b15966410_0008_068 SCIENCE FOR JUVENILES. WE have received a ticket of admission to a series of Lectures on Physiology and Physical Geography, to be delivered by DR. IMLAC, at a school-room in Sittingbourne. The Doctor is exceedingly moderate in his demand; for he asks only half-a-crown for the course from adults, and he takes in children at a shilling. We should be curious to see the effect produced by alternate doses of Physiology and Physical Geography on a juvenile audience. He must administer the stuff on very homoeopathic principles, or the constitution of children would never be able to resist the force of such a powerful opiate. The subjects of the Lectures are given on the card of admission, which we have taken the liberty of slightly varying, in order to adapt them to the infantine capacity :— Distinction between the Animal and the Vegetable Kingdom – Cows and Cowcumbers, Horse and Horseradish. Animal Functions—The Duties of Donkeys. The Properties of Matter. Song—” Oh, dear, what can the matter be?” Vegetable Distribution—Pelting with Cabbages at the Westminster Election. Water in its Different Forms—Brandy-and-Water. Glee—” Mynheer Van Dunck.” The Theory of Light and Heat—Coals and Candles. Grand Finale— “Rule Britannia.”