GEOGRAPHY
It grows out of the shops of the neighbourhood and the adjoining railway system.
Home-produced Goods—
A. The green-grocer's shop.
Tracing of fruit to its own home source, or to a foreign country.
Home-grown fruit. The fruit farm, garden, orchard, and wood.
The packing and sending of fruit.—Railway lines.
Covent Garden; the docks; fruit stalls; jam factories.
B. A grocer's or corn-chandler's shop.
Flour and oatmeal traced to their sources.
The farm. A wheat and grain farm at different seasons. A dairy farm
and a sheep farm.
A mill and its processes.
Woollen factories.
A dairy. Making of butter and cheese
Distribution of these goods.
C. A china shop, leading to the pottery district and making of pottery.
Foreign Goods—
Furs—Red Indians and Canada.
Dates—The Arabs and the Sahara.
Cotton—The Negroes and equatorial regions.
Cocoa—The West Indies.
The transit of these, their arrival and distribution.
[The need for a map will come early in the first part of the course, and the need for a globe in the second.]