Fz»aranY 25, 18€5.] 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
181 
mof education 
c, grammar, 
pa- 
riculture. — ture. They must tall атоо! thatu 
—by which he meant 
and spelling- Tei zi 
ers. whi 
ch 
эф pe often felt 
ught there had been 
mbers 
qw А еец вту iderable 
"e up for their deficie 
He tho 
Govern 
"n 
though i thay 
m: 
eme degreo ood education. 
À 
—they e 
D e -yet tke бтв. "йр eople did w 
settled was to tax m maelves f for sn. 
What they о кето таутан) 
‘ural library in every school in 
м 10. 
was | its entire | coincidence with. that which. the Agricultural 
par icular department of labour in this fiel ich | 
созы to the ор, м m «verd and vell. деб, ael 
u ke = labour: Wi ш! ought to under- | 
take both effici M and ука he class ' 
poss ssible only in the case of those (almost) t towns which 
| sometimes arise around new 
pools ‚ filters, &c. might all be pro — before the new 
special ретте it might X^ p stimulate 
siderable, both for ish number, and for the inane 
the preliminary education it Pen ady rec 
confers. Leb however a certain standard of pre- 
24 ет АВ - е жене p" results of a 
go red before an 
possible 
attempt any such ration, or of 
| restrieted water supply as һе requires, Excessive water 
"E Wm 
© 
СЯ 
reque t and abundant flus ashing of all 
rains, Е 
towns which b a not abandon. And any plan for 
2c 
БФ 
which с pd influ- 
ence Mr. Holla nd in гэр reply to Mr. Ада nd's le tter. 
of t it has to deal. Mr. 
"40 рки ет оў аз po en er at present stand 
believes “ the utilisation of London sewage upon 
perfi be hopeless if any adequate return is 
to be obtained € the outlay —— to MN either 
rem m will undoubtedly be receiv 
ifetime pent in the bereke of 
must command E 
ren it is the weightier vl more trustworthy fo 
(depend 
:—' As I have not examined the country 
piter hrs don, I am not prepared to say that there is 
| sufficient land z— i the purpose to warrani а 
We extract the following passage 
whether it be 
g 
“I look u rowning exa amination of 
the 
uea- | the whole, "d pectéoty easy I manage. Remember, 
f irrigatio upon the — — 
advocated , being CUL on econ 
qos would require a very cams 
er, 
change is made in the system кс: mi drainage. 
rfe Rer. 
4 н at the naa that one object or Led It i к оет = that Mr. Menzies оша know 
tion is to present to th mind something hard. Не! is not tea hing p practical agriculture. that I ask you that the соп untry an ound жа оп —— well 
was convinced that nothing eu out the faculties of the mind | t6 enteri tain, жеры t У A &c. 
better than the fixed studies— ‚ Greek, and Mathematies. n о he — 
1t had been thought that physical science, from its progressive | At Ciren cester agrioultaro has a certain number of | that much “serious yde ht ay mn already spent 
was not Wi d e umg Hir in аан as uid allotted to Practical aena ir а | -— n the subject, and nati in fact 80,0007. has already 
sciences whic! en fixed for centuries; bu was 
--X y was taik wire аа асе rhe: number of 'the se, а 7 ma proceeding | been deposite d as а gua antee that the plans devised 
rr А E =. ent position i in tho education of | there is pgs me actory. e secure the servi тө 
Wan it it had yot attained, Ho D om thinking | examiner in practical agriculture of some noted m It is indeed, unfortunato for the author of this 
that che chemistry, geo! ny, a capable | as an хато Та r Mr. 5—, from Wi laine work, "lat there can be hardly any reader of it who 
terii атаи UPS The е other day ho was kind enough to 5 aes der us his services. Тһе mode of | will not see at once how deficient it is in the acknow- 
Ine members of the eme PM aud others, | proceeding 3 due hat has been already done 
in Hanover Square Жош, and he th. M — 4 the opinion him thecandidates for diploma, with some such Words as|in connection with i ubject. he whole of the 
ccena ym intimated, to the disa ppro of Dr. Temple, these: ‘Mr. S. chemistry, and the whole of the agriculture of house 
murred as to the practicability of the › Royal Agricul- г h Б 
9 ООУ measuring а man by ts in "science, | 0 obtain which it is necessary to gain suc! and such | a 
dictated to you how you are to examine them, but 
re I 
the а proper one." Well, now, that was 
just the point they had to consider that evening— —"whether it 
ме "үзү to Зечар v mind m — ene res 
of the greatest prae use life. He 
th с Cross and he did think the 
in would be M us, provided 
tituted for it. 
Ont the might а] fir tic e on his 
right hand (Dr. Voelcker), who would tell them that if teachers 
chose to make s dificult and educational they coul 
easily do so. tleman that read the paper that evening 
said the stan: ане: was high. Perhaps that was 
. He kne his friend Dr. Voelcker laboured д 
many years to the standard high and difficult, becaus: 
Мотото elass of minds which they had had o dodi 
2 
many of 
се ha 
they would give this subject a practica! а turn, le t them 
ether it was not » to edu: cate up toa hi igber 
,by g to зу been termed the machinery 
of education—reading, w ;, and arithmetic—mathematies 
and the Condes scien 
ter Hall, Coo mbe, Coventry, said: As 
Warw Bir mon, he ern "поё help expressing the з редат 
with eh he had listened to the able d P of his n про. 
Mr. MEO and he ы „= that paper had. 
well тесе only а tont to 
3A cbíetos. 
Agricultural 7 pe By Edward 
This js ат eply кзы; 
meu of the. АА pee Society 1 ett 
the educational subject ед Ф President 
by Mr. Acland, а mem E 6 mittee, and 
Кк 
в professiona 
h profession 
ing _ 
odical oet. 
=. Holland, with every нее intelligent 
igly as Mr. Acland does, that 
rofes- 
general таша ng m precede d special o 
Sional education but e believes t erbe to or pr exist- 
ing exa mining bodies a ar arant still more, let us s аў, 
the mme telli ~ MÀ gu general middl 
is country, t is Mal education < om 
ына апа Басын г во every day— 
effort by the Soci iety t. 
altogether lost in the subje 
r which they are gaining Еа this knowledge as pupils ? | 
repr 
uld | As 
this field E the * promotion 
u 
Erefted, contends for the me force of the Society's в |і 
that 
e ordinary surface gravitation 
to the farm and keep them there 
proceed 
labourers : are, » however, all unnamed in these pa - 
f the details of house Mos 
three, four, 
self as to init ders attainments. Do not confine 
your examinations to the state wi ә farm, € nature 
of the c crops, their rota ation an nd s rth, but ascertain 
f veh nts, 
dation, in which the strength of Mr. Menzies' pub- 
lioation Jor. diit is а E бокой of 
he i the the credit of in- 
aud of every matter connected wit im the practical 
management of a far (The examiner did so, 
understand ^ has been since pleased E 
конон koonlojgs dge 
m 
in оной Miricaltars when t 
— for o 
rewards come off their fathers’ эйе, or from farms on | th 
I 
which however may be learnt from 
&c 
of Windsor Castle* (1863), 
de loped in 
from which it is plain, that many an idea 
гоп the 
ter tank, which is so exclusivel attributed to 
e Tite” Prince Consort, reram mpeg m ght zd 
supplied with more of that j 
labourers, in which i тэ хе i 
m ТЕ 
t 
ась us our incl ngs.” 
We sincerely hope that the author of this pamphlet | 
will carry his views in the Council next Wednesday; 
ad that the governing body of the Royal Agricultural 
тен of аи and will see their way to the adoption 
uch a plan as may lead to the eri sic ima and 
another example of this same fault, it must be 
added "that A мі closet system, which is certain d 
| the best pla а 7 with the eiue ы in the 
of de А т ry houses, is iPad "y 
mention of the R = Н. Moule, to seis ur readers 
know, ыы кыегы vd it is due. 
A Re 
has no ош. pora in 
now 
TN. uec DU aree | 
ө Sewage, 
f mn Illustrated with 
of Windsor Poret and Park, 
edi Draw Longmans. 
le which does 
veli 
sE 
ei Linee in 
ouse 
And 
P deal g with sewago y 
g out the undue season which tbe men 
hibits and the lack, we do n of generosity, but 
the nc by which the 
as been сите out at the Wellingto 
t the Broadmoor Crim ша Lanatie 
ta 
f just and candid eden which it displays 
towards his predecessors in the field, 
The Agricultural Value <M the Sewage of Londo 
Examined in Referenc Principal Scheme. 
ow 
| everywhere. Beginning with а илебез. аа: of the 
| v etra for е — and of the — ity | 
ntilation, and о s devices for ensuring 
Girst tet dem 
the 
Submitted to vei Metropolitan Board of Works, with 
Extracts tien of Chemists, Engineers, 
and Agricu Stanford, 6, Charing 
ross, S. Ww. 
In z el тарен. pastphlet of 78 pages, an anonymous 
pendious usly M soy whatever 
ortant 
кы, ds 
hose 
pipes оп to the land. The upward filtration € 
“ -— eee Consort at Os lescribed, and th 
Р 
- n successive ни we hv e freut him a 
Lied " the n of the portable manure trade, and 
of "ed origin and progress of the li iquid manure theory; 
| the. evidence гог уай бш engineers, and agrieulturists 
filtration, and ot designing me à tank upon t vx 
principle as — continue to act, is ascribed to his 
yal 
Then má a chapter on methods of irr 
A 
gri 
a discussion and defence of 
the decision of the M poma cesar in favo ся 
the Napier-Hope topom o ii е drainage water 
of t he me tropol is upon the Maplin Sands } and along 
Ы 
rrigatio 
very sensible chapter it ria expressing а palisi 
for sandy slopes anda sm small. area of lg land and 
and putrid sewage, to 
чү A tent е has passed for eorising on the value and 
There is in anoe ев сай t mass 
age. 
dt liable eviden to point out ihe best mode of 
which is just now 2 - m of A —bat | 
that whether jen ach an effort ed Ша be | 
pipes, and preliminary deodorisation by —! 
ans of flushing the syphon traps of 
additions to the liquid: a pr refe eren which has 
quite ont of the беа which. 
pama ын y б таго йен 
80 must every other intelligent man, that the | 
The full development of “the med which Mr. | 
| Menzies recommends for dealing with town sewage is 
water- 
long closets T ез having ЕС invented and applied by e. Turn- 
ull (Clerk of the Wor ks, Windsor 
w, is peculiar to Windsor кетин 
ater "enables this form of a applica 
is most beneficial." Mr. Rawlin 
Castle), and, so far as I 
The abundant m de 
n to - made. The effeot 
мое у Rees 
