9. 
(BO) [April, 
III. SEWAGE AND SEWERAGE. 
. First Report from the Select Committee (Dr. Brady’s) on the 
Sewage of Towns, together with the Minutes of Evidence and 
Appendix. Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed, 
April 10, 1862. 
. Second Report from the same Committee. Ordered by the House 
of Commons to be printed, July 29, 1862. 
. Report from the Select Committee (Lord Robert Montagu’s) on 
Sewage (Metropolis), together with the Proceedings of the Com- 
mittee, Minutes of Evidence, Appendix, and Index. Ordered 
by the House of Commons to be printed, July 14, 1864. 
. Tuird Report and Appendices of the Commission appointed to 
enquire into the best Mode of Distributing the Sewage of Towns 
and applying it to beneficial and profitable Uses. Presented 
to both Houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty. 
1865. 
. The Present State of the Town Sewage Question. By Gilbert 
W. Child, M.D., of Exeter College, and Physician to the 
Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford. Oxford and London: John Henry 
and James Parker. 1865. 
. General Report of the Commission appointed for Improving the 
Sanitary Condition of Barracks and Hospitals. Presented to 
both Houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty. 1861. 
. A Manual ef Practical Hygiene, prepared especially for Use in 
the Medical Service of the Army. By Edmund A. Parkes, 
M.D., F.R.S. London: John Churchill & Sons, New Bur- 
lington Street. 1864. 
. The Sanitary Management and Utilization of Sewage. By 
William Menzies, Deputy Surveyor of Windsor Forest and 
Parks. London: Longman & Uo. 1865. 
National Health and Wealth. By the Rev. H. Moule. 1861. 
(Pamphlet. ) 
10. A’emoir on the Cholera at Oxford in the Year 1854, with Con- 
siderations suggested by the Epidemic. By Henry Wentworth 
Acland, M.D., F.B.S., &e. London: John Churchill, New 
Burlington Street; and J. H. & J. Parker, 377, Strand. 
Oxford: J. H. & J. Parker. 1856. 
11. Seventh Report of the Medical Officer of the Privy Council, 
with Appendix. 1864. 
TuE problems of Sanitarian Science seem sufficiently complex ; but 
the most pressing and primary of them will run in the simple 
formula: How are we to dispose of our Sewage without either 
spoiling our rivers, or robbing our fields, or poisoning ourselves ? 
