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KNOW LI I ... I . 



April. 1915. 





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Buckingham Palace. 

 '■ At such a moment wc all stand by one another, 

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To H.R.H. The Prim e of Wales, 

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Reprinted from "Knowledge" May, 1911, issue. 



A BIRD'S-EYE VIEW 



in tut: 



HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY 



(Wl TH FOLDING PLA TE). 



By W. ALFRED PARR. 



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PUBLIC SCHOOL BATTALION. 



"THE ADMIRALTY have given official 

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 Men, and who will serve together as 

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THE 



English Mechanic 



WORLD OF SCIENCE 



Commences with Volume C I 

 its Second Century. 



Foi m" years it has steadily and continuously broadened 



the I infill s, an ' yearly added to the ranks 



oi it ■ ;[■,. i, .11, l- . i ■■■ tun! irj hi ipers. We ask to-day, not 

 fori nscrip ion, bul Foi universal voluntai y servi< e in the task 

 ,,i enli ting the young in the »ei \ ii e d 51 tern e it 1- no duty 

 { ours to discuss whether wi were read} as a nation for the 

 ei, ti itruggli in which the British I mpire is engaged; but 



no 1 1 rel ih.it, after a gi n nation ol universal elementary 

 education, the majority ol our countrymen grow into man- 



1 and womanhood ill equipped for the industrial struggle 

 with their competitors ol better-trained nations, and content 

 1, mi vicarious athletics and the unedifying, 

 lmt 1 .piil.tr " literature oi the time. ( 'i hundreds 



oi th these it is the bare truth to say the fault 



is not theirs, but that of their teachers. H youth were but 

 led judiciously, and without pedantry, to the realisation 

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 attrai 1 yearly increasing thousands to the profitable utilisation 

 thereol in manhood One proof that this is so is the eagerness 

 with which the English Mechanic is read in schools where 

 the teachers have familiarised the children with its contents, 

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