912 EXPERIMENT STATION EECORD. 



larly to work upon the farm, I have never seen trials carried out with 

 such respect for practical details, and with such scrupulous regard for 

 accurac}' in ever}' particular, as those in progress at the different sta- 

 tions which I visited. Secondlj^, to the precautions taken to avoid 

 publishing hastj" or misleading results; and, thirdl}^, to the definite 

 and precise form in which the}' are issued to the public. In some 

 cases, as at Geneva, the stations engage an official for the special pur- 

 pose of editing the bulletins and reports." 



The writer finds the efforts which are being made to develop agri- 

 cultural instruction in the secondarv schools "full of interest and 

 worthy of our close attention;" and he expresses the belief that "if 

 such education can be carried on successfully anywhere, it will be in 

 Canada and the United States of America." 



