state Convention—industrial Education. 269 
1 . Mineral 
2. Vegetable 
3. Animal 
His means are: 
1. Mechanical Forces 
2. Chemical Forces 
V. The farmer and mechanic 
Geology. 
Mechanics and 
Mathematics. 
Natural Philosophy. 
Chemical Physics. 
should understand the laws of 
trade which govern the exchange of products and the investment 
of the proceeds. As the commercial value of manufactured arti¬ 
cles depends largely upon the taste displayed in their design and 
execution, the mechanic needs especially to be instructed in Aes¬ 
thetics or the Science of Formal Beauty. 
The following conspectus of a five years’ course embraces the 
foregoing studies : 
First Term. 
Second Term. 
Third Term. 
English Grammar. 
History, United States. 
Arithmetic. 
PREPARATORY YEAR. 
English Analysis. 
Physical Geography. 
Commercial Arithmetic. 
English Composition. 
Physiology. 
Book-keeping. 
English. 
El. Algebra. 
Book-keeping. 
FRESHMAN YEAR. 
English. 
Elementary Algebra. 
Book-keeping. 
English. 
Plane Geometry. 
Botany. 
Solid Geometry. 
Rhetoric. 
Chemistry. 
SOPHOMORE YEAR. 
Higher Algebra. 
Physiology. 
Agriculture. 
Plane and Spher.Trigon. 
Zoology. 
Agriculture. 
Conic Sections. 
Agriculture. 
English Literature-. 
JUNIOR YEAR. 
Mechanics, 
Chemistry. 
History. 
Physics. 
Chemistry. 
Constitution. 
Astronomy. 
Mental Philosophy. 
Political Economy. 
SENIOR YEAR. 
Logic. 
Moral Philosophy. 
Geology. 
Aesthetics. 
Economic Geology. 
Keviews. 
Latin, German and French may be pursued as optional studies throughout 
the course. 
