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hour on a railway, at the end of 12 hours it meets a passenger train travelling in the opposite direction, which arrives at the original starting station 16 hours after the goods train left. At what rate is the passenger train travelling?

DOMESTIC ECONOMY.

Female Candidates.

SECTION 1. (Household Work.) 1. State the industrial work which devolves on a young person day by day, who has charge of her own bedroom; the time such work should occupy; and the method she should adopt.

2. What special subjects are included under the term "Domestic Economy"? Describe the duties of a "child's maid," as you would to an elder girl on leaving school for such a place.

3. Describe, as clearly as you can, the "household work" which a mother of a family has to do day by day in her home, where she has no servant of any kind to assist her.

SECTION II. (Investment.) 1. What are the particular benefits offered to the wage-earning classes by the Post Office Savings' Banks ?

2. Give reasons why an elementary school teacher should of necessity lay by some sum of money year by year; and mention safe investments for such savings.

SECTION III. (Cooking.) 1. What are the special purposes accomplished by food ?

2. Give recipes for three of the following:

An Irish stew,

A fried sole,

A grilled mackerel,
A suet pudding,
An apple dumpling,
Eggs and bacon.

SECTION IV. (Sickness.) 1. What special care should be taken by those attending in a sick room, both as regards themselves and the sick person ?

2. Name the common vegetable poisons against which school children should be specially warned; and what

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treatment have you been recommended to adopt in the case of a child suffering accidentally from such poisons ?

SECTION V. (Clothing and Washing.) 1. What would be the cost of an outfit for a girl of 13 years of age? What amount of materials would be required ? Make a bill for the same.

2. Write out a receipt for making a baby's sock.

3. What method should be followed in washing woollen articles? What difference should be made with coloured prints ?

DICTATION AND PENMANSHIP.

TWENTY MINUTES allowed for these Exercises.

You are not to paint your letters in the Copy-setting Exercises, but to take care that the copy is clean and without erasures. Omissions and erasures in the Dictation Exercise will be counted as mistakes.

The words must not be divided between two lines; there is plenty of room for the passage to be written.

Write in large hand, as a specimen of Penmanship, the word Sufficiently.

Write in small hand, as a specimen of Penmanship, the sentence

"The mountains of their native land."

DICTATION.

You are to write the passage* dictated to you by the Examiner, and punctuate it correctly.

For Male Candidates.
(A1.)

"Gratitude is properly a virtue disposing the mind to an inward sense and an outward acknowledgment of a benefit received, together with a readiness to return the same or the like, as the occasions of the doer of it shall require, and the abilities of the receiver extend to." -SOUTH.

The passages A1, A2, were given alternately where the number of Candidates was large, and there was danger of copying.

"His abilities as a statesman are glorious; yet surprise us still more when they are observed in the ablest scholar and philosopher of his age; but a union of both these characters exhibits that sublime specimen of perfection to which the best parts with the best culture can exalt human nature."-MIDDLETON's Life of Cicero.

(A2.)

"Of all the glories of science, none equals that of a well-directed and successful attempt at diminishing the risk of danger to human life; yet, while we owe much to the labours of those who have discovered its important truths, let it not be forgotten that we owe all to that great Being who, from time to time, permits His creatures to obtain a view of those mighty governing principles with which He orders and directs the course of natural events. Should the inquiry be made as to the immediate connection between the chemistry of nature and the movements of the air, the reply must be, that the connection is most intimate. The irregular, capricious winds which constantly agitate the air of temperate regions, fulfil a most important office in the operations of nature."-Chemistry of Creation.

For Female Candidates.

(A1.)

"You are so little accustomed to receive any marks of respect or esteem from the public, that if, in the following lines, a compliment or expression of applause should escape me, I fear you would consider it as a mockery of your established character, and perhaps an insult to your understanding."-JUNIUS.

"In general, then, we should be understood to main tain that the beauty and grandeur so much admired in the Greek statues were not a voluntary fiction of the brain of the artist, but existed substantially in the forms from which they were copied, and by which the artist was surrounded."-HAZLITT.

(A2.)

"The mind of man naturally hates everything that looks like a restraint upon it, and is apt to fancy itself under a sort of confinement, when the sight is pent up

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in a narrow compass, and shortened on every side by the neighbourhood of walls and mountains. On the contrary, a spacious horizon is an image of liberty, where the eye has room to range abroad, to expatiate at large on the immensity of its views, and to lose itself amidst the variety of objects that offer themselves to its observation. Such wide and undetermined prospects are as pleasing to the fancy as the speculations of eternity or infinitude are to the understanding.”—ADDISON,

SCHOLARSHIP QUESTIONS,

1872.

NOTE.-Except where different directions are printed, the time allowed for each Paper in the following series was three hours, and Candidates were restricted to one question in each section.

GRAMMAR.

Candidates are not permitted to answer more than one question in any section, except in that headed "Latin." Candidates must not, however, confine themselves to the questions on Latin Grammar; they must answer at least four questions in the other part of the Paper, and not more than three questions in the Latin Section.

SECTION I. 1. Parse the words printed in italic in the following passage:

"We are born with faculties and powers capable of almost anything, such at least as would carry us further than can be easily imagined; but it is only the exercise of those powers which gives us ability and skill in any thing, and leads us towards perfection."-LOCKE.

2. Re-write the passage, turning the active verbs into passive, and the passive into active.

SECTION II. 1. Analyse one of the two following sen tences:

"In hope of giving longevity to that which its own nature forbids to be immortal, I have devoted this book, the labour of years, to the honour of my country, that we may no longer yield the palm of philology without a contest to the nations of the Continent."

Or,

JOHNSON.-Preface to Dictionary.

"When the darkness of the night was over, after the king had cast himself into that wood, he discerned

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