H 



ASSOCIATIONS. 



K. 



\ff\ RONOMU'AL 



\ . 



to the different 

 a did tbsy find 

 m very point*. 

 tht reSttlU that 



In turn. And in oondoi 



lid thai the uutary millennium lay before and 

 not behind them, and thai .;: woceedin* years 

 woold vttesss a continuous, if gradual, decrease 

 UtWasontairfdsfreeofdiase, 



were then rratl and dis- 



Thc Sanitation of 



.;. . i . 



! . . ..- ... 

 i ./.,. 



. \ ...--. . 



. - . !::.',: , - 

 ; . I. -r 



Wilson; lather MofiJ?"" 1 



Views ef the 



irther Notes on Spiroptera 



...... . . :r. ..-. ..... 



. , M ! ........ 



: -. ... A K, 



v Booth Wales in 

 mpwo : " An In.jiiirv into 

 ebricty and Kin 



.an I t. Tuberculosis," 

 >&niurium for Consumptive 



? -: I! r- <-,.:: 



.!.-.- unies ". : 11 . 



.. . -. > v;,r u : 

 : . 



- CompoUory Notification of Infection 

 aw.* bir WUsottLoire ; * Leprwv. 

 tmi ; federal Qttsrsntina,** \ 



. on PhthW" by George L. Mul 



r 

 large 



J. Jfrnlo/ Scima and Education. The pre- 

 siding oOoer of this section was Prof. Francis 

 im*Z* of Sydney Universit v, whose address 

 was on - PbliUos and Education." After dis- 

 snbieot generally be said in tin- 

 ts than had been founded in the 

 and in connection with many 

 larger universities schools of ; 

 and he did not sse why they oon .-stab- 



Ushsd in Aurtralia, not only in towns which had 

 irvacaitiss. but in places like Brisbane, 

 rere not the proud possessors of a uni- 

 In the American schools of political 

 it wss possible to obtain information 

 with regard to many of the politieal pn.Mems 

 in Australia with greater ease than it could be 

 obtained in Australia itsslt The jmbli 

 which were issued under the auspfoes of these 

 schools had not only supplied our education 

 in the American Stales Ujrtndeiita, lawyers, 



about the only 



AnstfBlfcn staderts, lawyers, and 



In Aiutralia it WM to the organizations such as 

 ths school* that thry most look-in addition to 

 the work of the press for the training and edu- 

 csdon of the body of opinion which Was to such 

 a larg ax^wsj^W We had no train- 

 talT tor ioornafistolieyond that which they 

 ndyhtpfak up by actual experienos. We had 

 tracing for lawyer^ tmt U^might be better if 

 they had a training which went beyond the 

 special training they now received. Further, 



.-, .: -. rraata, N"w. for all thoy 

 could ate, the civil senrioe -:' Au-tml in. ^reat as 

 it now is, nii^l. come a much larp-r 



body. But supposing the Oovrnmirnt -h.-ulil 

 1 its operations much beyond it- j.r. -.-nt 

 limits, where were we to look for a 1. 



i .i\il servants f If we Boooeedea in 

 rkMi^' a land act we knew we did so afi< -r a 

 succession of Itlnndcrs. and, if m.-r.-ly \ up|>ly 

 a training and education which might benefit 

 tin- publir M-rvnnts and tin- rili/m-. ihr r-ial>- 

 lishment of schools of political science would In- 



.-nt well worth trying, perhaps 

 ter exporiinei.t than 50 or 100 others that we 

 hare already tried. 



Subsequent ly t he following named papers were 

 read by their author- and were discussed before 

 the sect ion : 

 u Science M Subject in (JiiT* Schools." 1 



i 



\v. H. Will State/ 1 



by Canon K. siuney !'<],. ; u TheTendi 



traliun 1/iteratun-."" l>y Krnot I ' >n tin- 



,_' <>t Kiiniruaffes." by Charles II. Barton; 

 Whitman/' \.\ Willi,.: Methods 



of Btodying I.anguagea, n by < 



1 urriciiluin of Sccondarv Kdu<-atiun." 1-v I. 11 

 Hollidtf.-; -K-hL-ati..,, of G 



Wblsfeenholme ; u Arohiteoture in Kelat'nn t<> ! 

 ti..n." by Geoive H. M. Addi>.n : - Th.- Te.'lmi<-ttl 



at in a Btsts System f K.lu<-ati.pu." i,\ .\n 

 thony St. Ledger ; M Th. I 

 nnan," by \^ . Oraham: 'I : ': 



Speech," by .I<>hn II. Ni.-holM.n ; :ii<-tiorj 



in Drawing' 1 and "Australian Art D-ve]..|,tn-nt." l>y 

 .l.-hn I'luiii!: Mtriliution 



f th- Kelation i.f Kthi.-s HUM 

 I'ollock ; u Th.- TcM-l. i. - ralian l.it. 



Ky .l.,hn H. n'Har. f Australian 



lii.-v .lejiheiitt ; u Use and Abuse 

 of Examinations/ l>y Henry P,. 1. i ImjH^r- 



tanceof Mental Science as a (ni<l in Primary Mu- 



1 by Janien Rule: ' Religion- [ttstmodon in 

 Day Schools," bv A. R. Hivers: u Art Edu 

 by K. Godfrey Rivers; -The Educational ' 

 and how to 1 l.y H. Cecil Wri-ht : -Th.- 



SchoolmMter -.f t)u- Future," l.v Th"mas liradlmrv; 



44 To Science," by Geor- 



;.tun-." by .F. li. Train i 



Ne\t Meeting. At u meeting of the(i. 

 Council held on Jan. 18, it was resolved that the 

 next meeting of the Association be held b 

 ney two years hence, also that the meeting next 

 after the Sydney meeting be held at tl, 

 bourne I'niv. -rsity. The new president chosen 

 is Prof. Archibald Livereidge, of Sydney. 



\s||;n\nM\. I'lHH.IM ^> <H. IN 1^.,;,. 

 Though, like the year Immediately preceding it. 

 1805 was not remarkable for any startling os- 



nical disclosures, save the mt i 

 covery of the components of the rings of Saturn. 

 yet our knowledge of the visible celestial uni- 

 verse has surely though slowly advai 



I he x ( ,|.,r x^tein. since the c.-mplet j.,n ..f 

 last year's record the boundaries of the solar 

 system have not been enlarged, nor has its mem- 

 bership been increased, except by the addition 

 of a few asteroids and two short-period coraeta, 

 and, as no change has been made in the assumed 

 solar parallax, the volumes and distances of its 

 several constituent bodies, both primary and 

 secondary, remain mostly unchanged. 



