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Updated: June 19, 2025


Fritz broke into bitter weeping and his aunt wept with him for she had no comfort to offer, and when Franz and Paul came they, too, were deeply worried over the loss, for they blamed themselves that they did not see that the door was latched. "What can we do?" they asked Mrs. Steiner. "The first thing is to run to the station-house and tell the police.

During his life the average price of his violins was six florins. A century after his death the Duke of Orleans, Louis Philippe's grandfather, paid 3,500 florins for one of them. It is also recorded that an American gentleman on La Fayette's staff, in the Revolutionary War, exchanged for a Steiner 1,500 acres of the tract where Pittsburg now stands.

Steiner called them to go to the great pavilion where the monkeys lived and played as merrily as if in their native haunts; running over the branches of the tree in the centre and swinging from the ropes, chattering, grinning, teasing each other, and making themselves generally amusing to the many spectators who crowded about their pavilion.

But people were beginning to lay wagers that the Mignons would not finish their slice, for Nana was showing her white teeth. Once again Steiner was in the toils, and so deeply this time that as he sat by Nana's side he seemed stunned; he ate without appetite; his lip hung down; his face was mottled. She had only to name a figure.

It was a stirring scene upon which they gazed. People were going to and fro; and among them Franz saw two familiar figures. "Fritz," he said, "there is Aunt Steiner and Pixy." "So it is Aunt Fanny," cried Fritz, joyously; "Aunt Fanny, do you see us? Pixy! Pixy!"

Whereupon she laughed, winked once or twice and with a naughty little gesture cried out: "After all's said and done, if I want him the best way even now is to kick him out of doors." Zoe seemed much impressed. Struck with a sudden admiration, she gazed at her mistress and then went and chucked Steiner out of doors without further deliberation.

The importance of mathematics, whether as a discipline of the human spirit or as an instrument of natural science, was not for a moment undervalued. Through his lectures and his part in the discussions they were held daily by the various speakers and ranged over almost every field of modern knowledge I gradually realized that Rudolf Steiner was in possession of unique powers.

One phrase only went round: "It's idiotic." A critic was saying that it would be one's duty to do a pretty bit of slashing. The piece, however, mattered very little, for people were talking about Nana before everything else. Fauchery and La Faloise, being among the earliest to emerge, met Steiner and Mignon in the passage outside the stalls.

"Pixy has been trying to take a bath in the pan of fresh water that I set out for the birds," said Mrs. Steiner, "and as he could not get into it, he dipped a foot in as does a cat. All animals try to be clean if we give them the chance. Take that largest tin basin, Fritz, fill it with water, dip this dust brush in it, and wash him. It will answer almost as well as if he were put in a tub.

RYDER, ARTHUR W. *Twenty-two Goblins. Dutton. SABIN, EDWIN L. How Are You Feeling Now? Little, Brown. SCHAYER, E. RICHARD. Good Loser, The. McKay. SCOTT, LEROY. Mary Regan. Houghton-Mifflin. SHOWERMAN, GRANT. *Country Child, A. Century. STEINER, EDWARD A. My Doctor Dog. Revell. STERN, GERTRUDE. My Mother and I. Macmillan. STITZER, DANIEL AHRENS. Stories of the Occult. Badger.

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