152 
The Limits of Sanitary Reform. 
[March, 
residing in domiciled 
ffpc^la t® n we "shall be sun-sed to find how man^ 
them have been bom and brought up m count ^ ^ 
and how many moie ai J It proves that 
parents'. This is »« «. » "of fh e cocLeys, must 
the true-bred Londoner , bro( J ht prora j„ently forward 
rapidly die out. 1 his « ^ ■ . imp0 s- 
by the ledturer. He “"^^ely impossible ? to find a 
sible to find a third, a nnf)oners the progeny ceasing 
fourth, generation of pu physical decline and in- 
partly from moral and pa y P Y Qndoner of t he third 
ability of continuance. T P much search and 
generation whom he had ee ^ ^ q{ . physical decline 
inquiry, to get hold of, w } I . deformity of 
involving di “|" ut ‘ V D e ea f a nce scrofulous diseases, and small 
se 0 “pape S rs‘ he an^ ‘eaC livelihood by some such shiftless 
means.” , „ r .u P thorough-bred Londoner 
apfdios 
^lyTfighefthttn ?h"e ‘small towns Ld villages of the 
German empire. exists for avoiding the 
Mr. Canthe holds hat but one way ^ an am t 
present ills, — i.e-, seen g ^ i as s hall enable 
of beneficial sojourn in a P u ‘ . j, circumstances 
the bodily funtUtons to be perfor^tod under Hm 
the most favourable to p P Y As the degeneracy of 
we must presume to differ combined action of several 
Measures are not merely 
rSM£ “-sist h m the i^^tthl 
inspeaton b“„ W f!Lid necessary in fadtortes of 
attempted. It has hours of work to be regulated 
various kinds, not only ondit j ons to be enforced which 
by law, but for a ja e y of c on* fo rf those employed 
a aasaisrtt. “jsrpws 
tss'Xr'i*. 
