffed animals and birds. Established in 1884. Production value 10,000 roubles per annum; 4 workmen. Materials Russian. Sale in Rus- sia and abroad. 266 Departments H. Group 105 Class 660. 564. MISSCHENKO, P. St. Petersburg. Workshop for stuffing animals. Stuffed brown owl. Hand production, value 6,000 roubles per annum; 8 workmen. Materials Russian. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Group 105. Class 660. 565. PANYSHOVS, J., M. and CH. Gov. of Ni^hny Novgorod, Kniaginin district. Sheep-skin white tanning workshop. 1. Black and white ,,Saksak". 2. Black ,,Reshetilov" fur. 3. Black goats skin fur. 4. Combed goat and sheep skin fur. Workshop established in 1860. Production 30,000 skins per annum, value 35,000 roubles; 40 workmen, 8 work- women and 3 minors. Sale in Moscow, at the Nizhny Nov- gorod fair and in Poland. 267 - Department H. Group 105. Class 660. 566. PANYSHEV, J. Gov. of Nitfmy Novgorod, Kniaginin district- Lamb-skin fur dressing workshop. Sheep furs and sheep pelts. The workshop exists since 1849. Production 30,000 sheep- and lamb-skins per annum, value 50,000 roubles. Hand work. 10 vats, 5 ovens; 25 workmen and 7 work- women, besides 20 women employed in sew r ing furs at home. Raw skins obtained in Russia and Persia. Sale in Russia, principally at the Nizhny Novgorod fair. Department H. Group 105. Class 660. 567. SUTIAGIN, M. Moscow. Astrakhan pelts dyeing workshop. Dyed Astrakhan pelts. Established in 1878. Dyed yearly 80,000100,000 pelts. Machine and hand work; benzine motor (2 1 /2 H. P.); 12 workmen. The pelts supplied from Bokhara. Sale in Russia and abroad. 268 Department H. Group 105. Class 660. 568. PANOV'S, V. Sons and KOVALEV. Gov. of Ni^hny Novgorod, Kniaginin district. Lamb-skins fur workshop. 1. Furs of grey and black lambs. 2. Lamb-skins of various kinds. 3. Tanned Kharkoff black ,,Saksak". 4. Goat skins. Established in 1865. Production 40,000 45,000 various sheep and lamb-skins per annum, value 70,000 roubles. Hand work; 40 workmen and 10 workwomen. Raw skins Russian. Sale in Russia. Department H. Groups 100,' 102 and 103. Classes 630, 638 and 642. 569. ALEXANDROV'S, E. and J. Gov. of Kaluga, Borovsk district. Head handkerchiefs and shawl manufactory. Head handkerchiefs and shawls made of cotton, mixed wool and wool. Established in 1820. Hand work. Production value 500,000 roubles per annum; 500 workmen and 400 work- women. Wool and silk from abroad, cotton from Russia. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 103. Class 649. 570. BRUNOV. P. Gov. of Moscow, Bogorodsk district. Machine carpets, oil cloth and bag manufactory. Moscow Persian carpets. Established in 1880. Production value 500,000 roubles per annum. Steam engine (20 H. P.), 250 looms, 2 warp beams, 3 windles; 400 workmen, 400 workwomen and 200 minors. Russian materials. Sale in Russia. Department H. Groups 104 and 106. Classes 658 and 663. 571. PERETS, N. Siberia, Tomsk. 1. Ready made linen. 2. Embroideries. Established in 1881. Production value 18,000 roubles per annum. Machine and hand work. American, German and French machines; 35 40 workwomen, including 10 minors. Materials Russian and foreign. Sale in Siberia. 270 Department H. Group 100. Classes 631 and 632. 572. SURATOV, S. St. Petersburg. Galloon manufactory. Galloons, silk galloons, tape, chains. Established in 1850. Machine and hand work. Produc- tion value 300,000 roubles per annum; 400 workmen. Russian materials. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Groups 103, 104 and 108. Classes 648, 658 and 682. 573. SPIEKHIN, V. St. Petersburg. Linen, umbrella and felt slippers factory. 1. Gentlemens shirts. 2. Ladies and gentlemens silk umbrellas. 3. Felt slippers. Factory founded in 1 870. Hand turning lathes and sew- ing machines; 40 workmen, 80 workwomen and 10 mi- nors. Production value 200,000 roubles per year. Mate- rials principally Russian. Sale in Russia. 271 Department H. Group 109. Classes 683, 687 and 689. 574. THE ASSOCIATION OF THE RUSSO- AMERICAN RUBBER MANUFACTORY. St. Petersburg. Rubber factory. 1. Rubber galoshes of various kinds. 2. Technical articles, as: rings, belts, cords, hose, reser- voirs, articles made of caoutchouc and guttapercha etc. 3. Articles used in nursing sick persons. 4. Various articles for house and special use: travelling cushions, baths, portmanteaux, carpet-walks, office and toilet articles, diving appliances etc. 5. Toys: balls, dolls, animals etc. 6. Mackintoshes and waterproof fabrics. The Association exists since 1860. The factory inclu- des: 25 steam engines (2,120 H. P.), 22 steam boilers, 380 rolling, washing and auxiliary machines. In 1891 4,765,000 pairs of galoches sold, value 7,600,000 roubles and other articles lor 1,720,000 roubles; 1,486 workmen and 1,387 workwomen. Raw caoutchouc imported from England, France, Portugal, partly from New York and Brazil; a part of the chemicals from Germany, all the remaining materials Russian. 1,000,000 pairs of galoshes exported to Europe, the rest sold in Russia. 272 Department H. Group in. Class 697. 575. BRUSNITZYN, H. and Sons. St. Petersburg. Tannery. Leathers. Tannery exists since 1847. 70,000 hides tanned annu- ally, value 1,600,000 roubles; 4 steam boilers, 2 steam engines (75 H. P.), i,ioo various vats, 2 mills, 5 presses lor the bark, i hammer, 5 hand and 7 mechanical rol- lers; i rolling, i leveling and 2 dressing machines; 3 cy- linders, 5 steam pumps and 3 pumps; i turning and i dril- ling lathes; 450 workmen. The hides, besides Russian, are imported from America (Rio Grande) to the number of 35,000. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 104. Class 656. 576. DYSHKO, V. St. Petersburg. Boot and shoe of various kinds. Workshop founded in 1842. Value of annual produc- tion 250,000 roubles. Hand work; 175 workmen. Leather supplied from Russia and France. Sale in Russia and export to England. 18 Department H. (iroup 104. Class 656. 577. BOGDANOV, V. 5/. Petersburg. Boot and shoe workshop. Boots and shoes of various kinds. Production since 1870, value 20,000 roubles per an- num. Hand work; 20 workmen, 5 workwomen and 5 mi- nors. Materials Russian and partly foreign. Sale in St. Petersburg. Department H. Groups 104, 1 08 and in. Classes 656, 678, 679 and 697. 578. ASSOCIATION Ol : THE ST. PETERS- BURG MACHINE WORK BOOT AND SHOE MANUFACTORY. St. Petersburg. Machine work boot and shoe manufactory and tannery, i Shoes and boots for gentlemen, ladies and children. 2. Travelling equipments: portmanteaus, hand bags, dres- sing cases. 3. Dressed leathers of various kinds. Tannery exists since 1882. Production value 300,000 roubles per annum. Production at the manufactory, value 800,000 roubles per annum. 3 steam engines (45 H. P.); 200 American and Knglish machines; 600 \vorkmen and 200 workwomen. 7o"/i> of leather supplied by own tannery, remaining 3o"/<> exclusively of Russian tanning. Sale in Russia, latterly export to France. Department H. Group in. Class 701. 579. SAVIN, V. Gov. of Tver, Ostashkov. Russia leather manufactory. Russia leather of various kinds. Established in 1730. Production 150,000 200,000 skins per annum, value 600,000 700,000 roubles. Hand and machine work. 40 lye tanks and 280 tanning tanks; 350 workmen, 150 workwomen, 4 minors. Raw hides from Russia, and partly imported from Germany and Denmark. Export to all the countries of Europe, to the U. S. of North America, South America, Africa and Asia. See Dep. A. J\e 169. Department H. Group 104, 108 and in. Classes 656,678 and 705. 580. GALHIFY, M. Ka^an. Leather articles workshop. 1. Boots and shoes. 2. Leathers for furniture. 3. Various articles ot leather: cushion, hand bag etc. 4. Sitting room suite of furniture, covered with leather straps of various colors, sewn with silk. Workshop established in 1860. Work done exclusively by hand, value 60,000 roubles per annum. 70 workmen, 300 workwomen! and 1 50 minors. Materials Russian and foreign from Prance, Germany and Persia. Sale in Euro- pean Russia, Siberia, Tashkent, Bokhara and Persia. The furniture \vas manufactured in the carpenter's workshop oi Pikulin in Kaxan, established in 1878. Department H. Group in. Class 697. 581. THE IMPERIALLY SAXTIONED COM- PANY OF THE VLADIMIR TANNERY. 5^. Petersburg. Tannery. 1. Backs of leather lor belts. 2. Leathers mimosa" and ,,grey" leathers. 3. Pieces of sole leather. 4. Steven gear belting. 5. Leather fire hose. 6. Leatherraft. 7. Stitched leather belts. Company founded in 1861. 30,000 ox-hides treated annually, value 750 ooo roubles. 2 steam engines of 60 H. P., 4 steam boilers, 6 steam pumps, 4 rollers and 4 hammers, 5 steam mills, 500 vats etc.; 180 workmen. Materials local and imported, principally from America. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 103. Class 648. 582. SMIRNOV, M. (io:-. of Xi^hny Xovgorod, Semertov and districts. .. Felt boots of various kinds for gentlemen, ladies and children. Production since 1817, about 200.000 pairs per annum, value 250,000 roubles. Hand \vork; 350 workmen, 50 workwomen and 100 minors. Russian materials. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia, the Caucasus and the Amur province. - 276 - Department H. Group 104. Class 656. 583. VYSSOTSKY, A. St. Petersburg. Boot and shoe workshop. Boots and shoes for gentlemen and ladies. Workshop established in 1883. Handwork, production value 50,000 roubles per annum; 50 workmen, 10 work- women and 1 3 minors. Leather for hunting boots dressed by method invented by exhibitor. Materials Russian and foreign. Sale in Russia. Department H. (mmp. ill. Class 697. 584. ERIVANTSEV-ASTVATSUROV, M. Tiflis. Leather articles workshop. 1. Mosaic table. 2. Samples of leather articles. Workshop established in 1889. Hand work of the exhi- bitor and two apprentices. 277 - Department H. Group io_j. Class 656. 585. WEISS, H. St. Petersburg. Boot and shoe workshop. Boots, shoes and slippers for ladies and gentlemen. Established in 1880. Hand work; production value 200,000 roubles per annum; 160 workmen, 40 workwo- men and 15 minors. Material Russian, partly imported from France and Germany. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group in. Classes 699 and 702. 586. KARPOV, M-me M. St. Petersburg. Patent and dyed leather and oil cloth manufactory. 1. Patent leather. 2. Oil cloth. Established in 1888. Production by hand work, value 20,000 30,000 roubles per annum; 30 workmen. Sale in St. Petersburg. Department H. Group ni. Class 697. 587. RHBROV, J. Moscow. Boot leather workshop. Boot leathers: uppers, fronts and backs. Established in 1878. Hand work; production 150,000 pairs per annum; value 300,000 roubles; 70 workmen. Russian materials, partly from Siberia and the gov. of Yiatka. Sale in Moscow and in Southern Russia. Department H. Group 111. Class 697. 588. Sl-KHBKI'NNIKOV, S. Go-i'. of Xi~hn\ Xoi'goi'fid, vill. Great Murashkino. Tannery. 1. Dressed leather. 2. Cow skin leather. 3. Horse skin leather. The tannery founded in 1819. 1,000 skins dressed per annum, value 6,000 roubles. Hand work. 6 ash-pits, 8 tan- ning vats; 9 workmen. Raw hides purchased on the spot. Sale at the fair of Ni/hny Novgorod and in Moscow. - Department H. Group in. Class 697. 589. ZHEMOCHKIN, J. Moscoiu. Hamburg boot ware horse skin leather workshop. Leather. Production since 1891, value 100,000 roubles per an- num. Hand work; 40 workmen employed. Raw hides from Russia. Sale in Russia, Siberia, the Caucasus and abroad. Department H. Group in. Classes 697 and 701. 590. LAVRENTII-V, J. Gov. of Irkutsk, Baldguny region. The Bielsk Nicolaiev tannery. 1. Russia leathers, dyed leathers, boot and carriage lea- thers of various kinds. 2. Boot leather. Tannery founded in 1865. 15,000 skins tanned per an- num and various boots and shoes manufactured, value 140,000 roubles per annum. Skin dressing by hand. 15 lye vats, 90 tanning vats. Steam engine for grinding oak-bark. 50 workmen employed. Dyes Irom Moscow. Hides and materials local. Sale principally in China and partly local. 280 Department H. Group in. Class 697. 591. MILLER. CH. St. Petersburg. Boot leather workshop. Boot leather. Established in 1848. 50,000 pairs manufactured per an- num, value 50,000 roubles. Hand work. 15 workmen. Materials purchased in St. Petersburg. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group 111. Class 698. 592. SEMENOV, S. 5/. Petersburg. Leather workshop. Calf leather, fronts, backs, uppers, ladies' and half boots, black leather and patent leather. Production since 1867, hand work, value 50,000 rou- bles per annum; 25 workmen. Materials Russian. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group in. Class 697. 593. SKVORTZOV'S, J. Sons. Moscow. Tannery. 1. Sole leather. 2. Saddle leather. Tannery established in 1839. Production 15,000 20,000 skins per annum, value 600,000 roubles. 2 steam boilers (120 H. P.), steam engine ,, Compound" (50 H. P.), 2 Hutting machines, 10 various other machines, i maceration battery, i dynamo, 4 desintegrators, 2 cut- ting machines and 200 pits; 150 workmen. Ra\v hides purchased in Russia and imported from America, Australia, German v and Holland. Sale in Russia. Department H. Group in. Class 697 594. YAKOVKIN, J. Bldgovieshchefisk <>n Amur. Tannery. 1. Samples ot dressed leathers ot various kinds. 2. Boot leathers. Tannery established in 1891. 5,500 hides, local and from Manjuria, dressed per annum, value 40,000 roubles. 2 horse gear, 1 1 pits, i cylinder, i stamping mill and i braking machine; 20 \vorkmen. Boots sewn outside the tannery by 20 workmen. Sale in the Amur and South Ussuri Provinces. 282 - Department H. Group ni. Class 697. 595. KTSNHTSOV, A. St. Petersburg. Military harness, leather goods and cap-visor manufactory. 1. Stretched leather goods. 2. Cap-visors. Hand work, production value 200000 roubles per annum; 150 workmen and 50 minors. Materials Russian. Sale to the Army and in Russia. See Dep. G. J\v 596. Department H. Group 111. Class 702. 596. MEXDHLSON, I:. Arkhangelsk. Deer skin dressing manufactory. Deer skin Chamois leather. Established in 1872. Production value 200,000 roubles per annum. Hand work; 20 workmen. Hides are pur- chased on the spot. Sale in Russia and export. Department H. Groups 104 and in. Classes 6^7 and 702. 397 KOZLOV, J. Chamois leather and glove manufactory. JRukavitzy", Russian gloves, and various kinds of gloves. 2. Dressed and raw deer-skins: elk-skins. Established in 1880. Nearly 50,000 skins dressed yearly, value 200,000 roubles; and 175,000 pairs of gloves and Russian gloves sewn, value 100,000 roubles. Raw hides supplied from the gov. ol" Arkhangelsk. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department H. Group in. Class 697. 593. FOFONOV, M. Goi. < >f I'iiitkti, Slobodskoy. Tannery. . 1. Leathers. 2. Schetched leather goods and articles of military outfit. i. \Yool. hair and due. - Tannery founded in 1762. 64,000 skins dressed yearly, value 500,000 roubles, and glue extracted lor 4,000 rou- bles. Steam engine (26 H. \\), 2 steam boilers. 50 work- men, 1 50 workwomen and 20 minors during winter and spring. Russian materials. Sale in Siberia and European Russia, but principally to Crown onL Department H. Groups 104 and in. Classes 6^6 and 699. 599. SOROK1X. Gov. of Tver, Korcberit district, -vil. Kinirv. Boot, shoe, and boot-leather workshops. 1. Hamburg boot leather ware: chagreen, uppers etc. 2. Boots, gaiters etc. Workshops established in 1888 and 1890. Hand work, value 40,000 roubles per annum; 50 workmen, 5 work- \vomen and 5 minors. Leathers supplied from Moscow and Ka/an. Sale in St. Petersburg, Moscow and local. Department H. Groups 108 and 111. Classes 679 ' and 697. 600. DI-MI-NT, M. and Son. Moscow. 1. Trunk bed, exhibitors system. 2. Cleansed leather beltings. See Dep. ('. -V 594. Department H. Group ill. Class 70;. 601. DAMM, E. Si. Embossed leather articles. Production since 1877, value 10,000 roubles per an- num; i hand machine, cast-iron stand with engraved rol- lers with endless designs, cast-iron press with copper en- graved designs. 3 workmen. Leather supplied from St. Petersburg and Moscow tanneries. Sale in Russia. Department H. Groups 104, 108 and iir. Classes 656, 680, 697 and 705. 602. HIBNHR, R. St. Petersburg. Tannery. 1. Calf skins, white. 2. Jack boots, shoes, uppers etc.; samples of galosh-uppers. 3. Sole leather red, heavy and light. 4. Willow bark. 5. Skins of the fish ,,Zubatka", wolf- fish, raw and in 3 stages of dressing. 6. ,,Zubatka" stuffed and photographs. 7. Articles made of ,,Zubatka": 2 gun cases, gamebag, cartridge-bag, travelling flask, slippers, pocket-book and purse.- Tannery founded in 1862. Production value 100,000 roubles per annum. Steam boiler (30 H. P.), steam en- gine (12 H. P.), steam rollers, revolving cylinders, 300 pits; 50 workmen. Ra\v hides from St. Petersburg and Moscow, willow bark local. Sale in Russia. ,,Zubatka" skin dressed as a trial, 3,000 skins, value 3,000 roubles per annum. ,,Zubatka" received from the Murman coast in the gov. of Arkhangelsk. Sale in Russia, I'Yance and England. 286 DEPARTMENT W WOMEN'S WORK. Women's Work. This Department has been organized by the Ladies Committee appointed by the High Order of Her Imperial Majesty, the Empress of Russia. I. Articles collected by Her Imperial Highness the Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna, in the City and Province of Moscow. 603. CONVENT OF S-t JOHN. Moscow. Russian Court dress of red cloth of gold, embroidered n After ancient patterns from the collection of Princess Jussupov. This Convent is said to have been built in the XVI century by the Grand Duchess Helena Glinsky, mother of the Tzar John the Terrible. It was completely burnt down by the French in 1812 and has been restored only in 1879. It is a community, i. e. the nuns have to work for the Convent and can live at its expense. There are three different ateliers" in this Convent: one for common needlework and embroidery, one for gold embroidery and one for the painting of holy images (icons). The Con- vent has an infirmary and a small home for children of the Elizabethan Society. 289 19 604. CONVENT OF THE HOLY VIRGIN. Moscow. 1. Sarafane (white under dress) for the precedent red Court dress. 2. Image (icon) engraved, painted and gilt. This convent, dating from 1524, is situated in one of the suburbs of Moscow and is often mentioned in the annals of Russian history. The Tzarevna Sophia, sister of Peter the Great, was imprisoned there for years by his order, after he had found her an obstacle to his ideas of reform, and died there in 1704. The Sisterhood con- sists of 200 nuns, but is no community, i. e. the nuns have to work each for her own living, except one or two days in the week, when they must work for the Convent, which is justly celebrated for its gold embroi- dery. The Convent has two homes for old and infirm nuns, an infirmary, an institution for children of the Elizabethan Society and an orphanage founded and en- dowed in 1871 by M' Ue Filatiev. 605. CONVENT OF THE HOLY VIRGIN. Serpukhov. Embroidery for an arm-chair: green satin worked in silks, gold and silver. The design was taken from the - n Ornement National Russe " by M-r Stassov and comes originally from an an- cient priest's vestment of the XVI century. This Convent is situated on the outskirts of the town of Serpukhov. It consists of 350 nuns living under com- muned rule; 30 of these nuns work in the fields, take care of the cattle and generally manage the farm of the Convent, which has also an atelier for plain needlework, another for weaving and one for the painting of holy images. Its foundation dates from 1360. 390 606. CONVENT OF S-t ALEXIS. Moscow. 1. Embroidery for a chair: faded pink satin embroidered in gold and silver. The design is taken from an ancient quiver (of the XV century) kept in the Treasury of the Tzars in Moscow. 2. Image (icon) engraved, painted and gilt. This Convent is situated in one of the suburbs of Moscow, having been founded in 1358 by S-t Alexis, Metropolitan Bishop of Moscow in the centre of the town and transferred subsequently in 1837 to its present site to make place for the Temple of the Saviour. The Con- vent has 300 nuns and 4 ateliers, viz: one for gold em- broidery, one for the painting of holy images, one for bookbinding and one for engraving, also an infirmary, a retreat for old nuns, an institution for girls of the Slavonic race, a school for daughters of the clergy of the diocese of Moscow and a home for girls of the Elizabethan Society. 607. CONVENT OF THE ELEVATION OF THE HOLY CROSS. Podolsk district. 1. Embroidered image of the Holy Virgin of Iberia. 2. Embroidered image of the Holy Virgin. 3. Embroidered image of the Saviour. This Convent is situated 30 versts from Moscow and exists since 1887. It has 160 nuns, a parish school for 25 girls, a home for 10 orphans, an infirmary and a dispen- sory where medicines are given to poor peasants of the neighbourhood. There are, besides, ateliers for embroidery, bookbinding and image painting. The nuns have also a farm which they work themselves. - 291 608. CONVENT OF KHOTKOV. Diiiitrov district. Embroidery for a costume in gold and pearls. The pattern is taken from an ancient vestment (of the XVII century) belonging to a convent in the province of Novgorod. This Convent is situated 60 versts from Moscow and 10 versts from the Monastery of St. Serge. The Convent is ruled under the communed system and contains 350 nuns. It has a parish school for 60 girls and is celebrated for its painted images, it has also ateliers for embroi- dery and general needlework. 609. CONVENT OF BORODINO. Borodino district. Trimming for an opera-cloak. The collar is copied from that of the Patriarch Ni- kon and the trimming from a costume of the Tzar Alexis Mikhailovich. This Convent is situated on the celebrated battlefield of the same name, called n de la Moskowa" by the French, where on the 26 August 1812 the Russian army, under the command of General Koutousov, fought against the ,,grande armee" of Napoleon one of the bloodiest battles of the Century. One of the many victims was General Tuchkov, whose young widow, after having searched in vain for his corpse, founded a small sisterhood on the presumed spot of his death and was the first of its abbes- ses. The Convent actually consists of 300 nuns Jiving un- der the communed rule and owns some landed propriety. 610. CONVENT OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD. Moscow. Embroidered picture made up as a ,,sachet". The name of tins Convent recurs often on the pages of historical record. 6- i > 292 611. CONVENT OF OUR SAVIOUR OF VLAKHERN. Carpet (covering) of ancient work. 612. POKROVSKAYA COMMUNITY. Moscow. Specimens of silk-worm culture. This is a Community of Sisters of Mercy. It possesses on its vast premises an infirmary, a dispensory, a home for small children, a girls'grammar school, a school for hos- pital nurses, ateliers of dressmaking and drawing and a school of silk-worm culture. The Sisters composing the Community devote themselves to nursing the sick at home and in the hospitals. The whole vast Establishment has been managed since its foundation by an abbess, mo- ther Zena'ide, with the help of a certain number of nuns. 613. SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF PRACTICAL KNOWLEDGE AMONG THE EDUCATED CLASSES. Moscow. 1. Lambrequin border of coarse linen. After an ancient design. 2. Three specimens of painting on porcelain. 3. Five plates, painting on porcelain. 4. Two pictures on porcelain. This Society has been founded by the ladies of Mos- cow on the model of the German ,,Lette-Vereine" and consists of different shools, viz: for dressmaking, bon- net making, art needlework, a culinary school, a gover- nesses' register and a permanent exhibition of the work - 293 of poor ladies. The purpose of the Society is to give ladies the means of learning what they are not taught at school. There are at present 190 pupils in the different schools, having mostly finished their education in the best public schools and gymnasia and belonging to the middle and upper classes. 614. CHEPELEVSKY, M"" B. Moscou 1 . 1. Imitation of an ancient embroidery. 2. Towel. After a design from the n Ornement National Russe" by Stassov. 3. Napkin. After a design from the collection of M~ me Shabelsky. 4. Napkin. After a design from the collection of M~ me Rodionov. 5. Table-cover. 6. Pillow-case. 7. Graduated course of drawing of the Model School of the Seminary. 8. Course of drawing of the pupils of the Seminary. 9. Course of elemantary drawing for home and school- teaching, edited by the Seminary. This Seminary has been founded in 1870 by M" me Chepelevsky for the purpose of preparing school mis- tresses for village schools. It has actually 200 pupils; there are special classes for drawing and embroidery, enabling the school mistresses eventually to help and guide the peasant women in their local industries. There is also belonging to the Seminary a model school, where the pupils practically learn to give lessons, and a separate, special school of artificial flowermaking for poor girls. 615. SCHOOL OF THE MERCHANT'S CORPO- RATION FOR THE CHILDREN OF POOR CITIZENS OF MOSCOW. Moscow. 1. Curtain for a door, made after ancient Russian de- signs. 2. Towel embroidered in the School. 3. Samples of the work of the pupils of different classes. This School was founded in 1841 by the Merchant's Corporation; the Girl's School is only a small part of the whole vast establishment and contains 245 pupils. The course of study corresponds to that of the grammar schools, with special classes for all sorts of needlework. 616. PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL OF M"" e B. LEPESHKINE. Moscow. Specimens of work done by the pupils of the first and second classes. This School has been founded in 1887 by M' nie Le- peshkine for the purpose of preparing teachers of dra- wing and needlework for the elementary schools. The number of the pupils is 130 and the course of study corresponds to that of the grammar schools with the addition of special classes for drawing, needlework and housekeeping. 617. CHERNIAVSKY-OUSSACHEV INSTITU- TION. Moscow. 1. Small screen for photographs. 2. Model of a pair of stays. 3. Model of a dress. 4. Model of a uniform dress of the pupils of the Esta- blishment. 295 5. Three painted porcelain dishes. 6. Collection . of photographic vie\vs of the Institution. 7. Collection of copies of calligraphy. 8. Collection of patterns of cutting out in dressmaking. 9. Course of drawing. This boarding school appertains to the Imperial Phi- lanthropic Society and is named after its founders. 398 girls actually receive there an education corresponding to that of the public schools (gymnasia) for girls. Half of the pupils are boarders. 618. THE PENITENTIARY SCHOOL OF BOL- SHEVO. Moscow district. 1. Abat-jour made by the pupils. 2. Clothing. 3. Dress on a manequin. 4. Collection of photographic views of the School. This School is situated in a village near Moscow and belongs also to the Philanthropic Society. It is spe- cially intended for little tramps and beggar girls taken up by the police in the streets. At present there are 65 pupils in the School. 619. SHABELSKY, M' me N. L., actual member of the Imperial Russian Historical Museum and other Scientific Societies. Moscow. 1. Wall carpet. Crotchet work, pattern taken from an old manuscript (Titulyarnik) dating from the reign of Tzar Alexis Mikhai- lovich (1672). This manuscript is still existing in the archives of the Foreign Office. 2. Border (lambrequin) door decoration. Crotchet work from an ancient Byzantine design, the frame and scallops worked with materials of the XVII century. 3- Bed-sheet trimmings. Four pieces of lace made with the bobbin, modern work executed from old designs of the gov. of Moscow. 4. Application work of old authentic article^. Ancient materials from the collections of M~ me Shabelsky. Copies of women's coiffures from old portraits. Head- dress of the women of Tver, Kaluga, Nizhni and Kostroma. 5. Towel trimmings and woven portrait. Woven samples, hand-made, most primitive loom work, after old designs, of the Vereia district, gov. of Moscow. 6. Wall carpet (decorative panel). Application work, embroidered with materials of the XVII century: gold cloth, lampas, figured silk brocade, satin etc. The design is taken from a part of the throne curtains of the Tsars John and Peter (1681). 7. Table cloth: silk embroidery on linen in flat stitch. Copied from an ancient embroidery of M" me Sha- belsky's collection. The design represents an ancient Rus- sian ornament: a symbolic bird, the twoheaded eagle etc. 8. Silk embroidery. Copy of an old towel trimming, which towel it was the custom to offer, together with bread and salt, on a day of victory. The design represents the image of the Holy Virgin carried on the wings of the symbolic eagle and surrounded by angels. The original belongs to the collectians of M' me Shabelsky. 9. Border (lambrequin). Copy of an ancient trimming of a state bed, embroi- dered in silk on linen, bedsheet trimmings etc. Design of the XVII century. 10. Costume of a Mordva woman from the gov. of Penza. Chemise, kaftan, headdress, sash and samples of embroi- dery of the Cherkess women of Kazan from the ethnogra- phic collection of M'" 16 Shabelsky. 297 11. Wall carpet, executed by M" me Shabelsky's pupils. The design is taken from an old engraving repre- senting a dedication day, a fair, a national dance, masks etc. 12. Application work executed by M" me Shabelsky's pu- pils. Costumes of the inhabitants of Northern Russia. M"" 16 Shabelsky spends a large part of her income for the last 18 years in collecting ancient Russian em- broideries, designs, costumes and jewelry. This collection is perfectly unique and contains upwards of 4500 diffe- rent articles of various descriptions, some of w r hich date from the X century. There are specimens of jewelry, plate and ancient household implements. M'"' e Sha- belsky and her daughters employ most ot their time in splendid art needlework, and the things they copy and make themselves after ancient designs are wonderful. 13 and 14. Application work, door decoration. The design represents two symbolic birds n Syrin", one copied from the r Russian popular pictures" of M~ r Rovinsky, the other from a chimney - tile in the town Uglich. 620. MAMONTOV, M"" 6 M. A. Moscon'. Children's Education Bazaar. 1. Box with dolls in peasant's costumes of different pro- vinces. 2. Dolls: boyar's wife, boyar's daughter, pilgrims, peasant of Tula, peasant woman and child, peasant woman and boy, peasant in winter clothes, peasant in sum- mer clothing, wet-nurse, peasant boy. 3. Two dolls, dressed as peasants, in a peasant's sledge. 4. Two dolls, dressed as peasants, in a peasant's cart ^telega". 5. Small-Russian cottage ,.khata". 6. Russian cottage ,.izba". 7. Baby in a crib. 298 8. Box with a game of squills. 9. Interior of a peasant's house. 10. A boyar's feast. The Children's Education Bazaar" lias been founded in 1883 by M" nie M. A. Mamontov. It contains all a child can want from its birth up to seven years of age: linen clothes, children's furniture, equipages, tricycles, artistically dressed dolls in national costumes, games occu- pations, calisthenics and gymnastics. 621. ZEMSTVO OF THE GOV. of MOSCOW. Moscow. Technical Museum for peasant's work home industry. 1. Nine cardboards and carpet with samples of peasant's home work. 2. Net for fishing. 3. Towel with trimmings. 4. Clothing. 5. Running pattern embroidered in silk. 6. Dolls. Women ot Riasan, laroslav, Vologda, Velikopolje (Poland), Nizhni, Voronezh, Mogilev, Kharkov, Olo- nets, Kaluga, Kiev, Tambov, Vladimir, Smolensk, Moskow and district of Moskow. Peasants of Moskow and Kostroma. Peasant woman of Riasan. Cossack and Cossack woman of the Ural, peasant of Small Russia, peasant and peasant woman of White Russia, Lithuanian and Lithuanian woman, Mazur (Poland). Tartar, Karaim woman of the Crimea, Bashkirian and Baskirian w r oman, Jakut and Jakut woman. Dolls in costumes worn around St. Petersburg, in Arkhangel, Kostroma and in a Polish costume. 299 Burlak of the Volga. lamshchik of Moscow. 7. Small-Russian peasant and team of oxen. 8. Russian peasant carrying wood. 9. Peasants sledge. 10. Peasant woman with a harrow. 1 1 . Peasant woman with a plough. 12. Peasant with a plough. 13. Sledge carrying boards. 14. Small-Russian ploughing. 15. Country ,,tro'ika u . 1 6. Country team. 17. Sledge. 1 8. Russian sportsmen's equipage. 19. Small-Russian peasant's house ,,khata". 20. Russian peasant's house ,,izba". 21. Garden table, chair and stool. 22. Two baskets. This Museum was created to uphold the small rural industries and help the peasants to sell their productions. The rural industry is the manufacture of home-made articles' and is one of the most important branches of labour in the villages of Russia in general. The articles exhibited are made by peasant women of the gov. of Moscow in their own homes, by means of the most pri- mitive implements, modern appliances being unknown to them. It is rare to find a village where local industry is not represented by several branches of production. Both sexes labour on an average equally, but many industries are exclusivelv those of the women. 622. MAMONTOV, M' me E. G. Moscow. 1. TW T O cases for holy images. 2. Seven Cupboards. 3. Corner chair stool, mirror, bench, two shelves, clothes- peg and calendar. 300 4. Five frames for photographs. 5. Four small boxes. 6. Three salt cellars. 7. Salt cellar of the Tzars. These things are made by peasant boys in an atelier arranged by M'"' e Mamontov 8 years ago for the boys of the school on her estate, to give them the means to learn an industry they might continue at home. M" rae Mamontov has collected a considerable num- ber of specimens of ancient Russian woodcarving, and her friend Miss Polienoff, a wellknown painter, makes the designs of all that is made by the boys after these ancient patterns; thanks to the efforts of these two ladies, ample work is always forthcoming both for the pupils and for those who have already left the school. 623. PRINCESS LVOV. Klin district. 1. Trimmings for a dress. 2. Four pillow cases. 3. Four towels. 4. Napkin with six smaller ones for the tea table. 5. Antimacassar. All these articles have been made by peasant women in their own homes, after the design and with the help of Princess Lvov, proprietress of an estate in the di- strict of Klin. This lady and her sister, seeing the enforced idleness of our peasant women during the long Russian winters, conceived the idea of reviving an ancient local industry. Lately the Administration of the Domains has lent its support to this useful undertaking, so that the Princess has been enabled to start a school for the youngest of the workers, procuring, besides, numerous orders for those who work at home. 301 624. KATKOV, M"" e . Moscow district. Five pieces of cloth made by peasants. M' me Katkov has done much to encourage and ame- liorate the production of homespun woollen tissues in the neighbourhood of her estate, not far from Moscow, and the results of her exertions may be seen in the spe- cimens and samples exposed. 625. RYDZIEVSKY, M"" 6 . Moscow. Table cloth. 626. RODIONOV, nee Princess Shakhovskoy. Moscow. Album of ancient Russian designs. 627. MICHAILOV, M"" e . Moscow. Embroidered picture, representing the Emperor Alexander II driving in a sledge. 628. GORODETSKY, M . Moscow. 1. Embroidered picture representing the Kremlin. 2. Course of drawing, as adapted to needlework i- st and 2- nd term. 3. Russian and Slavonic letters. 629. KAMENIEV-LUBAVSKY, M"-. Moscow, Two pictures on velvet. 630. CHOKOLOV, M. Moscow- Lambrequin and panel. 631. CHEKHONIN, M". Moscow. Atelier for gold embroidery. Court dress for a drawing-room: yellow damask and white satin embroidered in silver, after the design ot an ancient embroidery belonging to the Convent of S-t John. 632. J U N G E, M-. Moscow. 1. Painting on porcelain. 2. Painting on satin. 3. Fan. 303 II. Articles collected by the Ladle's Auxiliary Committee in Kazan. 633. CONVENT OF THE HOLY VIRGIN. Ka^an. Three images (icons) painted and embroidered in gold. 634. PRIMARY GIRLS SCHOOLS. Ka^an. Specimens of work done by the pupils. 635. PRIMARY GIRLS SCHOOL OF THE ZEMSTVO. Tou n Mamadysb. Specimens of work done by the pupils. 636. USMANOVA, Bibi-Fatima. Costume of a Tartar woman. - 304 637. IEVLEVA, M" 116 L. Ka^an. Dressmaker. Velvet dress. 638. POPOV A, M' me E. Ka^an. Mirror frame with a garland made of birch tree bark. 639. NECHAIEVA, M' me . Ka^an. Domestic and industrial school. Shawl worked in guipure. 640. SHCHETINK ^^XjX^sr Ka^an. Furrier. Furs: Russian muskrat, black badger and fox paw, sewn at home by peasant women. 305 641. D U R N E 1 E V, M' me M. Shawls made of goats down. Industry since 1884; handwork, 200 shawls per year. Goats down obtained from the Khirgees of the gov. of Orenburg. 642. D A N A U R O V, M' me C. Ka^an. Samples of Rybno-Slobodsk lace. In the districts of Laishev and Mamadysh 630 women are employed in lace making during the whole year, with help of minors from eight years of age. Expert lace makers earn yearly about 50 roubles. 643. KRJVAKSIN, M L. and BLOSSFELD, M-". Ka^an. Pamphlet about woman's home industry handwork in Kazan. Compiled by M' me Krivaksin, bound by M -me Blossfeid. 306 1 . Towel for kneeling and rosary band used by old ritua- lists (dissenters) at prayers. Home industry work of Kazan women. 2. Chuvash womens' costume. Collected in Tetiushi and Tsivilsk districts. 3. Chuvash women's ornaments. From Cheboksary district. 4. Four dolls in Cheremiss' costumes: men's, women's, boy's and girl's. 5. Cheremiss' costumes and clothing articles. JVJ\ 4 and 5 from Tsarevokokshaisk district. 6. Small fur carpet. Home industry work of Kazan women. 7. Embroideries on drawn linen: curtain representing Ka- zan Coat of Arms; covering and coverlet. Embroideries on drawn linen are worked in many vil- lages of the gov. of Kazan, but principally in the village Shushary in Kazan district. 8. Ancient ,,kichka", head-dress, and ,,fata u , veil. 9. Collection of towels, table clothes etc. 10. Ancient Chuvash towel. 11. Samples of towels, table clothes, napkins etc. Women's home industry work from the Kazan, Spassk and Tetiushi districts and from the Volga stepps. 12. Specimens of ^ichegi", boots and ,,tiubiteiki", head- dress, manufacture. The manufacture of ichegi's is localised in Kazan among the tartars. These Asiatic boots are sold at the Nizhni Novgorod, Menzeiinsk, Irbit and other fairs, Irom where they are sent to remote eastern districts po- pulated by musulmen. The number of ichegi's of different 307 sorts, manufactured in Kazan, amounts to 3 ,000,000 pairs, value 5,000,000 roubles. The ichegi's are made from goat and sheep skins, colored or black, embroidered or plain. The ichegi's are sewn out of three pieces: a) the ,,kriuk", i. e. the upper, front and back strained together; b) the heel and c) the sole. The chief distinction of Asiatic boots is the fancy shaped heel. The patterns on the ichegi's are stitched in ,,riabinovka", i. e. ripplingly, ripple marked, in cotton, silk and gold. The ichegi's are sewn by Russian women and only the sole is united to the upper by the tartars themselves. The number of workwomen employed in sewing ichegi's is stated to 2,000; they all inhabit the outskirts of Kazan and the adjacent villages. 13. Albums with photographs of women's costumes, speci- mens of handwork etc. III. Articles from the gov. of Vologda. 644. COMMITTEE OF THE VOLOGDA [PER- MANENT HOME INDUSTRY EXHIBITION. Vologda. Collection of lace and of lace articles. In the gov. of Vologda lace making as home industry occupies 6,500 women, who earn about 110,000 roubles per year by it. 308 IV. Articles from the gov. of Viatka. 645. CONVENT OF THE ANNUNCIATION. town Sarapui. 1 . Samples of embroidery in silk on satin; velvet stitch, and flat stitch embroidery. 2. Samples of lace and filet-guipure. 646. CONVENT OF St. MARY.<(ZNAMENSKOY). town laransk. Embroidered cushion. 647. TEMPORARY CHARITY COMMITTEE for procuring work to needy women. town lelabuga. 1. Samples of hand woven tissues from twisted yarn. 2. Samples of lace and plaited work. 309 648. MARIA GYMNASIUM. Viaika. Specimens of pupils work. 1. Map of the gov. of Viatka embroidered in silks on white satin. 2. Embroidery on velvet with fish scales and silver can- netille. 3. Embroidery in birch tree bark and silks on velvet. i. Tissues and handwork of local female home industry. 2 Samples of shoes, boots and gloves. 3. Tissues for home use and made to order; ancient country lace; samples of fringes and insertion, worked by peasant women of the Sarapul district. 4. Samples of hand weaving and other handwork of the peasant women of the Urzhum district. 5. Tissues and handwork of the tartar population. V. Articles from the gov. of Orenburg. 649. CONVENT OF THE ASSUMPTION. Orenburg. 1. Painted wax candles. 2. Painted image. 3. Knitted shawls of goat's down. 4. Embroidery in gold, chenille etc. 5. Samples of clothing, binding etc. 310 650. CONVENT OF ODIGITRIA. town Chetiabinsk. Samples of clothing; flat stitch and embroideries in silks, gold and chenille; knitted articles. 651. COMMUNITY OF ORSK. Samples of needle work and knitted articles. 652. GIRLS GYMNASIUM. Handwork classes. Samples of handwork made by the pupils. 653. GIRLS PROGYMNASIUM. Samples of handwork made by the pupils. 654. GIRLS PROGYMNASIUM. Samples of handwork made by the pupils. Orenburg. Orenburg. tou'n Chetiabinsk. 311 - 655. R Y K O V, M" me M. 1. Samples of knitting and backstitch. 2. Wedding sheet of ancient work, trimmed with lace. 656. SV1YAZHNOV, M' me A. Towel of ancient work, embroidered in gold, silver and silks on linen canvas. 657. POKROVSKY, E. Towel of ancient work, stitched in silk and trimmed with lace. 658. OBODOVSKY, M"" e . Flat stitch on velvet and embroidery in silks on cloth. Work of the exponent. 659. RYKOV, M. v Collection of goat's down shawls. Female home industry. 660. UMNOV, M-'" e . Colleciton of goat's down shawls. Female home industry. 3*2 1. Twenty live goat's down shawls, exhibited by different exponents. 2. Goat's down shawls, knitted by Cossack women of the Orsk district. The knitting of goat's down shawls affords occupation to the women and girls of the Cossack population and partly the peasantry of Orenburg, but mostly in the Oren- burg, Orsk and Verkhneuralsk districts. This work re- quires much time and labour. For knitting a small shawl of 300 stitches, i. e. about 4 square archms, not less than three weeks are required, and for larger shawls from one to three months. The w T ork, therefore attracts the wo- men only in time free from field labours, from the middle September till middle May; but, as home industry it still lends great support to the workers household. The material used is the down, the finest wool of grey and white goats and is obtained by simply combing the goats, while moulting with a common comb. To special order, the Orenburg" shawls are knitted from wool mixed with silk the latter being, supplied by the buyers. The designs for the knitting are mostly drawn by the workwomen themselves. Sometimes when short of patterns they copy them from the ice pattern in their half - frozen windows or employ traditionnal drawings, that pass as heirlooms from generation to gene- ration and have each a special name The shawl, when knitted, is washed in soap water, and then dried before being sold. But traders often purchase the shawls unwashed, and cleanse and stret;he them themselves. 3. Samples ot hand weaving and handwork of the pea- sant women of the Cheliabinsk district; of the emigrant peasant and Cossack women of the Orenburg district; and Cossack and Bashkir women of Verkhneuralsk. 313 VI. Articles from the gov. of Smolensk. 661. URUSSOV, Princess M. town Sychevka. School of spinning and weaving. 1. Articles manufactured in the workshops of the school. Cloth of different colours: beaver, ourse and diagonal. Plaids unicolored and checked. Goat's down shawls unicolored and checked. Rough towels and sheets, cotton and linen. Straight carpets. Towels, with woven designs, bleached and unbleached. Table cloths and napkins. Linen bleached and unbleached. Sacks and sack cloth. Linen fabrics for ladie's dresses. Silk materials. Lace. Specimens of common tissues of local peasants work. Yarn and thread. 2. Models of implements of the spinning and weaving workshops. 3. Photographs of the workshops. 4. Articles of homework weaving industry in the Sychevka district. 5. Description of the industry and a report about the work of the School. VII. Articles from the gov. of Simbirsk. 662. GONCHAROV, M E. 1. Doll: a Mordva woman in a Sunday dress. 2. Mordva towels with lace. 3. Different clothing articles of Mordva women. 4. Mordva embroideries; stools, cushions, rolls, curtains etc. 5. Cloth made of local flax, of different colors. 6. Russian towels, trimmed with Yelets lace, 7. Collection of tartar towels, used for ornamenting the doors, windows and mirrors in the houses of the Tartars, on great festivities. VIII. Articles collected in the gov. of Nizhni Novgorod, by the Nizhni Novgorod Society for assistance of the poor, under the presidence of M- A. I. Baranov. 663. K O P T E V, M' me I. A headdress, emdroidered in pearls. From the Balakhna district. - 315 - 664. BOGDARIN, M"" 6 A. Lace articles made of silk and thread, handwork of local home industry. 665. MIKHAYLOV, M"" 6 M. 1. Samples of swan's down tissues. 2. Clothing articles, made of down. 666. VINOGRADOV, M' me L. 1. Samples of swan's down tissues. 2. Goat's down shawls. 3. Clothing articles, made of down. 667. PODTUROV, M"" e D. 1. Womens caftan, small over-coat with plaits, embroi- dered in gold on linen. 2. Showl, embroidered in gold on taffeta. Work of the exponent. 668. VLADYKIN, M"" 6 A. 1. Women's caftan emroidered in gold on crimson velvet. 2. Shawl, embroidered in gold on lilac silk. Work of the exponent. 669. KOCHETOV, M- me M. Nizhni-Novgorod district. Sarafan, Russian national dress, gold weaving on brown satin with fringe. - 316 - IX. Articles from the gov. of Yaroslavl. 670. KHANYKOV, M-" e . Yaroslavl district. Workshop of handwork. Samples of towels, shawls, napkins etc. X. Articles from the gov. of Kaluga. 671. LADIES PHILANTHROPIC SOCIETY, under the direction of the Imperial Phi anthropic Society. Kaluga. Industrial asylum. Embroideries in silk, knitted articles. 672. C H A P K I N, M" L. A. Medyn distrcit. Ancient embroidery in silks on straw. Work of the beginning of the present century. 673. BILIBIN, M' me . Kaluga. Ancient embroidery on canvas. 674. VIASEMSKY, Princess M. Kaluga. Embroidery on lawn. 675. RIABTSOV, M' me Z. Borovsk district. Lace articles. Samples of handwork of peasant women of the Kaluga and Borovsk districts: wedding towels and trimming for clothing. XL Articles collected in the gov. of Minsk. 676. DIRECTION OF THE ELEMENTARY COUNTRY SCHOOLS. Minsk. Samples of pupil's work: knitted articles, embroideries in silk, wool etc. and filet-guipure. - 318 - 677. GIRLS GYMNASIUM. Minsk. Samples of pupils' needlework: embroidery, knitting back- stitch etc. 678. GIRLS PARISH SCHOOL. Belonging to the Clergy, Towel embroidered in Russian flatstitch. 679. DOROHAIEVSKY, M' rae V. town Igumen. Picture, embroidered in silks, copy of a painting of Gabriel Maks: ,,The Image of our Saviour". XII. Articles collected in Odessa by the local Ladies Committee. 680. THE FIRST MARIA TOWN GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Odessa. Work of the pupils: 1. Plush cushion in ancient Russian style. 2. Screen, flat stitch embroidery. 681. SECOND TOWN GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Work of the pupils: 1. Silk towel embroidered in Russian style. 2. Stool, flatstitch embroidery. 3. Sample of the uniform dress of the pupils. 682. TOWN SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. Work of the pupils: Altar-cloth and two palls, embroidery in gold. Embroidered coat of Arms of Odessa. Flatstitch embroidery on lawn and plush. Embroidered table-cloth. Carpets in South-Russian style. Odessa. Odessa. 683. TOWN ELEMENT ARYISCHOOLS. Odessa. Work ol the pupils: %.. i- st School: curtains, crotchet work. 2- nd School: bands for curtains, net-work. 3- rd School: child's dress, a jour" work on linen. 4- th School: lady's morning dress, coverlet, knitted coverlet for a pillow. 5' th School: lady's shirt, ,,a jour" work on silk. 6- th School: band for an armchair flatstitch embroidery. y- th School: towel for an image, embroidery in Russian style. 320 684. CHILDRENS ASULUM OF THE EMPRESS MARIA FEODOROVNA. Odessa. Work of the children: 1. Coverlet for a cushion, embroidered in flat stitch on batiste. 2. Towel, Russian netting. 685. RIGANELOVICH, M' me . Odessa. School ol 4 classes. Work ot the pupils: coverlet for a cushion. 686. JURGENSON, M' me N. 1. King David", picture embroidered in flat stitch on linen. 2. ,,Hercules", embroidery of the XVII century. 3. ,,The children of king Edward IV", two pictures, hand- work in point Gobelin. 4. ,,A Little Russian woman", picture embroidered in flat stitch on silk. 5. A holiday in Little Russia", picture embroidered in flat stitch on linen. 321 - 21 XIII. Articles from the gov. of Kiev. 687. PRIMARY TOWN SCHOOL, of 2 classes. Town Kanev. Work of the pupils. 688. PRIMARY TOWN SCHOOL, of 2 classes. Town Chigirin. Work of the pupils. XIV. Articles from the gov. of Tula. 689. ELEMENTARY COUNTRY SCHOOLS. Work of the pupils. XV. Articles from the gov. of Kursk. 690. THE MARIA GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Kursk. Work of the pupils. 322 XVI. Articles from the gov. of Poltava. 691. GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Town Priluki. Work of the pupils. 1. Pillow, embroidered in gold on velvet. 2. Mat for a lamp, an ornament made of mellon seeds. 3. Ernbroidered towels. 4. Crochet work. XVII. Articles from the gov. of Orel. 692. ABRAMENKOV, M' me A. Jeiets district. i . Samples of silk and thread lace, peasants home industry. 2 Pillow with an unfinished lace disign. 3. Album of patterns. The exhibitor conducts the lace making industry in the neighbouring villages near her residence and under her directions 150 lace workers are employed. Flax thread and silk yarn are- supplied from Moscow. The lace is sold in the home industry Museum of the Zemstvoofthe gov, of Moscow and by the aid of private persons in St. Petersburg, Voronezh, Bukharest and other localities. 323 693. KAZACHEK, M' me A. Mtsensk district. Specimens of the work of peasant women home industry. XVIII. Articles from the gov. of Kovno. 694. GUKOVSKY, C, Member and secretary of the statistical committee of the gov. of Kovno. Kovno. Samples of hand weaving and home clothing articles worked by the Kovno peasant women. The production is principally for supplying the wants of the workers; surplus is sold at the local markets; weaving materials, flax and wool local. An agricultural and do- mestic training school for adult women has been recently founded in one of the districts of the above mentioned government, namely the one of Ponevezh. XIX. Articles from the Province of the Don Cossacks. 695. OZNOBISHINA, M"" e N. Kietsk settlement. Knitted shawls made of oats down. The industry was introduced through the endeavour of the exhibitor among the Cossack women of the Ust- Medveditsk region. 324 - XX. Articles from the gov's of Poland, collected by M" me M. Gurko, wife of the Warsaw Governor-General. 696. ZAMOISKY, Countess K. Gov. of Sedtets. Samples of tissues, work of local peasant women. 697. RUN AT, M"" e J. Gov. of Suvaikij. Samples of wool fabrics, woven by local peasant women. 698. V O L L O V I C H, M E. Gov. of Suvaiky. Samples of tissues, work of local peasant women. 699. SAKRZHEVSKY, M F. Gov. of Warsaw. Straw hats, work of local peasant women. 325 700. ZIBERG-PLATER, Countess C. Warsaw. Work of the pupils of a professional school, established by the Countess in Warsaw. 1. Samples of embroidery in silk, gold, etc. 2. Articles of ladies clothing. 701. R O S H K O V S K Y, M- e S. Warsaw. Work of pupils by the method of Frebel. 702. KORSHCHINSKY, M' me A. Warsaw. Industrial school for girls. Work of the pupils: 1. Engraving on metals. 2. Wood etching. 3. Lithographs. 4. Turnery, book-binding and basket making. 5. Gloves. 703. B A K K A, M""' C. Warsaw. Embroidered picture w Hagar u , imitation of gobelin. - 326- 704. R E I S K Y, Baroness J. Warsaw. Image covering, embroidered in gold. 705. KHORONZHINA, M me M. Warsaw. Embroideries in silk on velvet and satin. 706. TSEKHOMSKY, eM" me S. Warsaw. Worked carpet. 707. GOLENSKY, M T. Gov. of Kaiisb, town Vdiun. Embroidered tablecloth, imitation of work of the XVII century. 327 708. DOBOSHINSKY, M' me J. 1. Samples of needle-work. 2. Musical composition. 709. Z B I E V S K Y, M' me J. Embroidered napkins. 710. KOZHUKHOVSKY, M- S. Embroidery on net. 711. Z A B O R S K Y, M S. Guipure-work articles. 712. SERNAKER, M' me R. Knitted articles. Warsaw. Warsaw. Warsaw. Warsaw. Warsaw. - 328 - 713. M A G E L A N E R, M""' E. and T. Knitted articles. 714. KOSMALSKY, M"" 6 A. Nets, coverings for horses. 715. KAGOROVSKY, M"" 6 T. Lace handwork. 716. SILLA-NOVITSKY, M"" 6 F. Warsaw. Warsaw. Warsaw. Warsaw. Two ancient-lace coverlets for a bed, women's handwork of the end of the XVII century. 717. V O I T S I N S K Y, M A. A Mazur child's costume. Warsaw. 329 718. Z I M A I E R, M- n ' e E. Silk embroideries. 719. GALETSKY, J Manual for cutting out dresses. War saiv. A. and daughter. Warsaw, 720. F I O R E N T I N I, M"" 6 M. Two pictures embroidered in silks on silk. 1. ,Jan Sobiessky". 2. W A view on the sea tt . Warsaw, 721. KHRZHANOVSKY, M' me A. Lay-figure lor ladies costumes. Warsaw, 722. BLOTSISHEVSKY, M"" 6 J. Gov. of Sediets. 1. Silk of local culture. 2. Articles worked out of it. - 330 - 723. S I VI N SKY, M""' V. Basket with artificial flowers. 724. V I S L I T S K Y, M" 1 " M. Screen painted, with artificial flowers. 725. P O S V I K, M B. Painting on porcelain. 726. GLOVATSKY, M"" e M. Painting on wood, porcelain etc. 727. RODZIEVICH, M"" 6 J. Painting on porcelain. Warsaw. Warsaw. Warsaw. Warsaw. Warsaw. 33* 728. KONOPCHINSKY, M" me L. Warsaw* Painting on porcelain. 729. BOGUSLAVSKY, M""" M. Warsaw. Small carved cupboard, with etchings on wood after designs of Mateiko. 730. V O I T S I T S K Y, M J. Warsaw. Relief geographical maps with explanatory tables. 731. DZEVANOVSKY, M"" 6 J. Gov. ofPtotsk. Painting from nature; ,,A bouquet of flowers'". 332 732. EIDZIATOVICH, M' me H. Warsaw. Three paintings in oil: 1. ,,An Arab". 2. Grandmother". 3. ,,A woman's head". 733. BOGUSSKY, M' me J. Warsaw. Painting in oil: ,,Cows at a stream". 734. ESKE-KHOINSKY, nee Countess Minorsky. Warsaw. Musical compositions. 735. BROEL-PLATER, Countess M. Warsazc. Musical compositions. - 333 - XXI. Articles, collected in the Pri-Amur province, by the late Governor- General Baron A. Korf and his wife Baroness S. Korf. Articles from the island Sakhalin. 1. Fulldress Khalat (vestment), n Emi.", made of common nettle thread web. 2. ,,Khalat" made of elm bast. 3. Khalat" made of common elm bast. 4. Belt made of colored nettle thread. 5. Upper woman's dress made of skin of the fish ,kety% Salmo lagocephalus. 6. Child's dress made of seal skin. 7. Winter hat made of fox fur. 8. Winter boots ,,niro"; boot-leg made of sea-calfskin, trim- med with otter fur. 9. Boots made of fish skin. 10. Mittens ,,mashumeri" made of dog-skin. n. Gun case made of musk deer paws. 12. Tobacco pouch made of sea-lion skin embroidered in japan thread. 1 3 . Seal skin pouch for tinder and flint stone. 14. Upper shirt made of japan cotton web. 15. Head dress. 1 6. Nettle fibre cleansing stand. 17. Ain " loom, local invention, for nettle and bast thread webs. 1 8. Loom for weaving belts. 19. Model of appliance for dressing fish skins. 20. Model of loom for mat weaving. 21. Samples of mats and articles of bark. J\J\ i 21 worked by Ain women. 334 - 22. Black dog-fur coat w Konok*. 23. Petticoat khospo" made of sea-calf skin. 24. Half sleeves torliaz" to a pelisse made of purchased stuft. 25. Man's winter hat ^utgu-gapk" made of deer paws. 26. Frontlet ,,tomp" made of squirrel tails. 27. Lappets nassayr", trimmed with dog paws fur. 28. Woman's winter cap ungu-gik ft . 29. Clothing articles made of Japanese cotton fabrics, dog hides and fish skin. 30. Articles made of birch tree bark. 3 1 . Model of a Giliak cradle. 32. Model of a Giliak fishing net, the black ropes on the edges of the net are made of willow bast. 33. Model of bag-net made of nettle thread. 34. Samples of dressed hare and dog skins. 3 5 . Samples of women clothing articles made of carp skin. 36. Samples of articles made of nettle thread. 22 36 worked by Giliak women. 37. Clothing and saddlery and harness articles made of deer skin. 38. Articles made of birch-tree, worked by Tunguz and Orochen women. - 335 Articles from the Primorsk province. 1. Clothing articles and fur carpets. Work of Tunguz women. A full costume of a married women with knife and steel in silver mounting; man's silk costume on lamb fur with knife in silver mounting etc. 2. Clothing articles made of different tissues and fish skin, embroidered in silks. Work ot Goild women. 3. Clothing articles. Work of Kamchadal, Koriak, Oliutor, Chuvash and Chukots women. 4. Clothing articles. From the collections of Baron A. Korf. Buriat's man summer ,,tyrlyiv", Buriat summer hat, Buriat belt, decora- ted with silver and corals, with knife and steel; men's silk boots jjgotuiy"; Buriat's woman summer ,,turlyk". 5. Man's and women's silk clothing articles; leathern articles. Work of Ain women. 6. Orochen's women clothing articles. -336 - XXII. Articles collected by M" B. Vyshnegradsky, President of the Ladies Committee. 736. KRAMSKOY, M"" e . St. Petersburg. Portrait in water colors of Her Imperial Majesty the Empress of Russia. 737. SHUVALOV, Countess E. St. Petersburg. Embroidered frame for the above portrait. 738. VORONTSOV-DASHKOV, Countess M. St. Petersburg. Embroidered frame. 739. LAM AN SKY, M"" e A. Si. Petersburg, Great Cross of St. Catherine, painting on porcelain. r - 337 - 740. BILBASSOV, M. St. Petersburg. Women's work, embroidery in silks and bugles on birch tree bark. 741. KALAM, M- rae . St. Petersburg. Embroidered towels. 742. SHNEIDER, M' me A. St. Petersburg. Flowers from nature", painting in water colors. 743. GROT, M' me N. v St. Petersburg 1. ,,An old woman", pencil drawing. 2. Four paintings in oil: ,,Izba", Russian peasant house; two types of women of the gov. of Riazan, Nosegay". 3. Portrait of Count L. Tolstoi, etching on wood. - 338 744. SIFFERS, M"" 6 T. St. Petersburg. Two pictures, etching on wood. 745. GR EVEN ITS, Baroness C. St. Petersburg. Painting on wood: tabourets and shelves in Russian style. 746. KRASNUSHKIN, M"" e E. Moscow. Painting on wood: Troika'-. 747. S H T R A M, M' me L. St. Petersburg. 1 . A shelf in Russian style, etching and water color painting. 2. Troika", etching and water color painting. 3. Frame for the above picture, etching on gold. 4. Russian Coat of Arms, etching and water color painting. 5. Table-cupboard Russian style, etching and water color painting. 748. LIDERT, M""' O. St, Petersburg. Painting on porcelain, four pictures: .John the Terrible'-, ., Lorelei", Cupid in a nest", Cupid on a branch". 749. R O Z E N, Baroness, M. Sf. Petersburg. Panel; Russian ornament, painted in ordinary ceramic colors on baked glaze. 750. NAZIMOV, M- N. St. Petersburg. Painting on porcelain: Prayer beiore supper". 751. V I T T, M"" e M. Sr.^Pelersbnrg. Embroidery in silks on satin. 1. Fire screen. 2. Screen. Worked from own designs by the exhibitor, aged 76, former inspectrcss of the Nicholaiev Institute, a pensioner of Their Imperial Majesties, widow of an artist. The embroideries are presented for exhibition by M~ r Lvov. 340 752. KIKODZE, M' me N. Gov. of Ratals, town Sukhiim Kate. Knitted silk articles. Home industry handwork from local silk by peasant women of the Ozurget district, gov. of Kutais. 753. ROGINSKY, M- nie . Pskov. Child's costume trimmed with handmade lace. 754. RIZNIKOV, M" 116 A. St. Petersburg. Album of phototype designs of patterns for lace making. 755. OGAREV, M. St. Petersburg. Two ancient embroideries worked on drawn linen. 341 xxra. Articles collected by M"" e Naryshkin, member oi the Ladies Committee. 1. Small cupboard for the water colors of M' me Bern (see JV 768); embroidery on satin: Symbolical bird ,,Sirin", ancient Russian design. 2. Embroidery on satin, reproduction of the doors ot the Novgorod Cathedral. 3. Three panels, application work, ancient Russian design. 4. Hand woven carpets. 5. Toilet table, embroidery in thread and gold on drawn linen from a design of the XIV century. 6. Ancient embroideries. 7. Collection of Russian lace and lace articles. 8. Quilt and coverlet for a pillow, plaited. 9. Curtain for a door representing cherubs. 10. Articles of down: quilt and dress, trimmed with silver, i T . Insertions and trimmings for a dress. 12. Embroidery in gold on silver: a dress and trimmings for it. 1 3 . Collection of tartar towels. 14. Collection of Russian towels and edgings tor them. 15. Collection of Little Russian towels. 1 6. Collection of table cloths, worked in gold, silks etc. 17. Stripe worked in silks on a pale blue ground, an ancient ornament from Kiev; embroidered cushion, etc. 1 8. Collection of Torzhok articles: embroideries in gold and silver on velvet and satin; embroidered leathern articles. - 342 - 19. Collection of articles made by the peasant women of the gov. of Chernigov: embroidered tissues, table cloths, curtains and carpets. 20. Troika", a group in wax, modelled by M" me N. 2 1 . Paintings in water colors: views of Little Russia, varie- ties of mushrooms growing in Russia, by M" me N. The lace, needle work and carpets, exhibited by M- me Na- ryshkin are worked under her instructions and from her designs chiefly by peasant women near her estate in the gov. of Tambov. When not employed in field work, they come to M- mo Naryshkin's house to learn embroidering, lace making etc. The patterns are drawn on paper, sewn on coarse linen and then worked in thread by the peasant women at home. The work is paid for by the arshin, and according to its quality; the liner the thread, more com- plicated the pattern, and more carefully accomplished the work, the dearer is the pay. Sheep wool for carpets is dyed on the estate; carpets woven partly on the estate, partly at home by the peasant women. The necessary ma- terials are supplied to the workers by M' mo Naryshkin. 756. CONVENT OF THE HOLY VIRGIN. St. Petersburg. Embroidered table cloth. 343 - XXIV. Articles collected by M' me B. Kochubei, member of the Ladies Committee. 1 . Picture worked in black silk on batiste by M"" e A. Kle- vetsky and presented to the Emperor Alexander I" 1 . 2. Picture, flat stitch embroidery in silks, worked in a convent at the end of the XVIII century. 3. Old Russian lace of the XVII century. 4. Stripe, embroidered in different Russian stitches on drawn linen and trimmed with Russian lace, worked in the gov. of Chernigov. 5. Old Russian embroidery on drawn linen, representing ships. 6. Stripe, worked on netting in different Russian stitches and trimmed with Russian lace, worked in Little Russia. XXV. Articles collected by M' me E. Naryshkin, member of the Ladies Committee. 757. THE ATHANASIUS' CONVENT. Gov. of Yaroslavl. Icons embroidered in gold, presented by Princess E. Ku- rakin. 344 758. THE MARIA PRACTICAL LACE MAKERS SCHOOL, under the patronage of Her Impe- rial Majesty the Empress of Russia. St. Petersburg. Needlework articles. 759. KAZNACHEIEV, M- me S. Gov. of Ria^an. Women's home industry work. Embroidery on linen. Under the guidance of M' me Kaznacheiev the peasant women from 1 5 villages in the Mikhailov district are taught needle work. In order to superintend the instructions M' me Kaznacheiev assisted by the Ministry of Public Domains has founded a practical industrial school in the village Podliess. 345 XXVI. Articles, collected by Princess M. A. Shakhovskoy, Maid of Honor to Her Imperial Majesty the Empress of Russia and delegate of the Ladies Committee at the World's Columbian Exposition. 760. DUBASSOV, M' me A., POLENOV, M"" e E., OLSUFFIEV, M' me T., VOLKONSKY, Princess E. and others. St. Petersburg. Frontage of the Russian section of Women's Work in ..Wo- men's Building" at the World's Columbian Exposition. Failing on gilt oak, etching on wood, design of the XII century taken from the lunev-Polsky Church, from the work of Prince G. Gagarin. Executed under direction of Prin- cess M. A. Shakhovskoy. 761. VASILCHIKQV, M' 1 "" M. St. Petersburg. A door made from designs taken from the Savin Convent in the gov. of Moscow. Imitation of ancient image ornamenting work. 762. SHAKHOVSKOY, Princess M. A., pupil of M. Antokolsky. St. Petersburg. 1. Marble bust of Princess Obolensky. 2. ,,Head of an old man", terra cotta. - 346 - 763. BARIATINSKY, Princess O. St. Petersburg. Paintings in oil. 1. Portrait of prince B. 2. Female figure, sketch from nature. 764. VASILCHIKOV, M- me O. St. Petersburg. Nature morte", painting in oil. 765. IMERETINSKY, Princess A. St. Petersburg. Landscape", drawing in pen and ink. 766. BEGGROV-GARTMAN, M""". St. Petersburg. Paintings in oil. 1. W A child's head". Enfant au biberon", Munich 1892. 2. .,The bilberries are ripe". 767. OLSUFFIEV, M' me T. St. Petersburg. View of the river Oka", painting in oil. 347 1. Collections of wool fabrics, hand woven. Work of peasant women of the gov. of Penza, under direction of Princess M. A. Shakhovsky. 2. Samples of embroidery in albums. Executed in the gov. Riazan under direction of Princess M. N. Shakhovskoy. XXVII. 768. BEM, M- me E. St. Petersburg. 1 . Collection of articles in crystal. The form of the articles and the engravings -oi\ them are from designs by the exhibitor. 2. Collection of designs for publications, silhouettes, cards in Russian style, etc. 3. Collection of water color drawings, originals. 4. Fan painted in water colors. XXVIII. 769. DURNOVO, M"" 6 M. 1. Door, imitation of image ornamenting work. Executed under direction of M' me Durnovo by patterns taken from ancient Russian Convents. 2. A dog", wax- work by M' mo N. - 34 - DEPARTMENT J Electricity and electric appliances. Department J. Group 134. Classes 797, 800 and 801. 770. MINISTRY OF MARINE. St. Petersburg* The Kronstadt diving school. Telephones and, conduits. See Dep. F. N 364. Department J. Group 138. Class 819. 771. MINISTRY OF WAR. St. Petersburg. The St. Petersburg Arsenal. 1. Part of the press ,,Mohr-Teder harp. 2. Bronze apparatus of Prince Gagarin. 3. Acumulators. Department J. Group 138. Class 819. 772. PROKHOROV, N. Kiev, 1. Electric clock with repeater. 2. Regulator with prolonged winding. Exhibited as invention. Department J. Group 130. Class 790. 773. ANTONIEV. Gov. of Ria^an, Skopin district. Manipulator for automatically transmitting the telegraph signs of Morse, with apparatus of the same system. Department J. Group 138. Class 819. 774. IMIANITOV, B. Gov. of Vitebsk, town Dvinsk. Electric arc lamp .,Ring". Exhibited as invention. 352 Department J. Group 126. Class 769. 775. FEINSTEIN, S. St. Petersburg. Copper and bronze foundry and mechanical workshop. Electric switches. Founded in 1884, production value 12.000 roubles per year. Workshop includes 20 various machines; 20 workmen and 4 minors employed. Materials Russian. Sale in Russia. Department J. Groups 126 and 129. Classes 764, 765, 769, 770, 778 and 779. 776. VLADIMIROV, N. St. Petersburg. 1. Battery of accumulators capacity '30 ampere-hours at 30 25 volts. 2. Amperemeters. 3. Voltmeters. 4. Safety switch. 5. Electric switch. 6. Rheostat. 7. Incandescent lamp. 8. Arc lamp. 9. Mountings for incandescent lamps. 10. Various appliances. SSX 23 Department J. Groups 123, 128 and 133. Classes 764, 777 and 790. 777. PERSKY, C. St. Petersburg. 1 . Electric indicator. 2. Model of an electric circuit. 3. Electric cupboard. 4. Clock mechanism. 5. Signalling apparatus. 6. Box for galvanic battery. 354 )EPARTMENT K. FINE ARTS. Fine Arts. Painting, sculpture, architecture and decoration. Collection of Pictures and Statues, exhibited by the Imperial Academy of Arts. 778. AD AM SON. Wood-carvings. 1. r Dying hyacinth". 2. Helpless". 779. AYVASOVSKY, J. 1. ,,The Ship Santa Maria on its way to America; Co- lumbus during a violent storm, surrounded by his discontented crew". 2. Landing of Columbus and his suite at the island St. Salvador". 3. Columbus in his youth escaping on a mast from a fire on board a merchant ship, burnt by Venitian galleys near the shores of Portugal". 4. ,,Columbus' farewell before starting on his voyage from port Palos in Spain". 5. Arrival of Columbus' flotilla at the shores of America". 6. Naples from Posilippo on a moonlight night". 7. ,,ln a gondola at Venice". 357 8. ,,The Parhtenon of Athens in ancient days". 9. Wrecked". 10. Garibaldi and his followers on board a steamer", n. Yalta in the morning". 12. ,,A streat in Bakhchisaray". 13. n A storm near the shores of the Crimea". 14. B A boat in a storm". 15. ,,A lighthouse in the sea of Marmora". 1 6. w Constantinople from the sea of Marmora". 17. ^Breakers on shore of the Azov sea". 1 8. ,,Breakers on shore of the Black sea". 19. Yalta at night". 20. ^Environs of Malaga". The exhibitor is emerited professor * of marine pain- ting since 1847, member of the Council of the Imperial Academy of Arts since 1885 and honorary Member of the said Academy since 1887. Born 1817. Y80. ALEXEYEV, A. 1. w An Italian woman", 1884. 2. ,,Head of an Italian woman", 1889. Artist of IP nd degree since 1876 and honorary unat- tached associate of the Imperial Academy of Arts since 1866. Born 1842. 781. ASKNASIY, J. 1. Moses Parents". 2. Celebration of the Sabbath". 3. ,,A talmudist bridegroom under trial by a Rabbi". Academist of historical painting. Born 1856. * There are several denominations, assigned in Russia to professors both in science and arts, according to their degrees, of which B emerited professor" is the highest; the first is ^private decent", which is folloved by adjoint professor", ^extraordinary professor" and ^ordinary professor". - 3)8 - 782. BECLEMICHEV, W. ,,A fugitive slave", plaster group. Sculptor, artist of p st degree, pensioner of the Imperial Academy of Arts. Born 1861. 783. BOBROV, V. ,,Ertskus Hertske, a Kovno Jew", 1886. Academist of portrait painting since 1873 and etcher. Born 1842. 784. BODAREVSKY, N. W A wedding in Little Russia". Class-artist of T st degree of historical painting since 1875. Born 1850. 785. BRONNIKOV, Th. , Christians before death after the so called free supper", 1878; property of the Academy. Professor of historical painting since 1863. Born 1827. -5=3? S- 786. BRUNI, N. ,,Taper bearer"; property of the Academy. Class-artist of I' st degree. Born 1856. 359 787. VASILIEV, Th. After rain"-, property of the Academy. Landscape painter. Born 1850, died 1873. 788. VILLEVALDE, B. ,,Today you tomorrow I"; property of the Academy. Professor of battle painting since 1848, member of the Academy Council since 1859 and emerited professor. Born 1818. 789. VENIG, Ch. W A Russian girl", 1889; property of the Academy. Professor of historical and portrait painting since 1862, member of the Academy Council since 1871; professor at the Academy since 1869 and professor of I' st degree since 1888. Born 1869. 790. VOLKOV, E. Morning". Landscape painter. Born 1844. 791. VRANGEL, Baroness E. Winter landscape". Honorary unattached associate of the Imperial Academy of Arts since 1874. 360 792. GALIMSKY, V. ,,A forest". Landscape painter, class-artist of l~ si degree since 1880. Bora 1860. 793. GINTSBURG, E. Bronzes. 1. ,,An interesting story". 1 Property of the 2. ,,The first tune". I Academy. Statuets. 3. Count L. Tolstoy. 4. Shishkine. 5. A. Rubinstein. 6. P. Chaykovsky. 7. W. Vereshchaguine. 8. P. Strukov. 9. W. Stassov. Busts. 10. Count L. Tolstoy. 1 1 . Professor D. Mendeleyev. Plaster groop. 12. Bathing boys". Genre sculptor, class-artist of I' st degree. Born 1859. 794. GOLINSKY, W. ,,Mushroom gatherers at rest", 1888; property of the Aca- demy. Genre painter, class-artist of P st degree. Born 1854. - 361 - 795. GRANDKOVSKY, N. ,,On the swing". : :;: 796. DILLON, M' me M. 1. ^Capricious*, plaster. 2. ,,Indolency", bronze. Sculptor, class-artist of ir nd degree since 1888. Born 1858. 797. DMITRIEV ORENBURGSKY, N. 1. ,,A drowned man in a village"; property of the Academy. 2. ,,Studio of a battle painter". 3. ^Sunday in the country". Professor of battle painting since 1883 and genre painter. Bora 1838. 798. D I U K E R, E. w Noon day"; property of the Academy. Professor of landscape painting since 1873. Born 1841, 799. ENDOGUROV, I. 1. ,,Early spring"; property of the Academy. 2. ,,A shower". 3. ,,A winter evening in the country". Landscape painter. Born 1861 - 562 - 800. ENDOGUROV, S. Paintings in water colours. 1. ,,A quiet day". 2. After a storm". 3. Evening". 801. ZHURAVLEV, Th. 1. Haymakers at rest". 2. Loves me little loves me not". 3. ,,A family of street musicians", 1870. Genre painter, academist of painting since 1836. Born 1836. 802. ZAGORSKY, N. 1. ,,A heavy heart; property of the Academy. 2. ,,At breakfast". Genre painter, class-artist of I' st degree since 1875 Born 1849. 803. KIVSHENKO, A. i. ,,The military council at Phily", 1881; property of the Academy. In the memorable year 1812, after the undecided, but bloody battle of the 26 August at Borodino against Napo- leon, when tfie Russian Army lost nearly half of her troups, the Commander in chief, General Prince Kutuzov, not risk- ing to renew the battle next day, ordered a retreat to- - 363 - wards Moscow. Napoleon followed the Russians closely and another battle was to be expected every day. The position, that the Russian troops were obliged to occupy in order to protect the capital from the West, was most unfavarouble, being all cut by cavins and backed on all its line by the river Moscowa. The ennemies were ne- arly twice as numerous as the Russians, a defeat was most probable and should it occur, it threatened to ex- terminate the Russian army as a hasty retreat over the steep banks of Moscowa was not to be thought of. Prince Kutuzov then summoned a council of war for deciding the fatal question, weither the Russian Army was to accept battle or retreat and give up Moscow to the ennemy. The council united at the head-quarters of the Army, in the village of Phily, close to Moscow in a simple peasant's house. This solemn moment is that choosen by the artist for the exhibited painting. 2. Taking a wolf alive", 1889. 1 Property of the 3. ,,Feather sorting". Academy. 4. ,,Near the craters of Ledgi". Genre and battle painter, professor of painting since 1893. Born 1851. 804. KLAGESS, Th. ,,Interior view of the Cathedral of our Saviour in Moscow, 1884. Professor of perspective since 1883 and teacher in the Academy of Arcs since 1864; Keeper of the Academy Museum since 1887. Born 1814. The Cathedral of our Saviour in Moscow, is a monum- ent both religious and national. It has been erected in memory of the deliverance of Russia from the army of Napoleon in 1812. The Emperor Alexander I intrusted the architect Vidberg with the building of a Church of Thanksgiving to the Lord for the salvation of the Empire from Napoleon Vidberg first chose a place in the Gremlin bat afterwards decided, that it should be erected on the Sparrow Hills, a beautiful place in the vicinity of Moscow. - 3*4 - It was to consist of three sections, as an emblem of the three principal epochs of Christ's earthly life: the Birth, the Transfiguration and the Resurection. The first Church was to be under ground and distined to receive the remains of the heroes, who fell in 1812. The second had the form of a cross and was dedicated to the Holy Ghost; its place was on the side of the hill. The third Church, in form of a circle, was to stand on the top of the mount. The work went on so slowly, that the Emperor Alexander died before it was fairly begun. In 1827 a new commission was named by the Emperor Nicolas. The plan was pronounced as practically impossible and professor Toll was directed to undertake the work. The old place on the Sparrow Hills was desiited and on the lo-th September 1839 the foundation of the new building was laid in the centre of Moscow on the banks of the river Moscowa. The Cathedral is built in the Russian-bysantine style. It is 48V/J sazhens (339,5 feet) high and covers an area of 1,500 square sazhenes, i. e. 73,500 square feet. The largest central cupola of the five that cover the roof, has 16 win- dows which together with the 36 windows of the choir illuminate the whole building The exterior walls are partly inlaid with dark red granite from Finland. The interior is decorated with various marbles, labrador and other precious stones, brought from all parts of Russia, and with white slabs, with the names oi the officers and soldiers slain in battle in 1812. All round the Church run broad choirs, their walls are covered with paintings from Russian history and the history of the Byzantine Church. Pro- fessor Markov, who executed the image of God Sabaoth in the great cupola, employed 5 years to mllfill this enormous work. The most celebrated Russian painters, Xef, Makovsky, Semiradsky, Bronnikov, Vereshchagin and others, have disigned and painted the images for this grand and magnificent Church . The iconostasis, front wall of the inner chapel, that surrounds the altar, depicted in the painting of M' r Klagess, is entirely of snow white marble, with incrustations of red stone; it is covered by a roof of guilt bronze. The Cathedral is surrounded by gardens. The esplanade in front of it commands a beautifull view of the river and the Zamoskvorechiye, part of the city situated un the opposite bank of the Moscowa. 805. KLEVER, J. ,,A forest"; property of the Academy. Professor of landscape painting since 1881. Born 1850. 806. KLODT, Baron fon - Jurgensburg, M. ,,The Tzaritsa's Alms". Professor of landscape painting since 1864, professor at the Academy of Arts and member of the Academy Council since 1871. Bora 1832. The life of the wifes of the Tsars, the Tsaritsa's, in the XVI and XVII century was most dreary and monotonous. They were shut up in the palace; their only occupation consisted in trying on their rich costumes and in embroi- dering in gold and pearls. Every worldly pleasure was denyed to them, as unfit for their exalted rank. They drove out in closely shut up carriages, surrounded by armed men. Horse men rode before the train, scattering with long whips the curious crowd that run to see the sovereign's spouse on her way. The people that stood nearest, were commanded to fall on their knees and not to lift up their heads until the carriage had passed, for fear of the B evil eye ".In Church theTsaritsas had separate places, completely shut out from the rest of the congregation. The only distrac- tion the Ladies of the Tsar's family could enjoy were occasion- nal visits, on foot or in equipages, to the many Convents in Moscow or in the provinces. Those pious pilgrimages were performed with great style and ceremony. In the XVI and XVII century the Russian Convents were refuges for all those who needed help or shelter. The nuns nursed the sick, gave food and clothes to the needy, helped widows and orphans; even the insane, who were scarcely treated as human beings in those hard times, were sometimes received by the sisterhood. The Tsaritsas, every time they visited a Convent, gave abundant alms to the poor with their own hands. Baron Klodt's picture gives an illustra- tion of this custom. The Tsaritsa, acompanied by the young Princesses, her daughters and led by the abbess, has just descended into the vault that serves as hospital and as ward for the poor. She takes coins out of a casket, held by a lady in waiting and gives them to a women that kneels before her. Another lady takes bread out of a huge 566 basket. Along the walls sit and crouch insane women with clogs on their feet: a boyarynia, lady of the court, stoops down to one of them and speaks to her. A pale ray steals through the arched windows; the scene is lighted by the llame of tall wax candles held by several young nuns. 807. KOVALEVSKY, P. ,,Excavations in Rome", 1877 78; property of the Academy. Professor of battle painting since 1881. Born 1843. 808. KORSUKHIN, A. i. The brides evening party" 1889; property of the Academy. Marriages were always accompanied in Russia by many ceremonies and rejoicings. One of them was the brides party. On the eve of her marriage the bride invited all her friends and playfellows, asking them to help her to bid farewell to her happy maiden years. Marrying had in old times indeed this sad character for the bride of loosing entirely her freedom, as once married she became the full slave of her husband. The young girls, led by the swakha, the match-maker, an old women who arranged the marriage, and a person who claims the most important part on such occasions in Russia, go to the bath, where refreshments, sweatmeats and wine are plentifully provided. After much singing, dancing, laughing and joking all the party goes home, the bride surrounded by her friends. Before goes a young girl who sweeps the road with a broom, to send away spells that may be sent by some malicious person. Then follows the swakha with a brasspan; she beats on it with a stick to frighten the dark powers and spirits. The brides maids spread their shirts around the bride, to shield her from the evil eye. Once at home, the feast continues until late in the night. M' r Korsukhin has chosen for the subject of his pain- ting a scene of this kind in the midlle of the XVII century. - 367 - Now a days this custome is not to be met with all its old ceremonies and superstitiousness. It is still kept allthough modified in the country by the peasantry. In a form of just a young girls but quite joyfull party it is still considered obligatory amoung the tradesmen and nearly always takes place in the higher classes as well. 2. ,,At a crust of bread"; property of the Academy. Genre painter, academist of painting since 1868. Born 1835. 809. KOROVIN, C. i. Spanish women". 2. ,,At tea". 810. KRAMSKOY, J. Portraits: i. M" r Soloviev. i. M ooioviev. ) a. The artist's daughter. } Pr P ert y ot the Acadera Y- Academist of historical and portrait painting. Born 1837, di ed 1887. 811. KRACHKOVSKY, J. 1. ,,Xew moon"; property of the Academy. 2. ,,A morning in July". Academist of landscape painting since 1885. Born 1854. 368 812. KRYZHITSY, C. 1. ,,The heat is 'over and the cool breazes are come", 1889; property of the Academy. 2. ,,Coming home from work". 3. Winter", 1888. 4. A night scene in Little Russia". Academist of landscape painting since 1889. Born 1858. 813. KUSNETSOV, N. 1. ,,An arbiter of peace" 1888. The liberation of the serfs in Russia was effectuated by giving them the heriditary use of their homesteads and of allotments of ground from the property of their former masters, of sufficient size to satisfy their wants. At the same time the peasants were obliged at the request of their masters to remain at their service for a period of two years. To prevent any misunderstandings or dif- ferences of opinion which might arise in the distribution of these allotments, special officials were nominated from among the landowners, and these officials were rightly called the arbiters of peace" in virtue of the peaciful character of their mission. The best men out of the no- bility presented themselves as candidates and thanks to their impartial, just and disinterested dealings the difficult and complicated problem of entirely changing the rural and economical organisation of the Empire was accom- plished quietly and justly without disturbances or riots. 2. ,,In the garden", 1889. 3. ,,An interrupted breakfast". Genre and portrait painter. - 369 - 24 814. KOURIAR, P. W A landscape". Honorary unattached associate of the Academy, since 1882. 815. LEVITAN, I. ,,A Convent on the eve of a holiday". 816. L E M O K H, Ch. ^Peasant girls". Academist of painting since 1875. Born 1841. 81Y. LITOVCHENKO, A. ,,The Italian ambassador, Calvucci drawing the favourite falcons of the Tzar Alexey Mikha'ilovich" ; property of the Academy. 818. MAKOVSKY, V. 1. ,,A quarrel at cards". 2. ,,A miser". 3. ,,The rag-market in Moscow", 1879. 4. ,,A pilgrim". 5. Little-Russians smoking". Genre-painter, academist of painting since 1873. Born 1846. 819. MAKOVSKY, C. 1. ,,A Bacchanalia". 2. ,,The toilet of the bride". 3. ,,A lady's portrait". Professor of painting. Born 1835. 820. MESHCHERSKY, A. ,,The roadstead of Narva", 1886; property of the Academy. Professor of landscape painting since 1876. Born 1834. 821. MOROSOV, A. ,,A blast furnace". Genre painter, acadeinist of painting since 1864. Born 1835. 822. MIASSOYEDOV, Gr. i . Flight of Grigory Otrepiev from a tavern on the fron- tier of Lithuania", 1867; property of the Academy. This painting illustrates a scene from Boris Godunov", a tragedy of the Russian poet Pushkin. The son of John the Terrible, Dimitry, a child of seven years, who lived with his mother in exile in the town Uglich, was killed in 1591 by the order of a boyar Boris Godu- nov, brother in law and favourite of the Tsar Theodore loannovich. As this Tsar died childless, he left the throne of Russia vacant and Boris Godunov was elected Tsar. The beginning of his reign was wise and merciful. But soon a dreadful suspicion took possession of his mind. In every one he saw a traitor. Spies were sent into every house; for the least word people were taken to prison and put to death in the most cruel way. Neither boyar, citizen or peasant were sure of their lives. In those dreadfull times a monk, called Grishka Otrepiev, concieved the bold plan of taking possession of the throne under the name of the murdered Dimitry. He entered the service of the Patriach Job and soon won his confidence. Some incautious words that escaped him, aroused suspicion and an order was issued to arrest him. But he fled from Moscow in time. On the road he met two old monks. They agreed to travel together. As they stopped at an inn the young pretender was reco- gnised by a patrol. He sprang out of a window and esca- ped over the frontier to Lithuania. 2. Harvest time", 1887, duplicate of a picture belonging to His Imperial Majesty, the Emperor of Russia. Genre painter, academist of painting since 1870. Born 1835. 823. NAVOSOV, W. ,,A free soup kitchen", 1889; property of the Academy. Genre painter and draftsman, class-artist of I" st degree since 1889. Born 1862. 824. NOVOSKOLTSEV, A. 1. ,,A negro's head", 1885; property of the Academy. 2. ,,The last moments of the Metropolitan Philip, 1889; property of the Academy. Academist of historical painting since 1889. Bora 1853. Since the year 1323 the metropolitans (archbishops) ot Moscow always were the nearest councillors of the Tzars. The sovereigns of Russia never acted without the blessing and guidance of the head of the Church. The metropolitans ~ 372 were the refuge of the poor and the defendants of the persecut- ed and the innocent. John the Terrible was the first Tzar who openly rebelled against this custom. He discharged the metropolitan Herman from his office and soon after the vener- able archbishop died suddenly. The choice of the Tzar, clergy and boyars fell upon Philip, abbot of Solovky, a Convent, situated on a group of islands on the White Sea. He was of high descent and one of the richest noblemen of Moscow, universally esteemed for his wisdom and kind- ness. Even the despotic Tzar, when a child, knew and lov- ed him. At the age of thirty, the brillant courtier exchang- ed the robes of state for the black gown of a monk and the palace for the cloister. Ten years after taking the veil, he was elected abbot of Solovky. This convent, the last colonny on the confines of the north, was poor and almost cut off from human society. The monks led a miserable existance in a severe climate and on a barren soil. The new abbot set to his work with a will; he gave up all his fortune to better the condition of his flock. Canals were dug, marshes and bogs drained. Numerous herds of deer and cattle soon grazed on the newly drained meadows. He huilt a cathedral, new aim-houses and hospitals: when all his means were exhausted, he wrote to Moscow and ample sums were sent to him. He also gave great care to the administration of the peasants, serfs of the convent. He introduced the elective system of the mir community, gave the peasants implements and horses, tried to accustom them to regular work and an orderly life and to break them of their habit of drinking and fighting. The message of the Tsar found him in the midst of this active and useful work. With a heavy heart he left his beloved solitude and went back to Moscow. He several times refused the honors proposed to him and only the hope of helping the wretched victims of John's cruelty induced him to accept the staff of the Metropol- itan. But the Tzar soon got tired of the new archbishop. He was not accustomed to hear truth spoken to him. Philip several times in noble words charged him not to torment his people and to change his bloody life. But his rebukes only exited the hatred of. the Tzar and his wild body guard, the Opritchnik's. The holy bishop was torn from the altar, when officiating high mass, judged by a mock tribunal and sent to Tver as a prisonner. Here he was strangled by Maliuta Scuratov, the favourite of the Tzar on the 23 December 1569. 373 - 825. PASTERNAC, L. Returning home". 826. POLEVIN, J. ,,The first born"; property of the Academy. Genre painter, academftt of painting since 1869 and artist in mosaic work since 1861. Born 1841. 827. PEROV, W. Fishermen", 1873. Genre painter, professor of painting. Born 1833, died 1882. 828. PIMONENKO, N. ,,Fortune telling at Christmass"; property of the Academy. Genre painter. Born 1862. In Russia, Christmass is alw ays a period of much" merry- making and fun. The village tavern is full of guests. Young people every evening arrange mascarades They dress up in some comic way and go about to visit their friends. The street and the cottages ring with song, mirth and laugh- ter. When late in the night all is quiet and asleep, the village, maidens assemble to know their fortune in future life. Some of them pour melted wax or lead into the snow and try to guess their fate from the figures obtained in that way. Some run out to the highway and ask the men they meet for their names; if the name is a pretty one, it is considered grod luck. Some go to the neighbours' cottages, where there is still a light burning and stand under the window to catch some word or phrase. If they speak of bread, money or marriage the girl goes away full of hope; if it is about a knife, coffin, or some misfortune, it is considered as a bad omen. The brave ones go to the bath- house which is always built at some distance from the dwel- 374 - lings; there a mirror is put upon a table with two can- dles burning before it. The girl sits and looks into the gkss: her imagination soon shows her the face of her future hus- band. One of the most frequent ways of fortune telling is to scatter grain in heaps before every young girl present. A cock is brought in. If he walks up to one of them and pecks at the grain, the maiden to whom the heap belongs is sure she will get married in the course of the year. 829. POLENOV, Helen. 1. After the bath". 2. ,,On the eve of an examination". 830. REPINE, E. ,,The answer of the Dniepr Cossacks"; property of His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of Russia. Academist of historical painting since 1876. Born 1844. 831. SAVINSKY, W. ,,The prince Pozharsky, notwithstanding his illness, is asked to take the command of the army", 1882; property of the Academy. Class-artist of painting of I' st degree, since 1882. Bom 1859. In the year 1611, Russia was in a state of complete anarchy. The boyars had dethroned the Tsar Vassily Shuysky and elected prince Vladislav of Poland as his successor. An embassy was sent to king Sigismond III, his father, to ask his consent to this election. But the king had other plans: he intended to annex Russia to Poland and to wear both crowns. He detained the Russian ambassadors. Meanwhile 375 - the Poles took possession of Moscow. Bands of Poles and Cossacks infested the Empire and killed and pillaged without mercy. Smolensk fell into the hands of Sigismond, and the Swedes took Novgorod. All hope seemed lost. One of the calls for help, sent all over Russia from the Convent of St. Serge near Moscow, reached Nizhni- Novgorod. It was read in the Carhedral to the congregation and a common butcher, Kosma Minin called upon his fellow- citizens to stand up in defense of their native land. Some difficulties arose as to how the money was to be raised for the pay of the army. Minin said: ,,Let us sacrifice all, sell our houses, wives and children; but Russia must be saved". His enthousiasm communicated itself to all the inhabitants of Nizhny. Soon a considerable sum was collect- ed. Volunteers and soldiers assembled under Minin's ban- ner: but none of the noblemen of Nizhny could be intrusted with the command of the army. Minin remembered then that one of the generals of Shuysky, prince Pozharsky, lived at his estate in the neighbourhood of Nizhny. The prince had recieved many wounds in battle with the Poles and had returned home to nurse them. Minin sent the archimandrite (abbot) of Pechersk and some noblemen to ask the general to lead the new army. He was so weak and so ill that he could scarcely get up from his armchair to greet the deputation and kneel before the holy images they had brought. He readily consented nevertheless to accept their offer. In spring (1612) Pozharsky and Minin left Nizhny at the head of a considerable army. After many succesful battles under the walls of Moscow Pozharsky forced the assieged Poles, cut off from their countrymen and suffering from hunger and illness, to surrender and on the 2j- th October Pozharsky entered in triumph through the gates of Moscow. 832. SAVITZKY, C. ,,Alms for the sake of Christ". Genre painter. Born 1845. Dark and lonesome is the n tayga", wild forests of Siberia. Enormous trees cover many hundreds of miles, stretches of bog and marsh hem the path of the travellar. Wild animals steal through the bushes; squirrels and birds hop from branch to branch. Otherwise all is silent and dark. Here and there patches of arable land are met. The trees have been felled, and a cluster of lonely cottages have been built by colonists. Every 376 evening, before going to rest, each peasant puts a loaf of bread and a jug of ,,kvass", a home brewed sour liquor, made of malt, on the outer sill of their window with the words: ,,take it in Christ's name". He shuts himself up for the night, muttering a fervant prayer, that he may not be disturbed in his sleep and may be saved from every evil and danger. If he hears a sound under his window he will not get up and go to his door: he knows it are the fugitives from the prisons and mines of Siberia for whom the taiga serves as refuge. They wander about in the wilderness, half naked, hungry and miserable. In summer they feed upon berries and wild roots. Sometimes they may kill or catch some small bird or a hare. But in winter their life is a constant suffering and torture; they often fall a prey to the bears or wolves or are frosen to death. The only help they get are those offerings they find on the window sills of the cottages. On their part they never touch the persons and property of the charitable colonists and protect them from every danger. Such a scene is masterfully represented by the brush of M~ r Savitzky. A brillant northern night. The moon shines upon the fir trees, laden with snow, and on the icicles on the roof of the cabin. A troop of ragged fugitives sup on the alms, given them ,,in Christ's name". One of them drinks out of the jug, the others wait for their turn. No quarrels, no strife; the name of Christ, the solemnity of the hour soften all dessentions. 833. SVERCHKOV, N. ,,A young mare, that just killed a wolf". Professor of painting since 1855. Born 1817. 834. SEMIRADSKY, H. 1. Christ in the house of Lazar", 1887; property of the Academy. 2. ,,Phrine", 1889; property of H i s Imperial Majesty, the Emperor of Russia. - 377 The artist has finished his studies in the Imperial University of Kharkov in the physic-mathematical depart- ment and obtained the degree of bachelor. Professor of painting since 1877 and member of the Council of the Academy of Arts since 1889. Born 1843. 835. STEPANOV, A. W A hunting scene". 836. S E D O V, GR. ,,Wasilissa Melentieva", 1882. Academist of historical painting since 1870. Born 1836, died 1886. The subject of this picture is taken from the history of the reign of John the Terrible. The Tsar fell in love with a beautiful widow, lady in waiting ol one of his wives, Anna Vasilchikov. This princess soon died from poison and the Tsar proclaimed his beloved Wassilissa Melen- tieva, as his bride and asked the clergy to allow him to marry her. But as he was already married several times the metropolitan hesitated to sanction an act, that was against the rules of the Eastern Church. Meanwhile the widow, whilst asleep, murmured once some words of love and the name of a young boyar. The suspicious Tsar had her tried, as well as the young nobleman she named; they soon confessed their guilt and were both put to death. The painter has chosen the moment when the old Tsar watches the slumbers of his beloved. 837. TVOROZHNIKOV, J. 1. ,,A novice selling images", 1888; property of the Academy. 2. ,,Grandmother and grand-daughter", 1889; property ol the Academy. Genre painter, class-artist of painting of I' SD degree since 1873. Born 1848. 378 838. FEDDERS, Y. ,,My villa"; property of the Academy. Landscape painter, academist of painting since 1880. Born 1838. 839. F R E N T S, R. an hostlery"; property of the Academy. Honorary free associate of the Academy of Arts since 1885. Born 1831. 840. CHISTIAKOV, P. ,,The Grand Duchess Sophia Vitovtovna at the wedding of the Grand Duke Wassiliy the Blind in 1433 tears from the Prince Wassiliy the Squint a girdle, that had once belonged to Dmitry Donskoy", 1882; property of the Academy. Academist of historical painting since 1870, genre and portrait painter, adjoint professor at the Academy since 1872. Born 1832. In the XVI century Russia was agitated by feuds amongst the princes of the house of Rurik. The grand dukes of Moscow, who had been the first to shake of the tyranny of the Tartars, tried to unite all the small domi- nions of their kinsmen under their authority. The least quarrel led to bloody strife. One of those episodes is repre- sented on this picture. At the wedding of the grand duke Vasily, called the Blind, his mother, Sophia, the proud daughter of Witold, prince of Lithuania, violently tore from one of the guests, the cousin of the bridegroom, prince Vassily of Svenigorod, a precious girdle, set with gems, that had once belonged to her father-in-law, Dmitry Don- skoy. The offended prince left the court in great wrath and vowed vengeance to the whole family of Sophia. Some years later, the grand duke was taken prisonner by the brother of his foe and blinded. - 379 841. SHISHKINE, J. ,,A Forest", 1872; property of the Academy. Professor of landscape painting since 1873, etcher and draftsman. Born 1831. 842. YAKOBIY, V. ,,The Ice-Palace"; 1881, property of the Academy. Professor of historical painting since 1870, member of the Academy Council since 1878 and teacher since 1883. Born 1834. In the winter of 1740, the Empress Anna of Russia was ailing and suffered from attackes of spleen. To amuse her the chancellor Volynsky proposed to build a palace of ice. The winter was very severe and the entreprise was perfectly successful. The house with its windows, both frames and glass, furniture, statues were made of ice. In front of the palace were placed two dolphins and an enormous elephant. At daytime, a column of water, 24 feet high sprang out of their mouths, at night the fountain was of burning naphta. The elephant could scream; a man with a trumpet sat in the interior of it and shouted at certain intervals. In the palace were mirrors, clocks, glasses and winetumblers, dishes with fruit and game, all made of ice. 380 )EPARTMENT L LIBERAL ARTS. Liberal Arts. Education, literature, engineering, public works, music and the drama. INSTITUTIONS OF THE EMPRESS MARY under the immediate patronage of Their Imperial Majesties. From JM 843 to ^9903. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 843. THE ALEXANDRA ORPHAN'S ASYLUM. St. Petersburg. 1. Picture embroidered in silk: .,The Kremlin". 2. Picture embroidered in silk, landscape. 3. Screen embroidered in silk. 4. Coverlet for a pillow embroidered on batiste. 5 . Specimens of gradual teaching of needlework, embroider- ed in flat stitch, fine work, cuttingout, dresses and underlinen. 6. Doll dressed in pupils uniform of the asylum. 7. Specimens of linen and dresses made to order by the pupils of the asylum. - 383 Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 844. THE DEMIDOV'S HOSPICE FOR WORKMEN. . St. Petersburg. Specimens of handwork done by the pensioners and pupils. 1. Sachet, picture embroidered in flat stitch: ,,Meeting of the steamer Leo, loaded with American grain", at St. Pe- tersburg in 1892. 2. Stripe for a mantle-piece, embroidered in gold and silver from an ancient design of the XIII century. 3. Child's dress from a pattern of the XVI century. 4. Hat made of wood shavings etc. Department L. Group 149. Class 842. 845. THE St. PETERSBURG LADIES PATRIOTIC SOCIETY. Si'. Petersburg. 1 . 25 handkerchiefs, presented to Her Imperial Majesty, the Empress of Russia by the schools of the Society on the 25 " th anniversary of the marriage of Their Imperial Majesties and sachet for those handkerchiefs, worked in silk. 2. 26 photographs of the above mentioned handkerchiefs and sachet. 3. Screen embroidered with flowers in silk from a design taken from an edict of the Tsar Alexey Mikhailovich. 4. Programme of teaching handwork in the schools of the Society, shown in gradually selected specimens. 5. A short historical account of the Society, published in English and Russian. - 384 - Department L. Group 149. Classes 552. 846. THE COMMERCIAL SCHOOL. Moscow. 1. Short account of the school, in French and English. 2. Memorandum books, including information of the con- dition and progress of the school during the last four years. 3. Three plans, facade and 10 large photographs showing various rooms in the school. 4. Collection of photographs, apparatus, and implements of the mercantile laboratory, employed by the scholars in their practical lessons in commerce. 5. Book-keeping work of the scholars. a) Book-keeping by the scholars of the y-tn and 8' th clas- ses, in connection with bills of exchange, bills, invoi- ces and other documents. b) Examination work of the scholars of the 7 th and 8' th classes in writing, for book-keeping and commercial arithmetic. 6. Themes for the examinations proposed during the last eight years, translated into English and French. 7. Programme of drawing shown in drawings of the scho- lars of the six general classes. 8. Specimens of the pupils calligraphy. 9. Publications written by the masters of the school. 10. Screen. Department L. Group 149. Class 849. 847. THE St. PETERSBURG DEAF AND DUMB SCHOOL. St. Petersburg. o I. Work of the pupils. a) In joinery. 1. A ladies veneered walnut wood writing table. 2. Veneered oak sideboard. 3. Polished birch wood table. 4. Work-box made of ebony. 5. 35 models of the joiner's school, worked by designs of Pesotsky, the inspector of the workshop, and of the foreman Berzom. b) In book -binding. 6. Copy-books. 7. School books, in plain library, leather library and trade bindings. 8. Portfolio. c) In typographical work. 9. Blanks, tablets, pamphlets, books. d) In locksmith's work. 10. Small metal locksmiths and turners articles: rulers, triangles, locks, candlestisks etc. II. Pamphlets showing the progress of the school. Department L. Group 149. Class 849. 848. THE EMPRESS MARIA ALEXANDROVNA ASSOCIATION FOR THE RELIEF OF THE BLIND. i. Samples of work of the blind educated and taught in the institutions of the Association. t Brushes, baskets, carpets, articles plaited from osier and cane. Various female handwork. Work by the system of Frebel. From the St. Petersburg Alexander Maria and the Kostroma schools. 2. Specimens of writing by the blind. 3. School books etc. Writing accessories, black boards, relief geographical maps of Russia and plans of St. Petersburg, books printed and copied in raised type, samples of paper, a book with movable letters for reading. 4. Publications: Sketch of the work of the Association, in English and French. Statistics of the blind in Russia from the census 1886, in Russian and French. Journal Russky Slepets" (Russian blind) for 1886 1892. 5 . Plans and photograph views of the buildings of some of the institutions for the blind. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 849. THE IMPERIAL St. PETERSBURG FOUND- LING HOSPITAL WITH ANNEXED INSTI- TUTIONS. 1. Account of the Hospital for 1890, with explanatory lists and diagrams. 2. Collection of handwork of the pupils of the Seminary for teachers. 3. Collection of work of the ,,Childrens garden" by pupils of the school ibr nurses. 4. Plans and photographs 587- Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 850. THE IMPERIAL MOSCOW FOUNDLING HOSPITAL WITH ANNEXED INSTITU- TIONS. 1. Short sketch of the work of the Hospital, in French and English. 2. Photographs of the buildings, of apartments and of the nurseries showing the method of keeping the wetnurses and children. 3. Photographs of the principal objects in the anatomo- pathological cabinet. 4. Diagram for the last 20 years of the children received, of the wet nurses engaged etc. Department L. Group 150. Class 854. 851. PLAYING CARD FACTORY OF THE IMPE- RIAL FOUNDLING HOSPITAL St. Petersburg. Playing cards ot various kinds. 1. For the Imperial court, glazed for Their Imperial Majesties. 2. Ordinary glazed, satin and puzzle cards, of r st quality and toy cards. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 852. THE SHEREMETIEV ASYLUM FOR SENIOR AND JUNIOR OFFICERS. Moscow. Photographs. 388 Department L. Group 147. Class 832. 853. LYING-IN HOSPITAL. 1. Plans and photographs. 2. Historical account in English. St. Petersburg. Department L. Group 147. Class 832. 854. LYING-IN HOSPITAL. 1. Plans and photographs. 2. Statistics and diagrams. 3. Historical account in French and English. Moscow. Department L. Group 147. Class 832. 855. THE ALL PENITENTS' HOSPITAL for the insane. St. Petersburg. 1. Plan of the Hospital grounds. 2. Photographs. Facades of the buildings. Views of the interior apartments: house chapel, medical cabinet, reception room for visitors, theatre, departments for quiet and violent patients, wards, dormitories, bathes and kitchen. Groups of the patients: at outdoor work, in the bin- ding work-room, in the needlework room and in the dining-room. - 389 - Patients at billiard playing, at musical occupations, at cards, at christmas tree etc. 3. Photograph views of the school for the children of the nurses and attendants. Department L. Group 147. Class 832. 856. THE OPHTALMIC HOSPITAL. St. Petersburg. i. Short historical account of the Hospital in English. 2 Diagrams of the progress of the Hospital from 1824 1892. 3. Ophtalmo-metrical lists, edited by the Hospital. Department L. Group 147. Class 832. 857. THE PRINCE OF OLDENBURG'S HOSPITAL FOR CHILDREN. St. Petersburg. 1. Plans and photographs. 2. Statistics. 3 . Directions for mother's * , a pamphlet distributed among the mothers at the reception of out-door patients. Department L. Group 147. Class 832. 858. THE MARIA HOSPITAL FOR THE POOR. St. Petersburg. THE HOSPITAL OF THE EMPEROR PAUL THE T st - THE SOPHIA HOSPITAL FOR CHILDREN. Moscow. Photographs. 390 Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 859. THE WIDOW'S HOME AND ASYLUM FOR POOR UNMARRIED WOMEN. St. Petersburg. 1. Account for the year 1891, with a short historical record. 2. Plans and photographs. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 860. THE WIDOW'S HOME. Moscow Photographs of the building and wards. Department L. Group 149. Class 852. 861. THE COMMERCIAL SCHOOL. St. Petersburg. 1. Short historical account in English. 2. Facade of the principal building and plan of the second story. 3. Statutes, memorandum books and statistics. 4. School-books. 5. Copy-books of book-keeping and correspondence. 6. Copy-books of calligraphy, showing the system of gra- dual improvement, and drawings. 391 Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 862. THE IMPERIAL ALEXANDER LYCEUM. St. Petersburg. Photographs. Department L. Group 149. Class 842. 863. THE NICHOLAS ORPHAN INSTITUTE. Gatcbino. 1 . Short description of the Institute, in Russian and French. 2. Photographs. 3. Models of a school -room table, book and linen cup- boards, work of the scholars. Department L. Group 149. Class 842. 864. THE NICHOLAS ORPHAN INSTITUTE. THE NICHOLAS SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. St. Petersburg. 1. Specimens of the scholars work in drawing and calli- graphy. 2. Photographs. Department L. Group 149. Class 843. 865. ORPHANS INSTITUTIONS. Moscow. 1. Historical account. 2. Work of the pupils. Painting in water colors on etched wood. Embroidery flat stitch in silks on pale blue satin for a cushion. Filet-guipure from thin thread. Towel, embroidered in Russian stitch and trimmed with Russian lace made by hand. 3. Photographs. Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 866. GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Vitebsk. 1. Photographs. 2. Samples of the pupils needlework: knitting, embroidery and sewing. Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 867. THE MARIA GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Simbirsk. 1. Photographs. 2. Specimens of the pupils calligraphy, drawing and needle- work. Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 868. GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Zhitomir. 1. Photographs. 2. Specimens of the scholars calligraphy, drawing and needlework. ==4- 39) Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 869. GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Viino. 1. Photographs of the building. 2. Programmes. 3. General copy book with full systematical teaching ot caligraphy. 4. Work of the scholars in drawing in systematical order. Designs: By dots. From Schmit's, wall pictures and from wire and geometrica models. From ornamental models. From models of the eye, ear and hand. From bas-relief: of children, child's head and mask of Michael Angelo. From the bust of Alexander of Macedonia and of Hermes. Portraits of Peter the Great and Prince Peter of Oldenburg. 5. Samples of the scholars needlework in systematical or- der; viz: garter, stockings, apron, chemise, embroi- dered jacket, towel, filet -guipure and Venetian lace ,,dentelle Italienne". Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 870. GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Minsk. Work of the pupils. i. Handkerchiefs. 2 Crochet work. 3. Samples of marking on linen. 4. Embroidery in flat stitch. 5. Towels. 6. Chemise, pinafore and bib. 394 Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 871. GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Moscow. 1. Historical notes and statistics. 2. A model, representing the outside and interior view of the 4-th Moscow gymnasium for girls. 3. Photographs, showing the interior life in the gymna- sium. 4. Programmes, school books, work of the pupils: in Rus- sian and foreign languages, in calligraphy, drawing and needlework. 5. Record of the Lady-Doctors for the last three years of the condition of the pupils health. Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 872. GYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. St. Petersburg and Tsarskoie Seto. 1. Historical notes, regulations and statistics. 2. Photographs, showing the interior life in the gymna- sium. 3 . Programmes, instructions, school books and work of the pupils: in Russian and foreign languages, in mathematics, hygiene and means of first assistance, calligraphy, dra- wing and needlework. 4. A doll dressed in the uniform of the gymnasium. 5. Record of the Lady-Doctors for three years of the con- dition of the health of the pupils. - 39$ Department L. Group 147. Class 851. 873. THE ALEXANDRA INSTITUTE. Tambov. 1. Samples of the pupils needlework. 2. Drawings of the former and present pupils of the insti- tute, some of which were honored with awards by the Academy of Arts. Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 874. GIRLS INSTITUTE. Belostok. 1. Historical account. 2. Photographs. Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 875. GIRLS INSTITUTE. Kiev. 1. Plans of instruction. 2. Photographs. 3. Samples of work by the pupils. Drawings. Painting on porcelain. Paintings in water -colors on satin. Needlework. 396 Department L.. Group 149. Class 851. 876. THE MARIA INSTITUTE. Nitfmij Novgorod. 1. Historical account. 2. Photographs showing the interior life in the institute. Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 877. THE RODIONOV INSTITUTE. Ka^an. 1. Album with views of the Institute, taken on the 5O- th jubilee of the institute August 3O- th 1891. 2. Portrait of His Imperial Highness, The Tses- sarevich Nicolai Alexandrovich, presented to the Institute by the Kazan town Council on the above mentioned jubilee. 3. One of the most remarkable Russian women", bio- graphy of A. N. Rodionov, foundress of the Institute, pamphlet edited by P. A. Ponomarev, teacher at the Institute. 4. Description of the jubilee. 5 . Plan of the situation and buildings of the Institute. 6. Course of natural history, written by Iznoskov, teacher at the Institute. 7. Course of chanting, composed by Alexandrov. 8. Specimens of the pupils work in drawing in systema- tical order from the y- th to the r st class including dra- wings from nature, presented for competition to the Aca- demy of Arts and honored by awards. 9. Specimens of needlework by the pupils. Winding sheet with an Image of Our Saviour and cover for a prayer's reading desk. 4 - 397 Full costume of a pupil made after the fashion and from materials, actually used in the Institute; the costume except the boots, is all made by the pupils. A doll, dressed in the uniform dress of the Institute. 10. Class table of new shape, used in the Institute. Dapartment L. Group 149. Class 851. 878. THE KUSHNIKOV INSTITUTE. Kerch. Drawings of the pupils, presented for competition to the Academy of Arts in 1892. Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 879. THE ALEXANDER-MARIA INSTITUTE. or saw, 1. Plans of the buildings with full information of the water heating and ventilation. 2. Photographs. 3. Models. Two beds with bedding Class-table of new shape. 4. Two dolls dressed in the uniform dress of the pupils. 5. Album with samples of needlework. 6. Imperial Russian Coat of Arms. - 398 Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 880. THE ALEXANDER INSTITUTE. St. Petersburg. 1. Description of the Institute in Russian and English. 2. Plans of the buildings and seperate stories showing the disposition of furniture in the class-rooms, halls, sleeping rooms, and infirmary. 3. Photographs of hall, class-rooms and sleeping-rooms, with lists showing the average quantity of air in cubic feet for each pupil. 4. Suit of pupils clothes and a complect of bedclothes. 5. Weekly list of dinners and invalids feeding, showing the average of the daily portions for each pupil. 6. Bed for contagious illnesses. Depaitment L. Group 149. Class 851. 881. THE ELIZABETH INSTITUTE. THE PATRIOTIC INSTITUTE. THE PAUL INSTITUTE. THE CATHERINE SCHOOL. THE EDUCATIONAL HOME FOR GIRLS OF NOBLE BIRTH. St. Petersburg. THE ELIZABETH INSTITUTE. THE ALEXANDER INSTITUTE. THE CATHERINE SCHOOL. Moscow. Plans and photographs. 399 Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 882. THE MOSCOW BENEVOLENT SOCIETY founded in 1837. Specimens of works of the pupils of the Society's schools in drawing, calligraphy and needlework. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 883. THE ALEXANDER MARIA AND MARIA SCHOOLS of the Association for the relief of the poor in Moscow. 1. Samples of pupils' needlework. 2. Photographs. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 884. THE St. NICHOLAS' ASYLUM of the Kolpino Benevolent Society. * Kolpino. 1. Short account of the work of the Society and of the Asylum, from the day of their foundation to the present year in Russian and English. 2. Plan and facade ot the Asylum with photographs ot two ot the pupils in winter and summer clothing. 3. Copybooks, writing of the children. 4. Childrens work. A girls Russian costume. Russian costume for a boy. 400 Two embroidered towels. Embroidered satin cushion for a sofa. Six various tea napkins. Two knitted toilet pin cushions. Knitted coquette for a chemise. Unbleached linen table cloth with knitted lace. Table with supports, in the shape of a toilet-table. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 885. THE ASYLUMS FOR CHILDREN. Moscow. 1 . Photographs of groups of the children and of the apart- ments and buildings of the Asylums. 2. Two carpets, work of the children from the age of 8 to 10 years. 3. Two handkerchiefs embroidered by the children. Department L. Group 147 and 149. Classes 831, 843 and 844. 886. THE RESHETOV'S TRADE CLASSES, con- nected with an Asylum for children. Tver. 1. Description of the Asylum in English. 2. Lawn handkerchief with embroidered corners, work of the girls. 3. Small carved box, work of the boys. 401 26 Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 887. THE NICHOLAS ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Tula. Children's work. 1. A coverlet filet -guipure. 2. Curtains, embroidered in Russian style. 3. Samples of plaiting. 4. Samples of marking and embroidery. 5. Towel, embroidered in Russian style on drawn linen, trimmed with lace of the same style. 6. Plaited coquette. 7. A child's sailor's collar. 8. Two plaited capes. 9. Two pocket handkerchiefs with lace. 10. A cushion embroidered on green velvet. n. Coverlet for a pillow emroidered in flat stitch. 12. Tablecloth, embroidered in Russian style. 13. Embroidered antimacassar. 14. Samples of Brussel's lace. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 888. THE ALEXANDRA ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Work ol the children. 1. Batiste pocket handkerchief hem-stitched, trimmed with lace, made on bobbins from thread; all handwork. 2. Lace, made on bobbins, from thread. 3. Lace coverlet, from unbleached thread. 4. Embroidered linen towel, trimmed with hand made lace. 402 5- Antimacassar for a pillow embroidered on tulle. 6. Linen chemise with a hand made lace coquette, the se- wing done by machine and handwork. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 889. THE NICHOLAS ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Ka^an. Childrens work. 1. Napkin in filet - guipure. 2. Back-stitched and embroidered towel. 3. Embroidered handkerchief. 4. Coquette for a chemise embroidered in flat stitch. 5. Coverlet for a sofa cushion. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 890. ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Kharkov. Work of the children. 1. Knitting: stockings, head nets from black silk, perelins from wool, false shirts for chemises, lace for towels, napkin for bread basket, childrens caps and bibs. 2. A child's uniform school dress, chemise and apron. 3. A Little Russian costume. 4. Towel, embroidered in Bulgarian stitch. 5. Lamp mat made of leather. 6. Ornaments for Christmas trees from nuts and almonds, and flowers made of tissue paper. - 403 - Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 891. THE NICHOLAS ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Taganrog. 1. Photographs. 2. Work of the children. Screen, representing Taganrog's Coat of Arms. Towel for a looking-glass. Towel for a table. Antimacassar. Bag for linen. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 892. THE KUBAN COSSACKS PROVINCE SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. Ekaterinodar . Needlework of the pupils: 1. Costume of a Kuban Cossack. 2. Three pairs of stockings, machine work. 3. Two towels, woven by the pupils. 4. A shirt and chemise. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 893. THE ALEXANDRA ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Vologda. Work of the pupils: Samples of lace of three defferent sizes made of creme silk and presented to Her Imperial Majesty the Empress of Russia on the 2o-th March 1866. 404 2. Lace made on bobbins. 3 . Two cushions with pieces of lace began. 4. Black silk parasol. 5. White silk fan. 6. Cream silk lace. 7. Bag for needlework. 8. Two antimacassars and white thread lace edgings and trimming for a towel. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 894. THE ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN AT THE CHURCH OF St. METHODIUS. St. Petersburg. Work of the pupils: Apron and shirt, embroidered in Russian style. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 895. THE MARIA ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Kerch. 1. Pupils needlework: towels napkins, embroideries, etc. 2. Description of the Asylum in French. 3. Photographs. - 405 - Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 896. THE GRAND DUCHESS OLGA NICO- LAIEVNA'S ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. St. Petersburg. Box for newspapers. Embroidery in silk, work of the girls. Carved wood frame, work of the boys. Department L. Group 147. Class 851. 897. THE OLGA ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Yaroslavl. 1. Towel, embroidered in Russian style, work of the pupils. 2. Photographs. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 898. THE BARON STIEGLITZ'S MODEL ASY- LUM FOR CHILDREN. St. Petersburg. Silk towel, embroidered in silk, work of the pupils. - 406 Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 899. THE GRAND-DUCHESS ALEXANDRA NICO- LAIEVNA'S ASYLUM FOR CHLDREN. St. Petersburg. Embroidery for a screen, representing a pelican feeding its little ones, which is the emblem of the E m p r e s s' Mary Educational and Charitable Institutions; the embroi- dery is worked after an ancient design of the XVII century found in the Church of Romanov Borissoglieb. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 900. ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Rostov on the Don. 1. Needlework. 2. Photographs. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 901. THE ALEXANDRA ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Viadimir. THE NICHOLAS ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Astrakhan. - 407 THE N. M. KHARITONENKO'S ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Sumy. THE VIRGIN MARY ASYLUM FOR CHILDREN. Perm. ASYLUMS FOR CHILDREN. In the towns: Tomsk, Archangelsk, Viatka, Nizhni-Novgorod, Jelabuga, Vessiogonsk, Pskov, Vologda, To- bolsk, Petrozavodsk, Yaroslavl, Vitebsk, Ria^an, Samara, Dvinsk, Kherson, Kharkov, Saratov, Kaluga, Simbirsk, Ti/Jis, Kiev, Tambov and Krasnoyarsk. Plans and photographs. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 902. THE M' me MEDVEDNIKOV'S ORPHAN'S HOME with Bank and Saving Bank. Irkutsk. v 1. Pamphlets, describing the Orphan's Home and Bank. 2. Photographs. 408 Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 903. THE TSESSAREVICH'S NICOLAI ALEXANDROVICH ALMS HOUSE. St. Petersburg. Photographs. End of the Section of the Institutions of the Empress Mary. Department L. Group 158. Classes 927, 929 and 931 933. 904. TSIMMERMAN, J. St. Petersburg. Musical instruments factory. 1. Wind and stringed instruments. 2. Pianino of Feirich, with a appliance for obtaining sounds by knocking the cords with small clappers, that are put in motion by air, called: String-Organ, ,,Saiten-Orgel"; patent of the exhibitor. The factory exists since 1877. Hand and machine work, value 65,000 70,000 per year; 32 workmen. Materials Russian and foreign. Sale in Russia. See JN 924. Department L. Group 151. Class 871. 905. SOLOVIEV, S. St. Petersburg. Photography, phototype and photo-lithography. Photographic copies of genre groups and portraits. Established in 1877; production value 8,000 10,000 roubles per year; 6 10 workmen. Sale in Russia. 409 Department L. Groups 149, 150 and 155. Classes 842, 845, 847, 851, 855, 907 and 908. 906. THE MINISTRY OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION. St. Petersburg. 1. Report of the Ministry. 2. Reports of the Instruction regions and of different schools. 3. Plans of teaching and programmes. 4. Samples of school-books and appliances, used in middle and high schools. 5 . Writings of professors of Russian Universities and other schools. 6. Works of the pupils in different branches of knowledge. 7. Natural history collections of different schools. 8. Photographs of schools. 9. Publications of scientific Societies, high schools and educa- tional and pedagogical Societies. Department L. Group 158. Class 930. 907. MUHLBACH, Th. St. Petersburg. Piano-factory. Aano and pi a cottage piano. The factory exists since 1856. Production per annum 400 instruments, value 250,000 roubles. Steam engines, motor (15 H. P.); electric lighting; 125 workmen. Mate- rials foreign. Sale in Russia and abroad. 410 Department L. Group 158. Class 930. 908. BITE PAGE, M., firm ,,Becker". St. Petersburg. Piano factory. 1. Jubilee piano, presented to Anton Grigorievich Rubin- stein on the i8" th November 1889. On this piano Anton Grigorievich Rubinstein played on the I9' th November 1889 in the Concert room of the No- bility's Assembley in St. Petersburg, at a conceit, organi- sed in his honor on the occasion of his 50 years jubilee. 2. Concert piano of middle size. 3. Two large concert pianos. The factory exists since 1841. Yearly production 700 instruments, value 450,000 roubles. Two steam engines (70 H. P.), 60 turning, drilling and other lathes, 2 plane benches, 6 endless files etc.; cast-iron and brass foundery and steam forge. All the parts of the instruments are made at the factory; 250 workmen. Materials mostly Russian, partly foreign. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department L. Group 158. Class 935. 909. G L A V A C H, V. St. Petersburg. 1. Armonipiano, Armonipiano Caldera," improved by exhi- bitor and adapted to a piano of Schroder. 2. Harmonium de Concert," manufactured after designs and under instructions of the exhibitor at the piano factory of Shidmayer. See J^ 915. 411 Department L. Group 158. Class 930. 910. SCHROEDER, M. St. Petersburg. Piano factory. 1. Grand concert piano of oak, carved work, presented by exhibitor to Anton Grigorievich Rubinstein on his 50 years jubilee in 1889. 2. Concert piano. 3. Cabinet piano. The factory was founded in 1818. Production 900 instruments yearly, hand and machine-work; 250 workmen. Materials partly Russian, partly from Germany and Ame- rica. Sale in European and Asiatic Russia. Department L. Group 158. Class 930. 911. E B E R G, A. Moscow. Piano factory. 1. Large cabinet piano. 2. Two cabinet pianos. 3. Cottage piano. The factory exists since 1851. Production yearly 24 cottage pianos and 70 pianos, value 50,000 roubles. Hand- work. The factory includes 25 stands, 4 spindle-laths, 2 saw-benches, i drill, 5 drying, ovens, i press for the piano- lids; 25 workmen and 4 minors employed, besides 15 work- men outside. Materials: timber from the gov's of Smolensk and Nizhny Novgorod, glue from Siberia; felt, ivory, strings etc. from France and Germany. 412 Department L. Group 158. Class 930. 912. RE IN HARD, V. St. Petersburg. Piano factory. Two cottage pianos. Established in 1872. Yearly production 60 planes, value 25,000 roubles. Handwork; 13 workmen and i apprentice. Materials Russian; some of the mechanical parts obtained from Germany. Sale in Russia. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 913. G L A S U N O V, A. St. Petersburg. Triumphal March, composed by the exhibitor on the occa- sion of the World's Columbian Exposition 1893, Chi- cago. Orchestra partition and vocal parts, transposition for piano for 4 and 2 hands. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 914. A LEER A KI, A. St. Petersburg. 52 Songs, for voice with piano, composed by the exhibitor. 413 Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 915. G L A V A C H, V. St. Petersburg. Musical compositions of the exhibitor: 22 for choir, 2 for orchestra, 29 songs and 29 pieces for the piano, 2 hymns for voice solo, choir and orchestra. See J\ 909. Department L. Group 149. Class 852. 916. R I B A, J. Moscow. Rational method ol teaching piano playing, 34 books, com- piled by the exhibitor. The work is dedicated to Her Imperial Majesty, The Empress of Russia. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 917. BOGAIEVSKY, M- ne A. St. Petersburg. Songs with piano for children. 1. Favorite stories". 2. ,,Mamma's songs". Composed by the exhibitor. - 414 Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 918. P O B U D A. Tsarskoie-Selo . The Glukhovskoy-March.. Composed by the exhibitor. Department L. Group 158. Class 930. 919. PILAR VON PILKHAU, Baron G. St. Petersburg. 1. Pianino. 2. Apparatus for automatically inscribeing musical impro- visations. The apparatus is exhibited as an invention of the exhibitor. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 920. BESSEL and C. St. Petersburg and Moscow. Music publishers and sellers and music printing office. i. Partitions and parts. Operas: ,,Sniegurochka", by N. Rimsky-Korsakov. ,,The Captive from Caucasus", by C. Cui. aKhovanshchina", by M. Musorgsky. Vengeance", by Soloviev. Compositions for ochestra and choir. Russian songs. Quartets, trios etc. 2. Transpositions for the piano. ,,Thc Stone Guest", opera by A. Dargomizhsky. ,,The Maid of Pskov", opera by N. Rimsky-Korsakov. 3. Compositions for violin, violoncello, cello, flute, harmo- nium, cornet-tVpiston, cithara, with piano. 4. Compositions and transcriptions for two pianos and for piano for 4 and 2 hands. 5. Songs and airs for voice and piano. 6. Manuals of singing, solfeggios and publications about music. The firm and the music-printing office were founded in St. Petersburg in 1869. Compositions printed exclusively for own business, mostly operas and compositions for orchestra by Russian authors and manuals for teaching. Production value 60,000 roubles per year. The printing office include 2 steam presses and lithographic machines, 2 lithographic and 2 metallographic hand presses, i glazing cilinder, i paper cutting machine etc. Employed: 4 etchers, a bookbinder; in the printing office,, 8 workmen, 4 work- women and 2 minors. Paper supplied from local works. Sale in Russia and partly abroad. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 921. BELIAIEV, M. St. Petersburg and Leipzig. Music publisher and seller. 1. Triumphal march composed by A. Glasunov, on the occasion of the Worlds' Columbian Exposition 1893 Chicago, partition and vocal parts. 2. Compositions of N. Rimsky-Korsakov, A. Borodin, A. Glasunov, A. Liadov and other Russian authors. - 416 - Partitions, parts and transpositions for piano for 4 and 2 hands of operas, orchestral and chamber music. Compositions for piano. Compositions for instruments and voice with piano. The business founded in Leipzig in 1885. Only com- positions by Russian musicians are published. Sale in Europe and America. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. . 922. FON-MILLER, A., firm ,A. Bitner". St. Petersburg. Music publishers and sellers. 1. Musical compositions. 2. Musical journal ,,The Muse"; a complete copy for 1892 and JN? r st and the supplement for 1893. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 923. KHAVANOV, V. firm ,,A. lohansen". St. Petersburg. Music sellers. Twenty two books of music. The firm exists since 1860. 417 - 27 Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 924. TSIMMERMANN, F. St. Petersburg. 1 . Manuals for teaching playing on stringed, wind and strike instruments. 2. Musical compositions. See J\ 904. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 925. T S I G E R T, Ch. St. Petersburg. Music engraving workshop. Two metallic plates engraved and samples of musical publications. The workshop exists since 1886. Yearly production 5 ooo plates, value 8,000 roubles; 10 workmen. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 926. JURGENSON, P. Moscow. Music publisher und sellers and music printing office. 1. Partitions: w Shchelkunchik" and w lolanda% by P. Chaykovsky. 2. Transpositions for piano of operas, compositions for orchestra and chamber music, by M. Glinka, A. Rubinstein, P. Chaykovsky, M. Balakirev, N. Rimsky-Korsakov, S. Taneiev, Arensky and other Russian and foreign composers. - 418 - 3. Quatuors, trios, etc., and compositions for piano and voice with piano, by Russian and foreign authors. 4. Complete edition of the compositions for piano of Schumann, Chopin and Mendelsohn. 5. Manuals for teaching music. The music printing office was founded in 1867. Yearly 2,500,000 sheets printed, value 200,000 roubles. The print- ing office includes: i steam engine (8 H. P.), 2 steam boilers, 6 steam presses, 2 hand printing presses; binding, planing, papercutting and stone-polishing machines, I press and I whetstone; 45 workmen and 20 workwomen. The paper, tin and lead are purchased in Moscow; the dyes supplied from France and Germany. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 927. GUTHEIL, Ch., firm ,A. Gutheil". Moscow. Music sellers. 1. Orchestral partition of the Opera Russian and Liudmila" by M. Glinka. 2. Transcriptions for piano with text of the operas: ,,The Life for the Tzar" and Russian and Liudmila", by M. Glinka. ,,Russalka", by A. Dargomyzhsky. ..Askold's Grave", by A. Verstovsky. Judith", ,,Rognieda" and ,The Might of Evil", by A. Serov. ..The Maid of Croatia", by O. Diutsh. ,,The last day of Bel-Sar-Ussura", by A. Koreshchenko. ,,Aleko", by S. Rakhmaninov. 3. Concerto for piano with orchestra, composed by S. Rakh- maninov. - 419 Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 928. GEBETNER and WOLF. Warsaw. Music publishers and sellers. Musical compositions of Moniushko, Zelinsky and other Polish composers. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 929. ZENNEVALDT, G. Warsaw. Music publishers and sellers. Musical compositions of Chopin, Moniushko, Zelinsky and other Polish composers. Department L. Group 158. Class 937. 930. BERNARD, N. St. Petersburg. Music sellers. Musical journal w The Nouvellist", complete numbers for 1889, 1890, 1891, 1892, and 4 numbers for 1893. Published by the exhibitor. 420 Department L. Group 150. Class 854. 931. GUL AMI RI ANTS, S. St. Petersburg. 8 Numbers of the literary artistical Review n Arax" for 1887, 1888, 1889, 1890, and 1892. The Review is edited by the exhibitor since 1887, two volumes per year. 1,200 copies were issued in 1892 and 2,000 copies in 1893. Department L. Group 158. Class 929. 932. HEISSER, E. St. Petersburg. Musical instrument works and sellers. 1. Two violins. 2. Alto. 3. Violoncello. 4. Two violin bows. Established in 1881. Handwork; 4 workmen. Sale in Russia. Department L. Group 158. Class 934. 933. H U B N E R, A. St. Petersburg. Cornet-a-piston. 421 Department L. Group 158. Classes 929 and 935. 934. IINDRZHISHEK, H. Kiev. Musical instrument works. 1 . Violins, alto and violoncello. 2. Harmoniphons with different numbers of keys. The factory of stringed instruments exists since 1885 and of harmoniphons since 1887. Value of yearly predic- tion 8,000 roubles. Handwork; 19 workmen and minors. Materials, wood included, Russian, only small parts, value 400 roubles per year, foreign Sale in Russia. Department L. Group 158. Class 935. 935. SHPANOVSKY, L. Odessa. Meloharmoniphons with 27 and 32 keys. These instruments are manufactured since 1889 in Odessa under the direction of the exhibitor and inventor; as a trial they are ordered in other towns. Up to the present over 200 meloharmoniphons have been made. Material local; sale to primary and other schools in Russia. V Department L. Group 158. Class 935. 936. L O B O R H V, W. St. Petersburg, Harmoniphons factory. Harmoniphons of various sizes and systems. Established in 1885. Handwork. Production 600 harmo- niphons per annum, value 12,000 roubles; 6 workmen and 2 minors. Materials local. Sale in Russia. 422 Department L. Group 153. Class 890. 937. THE CENTRAL STATISTICAL COMMITTEE OF THE MINISTRY OF INTERIOR. St. Petersburg. Publications. Department L. Group 149. Class 852. 938. THE DRAWING SCHOOL OF THE IMPE- RIAL SOCIETY FOR THE ENCOURAGE- MENT OF ART. St. Petersburg. 1 . Paintings in water colors. 2. Engravings. 3. Painting on porcelain. ,|. Majolicas. 5. Carvings on wood. 6. Bronze groups. The school exists since 1839; annual bucget about 25,000 roubles; 550 scholars (male) and 400 (female) study at the school. Department L. Group 151. Class 871. 939. FISHER, Ch., firm ,,Diagovchcnko. Moscow. The Photographer to the Imperial Theatres. Samples of photographic and photomechanical works. Photography established in 1865, the phototype in 1889. Handwork, value 20,000 roubles per year; 16 work- men. Materials chiefly Russian, but partly foreign. Sale in Moscow. See Dep. F. JV 385. - 423 Department L. Group 149. Class 843. 940. ARGAMAKOV, M' me M. St. Petersburg. Practical school for women's handwork. Samples of scholars handwork and carving. The school was founded in 1885 and is under the High Patronage of Her Imperial Highness the Princess Evgenia MaximiHanovna of Oldenburg. Department L. Group 151. Class 871. 941. GRODZITSKY, J. Radom. Photography. 1. Photographs of various sizes. 2. Photographs, enlarged on bromo-silver paper. Established in 1878. Production, value 12,000 roubles per annum. Handwork; 5 workmen, 6 workwomen and 3 minors. Materials from Warsaw, and partly from France, Belgium, and Austria, value 4,200 roubles per year. Sale local. Department L. Group 151. Class 871. 942. KHMELEVSKY, J. Poltava. Photography. Photographs, groups and portraits. Established in 1875. Production, value 10,000 roubles per annum; 5 workmen, 2 workwomen and i apprentice. Materials chiefly Russian, partly foreign. Sale in Poltava and environs. 424 Department L. Group 151. Class 871. 943. D M I T R I E V, M. Nitfmy Novgorod. Photographs. Department L. Group 149. Class 847. 944. THE BARON STIGLITS' CENTRAL SCHOOL OF TECHNICAL DRAWING. St. Petersburg. Work of the scholars. 1. Paintings in oil and water colors from nature. 2. Drawings by pen and pencil. 3. Majolicas. 4. Xylography and etching. 5. Compositions on given themes. 6. Decorative paintings in size colors. 7. Drawings. 8. Work, made from designs and models of scholars. The school is under the jurisdiction of the Department of Trade and Manufactures. In 1876 the founder Baron A. L. Stieglits endowed the school with 1,000,000 rou- bles, of which 800,000 roubles were left as an invio- lable fund, on the percentage of which since 1879 are supported ,,The Elementary drawing" and the Central" schools. The object of the school is to educate skilled draftsmen, sculptors and painters, and also teachers of drawing, for professional schools. In the Central school in 1892 there studied 189, and in the Elementary school 746 scholars of both sexes; not younger than 14 years in the former, and not younger than 9 years in the latter. When the founder died in 1885, the funds of the school were enlarged through his testimony, which enabled the authorities of the school to commence building a large edifice for an Art-Museum. 425 Department L. Group 150. Class 864. 945. I L 1 1 N, A. St. Petersburg. Map printer. 1. Maps, atlases and globes. 2. Artistical editions. Established in 1859. Production, value 250,000 300,000 roubles per annum; steam-engine (10 H. P.), 9 steam printing machines and 15 hand printing-presses; 100 workmen and 15 workwomen. Department L. Group 150. Class 864. 946. KRABBE, L., Engineer. Si. Petersburg. Model of the '/g P art of St. Petersburg. Department L. Group 150. Class 864. v 947. KLEMENTIEV, N., Topographer. Tijlis. Relief map of the Caucasus. Since 1889 yearly 15 copies manufactured. Production after a wax model, from which a plaster form is taken. Its impression made in papier-mache, is tinted by one artisan, which requires the work of a month. Sale for schools, liiraries, to the army, and private customers. 426 Department L. Group 152. Class 88 1. 948. SHMELEV, T., Engineer. Rev at. Model of the Reval harbour with plan. Department L. Group 155. Class 908. 949. THE IMPERIAL RUSSIAN SOCIETY FOR THE ENCOURAGEMENT OF SEA TRADE -NAVIGATION. Moscow. 1. Explanatory record of the Society in Russian and Eng- lish. 2. Pamphlet in English: ,,The Black sea and Caspian ca- nals". 3. Transactions", journal edited by the Society, and other publications. 4. Engineer Danilov's project of irrigative-navigable canals, with a large wall map of North Caucasus. 5. Plans of the harbour of Poti, by N. Shavrov. The Society was founded in 1873. Direction board in Moscow, branch offices in St. Petersburg, Odessa, Onega, Anapa, Poti and Rybinsk. Annual budget 10,000 roubles. 427 Department L. Group 149. Class 852. 950. THE St. PETERSBURG PRACTICAL TECHNOLOGICAL INSTITUTE. St. Petersburg. Collections of a systematic course of mechanics; collec- tion of problems, a valve of a water main, holder boxes of various systems for lathes, foot-lathe, steam distribut- ors of various systems. Work of students, and photographic collections. Collections of teaching subventions for practical mecha- nism and mechanical technology, accomplished in the workshops of the Institute. The Institute was founded in 1828 and includes me- chanical and technological workshops and a laboratory. No work is done for private orders, the workmen are kept exclu- sively for repairs of lathes and for preparation of teaching collections. Department L. Group 154. Class 905. 951. E Z E R S K Y, Th. St. Petersburg and Moscow. Firm Book-keeper". Established: in St. Petersburg in 1874, in Moscow in 1887. Production, value 50,000 roubles per annum. Ma- terials Russian and sale in Russia. 428 - Department L. Group 151. Class 865. 952. O D N E R, W., Engineer. St. Petersburg. Arithmometers, reckoning machines. Manufactory of machines started in 1886. Production value 30,000 roubles per annum. Petroleum motor (4 H. P.), 20 various lathes; 25 workmen and 10 minors. Materials Russian. Sale in Russia and abroad. Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 953. PEREPELKIN, M me Z. Moscow. Gymnasium for girls. 1 . Paintings in water colors and other drawings by pupils. 2. Samples of pupils handwork. The Gymnasium formerly belonging to Delsal, estab- lished in 1795; has seven normal classes, besides i pre- paratory and i pedagogical class. Drawing is taught in all the eight classes, excluding the preparatory class. Department L. Group 149 and 151. Classes 842 and 865. 954. BRANDT, A., Professor of University. Kharkov. 1. Universal school bench for school and house use. 2. Percentometer-screens, for measuring height and lenghts of the body and for increasing or diminishing statues and drawings. 3. Ribbon Percentometers. 4. Explanatory pamphlets. Inventions of the exhibitor. 429 Department L. Group 149. Class 847. 955. THE CHEREPOVETZ ALEXANDER TECHNICAL SCHOOL. Gov. of Novgorod, Cherepovet^. 1. Technical work of the pupils, made in the educational workshops of the school. 2. Course of problems for different classes. 3. Drawings. 4. Photographs. Founded in 1869. For maintaining the workshop, in- cluding materials, instruments, repairing of lathes and communicators, 3, 540 roubles are allowed per annum. Steam- engine (8 H. P.) 32 various lathes, 115 vices, i forging- furnace with 6 fires, 37 bench-boards; 153 pupils work at the workshops. Depar.ment L. Group 150. Class 854. 956. ZLATKOVSKY, M. St. Petersburg. Book upon Women's professional schools in Russia. Department L. Group 149. Class 843. 957. P O L E V A I A, M"" 6 O. St. Petersburg. Meat-day and fast-day board", a house-keeping book with illustrations. 43 Department L. Group 152. Class 889. 958. DEKHTEREVA, .M" ne C. St. Petersburg. Journal r The Economical Builder". The journal published since 1878; 1,500 copies. Department L. Group 150. Class 854. 959. NEUSHTUBE, S., Veterinary-surgeon. St. Petersburg. Publications. Department L. Group 152. Class 889 960. FIETTA, J. St. Petersburg. The Motives of Russian Architecture'-, seven volumes. Edited by the exhibitor 1874 1880. Department L. Group 149. Classes 843 and 847. 981. AXDREIEV, P., Engineer technolog. St. Petersburg. 1. Technical French-Russian-English-German dictionary. 2. Russian trade dictionary. 3 . Book, including technical descriptions of materials used on the Russian railways. 4. ,,Housemanagement' ; , manual for house-wives, house teachers and governesses. 431 Department L. Group 150. Classes 854 and 856. 962. THE IMPERIAL RUSSIAN TECHNICAL SOCIETY. St. Petersburg. 1. Report of the progress of the Society and of the work of the Perpetual Committee on technical education. 2. Collection ot works and publications of the Society. 3. Samples of diplomas and medals awarded by the So- ciety. Department L. Group 152. Class 880. 963. B1ELELIUBSKY, N., Professor Engineer. Si. Petersburg. Bridgcbmlding. 1. Photographs of the principal constructions, accomplished after projects of the exhibitor. 2. Literary works of the exhibitor. 3. Albums of drawings, explaning the projects and details of some bridges. The exhibitor superintends the mechanical laboratory of the St. Petersburg Institute of the Engineers of Ways of Communications. The works of the exhibitor begun in 1867. Department L. Group 150. Class 863. 964. THE MINISTRY OF FINANCES. I. DEPARTMENT OF TRADE AND MANUFACTURES. St. Petersburg. 1. Review of the manufacturing industries of Russia, in Rus- sian and English. 2. Description of Siberia and the Great Siberian Railway, in Russian and English. 3. Review of the mining industry of Russia, in English. The reviews and description have been published by the Department of Trade and Manufactures for the World's Columbian Exposition 1893, Chicago. 4. International Commercial Code ol Signals. 5. The Grain Exchanges of Western Europe and ot the United States of North America. 6. Prices of grain and spirit, freights and insurance premiums of the chief foreign and Russian markets; complete num- bers for 1892. Weekly edition, sent to Crown and public institutions in all the gov's and districts of Russia, and also to all the railway stations. 7. Charts, showing the prices of rye and oats, complete numbers for 1891 and 1892. Monthly edition. 8. Summary of data, concerning the manufacture indus- try lor 1890. 9. Summary of data, concerning the trade taxes in 1889. 10. Statistical results of the percentage and assessment taxes for 1889. II. DEPARTMENT OF CUSTOMS. St. Petersburg. 1 . Review of the Russian export trade across the European and Asiatic frontiers for 1882 1891. 2. Monthly reports on the export trade across the European frontier for 1884 1892. 3. Reports on import trade for 1869 1886. 4. Reports on the Russian export trade for 1869 1886. 5. Comparative tables for various years up to 1890. III. DEPARTMENT OF EXCISES AND TAXES. St. Petersburg. 1. Works of the Technical Committee of the Department for 1864 1890, i volume. 2. Siemens' Controlling apparatus, book written by Ne- doshivin and Novitsky, i volume. 3. Materials on the rural brandy distillation for 1888 1889, i volume. 4. Reports of the Department with supplements for 1888 1891. 5. List of the brandy distilleries in the Russian Empire for the periods i88 6 / 7 188 7 / 8 , i volume. 6. Materials concerning the tobacco monopoly. 434 IV. DEPARTMENT OF RAILWAY AFFAIRS. 1. Materials concerning the elaboration of the freights of Russia railways: vol. T st --on grain cargoes. vol. II" 1 " 1 on flax, hemp, and sugar. vol. lll' rd on spirit. 2. Tables for the determination of an equal percentage .tax du- ring the whole emission term of a loan and of the capita- lised value of the payments on account of the percents. 3. Reference book on the grain and spirit trade. 4. Records of the Council on freight affairs for 1889 1891. 5. Records of the Freight Committee, vol. I~ st . 6. Records of the Special Council and of the Freight Committee on the question of elaborating general ru- diments for regulating freights on grain in 1891. 7. Situation of Russia in respect to the international grain market. 8. Materials on the revising of grain freights on the Rus- sian railways in 1893, volumes I VI. V. EDITORS OFFICE OF THE JOURNALS PUBLISHED BY THE MINISTRY OF FINANCES. St. Petersburg. 1. Journal .,The Messenger of finances, industry and trade ", complete numbers for 1892, and for fhe first quarter of 1893. 2. The trade and industry Gazette", numbers for the first quarter of 1893. The Messenger is published since October 1883; the Gazette since January 1893. The Messenger is issued - 435 weekly on Sundays; price of subscription 8 roubles per year; 6,556 subscribers for 1893. The Gazette is issued daily, excluding the days succeeding holidays; price of sub- scription 5 roubles per year; 3,279 subscribers for 1893. Department L. Group 154. Class 903. 965. THE IMPERIALLY SANCTIONED COM- MITTEE OF THE MEETINGS OF THE REPRESENTATIVES OF THE RUSSIAN LAND CREDIT ESTABLISHMENTS. St. Petersburg. Publications of the Committee. 1. Statutes ol the joint-stock land banks, with explanations on questions, arising in practice by the adaptation of the Statutes; published in 1886 and 1890. 2. Literature of the Russian land credit, 2 volumes. 3. Statistical data on the land credit in Russia, 1891. 4. Statistical data on the land credit in Russia, in French. 5 . Maps and diagrams. The Committee was founded in 1876 for elaborating the questions, destined for deliberation at the meetings oi the representatives of the land credit establishments in Russia. 8 such meetings took place up to 1893. The Committee, since its foundation has elaborated a series of questions both of a judicial and technical character, that arose from the practice of land banks. The Committee also is collect- ing and treating statistical materials and data on long term credit; in respect of which it has attained the possi- billity of editing a complete code concerning the indebtment of land property in Russia and periodical reviews, twice per year, with latest data on the progres-. of the operations of all the lontr-term credit establishments in Russia. Department L. Group 154. Class 900. 966. THE RIGA EXCHANGE COMMITTEE. Riga. 1 . The Riga Exchange Committee from 1 8 1 6 till 1 866, issued in 1866. 2. The Riga Exchange Committee from 1866 till 1872, with supplement of Regulations, Instructions and Dues, con- cerning trade and navigation. 3. The Riga Trade Archive for 1873 1892. Publications in German of the Committee, edited by the secretary of the Committee M' r von Stein. Department L. Group 152. Classes 881 and 882. 967. THE EXPEDITION FOR DRAINING THE MARSHES IN POLESSIE AND FOR IRRI- GATING OF THE SOUTH OF RUSSIA AND THE CAUCASUS. St. Petersburg. 1 . Record map of the works of draining the marshes in Pollessie. 2. Sketch of the above mentioned works. The works were started in 1874 by the Expedition organised by the Ministry of the Public Domains, under the superintendence of Lieutenant-General Zhilinsky of the General Staff of the Army. The object of these works is both to improve the sanitary condition ot the localities destined for draining, and to convert the marshes into meadow land in order to satisfy the wants of local inhabi- tants in meadows and pasture, arising from the yearly in- creasing cultivation of meadow land in arable land. The lo- cality of Polessie, in the basin of the river Pripiet, in- cludes in a total area of 8.000,000 dessiatines, 3,000,000 dessiatines of boggy forest and 3,000,000 dessiatines of open marshes. The work of draining is directed to the 437 - regular distribution of water over the whole space of the 'locality destined for draining, by means of canals for free flowing of the water to the rivers. 3,312 versts of main and branch canals, 5 20 arshines in width have teen dug up to 1893, by which 2,350,000 dessiatines have been dried, the growth of trees on them in the forests improved and good meadows created. The expenses of the canalisation amounted on the average to 3 roubles per dessiatina, and the drained plots now give a revenue of from 3 roubles 60 copecs to ii roubles per dessiatina. The works are being further carried on. 3. Record map of works oi irrigation. 4. Sketch of the above-mentioned works. 5. Relief map of the Valuisk irrigated grounds in the gov. of Samara. The researches on irrigation in South Russia begun in 1880, under the direction of the Ministry of Public Domains, and under the superintendence of Lieutenant- General Zhilinsky of the General Staff, in order to prevent the frequent famines caused by drought. The works are adapted to irrigation by snowmelted water, gathered in spring in large water reservoirs. 19 such reservoires have been erected up to the present and 8,500 dessiatines of meadows, and 6,500 dessiatines of arable land are irrigated by them. The works are being continued. Department L. Group 150. Classes 854 and 864. % 968. THE EXPEDITION ORGANIZED BY IMPE- RIAL ORDER for exploring the ancient beds of the river Amu-Daria between the Aral and Caspian seas. 1. Works of the Expedition. 2. Map of Asiatic Russia, 1884, and maps of the delta and of the ancient beds of the river Amu-Daria with projects for two paths for the Amu - Daria water way. 3 . Longitudinal and cross profiles of the projected lines for directing the waters of Amu-Daria in the Caspian sea. 4. Record map of the Transcaspian province, 1875, show- ing the work accomplished by the engineers of the Expe- dition. 5. Record map of the engineering and topographic works, done in the delta of the river Amu-Daria in 1879 and 1880. 6. Photographs: Of the ancient beds and the delta of the river Amu-Daria. Views of the Turcomanian steppes. Views of the Khanate of Khiva. Views of Petro-Alexandrovsk. This expedition was organized by Imperial Order in 1878 and was annexed to the Ministry of Ways of Com- munications under the superintendance of Major General, at present Lieutenant General of the General Staff of the Army, A. Glukhovskoy. The objec; of the Expedition was: i. to explore the ancient bed of the Amu-Daria, si- tuated between its present course and the Caspian sea, with a view to directing the waters of the river along this bed to the Caspian sea without harming meantime the economical interests of the Khanate of Khiva; 2. to choose a direction for a water way from the Aral sea to the river Amu-Daria, should it be possible to direct the latter to the Caspian sea; 3. to determinate the quantity of water which is lost at the overflows of the delta of the river Amu-Daria and could be utilized by being di- rected to the Caspian sea. The works of the Expedition were started in 1879 in the delta of the river Amu-Daria, when 391 verstes of double leveling and 289 verstes of single leveling has been done and 8.838 square verstes surveyed. From the three main branches the middle one was chosen for steamboat navi- gation. Since 1880 the works have been conducted in the Khanate of Khiva and in the Turcomanian steppes. Here 1,127 verstes of double leveling wjth copying longitudinal profiles and 3,115 verstes of single leveling has been done and 31,881 square verstes surveyed. The works of the Expedition were completed in 1883 and have affirmed the possibility of directing the waters of the ri- ver Amu-Daria to the Caspian sea. The leveling has shown, that the locality gradually falls from Amu-Daria to the sea, the slope being sufficient on this stretch for a navigable 439 - river; and in what concerns the quantity of water flowing through the river Amu-Daria, excluding that kept for irrigation of the Khanate of Khiva and the Amu-Daria section, it was determined 345 cubic sazhens per se- cond at high waters, 75 cubic sazhens at low waters, and 150 square sazhens at the average during the year. The direction of the waters can be effectuated by two lines: i . by the river Kunia-Daria, through the Sarakamysh basin, by filling it up, and by the river Usboy, which gives a length of the way of 1,200 verstes and will re- quire 15,000,000 roubles of expences; 2. by the river Ku- nia-Daria, the canal Shamrat, the dry bed of the Daudan, by a new canal to be dug in circuit of the Sarakamysh basin, and by the river Usboy, which gives a length of the way of 1,074 verstes and will require 27,000,000 roubles of expences. The navigation way is projected to be 5 feet deep. Department L. Group 154. Class 856. 969. THE RUSSIAN FISHERIES AND FISHING SOCIETY. Sf. Petersburg. Journal The Messenger of Fisheries", complete numbers ior seven years 1886 1892. The society was founded in 1881, and is under the Patronage of His Imperial Highness the Grand Duke Sergy Alexandrovich. The object of the Society is to encourage the progress in fisheries, fishing and other sea and river industries in the Russian Empire. The exhibited journal is published by the Society and edited by D' r O. Grimm. 440 Department L. Group 149. Class 847. 970. THE SIMBIRSK TRADES SCHOOL OF V. V. ORLOV-DAVIDOV, UNDER THE AUGUST PATRONAGE OF HIS IMPE- RIAL MAJESTY THE EMPEROR OF RUSSIA. Simbirsk. 1. Programmes of blacksmiths' and locksmiths' handiwork: samples of work, drawings and designs. 2. Programmes of turners' handiwork: samples of work. 3. Programmes of joiners handiwork: buffet, cup board, small and large oak tables. 4. Drilling lathes. 5. Force pump. 6. Cross-planing lathe. 7. Gear turning lathe. The school was founded in 1871, by Count V. V. Or- lov-Davidov; in 1878 it passed over to the direction of the Ministry of Finances; and since 1882 is under the August Patronage of His Imperial Majesty theEmperor ofRussia. 150 pupils are working at the school from the age of 12 to 20, accomplishing work, value 8,000 10,000 roubles per year. The workshops of the school include i steam motor (4 H. P.), i cupola furnace, i automatic blowing forge, 6 forging furnaces; 2 planing, i cartridge, 4 drilling and i screw-cutting stands; 12 turning lathes for metals and 4 for wood, 9 foot turning lathes, 120 vices and 20 join- ers benches. Most of the lathes and stands are made by the pupils. Materials Russian and Sale in Russia. Department L. Group 147. Class 829. 971. NADEIN, M. St. Petersburg. Workshop and experimental laboratory of sanitary apparatus for populated localities. Models and drawings. 1. Separator for dividing water Irom the solid remains in waterclosets. 2. Apparatus for automatically preparing fertilizing com- pounds. 3. ,,Urinuar", apparatus for preventing the putrefaction of urine in the pipes of closets. 4. Apparatus for ventilating closets and rooms. 5. Syphons for washing drains. 6. Apparatus for. burning the fecal masses in time of epi- demics. 7. Apparatus for dividing urine in waterclosets. Inventions of the exhibitor. Workshop founded in 1892. The amount of yearly production is not determined. Sale to private houses in towns and villages. Department L. Group 147. Class 829. 972. K O S L O V, A. Moscow. Furnace for burning excriments. Invention of the exhibitor. 442 - Department L. Group 120. Class 755. 973. D A V I D O V, P. St. Petersburg. Model of submarine tubes in form of a chain. Exhibited as an invention. Department L. Group 154. Class 899. 974. K O R T, A., Architect. Model of an elevator. Department L. Group 148. Class 839. 975. KHRUSHCHOV, I., Dentist. St. Petersburg. Workshop of instruments of dental surgery. 1 . Mechanical armchair with appliances for dental operations. 2. Technical instruments, mechanical dental drill, etc. 3. Show-case with prosthesis. 4. Publications and pamphlets. Workshop founded in 1885, dentist- cabinets of exhibi- tor since 1874. Receipt for operations etc. 25,000 roubles and for sale of dental appliances 40,000 roubles per annum. Handwork; 12 turning lathes, 2 polishing and 3 drilling stands, i stamping and i hydraulic presses, 2 forging furnaces: 30 workmen and 15 minors. Cast-iron and copper- castings purchased in St.-Petersburg, steel and iron supplied from Ural works. Sale in Russia. 443 Department L. Group 147. Class 829. 976. THE MINISTRY OF WAR, Chief military me- dical direction board. St. Petersburg. 1 . Portable field hygien steam laboratory. 2. Disinfecting apparatus. Department L. Group 149. Class 850.. 977. ALCHEVSKY, M- me C. Kharkov. Private Sunday school for girls. Book in titled: .,What is the peasantry to read. School founded by the exhibitor in 1870. Over 500 children, maidens and women taught gratis by 80 school mistresses, who have compiled the exhibited publication. Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 978. FESENKO, M M. Kharkov. Model of a daily refuge with cribs for children. 444 Department L. Group 149. Class 851. 979. THE FATESH PROGYMNASIUM FOR GIRLS. Gov. of Kursk, Fatesh. Work done by the pupils. 1. A ,,Saian" women's costume from the Fatesh district. 2. Doll dressed as a ,,Saian" women. 3. Embroidered towel. The Progymnasium was founded in 1874. Various wo- men's needlework done, value 50 55 roubles per annum. 15 pupils are working The articles made by them are sold at the annual session of the Progymnasium. Department L. Group 149. Class 841. 980. PECHINSKY, A. St. Petersburg. Album of copies and samples of caligraphical writing. Department L. Group 149. Class 842. 981. GUERBACH, W. St. Petersburg. Copy books and manuals of caligraphy. -5=3? ! - 445 - Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 982. ORLOV-DAVIDOV, Count S. Moscow. The St. Olga's Children's Hospital. 1. Drawings and plans of the Hospital with explanatory notes. 2. Album of views of the Hospital with explanatory notes. 3. Description of the Hospital and annual reports. The Hospital was founded in 1886 and is annexed to the Moscow Committee for relief of poor of the Imperial Benevolent Society. The Hospital includes 36 beds and an infirmary, at which 57,500 outdoor patients have been received during 1892. The employes and the surgeons at service at the Hospital profit of privileges of Crown service. The Hospital possesses an invialable capital of 519,000 roubles; its yearly budget is 30,000 roubles. Since 1891 the Hospital is under the August Patronage of H e r I m p e- rial Majesty the Empress of Russia. Department L. Group 157. Classes 922 and 923. 983. THE IMPERIALLY SANCTIONED SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF HOLY WRIT IN RUSSIA. St. Petersburg. Books of Holy writ. The Society was founded in 1869. About 50,000 copies distributed annually. Up to 1892 1,457,805 copies were distributed. The books are printed at the Synod's typography. 446 Department L. Group 147. Class 831. 984. BUKSHEVDEN, Baron. Photographs of work asylums. 985. THE MINISTRY OF WAR. Department L. Group 147, 149, 151 and 153. Classes 83 1 , 85 1 , 852,855, 866 and 894. I. The Chief Engineering Administration. St. Petersburg. 1. Books and publications. 2. Two albums with drawings oi the Nicholas Engineering Academy and School. 3. Model of a lifting stand for guns of General-Lieutenant Pauker's system. 4. Apparatus for determinating azimuths. 5. Drawings of the Hospital for insane in St. Petersburg. 6. Drawings of the military prison in St. Petersburg. Department L. Groups 149 and 150. Classes 851, 852 and 895. II. The Mikhailovskaia Artillery Academy and school. St. Petersburg. 1. School books and subventions. 2. Lectures of the professors and teachers. 3 . Practical works and drawings of the officers and scholars. The Academy and the school were founded in 1820, the Academy in order to afford superior education to the officers of the Artillery, and the school in order to edu- cate officers for service iu the Artillery. 447 - Department L. Groups 149, 150, 155 and 158. Classes 851, 852, 855, 909 and 930 934. III. Pedagogical museum ot the military schools. Si. Petersburg. 1 . School books and appliances. 2. Lay-figures with samples of cadets clothes. 3. Pamphlets for popular lectures. 4. Account of the works of the Museum. 5. Books, albums, drawings and lists. 6. Maps, globes, diagrams etc. 7. Ethnographical collections: types, busts and lists. (S. Zoological collections: skeletons and various stuffed animals. 9. Anatomical preparations. 10. Physical and topographical apparatus. 1 1 . Models of machines. 1 2. Collection of measures. 1 3 . Models for drawing. 14. Collections of apparatus for class drawing. 1 5 . Musical instruments. Museum founded in 1863. Department L. Group 148. Classes 836 and 837. IV. Surgical instruments works. <9 . Petersburg. Collection of surgical instruments: 1. For battalion, division and hospitals. 2. Anatomical: medical and veterinary. }. Pocket collections: for surgeons and assistant surgeons; medical for sisters of mercy; for veterinary surgeon and assistant veterinary surgeons. Works founded in the 2' ed quarter of the XVIII cen- tury. -448 - Department L. Group 153. Class 893. 986. THE POST AND TELEGRAPH DEPARTMENT. St. Petersburg. 1. Models of mail transport by means of reindeers, dogs, camels and on a ,,odnokolka", chaise, drawn by three horses tandem. 2. Models of mail carrying by men in the Caucasus and of mail conveing by women in ,,KarbassyV, small boats in the Kem district, gov. of Arkhangelsk. 3. Layrigures of postmen life size. 4. Letter boxes, clocks with regulator and scales for letters and parcels. 5. Various appliances and attributes for posts and post offices. 6. Postage stamps, post cards, stamped envelopes and wrap- pers. 7. Publications, maps and statistical tables. Department L. Group 150. Classes 854 and 864. 987. THE MINISTRY OF MARINE. St. Petersburg. 1. The Chief Hydrographical Department. 1 . Four books, containing documents concerning the expe- dition of Commander-Captain Behring, during which the North-Western coast of North America was discovered. 2. Two maps showing the voyage of the vessels of the above mentioned expedition. 3. Four maps of the Arctic Ocean, of the Behring sea and of the gulf Tokio. 4. Four photographs of compasses. - 449 29 Department L. Group 151. Class 867. II. Marine instrument works attached to the Chief Hydrographical Department. St. Petersburg, Chief Admiralty. 1. The standart compass of the ironclad Navarine" with analhidada, azimuth mirror, graduated circle on the brim of the cover glass and sea-card of 7.5" in diameter. The binnacle beares inside a system of two parallel mag- nets with a logarithmic apparatus for correcting the se- micircular deviation; a vertical magnet for correcting heel- ing deviation and soft iron bars for correcting quadrantal deviation. To preserve the card from oscillations, the bowl is joined to the binnacle by a system of brass springs. The lighting is by oil lamps and electricity. The sea card is made of aluminium, has small needles i. 5 inches long, and forms a rigid and light system, only 15 gramms weight. 2. Platform, for demonstrating various modes of correcting the semicircular and heeling deviations of the compass. 3. The steering-compass of the above mentioned ironclad. Sea card diameter 10". The binnacle contains for correct- ing the semicircular deviation a system of two pairs of magnets, one pair being perpendicular to the other and the whole system turning round the vertical axle. The compass has two bowls, the inside one floating in the outer, which is connected to the binnacle by springs. 4. Compass' appliances. Deflector invented by Colonel j. de Collong for mea- suring the horizontal magnetic force, connected to a sea- card, proposed by Baron Shtempel, with inclined needles for simultaneously measuring the vertical magnetic force. 5. Fittings of a steering compass. The fitting consists principally of two electromagnits and has been proposed by M-r Dobrov in order to auto- matically correct errors, arising from the influence of dyna- mos. This fitting was first used on the Imperial Yacht Derzhava". 450 6. Dromoscope of captain A. Kruglov. This apparatus serves for automatically determinating deviations and for correcting the indications of the com- pass, and also for solving many problems of deviation. By the suggestion of Colonel de Collong, the dromoscope is used as well for mechanical determination of the azi- muth of any given star, knowing its horary angle. The marine instrument works were established in 1804. Production by handwork, value 60,000 roubles per annum; 32 lathes; 26 workmen and 14 apprentices. Materials chiefly Russian. Work done for the Imperial Russian Navy. Department L. Group 155. Class 908. 988. THE GEORGIEVSKAIA ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORY. Gov. of Tiflis, Abastuman. Photographs, books aud pamphlets, concerning the progress of the Observatory. Department L. Group 153. Class 833. 989. THE PIGEON SPORT SOCIETY. Kiev. Pigeon-rearing. 1 . Stuffed pigeons and models of pigeon-cots. 2. Appurtenances of dove-rearing. 3. Drawings and maps. 4. Statutes of the Society, short notices, books and regu- lations. 5. Journal ,,The Messenger of pigeon sport", i J& 6. Specimens of appliances for the pigeon-post. The Society founded in 1891. Department A. Group 151. Class 845. 990. PICK, M. Warsaw. Physical and other instrument works. 1. Physical apparatus for eye-sight teaching. 2. Instruments for determinating the quality of wines. 3. Drawing instruments. Established in 1824. Handwork, with use of lathes and carpenters-benches. Production, value 30,000 roubles per annum; 10 workmen and 10 minors. Materials Russian. Sale in Russia. Department L. Group 148. Class 864. 991. F E I G U I N, Ph., Doctor of medicine. \Sf. Petersburg. 1. Anatomical saw with two handles. 2. Anatomical saw with one handle. Exhibited as an invention. - 452 - Department L. Group 151. Class 874. 992. M I E L K, L, Trade house. St. Petersburg and Moskow. Optical instrument works. Optical instruments, cut glasses, spectacles and opera glasses. Production started in St. Petersburg in 1840, in Mos- cow in 1882, value 45,000 roubles per annum. There are 5 hand lathes; 12 workmen. The glasses used for op- tical pollishing are imported from France. Gold and silver purchased on the spot. Sale in Russia. Department L. Group 147. Class 837. 993. FEODOROVICH, A. St. Petersburg. Mechanical ventilator. Exhibited as an invention. Department L. Group 150. Class 829. 994. PIASSETSKY, P. St. Petersburg. Illustration map of the Transcaspian Railway, painting in water-colors. The map is made by the exhibitor, during 1891 1892. 453 Department L. Group 151. Class 871. 995. L I B O V I C H, V. Ria^an. Archaeological photographs. 996. BURILIN, D. Ivanovo-V osnessensk . Numismatic collection. Department L. Group 151. Class 871. 997. ZANIS, C, Artist. Tiflis. Photographs. 998. THE MINISTRY OF WAYS OF COMMUNICATIONS. St. Petersburg. Department L. Group 152. Class 883. i. Department of Railways. 1. Album of Russian railway constructions. 2. Maps, plans, drawings and pamphlets, concerning con- structions on the Novorossiysk branch of the Vladicavcas 454 railway, of the Novorossiysk port and its grain ele- vators. Album of photographic views of the constructions on the South Eastern railways, on the Uman branches, and on the Griaze-Tzarizyn railway. Department L. Groups 148 and 152. Classes 840 and 883. II. Direction of the Crown Railways. 1 . Map of a portion of Siberia, scale 40 versts to an inch, showing the direction of the Great Siberian Railway. 2. Map of Siberia, scale 100 versts to an inch, showing the same direction of the above mentioned Railway. 3 . Map of European and Asiatic Russia, scale 200 versts to an inch, with two longitudinal profiles from the Alexandrovo station on the Prussian frontier to Vladivostok, and from Uleaborg to the Persian frontier. 4. Album of photographic views of the Samara-Zlatoust, Feodosia and Ural railways and the circuit line of the Suram summit. 5. Albums of recordary drawings of the Baranovichi-Belo- stok, Brest-Holm, Sedletz-Malkino and Ufa-Zlatoust rail- ways and of the II nd portion of the circuit line of the Su- ram summit. 6. Report on the construction of the II nd portion of the circuit line of the Suram summit. 7. Model of a sanitary train of the Libau-Romny line. - 455 Department L. Group 152. Class 88 1. III. Department of Roadways and Water Communications. 1 . Map of the water communications of Russia. 2. Detailed and abbreviated plans, abbreviated longitudinal profiles and a short description of the rivers Kama, Oka, Dniepr, Severnaia Dvina, Sura, and Volkhov. 3 . Plaster metrical map of European Russia, scale 60 versts to an inch. 4. Map of the lenght and fall of the rivers of European Russia, scale 60 versts to an inch. 5. Drawings and photographs of the reconstruction of the Maria water way: rivers Vytegra and Kovzha, Belozersk canal and river Sheksna. Department L. Group 152. Class 878. IV. The Commission for the construction of Commercial Ports. 1 . Map of Russia with graphical representation of the yearly tonnage of the ports. 2. Atlas and 14 books, with descriptions of ports, edited by the Commission. 3. Plans of ports. Department L. Groups 150 and 152. Classes 863, 864, 877, 88 1 and 883. V. The Statistical Department. i. Short sketch of the condition and work of the railways and interior water-ways of Russia. - 456 2. Statistical Review published by the Ministry of Ways of Communications, numbers XVII XXX with supple- ments including: a) Data for 1880, 1882, 1884 and 1888, respecting the export and import of grain, salt, coal, naphtha, petro- leum, and other products of naphtha at the rail- way stations, harbours and custom-houses of Euro- pean Russia. b) Data respecting goods traffic by railways, vessels and steamers in 1890. 3. Summary of the interior water ways, vessels and steamers in European Russia. Maps and graphical work. 1. Maps of the railways, roadways and interial water-ways ot Russia, scale 60 versts to an inch, published in 1893. 2. Graphic representation of the opening and closing of the rivers, lakes, and canals in European Russia, of the con- tinuity of navigation and ice driving for the last 10 years, of the traffic of vessels and rafts on artificial and interior water ways and of the traffic by railways. Department L. Group 149. Class 851. VI. The Institute of Engineers of Ways of Communications of the Emperor Alexander the I~ st . St. Petersburg. 1 . Books and publications. 2. Works of professors. 3. Students reports on practical engineering work, accom- plished by them. - 457 Department L. Group 149. Class 832. The Teaching Department. St. Petersburg. The Train - Guards School. Vyshny-Volochok. 1 . Locksmiths' joiner's and carpenter's work made by pupils. 2. Models made by the pupils. Steam distribution by flat slide-valves. Steam distribution by means of the slut-hole of Ziablov. On constructive architecture and engineering. 3. Drawings. 4. Books and school appliances. 5. Pamphlet describing the school, in English. This is the only train -guards school in Russia. It's statutes were Imperially sanctioned on March 28' th 1883. Yearly budget 24,993 roubles; 100 120 pupils. The Technical Railway Schools. 1. Locksmith's, carpenter's and joiner's work, made by pupils. 2. Drawings on telegraphy. 3. Telegraphic conduits and insulators. 4. Models for drawing. 5. Pamphlets describing the schools, in English. fc Technical railway schools are now founded in dif- ferent gov's in Russia. Their regulations and statutes were Imperially sanctioned on April y th 1886. Yearly bud- get of each school 12,500 roubles. The Technical Railway School. Kremenchuk. 1. Counting rule enlarged, made by pupils. 2. Collections ol various joints in wood- work, according to Reinbott's method. ADDITIONAL LIST OF EXHIBITORS. Additional List of Exhibitors. Department A. Groups i, 5 and 9. Classes 5, 7 9, 32, 53 and 56. 999. THE IMPERIAL CAUCASIAN AGRICUL- TURAL SOCIETY. Tiftls. 1. Collections of seeds of grain, beans, oil seeds and of seeds of forage plants. 2. Samples of cotton and cotton seeds ot various kinds. 3. Dye plants. 4. Preserved fruits. 5. Dried fruits. 6. Collection of samples of various kinds of tobacco. See Dep. A. J\ 10. 461 - Department A. Group i. Class 1,3,4 an( ^ 5- 1000. D E V I A T O V, Th. Gov. of Enisseisk; Minussinsk region. Peasant's farming. 1. Wheat ,,Sibirka". Yield 10 fold. Price 25 copecks per pood. 2 . Wheat ' Sandomirka " . Seeds from the Minussinsk Museum. Yield 10 fold. Price 25 copecks per pood. 3. Spring wheat ,Bieloturka*. Seeds imported from the gov. of Ekaterinoslav. Yield 7 10 fold. Price 27 copecks per pood. 4. Oats Canadian. Seeds from the Minussinsk Museum. Yield 12 fold. Price 25 copecks per pood. 5. Barley Siberian. Yield 5 15 fold. Price 20 copecks per pood. 6. Spring rye. Seeds from the Minussinsk Museum. Yield 10 fold. Price 17 copecks per pood. The cultivated soil is elevated and dry, and consists of porous black earth, mixed in some parts with sand and clay; the under soil is of grey and yellow losz. The manuring of fields is not practised. 462 Department A. Group 3. Class 26. 1001. SHARASHIDZE. Gov. of Kutais, O^urgety district. Apiary. Samples of honey and wax. The hives at the apiary are all of the British Ameri- can frame type of M~ r Zubarev. Department A. Group 3. Class 26. 1002. GUIGOVSKY. Province of Kuban. Apiary. Samples of honey and wax. One of the hives at the apiary is of Lansrot-Dadan's frame system. Department A. Group 3. Class 26. 1003. MARYSHEV. Kutais. Apiary. Samples ol honey and wax. 463 - Department A. Group 3. Class 26. 1004. KUSSAKIN. Gov. of Kutais, Zekary summit. Apiary. Samples of 'honey and wax. The hives at the apiary are of the Berlepsh's and Do- linovsky's frame systems. Department A. Group 3. Class 26. 1005. PUSHKIN, A. Novocherkassk. Apiary. Samples ot honey and wax. The hives at the apiary are of Dolinovsky's and Letep's systems, British American of Zubarev's system; three- stored stands of Berlepsh's type and ordinary line-hives; 100 1 02 hives are kept for wintering. The honey is gathered by the bees from white acacia, rape' and melilot. Department A. Groups 3 and 8. Classes 27 and 45. 1006. BORMANN, G., firm ,,George Bormann". St. Petersburg. Chocolate manufactory. Chocolate, cocoa, caramel, sweets and marmalade. Established in 1862. Production 80,000 poods per annum, value 860,000 roubles; 2 steam boilers (80 H. P. each), 2 steam-engines (45 and 25 H. P.), 5 miscers, 12 pairs of rollers, 4 grinding mills, vacuum apparatus, and other machines; 90 workmen and 75 workwomen. Sugar, apples and various fruit supplied from the Interior and Southern gov.'s of Russia; cocoa imported via England and direct from South America and the West Indies. Sale in Russia, partly export to Germany, Sweden, Den- mark and England. Department A. Group 7. Class 43. 1007. NIDEGUER, Ch. Gov. of Tiflis. Cheese-maker. Swiss cheese. Production since 1860; 700 poods per annum, value 10,000 roubles; 8 workmen and 5 workwomen. Milk ob- tained from cows of the exhibitor's stud. Sale in Tiflis. 465 so Department A. Group 8. Class 51. 1008. G O R O S H K O, W. Ekaterinodar. Tobacco plantation. Caucasian tobacco in leaves. Plantation founded in 1868. Production, value 100,000 roubles per annum. 100 workmen and 400 workwomen. Sale in Rostov on the Don. Department A. Group 8. Class 51. 1009. ENFIADZHIANTS, A. Gov. of Tijlis, Signakh district. Tobacco plantations and factory. 1. Trebisond tobacco of 1891 and 1892 harvests, from imported seeds. 2. Trebisond tobacco of 1891 harvest, from hybrid local seeds. 3. Trebisond tobacco of 1892 harvest, from local seeds called Shvek-Kulach " . 4. Parthian tobacco of 1891 and 1892 harvests, from im- ported seeds. 5. Tobacco ..Kiubek" or Rumelian of 1892 harvest, Irom Enidzhey seeds. 6. Tobacco of various kinds in leaves. Plantations founded in 1876. Average yield 1,000 1,500 poods of tobacco per annum. The tobacco is dried by air under sheds; 40 120 workmen, workwomen and minors employed, according to the seasons of cultivation and treating. Seeds partly imported from Turkey, but mostly local hybrid seeds used. The tobacco trom the plantations is supplied to the exhibitor's tobacco factory. - 466 - Department A and H. Groups 3, 9, 19 and 100. Classes 26, 61, 103 and 625 632. 1010. THE CAUCASIAN SERICULTURE STATION. TiJKs. Sericulture and Apiary. Publications of the Station. Collection of samples of cocoons of Caucasian grain. Collection of cocoons, bred at the Station. Samples of raw-silk, dyed and undyed silk and silk refuse. Samples of cocoons and silk, obtained by feeding the worms with dyeing substances. Samples of vegetable dyes. Samples of silk stuffs and articles. Albums with photographs concerning: The progress and organisation of the Station. The sericulture in the Transcaucasus. The sericulture at the Station. The local silk home-industry. The apiary of the Station. Samples of European and Caucasian species of silk worm plants. Production per annum i pood of cellular grain, value 2,000 roubles and 10,000 shoots of mulberry tree value 1,000 roubles; 18 employes and 17 workmen. Sale in the Caucasus, the Southern gov.'s of Europian Russia and in the Transcaspian province. 467 Department A. and H. Groups 9 and 100. Classes 61 and 625 632. 1011. HERTSOG, M- H. Gov. oj Tiflis, Gori district. Sericulture. 1 . Cocoons, grain and twisted silk. 2. Stuffs and articles made of silk. Established in 1890. Production per annum 4 6 1 /* poods of cocoons, from which silk is obtained, value 300 400 roubles. There are 2 foot silk reeling lathes, and I spinning-wheel for twisting silk, i permanent workmen employed during the feeding of silk-worms, besides i 3 hired per day and i workman, i workwoman and i minor during the reeling of silk. The grain is obtained from the Caucasian sericulture Station, from foreign breed- ers, and since 1891 is prepared at the premises. Breeding is exercised for personal study, and also to acquaint the local inhabitants with rational methods of sericulture. A part of the cocoons is selected for breeding nnd grain col- lected from them by cellular method; the remainder pan is distributed to local peasants gratuitously. Sale in Tiflis. Department A. Group 9. Class 59. 1012. PROZOROV, A., firm ,J. Prozorov and Son." St. Petersburg. Flax-dealers. 1. Flax dressed and tied. 2. Viatka and Kama hackled flax. Flax trade since 1841. 100,000 200,000 poods of flax sold per annum, value 400,000 800,000 roubles. The as- sorting, tying and pressing of the flax is done by hand- work; 150 workmen and 300 workwomen. The flax is supplied from the gov.'s of Perm, Tobolsk, Viatka, and Tver. Export via St. Petersburg port, to France, Bel- gium, Great Britain, Germany and Austria. 468 - Department A. Group 10. Class 65. 1013. BICHUNSKY, O. St. Petersburg. Artificial mineral waters factory. Artificial mineral waters. Established in 1866. Production by handwork, 230,000 bottles per annum, value 13,000 roubles; 8 workmen. Ma- terials local. Sale chiefly in St. Petersburg, but partly in other localities of Russia. Department A. Group 16. Class 84. 1014. S E R I K O V. Kharkov. Bucker plough. Department A. Group n. Classes 66 and 68 70. 1015. PETROV, W. St. Petersburg. Rectifying liqueurs and brandy distillery. 1. Rectified spirit 95% strong. 2. Table brandy, brandies and liqueurs. Established in 1862. Production 600,000 vedros of spi- rit, table brandy, brandies and liqueurs per annum, value 4,200,000 roubles; 4 steam-boilers (240 H. P.); i Savalle's rectifying column of 1630 vedros capacity, Vernicke's steam rectifying apparatus of 4,400 vedros capacity and a Bel- gium column of 420 vedros capacity, n purifying vats, 64 cylinders and 4 brandy and liqueurs distilling apparatus; 228 workmen and 92 workwomen employed. Raw spirit supplied from the Baltic and Interior gov's of Russia. Sale in St. Petersburg, and other towns of Russia and abroad. 469 Department A. Group 17- Class 93. 1016. THE ASSOCIATION FOR RAISING AND PREPARING PHOSPHORITE AND OTHER MINERAL FERTILIZING COMPOUNDS. Moscow. Phosphorite beds and phosphorite and other mineral fertiliz- ing compounds works. Collection of samples of phosphorite from beds, belong- ing to the Association. Collection of samples of products from phosphorite and specimens of other mineral fertilizing compounds, treated at the works of the Association. The Association owns phosphorite beds in the gov's of Moscow. Riazan, Kostroma, Vladimir, Tambov, Orel. Podolsk and others. Works founded in Riazan, in 1888. Production 500,000 poods of various fertilizing compounds per annum, value 200,000 roubles. The works include: 2 steam-engines (28 H. P.), 4 sets of grinding siones, 2 crumblers, i mullar, sifters, riddles etc.; 30 permanent workmen employed, besides 100 hired per day. The phos- phorite treated at the works is raised from deposits on the banks of the river Oka, at 8 versts' distance from the works. Sale in Central and North- Western Russia. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 1017. THE IMPERIAL NIKITSKY GARDEN. Taurida gov., Yalta district. Vineyards and wine manufactory. 1. Muscat white, 1888, black and pink. 2. Alikanit, 1887. 470 3. Red-wine, 1890. 4. Table red-wine. 5. Franc-pin. 6 AMI. 7. Semillion. 8. Risling. 9. Traminer. 10. Verdeillo, 1883. Production 1,500 2000 vedros per annum, value 9,000 12,000 roubles; partly machine work by presses, partly handwork with plucking the grapes from the stems; 3 per- manent workmen and 12 apprentices. There is a school of horticulture and \vine-mnnufacturing annexed to the garden. Grapes supplied from own vineyards. The wines depend upon interior markets. See Dep. B. J\ 275. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 129. 1018. THE IMPERIAL APPANAGES. St. Petersburg. Vineyards and wine-manufactory. The estate of His Imperial Majesty ,,Livadia". Yalta district. i. Sparkling wine, Vin mousseux", 1891. Production enlarged in 1880, since when the area of the vineyards has been increased every year and occupies at present 40 dessiatines, of which 32.26 dessiatines are fruit bearing. Red and white table wine is getting manufactured from French vines, also heavy wines and liqueurs. The manufacture of sparkling wines, Vins Mousseux, was start- ed in 1891. The harvest in 1892 gave an average yield of 300 vedros per dessiatina, and a total yield of 10,000 vedros, value 100,000 roubles. The Appanage estate ,,Massandra". Yalta district. 2. Muscat-Lunel, 1877. 3. Muscat- Lunel, 1878. 4. Saperavi, 1891. 5. Carmener, Lafitte, 1891. The estate was bought by the Appanages from the heirs of Prince Vorontsov in 1 889 . It then included 3 o des- siatines of vineyards, which were since increased to the area of 54 dessiatines. Red and white table wines from French vines are chiefly produced, as also liqueurs. In 1892 the average yield per each of the 30 full bearing dessia- tines wns 265.73 vedros and the total yield 7,972 vedros, value 63,776 roubles, The Appanage estate ^Aidanil*. Yalta district. 6. Pino-gn, 1878. 7. Murved, 1891. 8. Karmener, 1891. The estate was bought by the Appanages from the heirs of Prince Vorontsov's in 1889, including then 42 dessia- tines of vineyards, which since have been increased to the area of 105.5 dessiatines. Red and white table wines are prin- cipally manufactured from French vines, as also liqueurs. Average yield in 1892 was 221.18 vedros per each of the 42 full bearing dessiatines, and the total yield 9,404 vedros, value 75.232 roubles. The Appanages estate ,,Abrau". Kuban provhice. 9. Risling, 1893. Regular and systematical cultivation of the vineyards began in 1880. The vineyards in 1892 occupied an area of 63.5 dessiatines, of which 39 dessiatines of full bearing vines. The chief sorts of manufactured wines are Risling and Red Burgundy. Average yield in 1892 was 182 vedros per dessiatina, and total yield 7,211 vedros, value 57,688 roubles. 472 The Appanages Kakhetia estates. Teiav and Signakh districts. The estate w Tsinondali". 10. Saperavi, 1886. 11. Saperavi, 1888. 12. Saperavi. 13. Muvanc, 1886. 14. Rka-Tsiteli, 1889. The estate ,,Mukuzan". 15. Rka-Tsiteli, 1887. 1 6. Rka-Tsiteli, 1889. 17. Rka-Tsiteli. The estate Napareuli*. 1 8. Rka-Tsiteli, 1890. The estates were bought by the Appanages from the Princes Chavchavadze in 1885, since when regular plant- ing and cultivation of the vineyards, according to Euro- pean methods, has been startet. The area of the vineyards was increased upto 1892 to 325 dessiatines, of which 130 des- siatines are full bearing. Local varieties of vines are chiefly planted, and of those the kinds Tsiteli and Muvane are used for manufacturing white wines, and Saperavi for ma- nufacturing red wines. Average yield in 1892 was 293 vedros per dessiatina and total yield 39,000 vedros, value 195,000 roubles. The wines manufactured at the estates of the Appa- nages are sold exclusively in wine-stores belonging to the . Appanages, in banderolled glass bottles of Vis and 1 /32 of a vedro capacity. For trade purposes and for promoting the private wine industry the Appanages purchase from private vineyards in the Crimea 60,000 vedros of wine per annum, which are stored in the Appanages cellars and when ripe, sold* 90,000 100,000 vedros are sold per annum, value 1,000,000 roubles. 473 - Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 1019. S I N A D I N O, Brothers. Gov. of Bessarabia, Orgeiev district. Vineyards and wine-manufactory. Wines, red and white. Production 50,000 vedros per annum, value 150,000 roubles. Department B. Group 20. Classes 126 and 127. 1020. R I K H T E R, G. St. Petersburg. Wholesale store of Russian wine. Crimean wines, white and red. Established in 1879. 30,000 vedros sold per annum, value 200,000 roubles. Department D. Group 20 Classes 126 and 127. 1021. ANDRONNIKOV, Prince. Ti/Ks. Wines. 474 Department B. Groups 21 and 23. Classes 139 and 176. 1022. KATKOV, E. Ka^an. Horticulture and kitchen garden. 1. Dried fruits. 2. Dried apples. Orchard and kitchen garden established in 1873, and drying of fruits and vegetables started since 1890. Pro- duction 200 poods of dried vegetables per annum, value 2,000 roubles. Handwork. One Rider's drying apparatus with 54 sieves; 4 workmen and 20 workwomen. Vege- tables supplied from the exhibitor's garden, besides 2,000 poods, purchased per annum in Kazan. Sale in Kazan and adjacent gov's. Department D. Group 40. Class 273. 1023. BOLDYREV, M. Pressed caviar. Department D. Group 40. Class 273. 1024. KOSHECHKIN, W. 1. Dried spine of sturgeons. 2. Isinglass. Guriev. Guriev. Department D. Group 40. Class 273, 1025. VI EL. Pressed caviar. Guriev. 475 - Department N. Group 97. Classes 604 611. 1026. HAN, Ch. St. Petersburg. Goldsmith and Jeweler. Gold cigar-cases, ash-trays, cups and various art articles of gold enamel work. Established in 1874. Production, value 200,000 roubles per annum. Handwork, 30 workmen. Gold and silver pur- chased in ingots in St. Petersburg. Sale in St. Petersburg. Department N. Group 97. Classes 604 611. 1027. SEROBIANTS, K. Tiflis. Gold and Silversmith. Silver articles filigree, enamelled, niello work etc.; large and small Georgian horns, daggers, cases, inkstands, ci- gar-cases, purses, rings, bracelets, studs etc. Established in 1865. Handwork. Production, value 15,000 roubles per annum; 4 workmen and 2 minors. Silver and gold imported from Hamburg. Sale in Tiflis. * 1028. PLETNEV. A. St. Petersburg. Two pictures, representing hounds-hunting. The pictures are painted by the professor Nicolai Sverchkov. 476 Department H. Groups 104 and 105. Classes 654 and 662. 1029. SHCHERBININ, A. Gov. of Jcnisseisk, Krasnoiarsk. Hat workshop. 1. Malakhay", fur cap with lappets, made of ,,pyzhik", dotterel fur. 2. Jiakut's cap made from dog paws and lined with arctic fox fur, with band of sables' necks. 3. Double cap from otter's and pole-cat's fur, with band of arctic fox fur. 4. Double cap from fox's paws and fox fur. 5. Dotterel cap lined with dotterel fur. 6. Cap from glutton fur. 7. Spring cap from cloth. Workshop established in 1873. Production value 7,000 roubles per annum. Furs supplied from the Krasnoiarsk region. Sale in the gov. of Enisseisk. Department H. Group no. Class 695. 1030. PUTIATIN, Prince E. Gov . of Podolsk. Collection of Easter eggs. The eggs were dyed and painted in Little Russian style by peasants of the village Glebovo. Department W. 1031. REBINDER, M""" V. Counterpane and coverlet for a pillow. Work of the exhibitor. 477 - Department L. Group 150. Class 854. 1032. THE STATISTICAL COMMITTEE OF THE PROVINCE OF THE DON COS- SACKS. Diagrams. Department L. Group 150. Class 854. 1033. THE KIEV TECHNICAL SOCIETY. Kiev, Publications of the Society. Department L. Group 155. Class 908. 1034. THE IMPERIAL RUSSIAN GEOGRAPHI- CAL SOCIETY. St. Petersburg. Maps. 1. Map of the northern Ural. 2. Map of Southern Siberia, scales i : 1,680,000. 3. Ethnographical map of European Russia by P. Keppen, 185 T, scale i : 3,150,000. 4. Ethnographical map of European Russia by Rittich, 1875, scale i : 2,520,000. 5. Map showing the itineraries of Russian scientific travel- lers in Asiatic Russia and adjacent countries, up to 1892, scale i : 4,200,000. Books. i. The Northern Ural, by Hofmann, 2 vols 1853 1856; report of an expedition from 1847 to 1850, organized by the Society. 1 - 478 - 2. Mongolia and the land of the Tanguts, by Przhevalsky, 2 vols, 1875 76; description of the first voyage ot Przhevalsky to Central Asia. 3. Przhevalsky 's report on his third voyage to Central Asia, i vol., 1883. 4. Przhevalsky's report on his fourth voyage to Central Asia, i vol., 1888. 5. The North- Western Mongolia, by Potanin, 4 vols, 1881- 1883. .6. Orographical sketch of the Pamirs, by Severtsov, i vol., 1886. 7. Results of the Siberian levelling carried out on the Society's expenses from Zverinogolovsk, on the Siberian border of European Russia, to Irkutsk, by Fuss, i vol., 1885. 8. The ancient beds of the Oxus, by Kaulbars, i vol., 1887. 9. The snow-cover, its influence on climate and weather, by Voe'ikov, i vol., 1889. 10. The Transcaspian low land, by Obruchev, i vol., 1890. 1 1 . The distribution oi the atmospheric pressure over the Russian Empire and the Asiatic continent, with an atlas of 69 maps, by Tillo. i vol., 1890. 12. Materials for ascertaining the distribution of the gravity in Russia, parts I IV in i vol., 1890 1892. 13. Anthropological researches among the Mordvins by Mainov, i vol., 1883. 14. The Pintchuki's, inhabitants of the great marshes in Wes- tern Russia. 15. Sketches of the life in the Buddhist monasteries and of the Buddhist clergy in Mongolia, by Posdneiev. The Imperial Russian Geographical Society was found- ed in 1845, includes at present 970 members under the Presidency of His Imperial Highness the Grand Duke Nicolai Mikhailovich and Vice Presidency of M* r P. Semenov, Senator, and has four branch sections in Irkutsk, Omsk, Tiflis and Orenburg. In 1892 the Society has been 479 in connection with 678 scientific bodies. During the last 10 years, 18831892, the Society excluding its sections spent 248,546 roubles on scientific work, and 153,989 roubles on publications. The Society possesses a library of nearly 60,000 volumes. Department B. Group 20. Class 132. 1035. THE CAUCASUS PHILOXERE COMMITTEE. Tifiis. Materials on the Ampelography ol the Caucasus, vol, i- st - Published by the Committee and compiled by W. Sta-- roselsky, Agronom of the Ministry of Public Domains in the Caucasus. Department L. Group 150. Class 864. 1036. VEBER, C. Corea. Map of North-Eastern China, scale i : 1,355,000. Edited by exhibitor, Imperial Russian Charge d'Affaires in Corea. DISPOSED BY THE CLASSIFICATION. 81 List of the Exhibitors disposed by the classification. DEPARTMENT A. GROUP 1. Cereals, grasses and forage plants. Page. Alexeiev, J 34 19 Antonov, K 37 21 Baranov, J. 55 31 Berg, Count Th 28 15 Berendt and C 49 28 Bieliavsky 27 15 Bonetsky, A 65 36 Borell, E 5 8 33 Branitsky, Count X 73 39 Bunakov, A 52 30 Cherniaev, E. 36 21 Chief Superintendency (Ministry of War) ... 9 Chumakov's, M. Sons 57 32 Cotarbinsky, V. 76 40 Deviatov, Th 1000 462 Donskoy, A. 463 216 - 483 - A.\s Page. Farm of the Agricultural School of Uman - 8 7 Frolova M. ,,Tsimerman Economy" .... 46 27 Galunov, A. . ' 48 27 Goilov, L 22 12 Goretsk Agricultural Farm 6 6 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 210 Gromadzky, K 44 25 Gursky, J 61 34 I 10 8 Imperial Caucasian Agricultural Society . . . .< ^ Kazan Agricultural Farm 5 5 Kharkov Agricultural Farm 4 5 Khoklov, A 25 14 Khrapovitsky, Count E 77 40 Kleinmichel, Count C 29 15 Kozlovsky, V 68 37 Krassinsky, Count L 71 38 Kronenberg, 1 63 35 Kurovsky, E 21 12 Lenaitovitch, A 67 36 Liberman, Brothers G. and A 54 31 Lubensky, J 70 38 Maiakin, E 39 23 Mansfeldt, D 47 27 Mariinsky Agricultural Farm 7 7 Meller, M 42 24 Moller 17 10 Nicolaiev Exchange Committee 16 10 Novaia Alexandria Institute of Agriculture and Forestry 2 4 Obzhorin, S 40 23 Odessa Exchange Comktee ....... 15 10 Ofrosimov, A. 20 12 Okhenkovsky, C). 72 38 Okulov, J 45 26 Oushin, N 26 14 Pershin, J. 33 19 Petrovskaia Agricultural Academy i 3 Pototskaia, Countess M. 66 36 Prianishnikov .... 41 24 Riga Exchange Committee 13 9 Rostov Exchange Committee ......... 14 9 - 484 - J&re Page. Salomatov 35 20 Satin, A 19 n Sazanov, E. 38 22 Selezniev, E 464 217 Shmidt, Bro:hers 51 29 Sinadin 30 16 Sobeshin 62 35 Society of Agricultural Colonies 60 34 Station for Melioration and Agricultural Experiments 59 33 Stenbock-Fermor, Count J 18 n Stroganov, Count P 24 13 Taldykina, M'" 16 C 53 30 Tereshchenko, N 31 1 6 Tereshchenko, Th 32 18 Turbin, J 23 13 Ufa Government Museum. . 12 9 Vydzhga, J. . 75 39 Weins:ein, E. and Sons ... .... 56 32 Weiss, Ch., firm Starr and C" 50 29 Yagovkin, A 43 25 Yanash, A. 69 37 Yelets Zemstvo n 8 Zakrzhevsky, N 74 39 Zhuravsky, J 64 35 GROUP 2. Bread, biscuits, pastes, starch, gluten etc. Bunakov, A. 52 30 Galunov, A 48 27 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 211 Rostovtseva, J . 78 40 Schmidt, Brothers 51 29 Taldykina, M"" 6 C. 53 30 Weinstein E. and Sons 56 32 Weiss, firm Starr and C" 79 41 485 - GROUP 3. Sugars, syrups, confectionery, etc. JVj\ Page. Balashov, M" me C 174 73 Bkrikh, M- me C, firm ,,Bartels 186 78 Bolotnikov, S. i 191 81 Borman, G., firm George Borrnan" 1006 465 Botkins Imperially Sanctioned Association ... 176 74 Caucasian Sericulture Station 1010 467 Go vemor-General of Turkestan 462 211 Guigovsky 1002 463 Imperial Appanages 180 76 152 65 Imperially Sanctioned Bone Calcining Company Kharkov Sugar-Refmery Association 181 76 Khoklov, A . 190 80 Kurdiumov 175 73 Kussakin 1004 464 Lomakin, V. . 189 79 Maryshev 1003 463 Pushkin, A . 1005 464 Russian bee breeding Society 187 79 Ryzhoy . 183 77 Sharashidze 1001 463 St. Petersburg bee breeding Museum .... 188 79 Station for Melioration and Agricultural Experiments 59 33 Tereshchenko, Brothers, Imperially Sanctioned Asso- ciation 17^ 74 Tereshchenko, N 178 75 Tereshchenko, Th. . 179 75 Tolstoy, Count M 182 77 Vrublevsky, J jgj 78 -5=3==?- 4 86 GROUP 4. Potatoes, tubers and other root crops. Page. Farm of the Agricultural School of Uman . . . 103 46 Dobrzhansky, J. and Son 101 46 Dzenguelevsky, J. ...... 98 45 Frych, K. 102 46 Glussky, G 97 44 Gradenvits, V. .... 100 45 Imperial Appanages 93 43 Maizel, V 99 45 Society of Agricultural Colonies 95 44 Tereshchenko, Th. 94 44 Yanash, A 96 . 44 -f=3-H- GROUP 5. Products of the farm not otherwise classed. Beliavsky ... 87 42 Donskoy, A 463 216 Imperial Caucasian Agricultural Society .... 999 461 Kharkov Agricultural Farm 83 41 Khrapovitsky, Count E 89 43 Mariinsky Agricultural farm 84 42 No vaia- Alexandria Institute of Agriculture andTorestry. 8 1 41 Odessa Exchange Committee 85 42 Okhenkovsky, Ch 91 43 Petrovskaya Agricultural Academy 80 41 Pototskaia, Countess M. . . 90 43 Satin, A 82 41 Sazanov, E. 38 22 Society of Agricultural Colonies 88 42 - 487 - AivM' Page. Stroganov, Count 86 42 Ufa Government Museum 12 9 Vydzgha, J 92 43 GROUP 6. Preserved meats and food preparations. Roman, I. 193 Si Stroganov, Count P 192 81 Tuorla 194 82 GROUP 7. The dairy and dairy products. Nideggeiy Ch 1007 465 Vereshchagin, N 173 72 -^ GROUP 8. Tea, cofTe, spices, hops, and aromatic and vegetable substances. Aslanidy, I. and A., Brothers 225 92 Bogdanov, A. and C u 230 95 Borman, G., firm ,,Georg Borman" 1006 465 Borman, M""' e T 240 99 488 Page. Braghin, B. and Sons 218 90 Chumakov's, M. Sons . 228 94 Dzhigit, E. and D 227 93 Enfiadzhiantz, A 1009 466 Fedosseiev, J 224 92 Goroshko, B. .* 1008 466 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 211 Imperially Sanctioned First Hop Culture Sodety. - 220 90 Kazan Agricultural Farm 217 89 Kleinmichel, Count ............ 219 90 Klenovsky, J 216 89 Kronenberg, L. 221 91 Krupar, E 215 89 Kushnarev, J .... 232 96 Mirzabekiants, G. and M., Brothers 233 96 Muratchaiev, K. and Nazarov, Kh 235 97 Novaia Alexandria Institute of Agriculture and Forestry 222 9 1 Perlov, B. and Sons 243 100 Perlov, S 242 100 Safarov, M. 223 91 Selivanov, A 239 99 Slier eshevsky, J. 234 97 Sinaden 236 98 Turshu, E 229 94 Victorson, A 237 98 Volchansky, V 226 93 Vrublevsky, I 241 99 Weiss, Ch., firm Starr and C." ...'.. 238 98 Zaritsky, A 231 95 GROUP 9. Animal anb vegetable fibres. Berendt and C 200 84 Caucasian Sericulture Station. . . . . . . 1010 467 Devishev, iM 209 87 - 489 - Donskoy, A Fofonov, M. ... . . . Gerzog, M'" 16 H Governor General of Turkestan Imperial Caucasian Agricultural Society. Kashin, N., New Kostroma Linen Manufactory Asso- ciation Kharkov Agricultural Farm Kletniev, N Krivsky, P Liutov's M. Sons Mariinsky Agricultural Farm Melkonov-Esekov, G. Minder, G. Petrovskaia Agricultural Academy Plieshanov, I Pridanov. ........ Prosorov, A., firm J. Prosorov and Son." Pskov Agricultural Society. .... Shavrov Shishkov, N. . Shweitser, E Stenbock-Fermor, Count Suthof, C. and C Troitsk Primary Agricultural School . Vvedensky, A JfiJS 463 212 IOII 462 999 2OI 205 198 210 2O2 7 21 204 208 IOI2 196 2O6 195 199 465 Page. 216 88 468 212 461 8 4 86 83 87 85 7 88 87 218 86 86 86 468 83 88 85 83 86 82 84 218 GROUP 10. Pure and mineral waters, natural and artificial. Bichunsky, O. . 1013 469 Lanin, N 132 59 490 GROUP 11. Whiskies, cider, liqueurs and alcohol. .\ A? Page. Avanessov, Brothers 120 54 Balk, Ch. 109 49 Blossfeldt, J 117 53 Bogatyrev, J 118 53 Bolman and C 119 54 Chaplinsky, M. and M' me M 116 52 Chistiakov, St. and C 127 58 Keller and C 106 48 Lange, K. and C in 50 Mariinsk Distillery Association 126 57 Megvinov, S 123 56 Natus, F. and C 107 48 Petrov, B 1015 469 Rabotkin, P 113 51 Rogger, P 112 51 Saradzhev, D 104 47 Shereshevsky, J 128 58 Smietanin, G 124 56 Smirnov, P 115 52 Smirnov, S 114 51 Stalnov,] 125 57 Tereshchenko, Th 108 49 Timofeievsky, Brothers. 130 59 Vaniushina, M' me 129 58 Vikel, W 131 59 Volkova, M- me A., firm B Gothard Martini" ... no 50 Vorogushin, N 121 55 Wolfshmidt, A 105 47 Yon, J .'.... 122 55 491 GROUP 12. Malt liquors. Page. Durdin's, J., Imperially Sanctioned Association . 133 60 GROUP 15. Litterature and Statistics of agriculture. Department of Agriculture and Rural Industry . . 244 100 Dokuchaiev, B. and Sibirtsev, N 255 103 I 3 4 Imperial Agricultural Museum \ Imperial Agricultural Society of Moscow. . . . 248 101 Mansfeld 250 102 Neishtube 251 102 Neuman, M 249 101 Petrovskaia Agricultural Academy . . . . 247 101 Sibirtsev, N., (Dokuchaiev, B. and Sibirtsev, N.) . 255 103 Trilsky, A 252 102 Warsaw Museum of Industry and Agriculture . . 246 101 Weiss von WeissenhofF 254 102 Zhilinsky 253 102 GROUP 16. Farmingtools, implements and machinery. Berg, Count Th 257 103 Governor General of Turkestan 462 212 Sierikov 1014 469 Votkinsk Crown Works 256 103 492 GROUP 17. Miscellaneous animal products. Fertilizers and fertilizing compounds. J6J6 Page. Association for raising and manufacturing phosphorite and other mineral fertilizing compounds . . 1016 470 Cruming, A 165 70 Fofonov, M 170 71 Imperially Sanctioned Bone Calcining Company . 166 70 Kulomzin, A 164 69 Lurie 167 71 Petrovskaia Agricultural Academy 163 69 Savin, V 169 71 Sinadin 172 72 Suntsov's, V. and A., Brothers 168 71 Zhilin, Z. 171 71 GROUP 18. Fats, oils, soaps, candles, etc. Alikhanov, K., (Tairov, I. and Alikhanov, K.) . . 136 61 Berendt and C 150 65 Donskoy, A. 463 216 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 212 Gromadzsky, K 44 25 Imperially Confirmed Bone Calcining Company . 152 65 Kharkov Agricultural Farm 140 63 Krestovnikovs, Brothers 162 68 Liutov's M., Sons . 155 66 Lurie 158 66 Mariinsky Agricultural Farm 135 61 Nicolaiev Exchange Committee . 146 64 Novaia Alexandria Institute of Agriculture and Forestry 141 63 Odessa Exchange Committee 145 64 493 c 5 3* f< J&TC 1 60 I 3 8 157 139 144 143 148 464 I 5 6 '53 134 147 149 159 136 154 142 137 J5 1 161 263 266 lOIGk 2 5 8 462 260 259 268 267 262 265 26l 264 Page. 67 62 66 63 64 63 64 217 66 66 60 64 65 6/ 61 66 63 62 65 68 107 1 08 467 104 212 IO4 IO4 1 08 108 107 107 107 107 Satin, A. Shishkov, N Suntsov's V. and A , Brothers Tairov I. and Alikhanov K GROUP 19. Forestry, forest products. Avgustinovich Buldakov, S. Commission attached to the Ministry of Public Domains Imperial Appanages Keller Tikhomirnov, M> me 3 } 494 c > ( > DEPARTMENT B. and appli 289 ances. Page. 118 474 117 119 480 112 113 117 112 122 471 113 47 113 1 20 1 20 116 118 114 in 119 121 114 116 474 121 474 in 122 GROUP 20. Viticulture, manufactured products. Methods Andronnikov, Prince Annenkov, M Brazhnikovs, P. and V Caucasus Pbiloxere Committee ..... 1021 287 292 Derozhinsky, M 272 276 286 27? * I J Imperial Appanages . 1018 I 275 Imperially Sanctionned Wine-Manufactory Association 274 Kempner, M. and I Brothers 2 28? I eonard M~ me O Mecrvinov, S 26 Miniashin A firm Alushta" 278 28? Richter G IO2O Saradzhev. D. TOT Q 2Q7 *"/ c i c > 495 Page. Sokolov, D. 281 115 Stahl, Brothers 288 117 Tatuzov, A 282 115 Ter-Arutinov, N. 284 116 Tomulets, G 271 112 Tripolsky, Th 280 115 Vishniakov V. and C 277 114 GROUP 21. Pomology, manufactured products. Methods and appliances. Derozhinsky, M. 302 123 Goilov, L 303 123 Governer -General of Turkestan 462 213 Katkov, D. 1022 475 Kolakovsky, J 307 125 Lanin, N. 290 118 Ministry of Public Domains 300 123 Prokhorov, A 305 124 Shonhov, 301 123 Ter-Ioanissiants , . . 304 124 Volguin, D 306 125 Vvedensky, A 465 218 GROUP 23. Culinary Vegetables. Governer- General of Turkestan 462 214 Katkov, D 1 022 475 Kokuiev, N 309 126 Kolakovsky, I. 307 125 496 J&Ns Page. Ministry of Public Domains 300 123 Roman, 1 308 125 Volguin 306 125 Wolf, M' me A., Successor of Price 310 126 G R O U P 26. Appliances, methods, etc. Cufalt, G 299 122 DEPARTMENT D. GROUP 38. Sea fishing and angling. Astrakhan Administration of the fishing and seal catch- ing industries 311 129 Basilevsky, Th., Astrakhan Sinemorsk fisheries. . . 313 130 Solnyshkov, S . 312 130 497 32 GROUP 39. Fresh water fishing and angling. JSJs Page. Basilevsky, Th., Astrakhan Sinemorsk fisheries. , . 313 130 Stepanenko, M"" 6 N . 315 131 G R O U P 40. Products of the fisheries and their manipulation. Astrakhan Administration of the fishing and seal catching industries. 311 129 Basilevsky Th., Astrakhan Sinemorsk fisheries . 313 130 Bayl, J. 324 135 Boldyrev, M. . . . 1023 475 Bratus, M. - . 325 136 Buzhisky, S. . . . . 318 132 Chilikin, V. 316 132 Danielson, D 322 134 Dubinin, B. .... 321 134 Koshechkin, B 1024 475 Krausp, M- me C. ..... . 319 133 Lianosov. G. and Pridonov, A., Bozhi-Promysly Fish- ery Company 323 135 Riadnin, C. 327 136 Roman, 1 320 133 Solovky Convent 314 131 Stepanenko, M' 1 " 6 N. ... 315 131 Viel 1023 475 Vlasinko, C 326 136 Zhadan, J. 317 132 DEPARTMENT E. G R O U P 42. Minerals, ores, native metals, gems, and crystals. Geological specimens. J&Ns Page. Alagir Crown Works 344 148 Bellad, Ch 347 149 Chubinidze, G. and C ft 355 154 Dombrovo coal field 329 140 Filkovich, N 354 153 Glebov, A. 334 142 Mining Administration of South Russia . . . . 333 142 Mining Institute, under direction of the Mining De- partment 360 156 Ovchinikov, Brothers 352 152 Sadon Mine 344 148 Sumin, J. 346 149 GROUP 43. Mineral combustibles coal, coke, petroleum natural gas, etc. Abamelek-Lazarev, Princess E 361 157 Alexeievskoie Mining Company 342 147 Dombrovo coal field 329 140 Imperially Sanctioned Russo - American Naphtha In- dustry Association 341 146 Nobel, Brothers 339 145 Schmidt, K 340 146 - 499 - GROUP 44. Building stones, marbles, ornamental stones and quarry products. J6J6 Page. Stritzhev, N ' . 349 150 GROUP 47. Limestone, cements and artificial stone. Moscow Joint-Stock Company ..... 348 149 GROUP 48. Salts, sulphur, fertilizers, pigments, mineral waters and mis- cellaneous useful minerals and compounds. Abamelek-Lazarev, Princess E 361 157 Imperially Sanctioned company for the exploitation of rock salt and natural soda in South Russia . 345 148 Myshkovsky, M 357 155 500 GROUP 49. Metallurgy of iron and steel, with the products. Page. Abameleck-Lazarev, Princess E 361 157 Balashovs, N. and J. 359 156 Ekatcrininsk Iron Works 362 158 Gora-Blagodait Region 351 iji Guta-Bankova 363 158 Olonets mining district 335 143 Rastorguievs, L. Successors 330 140 Shamov, 'N. and C 331 141 Votkinsk Crown Works 336 144 Zlatoust Small Arms Factory (Mining D' nt of the Ministry of Public Domains) 332 141 GROUP 51. Copper and its alloys. Metallurgy. Caucasian Mining Direction 343 147 GROUP 57. Extraction of gold, silver and lead by fire. Alagir Crown Works 344 148 Sadon Mine 344 148 501 GROUP 61. Boring and drilling tools and machinery, and apparatus for breaking out ore and coal. J6J6 Page. Dombrovo coal field 3 2 9 H Filkovich, N 354 1 53 Glushkov, E. Mining Engineer 35^ T 54 Gora Blagodait Region 35 1 I 5 I Voyslav, S. 35 GROUP 67. History and litterature of mining and metallurgy. Board of Council for Baku Naphtha Industry . 337 144 Dombrovo coal field 329 140 Ekaterininsk Iron Works. 362 158 Geological Committee of the Mining Department . 338 145 Glebov, A 334 142 Gora Blagodait Region 351 151 .Imperially Sanctioned Company for the exploitation of rock salt and natural soda in South Russia . 345 148 Mining Administration of South Russia . . . . 333* 142 Mining Department of the Ministry of Public Domains 328 139 Mining Institute under direction of the Mining De- partment 360 156 Moscow Joint-Stock Company . . . . . . 348 149 Myshkovsky, M 357 155 Nobel, Brothers 339 145 Shamov, N. and C 331 141 Votkinsk Crown Works 336 144 GROUP 68. Originals or reproductions of early and notable imple- ments and apparatus used in mining and metallurgy. J6J Page. Lebedev, N. 353 153 Slavianov, N. 358 155 DEPARTMENT F. GROUP 69. Motors and apparatus for the generation and transmission of power hydraulic and pneumatic apparatus. Cronstadt divers' training School 364 161 Cronstadt mechanical and ship building Works . . 364 161 Delone, N 372 165 Keller and C 366 162 Komarov, J. 367 162 Ministry of Marine . . . . . . 364 161 Nobel, E. and Ch . . . . 371 164 Rauzer, A., firm ,,Miller, Fugelzang and C" . . 370 164 St. Petersburg Metallic Works 373 165 Yakovlev, E 365 162 GROUP 70. Fire engines apparatus and appliances for extinguishing fire. Zimin, N 369 163 - 503 - GROUP 72. Machinery for the manufacture of textile fabrics and clothing. Page. Berugashvilli, R. 4 6 9 219 GROUP 73. Machines for working wood. Meyer, H 368 163 GROUP 74. Machines and apparatus for type setting, printing, stamping, embossing, and for making books and paper working. Benke, A. 381 168 374 1 66 State Paper Manufactory 459 GROUP 75. Lithography, zincography and color printing. Diusterdik. 376 166 Marks A., Editor of the Journal .,Niva". . -.. . . 380 168 Polianin, P 383 169 JSJS Page. Soloviev, M 379 167 Stadlerand Pattinot 382 169 Von-Bool, N 375 166 GROUP 76. Photo-mechanical and other mechanical processes of illu- strating, etc. Fisher, Ch., firm n Diagovcbenko" 385 170 Kroiss, F 378 167 Miionov, C. . 377 167 GROUP T7rT 1 1. Miscellaneous hand-tools, machines and apparatus used in various arts. Kostikov- Almazov, A 384 170 DEPARTMENT G. GROUP 80. Railways, railway plants and equipment. Bronthtein, D. 399 180 Guintsburg, B . 401 181 505 Page. Ritsoni, P. ... 402 181 Theodorovich, H 400 180 GROUP 83. Vehicles and methods oi transportation on common roads. Dement, M. and Son. 394 178 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 216 Grigoriev, W 397 179 Kusnetzov, A 396 179 Markov, W 398 180 Nellis and Frese . 392 177 Semenov, G. 403 182 Tsimmerman, R ... 395 178 Ushln's, N., Successors 390 176 Volk and C 393 177 GROUP 85. Vessels, boats marine, lake and river transportation. Coriakin, J 391 176 Goth, J. . 388 175 Solnyshkov, N 389 175 St. Petersburg Metallic Works 387 175 - 506 GROUP 86. Naval warfare and coast defence. Page. Cronstadt Rope Works 386 174 Galerny Ostrov Ship-Yard 386 174 Ministry of Marine 386 173 Model Workshop of the Marine Museum. ... 386 173 St. Petersburg Metallic Works 387 175 DEPARTMENT H. GROUP 87. Chemical and pharmaceutical products druggists' supplies. Bremme, Brothers. 507 237 Brocard, H. and C- 489 229 Eliashev, R 496 232 Hirshman, L 499 233 Ivanov, A. 497 232 Roller, R 511 239 Krestovnikovs, Brothers. . 492 230 Lapshin, W 501 234 Loguinov, W 500 234 Lubimov, Solvay and C 512 240 Lurie, S 493 230 Mirzaiants and C 515 241 Ostroumov, A. 495 231 Pell, A 510 239 Ralle, A. and C, Successor 498 233 Reinherz, A . 506 237 Repman, R 508 238 Smirnov, S 514 241 507 J^Js? Page. Tentelevsky Chemical Works 504 236 Tsypkin, S. 505 236 Ushkov, P. and C 513 240 Yassinsky, J. . 509 238 GROUP 88. Paints, colors, dyes and varnishes. Bremme, Brothers 507 237 Olovianishnikov, J 502 235 Sinitsyn, P. 494 23 1 Vakhrameiev's, N., Successors 503 2^5 * ; =i- GROUP 89. Typewriters, paper, blank books, stationery. Freiberg, A., firm August Lira" 519 243 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 214 State Paper Manufactory 459 208 Vargunin, Brothers 518^ 243 GROUP 90. Furniture of interiors, upholstery, and artistic decoration. Barilussov, J 468 219 De-Kamilli, G 447 204 508 Page. Goncharova, M' me E 45 8 207 Governor General of Turkestan 462 214 Greenberg. Cli. 45 2O 5 Imperial Peterhov stone cutting Manufactory. . . 417 191 Levitt,] 45 2 2o6 Loviton, N 451 206 Meltser, T. and C 449 205 Posse, O. 409 187 Semechkina, M" me T 445 203 Sorokin, A 467 219 Tucalev, N 411 188 Zhessel, A 426 195 GROUP 91. Ceramics and mosaics. Governor General of Turkes:an 462 214 Grantsov, C .... 516 242 Kusnetzov, M. and C" 433 198 Lippoid, A 412 189 Rasteriaiev, G. 517 242 Semenov, J ..... 435 199 GROUP 92. Marble, stone and metal monuments, mausoleums, mantles, etc. caskets, coffins and undertakers' furnishing goods. Bergman, V 437 200 Imperial Ekaterinburg stone cutting Works. . . . 413 189 Imperial Kolyvan stone polishing Works. . . . 413 189 Imperial Peterhov stone cutting Manufactory . . 417 191 - 509 J&Ns Page. Kopievsky, C 422 193 Korchakov-Sivitsky, V 4 l6 I 9 l Mikeshin, M ' ... 420 193 Persianinov, A 4*5 I 9 Svecbnikov, A. 414 190 Veitsenberg, A. 448 204 Verfel, Ch 431 197 GROUP 93. Art metal work enamels etc. Fedorov, A 424 194 Meltser, A., firm J. Stange". ... ... 419 192 Renner, L 446 203 Verfel, Ch. . 431 197 GROUP 94. Glass and glassware. Frolov, A 45"- !&5 Nechaiev-Maltsev, J 432 198 -N==f==i- GROUP 96. Carvings in various materials. Abrossimov, S 410 188 Baburin, J 404 185 510 .ASAi Page. Fedorovitch, G. .......... 404 185 Governov-General of Turkestan. . .... 462 214 Kraiser, C. ........... 404 1 85 Michelson, J. .......... 404 185 Shurov.A ............ \ 43 8 200 GROUP 97. Gold and silver ware, plate, etc. Dalman, A. 428 196 Grachev, M . 418 192 Han, Ch. 1026 476 Khodjeyan, K 429 196 Klingert, G. and Levitt, J 427 196 Korsinin, G .... 425 195 Marshak, J. 423 194 Ovchinnikov, M. and A. 430 197 Serobiants, K 1027 476 GROUP 98. Jewelry and ornaments. Bernstein, Brothers 439 201 Berugashvilli, R. . . 469 219 Grachev, M 418 192 Ovchinnikov, M. and A 430 197 GROUP 99. Horology watches, clocks, etc. Page. Makarovsky, N 487 228 GROUP 100. Silk and silk fabrics. Alexandrovs, E. and J 569 269 Berugashvilli, R 469 219 Bocharov, J. . 557 263 Caucasian Sericultural Station 1010 467 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 215 Herzog, M" 116 E ion 468 Khodjeyan, K 429 196 Mussi P. and Successors of Gujon, P 558 264 Sapozhnikov, V. . 560 265 Suratov, S 572 271 Zaglodin, Brothers G., N. and S 559 264 GROUP 101. Fabrics ol jute, ramie and other vegetable and mineral fibres. Moscow Dye Mill 553 261 Senkov, S 542 255 512 GROUP 102. Yarns and woven goods of cotton, linen and other vege- table fibres. Page. Alexandrovs, E. and J . 569 269 Balakin, G 552 261 Baranov, J . 544 256 Bogorodsko Glukhovskaia Manufactory Company . 548 2j8 Burylin, D 523 245 Demidov, V. 539 253 Derbeniev's, N. Sons 528 248 Gandurin, A., and Brothers 526 247 Garelin, J , and Sons 5 29 248 Garelin's, N., Sons. 527 247 Governor-General of Turkestan Khludov, A Konshin, N. Kuvaev Manufactory 530 Malutin's, P. Sons 532 250 Marakushev, C., firm ,,Kokushkin and Marakushev" 524 246 Minder, G 466 218 Morosov's S. Son and C 549 259 Morosov, V. and Sons 545 257 Moskow Dye-Mill 553 Pal, Ch. Pavlov, S Prokhorov's Trekhgornaia Manufactory 537 252 Rostov Linen Manufactory 540 Sakin, P 541 Senkov, S 542 Shuia Manufactory 536 252 Zubkov's, N., Successors . 525 246 Zubov, V. 547 258 Zuievo Manufactory of J. Zimin 533 250 Voronin, J 534 251 Yasiuninsky, V., E., and A 531 249 313 - 33 GROUP 103. Woven and felted goods of wool and mixtures of wool. Jv'sJS'" Page. Alexandrovs, E. and. J. ........ 569 269 Berugashvilli, R 469 219 Bielov's, V., Imperially Sanctioned Association. . . 551 260 Brunov, P 57 2 7 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 215 Heinzel, J. 55 6 26 3 Moscow Dye-Mill , . . 553 261 Narva Cloth Manufacture 554 262 Poliakov's, A. Imperially Sanctioned Association . . 550 260 Smirnov, M. . . 582 276 Spekhin, V 573 2 7* GROUP 104. Clothing and costumes. Berugashvilli, R. . 469 219 Bogdanov, V. 577 274 Dyshko, V 576 273 Galeiev, M 580 275 Governor- General of Turkestan 462 ^ 215 Hibner, R 602 " 286 Kozlov, J 597 284 Peretz, N. 571 270 Shcherbinin, A. 1029 477 Sorokin 599 285 Spechin, V 573 271 St. Petersburg machine work boot and shoe Manu- factory. . 578 274 Technical Committee of the Chief Superintendancy 555 262 Vysotsky, A 583 277 Weiss, H . . . 585 278 514 GROUP 105. Furs and fur clothing. Page. Greenwald, E 562 266 Greenwald, P 561 265 Mishchenko, P 564 267 Panov's, V. Sons and Kovalev. 568 269 Panyshevs, J., M. and Kh 5 6 5 26 7 Panyshev, J 566 268 Popov, J 563 266 Shcherbinin, A 1029 477 Sutiagnin, M 567 268 GROUP 106. Laces, embroideries, trimmings, artificial flowers, fans, etc. Barilussov, J 468 219 Berugashvilli, R 469 219 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 216 Kbodjejan, K. 429 196 Kolomn's, P. Sons 442 202 Natanson, Brothers 520 244 Peretz, N 571 270 Pliater Ziberg, Count] 521 244 GROUP 108. Traveling equipments valises, trunks, toilet cases, fancy leather-work, canes, umbrellas, parasols, etc. Aksenov, St. 440 201 Dement, M. and Son 600 285 - 5'5 Page. Galeiev, M 580 275 Governor - General of Turkestan . ... . 462 216 Hibner, R 602 286 Spechin, V. ....... ... 573 271 St. Petersburg machine work boot and shoe Manu- factory 578 274 Vologda permanent Home Industry Exhibition . . 522 245 GROUP 109. Rubber goods, caoutchouc, gutta percha, celluloid, and zylonite. Russo- American Rubber Manufactory . . . . 574 272 GROUP 110. Toys and fancy articles. Lukutin, N. 434 * Nicolaieva, M- me E 444 202 Putiatin, Prince E. 1030 478 Tucalev, N 411 188 Vishniakov, P. and Sons 436 200 Vishniakov, V 441 2 oi Voronova, M' me N 443 202 - S t6- GROUP 111. Leather and manufactures of leather. Page. Brusnitzyn, N. and Sons 575 273 Damm, E 601 285 Dement, M. and Son 600 285 Erivantsev-Astvatsurov, M 584 277 Fofonov, M. 598 284 Galeiev, M 580 275 Hibner, R 602 286 Karpov, M' me M 586 278 Kozlov, J 597 284 Kusnetsov, A 595 283 Lavrentiev, J 590 280 Mendelson, E. 596 283 Miller, Ch 591 281 Rebrov, J 587 279 Savin, V 579 275 Semenov, S . 592 281 Serebrennikov, S 588 279 Skvortzov's J. Sons 593 282 Sorokin 599 285 St. Petersburg machine work boot and shoe Manu- factory 578 274 Vladimir Tannery 581 276 Yakovkin, J 594 282 Zhemochkm, J , 589 280 GROUP 113. Material of war; ordnance and amunition. Weapons and apparatus of hunting, trapping, etc.; military and sporting small arms. Berugashvilli, R. 469 219 Lejeune, W. and G., firm n W. W. Lejeune" . . 482 226 - 517 Page. Olonets Mining Region. 479 22 5 St. Petersburg Metallic Works 481 225 Zlatoust Small Arms Factory (Mining Department of the Ministry of Public Domains). . . 480 225 GROUP 115. Heating and cooking apparatus and appliances. Alenchikov, J. and Zimin, N 476' 223 Kolchugin, A. 477 224 Plenske, J 4 88 22 St. Petersburg Metallic Works . 481 225 GROUP 116. Refrigerators, hollow metal ware, tinware, enameled ware. Alenchikov, J. and Zimin, N. . . . 476 223 Batashov, N 475 22 3 Batashov's, V. Successors 474 222 Khvastunov, S 488 228 Kolchugin, A 477 224 Olovianishnikov, J. 472 221 Orlov, V 473 222 Samguin, A. 471 221 Vishniakov, P. and Sons 436 200 Vishniakov, V 441 201 - 518 - GROUP 117. Wire goods and screens, perforated sheets, lattice work, fencing, etc. Page. Solnyshkov, St 485 227 GROUP 118. Wrought-iron and thin metal exhibits. Kondakov, V 484 227 Von-Dervis 483 226 GROUP 119. Vaults, safes, hardware, edge tools, cutlery. Batashov, N 475 223 Condratov's, D. Successors 478 224 Governor General of Turkestan 462 216 GROUP 120. Plumbing and sanitary materials. Granzov, C 516 242 St. Petersburg Metallic Works 481 225 519 GROUP 121. Miscellaneous articles of manufacture not heretofore classed. Page. Cassatkin, A 490 229 Collections of the Central Asiatic Exhibition 1891, at Moscow 460 209 Ezersky, V .... 457 207 Governor- General of the Pri-Amur province, Collec- tions from Eastern Sibiria . .... 470 222 Lamanskaia, M- me A. 453 206 Mullanovsky, J 456 207 Mumrikov, J 407 186 Mumrikov, P 406 186 Mumrikov, V. 491 230 Nedykhliev, A., Secretary of the Committee of the Central Asiatic Exhibition 1891, at Moscow . . 461 209 Onufrieva, M' 1 " 6 N. 455 207 Pankrishev, J 408 187 Pletnev, A 1028 477 Salomon, M- me C 454 206 DEPARTMENT W. WOMEN'S WORK. Abramenkov, M- me A 692 323 Articles collected by Her Imperial Highness, the Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna, in the City and Province of Moscow . .... I 289 Asylum for childrens of the Empress Maria Feodorovna in Odessa ... 684 321 Athanasius' Convent 757 344 Bakka, M'" 16 C 703 326 Bariatinsky, Princess O. . 763 347 520 JteJSs Page. Beggrov - Gartman, M* me 766 347 Bern, M- me E 768 348 Bilbassov, M 740 338 Bilibin, M'" 16 673 318 Bogdarin, M- nie A. .... .... 664 316 Blossfeld, M' me 643 306 Blotsishevsky, M>" e ] 722 330 Boguslavsky, M" me M 729 332 Bogussky. M-'" e J 733 333 Broel-Plnter, Countess M 735 333 Chapkin, M' 1 " 6 L. 672 317 Chekhonin, M' me 631 303 Chepelevsky, M' me B 614 295 Cherniavsky-Oussachev Institute . ..... 617 295 Chokolov, M" nie 630 303 Committee of the Vologda Permanent Home Industry Exhibition 644 308 Community of Orsk 651 311 Convent of Borodino 609 292 Convent of Khotkov 608 292 Convent of Odigitria 650 3 1 1 Convent of Our Saviour of Vlakhern . . . . 611 293 Convent of St. Alexis 606 291 Convent of St. John . 603 289 Convent of St. Mary (Znamenskoy). .... 646 309 Convent of The Annunciation 645 309 Convent of The Assumption 649 310 Convent of The Elevation of The Holy Cross . . 607 291 Convent of The Holy Virgin in Kazan . . . . 633 304 Convent of The Holy Virgin in Moscow . . . 604 290 Convent of The Holy Virgin in St. Petersburg . . 756 343 Convent of The Holy Virgin in Serpukhov . . . 605 290 Convent of The Passion of The Lord . . . . 610 292 Danaurov, M' me C 642 306 Direction of the Elementary Country Schools in the gov. of Minsk 676 318 Doboshinsky, M' n:e J 708 328 Dorozhaiev.sky, M me V. 679 319 Dubassov, M' me A 760 346 Dumeiev, M- me M 641 306 Durnovo, M' 1 " 6 M '. 769 348 Dzevanovsky, M' me J. 73 T 33 2 Eidziatovich, M~ me H. . . 73 - 333 Elementary Country Schools in the gov. of Tula . 689 322 Eske-Khoinsky, nee Countess Minorsky . . . . 734 333 Fiorentini, M- me M. . 7 2 33 First Maria Town Gymnasium for Girls in Odessa . 680 319 Galetsky, M' me A. and Daughter 719 330 Girls Gymnasium in Minsk 677 319 Girls Gymnasium in Orenburg 652 311 Girls Progymnasium in Cheliabinsk 654 311 Girls Progymnasium in Orensburg 653 311 Girls School in Parich 678 319 Glavatsky, M -nie M 726 331 Golensky, M- me T 707 327 Goncharov, M' me E 662 315 Gorodetsky, M"" 6 628 303 Grevenits, Baroness C 745 339 Grot, M- me N 743 338 Gukovsky, C 694 324 Gurko, M' me M., wife of the Warsaw Governor-General XX 325 Gymnasium for Girls in Priluki 691 323 levleva, M' me L 637 305 Imeretinsky, Princess A 765 347 Junge, M' me . . . 632 303 Jurgenson, M Mlie N 686 321 Kagorovsky, M- me T 715 329 Kalam, M- 741 338 Kameniev-Lubavsky, M- me . 629 303 Katkov, M' me 624 302 Kazachek, M' 6 A. 69*3 324 Kaznacheiev, M' me S 759 345 Khanykov, M"" 6 . 670 317 Khoronzhina, M' mo M 705 327 Khrzhanovsky, M' 1 " 6 A. 721 330 Kikodze, M' 1 "" N 752 341 Kochetov, M- me M. 669 316 Kochubei. M- B XXIV 344 Konopchinsky, M' Ine L 728 332 Koptev, M-" ie J 663 315 Korf, Baron A., late Governor-General of the Pri-Amur Province XXI 334 Page. Korf, Baroness S., wife of the late Governor-General of the Pri -Amur Province . . .. . XXI 334 Korshchinsky, M"" A 702 326 Kosmalsky, M-'" e A 714 329 Kozhukhovsky, M"" 6 S 710 328 Kramskoy, M"" 6 736 337 Krasnushkin, M- me E 746 339 Krivaksin, M' me L. . 643 306 Kunat, M' me J 697 325 Ladies Committee appointed by the High Order of Her Imperial Majesty the Empress ofRussia W 289 Ladies Philanthropic Society in Kaluga . . . . 671 317 Lamansky, Mr mB A 739 337 Lidert, M"" 8 O ... 748 340 Lvov, Princess . . 623 301 Magelaner, M" ncs E. and T. 713 329 Mamontov, M- me M. 620 298 Mamonrov, M' me E 622 300 Maria Gymnasium in Viatka. 648 310 Maria Gymnasium for Girls in Kursk 690 322 Maria Practical Lace Makers School 758 345 Mikhailov, M- me *"', 627 302 Mikhaylov, M- me M 665 316 Naryshkin, M- me A XXIII 342 Narychkin, M"" 6 E XXV 344 Nazimov, M- ma N 750 340 Necbaieva, M' nie . 639 305 Nizhny Novgorod Society for assistance of the poor, under the Presidency of M^ ne A. I. Baranov . VIII 315 Obodovsky, M"" 658 312 Odessa Ladies Committee XII 419 Ogarev, M' me 755 341 Olsuffiev, M- T. , { 7 , 6 346 I 767 347 Oznobishina, M' me N 695 324 Penitentiary School of Bolshevo 618 296 Podturov, M-'" e D 667 316 Pokrovskaya Community 612 293 Pokrovsky, M"" 6 E 657 312 Polenov, M-"' e E. . 760 346 523 vNJS Page. Popova, M' me E 638 305 Posvik, M- nie B 725 331 Primary Girls School in Kazan. 634 304 Primary Girls School of the Zemstvo in Mamadysh 635 304 Primary Town School of 2 classes in Chigirin. . . 688 322 Primary Town School of 2 classes in Kanev. . . 687 322 Proffessional School of M' me B. Lepeshkine . . . 616 295 Rebinder, M" 6 V. 1031 477 Reisky, Baroness, J 704 327 Riabtsov, M- mc Z. 675 318 Riganelovich, M' me 685 321 Riznikov, M' me A 754 541 Rodionov, nee Princess Shakhovskoy 626 302 Rodzievich, M' 1 " 6 J 727 331 RoginsKy M~ me 753 341 Roshkovsky, M' 1 " 6 S. 701 326 Rozen, Baroness M 749 340 Rydzievsky, M' me . . , 625 302 Rykov, M- llie M . . 655 312 Ryzhkov, M 659 312 Sakrzhevsky, M' me F. 699 325 School of the Merchants Corporation in Moscow . . 615 295 Second Town Gymnasium for girls in Odessa . 68 1 320 Sernaker, M- me R. . 712 328 Shabelsky, M' me N. L 619 296 Shakhovsky, Princess, M. A I 762 346 Shchetinkin 640 305 Shneider, M' me A 74? 338 Shtram, M' me L. 747 339 Shuvalov, Countess E 737 337 Siffers, M' me T. . 744 339 Silla-Novitsky, M' me F. 716 329 Sivinsky, M"" 6 V 723 331 Society for propogation of practical knowledge among the educated classes . 613 293 Sviyazhnov, M -me A. . 656 312 Temporary charity Committee for procuring work to neady women in Jelabuga 647 309 Town elementary Schools in Odessa . . ... 683 320 Town School for girls in Odessa 682 320 524 - Page. Tsekhomsky, M' me S 706 327 Umnov, M' me 660 312 Urussov, Princess, M 66 1 314 Usmanova, Bibi-Fatima 636 304 Vasilchikov, M' me M. 761 346 Vasilchikov, M' me O. 764 347 Viasemsky, Princess M 674 318 Vinogradov, M' me L 666 316 Vislitsky, M' me M. . 724 331 Vitt, M -me M. 751 340 Vladykin, M- 118 A 668 316 Voitsinsky, M-"' e A 717 329 Voitsitsky, M- me J. 730 332 Volkonsky, Princess E. 760 346 Vollovich, M' me E. ........ 698 325 Vorontsov-Dashkov, Countess M. - . . - . 738 337 Vyshnegrandsky, M' me B., President of the Ladies Committee XXII 337 Zaborsky, M- me S. 711 328 Zamoisky, Countess K. . 696 325 Zbievsky, M"" 6 J 709 328 Zemstvo of the gov. of Moscow 621 299 Zieberg-Plater, Countess C. 700 326 Zimaier, M- me E. . 718 330 DEPARTMENT J. G'ROUP 123. Apparatus for electrical measurements. Persky, C 777 354 Vladimirov, N. 776 353 525 GROUP 126. Transmission and regulation of the electrical current. JSJ\ Page. Feinstein, S. . . 775 353 Vladimirov, N. 776 353 GROUP 128. Application of electric motors. Persky, C. , 777 354 GROUP 129. Lighting by electricity. Vladimirov, N 776 353 GROUP 130. Heating by electricity. Antoniev, M 773 352 GROUP 133. Electric telegraph and electric signals. Persky, C. 777 354 - 526 - GROUP 134. The telephone and its appliances. Phonographs. J6J6 Page . Ministry of Marine, Kronstadt Diving School. . . 770 351 GROUP 138. Progress and development in electrical science and con- struction, as illustrated by models and drawings of various countries. Imianitov, B 774 352 Ministry ot War, St. Petersburg Arsenal. . . . 771 351 Prokhorov, N 772 352 DEPARTMENT K. Fine arts: painting, sculpture, architecture and decoration. Adamson . 778 357 Alexeyev, A 780 358 Asknasiy, } 781 358 Ayvasovsky. J . 779 357 Beclemichev, W 782 359 Bobrov, V 783 359 Bodarevsky, N 784 359 Bronnikov, Th. . 785 359 Bruni, N. 786 359 Chistiakov, P . . . , . 840 379 Dillon, M- mo M. 796 362 - 527 - Page. Diuker, E 798 362 Dmitriev-Orenburgsky, N 797 362 Endogurov, 1 799 362 Endogurov, S 800 363 Feders, J. 838 379 Frents, R 839 379 Galimsky, V 792 361 Ginrsburg, E. . 793 361 Golinsky, W , 794 361 Grandkovsky, N . 795 362 Imperial Academy of Arts K. 357 Kivshenko, A . 803 363 Klagcss, Th. 804 364 Klever, J 805 366 Klodt, Baron von-Jurgensburg, M. ...... 806 366 Korovin, C 809 368 Korsukhin, A. 808 367 Kovalevsky, P. 807 367 Krachkovsky, J. . 811 368 Kramskoy,J 810 368 Kryzhitsky, C , 812 369 Kuriar, M" me P . 814 370 Kusneisov, N 813 369 Lemokh, Ch 816 370 Levitan, 1 815 370 Litovchenko, A 817 370 Makovsky, C 819 371 Makovsky, V 818 370 Meshchersky, A . 820 371 % Miassoyedov, Gr 822" 371 Morosov, A 821 371 Navosov, W 823 372 Novoskoltzev, A. 824 372 Pasternak, L 825 374 Perov, W . 827 374 Pimonenko, N. 828 374 Polenov, Helen 829 375 Polevin, J 826 374 Repin, E 830 375 Savinsky, W. 831 375 Savitzky, C 832 376 - 528 - Sedov, Gr 836 378 Scmiradsky, H 834 377 Shishkin, ] 841 380 Stepanov, A. .... ..... 835 378 Sverchkov, N. 833 377 Tvorozhnikoy, ] 837 378 Vassiliev, Th. . 787 360 Venig, Ch. ... 789 360 Villevalde, B ' . . . 788 360 Volkov, E 790 360 Vrangel, Baroness E ' . . 791 360 Yakobiy, V 842 380 Zagorsky, N 802 363 Zhuravlev, Th 801 363 DEPARTMENT L Institutions of the Empress Mary. Groups 147 and 149. JSI?,NJ 843 903. Pages 377 404. GROUP 147. Physical development, training and condition hygiene. Alexander Maria School of the Association for the relief ot the poor in Moscow. 883 400 Alexandra Asylum for children in Kazan. . . . 888 402 Alexandra Asylum for children in Vladimir. . . . 901 407 Alexandra Asylum for children in Vologda. . . . 893 404 Alexandra Orphan's Asylum in St. Petersburg . . 843 383 529 - JVJS Page. All Penitents Hospital for the insane, in St. Peters- burg 8 55 389 Asylum for children at the Church of St. Methodius in St. Petersburg 894 405 Asylums for children in Archangelsk, Dvinsk, Jela- buga, Kaluga, Kharkov, Kherson, Kiev, Krasno- iarsk, Nizhny-Novgorod, Petrozavodsk, Pskov, Ria- zan, Samara, Saratov, Simbirsk,, Tambov, Tiflis, Tobolsk, Tomsk, Vessiogonsk, Viatka, Vitebsk, Vologda and Yaroslavl 9 O1 4 8 Asylum for children in Kharkov 890 403 Asj'lums for children in Moscow. 885 401 Asylum for children in Rostov on the Don . . - 900 407 Baron Stieglits' model Asylum for children in St. Petersburg 898 406 Bukshevden, Baron. 984 447 Chief Engineering Administration, Ministry of War. 985, I 447 Chief Military Medical Direction Board. Ministry of War 976 449 Demidov's Hospice for workmen. 844 3 84 Feodorovich, A 993 453 Fesenko, M' me M. . . . 97 8 443 Grand-Duchess Alexandra Nicolaievna's Asylum for children in St. Petersburg 899 407 Grand-Duchess Olga Nicolaievna's Asylum for chil- . dren in St. Petersburg 896 406 Hospital of the Emperor Paul the I' st in Moscow. . 858 390 Imperial Moscow Foundling Hospital with annexed Institutions 850 388 ImperialSt. Petersburg Foundling Hospital with annexed Institutions. ... ... 849-387 Kharitonenko's Asylum for children in Sumy. . . 961 408 Lying-in Hospital in Moscow 854 389 Lying-in Hospital in St. Petersburg 853 389 M-'" e Medvednikov's Orphan's Home with bank and saving bank in Irkutsk 902 408 Maria Asylum for children in Kerch . 895 405 Maria Hospital for the poor in St. Petersburg. . . 858 390 Ministry of War . . . . | 97 Q 6 I 985 447 Moscow Benevolent Society founded in 1837 . . 882 400 Nicholas Asylum for children in Astrakhan. . . 901 407 53 Js?Js Page. Nicholas Asylum for children in Kazan .... 889 403 Nicholas Asylum for children in Taganrog. . . . 891 404 Nicholas Asylum for children in Tula .... 887 402 Olga Asylum for children in Yaroslavl .... 897 406 Ophtalmic Hospital in St. Petersburg 856 390 Orlov-Davydov, Count S., St. Olga's Children's Hospi- tal in Moscow . 982 446 Prince of Oldenburg's Hospital for children in St. Pe- tersburg. 857 390 Reshetov's Trade Classes connected with an Asylum for children in Tver 886 401 St. Nicholas' Asylum of the Kolpino Benevolent Society . 884 400 St. Olga's Children's Hospital in Moscow . . . 982 446 St. Petersburg Metallic Works 373 165 Sheremetiev Asylum for senior and junior officers in Moscow 852 388 Sophia Hospital for children in Moscow ... 858 390 Tsessarevich's Nicolay Alexandrovich Alms House in St. Petersburg. 903 409 Virgin Mary Asylum for children in Perm. . . . 901 408 Widow's Home and Asylum for poor unmarried women in St. Petersburg 859 391 Widow's Home in Moscow 860 391 GROUP 148. Instruments and apparatus of medicine, surgery and prosthesis. Direction of the Crown Railways, Ministry of Ways of Communications 998, II 455 Feigin, Ph 991 451 Khrushchev, Y . 975 443 Ministry of Ways of Communications 998 454 Surgical Instrument, Works, Ministry of War . . 985, IV 448 GROUP 149. Primary, secondary and superior education. J6J6 Page. Abhevsky, M' me C., private Sunday School for girls in Kharkov 977 444 Alexander Institute in Moscow 88 1 399 Alexander Institute in St. Petersburg 880 399 Alexander Institute in Tambov 873 396 Alexander Maria Institute in Warsaw .... 879 398 Andreiev, P. 9 6 * 43 1 Argamakov, M' me M. 94 4 2 4 Baron Stieglits' Central School of technical drawing 944 425 Brandt, A 954 4 2 9 Catherine School in Moscow 881 399 Catherine School in St. Petersburg 88 1 399 Cherepovetz Alexander Technical School. . . 955 430 Chief Engineering Administration, Ministry of War' . 985, I 447 Commercial School in Moscow. ... 846 385 Commercial School in St. Petersburg 86 1 391 Davydov, P. 973 443 Drawing School of the Imperial Society for the encouragement of Arts. . 938 4 2 3 Educational Home for girls of noble birth in St. Pe- tersburg 881 399 Elizabeth Institute in Moscow 88 1 399 Elizabeth Institute in St. Petersburg 88 1 399 Empress Maria Alexandrovna Association for the relief of the blind 848 386 Fatesh Progymnasium for girls 979 445 Girls Institute in Bielostok ' . . 874 396 Girls Institute in Kiev ' 875 396 Guerbach, W 981 445 Gymnasium for girls in Minsk 870 394 Gymnasium for girls in Moscow. . ... 871 395 Gymnasium for girls in St. Petersburg and Tzar- skoie Sclo 872 395 Gymnasium for girls in Vilno 869 394 Gymnasium for girls in Vitebsk. 866 393 532 , .NsJS Page. Gymnasium for girls in Zhitomir 68 393 Imperial Alexander Lyceum in St. Petersburg. . . 862 392 Institute of Engineers of ways ot Communications, of the Emperor Alexander the I~ st . . . . 998, VI 457 Koslov, A 972 442 Kuban Cossacks province School for girls in Ekateri- nodar 892 404 Kushnikov : Institute in Kerch 878 398 Maria Gymnasium for girls in Simbirsk . . . . 867 393 Maria Institute in Nizhny-Novgorod 876 397 Maria School of the Association for the relief of the poor in Moscow 883 400 Michailovbkaia Artillery Academy and School, Mi- nistry of War 985, II 447 Ministry of Public Instruction 906 410 Ministry of War 985 447 Ministry of Ways of Communications . . . . 998 454 Nadein, M 971 442 Nicholas Orphan's Institute in Gatchino. . . . 863 392 Nicholas Orphan's Institute in St. Petersburg. . . 864 392 Nicholas School for girls in St. Petersburg. . . . 864 392 Orlov Davydov, Count V 970 404 Orphans Institutions in Moscow. 865 392 Patriotic Institute in St. Petersburg 88 1 399 Paul Institute in St. Petersburg 88 1 399 Pechinsky, A 980 445 Pedagogical Museum of the Military Schools. . . 985, III 462 Perepelkin, M~ me Z., Gymnasium for girls ... 953 429 Polevaia, M' nie 957 430 Reshetov's trade classes, connected with an Asylum for children in Tver . . . . * . . . 886 401 Riba, J. 916 414 Rodionov Institute in Kazan. 877 397 St. Petersburg deaf and dumb School. . . . 847 386 St. Petersburg Ladies Patriotic Society 845 384 St. Petersburg Practical Technological Institute . . 950 428 Simbirsk Trades School of Count V. Orlov- Davydov under the High Patronage of His Imperial Majesty the Emper'or of Russia . . 970 441 Teaching Department, Ministry of Ways of Com- munications . 998 458 533 Page. Technical Railway School in Kremendb.uk, Ministry of Ways of Communications 998 458 Technical Railway Schools, Ministry of Ways of Communications 998 458 Train-guards School in Vyshni-Volochok . . . . 998 458 GROUP 150. Literature, books, libraries, journalism. Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Interior 937 423 Chief Hydrographic Department. Ministry of Marine. 987 449 Department of Customs, Ministry of Finances . . 964, II 434 Department of Excises and Taxes, Ministry of Finances 964, III 434 Department of Railway Affairs, Ministry of Finances 964, IV 435 Department of Trade and Manufactures, Ministry of Finances 964, I 433 Editors Office of the Journals, published by the Mi- nistry of Finances 964, V 435 Expedition, organized by Imperial Order for exploring the ancient beds of the river Amu-Daria ... 968 438 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 216 Gulamirianz, S 931 421 Hiin, A. 945 426 Imperial Russian Technical Society 962' 432 Kiev Technical Society 1033 478 Klementiev, N 947 ' c ' 4 2 ^ Krabbe, L 946 426 Michailovskaya Artillery Academy and School, Mi- nistry of War 985, II 447 Ministry of Finances. . . 964 433 Ministry of Marine 987 449 Minis :ry of Publi: Instruction 906 410 Ministry of War 985 447 Ministry of Ways of Communications . . . . 998 453 Neusluube, S . 959 431 Pedagogical Museum of the Military Schools . . 985, III 448 Piassersk P 534 - J&N? Page Playing Card Factory of the Imperial Foundling Hos- pital 851 388 Statistical Committee of the province of the Don Cossacks 103 2 478 Statistical Department of the Ministry of Ways of Communications . 998, V 456 Veber, C. . . .1036 480 Zlatkovskv, M. 956 430 GROUP 151. Instruments of precision, experiment, research, and photo- graphy. Photographs. Brandt, A. 954 429 Chief Engineering Administration, Ministry of War. 985, I 447 Dmitriev, M. . . 943 425 Fisher, Ch., firm ,,Diagovchenko". . . . . . 939 423 Grodzitsky, ] ........... 941 424 Khmelevsky, J. ...... 942 424 Libovitch, V. ... 995 454 Ministry of War 985 447 Mielk, S ......... ... 992 453 Marine Instrument Works attached to the Chief Hydrographic Department . ._ ._ 987, II 450 Odner, W ......... ^ ' 95 2 4^9 990 452 Soloviev, S. . . . ' rt'-'B*^ ' 905 409 GROUP 152. Civil engineering, public works, constructive architecture. Bieleliubsky, N .... 963 432 Commission for the construction of commercial ports, Ministry of Ways of Communications ... 998, IV 456 53S Page. Dekhtereva, M- nie C. 95 8 43 1 Department of Railways, Ministry of Ways of Com- munications 998, I 454 Department of Roadways and Water Communications, Ministry of Ways of Communications . . . 998, III 456 Direction of the Crown Railways, Ministry of Ways of Communications 998, II 455 Expedition for draining the marches in Polessie and for irrigation of the South of Russia and the Caucasus ' 967 437 Fietta, ]. 960 431 Ministry of Ways of Communications . . . . 998 454 St. Petersburg Metallic Works 373 165 Schmelev, T 948 427 Statistical Department of the Ministry of Ways of Communications 998, V 456 GROUP 153. Government and law. Chief Engineering Administration, Ministry of War . 985, I 447 Ministry of War 985 447 Pigeon Sport Society 989 451 Post and Telegraph Department . . . . . 986 449 GROUP 154. Commerce, trade, and banking. Ezersky, Th 951 228 Imperial Russian Society for the encouragement of sea trade-navigation 949 427 Imperially Sanctioned Committee of meetings of the Re- presentatives of the Russian land credit Estab- lishments 965 436 536 JiN Kort, A. 974 Riga Exchange Committee 966 Russian Fisheries and Fishing Society .... 969 Page. 443 437 440 GROUP 155. Institutions and organizations for the increase and diffusion of knowledge. Georgievskaia Astronomical Observatory . Imperial Russian Geographical Society . Ministry of Public Instruction 1034 906 GROUP 157. Religions organizations and systems statistics and. publi- cations. Imperially Sanctioned Society for the propagation of Holy Writ in Russia 983 446 GROUP 158. Music and musical instruments the theatre. Alferaky, A. 914 413 Bdiaiev, M. 921 416 Bernard, X. ... 930 420 Berugashvilly, R. 469 319 - 537 - Page. Bessel and C 920 415 Bitepage M., firm Becker" . .... 908 411 Bogaievsky, M'" 16 A. 917 414 Eberg, A 911 412 Fon Miller, A., firm n A. Bittner" 922 417 Gebetner and Wolf . 928 420 Giasunov, A 913 413 f 909 411 Glavach > V ' | 915 414 Gutheil, Ch., firm ,A. Gutheil" 927 419 Heisser, E 932 421 Hubner, A 933 421 lindrzhishek, H 934 422 Jurgenson, P. ... 926 418 Khavanov, V., firm a A. Johansen" 923 417 Loborev, W 936 422 Muhlbach, Th 907 410 Pedagogical Museum of the Military Schools . . 985, III 448 Pilar fon Pilkhau, Baron G 919 415 Pobuda . 918 415 Reinhard, V 912 413 Schroeder, M 910 412 Shpanovsky, L 935 422 Tsigert, Ch 925 418 Tsimmermann, I I 924 418 Zennevaldt, G 929 420 Out of classification. Burylin, D 996 454 ALPHABETICAL INDEX. Alphabetical Index. A. Page. Abamelek-Lasarev, Princess E ....... 361 157 Abramenkov, M' nie A ......... 692 323 Abrossimov, S ........... 410 188 Adamson ......... . 778 357 Aivazov, E. and C . ........ 289 118 Aksenov, St. . .......... 440 201 Alagir Crown Works ......... 344 148 Alchevsky, M" 6 C. private Sunday School for girls. 977 444 Alenchikov, J. and Zimin, N ........ 476 223 Alexander Institute in Moscow ...... 881 399 Alexander Institute in St. Petersburg ..... 880 399 Alexander Institute in Tambov ...... 873 396 Alexander Maria Institute in Warsaw .... 879 398 Alexander Maria School in Moscow ..... 883 400 Alexandra Asylum for children in Kazan. . . . 888 402 Alexandra Asylum for children in Vladimir. . . 901 407 Alexandra Asylum for children in Vologda . . . 893 404 Alexandra Orphan's Asylum in St. Petersburg. . . 843 383 Alexandrovs, E. and J. ........ 569 269 Alexeiev, A. ....... ... 780 358 Alexeiev, J ........... 34 19 Alexeievskoie Mining Company ...... 342 147 Alferaky, A ............ 914 413 Page. Alikhanov, K. (Tairov, I. and Alikhanov, K.) . . 136 61 All Penitents Hospital for the insane, in St. Peters- burg. 855 389 Andreiev, P. . 961 431 Andronnikov, Prince 1102 474 Annenkov, M 287 117 Antoniev, M 773 352 Antonov, K. 37 21 Argamakov, M' me M . 940 424 Articles collected by Her Imperial Highness the Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna, in the city and province of Moscow o . I 289 Asknasiy, J.. 781 358 Aslanidy, I. and A., Brothers 225 92 Association for raising and manufactoring phosphorite and other mineral fertilizing compounds . . . 1016 470 Astrakhan Administration of the fishing and seal catch- ing industries. 311 129 Asylum for children at the Church of St. Methodius in St. Petersburg. 894 405 Asylums for children in Arkhangelsk, Dvinsk, Jela- buga, Kaluga, Kharkov, Kherson, Kiev, Krasno- iarsk, Nizhny-Novgorod, Petrozavodsk, Pskov, Ria- zan, Samara, Saratov, Simbirsk, Tambov, Tiflis, Tobolsk, Tomsk, Vessiogonsk, Viatka, Vitebsk, Vologda and Yaroslavl 901 408 Asylum for children in Kharkov 890 403 Asylums for children in Moscow . . . . . 885 401 Asylum for children in Rostov on the Don. . . 900 407 Asylum for children of the Empress Maria Feodorovna in Odessa 681 321 Athanasius' Convent 757 344 Avanesov, Brothers 120 54 Avgustinovich. 263 107 Ayvasovsky, J 779 357 B, Baburin, J. 404 185 Bakka, M' me C. . 703 " 326 Balakin, G 552 261 542 c e JSJ6 Balashovs, N. and ] 359 Page. 1^6 Balashov, M~ me C. 174 A j " 73 Balk, Ch 109 / j AQ Baranov, M' nie \ VIII *rs 3 I ? Baranov, A 544 Baranov, T ...... .... 55 J * J 2 5 6 3 I Bariatinsky, Princess 763 3 x 347 2 I Q Baron Stieglits' Central School of tekhnical drawing. 944 Baron Stieglits' Model Asylum for children in St. Petersburg. 898 Basilevsky Th., Astrakhan Sinemorsk fisheries . . 313 ^ 1 7 425 406 130 T) 2 Batashov's, V., Successors 474 **y 222 I 2 C Beclemichev, W 782 Beggrov-Gartman, M' me ^ . . 766 1 ^) 359 347 A I () 1 2 7 15 42 T A Q Bern M-'" e E . 768 1 47 2/l8 Benke, A. 381 J40 168 49 Berendt and C 150 200 f 28 28 65 84 ^5 103 200 4.^0 2O T Berugashvilli, R. 469 219 A\ C ^ A J A (iQ Bieleliubsky, N 963 Bielov's Y, Imperially Sanctioned Association. . . 551 47 432 26O 5?8 Bilibin M'" ie 673 :>3 ?i8 Bitepa^e M., firm Becker" 908 3* A T T Bitrikh M-" IC C., firm Bartels" 186 t 1 L 78 Blossfeld M' ine ... 643 / 3O6 > > 543 - Page. Blossfeldt, J. ........... 117 53 Blotsishevsky, M' me J ......... 7 22 33 Board of Council for Baku Naphtha Industry . . 337 144 Bobrov, V. 783 359 Bodarevsky, N. .......... 784 359 Bocharov, J ....... .... 557 263 Bogaievsky, M"" e A. .... ..... 917 414 Bogatyrev, J. . . . ' ...... 118 53 Bogdanov, A. and C ......... 230 95 Bogdanov, V ........... 577 274 Bogdarin, M' me A. . ....... 664 316 Bogorodsko Glukhovskaia Manufactory Company . . 548 258 Boguslavsky, M'" 16 M ...... . . . 729 332 Bogussky, M' me J. ......... 733 333 Boldyrev, M. ........... 1023 475 Bolman and C ......... 119 54 Bolotnikov, S. . '. ....... 191 81 Bonetsky, A ......... . 65 36 Borell, E. . . . . ....... 58 33 Borman G., firm George Borman" ..... 1006 465 Bonn an, M"" 6 T ........... 240 99 Botkin's Imperially Sanctioned Association. ... 176 74 Braghin, B and Sons . ........ 218 90 Brandt, A ............ 954 429 Branitsky, Count X .......... 73 39 Bratus, M ............ 325 136 Brazhnikovs, P. and V. ........ 292 119 Bromine, Brothers ......... 507 237 Brocard, H. and C- ......... 489 229 Broel-Plater, Countess M ........ 735 333 Bronnikov, Th ........... 785 359 Bronshtein, D. .......... 399 180 Bruni, N ............ 786 359 Brunov, P. ........... 570 270 Brusnitzyn, N. and Sons ........ 575 273 Bukshevden, Baron .......... 984 447 Buldakov, S. . ...... 266 108 Bunakov, A. ........... 52 30 f 523 245 D 996 454 Bu/.hisky, S. ..... ....... 318 132 544 c. JSLY? Page. Cassatkin, A. 490 229 Catherine School in Moscow 88 1 399 Catherine School in St. Petersburg 88 1 399 Caucasian Mining Direction . . 343 147 Caucasus Philoxere Committee IO 35 480 Caucasian Sericultural Station 1010 467 Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Interior 93 7 423 Chapkin, M'" 16 L. . 672 317 Chaplinsky, M. and M' me M 116 52 Chekhonin, M"" e 631 303 Chejrelevsky, M-'" C B. 614 294 Cherepovetz Alexander Technical School. ... 955 430 Cherniacv, E. 36 21 Cherniavsky-Oussachev Institute 617 295 Chief Engineering Administration, Ministry of War . 985, I 447 Chief Hydrogralic Department, Ministry of Marine . 987 449 Chief Military Medical Direction Board, Ministry of War 976 449 Chief Superintendency, Ministry of War .... 9 8 Chilikin, V. 316 132 Chistiakov, P 840 379 Chistiakov, St. and C . . . . . .. . . 127 58 Chokolov, M' me . . . . 630 303 Chubinidze, G. and C. . 355 154 ( T 7 ? 2 Chumakov's, M. Sons J ' \ 228 94 Collections of the Central Asiatic Exhibition 1891, at Moscow . ........ 460 209 Commercial School in St. Petersburg 86 1 391 Commercial School in Moscow 846 385 Commission attached to the Ministry of Public Domains 258 104 Commission for construction of the commercial ports, Ministry of Ways of Communica:ions . . . 998, IV 456 Community of Orsk . 651 311 Condratov's, D. Successors . 478 224 Convent of Borodino 609 292 Convent of Khotkov 608 292 Convent of Odigitria 650 311 - S4S - Page. Convent of Our Saviour of Vlakhern . . . 611 293 Convent of St. Alexis 606 291 Convent of St. John 603 289 Convent of St. Mary (Znamenskoy) 646 309 Convent of The Annunciation 645 309 Convent of The Assumption . 649 310 Convent of The Elevation of The Holy Cross . . 607 291 Convent of The Holy Virgin in Kazan . . . . 633 304 Convent of The Holy Virgin in Moscow . . . 604 290 Convent of The Holy Virgin in St. Petersburg . . 756 343 Convent of The Holy Virgin in Serpukhov . . . 605 290 Convent ot The Passion of The Lord . . . . 610 292 Coriakin, J 391 176 Cotarbinsky, V. 76 40 Cronstadt Divers' Training School Cronstadt Mechanical and Ship Building Works . . 364 161 Cronstadt Rope Works 386 174 Cruming, A 165 70 Cufalt, G 299 122 D. Dalman, A . 428 Damm, E 601 Danaurov, M' me C 642 Danielson, D 322 Davidov, P 972 443 De-Kamilli, G 447 204 Dekhtereva, M' me S Delone, N Dement, M. and Son j g Demidov's Hospice for workmen ... ... 844 384 Demidov, V 539 253 Department of Agriculture and Rural Industry . . 244 100 Department of Custom Duties, Ministry of Finances 964, II 434 Department of Excises and Taxes, Ministry of Finances 964, III 434 Department of Raylways, Ministry of Ways of Com- munications 998, I 454 546 Page. Department of Railway Affairs, Ministry of Finances. 964, IV 435 Department of Roadways and Water Communications, Ministry of Ways of Communications . . . 998, III 456 Department of Trade and Manufactures, Ministry of Finances 964, I 433 f 272 112 Derozhinsky, M. j ^ Q2 ^ Derbeniev's, N. Sons 528 248 Deviatov, Th. . 1000 462 Devishev, M. - . . . 209 87 Dillon, M- me M. ... 796 362 Direction of the Crown Railways, Ministry of Ways of Communications 998, II 455 Direction of the Elementary Countiy Schools in the gov. of Minsk 676 318 Diuker, E ...... 798 362 Diusterdik 376 166 Dmitriev, M 943 425 Dmitriev-Orenburgsky, N 797 362 Dobrzhansky, J. and Son. ....... 101 46 Doboshinsky, M- me J. 708 328 Dokuchaiev, B. and Sibirtsev, N 255 103 Dombrovo coal field . . . . 329 140 Donskoy, A 463 216 Dorozhaievsky, M' nie V. . . . . . . . . 679 319 Drawing School of the Imperial Society for Encou- raging Arts 938 423 Dubassov, M'" 16 A 760 346 Dubinin, B 321 134 Durdin's J., Imperially Sanctioned Association. . 133 60 Durneiev, M'" 16 M 641 306 Durnovo, M-" 6 M. . . . 769 348 Dyshko, V 576 273 Dzenguelevsky, J 98 45 Dzevanovsky, M' me J 731 332 Dzhigit, E. and D 227 93 547 J > E. 911 Page. Edition Office of the Journals, published by the Mi- s 964 \ , 435 Educational Home for girls of noble birth in St. Pe- S I * i~t j 881 399 J S / 732 333 i j 162 J J J 158 Elementary Country Schools in the gov. of Tula . j 689 J 322 406 232 t Kf- j Elizabeth Institute in Moscow .... . 881 399 Elizabeth Institute in St. Petersburg .... 881 399 Empress Maria Alexandrovna Association for the relief of the Blind 848 386 Endogurov, I. 799 362 Endogurov, S 800 363 1009 466 Erivantsev-Astvatsurov M c84. 277 J W; T *// Eske-Khoinsky, nee Countess Minorsky .... 734 333 Expedition for draining the marches in Polessie and for irrigation of the South of Russia and the 067 4.27 Expedition, organized by Imperial Order for exploring y v i 'VJ 1 the ancient beds of the river Amu-Daria. 968 438 Fxersky, V ,ic7 207 ^j 1 / Q C I 428 y j A : F. Farm of the Agri:ultural School of Uman . . . 1 8 1 T ^- 7 I 103 4" Fatiesh Progymnasium for girls 979 445 Federov, A. A 2/1 IQA. 4 Z 4 1 74 Feders, J 8^8 27Q \J 2 \J 5 17 Fedorovitch, G /io/i TC 4 U 4 10) Fedoseiev J j 224 92 1 2 7 6 JI 3 1 c * - 548 Page. Feigin, Ph. 99* 45 l Feinstein, S. . 775 353 Feodorovicb, A 993 453 Fesenko, M"" 6 M. ' 978 444 Fietta, J. 960 431 Filkovich, N 354 153 Fiorentini, M"" 6 M 720 330 First Maria Town Gymnasium for girls in Odessa . 680 319 Fisher, Ch., firm ,,Diagovchenko" | I 17 7 1 Fofonov, M. 212 88 ! 598 284 Fon Miller, A., firm ,,A. Bittner" . . . . . 922 417 Freiberg, A., firm August Lira" 519 243 Frents, R 839 379 Frolov, A 45 l8 5 Frolova. M. ,,Tsimerman Economy" 46 27 Frych, K 102 46 G. Galeiev, M 5 8 2 75 Galerny Ostrov Ship- Yard. 386 174 Galetsky, M' me A. and Daughter 719 33 Galimsky, V. 79 2 3 61 Galunov, A 4 8 2 7 Gandurin, A., and Brothers. 526 247 Garelin', J. Sons .... 529 ' 248 Garelin's, N. and Sons 527 247 Gebetner and Wolf 928 420 Geological Committee of the Mining Department. . 338 145 Georgievskaia Astronomical Observatory . ... 988 451 Girls Gymnasium in Minsk 677 319 Girls Gymnasium in Orenburg 652 311 Girls Gymnasium in Priluki 691 323 Girls Institute in Bielosiok 874 396 Girls Institute in Kiev 875 396 Girls Progymnasium in Cheliabinsk. . . 654 311 549 Page. Girls Progymnasium in Orenburg 653 311 Girls School in Parich . . .' 678 319 Glasunov, A 913 413 909 411 Glavach > V. ... l 915 414 Glavatsky, M"" 6 M 726 331 Glebov, A 334 H 2 Glushkov, E. 356 154 Glussky, G. 97 44 Godiev 286 117 I 22 12 Goilov,L. 2 73 H2 303 123 Golensky, M' me T. 707 327 Golinsky, W 794 361 f 458 207 Goncharova, M'" 16 E \ 662 315 Gora-Blagodait Region 351 151 Goretsk Agricultural Farm . 6 6 Gorodetsky, M' me 628 303 Goroshko, B 1008 466 Goth, J. 388 175 Governor-General of the Pri-Amur province, Collec- tions from Eastern Sibiria. ..... 470 220 Governor-General of Turkestan 462 210 Grachev, M. 418 192 Gradenvits, V 100 45 Grand-Duchess Alexandra Nicolaievna's Asylum for children 899 407 Grand-Duchess Olga Nicolaievna's Asylum for chil- 'dren. 896 406 Grandkovsky, N - . 795 362 Grantsov, C 516 242 Greenberg, Ch 450 205 Greenwald, E 562 266 Greenwald, P. 561 265 Grevenits, Baroness C 745 339 Grigoriev, W 397 179 Grodzitsky, J. 941 424 Gromadzsky, K 44 25 Grot, M- me N. 743 338 550 Page. Guerbach, W. 981 445 Guigovsky 1002 463 Guintsburg, B 401 181 Guintsburg, E 793 361 Gukovsky, C. 694 324 Gulamirianz, S 931 421 Gurko, M- me M.,Wife of the Warsaw Governer-General. XX 325 Gursky, J 61 34 Guta-Bankova 363 158 Gutheil .... 927 419 Gymnasium for girls in Minsk 870 394 Gymnasium for girls in Moscow 871 395 Gymnasium for girls in St. Petersburg and Tzar- skoie Selo 872 395 Gymnasium for girls in Vilno 869 394 Gymnasium for girls in Vitebsk ... ... 866 393 Gymnasium for girls in Zhitomir 868 393 H. Han, Ch. 1026 476 Heinzel, J 556 263 Heissner, E. 93 2 4 21 Herzog, M' me E ion 468 Hibner, R 602 286 Hirshman, L. 499 233 Hospital of the Emperor Paul the T st in Moscov. . 858 390 Hiibner, A 933 421 I. Iliin, A 945 426 Imeretinsky, Princess A 765 347 Imianitov, B 774 352 n lmperial" 298 122 Imperial Academy of Arts K. 357 3 4 Imperial Agricultural Museum I 245 100 Imperial Agricultural Society of Moscow. . . . 248 101 Imperial Appanages J6J6 Page. Imperial Alexander Lyceum in St. Petersburg . . 862 392 93 43 1 80 76 260 104 1018 471 I 10 8 Imperial Caucasian Agricultural Society . . . . .g Imperial Ekaterinburg stone cutting Works ... 413 189 Imperial Kolyvan stone polishing Works. . - 413 189 Imperial Moscow Foundling Hospital with annexed Institutions 850 388 {^ 7 C T T "^ 1017 470 Imperial Peterhov stone cutting Works 417 191 Imperial Russian Geographical Society . . . . 1034 478 Imperial Russian Society for Encouraging Sea Trade- Navigation 949 427 Imperial Russian Technical Society 962 432 152 65 Imperially Sanctioned Bone Calcining Company J 166 70 184 77 Imperially Sanctioned Commitce of Meetings of Re- presentatives of the Russian land credit Estab- lishments 965 436 Imperially Sanctioned Company for the exploitation of rock salt and natural soda in South Russia. . 345 148 Imperially Sanctioned First hop culture Society . . 220 90 Imperially Sanctioned Russo - American naphtha in- dustry Association. 34 1 ^ J 4^ Imperially Sanctioned Society for the propagation of Holy Writ in Russia 983 446 Imperially Sanctioned Wine-Manufactory Association 274 113 Imperial St. Petersburg Foundling Hospital with annexed Institutions 849 387 Indrzhishek, A 934 422 Institute of Engineers of Ways of Communications of the Emperor Alexander the I' st , Ministry of Ways of Communications 998, VI 457 Institute of Forestry 259 104 Ivanov, A 497 232 Ivanov, 1 293 1 20 - 552 JSJ Page. Jevleva, M' me L. 637 305 Junge, M' me . 632 303 Jurgenson, M' me N. 686 321 Jurgenson, P 926 418 K. Kagorovsky, M- |ne T 715 329 Kalam, M"" . 74* 33 8 Kameniev-Lubavsky, M" me 629 303 Karpov, M- ne M 586 278 Kashin, N., New Kostroma Linen Manufactory Asso- ciation. 201 84 Katkov, D 1022 475 Katkov, M- me 624 302 Kazachek, M' me A 693 324 Kazan Agriculrural Farm \ I 217 89 Kaznacheiev, M M " e S 759 345 Keller 268 108 Keller and C - 1 l % f [ 366 162 Kempner, M. and I. Brothers 294 120 Kevorkov, A 285 116 Khanykov, M' me . 670 317 4 5 O - . j Kharkov Agricultural Farm < 140 63 ( 205 86 Kharitonenko's Asylum for children in Sumy. . . 981 408 Kharkov Sugar-Refinery Association 181 76 Khavanov, V., firm ,,A. Johansen" 923 417 Khludov. A. 535 251 Khodjeyan, K 429 196 I 2 5 M Khoklov > A | 190 80 Khoronzhina, M-'" M. 705 327 55? {r-i-j 89 Page. 77 40 43 Khmelevsky, J. 942 424 Khrushchev, Y 975 445 Khvastunov, S. 486 228 Khrzhanovsky, M' me A 721 330 Kikodze, M- me N 752 341 Kivshenko, A 803 363 Kiev technical Society 1033 478 Klagess, Th 804 364 {29 i S ~7 219 9O Klementiev, N. . 947 426 Klenovsky, J 216 89 Kletniev, N 198 83 Klever, J 805 366 Klingert, G. and Levitt, J 427 196 Klodt, Baron von-Jurgensburg, M 806 366 Kochelov, M-"' e M 669 316 Kochubei, M' me B. XXIV 344 Kokuiev, N 309 126 267 108 Kolakovsky, T I 37 I2 5 Kolchugin, A 477 224 Koller, R. 511 239 Kolonin's, P. Sons 442 202 Komarov, J. . . 367 162 Kondakov, V 484 227 Konopchinsky, M' me L 728 332 Konshin, N 543 " : 255 Kopievsky, C. 422 193 Koptev, M' me J 663 315 Korf, Baron A., late Governor-General of the Pri-Amur province. XXI 334 Korf, Baroness S., Wife of the late Governor-General of the Pri-Amur province XXI 334 Korchakov-Sivitsky, V 416 191 Korovin, C. . 809 368 Korsinin, G 425 195 Korshchinsky, M' me A 702 326 Korsukhin, A. 808 367 554 Page. Kort, A. 974 443 Koshechkin, B. 1024 475 Koslov, A 972 442 Kosmalsky, M- me A 714 329 Kostikov- Alma zov, A . 384 170 Kouriar, M"" 6 P 814 Kovalevsky, P 807 Kozhukhovky, M' me S 710 328 Kozlov, J. 597 284 Kozlovsky, V 68 37 Krabbe, L 946 426 Krachkovsky, J.. . 811 368 Kraiser, C 404 185 Kramskoy, J Sio 368 Kramskoy, M' me 736 337 Krasnushkin, M' me E. 746 339 Krassinsky, Count L. 71 38 Krausp, M- me C 319 133 J 162 68 Krestovmkovs, Brothers < \ 492 230 Krivaksin, M" ne L 643 306 Krivsky, P 210 87 Kroiss, F 378 167 Kronenberg, K 221 91 Kronenberg, L. . 63 35 Krupar, E 215 89 Kryzhitsky, C 812 399 Kuban Cossacks province School for girls in Ekaterinodar. 892 404 Kulomzin, A 164 69 Kunat, M' me J 697 325 Kurdiumov 175 73 Kurovsky, E. ...... .... 21 12 Kushnarev, J 232 96 1396 179 595 283 Kusnetsov, N Kusnetzov, M. and C. . Kushnikov Institute in Kerch. ...... 87! Kussakin 1004 464 Kuvaev Manufactory 555 L. ,NJV Page. Ladies Committee, appointed by the High Order of Her Imperial Majesty the Empress of Russia .... W 289 Ladies Philantrophic Society in Kaluga . . . - 671 317 | 453 2 6 Lamanskaia, M' me A. . ..... s ~^~ 537 Lange, K. and C ....... m 50 I 132 59 N Lapshin, W. .......... 501 234 Lavrendev, G. .......... 590 280 Lebedev, N. ..... ..... 353 153 Le Dantu .... ..... 279 114 Lejeune, W. and G., firm ,,W. W. Lejeune" . 482 226 Lemokh, Ch ....... . 816 370 Lenartovich, A. .... ...... 67 36 Leonard, M'" 16 O ....... . 270 in Levitan, I. . .......... 815 370 Levitt, J ............ 452 206 Lianosov, G. and Pridonov, A., Bozlii -Promysly Fishery Company ........ 323 135 Liberman, Brothers G. and A. ...... 54 .31 Libovitch, V. ... ...... 995 454 Lidert, M- 116 ........... 748 340 Lippold, A. ........... 412 189 Litovchenko, A ........... 817 370 f 155 66 Liutov's M., Sons .... . < OQ2 ,, g Loborev, W ............ 936 422 Loguinov, W. ..... 500 234 Lomakin, V. . ......... 189 79 Loviton, N. . . . ........ 451 206 Lubensky, J. ..... .... 70 38 Lubimov, Soivay and C ........ 512 240 Lukutin, N ............ 434 199 j 158 66 Lurie, S. ........... J 167 71 I 493 230 Lvov, Princess .......... 623 301 - S56 - Lying-in Hospital in Moscow. 854 389 Lying-in Hospital in St. Petersburg 853 389 Lyssenkov, A 291 119 M Magelaner, M' mes E. and T 713 329 Maiakin, E. - 39 2 3 Maizel, V 99 45 Makovsky, C. . 819 371 Makovsky, V. ... .... 818 370 Makarovsky, N 487 228 Malutin's P. Sons 532 250 Mamontov, M" me E. 622 300 Mamontov, M~ me M. 620 298 47 27 | 2 5 102 Marakushev, C, firm ,,Kokuchkin and Marakuchev". 524 246 Maria Asylum for children in Kerch 895 405 Maria Gymnasium for girls in Kursk .... 690 322 Maria Gymnasium for girls in Simbirsk. . . . 867 393 Maria Gymnasium in Viatka 648 310 Maria Hospital for the poor in St. Petersburg . 858 390 Maria Institute in Nizhny-Novgorod 876 397 Maria Practical lace makers School 758 345 Maria School of the Association for die relief oi the poor in Moscow 883 400 7 7 Mariinsk Agricultural Farm 84 42 I 135 61 Mariinsk Distillery Association 126 57 Marine Instruments Works attached to the Chief Hydrographic Department. 987, II 450 Markov, W 398 180 Marks A., Editor of the Journal n Niva tt 380 168 Marshak, J 423 194 Maryshev 1003 463 M""' e Medvednikov's orphan's Home with Bank and Saving* bank 902 408 557 J&N? Page. , 123 56 Megvinov, S. i 296 121 Melkonov-Esekov, G 213 Meller, M. 4 2 24 Meltser, A., firm J. Stange" 419 192 Meltser, T. and C . - . . 449 205 Mendelson, E. 59 6 283 Meshchersky, A. . . 820 371 Meyer, H .... 368 163 Miassoyedov 262 107 Miassoyedov, Gr .... 822 371 Michailovskaia Artillery Academy and School, Mi- nistry of War. 985, II 447 Mielk, S 992 453 Michelson, J 404 1 85 Miller, Ch 591 281 Mikeshin, M. 420 193 Mikhaylov, M' mc 627 302 Mikhaylov, M'" 16 M 665 316 f 211 87 Minder, G | 466 218 Miniashin, A., firm n Alushta" 278 114 Mining Administration of South Russia . . . . 333 142 Mining Department of the Ministry of Public Domains 328 139 Mining Institute under direction of the Mining De- partment ... 660 156 Ministry of Finances . . . 964 433 364 161 386 173 770 351 987 449 Ministry of Public Domains 300 123 Ministry of Public Instruction 906 410 77 1 35i Ministry of War 97 6 444 985 447 Ministry of Ways of Communications . . . . 998 454 Mironov, C .... 377 167 Mirzabekiants, G. and M., Brothers . . 233 96 Mirzaiants and C 5*5 241 Mishchenko, P .564 267 - 558- Ministry of Marine Page. Model Workshop of the Marine Museum. . . . 386 173 Moller. 17 10 Morosov, A 821 371 Morosov's, S. Son and C . - 549 259 Morosov, V. and Sons 545 257 Moscow Benevolent Society founded in 1837. . . 882 400 Moskow Dye-Mill 553 261 Moskow Joint-Stock Company 348 149 Muhlbach, Th 907 410 Multanovsky, J 456 207 Mumrikov, J 407 186 Mumrikov, P 406 186 Mumrikov, V. 491 230 Muratchaiev, K. and Nazarov, Kh 235 97 Mussi P. and Successors of Gujon, P 558 264 Myshkovsky, M 357 155 N. Nadein, M. 971 442 Narva Cloth Manufacture . 554 262 Naryshkin, M' me XXIII 342 Naryshkin, M- me E. . . . XXV 344 Natanson, Brothers . . . 520 244 Natus, F. and C. 107 48 Navosov, W . . ... , . . 823 372 Nazarov (Muratchaiev and Nazarov) ..... 235 97 Nazimov, M~ me N. 750 340 Nechaieva, M" me 639 305 Nechaiev-Maltsev, J. 432 198 Nedyckhliev, A., Secretary of the Committee of the Central Asiatic Exhibition 1891, at Moscow . . 461 209 Neishtube 251 102 Nellis and Frese 392 177 Neustube, S . 959 431 Neuman, M. 249 101 Niaziants, J 283 116 Nidegger, Ch. 1007 465 Nicholas Asylum for children in Astrakhan. . . 901 407 Nicholas Asylum for children in Kazan . . . . 889 403 559 9 > J8J6 Nicholas Asylum for children in Taganrog . . . 891 Nicholas Asylum for children in Tula . . . . 887 Page. 404 Nicholas Orphan's Institute in Gatchino. . . . 863 Nicholas Orphan's Institute in St. Petersburg . . 864 Nicholas School for girls in St. Petersburg . . . 864 Nicolaieva M" me E . 44.4. 392 392 392 IO 1 J 4 6 Nizhny-Novgorod Society for assistance of the poor, under the Presidency of M' A. I. Baranov. . VIII Nobel, Brothers ....... > > o 64 315 Nobel, E. and Ch -"-ji X 45 T < A 2 Novaia Alexandria Institute of Agriculture and Forestry - 141 222 Novooskokzev, A ... 824 O. Obodovsky, M~ me 658 4 4i 63 9i 372 Obzhorin, S 40 312 J5 Odessa Exchange Committee 85 14) Odessa Ladies Committee \I1 23 IO 22 6 4 Odner, W oc2 1 9 Ofrosimov, A - o 429 O^arev, M" n ' e . . . 7 ? ? * Okhenkovsky, Ch . . . 1 72 34 1 38 I 9i Okulov, T. A <- 43 o/r Olga Asylum for children in Yaroslavl ... 897 Olone:s Mining Region , J 355 406 H3 1 479 Olovianishnikov, T. . | 47- 225 221 502 Olsuffiev, M-T. J 76 235 346 \ 767 Onufrieva, M"" 6 N. . /( < c 347 OOT f 455 zu y c -3* 560 Petrovskaia Agricultural Academy .... Page. Ophtalmic Hospital in St. Petersburg. . . . 856 390 Orlov, V 473 222 Orlov-Dawidov, Count S. ....... 982 446 Orlov-Davidov, Count V 970 441 Orphans Institutions in Moskow . ... . . . 865 392 Oshurkovs Brothers 160 67 Ostroumov, A 495 311 Ovchinikov, M. and A. 430 197 Oznobishina, M- me N 695 . 324 Oushin, N 26 14 Ovchinikov, Brothers . 352 152 P. Pal, Ch 538 253 Pankrishev, J. ...,. 408 187 Panov's V. Sons and Kovalev 568 Panyshev, J 566 Panyshevs, J., M. and Kh 565 Pasternak, L 825 374 Patriotic Institute in St. Petersburg 88 1 399 Paul Institute in St. Petersburg 88 1 399 Pavlov, S 546 257 Pechinsky, A 980 445 Pedagogical Museum of the Military Schools, Ministry of War -985, III 448 Pell, A 510 239 Penitentiary School of Bolshevo 618 296 Perepelkin, M' me Z., Gymnasium for gilrs ... 953 429 Peretz, N 571 270 Perlov, B. and Sons 243 100 Perlov, S 242 100 Perov, W. 827 374 Pershin, J 33 19 Persianinov, A 415 190 Persk y c 777 354 i 3 So 41 163 69 207 86 247 101 - 561 f Page. Petrov, B. 1015 469 Petrov, Th. . 138 62 Piassetsky, P 994 453 Pick, M 990 452 Pigeon Sport Society. . 989 451 Pilar von Pilkhau, Baron G 919 415 Pimonenko, N. 828 374 Playing Card Factory of the Imperial Foundling Hospital .... 851 388 Plenske, J. 488 228 Pleshanov 157 66 Pletnev, A. 1028 476 Pliater-Ziberg, Count J. 521 244 Plieshanov, 1 204 86 Pobuda 918 415 Podturov, M-" 16 D 667 316 Pokrovskaya Community 612 293 Pokrovsky, M- me E 657 312 Polenov, Helen 829 375 Polenov, M- me H. 760 346 Polevaia, M' nie O ... 957 430 Polevin, J . 826 374 Poliakov's, A. Imperially Sanctioned Association . . 550 260 Polianin, P. . 383 169 Popov, J 563 266 Popova, M' me E 638 305 Posse, O. 409 187 Post and Telegraph Department . . . . . . 986 449 Posvik, M- me B 725 331 Pototskaia, Countess M " . . . | I 90 43 Prianishnikov . ........... 41 24 Pridanov 208 86 Pridonov, A. (Lianosov, G. and Pridonov, A.) . . 323 135 Prince of Oldenburg's Hospital for children ... 857 390 Primary girls School in Kazan 634 304 Primary girls School of the Zems.vo in Mamadysh 635 304 Primary town School of 2 classes in Chigirin . . 688 322 Primary town School of 2 classes in Kanev. . . 687 322 Professional School of M' me B. Lepeshkine . . . 616 295 Prokhorov, A. 305 124 -562- Prokhorov, N. Prokhorov's Trekhgornaya Manufactory. . Prosorov, A., firm J. Prosorov and Son". Pskov Agricultural Society Pushkin, A. . Putiatin. Prince E. 772 537 1012 139 197 1030 Page. 352 252 468 63 83 464 477 R. Rabotkin, P Ralle, A. and C, Successor Rasteriaiev, G. . . . . . . Rastorguievs, L. Successors Rauzer, A., firm M Miller, Fugelzang and C" Rebrov, J Rebinder, M' me V Reinherz, A. Reisky, Baroness J Reinhard, V. Renner, L Repin, E Repman, R Reshetov's Trade Classes connected with children's Asylum in Tver Riadnin, C. . Riabtsov, M' me Z. Riba J. . , Richter, G. . Riganelovich, M'" 16 . . Riga Exchange Committee Ritsoni, P. Riznikov, M' mo A Rocionov Institute in Kazan Rodzievich, M-" ie J Rodionov, nee Princess Shakhovskoy Roginsky, M~ m * 51 233 242 140 164 279 477 237 327 413 203 375 238 401 136 318 414 474 321 9 64 107 437 181 397 331 302 - 563 - Page. Rogger, P. 112 51 I 193 81 Roman, I .| 308 125 I 320 133 Rosen, Baroness M 749 340 Roshkovsky, M- me S 701 326 Rostovtseva, J. 78 40 Rostov Exchange Committee J I J 43 63 Rostov Linen Manufactory 540 254 Russian bee breeding Society 187 79 Russsian fisheries and fishing Society . . . . 969 440 Russo- American Rubber Manufactory 574 272 Rydzievsky, M' me 625 302 Rykov, M- me M 655 312 Ryzhov 183 77 Ryzhkov, M. 659 312 S. Sadon Mine 344 148 Safarov, M. 222 91 Sakin, P. 541 254 Sakrzhevsky, M' me F 699 325 Salomatov 35 20 Salomon, M" me C. 454 206 Samguin, A. ... 471 221 Sapozhnikov, V. . 560 : 265 Saradzhev, D. < 4 ' ! 295 121 19 ii Satin, A 82 41 148 64 I 169 71 SaVm '^ I 579 275 Savinsky, W. .... 831 375 Savitzky, C 832 376 Sazanov, E 38 22 School of the Merchants Corporation in Moscow .615 295 564 JS'JS? Page. Second Town Gymnasium for girls in Odessa . .681 320 Sedoy, Gr. 836 378 Selivanov, A. . 239 99 Selezniev, E 464 217 Semiradsky, H 834 377 Semenov, J 435 199 Semenov, G 403 182 Semenov, S 592 281 Semeshkina, M' me T 445 203 Senkov, S . 542 255 Serebrennikov, S. 588 279 Sernaker, M" 116 R. 712 328 Serobaints, K 1027 476 Shabelsky, M'" 16 N 619 296 QI 1 1 i r> \ XXVI 346 Shakhovsky, Princess M \ , \ 7 6 2 34 6 Shamov, N. and C 331 141 Sharashidze 1001 463 Shavrov 214 88 Shcherbinin, A 1029 477 Shchednkin 640 305 128 58 Sherechevsky, I 1 234 97 Sheremetiev Asylum for senior and junior officers . 852 388 Shevyrev 261 107 Shishkin, ] 841 380 156 66 Shishkov, N 1 203 85 Shmidt, Brothers 51 29 Shmidt, K. .... 340 146 Shmelev, T. .^ Shneider, M' 1 " 6 A . Shpanovsky, L. Shroeder, M. 910 412 I *53 66 Shweitser < I 196 83 Shtram, M" 1 " L 747 339 Shuia Manufactory. . cu A 4 21 J 93 Shutov, A < [ 438 200 Shuvalov, Countess E 737 357 - 565 - Page. Shonhov, O 301 123 Sibirtsev, N., (Dokuchaiev, B. and Sibirtsev, N.). . 255 103 Sierikov 1014 469 Siffers, M" 116 T. 744 339 Silla-Novitsky, M- me F. . 716 329 Sinitsyn, P. 494 231 I 30 16 Sinadin {172 72 ! 236 9 8 Sinadino, Brothers 1019 474 Simbirsk Trades School of Prince V. Orlov-Davidov under [the High Patronage of His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of Russia. ..... 970 ^41 Sivinsky, M' me V 723 331 Skvortzov's, J. Sons 593 282 Skvortsov, N. 134 60 Slavinov, N .. 358 155 Smietanin, G 124 56 Smirnov, M 582 276 Smirnov, P 115 52 I J1 4 5 1 Smirnov, S -, ^ III Smirnov, S 514 241 Sobeshin 62 35 Society for propogation of practical knowledge among the educated classes 613 293 I 60 34 Society of Agricultural Colonies 4 2 I 95., 44 Sogomonov, A. and Brothers . 297 " 122 Sokolov, D. ... 281 115 Solnyshkov, N 389 175 | 312 130 Solnyshkov, S j ^. 22 _ Soloviev, M 379 167 Soloviev, S. 905 409 Solovky Convent 314 131 Sophia Hospital for children in Moscow . . . 858 390 Sorokin 599 285 Sorokin, A 467 219 Spekhin, V. 573 271 - 566 T JSA Page. St. Nicholas' Asylum of the Kolpino Benevolent Society 884 400 St, Olga's children's Hospital in Moscow . . . 982 446 St. Petersburg Arsenal 771 351 St. Petersburg deaf and dumb School .... 847 386 St. Petersburg Ladies Patriotic Society 845 384 573 165 St. Petersburg machine work boot and 481 225 shoe Manu- St. Petersburg Practical Technological Institute . - 950 428 Stepanenko M~ me N - TC T - T Stadler and Pattinot . . . . Stahl, Brothers. Stalnov, J. . .... Station for Melioration and Agricultural Statistical Department of the Ministry Communications . . . . Statistical Commit.ee of the Province Cossacks. ...... 382 169 288 117 ' . ' ' 12 5 57 Experiments. 59 33 of Ways of . . . . 998, V 456 of the Don 1032 478 j 374 l66 I 459 208 18 ii 1/17 6 A. Stepanenko, M" me N .... 206 86 Stepanov, A Strizhey, N . . . 835 378 24 13 86 42 192 81 1A& IA.Q Suntsov's V and A. Brothers . . \ 159 6 7 1 168 71 Surgical Instrument Works, Ministry of Sutiaguin, M War . . 985, IV 448 567 268 Suthof C. and C IQ? 82 c i 567 -- JssJss Page. Sviyazhnov, M- rae A 656 312 Svecbnikov, A. . . 414 190 Sverchkov, K - 833 377 T. Tairov, I. and Alikhanov, K. 136 61 Taldykina, M' me C 53 30 Tatuzov, A 282 115 Teaching Department, Ministry of Ways of Com- munications. 998 458 Technical Committee of the Chief Superintendancy 555 262 Technical Railway School in Kremenchug, Ministry of Ways of Communications 998 458 Technical Railway Schools, Ministry of Ways of Communications. 998 458 Temporary Charity Committee for procuring work to neady women in Jelabuga 647 309 Tentelevsky Chemical Works . . . . . . 504 236 Ter-Arutinov, N 284 1 1 6 Ter-Ioanissiants 304 124 Tereshchenko, Brothers, Imperially Sanctioned Asso- ciation * 177 74 Tereschenko, N. . \ I 178 75 32 18 Tereshchenko, Th 108 49 i/9 75 Theodorovich, H . 400 180 Tikhomirnov, M' nie 264 107 Timofeievsky, Brothers 130 59 Tolstoy, Count M - 182 77 Tomulets, G. 271 112 Town elementary Schools in Odessa .... 683 320 Town School for girls in Odessa 682 320 Train-guards School in Vyshni-Volochok. . 998 458 Trilsky, A 252 1 02 Tripolsky, Th. . 280 115 568 Page. (154 66 I9Q 84 Tsekhomsky, M' me S 706 327 Tsessarevich's Nicolay Alexandrovich Alms House in St. Petersburg .... 90-5 409 Tsigert, Ch 925 418 f 904 409 Tsimmermann, F. . . 1 924 418 Tsimmerman, R 395 178 Tsypkin, S. 505 236 Tucalev, N. . 411 188 Tuorla 194 82 Turbin. J. 23 13 Turshu, E 229 94 Tvorozhnikov, J. 837 378 U. Umnov, M- me 660 312 Urussov, Princess M. .... ... 66 1 314 Ushin's, N. Successors 390 176 Ushkov, P. and C. . 513 240 Usmanova, Bibi-Fatima 636 304 12 9 142 63 Ufa Government Museum s V. Vaag, A. and Sons ........ 137 62 Vakhrameiev's, N. Successors 503 235 Vaniuchina, M- mo . . . .... 129 58 Vargunin, Brothers 518 243 Vasilchikov, M' me M 761 346 Vasilchikov, M" lue 764 347 Vassiliev, Th. 787 360 Veber, C. 1036 480 Veitsenberg, A. 448 204 Venig, Ch. 789 360 Verfel, Ch 431 197 569 JVsJVs Page. Vereshchagin, N. ... 173 72 Viasemsky, Princess M. 674 318 Victorson, A 237 98 Viel 1025 475 Vikel, W 131 59 ViUevalde, B. . . . 788 360 Vinogradov, M- me L 666 316 Virgin Mary Asylum for children in Perm . . . 901 408 Vishniakov, P. and Sons 436 200 Vishniakov, V. .... ...... 441 201 Vishniakov, V. and C. 277 114 Visiitsky, M' mft M 724 331 Vitt, M-"' e M. 751 340 Vladimir Tannery 581 276 Vladimirov, N 776 353 Vladykin, M- me A 668 316 Vlasinko, C. . 326 136 Voksinsky, M' 1 " 6 A. ........ 717 329 Voitsitsky, Mr ] 730 332 Volchansky, V 226 93 Volguin, D. 306 125 Volk and C. 393 177 Volkonsky, Princess E 760 346 Volkov. E. 790 360 Volkova, M- me A., firm ,,Gothard Martini" ... no 50 Vollovich, M' me E. 698 325 Vologda Permanent Home Industry Exhibition ! 644 308 Von-Bool. N. 375^ 166 Von-Dervis ... 483 226 Vorogushin, N. 121 55 Voronin, B. and Son 151 65 Voronin, J 534 251 Voronova, M' niH N. . 443 202 Vorontsov-Dashkov, Countess M 738 337 Votkinsk Crown Works. | 2 ^ 6 IO3 I 33 6 144 Voyslav, S. . 350 150 Vrangel, Baroness E , 791 360 Vrublevsky, J. . . I ^5 78 I 241 99 Page. Vvedensky, A 465 218 Vychnegradsky, M' me , President of the Ladies Committee XXII 337 Vydzgha, J. . . Vysotsky, A 583 277 W. Warsaw Museum of Industry and Agriculture . . 246 101 Weinstein, E. and Sons 56 32 Weiss, H 585 278 I 50 29 Weiss, Ch., firm Starr and C"" '19 41 ! 238 98 Weiss von Weissenhoff 254 102 Widow's Home and Asylum for poor unmarried women in St. Petersburg 859 391 Widow's Home in Moscow 860 391 Wolf, M' 1 " 6 A., Successor of Price" . . . . 310 126 Wolfshmidt, A 105 47 Y. Yagovkin, A 43 25 Yakobiy, V 842 380 Yakovkin, J 594 282 Yakovlev, E 395 162 Yanash, A. . . . . . { ^ ^ \ 96 44 Yasiuninsky, V., E. and A 531 249 Yassinsky, J 509 238 Yelets Zemstvo n 8 Yon, J. . 122 55 Z. Zaborsky, M' me S 711 328 Zaglodin, Brothers G., N. and S 559 264 Zagorsky, N 802 3 63 JJS Page. Zakrzhevsky, N 74 39 Zamoisky, Countess K 696 325 Zanis, C. . 997 454 Zarirsky, A 23 1 95 Zbievsky, Mr" 16 J. 709 328 Zemstvo of the gov. of Moscow 621 299 Zennenvaldt, G. ,929 420 Zhadan, J .... 317 132 Zhemochkin, J. 589 280 Zhessel, A 426 195 Zhilin, Z. 171 72 Zhilinsky 253 102 Zhukov, A . 161 68 Zhuravlev, Th 801 363 Zhuravsky, J. 64 35 Zieberg-Plater, Countess 700 326 Zimaier, M' me E. 718 330 Zimin, N. 369 163 ZlatKovsky, M ... 956 430 Zlatoust Small Arms Factory (Mining Department J 332 141 of the Ministry of Public Domains) . . \ 480 225 Zubov, V. 547 258 Zubkov's, N., Successors ........ 525 246 Zuievo Manufactory of J. Zimin 533 250 9< 8096 *& {> U.C. 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