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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 18:45:57 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 18:45:57 -0700
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44544 ***
+
+ Established by Edward L. Youmans
+
+ APPLETONS'
+ POPULAR SCIENCE
+ MONTHLY
+
+ EDITED BY
+ WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS
+
+ VOL. LIV
+
+ NOVEMBER, 1898, TO APRIL, 1899
+
+ NEW YORK
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
+ 1899
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1899,
+ BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.
+
+
+
+
+VOL. LIV. ESTABLISHED BY EDWARD L. YOUMANS. NO. 6.
+
+APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.
+
+APRIL, 1899.
+
+_EDITED BY WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ I. The Stuff that Dreams are made of. By HAVELOCK ELLIS 721
+
+ II. The Best Methods of Taxation. By the Late Hon. DAVID A.
+ WELLS. Part I 736
+
+ III. Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. By MARTIN W.
+ BARR, M. D. (Illustrated.) 746
+
+ IV. The Wheat Problem again. By EDWARD ATKINSON 759
+
+ V. The Coming of the Catbird. By SPENCER TROTTER 772
+
+ VI. Guessing, as Influenced by Number Preferences. By F. B.
+ DRESSLAR 781
+
+ VII. Concerning Weasels. By WILLIAM E. CRAM. (Illustrated.) 786
+
+ VIII. Care of the Throat and Ear. By W. SCHEPPEGRELL, M. D. 791
+
+ IX. The Physical Geography of the West Indies. I. The Mammals
+ of the Antilles. By Dr. F. L. OSWALD 802
+
+ X. Iron in the Living Body. By M. A. DASTRE 807
+
+ XI. The Malay Language. By Prof. R. CLYDE FORD 813
+
+ XII. Life on a South Sea Whaler. By FRANK T. BULLEN 818
+
+ XIII. Sketch of Manly Miles. (With Portrait.) 834
+
+ XIV. Editor's Table: Science and Culture.--Survival of the
+ Fittest 842
+
+ XV. Scientific Literature 845
+
+ XVI. Fragments of Science 854
+
+ XVII. Index to Vol. LIV 865
+
+
+
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,
+ 72 FIFTH AVENUE.
+
+ SINGLE NUMBER, 50 CENTS. YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION, $5.00.
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1899, BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.
+
+ Entered at the Post Office at New York, and admitted for
+ transmission through the mails at second-class rates.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MANLY MILES.]
+
+
+
+
+APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.
+
+APRIL, 1899.
+
+
+
+
+THE STUFF THAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF.
+
+BY HAVELOCK ELLIS.
+
+
+In our dreams we are taken back into an earlier world. It is a world
+much more like that of the savage, the child, the criminal, the
+madman, than is the world of our respectable civilized waking life.
+That is, in large part, it must be confessed, the charm of dreams. It
+is also the reason of their scientific value. Through our dreams we
+may realize our relation to stages of evolution we have long left
+behind, and by the self-vivisection of our sleeping life we may learn
+to know something regarding the mind of primitive man and the source
+of some of his beliefs, thus throwing light on the facts we obtain by
+ethnographic research.
+
+This aspect of dreams has not always been kept steadily in sight,
+though it can no longer be said that the study of dreams is neglected.
+From one point of view or another--not only by the religious sect
+which, it appears, constitutes a "Dream Church" in Denmark, but by
+such carefully inquisitive investigators as those who have been
+trained under the inspiring influence of Prof. Stanley Hall--dreaming
+is seriously studied. I need not, therefore, apologize for the fact
+that I have during many years taken note from time to time and
+recorded the details and circumstances of vivid dreams when I could
+study their mechanism immediately on awakening, and that I have
+occupied myself, not with the singularities and marvels of
+dreaming--of which, indeed, I know little or nothing--but with their
+simplest and most general laws and tendencies. A few of these laws and
+tendencies I wish to set forth and illustrate. The interest of such a
+task is twofold. It not only reveals to us an archaic world of vast
+emotions and imperfect thoughts, but by helping us to attain a clear
+knowledge of the ordinary dream processes, it enables us in advance to
+deal with many of the extraordinary phenomena of dreaming, sometimes
+presented to us by wonder-loving people as awesomely mysterious, if
+not indeed supernatural. The careful analysis of mere ordinary dreams
+frequently gives us the key to these abnormal dreams.
+
+Perhaps the chief and most frequent tendency in the mechanism of
+dreaming is that by which isolated impressions from waking life flow
+together in dreams to be welded into a whole. There is then produced,
+in the strictest sense, a confusion. For instance, a lady, who in the
+course of the day has admired a fine baby and bought a big fish for
+dinner, dreams with horror and surprise of finding a fully developed
+baby in a large codfish. The confusion may be more remote, embodying
+abstract ideas and without reference to recent impressions. Thus I
+dreamed that my wife was expounding to me a theory by which the
+substitution of slates for tiles in roofing had been accompanied by,
+and intimately associated with, the growing diminution of crime in
+England. Amid my wife's rather contemptuous opposition, I opposed this
+theory, pointing out the picturesqueness of tiles, their cheapness,
+greater comfort both in winter and summer, but at the same time it
+occurred to me as a peculiar coincidence that tiles should have a
+sanguinary tinge suggestive of criminal bloodthirstiness. I need
+scarcely say that this bizarre theory had never suggested itself to my
+waking thoughts. There was, however, a real connecting link in the
+confusion--the redness--and it is a noteworthy point, of great
+significance in the interpretation of dreams, that that link, although
+clearly active from the first, remained subconscious until the end of
+the dream, when it presented itself as an entirely novel coincidence.
+
+The best simile for the mechanism of the most usual type of dream
+phenomena is the magic lantern. Our dreams are like dissolving views
+in which the dissolving process is carried on swiftly or slowly, but
+always uninterruptedly, so that, at any moment, two (often indeed
+more) incongruous pictures are presented to consciousness which
+strives to make one whole of them, and sometimes succeeds and is
+sometimes baffled. Or we may say that the problem presented to
+dreaming consciousness resembles that experiment in which
+psychologists pronounce three wholly unconnected words, and require
+the subject to combine them at once in a connected sentence. It is
+unnecessary to add that such analogies fail to indicate the subtle
+complexity of the apparatus which is at work in the manufacture of
+dreams.
+
+It is the presence of the strife I have just referred to between
+apparently irreconcilable groups of images, in the effort of
+overcoming the critical skepticism of sleeping consciousness--a feeble
+skepticism, it may be, but, as many people do not seem to recognize,
+a real skepticism--that the impressive emotional effects of dreams are
+often displayed. It sometimes happens that two irreconcilable groups
+of impressions reach sleeping consciousness, one flowing from a recent
+stratum of memories, the other from an older stratum. A typical form
+of this phenomenon often occurs in our dreams of dead friends.
+Professor Sully remarks that in dreams of the dead "awareness of the
+fact of death wholly disappears, or reduces itself to a vague feeling
+of something delightfully wonderful in the restored presence." That,
+however, as I have elsewhere shown,[1] is not the typical process in
+dreaming of the dead; although in the later dreams of those who often
+see their dead friends during sleep, the process is abbreviated, and
+the friend's presence is accepted without a struggle--a very
+interesting point, for it tends to show that in dreams, as in the
+hypnotic state, the recollection of previous similar states of
+consciousness persists, and the illusion is strengthened by
+repetition.
+
+In typical dreams of a dead friend there is a struggle between that
+stream of recent memories which represents him as dead and that older
+stream which represents him as living. These two streams are
+inevitably caused by the fact of death, which sets up a barrier
+between them and renders one set of memories incongruous with the
+other set. In dreams we are not able to arrange our memories
+chronologically, but we are perpetually reasoning and striving to be
+logical. Consequently the two conflicting streams of memories break
+against each other in restless conflict, and sleeping consciousness
+endeavors to propound some theory which will reconcile them. The most
+frequent theories are, as I have found, either that the news of the
+friend's death was altogether false, or that he had been buried alive
+by mistake, or else that having really died his soul has returned to
+earth for a brief space. The mental and emotional conflict which such
+dreams involve renders them very vivid. They make a profound
+impression even after awakening, and for some sensitive persons are
+too sacred to speak of. Even so cautious and skeptical a thinker as
+Renan, when, after the death of his beloved sister Henriette, he
+dreamed more than once that she had been buried alive, and that he
+heard her voice calling to him from her grave, had to still his
+horrible suspicions by the consideration that she had been tended by
+experienced doctors. On less well-balanced minds, and more especially
+in primitive stages of civilization, we can scarcely doubt that such
+dreams, resting as they do on the foundation of consciousness, have
+had a powerful influence in persuading man that death is but a
+transient fact, and that the soul is independent of the body. I do not
+wish to assert that they suffice to originate the belief.[2]
+
+While dreams are thus often formed by the molding together of more or
+less congruous images by a feeble but still intelligent sleeping
+activity, another factor is to be found in the involuntary wavering
+and perpetually mere meaningless change of dream imagery. Such
+concentration as is possible during sleep always reveals a shifting,
+oscillating, uncertain movement of the vision before us. We are, as it
+were, reading a sign-post in the dusk, or making guesses at the names
+of the stations as our express train flashes by the painted letters.
+Any one who has ever been subject to the hypnagogic imagery sometimes
+seen in the half-waking state, or who has ever taken mescal, knows
+that it is absolutely impossible to fix an image. It is this factor in
+dreams which causes them so often to baffle our analysis. In addition
+to the mere, as it were, mechanical flowing together of images and
+ideas, and the more or less intelligent molding of them into a whole,
+there is thus a failure of sleeping attention to fix definitely the
+final result--a failure which itself may evidently serve to carry on
+the dream process by suggesting new images and combinations. I dreamed
+once that I was with a doctor in his surgery, and saw in his hand a
+note from a patient saying that doctors were fools and did him no
+good, but he had lately taken some _selvdrolla_, recommended by a
+friend, and it had done him more good than anything, so please send
+him some more. I saw the note clearly, not, indeed, being conscious of
+reading it word by word, but only of its meaning as I looked at it;
+the one word I actually seemed to see, letter by letter, was the name
+of the drug, and that changed and fluctuated beneath my vision as I
+gazed at it, the final impression being _selvdrolla_. The doctor took
+from a shelf a bottle containing a bright yellow oleaginous fluid, and
+poured a little out, remarking that it had lately come into favor,
+especially in uric-acid disorders, but was extremely expensive. I
+expressed my surprise, having never before heard of it. Then, again to
+my surprise, he poured rather copiously from the bottle on to a plate
+of food, saying, in explanation, that it was pleasant to take and not
+dangerous. This was a vivid morning dream, and on awakening I had no
+difficulty in detecting the source of its various minor details,
+especially a note received on the previous evening and containing a
+dubious figure, the precise nature of which I had used my pocket lens
+to determine. But what was _selvdrolla_, the most vivid element of the
+dream? I sought vainly among my recent memories, and had almost
+renounced the search when I recalled a large bottle of salad oil seen
+on the supper table the previous evening; not, indeed, resembling the
+dream bottle, but containing a precisely similar fluid. _Selvdrolla_
+was evidently a corruption of "salad oil." I select this dream to
+illustrate the uncertainty of dream consciousness, because it also
+illustrates at the same time the element of certainty in dream
+_subconsciousness_. Throughout my dream I remained, consciously, in
+entire ignorance as to the real nature of _selvdrolla_, yet a latent
+element in consciousness was all the time presenting it to me in
+ever-clearer imagery.
+
+While the confusions of dreaming are usually the union of unconnected
+streams of imagery which have, as it were, come from widely remote
+parts of the memory system to strike together at the narrow focus of
+shaping consciousness, in some rarer cases the fused images are really
+suggested by analogy and are not accidental. Maury records successions
+of dream imagery strung together by verbal resemblances; I have found
+such dreams rare, but other forms of association fairly common. Thus I
+once dreamed that I was with a dentist who was about to extract a
+tooth from a patient. Before applying the forceps he remarked to me
+(at the same time setting fire to a perfumed cloth at the end of
+something like a broomstick in order to dissipate the unpleasant odor)
+that it was the largest tooth he had ever seen. When extracted I found
+that it was indeed enormous, in the shape of a caldron, with walls an
+inch thick. Taking from my pocket a tape measure (such as I always
+carry in waking life) I founds the diameter to be not less than
+twenty-five inches; the interior was like roughly hewn rock, and there
+were sea-weeds and lichenlike growths within. The size of the tooth
+seemed to me large, but not extraordinarily so. It is well known that
+pain in the teeth, or the dentist's manipulations, cause those organs
+to seem of extravagant extent; in dreams this tendency rules
+unchecked; thus a friend once dreamed that mice were playing about in
+a cavity in her tooth. But for the dream first quoted there was no
+known dental origin; it arose solely or chiefly from a walk during the
+previous afternoon among the rocks of the Cornish coast at low tide,
+and the fantastic analogy, which had not occurred to waking
+consciousness, suggested itself during sleep.
+
+The following dream illustrates an association of quite a different
+order: I imagined I was sitting at a window, at the top of a house,
+writing. As I looked up from my table I saw, with all the emotions
+naturally accompanying such a sight, a woman in her night dress appear
+at a lofty window some distance off and throw herself down. I went on
+writing, however, and found that in the course of my literary
+employment--I am not clear as to its precise nature--the very next
+thing I had to do was to describe exactly such a scene as I had just
+witnessed. I was extremely puzzled at such an extraordinary
+coincidence: it seemed to me wholly inexplicable. Such dreams,
+reduplicating the imagery in a new sensory medium, are fairly common,
+with me at all events, though I can not easily explain them. The
+association is not so much of analogy as of sensory media, in this
+case the visual image becoming a verbal motor image. In other cases a
+scene is first seen as in reality, and then in a picture. It is
+interesting to observe the profound astonishment with which sleeping
+consciousness apperceives such simple reduplication.
+
+It sometimes happens that the confused imagery of dreams includes
+elements drawn from forgotten memories--that is to say, that sleeping
+consciousness can draw on faint impressions of the past which waking
+consciousness is unable to reach. This is a very important type of
+dream because of its bearing on the explanation of certain dream
+phenomena which we are sometimes asked to bow down before as
+supernatural. I may illustrate what I mean by the following very
+instructive case. I woke up recalling the chief items of a rather
+vivid dream: I had imagined myself in a large old house, where the
+furniture, though of good quality, was ancient, and the chairs
+threatened to give way as one sat on them. The place belonged to one
+Sir Peter Bryan, a hale old gentleman who was accompanied by his son
+and grandson. There was a question of my buying the place from him,
+and I was very complimentary to the old gentleman's appearance of
+youthfulness, absurdly affecting not to know which was the grandfather
+and which the grandson. On awaking I said to myself that here was a
+purely imaginative dream, quite unsuggested by any definite
+experiences. But when I began to recall the trifling incidents of the
+previous day I realized that that was far from being the case. So far
+from the dream having been a pure effort of imagination I found that
+every minute item could be traced to some separate source. The name of
+Sir Peter Bryan alone completely baffled me; I could not even recall
+that I had at that time ever heard of any one called Bryan. I
+abandoned the search and made my notes of the dream and its sources. I
+had scarcely done so when I chanced to take up a volume of
+biographies which I had glanced through carelessly the day before. I
+found that it contained, among others, the lives of Lord
+_Peter_borough and George _Bryan_ Brummel. I had certainly seen those
+names the day before; yet before I took up the book once again it
+would have been impossible for me to recall the exact name of Beau
+Brummel, and I should have been inclined to say that I had never even
+heard the name of Bryan. I repeat that I regard this as,
+psychologically, a most instructive dream. It rarely happens (though I
+could give one or two more examples from the experience of friends)
+that we can so clearly and definitely demonstrate the presence of a
+forgotten memory in a dream; in the case of old memories it is usually
+impossible. It so happened that the forgotten memory which in this
+case re-emerged to sleeping consciousness was a fact of no consequence
+to myself or any one else. But if it had been the whereabouts of a
+lost deed or a large sum of money, and I had been able to declare, as
+in this case, that the impression received in my dream had never to my
+knowledge existed in waking consciousness, and yet were to declare my
+faith that the dream probably had a simple and natural explanation, on
+every hand I should be sarcastically told that there is no credulity
+to match the credulity of the skeptic.
+
+The profound emotions of waking life, the questions and problems on
+which we spread our chief voluntary mental energy, are not those which
+usually present themselves at once to dream consciousness. It is, so
+far as the immediate past is concerned, mostly the trifling, the
+incidental, the "forgotten" impressions of daily life which reappear
+in our dreams. The psychic activities that are awake most intensely
+are those that sleep most profoundly. If we preserve the common image
+of the "stream of consciousness," we might say that the grave facts of
+life sink too deeply into the flood to reappear at once in the calm of
+repose, while the mere light and buoyant trifles of life, flung
+carelessly in during the day, at once rise to the surface, to dance
+and mingle and evolve in ways that this familiar image of "the stream
+of consciousness" will not further help us to picture.
+
+So far I have been discussing only one of the great groups into which
+dreams may be divided. Most investigators of dreams agree that there
+are two such groups, the one having its basis in memories, the other
+founded on actual physical sensations experienced at the moment of
+dreaming and interpreted by sleeping consciousness. Various names have
+been given to these two groups; Sully, for instance, terms them
+central and peripheral. Perhaps the best names, however, are those
+adopted by Miss Calkins, who calls the first group representative, the
+second group presentative.
+
+All writers on dreaming have brought forward presentative dreams, and
+there can be no doubt that impressions received during sleep from any
+of the external senses may serve as a basis for dreams. I need only
+record one example to illustrate this main and most obvious group of
+presentative dreams. I dreamed that I was listening to a performance
+of Haydn's Creation, the chief orchestral part of the performance
+seeming to consist chiefly of the very realistic representation of the
+song of birds, though I could not identify the note of any particular
+bird. Then followed solos by male singers, whom I saw, especially one
+who attracted my attention by singing at the close in a scarcely
+audible voice. On awakening the source of the dream was not
+immediately obvious, but I soon realized that it was the song of a
+canary in another room. I had never heard Haydn's Creation, except in
+fragments, nor thought of it at any recent period; its reputation as
+regards the realistic representation of natural sounds had evidently
+caused it to be put forward by sleeping consciousness as a plausible
+explanation of the sounds heard, and the visual centers had accepted
+the theory.
+
+It is a familiar fact that internal sensations also form a frequent
+basis of dreams. All the internal organs, when disturbed or distended
+or excited, may induce dreams, and especially that aggravated kind of
+dreaming which we call nightmare. This fact is so well known that such
+dreams are usually dismissed without further analysis. It is a
+mistake, however, so to dismiss them, for it seems probable that it is
+precisely here that we may find the most instructive field of dream
+psychology. On account of the profoundly emotional effect of such
+dreams they are very interesting to study, but this very element of
+emotion renders them somewhat obscure objects of study. I do not
+venture to offer with absolute certainty one or two novel suggestions
+which dream experiences have led me to regard as probable.
+
+Dreams of flying have so often been recorded--from the time of St.
+Jerome, who mentions that he was subject to them--that they may fairly
+be considered to constitute one of the commonest forms of dreaming.
+All my life, it seems to me, I have at intervals had such dreams in
+which I imagined myself rhythmically bounding into the air and
+supported on the air. These dreams, in my case at all events, are not
+generally remembered immediately on awakening (seeming to indicate
+that they depend on a cause which does not usually come into action at
+the end of sleep), but they leave behind them a vague but profound
+sense of belief in their reality and reasonableness.[3] Several
+writers have attempted to explain this familiar phenomenon. Gowers
+considers that a spontaneous contraction of the stapedius muscle of
+the ear during sleep causes a sensation of falling. Stanley Hall, who
+has himself from childhood had dreams of flying, boldly argues that we
+have here "some faint reminiscent atavistic echo from the primeval
+sea"; and that such dreams are really survivals--psychic vestigial
+remains--taking us back to the far past, in which man's ancestors
+needed no feet to swim or float. Such a theory may accord with the
+profound conviction of reality that accompanies such dreams, though
+this may be more simply accounted for, even by mere repetition, as
+with dreams of the dead; but it is rather a hazardous theory, and it
+seems to me infinitely more probable that such dreams are a
+misinterpretation of actual internal sensations.
+
+My own explanation was immediately suggested by the following dream. I
+dreamed that I was watching a girl acrobat, in appropriate costume,
+who was rhythmically rising to a great height in the air and then
+falling, without touching the floor, though each time she approached
+quite close to it. At last she ceased, exhausted and perspiring, and
+had to be led away. Her movements were not controlled by mechanism,
+and apparently I did not regard mechanism as necessary. It was a vivid
+dream, and I awoke with a distinct sensation of oppression in the
+chest. In trying to account for this dream, which was not founded on
+any memory, it occurred to me that probably I had here the key to a
+great group of dreams. The rhythmic rising and falling of the acrobat
+was simply the objectivation of the rhythmic rising and falling of my
+own respiratory muscles under the influence of some slight and unknown
+physical oppression, and this oppression was further translated into a
+condition of perspiring exhaustion in the girl, just as it is recorded
+that a man with heart disease dreamed habitually of sweating and
+panting horses climbing up hill. We may recall also the curious
+sensation as of the body being transformed into a vast bellows which
+is often the last sensation felt before the unconsciousness produced
+by nitrous oxide gas. When we are lying down there is a real rhythmic
+rising and falling of the chest and abdomen, centering in the
+diaphragm, a series of oscillations which at both extremes are only
+limited by the air. Moreover, in this position we have to recognize
+that the whole internal organism--the circulatory, nervous, and other
+systems--are differently balanced from what they are in the upright
+position, and that a disturbance of internal equilibrium
+always accompanies falling. Further, it is possible that the
+misinterpretation is confirmed to sleeping consciousness by sensations
+from without, by the absence of the tactile pressure produced by
+boots on the foot, or the contact of the ground with the soles; we are
+at once conscious of movement and conscious that the soles of the feet
+are in contact only with the air. Thus in normal sleep the conditions
+may be said to be always favorable for producing dreams of flying or
+of floating in the air, and any slight thoracic disturbance, even in
+healthy persons, arising from lungs, heart, or stomach, and serving to
+bring these conditions to sleeping consciousness, may determine such a
+dream.
+
+There is another common class of dreams which, it seems fairly evident
+to me, must also find their psychological explanation chiefly in the
+visceral sensations--I mean dreams of murder. Many psychologists have
+referred with profound concern to the facility and prevalence of
+murder in dreams, sometimes as a proof of the innate wickedness of
+human nature made manifest in the unconstraint of sleep, sometimes as
+evidence of an atavistic return to the modes of feeling of our
+ancestors, the thin veneer of civilization being removed during sleep.
+Maudsley and Mme. de Manacéïne, for example, find evidence in such
+dreams of a return to primitive modes of feeling. It may well be that
+there is some element of truth in this view, but even if so we still
+have to account for the production of such dreams. For this we must,
+in part at least, fall back upon the logical outcome of dream
+confusions, owing to which, for instance, a lady who has carved a duck
+at dinner may a few hours later wake up exhausted by the imaginary
+effort of cutting off her husband's head. But I think we may find
+evidence that the dream of murder is often a falsely logical deduction
+from abnormal visceral and especially digestive sensations.
+
+I may illustrate such dreams by the following example: A lady dreamed
+that her husband called her aside and said: "Now, do not scream or
+make a fuss; I am going to tell you something. I have to kill a man.
+It is necessary, to put him out of his agony." He then took her into
+his study and showed her a young man lying on the floor with a wound
+in his breast, and covered with blood. "But how will you do it?" she
+asked. "Never mind," he replied, "leave that to me." He took something
+up and leaned over the man. She turned aside and heard a horrible
+gurgling sound. Then all was over. "Now," he said, "we must get rid of
+the body. I want you to send for So-and-so's cart, and tell him I wish
+to drive it." The cart came. "You must help me to make the body into a
+parcel," he said to his wife; "give me plenty of brown paper." They
+made it into a parcel, and with terrible difficulty and effort the
+wife assisted her husband to get the body down stairs and lift it into
+the cart. At every stage, however, she presented to him the
+difficulties of the situation. But he carelessly answered all
+objections, said he would take the body up to the moor, among the
+stones, remove the brown paper, and people would think the murdered
+man had killed himself. He drove off and soon returned with the empty
+cart. "What's this blood in my cart?" asked the man to whom it
+belonged, looking inside. "Oh, that's only paint," replied the
+husband. But the dreamer had all along been full of apprehension lest
+the deed should be discovered, and the last thing she could recall,
+before waking in terror, was looking out of the window at a large
+crowd which surrounded the house with shouts of "Murder!" and threats.
+
+This tragedy, with its almost Elizabethan air, was built up out of a
+few commonplace impressions received during the previous day, none of
+which impressions contained any suggestion of murder. The tragic
+element appears to have been altogether due to the psychic influences
+of indigestion arising from a supper of pheasant. To account for our
+oppression during sleep, sleeping consciousness assumes moral causes
+which alone appear to it of sufficient gravity to be the adequate
+cause of the immense emotions we are experiencing. Even in our waking
+and fully conscious states we are inclined to give the preference to
+moral over physical causes, quite irrespective of the justice of our
+preferences; in our sleeping states this tendency is exaggerated, and
+the reign of purely moral causes is not disturbed by even a suggestion
+of mere physical causation.
+
+There is certainly no profounder emotional excitement during sleep
+than that which arises from a disturbed or distended stomach, and is
+reflected by the pneumogastric to the accelerated heart and the
+impeded respiration.[4] We are thereby thrown into a state of
+uninhibited emotional agitation, a state of agony and terror such as
+we rarely or never attain during waking life. Sleeping consciousness,
+blindfolded and blundering, a prey to these massive waves from below,
+and fumbling about desperately for some explanation, jumps at the idea
+that only the attempt to escape some terrible danger or the guilty
+consciousness of some awful crime can account for this immense
+emotional uproar. Thus the dream is suffused by a conviction which the
+continued emotion serves to support. We do not--it seems most simple
+and reasonable to conclude--experience terror because we think we have
+committed a crime, but we think we have committed a crime because we
+experience terror. And the fact that in such dreams we are far more
+concerned with escape from the results of crime than with any agony of
+remorse is not, as some have thought, due to our innate indifference
+to crime, but simply to the fact that our emotional state suggests to
+us active escape from danger rather than the more passive grief of
+remorse. Thus our dreams bear witness to the fact that our
+intelligence is often but a tool in the hands of our emotions.[5]
+
+I have had frequent occasion to refer to the objectivation of
+subjective sensations as a phenomenon of dreaming. It is, indeed, so
+frequent and so important a phenomenon that it needs some further
+reference. In hysteria (which by some of the most recent authorities,
+like Sollier, is regarded as a species of somnambulism), in
+"demon-possession," and many other abnormal phenomena it is well known
+that there is, as it were, a doubling of personality; the _ego_ is
+split up into two or more parts, each of which may act as a separate
+personality. The literature of morbid psychology is full of
+extraordinary and varied cases exhibiting this splitting up of
+personality. But it is usually forgotten that in dreams the doubling
+of personality is a normal and constant phenomenon in all healthy
+people. In dreaming we can divide our body between ourselves and
+another person. Thus a medical friend dreamed that in conversation
+with a lady patient he found his hand resting on her knee and was
+unable to remove it; awakening in horror from this unprofessional
+situation he found his own hand firmly clasped between his knees; the
+hand had remained his own, the knee had become another person's, the
+hand being claimed, rather than the knee, on account of its greater
+tactile sensibility. Again, we sometimes objectify our own physical
+discomforts felt during sleep in the emotions of some other person, or
+even in some external situations. And, possibly, every dream in which
+there is any dramatic element is an instance of the same splitting up
+of personality; in our dreams we may experience shame or confusion
+from the rebuke or the arguments of other persons, but the persons who
+administer the rebuke or apply the argument are still ourselves.
+
+When we consider that this dream process, with its perpetual
+dramatization of our own personality, has been going on as long as man
+has been man--and probably much longer, for it is evident that animals
+dream--it is impossible to overestimate its immense influence on human
+belief. Men's primitive conceptions of religion, of morals, of many of
+the mightiest phenomena of life, especially the more exceptional
+phenomena, have certainly been influenced by this constant dream
+experience. It is the universal primitive explanation of abnormal
+psychic and even physical phenomena that some other person or spirit
+is working within the subject of the abnormal experience. Certainly
+dreaming is not the sole source of such conceptions, but they could
+scarcely have been found convincing, and possibly could not ever have
+arisen, among races who were wholly devoid of dream experiences. A
+large part of all progress in psychological knowledge, and, indeed, a
+large part of civilization itself, lies in realizing that the
+apparently objective is really subjective, that the angels and demons
+and geniuses of all sorts that seemed at first to take possession of
+the feeble and vacant individuality are themselves but modes of action
+of marvelously rich and varied personalities. But in our dreams we are
+brought back into the magic circle of early culture, and we shrink and
+shudder in the presence of imaginative phantoms that are built up of
+our own thoughts and emotions, and are really our own flesh.
+
+There is one other general characteristic of dreams that is worth
+noting, because its significance is not usually recognized. In dreams
+we are always reasoning. It is sometimes imagined that reason is in
+abeyance during sleep. So far from this being the case, we may almost
+be said to reason much more during sleep than when we are awake. That
+our reasoning is bad, even preposterous, that it constantly ignores
+the most elementary facts of waking life, scarcely affects the
+question. All dreaming is a process of reasoning. That artful
+confusion of ideas and images which at the outset I referred to as the
+most constant feature of dream mechanism is nothing but a process of
+reasoning, a perpetual effort to argue out harmoniously the absurdly
+limited and incongruous data present to sleeping consciousness. Binet,
+grounding his conclusions on hypnotic experiments, has very justly
+determined that reasoning is the fundamental part of all thinking, the
+very texture of thought. It is founded on perception itself, which
+already contains all the elements of the ancient syllogism. For in all
+perception, as he shows, there is a succession of three images, of
+which the first fuses with the second, which in its turn suggests the
+third. Now this establishment of new associations, this construction
+of images, which, as we may easily convince ourselves, is precisely
+what takes place in dreaming, is reasoning itself.
+
+Reasoning is a synthesis of images suggested by resemblance and
+contiguity, indeed a sort of logical vision, more intense even than
+actual vision, since it produces hallucinations. To reasoning all
+forms of mental activity may finally be reduced; mind, as Wundt has
+said, is a thing that reasons. When we apply these general statements
+to dreaming, we may see that the whole phenomenon of dreaming is
+really the same process of image-formation, based on resemblance and
+contiguity, which is at the basis of reasoning. Every dream is the
+outcome of this strenuous, wide-ranging instinct to reason. The
+supposed "imaginative faculty," regarded as so highly active during
+sleep, is simply the inevitable play of this automatic logic. The
+characteristic of the reasoning of dreams is that it is unusually bad,
+and this badness is due chiefly to the absence of memory elements that
+would be present to waking consciousness, and to the absence of
+sensory elements to check the false reasoning which without them
+appears to us conclusive. That is to say--to fall back on the
+excellent generalization which Parish has elaborately applied to all
+forms of hallucination--there is a process of dissociation by which
+ordinary channels of association are temporarily blocked and the
+conditions prepared for the formation of the hallucination. It is, as
+Parish has argued, in sleep and in those sleep-resembling states
+called hypnagogic that a condition of dissociation leading to
+hallucination is most apt to occur.
+
+The following dream illustrates the part played by dissociation: A
+lady dreamed that an acquaintance wished to send a small sum of money
+to a person in Ireland. She rashly offered to take it over to Ireland.
+On arriving home she began to repent of her promise, as the weather
+was extremely wild and cold. She began, however, to make preparations
+for dressing warmly, and went to consult an Irish friend, who said she
+would have to be floated over to Ireland tightly jammed in a crab
+basket. On returning home she fully discussed the matter with her
+husband, who thought it would be folly to undertake such a journey,
+and she finally relinquished it, with great relief. In this dream--the
+elements of which could all be accounted for--the association between
+sending money and postal orders which would at once occur to waking
+consciousness was closed; consciousness was a prey to such suggestions
+as reached it, but on the basis of these suggestions it reasoned and
+concluded quite sagaciously. The phenomena of dreaming furnish a
+delightful illustration of the fact that reasoning, in its rough form,
+is only the crudest and most elementary form of intellectual
+operation, and that the finer forms of thinking only become possible
+when we hold in check this tendency to reason. "All the thinking in
+the world," as Goethe puts it, "will not lead us to thought."
+
+It is in such characteristics as these--at once primitive, childlike,
+and insane--that we may find the charm of dreaming. In our sleeping
+emotional life we are much more like ourselves than we are in our
+sleeping intellectual life. It is a mistake to imagine that our moral
+and æsthetic instincts are abolished in dreams; they are often
+weakened, but by no means abolished. Such a result is natural when we
+remember that our emotions and instincts are both more primitive and
+less under the dominion of the external senses than are our ideas. Yet
+in both respects we are removed a stage backward in our dreams.
+The emotional intensity, the absurd logic, the tendency to
+personification--nearly all the points I have referred to as
+characterizing our dreams--are the characteristics of the child, the
+savage, and the madman. Time and space are annihilated, gravity is
+suspended, and we are joyfully borne up in the air, as it were, in the
+arms of angels; we are brought into a deeper communion with Nature,
+and in his dreams a man will listen to the arguments of his dog with
+as little surprise as Balaam heard the reproaches of his ass. The
+unexpected limitations of our dream world, the exclusion of so many
+elements which are present even unconsciously in waking life, imparts
+a splendid freedom and ease to the intellectual operations of the
+sleeping mind, and an extravagant romance, a poignant tragedy, to our
+emotions. "He has never known happiness," said Lamb, speaking out of
+his own experience, "who has never been mad." And there are many who
+taste in dreams a happiness they never know when awake. In the waking
+moments of our complex civilized life we are ever in a state of
+suspense which makes all great conclusions impossible; the
+multiplicity of the facts of life, always present to consciousness,
+restrains the free play of logic (except for that happy dreamer, the
+mathematician) and surrounds most of our pains and nearly all our
+pleasures with infinite qualifications; we are tied down to a sober
+tameness. In our dreams the fetters of civilization are loosened, and
+we know the fearful joy of freedom.
+
+At the same time it is these characteristics which make dreams a fit
+subject of serious study. It was not until the present century that
+the psychological importance of the study of insanity was recognized.
+So recent is the study of savage mind that the workers who have laid
+its foundation are yet all living. The systematic investigation of
+children only began yesterday. To-day our dreams begin to seem to us
+an allied subject of study, inasmuch as they reveal within ourselves a
+means of entering sympathetically into ideas and emotional attitudes
+belonging to narrow or ill-adjusted states of consciousness which
+otherwise we are now unable to experience. And they have this further
+value, that they show us how many abnormal phenomena--possession,
+double consciousness, unconscious memory, and so forth--which have
+often led the ignorant and unwary to many strange conclusions, really
+have a simple explanation in the healthy normal experience of all of
+us during sleep. Here, also, it is true that we ourselves and our
+beliefs are to some extent "such stuff as dreams are made of."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] On Dreaming of the Dead. Psychological Review, September, 1895. In
+this paper I reported several cases showing the nature and evolution
+of dreams concerning dead friends. I have since received evidence from
+various friends and correspondents, scientific and unscientific, of
+both sexes, confirming my belief in a frequency of this type of dream.
+Professor Binet (L'Année Psychologique, 1896) has also furnished a
+case in support of my view, and is seeking for further evidence.
+
+[2] In Japan stories of the returning of the dead are very common.
+Lafcadio Hearn gives one as told by a Japanese which closely resembles
+the type of dream I am discussing. "A lover resolves to commit suicide
+on the grave of his sweetheart. He found her tomb and knelt before it
+and prayed and wept, and whispered to her that which he was about to
+do. And suddenly he heard her voice cry to him 'Anata!' and felt her
+hand upon his hand; and he turned and saw her kneeling beside him,
+smiling and beautiful as he remembered her, only a little pale. Then
+his heart leaped so that he could not speak for the wonder and the
+doubt and the joy of that moment. But she said: 'Do not doubt; it is
+really I. I am not dead. It was all a mistake. I was buried because my
+parents thought me dead--buried too soon. Yet you see I am not dead,
+not a ghost. It is I; do not doubt it!'"
+
+[3] Many saints (Saint Ida, of Louvain, for example) claimed the power
+of rising into the air, and one asks one's self whether this faith may
+not be based on dream experiences mistranslated by a disordered brain.
+M. Raffaelli, the eminent French painter, who is subject to these
+sleeping experiences of floating on the air, confesses that they are
+so convincing that he has jumped out of bed on awaking and attempted
+to repeat the experience. "I need not tell you," he adds, "that I have
+never been able to succeed."
+
+[4] Other pains and discomforts--toothache, for instance--may,
+however, give rise to dreams of murder.
+
+[5] It may be added that they also present evidence--to which
+attention has not, I believe, been previously called--in support of
+the James-Lange or physiological theory of emotion, according to which
+the element of bodily change in emotion is the cause and not the
+result of the emotion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The harmonious and equitable evolution of man, says President
+ Dabney, of the University of Tennessee, "does not mean that every
+ man must be educated just like his fellow. The harmony is within
+ each individual. That community is most highly educated in which
+ each individual has attained the maximum of his possibilities in
+ the direction of his peculiar talents and opportunities."
+
+
+
+
+THE BEST METHODS OF TAXATION.
+
+BY THE LATE HON. DAVID A. WELLS.
+
+
+PART I.
+
+This historical survey of tax experience among peoples widely
+differing in their economic condition and social relations, and this
+examination of the scope and practice of taxation, with especial
+reference to the tax systems of the United States as defined and
+interpreted by judicial authority, prepare the way for a discussion of
+the best methods of taxation for a country situated as is the United
+States. General as are the theoretical principles underlying taxation,
+the application of these principles to existing conditions must be
+modified to meet the long usage and inherited prejudice of the people,
+and the form of production or manner of distributing wealth. This
+holds true in the face of appearances so opposed to it as to defy
+definition and acceptance. No less promising field for an income tax
+can be pictured than British India, and few more promising fields than
+France. Yet India has borne such a tax for years, while France will
+not permit a true tax on income to be adopted as a part of its revenue
+system. In the latter country the plea is made that the upper and
+middle classes already pay under other forms of taxation more than
+their due proportion of the public burdens, and an additional and
+necessarily discriminating duty laid upon them will only make this
+inequality the greater. Class interest may thus oppose its veto to a
+change that promises to reduce the burdens of one class of taxpayers
+at the expense of another; or may even oppose a change that offers the
+chance of collecting a larger revenue with less real difficulty and
+sacrifice on the part of the taxed. No opposition can set aside even
+temporarily the great rules that clearly define a tax from tribute, a
+legal and beneficial taking by the state of a certain part of the
+public wealth from a demand that involves waste or mischievous
+expenditure, for which the state or people derive no advantage
+commensurate with the cost, or from which individuals obtain a gain
+not defensible in justice, and at the expense of only one part of the
+community.
+
+After so many centuries of experiment, in which hardly a possible
+source of state revenue has escaped attention, some knowledge of the
+great principles of taxation might have been evolved. Unfortunately,
+the experience of one nation is not accepted as containing lessons
+applicable to the needs or conditions of another, and one generation
+rarely appeals to history save to defend its own experiments.
+Ignorance, half knowledge, which is quite as dangerous, and interest
+guide or influence legislation, and those who predict failure or
+danger are regarded as theorists, and denounced as unpractical.
+Nowhere is the tendency to move independent of enlightened knowledge
+more evident than in the United States. At every appearance of the tax
+question, State and national legislatures are overwhelmed with
+measures that have been tried in the past, and after a thorough test
+condemned beyond any hope of defense.
+
+Yet history shows the gradual disappearance of certain forms of
+taxation which enjoyed great popularity for a time, and accomplished
+the end of their creation in a crude and often cruel manner. Looking
+over long periods of time, it is seen that some advances have been
+made, rather from a change in the economic condition of the people
+than from a true appreciation of the principles in question. The
+development of popular liberty has been an essential factor, and the
+alterations in tax methods require a close analysis of the causes
+leading to the rise and dominance of political and constitutional
+principle. While it is true that a popular uprising against fiscal
+exactions usually marked the limit of endurance of an oppressive
+system, it is also true that the same uprisings marked the completion
+of one stage of political development, and the readiness or even the
+need of entering upon a new stage. In one sense the progress of a
+people toward civilization in its highest meaning may be illustrated
+by its fiscal machinery and methods of obtaining its revenue from the
+people. It will be of interest to glance at some of these passing
+phases which have generally come down to a late day, and are still to
+be found in activity in some of the most advanced states of Europe.
+
+The practice of farming out the revenues of a state or any part of it
+has become nearly obsolete, and where it does exist is the mark of a
+fiscal machinery as yet not fully developed. The opportunities and
+temptation which the contract system offered for oppressing the
+taxpayers were apparent long before the state was in a position to
+assert its ability to make its own collections. In France the
+_fermiers généraux_ were a political factor, standing between the king
+and his people, regarded as necessary to the former and as oppressors
+of the latter. Their unpopularity, in part justified by their conduct,
+was a not unimportant item in the arraignment of royalty by the
+people. Wherever introduced, the farming of taxes proved in the long
+run as unwise politically as it was unprofitable financially; and the
+only reasonable defense for adopting it was the want of strength in
+the state to command its own revenue--a want as likely to arise from
+the dishonesty of its agents as from a political weakness. In early
+times the most universal manner of supplying the treasury of the
+state, the farming of taxes has become so rare as to be classed as a
+curiosity. Italy still employs this machinery to collect her taxes on
+tobacco, and Spain from necessity has mortgaged her taxes to the
+bank, with the task of collecting them.
+
+Of the same general character are the state lotteries, of which some
+few and quite important instances may still be found in action. Of the
+immorality of these instruments there can be little doubt, and there
+is quite as unanimous an opinion as to their inefficiency as fiscal
+instruments. Yet it is only within very recent years that state
+lotteries have been discarded even in the most advanced countries. The
+machinery of lotteries has often been modified, but, no matter how
+altered in details, they all have appealed to the love of games of
+chance. Adam Smith asserted that the "absurd presumption" of men in
+their own good fortune is even more universal than the overweening
+conceit which the greater part of men have in their own abilities.[6]
+Yet another assertion of the same writer is as true: "The world
+neither ever saw, nor ever will see, a perfectly fair lottery, or one
+in which the whole gain compensated the whole loss." Where the state
+undertakes it, there is a profit generally assured to the state, but
+that profit is by no means certain, and can not make good the
+demoralization introduced among the people. State lotteries are still
+a part of the revenue system in Italy and Austria (proper), where the
+receipts are important, but show a decided tendency to diminish;
+Hungary and Denmark, where they are of little moment; and in Spain,
+where they are retained because of the general incapacity of the
+administration to reach other and more profitable sources of revenue.
+The experience of the State of Louisiana in connection with a State
+lottery is too recent to require examination. It is not probable that
+once abandoned such an instrument for obtaining money from the people
+will be revived, save as a last resort.
+
+The state monopoly in the manufacture and sale of an article for
+fiscal purposes holds a place in European countries of high
+importance, and is met elsewhere under conditions not so favorable to
+its maintenance. As an example of the latter may be cited the colonial
+policy of the Dutch in their possessions in the East. After the
+termination of the trading companies, the Government undertook the
+entire control of the colonies, and sought to make them a source of
+revenue. The natives were to be taxed, but, having little of their own
+to be taxed, and practicing no occupation that could of its own
+volition become a profitable source of revenue, the state undertook to
+organize industry, and, by creating an opportunity for employing the
+labor of the natives, to receive the profits of production for its own
+uses. The native chiefs were made "masters of industry" and collectors
+of the revenue; and a certain part of the labor of the natives, one
+day in every five, was decreed to the state. In order to derive a
+profit, this labor must be bestowed in cultivating some product as
+find a market in international trade. Hence arose the importance of
+the sugar, coffee, tobacco, and spice crops of these Dutch islands,
+and for many years a handsome profit to the treasury was obtained from
+the management and sales of product. With the great fall in prices of
+sugar and coffee throughout the world, and the narrowing of the market
+for cane sugar, the Government obtained a less income each year, and
+has found it of advantage to relax the conditions surrounding
+cultivation, and to throw the management of the plantations more and
+more into private hands. To such an extent has this transition been
+effected that the state can no longer be considered as controlling a
+monopoly in product or sales, and is content with a revenue from other
+sources, one that does not even cover the expenses incurred in the
+colonial system. This experiment differs widely from those industries
+undertaken with the aid or encouragement of the state to be found in
+India. It was not with a fiscal object that they were established, and
+not infrequently the state sacrifices revenue by releasing them from
+tax burdens they would ordinarily endure. As one of the few remaining
+instances of the direct participation of a state in the production of
+products intended for foreign markets, yet undertaken and maintained
+for fiscal reasons, the history of the Dutch colonies in the East is
+instructive.
+
+In Prussia the working of certain mines is in the hands of the state,
+and was originally looked upon as an important contribution to the
+income of the state. As in the Dutch experience, the changes in
+production throughout the world have greatly reduced the returns and
+made the income variable; yet there is little disposition to dispose
+of these possessions. "The danger of mineral supplies being worked in
+a reckless and extravagant manner without regard to the welfare of
+future generations, and the dread of combinations by the producers of
+such commodities as tin, copper, and salt, with the aim of raising
+prices, have both tended to hinder the alienation of state mines."[7]
+
+The more common form of state monopoly is that which occupies a middle
+position, established for reasons of public safety or utility as well
+as of revenue. The salt monopoly enforced in Prussia was only
+abolished in 1867, and is still maintained in every canton of
+Switzerland. The strongest plea in its defense has been the guarantee
+by the state of the purity of the article sold, and this phase of the
+question has superseded the revenue aspect. Few articles of prime
+necessity, like salt, are subject to monopolies imposed by the state,
+and by a process of elimination it is only articles of luxury or
+voluntary consumption that are regarded as fit objects of monopoly for
+the benefit of the state.
+
+A tax imposed upon an article at a certain stage of its production or
+manufacture may enforce the expediency or necessity of a state
+monopoly. Where the supervision of the state agents must be so close
+as to interfere with the conduct of the industry, the state intervenes
+and itself controls the manufacture and sale. Tobacco has long been
+subject to this fiscal _régime_, and, proving so productive of
+revenue, there is little to be said against a monopoly by the state of
+its manufacture and sale.
+
+In Italy the tobacco monopoly is conceded to a company, but its return
+of net revenue to the state is nearly as large as the revenue derived
+from the taxes on real property (about thirty-eight million dollars a
+year). Prussia imposes a charge on the home-grown tobacco by a tax on
+the land devoted to its culture, but the return is very small, and
+Bismarck wished to introduce a true tobacco monopoly, modeled on that
+of France. But the conditions were opposed to his scheme, for the use
+of tobacco is general throughout the empire, and a proposition to
+increase its price by taxation or modify its free manufacture and
+distribution excited a widespread opposition. France maintains a full
+monopoly, and finds it too profitable to be lightly set aside unless
+some equally profitable source of revenue is discovered to make good
+the loss its abolition would involve.
+
+While historical support is given to the maintenance of a monopoly as
+in France, it is not probable that the system will find imitators in
+other states, however tempting the returns obtained might seem. Great
+Britain has by her insular position solved the problem in another way.
+By interdicting the domestic cultivation of tobacco, all that is
+consumed must be imported, and a customs duty offers a ready
+instrument for making the plant, in whatever form it enters,
+contribute its dues to the exchequer. In Russia, as in the United
+States, where tobacco is a domestic product, the tax is imposed upon
+its manufacture, and this method requires supervision but no monopoly
+of the state.
+
+The tobacco _régime_ is defended almost entirely on fiscal grounds,
+and as a monopoly, an extreme measure, has proved its value as an
+instrument of taxation. Other reasons, of a moral character, are urged
+to induce the state to monopolize the manufacture and sale of
+distilled spirits. Both France and Germany have considered this
+question, and, in spite of confident predictions of a large profit,
+have decided not to undertake it. Russia, on the other hand, has taken
+it up quite as much on social as on revenue grounds, and is gradually
+securing a monopoly of the trade in spirits. The initial cost of the
+undertaking is large, and, as the system has not yet been perfected,
+it is too early to give a judgment on its availability as a financial
+instrument.
+
+The transit dues, once commonly used by different countries, have been
+generally abandoned, and in China must they be sought for in their
+original forms of vexatious and unprofitable force. They arose from a
+desire to derive some benefit from a commerce permitted grudgingly,
+and rarely attaining any high results. The same end was sought by
+duties on exports, much employed when the country was supposed to be
+drained of its wealth by what was sent out of it. The conditions
+necessary for a successful duty on exports are not often found, and
+only in a few countries are they now existent. In Italy, South
+America, and Asia, exports of certain natural products are taxed, and,
+as in the case of Brazil, yield a notable revenue. In view of the
+rapid advancement of production in new countries and of inventions in
+the old, whereby many natural monopolies have been destroyed and
+competition made more general, such duties prove to be more
+obstructive to trade than productive of revenue, and are rapidly being
+abandoned. In spite of a formal prohibition of export duties in the
+Constitution of the United States, they are sometimes suggested in all
+seriousness.
+
+In thus clearing the path of what may be called dead or dying methods
+of recent tax systems, the advantages enjoyed by the United States in
+their freedom from such survivals become more evident. The practice of
+farming taxes never gained a foothold in any part of the country.
+Lotteries have been occasional, and with two exceptions have been
+conducted on a limited scale--that of Louisiana is well known; an
+earlier instance is less known. During the Revolution one of the means
+resorted to by the Continental Congress for income was a lottery, but
+the attempt proved disastrous to all concerned, and was finally
+abandoned even more thoroughly than was the continental currency.
+State monopolies of production and sale of any commodity have never
+met with favor, and stand condemned in the desire for individual
+initiative. As sources of revenue, the public lands, state control of
+the post office, and of such municipal undertakings as the water and,
+in a very few cases, the gas supply, has been employed, and in place
+of profit the mere cost of management is sought. More than any country
+of continental Europe, the United States has depended upon taxes, pure
+and simple, unsupported or modified by state domains, state mines,
+state manufactures, or state monopolies. Even Great Britain in her
+local taxation is bound and hampered by precedent, and pursues a
+system that is notoriously confused, costly, and vexatious. Long usage
+and the erection of independent and conflicting authorities on
+principles other than fiscal have imposed upon the local agents the
+duty of assessing and collecting county and borough taxes which are as
+indefensible in theory as they are difficult in practice.
+
+From this weight of tradition and precedent the United States has been
+almost entirely free, and it was possible to construct out of small
+beginnings systems of Federal and State taxation at least reasonable
+and consistent, producing an increasing revenue with the rapid
+development of wealth and the larger number of taxable objects; and so
+elastic as to adapt themselves to such changes as are inevitable in
+any progressive movement of commerce or industry. That no such system
+has resulted after a century of national life, and an even longer term
+of local (colonial and State) activities, these papers have tended to
+show. That the time is at hand when the problem of a thorough reform
+of both State and Federal taxation must be met, current facts prove
+beyond any doubt. If I have aided in a proper comprehension of these
+problems, and, by collecting certain experiences in taxation among
+other peoples and in different stages of civilization, contributed
+toward a proper solution, the end of this work will have been
+attained. It is not possible to introduce a complete change of policy
+at once; it is not only feasible but necessary to indicate the
+direction this change should take, and the ends to be secured in
+making them. And first as to Federal taxation:
+
+In a democracy like that of the United States, the continuance of a
+mixed system of direct and indirect taxes is a foregone conclusion.
+Not that there is an absence of change or modification in the details
+of this double system, or in the application or distribution of a
+particular impost or duty. To deny such modification is to deny any
+movement in the body politic, or any progress in the industrial and
+commercial economy of the people. There is a steady and continuous
+movement in every direction, and the mere effort to escape taxation
+results in a new adjustment of related facts. This development has,
+partly through necessity and partly through a rising consciousness of
+what a tax implies, been tending from indirect to direct taxes. Ever
+restive under a rigid supervision by the state of private concerns,
+there has been a wholesome opposition to inquisitorial taxes. But this
+opposition has been carried too far, and is due more to the ignorant
+and at times brutal disregard by the agents selected for enforcing the
+law than to an appreciation of the injustice of the tax. Whether in
+customs or excise, the same blunders of management have been
+committed, and created a spirit in the people that is injurious to
+their best interests. On the one hand, private enterprises have been
+unduly favored by the removal of foreign competition, a favor that is
+now disappearing through the remarkable development of domestic
+competition. Thus taxes have been extensively used for other purposes
+than to obtain revenue, and for private ends. On the other hand, there
+has been created the feeling that taxation is a proper instrument for
+effecting a more equal distribution of wealth among the people, and
+readily becomes an instrument of oppression.
+
+The almost absolute dependence of the Federal Government upon the
+customs duties for revenue through a great part of its existence was a
+striking fact. The simplicity of collection and the comparatively
+moderate scale of duties, although considered high at the time of
+imposition, gave this branch of the possible sources of revenue a
+magnified importance. The development of the country was slow, and at
+times greatly hampered by the tariff policy; but until about 1857 no
+other source of income was needed to meet the expenditures of the
+Government in a time of peace.
+
+In recent years this has all changed, and not for the better. The
+immense development in manufactures and financial ability accomplished
+since 1860 has made a tariff for protection an anachronism. The
+political features of customs legislation have been pushed so far as
+almost to overshadow the fiscal qualities. The wave of protectionism
+that followed the abrogation of the commercial treaties of Europe
+about 1880 has resulted in tariffs framed with the desire to injure
+the commerce of other states rather than to meet the needs of a
+treasury. In the United States this policy has been carried beyond
+that of Europe, and the tariff now in existence is more protective
+than any hitherto enforced, short of absolute prohibition of imports.
+
+In more respects than one the tariff law of 1897 was an extreme
+application of the protective policy. Each year the United States has
+demonstrated its ability not only to meet the industrial competition
+of the world on an equal footing, but to engage with it aggressively
+and with complete success. It is not necessary to give the figures of
+exports of manufactures to establish this fact; it is now beyond
+question. To frame a measure of extreme protection was, therefore, to
+overlook the most striking phase of the industrial situation existing
+in the United States. With an ability to manufacture cheaply and on a
+grand scale, and with a capacity to supply the demands of a market
+larger than any home market, there was no foreign competition to
+encounter, and the higher rates of duties meant nothing, either for
+protection or for revenue. In carrying further into action a tariff
+framed more for protection than for revenue, a twofold error was
+committed. The provisions were so complicated as to make the
+application difficult, and in applying these provisions inquisitorial
+and vexatious regulations were necessary to assure even a reasonable
+fulfillment of the requirements. In former tariff laws a general
+description carried a large class of articles, and a uniform duty,
+usually _ad valorem_, was collected. But under the demand for a more
+scientific tariff, these general classes were broken up into a number
+of enumerated articles, each one carrying a specific or mixed duty,
+and an omnium or basket clause at the end to catch any article that
+could not be included in any enumeration. This desire to fix specific
+rates upon each imported commodity has been applied more generally in
+the law of 1897 than in any previous tariff act. An examination of the
+imports of manufactures of textile fibers will illustrate this
+increase of complexity without any increase of revenue. Indeed, these
+classifications and rates, being suggested by interested parties, have
+for their object a reduction of imports, and as a rule a reduction in
+revenue from them follows.
+
+The second objection to the increasing complexity of the tariff laws
+is to be found in the petty annoyances imposed upon importers and
+others in enforcing the not always consistent provisions of the law.
+These vexations are made all the more telling by the fact that the
+administration of the law is apt to be in the hands of those who are
+openly hostile to foreign importations, and therefore regard the
+importer in an unfriendly spirit. The power given to the customs
+agents is enormous, and it is not remarkable that it is abused. The
+demand for samples, the appraisement of articles, the classification
+of new or compound commodities, all offer room for controversy, which
+is not always decided by an appeal to the courts of justice. In
+special instances, where a section of the law has been framed in
+behalf of a special interest, the attempt to enforce it becomes petty
+tyranny of the most intolerable kind.
+
+In operation the law soon exhibited its failure as a revenue measure.
+Although duties were generally increased, the more important articles
+taxed yielded a smaller revenue than under lower rates. The aggregate
+collections under the bill did not meet the expectations of its
+sponsors, and for two reasons: first, because the higher duties
+discouraged imports; and secondly, the demand for imported articles
+was steadily decreasing under the expanding ability of home
+manufactures to meet the needs of the market. No measure short of a
+direct encouragement to importations can change this situation, or
+prevent the further shrinkage in the use of foreign manufactures. It
+follows that the tariff, unless radically altered, can no longer be
+depended on for a return sufficient to defray one half of the rapidly
+increasing expenditures of the national Government. By refusing to
+impose moderate duties on articles of general consumption, revenue is
+sacrificed; by insisting upon imposing protective duties where little
+revenue can be had, the tariff is converted into a political weapon.
+Its dangerous qualities are strengthened by turning these duties
+against the products of certain countries, a policy specially fit to
+invite reprisals.
+
+Even the framers of this latest tariff entertained the belief that
+some provision should be made for breaking its full effect. The
+familiar scheme for reciprocity treaties, under which moderate
+concessions in some of the duties could be made, was retained; but
+France was the only power that could have an object in seriously
+entertaining the proposition to enter into a negotiation. No real
+reduction in duties could be given to Germany or any other country,
+and it has become a recognized fact that Germany does not hesitate to
+seize an opportunity to exclude the products of the United States, and
+on the same grounds as support the high duties in the American tariff.
+The system of drawbacks has ceased to be of much moment in our customs
+policy, and in the export interest in canned goods finds its chief
+exercise. Nor does a privilege to manufacture in bond affect more than
+one article of importance--ores of lead containing silver. No matter
+how it is regarded, the tariff of 1897 was not framed for revenue, and
+in experience has not proved sufficiently productive to meet its share
+of the expenditures of Government. The animus of its sponsors in
+attaining the immediate political object sacrificed the more important
+and permanent object of revenue.
+
+Were the true object of customs duties--revenue--to be kept in view in
+tariff legislation, it would be a simple matter to devise a measure
+that would be satisfactory and highly productive of revenue. In the
+fifteen hundred or more articles enumerated in the tariff schedules,
+more than fourteen hundred are nonproductive, or yield so small a
+return as to have in the aggregate no appreciable effect on the total
+receipts. The number left after so large an exclusion can be still
+further reduced without reducing the revenue one tenth; and it is from
+a small number of articles, hardly twenty-five, that the great part of
+the customs revenue is obtained. By reducing the rates of duties on
+these to a point of highest revenue efficiency, at which the import is
+not interfered with and yet not encouraged, a higher return could be
+had than from the existing complicated, overloaded, and political
+compilation of duties, usually imposed for any reason other than what
+they will bring into the treasury.
+
+When, therefore, the best methods of Federal taxation are broached,
+the reform of the tariff stands first in importance. It is necessary
+to bring it more into line with the industrial conditions of to-day,
+which call for foreign markets rather than a domestic or closed
+market; and for a liberal commercial policy in place of one that
+regards the products of other countries, whether imported in the crude
+or manufactured forms, as constituting a menace to American labor and
+American interests. It calls for a systematic and intelligent
+revision, which shall throw out such duties as are no longer of
+service even for protection, and to reduce those that are hostile to
+the products of other countries and bear in themselves the seeds of
+reprisals in the future. Now that the United States is going into the
+great markets with its manufactures, and obtaining a foothold against
+all competitors, the invitation to retaliation holds a danger far
+greater to its own interests than any that can be inflicted on other
+peoples. The greater the advances made the more readily will recourse
+be had to reprisals and hostile legislation; and in support of every
+act appeal may be had to examples set by the United States.[8]
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[6] Wealth of Nations, vol. i, p. 112 (Rogers's edition).
+
+[7] Bastable. Public Finance, p. 181.
+
+[8] "The old protectionist, with the stock arguments about the
+influence of the tariff upon wages and all the rest of it, is
+beginning to die out. He told us all he had to say about the 'pauper
+labor' of Europe, by which he often meant the best educated and most
+skillful artisans of the world. We got tired of hearing about how the
+importer paid the tax, how it was Europe and England in particular
+that was all the time squeezing our lives out, till nearly all of us,
+being of English ancestry ourselves, wondered whether we, even, could
+be so good as we hoped we were, if we had sprung from something so
+essentially perverted and bad. We were told, too, that American
+tourists who went to Europe and spent money there which they ought to
+have squandered at home were not friends of their country, and that
+they did us a particularly hostile act when they brought clothing,
+statuary, or diamond rings back with them from foreign parts. A season
+of high prices was a real heaven, and wars and fires were good things
+because they destroyed property that would have to be replaced, and
+this would create that demand which, reacting on supply, would
+increase prices. To say that an article was cheap was to say that the
+political party in power was no longer worthy of public confidence. It
+was related that each government could make its people so rich, and
+the idea was thought to have been traced down from Henry C. Carey,
+that the rest of the world could be safely disregarded altogether.
+
+"Seriously, who believes any of this stuff nowadays? The protectionist
+is not reckoning with such popular impotency and stupidity. He
+believes in his fellow-man, and wants to give him a helping hand. He
+does not care what effect it has on England or Ireland. He is not sure
+that a protective tariff in and of itself will increase the wages of
+the workmen. He is even inclined to think that less wages and profits
+would do well enough for every man, if it were cheaper to live and
+there were not such extravagant demands upon every person from all
+sides--this without being a socialist. He is certain that 'a cheap
+coat' does not necessarily make 'a cheap man,' but the cheaper the
+coat the better it will be for the wearer. That is what we are all
+trying to do, improve our processes, increase our effective working
+power, which means, if you please, to make things cheaper."--_The
+Manufacturer_ (organ of the Manufacturers' Club of Philadelphia).
+
+
+
+
+MENTAL DEFECTIVES AND THE SOCIAL WELFARE.
+
+BY MARTIN W. BARR, M. D.,
+
+CHIEF PHYSICIAN, PENNSYLVANIA TRAINING SCHOOL FOR FEEBLE-MINDED
+CHILDREN, ELWYN, PA.
+
+
+Periods of extraordinary efflorescence or fruitage are followed by
+exhaustion and sterility not infrequently demanding the free use of
+the pruning knife; and, just as we remark how frequent is idiocy the
+offspring of genius, so do we find the same seeming paradox, of mental
+defect in rank and increasing growth the product of this most
+wonderful nineteenth century.
+
+True, science has contributed to numbers by revealing as mental
+defectives the many "misunderstood," "the backward," "the feebly
+gifted," as well as by showing what was once esteemed moral perversion
+to be moral imbecility; but a truth to which science also attests is,
+that unstable nerve centers uniting and reacting through successive
+generations, producing various forms of neuroses, evidenced in
+insanity, moral and mental imbecility, idiocy and epilepsy, do show
+the influence of a highly nervous age.
+
+Our last census reports, although necessarily uncertain and
+unreliable, yet show ninety thousand mental defectives, not including
+the insane. Unrecognized and unacknowledged cases swell the number
+easily to one hundred thousand within our present borders--how many we
+are going to annex remains to be seen; but this is an enemy that
+attacks not our frontiers but our hearthstones. We have reached that
+point when we must conquer it, lest it should conquer us, and the
+means to this end may be summed up in three words--separation,
+asexualization, and permanent sequestration. "Diseases desperate grown
+by desperate appliances are relieved, or not at all," and we must
+recognize that heroic measures now are as essential to the welfare of
+the unfortunate as to society, which will then naturally adjust itself
+to new conditions. Viewing the separation and massing of these
+irresponsibles--innocent victims of ignorance, debauchery, or selfish
+lust--men will come to realize that a greater crime than taking is the
+giving of such life; and so a greater reverence for the sacredness of
+marriage, a deeper sense of the great responsibilities of parenthood,
+will do more to avert this evil than the most stringent marriage laws.
+That the present demands some restraint upon the ignorant and the
+indifferent there can be no doubt, and laws preventing the marriage of
+defectives and of their immediate descendants would go far to stem the
+tide of harmful heredity.
+
+But what to do with those now in our midst is the vital question! They
+must be provided for in a way that shall insure safety to society,
+economy to the State, and protection and happiness to the individual.
+The answer found in the experience of half a century is, briefly,
+asylums for the helpless--training schools and colonies for those
+capable of becoming helpful. These in very name and nature being
+widely separate, just as separate as titles and names indicate, should
+be their working systems. Work among the feeble-minded, a
+philanthropic movement directed first toward the idiot, soon found a
+limit in dealing with a subject not trainable and but slightly if at
+all improvable. Thence, diverging and broadening as idiocy became
+better understood and imbecility in various phases became recognized,
+it found its true province in strengthening and encouraging feeble
+intellects, arousing and stimulating indolent and weak wills, and in
+training and directing into healthful channels the abnormal energy of
+those destitute of the moral sense. How wide the divergence can
+readily be seen, as also how entirely incompatible with union must be
+work further apart in reality than is the training of an imbecile and
+a normal child.
+
+[Illustration: EXCITABLE IDIOT. Practically unimprovable.
+
+APATHETIC IDIOT. Practically unimprovable.
+
+IDIO-IMBECILE. But slight hope of improvement.]
+
+For the idiot, who not only can not be trained, but who in many cases
+is unimprovable even in the simplest matters of self-help, nothing is
+needed but that care and attention found in every well-regulated
+nursery of delicate children, the _sine qua non_ being regular hours,
+simple nourishing food, frequent baths, and tender mothering. As many
+are paralyzed, blind, lame, or epileptic, it is desirable that the
+dormitories, well ventilated, be on the same floor with the living
+rooms and of easy access to bathrooms and playgrounds. Covered and
+carefully guarded porches should afford the much-needed fresh air and
+outdoor life in all weathers. These, with cheerful, sunny playrooms,
+provided with simple toys and furnished with bright decorations
+varying with the season, will contribute the maximum of pleasure for
+this life of perpetual infancy. Low vitality, general poverty of the
+whole physical make-up, the prevalence of phthisis and epilepsy and
+kindred diseases require the daily inspection of a physician, while
+the comfort and well-being of the whole, both workers and children,
+are insured by a capable and sympathetic house mother.
+
+The character of attendants is of the first importance, as these are
+they who live with the children; it should combine that firmness,
+tenderness, and balance that constitute an even temperament, capable
+of recognizing and meeting an occasion without loss of self-control.
+The duties involve not only the care of the idiots, but the training
+and direction of idio-imbeciles as aids, and this dealing with natures
+often wholly animal, requires a certain refinement and dignity of
+character--at least an entire absence of coarseness--while a knowledge
+of the simpler manual arts, and if possible of drawing and music, will
+do much to soften and brighten these darkened natures. As these
+qualities are valuable as well as rare, the remuneration should be in
+proportion; certainly sufficient to induce permanency and to
+compensate for such isolation. A life of constant wear and tear
+demands also regular periods of rest, and the corps therefore should
+be sufficiently large to give relief hours daily as well as vacations.
+
+The idio-imbecile, but one remove from his weaker brother, to whose
+wants he may be trained to minister, finds here his fitting place, and
+the domestic service of these asylums may be largely drawn from this
+class and also from that of the low-grade imbecile. Working as an aid,
+never alone, always under direction, he finds in a monotonous round of
+the simplest daily avocations his life happiness, his only safety from
+lapsing into idiocy, and therefore his true home.
+
+The relief to the home, the actual benefit to the State in this
+housing and care of the idiot and idio-imbecile can never be fully
+estimated. It is reckoned, however, in a general way that for every
+idiot sequestrated the energies of two if not four normal persons are
+returned to society.
+
+Imbecility, mental or moral, congenital or accidental, is either an
+inherent defect or an irrecoverable loss, an incurable disease for
+which hospitals can do nothing, nor can reformatories form again that
+which never has been formed. Could language be made clear enough to
+enable the public mind to grasp this fact, the work of training
+schools, the only hope of the imbecile, would then be simplified, and
+people might be willing to accept what they can give, in the only way
+in which it can be given, to be of any permanent value. As it is, the
+few charlatans who profess to train and in a few years send out an
+imbecile ready to take a high-school or college course not only
+deceive those from whom they may gather a few thousands, but their
+representations, coupled with that of a sensational press, effectually
+impede the progress of a work which must eventually find its true
+place in the system of public education.
+
+Influenced by these misrepresentations, parents come with profound
+idiots and high hopes of a course of training (here is one of the
+misfortunes of an idiot asylum within a training school), and simply
+refuse to accept a negative to their expectations. Again--to waifs and
+strays, high-grade imbeciles, developing after years of labored
+training proficiency in music, drawing, or some one of the industrial
+arts, friends will suddenly crop up and, dazzled by what seems
+phenomenal genius, seek to withdraw them just as they become useful to
+the community. Little do they know of the weak will, indolent nature,
+and utter lack of "go," that forbid competition with normal labor and
+must forever be subject to the will of another; still less of the weak
+physical build that is kept intact only by watchful care, and which
+would succumb to any undue hardship. So much for the difficulties that
+beset the work. Now as to the work itself.
+
+As this must vary according to the status of the individual, a careful
+study and a correct diagnosis are of primary importance in order that
+the work may be fitted to the child, not the child to the work. The
+plan pursued is as follows: A thorough examination--physical, mental,
+and moral--is first made by the chief physician in connection with
+papers properly filled out giving personal and family history. He is
+then sent to the hospital for a fortnight to insure immunity from
+disease. There, while perfectly free and unrestrained among his
+fellows, he is under constant observation of the nurses; these
+observations, carefully noted, are returned to the chief physician,
+who turns both over to the principal of schools, designating the grade
+in which he is to enter for probation. Here under different
+environment he is again tested for some weeks and finally placed.
+
+[Illustration: HIGH-GRADE IMBECILE.
+
+HIGH-GRADE IMBECILE. Very improvable--can read, write, draw, etc.
+
+LOW-GRADE IMBECILE. Only slightly improvable.]
+
+It is hard for the uninitiated to understand that the grade, be it
+high, middle, or low, is not associated with promotion and advancement
+as in schools for normal children. On the contrary, it signifies the
+quality and status of the individual, his limitations, his
+possibilities, and consequently determines almost unfailingly the
+training for his life work; not by any hard-and-fast lines, but by a
+general mapping out of means which experience has proved will best
+insure his development, because best suited to his needs. Every
+latitude is allowed and, as the comfort of both the teacher and the
+entire class depends upon each going to his own place, there is easy
+and natural transference according to the necessity indicated by
+either progress or retrogression; but the varied occupations in each
+grade give ample scope for indulgence of individual proclivity in the
+means of development, and it is found that the original diagnosis,
+based upon experience, rarely errs.
+
+The motto of the schools--"We learn by doing; the working hand makes
+strong the working brain"--shows manual training to be the basis of
+the scheme of development, varied for each grade to suit the
+intelligence. Thus classified, various occupations are arranged and
+presented with the double intent of securing all-round development,
+and of giving at the same time opportunity for choice according to
+individual bent, the child being gradually permitted to devote himself
+more exclusively to that in which he shows a tendency to excel, and to
+gain a certain automatic ease in what shall prove the initial of a
+life employment. A knowledge of writing and of numbers is acquired
+incidentally as a necessary part of these occupations in daily
+practice, and arithmetic, taught with objects, is chiefly counting,
+separating into fractional parts, and practical measurements. Books
+are used rather as a convenient means of attracting and holding
+attention while inducing habits of consecutive thinking than for a
+knowledge of facts to be memorized. Those who can learn to read gain
+naturally a means of self-entertainment, of self-instruction, hence a
+certain amount of culture, so long as protected in an institution from
+indiscriminate and pernicious literature.
+
+The low-grade imbecile, but a slight degree removed from the
+idio-imbecile, is, like him, totally incapable of grasping artificial
+signs or symbols. He can therefore never learn to read or write;
+figures have no meaning for him, nor numbers, beyond the very simplest
+counting acquired in the daily repetition of some simple task such as
+knitting, netting, braiding rope, straw, or knotting twine. The
+excitation of interest in these, which will also give hand and arm
+power, the arousing of the sluggish, indolent will, through the
+stimulus of pleasurable emotions, the physical development by means of
+the various drills and the moral influence of refined, orderly
+surroundings--these, together with some practical work of house,
+garden, or farm, which forms part of the daily routine, are all that
+school life can do for him.
+
+[Illustration: MORAL IMBECILE OF HIGH GRADE.
+
+MORAL IMBECILE OF MIDDLE GRADE.
+
+MORAL IMBECILE, LOW GRADE.]
+
+From this preparation he passes to the industrial department, where he
+receives training in that occupation which the school has indicated
+for him, becoming in his limited way a useful and contented member of
+a community which should be his life home. As both of these types
+develop either extreme docility or perversity--the one quiet, gentle,
+obedient, following any suggestion even of a comrade's stronger will;
+the other obstinate, indolent, often brutal and cruel--the necessity
+for constant guardianship is therefore self-evident.
+
+When we consider that the training of a high-grade imbecile takes four
+times the period commonly allotted to a normal child, some idea of the
+vital energy expended on the training of the lower grades may be found
+in the following example:
+
+I find in our museum of educational work a little ball which I am
+inclined to regard the most valuable thing in the whole collection.
+The boy who made it was a low-grade imbecile. His hand against every
+man, he fancied every man's against him. Always under strict custodial
+care, that he might harm neither himself nor others, he would vent his
+spleen in tearing his clothing. His teacher, a woman of rare patience
+and devotedness, sat beside him one day, tearing strips of old linen
+and laying them in order. "See, Willie, let us make some pretty strips
+and lay them so." His wonder grew apace at seeing her doing what he
+had been reproved for doing; at once he responded, and a new bond of
+sympathy was established between them. She was playing his game--the
+only one, poor little lad, that he was capable of--and he joined in.
+
+"Now, we will draw out the pretty threads and lay them in rows." For
+weeks the boy found quiet pastime in this occupation, and the violent
+nature grew quieter in proportion. One day the teacher said, "Let us
+tie these threads together and make a long string." It took him months
+and months to learn to tie those knots, but meanwhile his attendants
+were having breathing space. "Now we will wind this into a pretty
+ball, and I will cover all you make for the boys to play with"; and a
+new occupation was added to his meager list.
+
+The next link in this chain of development was a lesson in knitting.
+Again, through months of patient teaching, it was at last
+accomplished, and the boy to the day of his death found his life
+happiness in knitting caps for the children, in place of tearing both
+them and their clothing. You see the teacher was wise enough to
+utilize the natural activities of the child and divert evil
+propensities into healthful channels. Had she brought knitting and
+bright yarn or anything foreign to him first, it would in truth have
+been fitting new cloth to old garments and the rent would have been
+widened: his obstinacy would have been aroused, and he would have
+continued to tear to the end of the chapter.
+
+[Illustration: HIGH-GRADE IMBECILES (FEEBLY GIFTED) AT SLOYD WORK.]
+
+The imbecile of middle grade receives that fuller presentation of work
+suited to fuller capacity. Some time is devoted to the three "Rs," as
+it is found that attention may be aroused and concentrated in the
+phonetic drills, more especially if associated with pictures, and the
+drawing of the objects named free-hand; thus eye, ear, and hand are
+encouraged to work simultaneously. Those who accomplish finally the
+reading of short simple stories not only enjoy evenings in the
+library, but may be enabled to glean suggestions for the various
+handicrafts for which they are being trained. This effort at quick
+observation and original thinking is further carried forward in the
+ambidextrous movements of free-hand drawing, designing, and sketching
+from life--finding ready and practical application in the daily use of
+tools. The value of the rule and the try-square is tested in the
+manufacture of the various useful articles in both paper and wood
+included under the head of sloyd, and "a boy can not learn to take a
+straight shaving off a plank," says Ruskin, "or to drive a fine curve
+without faltering, or to lay a brick level in the mortar, without
+learning a multitude of other matters which life of man could never
+teach him."
+
+Equally useful to the girl in the workroom as to the boy in the shop
+is this training of a ready eye, this quick intuition of balance and
+proportion, this practice of obedience of hand and arm to brain, until
+it becomes automatic. To both, therefore, the value of such
+preparation will be incalculable. It is noticeable that boys of this
+grade turn out as good workers in the ordinary crafts of shoemaking,
+carpentering, and house painting as those of higher grade who,
+although capable of grasping more intelligently the details of work,
+yet do not bring to it that energy and perseverance of one who finds
+in it "this one thing I do." With the imbecile of high grade, able to
+accomplish studies equal to about the first intermediate of the public
+schools, there is a diffusion of interest; the intelligence broadens
+rather than deepens during the school period in natural response to
+environment. With greater grasp of numerical values and of letters he
+attains proficiency impossible to the lower grades in drawing, in
+music, in printing, and in cabinet work. Other industries will
+probably be provided for him as the demand increases, for it must be
+remembered that this is a class whose needs have been the last to be
+recognized in a work begun, as I have before said, for the idiot.
+Regarded as queer, unlike other children--unable to keep up--he has,
+after an unsuccessful trial at school, been kept at home, in some
+cases an aid, in others a tyrant, to those relatives charged with his
+care.
+
+Changed conditions of both family and school, fortunately for him,
+combine to render this no longer possible, as absence of proper
+training is always certain to result in deterioration. The pressure
+upon the primary schools in the struggle for higher education leaves
+no time to contend with dull, backward children. In the family the
+care-takers grow fewer in proportion as the home-makers become
+home-winners, and so these feeble ones are a burden instead of an aid
+in the ordinary household offices.
+
+The next hope is a training school where, with false hopes fostered by
+ignorance and sensationalism, they are entered, and after a few years,
+a time all too short for any lasting benefit, a sentimentality equally
+stupid withdraws them from that guardianship absolutely essential,
+with just that little knowledge which will render them more dangerous
+to society, because less recognizable--an evil element perpetuating an
+evil growth. Under both conditions these unfortunates have suffered
+from that lack of constant care and supervision which should be theirs
+from the cradle to the grave.
+
+The separation of backward children in the schools and the placing of
+them in special classes for special training is the first step in the
+right direction. Here, after sufficient time for observation and
+diagnosing by teacher and physician, the defectives so adjudged will
+naturally drift to the training schools for the feeble-minded; these,
+if relieved of the odium as well as the care of their helpless
+population, will then be encouraged to arrange for this brighter class
+of defectives industries which will provide not only for development
+and happiness, but will largely aid in maintenance. The recognition of
+the necessity for this weeding out of the schools, having place first
+on the Continent, next in England, and later in our own country, marks
+an era in the national as well as in the special schools. Both will be
+benefited largely, and formal expression of this, found in the
+addition to our National Educational Association of a department
+representing the training of all classes of defectives, is one of the
+most encouraging signs of the times.
+
+[Illustration: MIDDLE-GRADE IMBECILES.]
+
+The same experience which dictates the separation of the idiot from
+the imbecile, the backward from the normal child, urges also that a
+permanent sequestration would tend alike to the safety and happiness
+of the normal and abnormal classes. The experiment made of preparing
+and sending out into the world these irresponsibles has proved, to say
+the least, not encouraging, and the advisability of their permanent
+detention has become self-evident.
+
+The heads of training schools here are a unit in urging that provision
+be made for those who have reached the limit of school progress. That
+experience has reached a similar conclusion in England is testified
+in the munificent gift lately made to the Royal Albert Asylum, and by
+the opinion of its superintendent, Dr. T. Telford-Smith, thus clearly
+expressed:
+
+"It is yearly more noticeable that the public mind is coming gradually
+but surely to recognize the threefold value of the work of such
+institutions as the Royal Albert Asylum. The educational and the
+custodial aspects early aroused the sympathies of the charitable; but
+the preventive aspect is another which must force itself upon all who
+thoughtfully consider the subject. The far-reaching and inexorable law
+of heredity is written large for those who study the imbecile."
+
+The following paragraph, from a daily paper, shows that, in America at
+least, public opinion and the acts of the legislature have become ripe
+for action:
+
+"The State of Connecticut is about to try a curious experiment in
+social legislation, having passed a law forbidding any man or woman,
+imbecile or feeble-minded, to marry under forty-five years of age, the
+penalty being imprisonment for not less than three years; and persons
+aiding and abetting are also liable. The hope of the legislature is to
+keep down dégenerate families."
+
+That this experiment is wise and justifiable who can doubt?
+
+[Illustration: LOW-GRADE IMBECILES. No. 1, obstinate, perverse,
+indolent; No. 2, gentle and obedient.]
+
+To glance at another and sadder, but not less real, side of the same
+question, can any one doubt but that the adolescent and adult female
+imbecile needs lifelong care and protection? Surely the noble gift to
+the asylum by Sir Thomas Storey of a home for forty such cases is a
+wise, far-seeing, and statesmanlike act.
+
+It is greatly to be hoped that this noble example may be speedily
+emulated on both sides of the sea, and that each State may shortly
+possess, in addition to its training school, its own colony farm with
+all the industries of a village, drawing its workers from the
+well-directed energies of a carefully guarded community. Cottages,
+each with its house mother, would insure that sense of home, and that
+affectionate and sympathetic oversight so essential to this society
+composed of those who are always children, while measures, which
+science has already pointed out and experience proved as advisable,
+might, if protected by wise legislation, permit less vigilance on the
+part of care-takers and consequent happiness because of greater
+freedom to its members.
+
+It is a happy coincidence that Massachusetts, the pioneer State in the
+work among the feeble-minded, should in its fifty-first year celebrate
+the beginning of its second half century by the inauguration of this
+most eventful step in the onward progress of the work. The training
+school at Waltham has lately purchased sixteen hundred and sixty acres
+of land for the establishment of a colony which is to have natural and
+healthful growth from the fostering care of the parent institution.
+
+As these colonies increase, drawing from society a pernicious element
+and transforming it under watchful care into healthful growth, may not
+in time the national Government, finding these homes of prevention a
+more excellent way than prison houses of cure for ill, be induced to
+provide a national colony for this race more to be commiserated
+because of a childhood more hopeless than that of the two others in
+our midst on whom so much has been expended?
+
+
+
+
+THE WHEAT PROBLEM AGAIN.
+
+BY EDWARD ATKINSON.
+
+
+In a recent article in the North American Review, Mr. John Hyde, the
+statistician of the United States Department of Agriculture, a
+gentleman of very high authority and repute, presents this problem in
+such terms as to throw a doubt upon the validity of any forecast of
+the potential increase in the product of wheat, or, in fact, of any
+crop in this country. Without referring to myself by name, he yet
+makes it very plain that he does not attach any value to my recent
+forecast of wheat production printed in the Popular Science Monthly
+for December, 1898.
+
+On the other hand, he rightly says that since Tyndall's address to the
+British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1874 no treatise
+presented to that association has excited so general an interest or
+provoked so much unfavorable criticism as Sir William Crookes's recent
+utterances on the subject of the approaching scarcity in the supply of
+wheat.
+
+Mr. Hyde disclaims any intention to give his own views, but yet no one
+can read his treatise without noting a substantial agreement with Sir
+William Crookes, perhaps almost unconsciously to himself. In his
+closing paragraph he says: "To discuss the extent to which under
+conceivable conditions the United States may, _notwithstanding the
+somewhat dubious outlook_, still continue to contribute to the food
+supply of other nations, would be little more than speculation."
+
+The Italics are my own.
+
+I venture to point out that the use of the word "speculation" is an
+example of many instances. Like a dog, one may give a word a bad name,
+yet it may be a good dog and a very good word when rightly used. In
+the true and very innocent meaning of the word "speculation" we find
+exactly what the public has a right to expect and even to demand from
+the Department of Agriculture. In Webster's Dictionary I find that,
+when used in such a connection as this problem of the potential of
+this country in farm productions, the word "speculation" stands for "a
+mental view of anything in its various aspects and relations;
+contemplation; intellectual examination."
+
+If any "mental view" has yet been taken in the Department of
+Agriculture of the proportion of the land of this country which may be
+termed "arable," I have yet to find the record. If any "contemplation"
+has been devoted to the proportions of this arable land which may be
+devoted to different crops in each section, I have been remiss in not
+securing the reports. If any "mental view" has been taken of the
+relative area now devoted to each principal crop, and that which may
+be so devoted hereafter in order to meet the prospective demand upon
+the land, either for the supply of our own population or of other
+nations, where is the record? If there is no such "speculation" now of
+record, is it not time that a true agricultural survey corresponding
+to our geologic and geodetic surveys should be entered upon? I have
+reason to believe that such surveys have been made by many European
+states in which all the arable land in some kingdoms is classified,
+listed, and so recorded that any one wishing to know the best place
+for any special product can get the information by reference to the
+proper department of the Government.
+
+I have had occasion to make several studies of this kind. In order to
+inform myself on the potential of the South in the production of
+cotton, I undertook a study of the physical geography and climatology
+of the cotton States and of other cotton-producing countries nearly
+forty years ago. The results of this research were first given in
+Cheap Cotton by Free Labor, published in 1861. In that pamphlet and in
+many treatises following, finally in an address in Atlanta, in 1880, a
+true forecast or "speculation" or "intellectual examination" will be
+found of the production of the cotton fiber, the potential of the
+future and of the cotton-seed-oil industry, then almost unheard of in
+this country. In 1880 I also entered upon my first "speculation" (not
+in the market) on the lines of a "contemplation" or forecast of the
+effect of agricultural machinery applied to our wheat land, coupled
+with the prospective reduction in the cost of carrying wheat to
+England, upon the condition of the American farmer and the British
+landlord. That forecast of prosperity to our farmers in the supply of
+bread at low cost to our kin beyond the sea has been justified at
+every point and in every detail. I therefore ventured to review Sir
+William Crookes's address, and I am well assured that what Mr. Hyde
+now calls a "somewhat dubious outlook" is subject to no doubt whatever
+as to our ability to continue our full supply for domestic consumption
+and export for the next century.
+
+Let me now repeat again what I have often said: statistics are good
+servants, but very bad masters. I long since ceased to put any great
+reliance upon averages of crops, wages, or products covering wide
+areas and varying conditions, unless I could find out, _first_, the
+personal equation of the man who compiled them; _second_, ascertain
+what he knew himself about the subject of which his statistics or
+figures were the symbols; and, _third_, unless I could verify these
+great averages from one or more typical areas of farm land, or from
+one or more representative factories or workshops, of the conditions
+of which I could myself obtain personal information.
+
+General statistics and averages of farm products and earnings I regard
+with more suspicion than almost any others because of the immense
+variation in conditions.
+
+I have sometimes almost come to the conclusion that so many of the
+figures of the United States census are mere statistical rubbish as to
+throw a doubt on nearly all the schedules. Yet without accurate
+statistics on many points, many of them yet to be secured, the conduct
+of our national affairs must become as uncertain as would be the
+conduct of any great business corporation without a true ledger
+account and a trial balance. Hence the necessity for a permanent
+census bureau and for a careful "speculation" or "intellectual" and
+intelligent examination and "contemplation" or study of the facts
+about our land by which our future welfare must be governed.
+
+A good beginning has been made by the authorities of many States, yet
+more by the body of well-trained men in charge of the Agricultural
+Experiment Station, in whose support too much can not be said. To them
+I appealed when trying to get an adequate conception of our potential
+in wheat.
+
+When we think of the blunders which have been made in very recent
+years, we may well have some suspicion that we may still be very
+ignorant on many points about our own country. Who really knows very
+much about the great middle section of the South, what is called the
+"Land of the Sky," comprising the upland plateaus and mountain
+sections of Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama,
+eastern Tennessee, and Kentucky? Within this area, as large as France
+and twice as large as Great Britain, will be found timber and minerals
+equal to both the countries named, and a potential in agriculture
+equal to either, as yet very sparsely populated.
+
+Yet under a craze for centrifugal expansion we are now in danger of
+trying to develop tropical islands far away, already somewhat densely
+peopled, where white men can not work and live, to our detriment,
+danger, and loss, while we fail to see that if we expand centripetally
+by the occupation and use of the most healthy and productive section
+of our own country, we may add immensely to our prosperity, our
+wealth, to our profit without cost and without militarism. This
+sparsely settled Land of the Sky is greater in area and far greater in
+its potential than the Philippine Islands, Cuba, and Porto Rico
+combined. Verily, it seems as if common sense were a latent and
+sluggish force, often endangered by the noisy and blatant influence of
+the venal politician and the greed of the unscrupulous advocates of
+vassal colonies who now attempt to pervert the power of government to
+their own purposes of private gain.
+
+Witness the blunders of the past:
+
+We nearly gave away Oregon because it was held not to be worth
+retaining.
+
+When the northern boundary of Wisconsin was being determined, it was
+put as far north as it was then supposed profitable farming could ever
+extend, excluding Minnesota, now one of our greatest sources of wheat.
+
+The Great American Desert in my own school atlas covered a large part
+of the most fertile land now under cultivation.
+
+What blunders are we now making for lack of "speculation" or
+"intellectual examination" as to the future of American farming and
+farm lands?
+
+On one point to which Mr. Hyde refers I must cry _peccavi_. He rebukes
+the editor of the Popular Science Monthly for admitting an article in
+which a potential of 400,000,000 bushels of wheat is attributed to the
+State of Idaho. The total depravity of the type-writing machine caused
+the mechanism to spell Montana in the letters I-d-a-h-o. What I
+imputed to Idaho is true of Montana, if the Chief of the Agricultural
+Experiment Stations of Montana is a competent witness, if all its
+arable land were devoted to wheat. It will be observed that I
+mentioned Idaho incidentally (meaning Montana), taking no cognizance
+of the estimate given, because it was at present of no practical
+importance.
+
+I have expressed my distrust of great averages in respect to
+agriculture and farm products.
+
+In illustration of this fallacy, the figures presented by Mr. Hyde
+will now be dealt with. It is held that in 1930, which is the year
+when Sir William Crookes predicts starvation among the bread-eating
+people of the world for lack of wheat (as if good bread could only be
+made from wheat), the population of this country may be computed at
+130,000,000. The requirements of that year for our own consumption Mr.
+Hyde estimates at 700,000,000 bushels of wheat, 1,250,000,000 bushels
+of oats, 3,450,000,000 bushels of corn (maize), and 100,000,000 tons
+of hay; and, although other products are not named by him, we may
+assume a corresponding increase.
+
+Subsequently Mr. Hyde gives the present delusive average yields per
+acre of the whole country, and then throws a doubt on the future
+progress of agricultural science, saying, "Whatever agricultural
+science may be able to do in the next thirty years, up to the present
+time it has only succeeded in arresting that decline in the rate of
+production with which we have been continually threatened." Without
+dealing at present with this want of and true consideration of or
+"speculation" upon the progress made in the last decade under the lead
+of the experiment stations and other beginnings in remedying the
+wasteful and squalid methods that have been so conspicuous in pioneer
+farming, let us take Mr. Hyde's averages and see what demand upon land
+the requirements of 1930 will make, even at the present meager average
+product per acre.
+
+Mr. Hyde apparently computes this prospective product as one that will
+be required for the domestic consumption of 130,000,000 people by
+ratio to our present product. He ignores the fact that our present
+product suffices for 75,000,000, with an excess of live stock,
+provisions, and dairy products exported nearly equal in value to all
+the grain exported, and in excess of the exports of wheat. If we can
+increase proportionally in one class of products, why not in another?
+Whichever pays best will be produced and exported.
+
+ _1897 and 1930 compared.--Data of 1897._
+ ------+------------------------+-----------------+----------------------
+ | Products. |Average per acre.| Area required.
+ ------+------------------------+-----------------+----------------------
+ Maize | 1,902,967,933 bushels. | 23.8 bushels. | 125,150 square miles.
+ Wheat | 530,149,168 " | 13.4 " | 61,660 " "
+ Oats | 698,767,809 " | 27.2 " | 40,200 " "
+ Hay | 60,664,770 tons. | 1.43 " | 66,290 " "
+ | | |----------------------
+ Total in square miles | 293,300 square miles.
+ -------------------------------------------------+----------------------
+
+All other farm crops carry the total to less than 400,000 square miles
+now under the plow, probably not exceeding 360,000.
+
+Prospective demand of 1930, at the same meager average product per
+acre, without progress in agricultural science:
+
+ ------+------------------------+---------------+----------------------
+ | Crop called for. | Per acre. | Area required.
+ ------+------------------------+---------------+----------------------
+ Maize | 3,450,000,000 bushels. | 23.8 bushels. | 226,600 square miles.
+ Wheat | 700,000,000 " | 13.4 " | 81,600 " "
+ Oats | 1,250,000,000 " | 27.2 " | 70,800 " "
+ Hay | 100,000,000 tons. | 1.43 " | 109,400 " "
+ | | |----------------------
+ Total in square miles | 488,400 square miles.
+ -----------------------------------------------+----------------------
+
+Assuming all land under the plow in 1930 in the ratio as above, the
+area of all now in all crops 400,000 square miles--an excessive
+estimate--that year (1930) will call for 667,000 square miles of
+arable land in actual cultivation.
+
+I have been accustomed to consider one half our national domain,
+exclusive of Alaska, good arable land in the absence of any
+"speculation" on that point in the records of the Department of
+Agriculture; but from the returns given by the chiefs of the
+experiment stations and secretaries of agriculture of the States
+hereafter cited, that estimate may be increased probably to two
+thirds, or 2,000,000 square miles of arable land out of a total of
+3,000,000 square miles, omitting Alaska.
+
+Assuming that we possess 2,000,000 square miles of arable land,
+capable at least of producing the present meager average product cited
+above, the conditions of 1930 will be graphically presented on the
+following diagram:
+
+
+ _Prospective Use of Land in the Year 1930 on Present Crop Average._
+
+ [Sidenote: Arable land assumed to be 2,000,000 square miles in the
+ outer lines of the diagram.]
+
+ +----------+----------+----------+--------------+------------+----------+
+ | Oats, | Wheat, | Hay, |Miscellaneous.| Maize, | Wheat |
+ | 70,800 | 81,600 | 109,400 |Roots, cotton,|Indian corn,| for |
+ |sq. miles.|sq. miles.|sq. miles.|tobacco, etc.,| 226,600 | export, |
+ +----------| | |168,600 sq. m.| sq. miles. | 143,000 |
+ | +----------+----------| Excessive. | |sq. miles.|
+ | +--------------+------------+----------+
+ |Arable land unassigned 1,200,000 square miles.|
+ |Deduct for cities, towns, parks, |
+ | and reserves of all kinds 200,000 " " |
+ | --------- |
+ | Reserve for future use 1,000,000 " " |
+ | |
+ | Forest, mountain, arid, etc., not counted, about 1,000,000 square |
+ | miles, not included in these lines or squares. |
+ +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+ No reduction on area cultivated on prospective improvement in the
+ present methods of farming, although it may be assumed that the
+ prospective increase of crop per acre will exert great influence.
+
+If the facts should be in 1930 consistent with Mr. Hyde's
+"speculation" it would therefore appear that our ability to meet the
+domestic demand of 1930 with proportionate export of cattle,
+provisions, and dairy products, and to set apart a little patch of
+land for the export of 1,226,000,000 bushels of wheat raised at the
+rate of only 13.4 bushels per acre from 143,000 square miles of land
+will be met by the cultivation of not exceeding 700,000 square miles
+out of 2,000,000 available.
+
+I should not venture to question the conclusions emanating from the
+Department of Agriculture, or the deductions of so eminent a scientist
+as Sir William Crookes, had I not taken the usual precaution of a
+business man in studying a business question. I went to the men who
+know the subject as well as the figures on which statistics are to be
+compiled.
+
+Being supplied by the Popular Science Monthly with one hundred proofs
+of the first nine and a half pages of the December article in which
+the terms of the problem are stated, I sent those proofs to the chiefs
+of the experiment stations and to the secretaries of agriculture in
+all the States from which any considerable product of wheat is now or
+may be hereafter derived; also to many makers of wheat harvesters; to
+the secretaries of Chambers of Commerce, and to several economic
+students in the wheat-growing States. This preliminary study was
+accompanied by the following circular of inquiry:
+
+
+ BOSTON, MASS., _October 5, 1898_.
+
+ _To the Chiefs of the Agricultural Experiment Stations and others in
+ Authority_:
+
+Calling your attention to the inclosed advance sheets of an article
+which will by and by appear in the Popular Science Monthly, I beg to
+put to you certain questions.
+
+If the matter interests you, will you kindly fill up the blanks below
+and let me have your replies within the present month of October, to
+the end that I may compile them and give a digest of the results? I
+shall state in the article that I am indebted to you and others for
+the information submitted.
+
+Area of the State of....................... square miles.
+
+1. What proportion of this area do you believe to be arable land of
+fair quality, including pasture that might be put under the plow?
+
+ Answer ................... square miles.
+
+2. What proportion is now in forest or mountain sections which may not
+be available for agriculture for a long period?
+
+ Answer ................... square miles.
+
+3. What has been done or may be done by irrigation?
+...........................................................................
+...........................................................................
+............................
+
+4. What proportion of the arable land above measured should you
+consider suitable to the production of wheat under general conditions
+such as are given in the text, say, a stable price of one dollar per
+bushel in London?
+
+ Answer ................... square miles.
+
+5. To what extent, in your judgment, is wheat becoming the cash or
+surplus crop of a varied system of agriculture as distinct from the
+methods which prevail in the opening of new lands of cropping with
+wheat for a term of years?
+
+....................................................................
+
+What further remarks can you add which will enable me to elucidate
+this case, to complete the article and to convey a true impression of
+the facts to English readers?
+
+....................................................................
+....................................................................
+....................................................................
+
+Your assistance in this matter will be gratefully received.
+
+ Respectfully submitted,
+ EDWARD ATKINSON.
+
+To this circular I received twenty-four detailed replies, containing
+statistics mostly very complete; also many suggestive letters, in
+every case giving full support to the general views which I had
+submitted in the proof sheets. It has been impossible for me to give
+individual credit within the limits of a magazine article to the
+gentlemen who have so fully supplied the data. Space will only permit
+me to submit a digest of the more important facts in a table derived
+from these replies:
+
+ -------------+-----------------------------------------+-------------
+ | FROM RETURNS MADE TO MY INQUIRY. |From United
+ |----------------+----------+-------------|States report
+ NAME. | Area of State. | Arable. | Suitable to | in wheat,
+ | | | wheat. | 1897.
+ -------------+----------------+----------+-------------+-------------
+ Minnesota | 84,287 | 66,000 | 50,000 | 7,189
+ South Dakota | 76,000 | 42,500 | 40,000 | 4,187
+ North Dakota | 74,312 | 50,000 | 50,000 | 4,300
+ Illinois | 56,000 | 54,000 | 20,000 | 2,292
+ Missouri | 68,000 | 64,000 | 64,000 | 2,448
+ Wisconsin | 56,000 | 35,000 | 35,000 | 961
+ |----------------+----------+-------------+------------
+ | 414,599 | 311,500 | 259,000 | 21,372
+ |================+==========+=============+===========
+ Texas | 269,694 | 200,000 | 100,000 | 700
+ California | 158,360 | 54,000 | 30,000 | 5,062
+ Montana | 145,310 | 30,000 | 25,000 | 109
+ Idaho | 87,000 | 30,000 | 15,000 | 192
+ |----------------+----------+-------------+------------
+ | 660,364 | 314,000 | 170,000 | 6,063
+ |================+==========+=============+============
+ Total | 1,074,963 | 625,500 | 429,000 | 27,435
+ -------------+----------------+----------+-------------+------------
+
+I do not give the data of the Eastern and Southern States, and I have
+selected only the most complete data of the other States, choosing the
+more conservative where two returns have been made from one State.
+
+The foregoing States produced a little over one third of the wheat
+crop of 1897. They comprise a little over one third the area of the
+land of the United States, excluding Alaska.
+
+The list covers States like Illinois, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, now
+very fully occupied relatively to Texas, Montana, and Idaho, as yet
+but sparsely settled.
+
+Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, Oregon, and
+Washington combined far exceed the above list in wheat production;
+but, as I have no complete data from these States, I can only say that
+the national or census statistics, as far as they go, develop
+corresponding conditions to those above given. The very small product
+of Texas and Montana, even of Idaho, as compared with the claimed
+potential, will attract notice, and perhaps excite incredulity. But
+let it be remembered that in 1880 the Territory of Dakota yielded less
+than 3,000,000 bushels of wheat, while in 1898 the two States of North
+and South Dakota, formerly in one Territory, claim to have produced
+100,000,000 bushels. Perhaps it will then be admitted that the
+potential of Montana, and even of Idaho, may be attained in some
+measure corresponding to the reports from those States; but as yet
+their product is a negligible quantity, as that of Dakota was only
+twenty years since.[9]
+
+Again, let it be remembered that Texas will produce a cotton crop,
+marketed in 1898-'99, above the average of the five ante-war crops of
+the whole country, and nearly equal to the largest crop ever grown in
+the United States before the war. Texas could not only produce the
+present entire cotton crop of the United States but of the world, on
+but a small part of her land which is well suited to cotton. When
+these facts are considered, perhaps the potential of that great State
+in wheat and other grain, in cattle and in sheep, as well as in
+cotton, may begin to be comprehended.
+
+The writer is well aware that this treatment of a great problem is
+very incomplete, but it is the best that the leisure hours of a very
+busy business life would permit. If it discloses the general ignorance
+of our resources, the total inadequacy of many of our official
+statistics, the lack of any real agricultural survey, and the
+necessity for a reorganization and concentration of the scientific
+departments of the Government as well as of a permanent census bureau,
+it will have served a useful purpose.
+
+If it also serves to call attention to the meager average crops and
+the poor quality of our agriculture as a whole down to a very recent
+period, it may suggest even to those to whose minds the statistics of
+the past convey but gloomy and "doubtful views" of the future, that
+the true progress in scientific agriculture could only begin when
+substantially all the fertile land in the possession of the Government
+had either been given away or otherwise distributed. So long as "sod
+crops" and the single-crop system yielded adequate returns to
+unskilled farmers, no true science of agriculture could be expected,
+any more than a large product of wool can be hoped for in States where
+it has been wittily said that "every poor man keeps one cur dog, and
+every d--d poor man keeps two or more."
+
+Finally, if I shall have drawn attention to the very effective work
+which is being done in the agricultural experiment stations by men of
+first-rate ability, I shall have drawn attention to a great fact. This
+work has already led to a complete revolution from the old practice
+of maltreating land, and to the renovation of soils that had been
+partially exhausted. Governor Henry A. Wise, of Virginia, long since
+condemned the old methods of Southern agriculture by telling his
+hearers, "The niggers skinned the land and the white men skinned the
+niggers." We are changing all that by new and progressive methods. I
+hope that in this recognition of the work of the experiment stations I
+shall have made some return for the attention which has been given to
+my inquiry by so many of my correspondents that the space assigned me
+forbids a list of my authorities being given by name.
+
+When the suggestion is made from the Department of Agriculture that
+all that science has yet accomplished has been to stop a tendency to a
+lessened production from the land now under the plow, and when it is
+even suggested that in 1930 the present meager average of crops per
+acre may still exist, it seems to me that little credit is given to
+the good work already accomplished in the short period in which the
+separate Department of Agriculture has been represented in the
+Cabinet, especially in the last five or six years, while the
+suggestion itself shows very little consideration of the great work of
+the experiment stations.
+
+Unless it can be proved that my correspondents and myself have entered
+into a conspiracy to mislead the public in dealing with the potential
+of this country in wheat production, nearly all the deductions from
+the figures of the past must be considered mere statistical rubbish.
+These statistics cover sections and States in which wheat should never
+be grown or attempted in competition with the true wheat soils and
+climate. As well might misplaced iron furnaces, built to boom city
+lots where there are no favorable conditions for the production of
+iron, be included in an average and held up as a standard of our
+potential in iron and steel production.
+
+In my efforts to discover the rule of progress in the arts and
+occupations of the people of this country, it has become plain that in
+ratio to the application of science and invention to every art the
+quantity of product is increased, the number of workmen is relatively
+diminished, the price of the product tends to diminish, while the
+wages or earnings of those who do the work are augmented. I have
+investigated many branches of industry, and find evidence conclusive
+to my own mind that such is the law of industrial development. This
+rule is subject to temporary variations under the restriction of
+statutes. In my own judgment, the so-called protective principle or
+policy of interference with commerce by imposing fines on foreign
+imports has retarded the progress of the specially protected arts, and
+has in some measure obstructed the diversity of manufactures; but the
+opposite policy of absolutely free trade in our domestic traffic over
+a greater area and among a much larger number of people than have
+elsewhere secured their own liberty has been so much more potent in
+its progressive influence as to have lessened the evils of the
+restrictions on foreign trade.
+
+According to my observation, all the efforts to regulate railroad
+charges by State legislation and under the interstate commerce act
+have greatly retarded the progress of the railway, and have deprived
+great States, notably Texas, of any service at all commensurate to the
+demand which might otherwise have been supplied to the mutual benefit
+of the owners of the railways and the inhabitants of the State. The
+most serious retarding influence, especially evil in its effect upon
+farmers, was the useless panic of 1893, caused by the silver
+craze--that is to say, by the effort to enact a force bill by which
+the producers of our great crops would have been compelled to accept
+money of half the purchasing power of that to which their industry had
+been long adjusted. This caused a temporary paralysis of industry, in
+which I think none suffered so much as the farmers of the country.
+
+But admitting these temporary variations, I find the same rule
+governing the products of the farm that governs the mine, the factory,
+and the workshop--namely, a lessening of the number occupied in ratio
+to the product; a great reduction in the cost of labor; an increased
+return in due proportion of the skill and intelligence of the farmer;
+a rapid reduction in the farm mortgages, ending at the present date in
+making the farmers of the grain-growing States the creditors of the
+world, especially those occupied upon wheat.
+
+But in the development of this progress we find the reverse of the
+practice in the factory and the workshop. The most important
+applications of science and invention led first to what might be
+called the manufacture of wheat on an extensive method of making a
+single crop on great areas of land. That phase has about spent its
+force; the great farms are in process of division; the single-crop
+system has about ended; the intensive system of making a larger
+product from a lessened area with alternation and variation in crops
+is rapidly taking the place of former methods.
+
+Therefore, while many branches of manufacturing tend more and more to
+the collective method, the tendency in agriculture is more and more to
+individualism in dealing with the land itself, coupled with collective
+ownership in the more expensive farm machinery, in creameries, cheese
+factories, and the like. We are apparently at a halfway stage in this
+revolution of agriculture. The intelligent and intensive methods of
+breeding cattle and sheep is also rapidly taking the place of the
+semibarbarous conditions of the ranch.
+
+If these points are well taken, the very suggestion that we must
+compute the land which should be under the plow in 1890 in order to
+supply the needs of 130,000,000 people on the basis of the imperfect
+statistics and inadequate data of the past, becomes almost an
+impertinence. It is much more probable that the 400,000 square miles
+which now meet the needs of 75,000,000 people, with an enormous excess
+for export, will in 1930 still suffice for the domestic supply of
+130,000,000 people, with a proportionate export corresponding to the
+present.
+
+If the product of the farms of the West now yielding the largest
+crops, or of the renovated lands of the South now yielding the best
+crops, be taken as the average standard of the near future, as they
+should be, then it may be true in 1930, as it is now, that one fifth
+of the arable land of this country when put under the plow will still
+suffice for all existing demands, the remainder of our great domain
+extending the promise of future abundance and welfare to the yet
+greater numbers who will occupy the land a century hence.
+
+I may add that in the course of a very friendly correspondence with
+Sir William Crookes, while we are still at variance in our estimates
+of the area which may be converted to the production of wheat in this
+country without trenching upon any other product, we are wholly at an
+agreement on a most material point. I quote from one of his letters:
+"Under the present wasteful method of cultivation there will be in a
+limited number of years an insufficient supply of wheat. Apply
+artificial fertilizers judiciously, and the supply may be increased
+indefinitely." I would only venture to add to the judgment of so
+eminent a writer the words "or natural," to the end that the paragraph
+should read, "Apply artificial or natural fertilizers judiciously, and
+the supply can be increased indefinitely."
+
+Many years ago I was asked among others, "What would be the next great
+discovery of science or invention?" To which I replied, "A supply of
+nitrogen at low cost." Has not that discovery been made in the recent
+development of the functions of the bacteria which, living and dying
+upon the leguminous plants, dissociate the nitrogen of the atmosphere
+and convert it through the plant to the renovation of the soil? Is not
+the invention of methods of nitrifying the soil by distributing the
+germs of bacteria one of the most wonderful discoveries of science
+ever yet attained? Can any one yet measure the potential of any given
+area of land in any part of this country in the production of any one
+of its great crops? That there is a limit may be admitted. Can any one
+venture to say that any of our average crops yet approach beyond a
+small fractional measure the true limit of production, whatever it may
+be, either in cotton, maize, wheat, or any other product of the soil?
+
+In this, as in many other developments of the theory of evolution, the
+factor of mental energy, which is the prime factor in all material
+production, may have been or is almost wholly ignored. We are ceasing
+to treat the soil as a mine subject to exhaustion, but we have as yet
+made only a beginning in treating it as an instrument of production
+which will for a long period respond in its increasing product in
+exact ratio to the mental energy which is applied to the cultivation
+of the land.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[9] I have been permitted to review the detailed statements of the
+accounts of one of the great enterprises which I have called the
+manufacture of wheat on a large scale on various large farms,
+separated one from another but under one control, aggregating more
+than twenty thousand acres, in North Dakota. They are managed mainly
+from a long distance through agents and foremen, therefore at a
+relative disadvantage compared to a farmer owning his own land, acting
+as his own foreman, and saving heavily in expense. Such farmers,
+making no charge for their own time, are computed to have a cash
+advantage of one dollar an acre.
+
+A large part of this land has been cropped in wheat for twenty-four
+years, one farm of six thousand acres showing an average in excess of
+eighteen bushels per acre for the term of seventeen years. The details
+of the product of other farms are not given, but this may be
+considered a rule. Of course, this cropping can not be carried on
+indefinitely. The land is now being allowed to rest, and other crops,
+such as maize, oats, barley, millet, and timothy, are to some extent
+being raised in rotation, but not to the extent in which individual
+wheat farms are now passing into rotation, especially in Minnesota.
+
+In this enterprise the manufacture of wheat is the main purpose, but
+under the changed conditions on the small farms in Minnesota wheat is
+becoming rather the cash or excess crop in a rotation of four; at
+present, in North Dakota, wheat constitutes about three fourths the
+total product.
+
+In these accounts of this great farm are included all charges of every
+name and nature except what might be called the rent of land: the
+labor, the harvesting and thrashing, the general expense including the
+foreman and all other charges; the office expenses, the taxes, the
+insurance, and, when summer fallow is introduced, the cost of the
+summer fallow. Suffice it that these figures for 1898--a year of high
+charge for seed and one which yielded a fraction over the average in
+product--prove conclusively an average of all charges of less than
+five dollars an acre for the cost of the product. In different years
+under these conditions the cost of the wheat varies from a little over
+twenty cents to approximately thirty-five cents per bushel. The cost
+of oats, which are cultivated with the wheat mainly for use on the
+farms, ranges from ten to fifteen cents per bushel.
+
+These are facts. The pending question in this discussion is, How much
+land, occupied by owners but not now in use, is there in this section
+of the country on which similar results can be attained, with better
+results by individual farmers who possess mental energy and practical
+skill? The figures given by the chiefs of the agricultural experiment
+stations may rightly be taken in the solution of this question.
+
+
+
+
+THE COMING OF THE CATBIRD.
+
+BY SPENCER TROTTER.
+
+
+In southeastern Pennsylvania there comes a day in February that brings
+with it an indefinable sense of joyousness. A southerly wind wanders
+up the Delaware with a touch of the spring in its air that quickens,
+for the first time, the slumbering life. It is then that those
+mysterious forces in the cells of living things begin their subtle
+work--hidden in the dark, underground storehouses of plants and the
+sluggish tissues of animals buried in their winter sleep. On such a
+day the ground hog ventures from his burrow, some restless bee is
+lured from the hive to wander disconsolate over bare fields, a snake
+crawls from its hole to bask awhile in the sunshine, and one looks
+instinctively for the first breaking of the earth that tells of the
+early crocus and the peeping forth of daffodils. The southerly wind is
+more apt than not to be a telltale, for with all its springtime
+softness it is drawing toward some storm center, near or remote, that
+will inevitably follow with rough weather in its sweep. The country
+folk rightly call such a day a "weather breeder," and even the ground
+hog knows its portent in the very sign of his shadow. Come as it will,
+the day is really a day borrowed in advance from the spring, as though
+to hearten one through all the dreary days that will follow and, in
+starting the growing forces of vegetation, to make ready for the
+season's coming.
+
+With this forerunner of the year come the harbingers of the bird
+migration. With the rise of the temperature to sixty or over, a
+well-marked bird wave from the south spreads over the Delaware Valley.
+On this balmy, springlike day we hear for the first time since
+November the croaking of grackles as a loose flock wings overhead or
+scatters among the tree tops. A few robins may show themselves, and
+the mellow piping of bluebirds lends its sweet influence to the charm
+of such a day. There is a sense of uncertain whereabouts in the
+bluebird's note, a sort of hazy, in-the-air feeling that suggests sky
+space. It does not seem to have the tangible element by which we can
+locate the bird as in the voices of the robin and the song sparrow. It
+is on such a day as this that song sparrows are first heard--cheery
+ditties from the weather-beaten fences and the bare, brown tangle of
+brier patches. The day may close lurid with the frayed streamers of
+lofty cirrus clouds streaking across the sky--the vaporous overflow of
+a coming storm--or a week of the same bright weather may continue with
+the wind all the while blowing softly out of the south, but sooner or
+later the inevitable winter storm must close this foretaste of the
+spring.
+
+A decided wave of rising temperature usually reaches the Delaware
+Valley from the middle to the last of March, maintaining itself longer
+than the February rise, and ushering in a well-marked bird wave. It is
+about this time that the vanguard of the robin migration scatters over
+the country. The grackles or crow blackbirds, which have been more or
+less in evidence since their first appearance in February, begin
+renovating the old nests or laying the foundations of new ones in the
+tops of tall pines. The shrill call of the flicker sounds through the
+woods, and before the end of the month one is sure to hear the
+plaintive song of the field sparrow. This is about the time that the
+spicebush shows its yellow blossoms through the grays and browns of
+the spring underwoods, and the skunk cabbage unfolds its fresh, green
+leafage in rank abundance along the boggy course of woodland rills. A
+week earlier the streaked yellow and purple of its fleshy spathes
+shows here and there in the oozy ground by the side of the folded leaf
+spikes. It is just at this time, too, that one must go to the woods
+for the first spring wild flowers--bloodroot, hepatica, anemones, and
+the yellow dog-tooth violet--if one would get the real freshness of
+spring into his soul. The crows, that all through the winter filed
+away each evening in straggling lines of flight toward the distant
+roost, have broken ranks, and go rambling in small groups through the
+woods and over the fields of green winter wheat. Like the grackles,
+they have thoughts of courtship and the more earnest business of
+family cares. The liquid notes of meadow larks sound clear and sweet
+in the greening fields and pastures, and small flocks of vociferous
+killdeers scatter in wheeling flight over the newly plowed lands. In
+tangle covers the rustle of dead leaves here and there tells of the
+whereabouts of a flock of fox sparrows halting in their northward
+pilgrimage. The pewee is back, inspecting her last year's house under
+the span of some old bridge, and the melancholy voice of the dove is
+borne on the air from the fence rows and cedars along the farther side
+of fields.
+
+After the 1st of April the tide of migration sets in with force, and
+the earlier waves bring several species of summer birds--those that
+come to build and breed in our woods--that rarely if ever make their
+appearance before this time. It is an interesting fact that none of
+the migrants that make their first appearance in April are ever found
+in the Delaware Valley during the winter, though several, if not all,
+of the species that come on the March waves are occasionally met with
+in the winter months. It appears, further, that the winter quarters of
+certain birds which are summer residents with us and some that are
+transient, passing on to more northern breeding grounds, lie not so
+very far to the south. If the last of March has been marked by warm
+weather lapping over into the first days of April, then one may expect
+soon to hear the familiar notes of the chipping sparrow from the
+swelling branches of garden shrubbery and the trees about the lawn,
+and a brown thrasher is sure to be heard volubly proclaiming his
+arrival from some near-by tree top. Among the budding sprigs of
+thickets the elusive chewink breaks into occasional fragments of song,
+and from the red-blossomed maples and the jungle of pussy willows and
+alders that fringe the meadow brook the metallic creaking notes of the
+red-winged blackbirds sound not unpleasingly. This jargon of the
+red-wing has a true vernal ring about it, suggesting the fresh green
+of oozy bogs and the loosening up of sap.
+
+From the middle to the last of April there are several big waves of
+migration that bring many of the summer residents as well as some
+transient species, forerunning the greater waves that are to follow in
+May. On certain warm April days the barn and the bank swallows appear,
+and the chimney swifts are seen scurrying to and fro above the trees
+and house tops. These are genuine signs of the coming summer, for
+swallows and swifts feed only on the minute gnats and other ephemera
+that develop under conditions of warm temperature. Whoever knows of a
+martin box that year after year is visited by its colony has an
+unfailing source of delight at this time in watching the lovely birds.
+The martins are very prompt in their arrival, rarely coming before the
+1st of April nor later than the 10th. We are aware for the first time
+that the house wren has come back by the voluble song that greets us
+some morning from the branches just beyond our window--a song that
+only the lover of his own rooftree can fully appreciate, for the
+wren's chant, more than any other bird song, seems to voice the home
+instinct in a man. By the last week of April the woods are fast
+closing up their vistas in a rich profusion of unfolding leafage. The
+umbrellalike leaves of the May apple are scattered everywhere through
+the woods and fields, forming conspicuous patches of green. During
+this last week of the month a few straggling thrushes make their
+appearance--the hermit thrush with its russet tail, the veery, and the
+wood thrush. The first two are transients, flitting through the
+underwoods or rustling among fallen leaves in search of their insect
+food. To hear the incomparable matins and vespers of the hermit one
+must follow to the bird's breeding range on the wooded slopes of the
+Appalachians or farther into the deep recesses of the Canadian
+forests. The wood thrush breeds with us, and the melody of its notes
+adds a peculiar charm to our groves and woodlands that would leave an
+unfilled blank in the choir if the bird were a transient like the
+hermit or the veery.
+
+From the 1st to the 10th of May a succession of bird waves comes from
+the south of such vast proportions as to the number of individuals and
+variety of species that all the previous migratory waves seem
+insignificant in comparison. It is the flood tide of the migration,
+bringing with it the host of warblers, vireos, orioles, tanagers, and
+thrushes that suddenly make our woods almost tropical in the variety
+of richly colored species and strange bird notes. It would take a
+volume to describe the wood warblers, sylvan nymphs of such bizarre
+color patterns and dainty forms that one is fain to imagine himself in
+the heart of some wondrous forest of a far-away land. Their curious
+dry notes, each different in its kind and expression, yet all of the
+same insectlike quality; their quick, active motions, now twisting
+head downward around the branches, prying into every nook and cranny
+in their eager search for food, or fluttering about the clusters of
+leaves, add to the strange effect. Their names, too, are richly
+stimulative to the color sense--the black-throated green, the
+black-throated blue, the chestnut-sided, the bay-breasted, the black
+and yellow, the cerulean, the Blackburnian, the blue-winged yellow,
+the golden-winged, the blue-yellow-backed or parula warbler, and the
+Maryland yellow-throat are each suggestive of a wealth of coloring.
+Others have names that carry us to southern realms, like the myrtle
+and the palm warblers; and others again tell of curious habits, as the
+worm-eating warbler, the hooded fly-catching warbler, and the black
+and white creeping warbler that scrambles about the tree trunks like a
+true creeper. There is nothing in all the year quite like the May
+woods. Then, if never again, you can step from your dooryard into an
+enchanted forest. The light yellowish effects of new green in the
+feathery masses of the oak catkins and the fresh, unfolding leafage of
+the forest trees are a rich feast to the eyes. Against this wealth of
+green the dogwood spreads its snow-white masses of bloom. In sunlit
+spaces of greenness the scarlet flash of a tanager, the rich blue
+coloring of the indigo bird, newly arrived from its winter quarters in
+South America, and the glimpse of a rose-breasted grosbeak among the
+high tree tops are strangely suggestive of a tropical forest. The ear,
+too, is charmed with a multitude of curious notes. The weird cries of
+the great-crested flycatcher among the topmost branches, and the loud
+chant of the ovenbird with its rising cadence coming from farther
+depths of the wood are two of the most characteristic bird voices of
+the May woodlands. If one would have the famous song of the mocking
+bird in this sylvan carnival he has only to loiter in the nearest
+grove to hear the wonderful performance of the catbird. The catbird is
+the real harbinger of summer. He is familiar throughout the
+countryside, liked or disliked according to the dispositions of folks,
+but when he appears amid the May-day throng every one knows that
+summer has come. As a countryman once said to me: "You can't place any
+dependence on the robin--it may snow the very day he comes; but a
+catbird never makes a mistake--it's summer with him for sure."
+
+The passing on of the great warbler waves to the north and the ending
+of the migration likewise mean the passing of the spring. It is summer
+any time after the 15th of May, or, to be more accurate, after the
+last of the migratory warblers, thrushes, and tanagers have passed
+beyond our woods. To a New-Englander summer will come a little later,
+nearer the true almanac date of June 1st. To a dweller in Virginia the
+last of April is the passing of spring and the advent of summer.
+
+Some ten or more years ago several enthusiastic ornithologists living
+in the neighborhood of Philadelphia began keeping records of the times
+of arrival of the different species of birds, and at the same time
+noted the conditions of temperature in relation to the abundance of
+individuals. After several years of these observations they were able
+to see clearly that these bird waves were directly related to the
+waves of rising temperature marking the advent of warm spells of
+weather. One of the most significant facts deduced from these
+observations was the remarkable regularity in the first appearance of
+certain species. For example, the Baltimore oriole in eight years of
+observation never arrived before the 1st of May, and only twice later
+than the 4th--viz., once on the fifth and once on the 7th. The list on
+the opposite page shows the date of first arrivals extending over a
+period of eight years, from 1885 to 1892.[10]
+
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------+
+ | 1885. | 1886. | 1887. | 1888. |
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------|
+ Flicker | April 10 | Mar. 24 | Mar. 26 | Mar. 30 |
+ Chimney swift | April 22 | April 23 | April 22 | April 20 |
+ Hummingbird | April 29 | May 12 | May 12 | May 14 |
+ Kingbird | May 6 | May 11 | May 7 | May 6 |
+ Crested flycatcher | May 2 | May 12 | May 3 | May 1 |
+ Pewee | April 3 | Mar. 20 | Mar. 21 | Mar. 22 |
+ Wood pewee | May 6 | May 15 | April 30 | May 13 |
+ Red-winged | | | | |
+ blackbird | Mar. 4 | Feb. 19 | Feb. 19 | Feb. 21 |
+ Meadow lark | ....... | Feb. 10 | Mar. 19 | Mar. 21 |
+ Baltimore oriole | May 5 | May 4 | May 2 | May 2 |
+ Purple grackle | Mar. 16 | Mar. 7 | Feb. 19 | Feb. 21 |
+ Chipping sparrow | April 8 | April 9 | April 8 | Mar. 31 |
+ Field sparrow | April 11 | April 7 | April 9 | April 2 |
+ Chewink | April 22 | April 23 | April 27 | April 18 |
+ Indigo bird | May 16 | May 11 | May 7 | May 12 |
+ Scarlet tanager | May 9 | May 12 | May 5 | May 8 |
+ Barn swallow | April 22 | April 19 | April 21 | April 12 |
+ Red-eyed vireo | May 7 | May 11 | May 4 | April 29 |
+ Black-and-white | | | | |
+ warbler | April 30 | May 4 | April 27 | April 21 |
+ Yellow warbler | May 6 | May 4 | May 2 | May 5 |
+ Myrtle warbler | May 2 | April 10 | May 2 | April 25 |
+ Black-throated | | | | |
+ green warbler | May 2 | May 11 | May 5 | April 26 |
+ Ovenbird | April 30 | May 3 | April 29 | April 30 |
+ Maryland | | | | |
+ yellow-throat | April 29 | April 24 | April 28 | April 30 |
+ Chat | May 2 | May 12 | May 5 | May 5 |
+ Redstart | May 2 | May 4 | May 3 | May 1 |
+ Catbird | May 2 | May 4 | May 3 | May 5 |
+ Brown thrasher | April 24 | April 25 | April 28 | April 15 |
+ House wren | May 3 | April 27 | April 24 | April 28 |
+ Wood thrush | May 2 | May 1 | May 1 | May 1 |
+ Veery | ....... | May 11 | April 25 | May 3 |
+ Hermit thrush | April 13 | April 7 | April 9 | April 3 |
+ Robin | Mar. 7 | Mar. 10 | Feb. 28 | Feb. 19 |
+ Bluebird | Mar. 18 | ....... | Feb. 17 | Feb. 21 |
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------+
+
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ | 1889. | 1890. | 1891. | 1892.
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ Flicker | Mar. 28 | Mar. 26 | Mar. 30 | April 2
+ Chimney swift | April 15 | April 22 | April 16 | April 27
+ Hummingbird | ....... | May 7 | May 11 | .......
+ Kingbird | May 6 | May 14 | May 1 | May 4
+ Crested flycatcher | May 8 | May 1 | April 30 | May 3
+ Pewee | Mar. 27 | Mar. 27 | Mar. 31 | April 3
+ Wood pewee | May 12 | May 14 | May 6 | May 17
+ Red-winged | | | |
+ blackbird | Mar. 13 | Mar. 12 | Feb. 25 | Mar. 9
+ Meadow lark | Mar. 14 | Mar. 12 | Feb. 23 | Mar. 17
+ Baltimore oriole | May 7 | May 1 | May 1 | May 3
+ Purple grackle | Mar. 2 | Feb. 13 | Feb. 18 | Mar. 6
+ Chipping sparrow | Mar. 29 | April 8 | April 13 | April 4
+ Field sparrow | Mar. 29 | Mar. 13 | Mar. 15 | Mar. 26
+ Chewink | April 11 | May 1 | April 18 | April 24
+ Indigo bird | May 12 | May 10 | May 8 | May 10
+ Scarlet tanager | May 9 | May 4 | April 28 | May 3
+ Barn swallow | April 22 | April 19 | April 19 | April 24
+ Red-eyed vireo | May 5 | April 30 | May 2 | May 3
+ Black-and-white | | | |
+ warbler | April 20 | April 30 | April 24 | May 1
+ Yellow warbler | May 11 | May 1 | May 8 | May 4
+ Myrtle warbler | April 20 | April 27 | April 18 | April 7
+ Black-throated | | | |
+ green warbler | May 5 | May 2 | April 19 | April 30
+ Ovenbird | May 3 | May 3 | April 29 | April 30
+ Maryland | | | |
+ yellow-throat | May 6 | April 30 | May 1 | May 3
+ Chat | May 11 | May 5 | May 1 | May 3
+ Redstart | May 4 | May 3 | April 29 | April 30
+ Catbird | May 5 | May 5 | May 4 | April 30
+ Brown thrasher | April 22 | April 30 | April 19 | April 30
+ House wren | April 14 | April 30 | April 19 | May 5
+ Wood thrush | May 3 | April 30 | April 23 | May 2
+ Veery | May 6 | May 2 | April 28 | May 4
+ Hermit thrush | April 10 | April 13 | April 12 | April 3
+ Robin | Mar. 7 | Feb. 26 | Feb. 24 | Mar. 9
+ Bluebird | Mar. 8 | Feb. 23 | Feb. 17 | Mar. 9
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+---------
+
+Another fact of great interest which bears on the south-to-north
+movement of migrating birds, and which these observations very clearly
+brought out, was the earlier appearance of individuals of various
+species at points nearer the river, the first arrival of the same
+species at points back from the river being, in many instances,
+several days later. The first report of the arrival of a given species
+usually came from a low, marshy tract of land immediately bordering
+the western shore of the Delaware. The second report came from a
+locality several miles back of the eastern shore of the river, but
+situated in the low plain of the river valley and within tide-water
+limits. The third report came from a place some miles back from the
+river on the uplands, but near the head of a stream emptying into the
+Delaware from the west. The last two places to report arrivals were
+situated farther up the river and some distance back from it. All this
+confirms the general idea that in migrating most, if not all, of the
+various land birds follow river valleys and invade the upland
+districts, lying back from either side, by way of the smaller
+tributaries.
+
+The fact of greatest importance resulting from these observations was
+that relating to temperature. It was found that there was always a
+marked increase in the number of individuals of a given species
+following a warm wave of temperature as marked by a decided rise of
+the thermometer. The following graphic representation, based on the
+abundance from day to day of three common and easily observed
+species--the brown thrasher, chipping sparrow, and flicker--affords an
+interesting illustration of the relative movements of the two waves.
+It will be understood that the numbers in the extreme left-hand column
+refer to the relative abundance of individuals of the three species
+collectively. The inside column refers to temperature. The period of
+observation was twenty days, as shown by the line across the top of
+the figure.[11]
+
+[Illustration: A, migration; B, temperature.]
+
+The advent of spring is marked by the northward progression of the
+isotherm of 42.8° F., which is the initial temperature required to
+awaken the dormant reproductive and germinating activities in animals
+and plants. With the gradual invasion of the United States, from the
+south northward, by temperatures above this, there passes over the
+different regions the ever-old but ever-new panorama of the spring
+with its opening blossoms, its unfolding green, and its waves of
+migrating birds. The restlessness produced by the periodic development
+of the reproductive function under the stimulus of increased
+temperature causes the highly organized bird life to spread out from
+its winter quarters, wherever those may be, and follow the zone of new
+green that steadily widens northward with its increase of food supply
+in the form of myriads of insects. The comparative regularity in the
+recurrence of this phenomenon year after year is attested by the
+observations just noted. Each species has a certain, definite
+physiological relation to temperature, and its migratory movement
+toward the breeding ground is determined by the movement of the
+isotherm of this temperature. Just as warm a spell of weather may
+occur in early April as in the first week of May, but it does not
+represent the permanent summer rise; and the majority of the warblers,
+the catbird, the tanager, the rose-breasted grosbeak, the two species
+of oriole, the vireos, and the kingbird, are rarely if ever seen in
+abundance in the Delaware Valley before the 1st of May. The migratory
+movement of such species is as regular as any other periodic
+phenomenon in Nature.
+
+It is hard to realize the enormous multitude of birds that form a
+so-called "wave." During the whole period of migration there is a
+general northward movement of all the migratory species, but under the
+influence of warm spells of weather this more or less uniform movement
+rises into a vast wavelike sweep of birds. These bird waves, as
+already noted, _follow_ the rise of temperature appearing at any given
+locality about a day or two after the first day of the warm spell.
+Many species of land birds migrate at night--such, for example, as the
+orioles, tanagers, warblers, vireos, wrens, the majority of the
+finches, the woodpeckers, and the thrushes, excepting the robin.
+During the passing of one of the May waves the darkness overhead is
+alive with flying birds. One may stand for hours at a time and hear
+the incessant chirping and twittering of hundreds of birds calling to
+one another through the night as though to keep from getting
+separated. The great mass of individuals are probably guided by these
+call notes.
+
+The usually accepted notion that birds migrate from south to north in
+traveling to their breeding grounds is largely true of shore birds and
+waterfowl, but among many of the species of land birds conditions of
+topography tend to deflect a direct northward movement. The Atlantic
+coast plain, reaching up into southern New Jersey, and the Mississippi
+basin, each offers a broad south-to-north highway for birds leaving
+the Gulf shores of the United States on their northward journey in the
+spring. A great majority of species find in the wilderness of the
+Appalachian highland, from the Catskills to Georgia, breeding grounds
+quite as well adapted to their needs as the forests of Maine and
+Canada. Large numbers of birds, according to their regional relations,
+will constantly turn from the Atlantic coast plain up the numerous
+rivers, which become great highways of migration, leading to the
+highlands. The northward movement has thus a large westerly deflection
+on the Atlantic slope of the middle United States. It is also quite
+certain that many birds winter in favorable localities on the Atlantic
+coast plain much farther north than is generally supposed. This is
+especially true of the holly thickets among the coastwise sand dunes
+of southern New Jersey and the cedar swamps and pine barrens in the
+vicinity of Cape May. Many of the finches, the marsh wrens,
+red-winged blackbirds, meadow larks, thrashers, and myrtle warblers
+are frequently seen in these localities through the winter. I spent
+one first day of February some years ago among the dunes below
+Atlantic City, N. J. At Philadelphia that morning it was bleak winter
+weather, but two hours later we found ourselves in a warm expanse of
+sunlight on the seaward beaches. The balmy air was filled with bird
+notes, and the holly thickets and bay bushes fairly swarmed with
+myrtle warblers. It seems to be a fact that many birds thus make
+comparatively short migratory movements between the seacoast plain and
+the mountains, up and down the river valleys.
+
+The phenomenon of the migrating bird has always appealed in a
+wonderful manner to the human mind. The guiding geographical sense
+that all animals, and wild animals and birds in particular, possess is
+peculiarly attractive to men of civilized society, because they have
+largely lost this same natural instinct of direction, and now look
+upon it in wonderment. Birds have very sure landmarks; their senses
+are keen for noting features of topography. They undoubtedly know the
+Potomac, the Susquehanna, the Delaware, the Hudson, and the
+Connecticut, and never confuse one with another. They know to which
+side the sea lies and that the rivers flow down from a wild, wooded
+region where there are plenty of food and the best possible places to
+raise their young. All these facts get fixed in their brains. The
+bird's brain-cell structure is built on these lines and is only
+waiting to get the impressions of the first migratory experience. They
+keep in with one another, follow their chirpings in the night, learn
+to tell the Hudson from the Delaware, or where this or that stretch of
+woodland lies, just as they learned when first out of the nest how to
+tell good from bad sorts of food, or how to find their way about the
+home woods, and that an owl or a fox was an undesirable acquaintance.
+In the fall migration the young birds follow the older ones in the
+general movement southward, and are often belated, showing that the
+impulse to leave their birthplaces is forced upon them, rather from
+necessity than choice, and is not the well-developed instinct
+impressed by former experience which their elders seem to possess. The
+old birds who have bred and reared these young ones set the example of
+early departure which the birds of the year through inexperience are
+tardy in appreciating. The habit waits upon experience.
+
+Each year, from midwinter, when the first warmth of advancing sunlight
+calls to the sleeping life, on to the first fervid heat of the
+reproductive summer, we have the joyous pageant of the spring. This
+steady waxing of the new light appealed to the pagan mind of western
+Europe with a far deeper sense than the modern mind can appreciate. To
+our rude ancestors it was the goddess Eástre, bountiful in her gift
+of warmth and the magic of reproductive life, that each year came with
+the light to drive away the frost giants. And with the goddess, whom
+we still love to picture as a maiden tripping lightly through the
+budding groves in her wind-blown garments, came the birds. It was the
+cuckoo that brought the summer with "daisies pied and violets blue,"
+and to-day, when its voice is heard for the first time in the year,
+every one knows that summer has come again to the hedgerows of England
+and the lands of the Rhine. So with us across the Atlantic, summer
+comes when the catbird first pours out its babel of sweet notes in
+green woodland ways and the tangled nooks of old gardens.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[10] The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Prepared under
+the direction of the Delaware Valley Ornithological Club. By Witmer
+Stone. Philadelphia, 1894.
+
+[11] Stone. The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
+
+
+
+
+GUESSING, AS INFLUENCED BY NUMBER PREFERENCES.
+
+BY F. B. DRESSLAR.
+
+
+About two years ago a certain progressive clothing company of Los
+Angeles, California, procured a very large squash--so large, indeed,
+as to attract much attention. This they placed uncut in a window of
+their place of business, and advertised that they would give one
+hundred dollars in gold to the one guessing the number of seeds it
+contained. In case two or more persons guessed the correct number, the
+money was to be divided equally among them. The only prerequisite for
+an opportunity to guess was that the one wishing to guess should walk
+inside and register his name, address, and his guess in the notebook
+kept for that purpose.
+
+The result of this offer was that 7,700 people registered guesses, and
+but three of these guessed 811, the number of seeds which the squash
+contained.
+
+It occurred to me that a study of these guesses would reveal some
+interesting number preferences, if any existed, for the conditions
+were unusually favorable for calling forth naïve and spontaneous
+results, there being no way of approximating the number of seeds by
+calculation, and very little or no definite experience upon which to
+rely for guidance. It seemed probable, therefore, that the guesses
+would cover a wide range, and by reason of this furnish evidence of
+whatever number preference might exist. It is undoubtedly safe to
+assume, too, that the guesses made were honest attempts to state as
+nearly as possible best judgments under conditions given; but even if
+some of the guesses were more or less facetiously made, the data would
+be equally valuable for the main purpose in hand.
+
+According to the theory of probability, had there been no preference
+at all for certain digits or certain combinations of digits within
+the limits of the guesses, one figure would occur about as often as
+another in units' or tens' place. It was argued, therefore, that any
+marked or persistent variation from such regularity in such a great
+number of cases would reveal what might be termed an unconscious
+preference for such numbers or digits for these places.
+
+The purpose of this study, then, was to determine whether or not there
+existed in the popular mind, under the conditions offered, any such
+preferences.
+
+After the very arduous and tedious task of collating and classifying
+all the guesses for men and women separately had been done, the
+following facts appeared:
+
+In the first place, marked preference is shown for certain digits both
+for units' and tens' places. This statement is based on a study of the
+6,863 guesses falling below one thousand. Of these, 4,238 were made by
+men and 2,625 were made by women. By tabulations of the digits used in
+units' place by both men and women, the following facts have been
+determined: 800 used 9, while but 374 used 8; 1,070 used 7, and 443
+preferred 6; 881 used 5, and only 295 preferred 4; 862 chose 3, while
+331 used 2; 577 ended with 1, while 1,230 preferred 0 as the last
+figure.
+
+A tabulation of the figures used in tens' place shows, save in the
+case of 2 and 3, where 2 is used oftener than 3, the same curious
+preferences, but in a much less marked degree. To go into detail, 850
+chose 9 for tens' place, while 559 took 8; 907 used 7, while only 637
+selected 6; 748 took 5, while only 536 used 4; 601 used 3, and 634
+chose 2; 728 used 1, as against 872 who used 0.
+
+Were it not that the selections here in the main correspond with the
+preferences shown in units' place, the significance of these figures
+would be much less important; but the evidence here can not wholly be
+ignored when taken in connection with the facts obtained in the
+preferences shown in the case of the figures occupying units' place.
+
+We are enabled, then, as a result of the study of these guesses, to
+say that under the conditions offered, aside from a preference of 0
+over 1 to end the numbers selected, digits representing odd numbers
+are conspicuously preferred to those representing even numbers. How
+far this will hold under other conditions can not now be stated, but
+the facts here observed are of such a nature as to suggest the
+possibility of an habitual tendency in this direction. However,
+further investigations can alone determine whether or not this bias
+for certain numbers is potent in a general way.
+
+The curve on the next page, exhibiting the results noted above, shows
+at a glance the marked and persistent preference for the odd numbers.
+
+It will be noticed that of the digits preferred, 7 surpasses any of
+the others. Not only, then, do we tend to select an odd number for
+units' place when the guess ranges between one and a thousand, but of
+these digits 7 is much preferred. In connection with this fact one
+immediately recalls all he has heard about 7 as a sacred number, and
+its professed significance in the so-called "occult sciences." I think
+one is warranted in saying from an introspective point of view that
+there is a shadow of superstition present in all attempts at pure
+guessing. There appears to be some unexpressed feeling of lucky
+numbers or some mental easement when one unreasoned position is taken
+rather than any other.
+
+[Illustration: CHOICE OF DIGITS IN TENS' AND UNITS' PLACES (MEN AND
+WOMEN).
+
+Vertical distance shows the number of times the figure on the
+horizontal line immediately below was used.]
+
+It is impossible on the evidence furnished by this study to give more
+than hints at the probable reason for the preference here indicated.
+But it is worth while to glance backward to earlier conditions, when
+the scientific attitude toward all the facts of life and mind was far
+more subordinated to supernatural interpretations than it is to-day.
+In this way we may catch a thread which still binds us to habits
+formed in the indefinite past.
+
+The Greeks considered the even numbers as representative of the
+feminine principle, and as belonging and applying to things
+terrestrial. To them the odd numbers were endowed with a masculine
+virtue, which in time was strengthened into supernatural and celestial
+qualities. The same belief was prevalent among the Chinese. With them
+even numbers were connected with earthly things, partaking of the
+feminine principle of Yang. Odd numbers were looked upon as proceeding
+out of the divine and endued with the masculine principle. Thirty was
+called the number of earth, because it was made up by the addition of
+the even numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10. On the other hand, 25, the sum of
+the five odd numbers 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9, was called the number of
+heaven.
+
+It is generally true that, as lower peoples developed the need of
+numbers and the power to use them, certain of these numbers came to be
+surrounded with a superstitious importance and endued with certain
+qualities which led at once to numerical preferences more or less
+dominant in all their thinking connected with numbers.
+
+It would certainly be unjustifiable to conclude from the evidence at
+hand that the preferences shown in the guesses under consideration are
+directly traceable to some such superstition; and yet one can scarcely
+prevent himself from linking them vaguely together. Especially is this
+true when some consideration is given to a probable connecting link as
+shown in our modern superstitious notions. I have found through a
+recent study of these superstitions that where numbers are introduced,
+the odd are used to the almost complete exclusion of the even. For
+example, I have collected and tabulated a series of more than sixty
+different superstitions using odd numbers, and have found but four
+making use of the even. Besides these specific examples there are many
+more which in some form or another express the belief that odd numbers
+have some vital relation with luck both good and bad.
+
+It would be impossible to define precisely or even approximately just
+what sort of a mental state the word "luck" stands for, but one
+element in its composition is a more or less naïve belief in
+supernatural and occult influences which at one time work for and at
+another time against the believer. In its more pronounced forms, the
+belief in luck lifts itself into a sort of a blind dependence upon
+some ministering spirit which interposes between rational causes and
+their effects. In a way one may say that the more or less vague and
+shadowy notions of luck which float in the minds of people to-day are
+but the emaciated and famishing forms of a once all-embracing
+superstition, and that these shadows possess a potency over life and
+action oftentimes beyond our willingness to believe.
+
+There is another interesting and somewhat curious thing to be noticed
+in connection with these guesses. There is a persistent tendency to
+the duplication of digits, or, if one thinks of the numbers as at
+first conceived in terms of language, a tendency to alliteration. For
+example, the numbers 111, 222, 333, 444, 555, 666, 777, 888, and 999
+occur oftener by sixty-seven per cent than any other combination
+possible in the tens thus represented. That is to say, other things
+equal, one would have a right to expect 334 or 332 to occur as often
+as 333. But the fact is, in this particular case, 333 occurred
+forty-eight times, while the other two put together occurred only
+three times. Here, however, we have the combined influence of the
+preference for the odd over the even and the digital sequence. Still,
+if we select 444, we find that this number, made up though it is of
+three digits in general least selected of all, the preference for
+alliterative effect is strong enough to make the number occur 28 times
+to 14 times for both 443 and 445. If we take 777, we find that it was
+used more times than all the other combinations from 770 to 779
+inclusive, put together.
+
+Therefore, under conditions similar to those presented for these
+guesses, one would be safe to expect these duplicative or alliterative
+numbers to occur much oftener than any other single number in the
+series.
+
+It would evidently be unsafe to generalize upon the basis of this
+study, notwithstanding the large number of guesses considered.
+However, it seems to me that the results here obtained at least
+suggest a field of inquiry which promises interesting returns. If it
+be true, as here suggested, that odd numbers are preferred by
+guessers, advantage could be taken of this preference in many ways.
+Furthermore, as I suspect, it may be that this probable preference
+points to a habit of mind which more or less influences results not
+depending strictly on guessing. It has been shown, for example, that
+the length of criminal sentences has been largely affected by
+preferences for 5 or multiples of 5--that is to say, where judges have
+power to fix the length of sentence within certain limits, there is a
+strong probability that they will be influenced in their judgments by
+the habitual use of 5 or its multiples. Here it would seem that
+unconscious preference overrides what one has a right to consider the
+most careful and impartial judgments possible, based upon actual and
+well-digested data.[12]
+
+Another thing is noticeable in these guesses. The consciousness of
+number beyond 1,000 falls off very rapidly. The difference in the
+values of 1,000 and 1,500 seems to have had less weight with the
+guessers than a difference of 50 had at any place below 1,000. And so,
+in a way, 1,000 seems to mark the limit of any sort of definite mental
+measurement. This fact is more and more emphasized as the numbers
+representing the guesses increase until one can see there exists
+absolutely no conception of the value of numbers. For example, many
+guessed 1,000,000, while several guessed more than 10,000,000.
+Guessing means, with many people, no attempt at any sort of reasonable
+measurement, but rather an attempt to express their guess in such a
+way as to afford them the greatest amount of mental relief. And this
+relief can not be wholly accomplished without satisfying number
+preferences. Therefore, guessing is likely to exhibit, in a greater or
+less degree, some habitual lines of preference subject to
+predetermination. It may be that much practical advantage has been
+taken of these facts in games of chance where number selections play
+an important part.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[12] See H. Le Poer. Influence of Number in Criminal Sentences.
+Harper's Weekly, May 14, 1896.
+
+
+
+
+CONCERNING WEASELS.
+
+BY WILLIAM E. CRAM.
+
+
+[Illustration: A Weasel standing on the ground]
+
+Why is it that while popular fancy has attributed all sorts of uncanny
+and supernatural qualities to owls and cats, and that no ghost story
+or tale of horrid murder has been considered quite complete without
+its rat peering from some dark corner, or spider with expanded legs
+suddenly spinning down from among the rafters, no such grewsome
+association has ever attached itself to the weasels, creatures whose
+every habit and characteristic would seem to suggest something of the
+sort? Now, fond as I am of cats, I should never think of denying that
+they are uncanny creatures, to say the least. But, suppose it was the
+custom of our domestic tabbies to vanish abruptly or even gradually on
+occasion, like the Cheshire cat after its interview with Alice, that
+would at least furnish some excuse for the general prejudice against
+them, but would really be no more than some of our commonest weasels
+do whenever it serves their purpose. I remember one summer afternoon I
+was trout-fishing along a little brook that ran between pine-covered
+hills. As I lay stretched on the bank at the foot of a great maple I
+saw a weasel run along in the brush fence some distance away. A few
+seconds later he was standing on the exposed root of the tree hardly a
+yard from my eyes. I lay motionless and examined the beautiful
+creature minutely, till suddenly I found myself staring at the smooth
+greenish-gray root of the maple with no weasel in sight. Judging from
+my own experience, I should say that this is the usual termination of
+any chance observations of either weasels or minks.
+
+Occasionally they may be seen to dart into the bushes or behind some
+log or projecting bank, but much more frequently they vanish with a
+suddenness that defies the keenest eyesight.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel lying on a branch]
+
+In all probability this vanishing is accomplished by extreme rapidity
+of motion, but if this is the case then the creature succeeds in doing
+something utterly impossible to any other warm-blooded animal of its
+size. Mice, squirrels, and some of the smaller birds are all of them
+swift enough at times, but except in the case of the humming bird none
+of them, I believe, succeed in accomplishing the result achieved by
+the weasels. The humming bird, in spite of its small size, leaves us a
+pretty definite impression of the direction it has taken when it darts
+away; but when a mink, half a yard in length and weighing several
+pounds, stands motionless before one with his dark coat conspicuous
+against almost any background, and the next instant is gone without a
+rustle or the tremor of a blade of grass, it leaves one with an
+impression of witchcraft difficult to dispel; and best appreciated
+when one sees it for one's self. Nor is the everyday life of the
+weasel quiet or commonplace; his one object in life apparently is to
+kill, first to appease his hunger, then to satisfy his thirst for warm
+blood, and after that for the mere joy of killing.
+
+[Illustration: A white weasel]
+
+The few opportunities I have had for observing these animals have
+never shown them occupied in any other way, nor can any hint of
+anything different be gained from the various writers on the subject,
+while accounts of their attacking and even killing human beings in a
+kind of blind fury are too numerous and apparently well authenticated
+to be entirely ignored. These attacks are said usually to be made by a
+number of weasels acting in concert, and the motive would appear to be
+revenge for some injury done to one of their number. There seems to be
+something peculiar about the entire family of weasels. The American
+sable or pine marten is said to have strange ways that have puzzled
+naturalists and hunters for years. In the wilderness no amount of
+trapping has any effect on their numbers, nor do they show any
+especial fear of man or his works, occasionally even coming into
+lumber camps at night and being especially fond of old logging roads
+and woods that have been swept by fire; but at the slightest hint of
+approaching civilization they disappear, not gradually, but at once
+and forever, and the woods know them no more. If there is anything in
+the theory of the survival of the fittest, why is it that not one
+marten has discovered that, like other animals of its size, it could
+manage to live comfortably enough in the vicinity of man? The mink and
+otter still follow the course of every brook and river and manage to
+avoid the keen eyes of the duck hunter, while for six months in the
+year their paths are sprinkled with steel traps set either especially
+for them or for the more plebeian muskrat. If a pair of sables could
+be persuaded to take up their quarters in some parts of New England
+they could travel for dozens of miles through dark evergreen woods
+with hollow and decaying trees in abundance, while at present there
+are almost no traps set in a manner that need disturb creatures of
+their habits. Partridges, rabbits, and squirrels, which form their
+principal food, are nearly if not quite as abundant as before the
+country was settled, so that it would certainly not require any very
+decided change of habits to enable them to exist, but evidently the
+root of the matter goes deeper than that, and, like some tribes of
+Indians, it is impossible for them to multiply or flourish except in
+the primeval forest.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel on the ground]
+
+The common weasel or ermine, which is the only kind I have seen
+hereabouts, would seem to have everything on its side in the struggle
+for existence, and when one happens to be killed by some larger
+inhabitant of the woods it must be due entirely to its own
+carelessness. Nevertheless, they do occasionally fall victims to owls
+and foxes, and I once shot a red-tailed hawk that was in the act of
+devouring one. Still, these casualties among weasels are probably few
+and far between. Fortunately, however, they never increase to any
+great extent. Occasionally in the winter the snow for miles will be
+covered with their tracks all made in a single night, and then for
+weeks not a track is to be seen; but usually they prefer to hunt
+alone, each having its beat a mile or more in length, over which it
+travels back and forth throughout the season, passing any given point
+at intervals of two or three days. This habit of keeping to the same
+route instead of wandering at random about the woods is
+characteristic of the family, the length of the route depending to a
+certain extent on the size of the animal. The mink is usually about a
+week in going his rounds, and may cover a dozen miles in that time,
+while the otter is generally gone a fortnight or three weeks. When it
+is possible the ermine prefers to follow the course of old tumble-down
+stone walls, and lays its course accordingly. In favorable districts
+he is able to keep to these for miles together, squeezing into the
+smallest crevices in pursuit of mice or chipmunks. All the weasels
+travel in a similar manner--that is, by a series of leaps or bounds in
+such a way that the hind feet strike exactly in the prints made by the
+fore paws, so that the tracks left in the snow are peculiar and bear a
+strong family resemblance. On soft snow the slender body of the ermine
+leaves its imprint extending from one pair of footprints to the next,
+and as these are from four to six feet apart, or even more, the
+impression left in the snow is like the track of some extremely long
+and slender serpent with pairs of short legs at intervals along its
+body. I have said that the ermine is the only true weasel I have found
+in this vicinity, but this is not strictly true, at least I hope not.
+One winter I repeatedly noticed the tracks of an exceedingly large
+weasel--so very large, in fact, that I was almost forced to believe
+them to be those of a mink. The impression of its body in the snow was
+quite as large as that made by a small mink, but the footprints
+themselves were smaller, and the creature appeared to avoid the water
+in a manner quite at variance with the well-known habits of its more
+amphibious cousin, while, unlike the common weasel, it never followed
+stone walls or fences. I put my entire mind to the capture of the
+little beast, and set dozens of traps, but it was well along in the
+month of March before I succeeded. It proved to be a typical specimen
+of the Western long-tailed weasel, though I can find no account of any
+other having been taken east of the Mississippi. Its entire length was
+about eighteen inches; the tail, which was a little over six, gave the
+effect at first glance of being tipped with gray instead of black, but
+a closer inspection showed that the black hairs were confined to the
+very extremity and were partly concealed by the overlying white ones;
+the rest of the fur was white, with a slight reddish tinge, and much
+longer and coarser than that of an ermine. Since then I have
+occasionally seen similar tracks, but have not succeeded in capturing
+a second specimen. In all probability the least weasel is also to be
+found here if one has the patience to search carefully enough; none,
+however, have come under my observation as yet. All the small weasels
+that I have seen have proved on close inspection to be young ermines
+with thickly furred black-tipped tails; in the least weasel the tail
+is thinly covered with short hair and without any black whatever. Late
+in the autumn or early in the winter the ermine changes from
+reddish-brown to white, sometimes slightly washed with greenish-yellow
+or cream color, and again as brilliantly white as anything in Nature
+or art; the end of the tail, however, remains intensely black, and at
+first thought might be supposed to make the animal conspicuous on the
+white background of snow, but in reality has just the opposite effect.
+Place an ermine on new-fallen snow in such a way that it casts no
+shadow, and you will find that the black point holds your eye in spite
+of yourself, and that at a little distance it is quite impossible to
+follow the outline of the weasel itself. Cover the tail with snow, and
+you can begin to make out the position of the rest of the animal, but
+as long as the tip of the tail is in sight you see that and that only.
+The ptarmigan and northern hare also retain some spot or point of dark
+color when they take on their winter dress, and these dark points
+undoubtedly serve the same purpose as in the case of the ermine.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel catching a bird]
+
+An old hunter, one of the closest observers of Nature I have ever
+known, once told me that female minks hibernated in winter in the same
+manner as bears, though it was his belief that, unlike the bears, they
+never brought forth their young at that season. At first I refused to
+take the slightest stock in what he said; the whole thing appeared so
+absurd and so utterly at variance with the teachings of those
+naturalists who have made the closest possible study of the habits of
+minks. Since then, however, I have kept my eyes open for any hint that
+might have the slightest bearing on the subject, and to my surprise
+have found many things that would seem to point to the correctness of
+the old hunter's theory. To begin with, he said that late in the
+winter he had repeatedly known female minks to make their appearance
+from beneath snow that had lain undisturbed for days or even weeks,
+the tracks apparently beginning where he first observed them, the
+difference in size between the two sexes being sufficient to make it
+easy to distinguish between their tracks at a glance; and, moreover,
+since he first began trapping he had noticed that while the sexes were
+about equally abundant in the autumn, the females always became very
+scarce at the approach of winter and remained so until spring, when
+they suddenly increased in numbers and became much the more abundant
+of the two.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel on a log]
+
+This is also the experience of trappers in general, and may be
+verified by any one who cares to take the trouble to look into the
+matter. Evidently no one has ever discovered a mink in a state of
+hibernation; at any rate, no such case appears ever to have been
+reported; but this does not necessarily prove that it is not a regular
+habit among them.
+
+The cry of the mink is seldom heard, even in places where they are
+fairly abundant, as they have evidently learned that the greatest
+safety lies in silence. It is a peculiarly shrill, rattling,
+whistlelike scream, that can be heard at a considerable distance.
+
+
+
+
+CARE OF THE THROAT AND EAR.
+
+BY W. SCHEPPEGRELL, A. M., M. D.,
+
+PRESIDENT WESTERN OPTHALMOLOGIC AND OTO-LARYNGOLOGIC ASSOCIATION, NEW
+ORLEANS, LA.
+
+
+Hygiene is that branch of medical science which relates to the
+preservation and improvement of the health. As the prevention of
+disease is more important than its cure--in fact, superior to all
+methods for its cure--this is a subject which demands our most earnest
+attention. Hygiene is not limited to the preservation and improvement
+of the health of the individual, but includes that of whole
+communities. As, however, the health of a community depends upon the
+state of the health of the various families composing it, and this
+again of its members, the proper understanding of the hygienic laws by
+each individual is of the utmost importance.
+
+For some reason, however, the subject of hygiene or the prevention of
+disease does not create the enthusiasm caused by methods advocated for
+its cure. A Koch, who publishes to the world a supposed means of
+curing tuberculosis, or a Behring, who introduces the serum therapy of
+diphtheria, arouses an interest which is limited only by the four
+corners of the world. The modest worker in sanitation, however, who
+explains the means of the development of these diseases, and the
+conditions and laws by means of which they may be prevented, is looked
+upon without interest and frequently with disfavor. But in spite of
+these conditions, the laws of hygiene are gradually becoming more
+farspread, and their influence is felt more with each advancing year.
+
+The nose, throat, and ear are so intimately connected with the other
+parts of the body that their health depends to a large extent upon the
+condition of the system in general. The laws of hygiene and their
+application which refer to the body in general are also applicable to
+these parts, and whatever condition benefits the former will have a
+useful influence on the upper respiratory passages, and, inversely,
+any injurious effect will injure the health of these organs.
+
+The physiology of this region is of much importance. Formerly the nose
+was considered principally in its relation to the organ of smell. This
+is a most important function, as it is a constant sentinel over the
+air we breathe and the food we eat. It is a curious circumstance that
+many of the functions that are referred to the organ of taste really
+belong to that of smell. In eating ice cream, for instance, the sense
+of taste simply informs us that it is sweet or otherwise, but the
+flavor is perceived only by the sense of smell. A proof of this is
+that where this function is destroyed, all ability in this direction
+disappears, and the patient thus affected will frequently complain
+that his sense of taste is defective, not realizing that it is the
+sense of smell which performs this act.
+
+The nose, however, has a much more important function to
+perform--viz., in respiration. Strange to say, however, this has only
+recently been realized, and it is even yet not well understood. You
+have all observed that, when you had a severe "cold" which prevented
+nasal breathing, the next morning the mouth and throat were dry and
+parched and frequently inflamed, the voice sometimes hoarse, and there
+was a general feeling of depression. While the progress of the
+inflammatory process may be a factor in this, still the mechanical
+obstruction of the nose from any cause whatsoever will have a similar
+effect. In patients in whom, for various reasons, an artificial
+opening has been made in the trachea, the air of the room has to be
+heated to an almost intolerable point and saturated with moisture, or
+severe bronchial inflammation will soon develop in the patient, simply
+because the nose has not taken an active part in the act of
+respiration. These effects, therefore, clearly demonstrate that the
+nasal passages have an important function to perform in the breathing
+process. Summarized in a few words, it is simply to warm, moisten, and
+clean the air which we inhale.
+
+The healthy nostrils are anatomically and physiologically so formed
+that when the current of air passes through them it will have been
+freed of its mechanical impurities, warmed to within a few degrees of
+the temperature of the body, and moistened to saturation. This has
+been experimentally demonstrated.
+
+The opening of the passage of the ear into the throat has several
+objects, the most important being ventilation and the adjustment of
+the atmospheric equilibrium. This passage leads outward until it
+enters the cavity of the middle ear, which is closed by the drum on
+the outside, thus separating it from the external canal of the ear. We
+know that atmospheric pressure varies at different times and in
+different altitudes. It is much less, for instance, at the top of a
+mountain than at the seaside. The opening into the throat allows the
+air to enter, and adjusts the atmospheric pressure within the ear to
+these various external conditions. Those of you who have ascended
+Lookout Mountain by means of the incline cable car may have noticed
+the adjustment taking place by a peculiar click when different
+altitudes were reached.
+
+So intimately are the nose, throat, and ear connected that it is
+unusual to find one affected to any considerable extent without the
+others being involved. While the rules of hygiene in general are
+applicable to the nose, throat, and ear, there are certain special
+conditions which deserve consideration. One of the most common causes
+of injurious effects to the nose, throat, and ear is the so-called
+"cold." The cold in this connection is, of course, understood to be
+simply the cause, the condition itself being a peculiar inflammation
+of the parts concerned. As cold is so frequently a cause of diseases
+of these parts, it would be well to consider under what circumstances
+it develops and the best mode of prevention.
+
+I have often noticed that persons who suffer most frequently and
+severely from colds usually insist that they exercise the greatest
+care to avoid exposure. They have dressed in the warmest clothing,
+wrapped the neck in the heaviest mufflers, remained in the closest
+rooms, and avoided every draught, and yet they continually "take
+cold." The street urchin, on the other hand, with only two or three
+garments and without shoes, and who lives out of doors, suffers less
+frequently from this affection.
+
+"Colds" have truly been called a product of modern civilization. The
+trouble was rare among the aborigines and is more common among the
+cultured than among the laboring classes. If we make a plant an
+exotic, we must keep it in the conservatory, and even here it is not
+free from danger. On the other hand, if we wish to harden it and make
+it proof against atmospheric and climatic changes, we must prepare it
+by judicious exposure for these conditions. The warm clothing which is
+thought to be a protection against cold is frequently the most fertile
+cause. It relaxes the body, moistens the skin, and the perspiration
+which is induced especially prepares the unresisting body for its
+attacks. This applies especially to warm covering around the neck, to
+which the air has periodic access. Except in unusually severe weather,
+the throat requires no more covering or protection than the face.
+
+The method of having only two systems of underclothing, the heavy to
+be worn until it is quite warm, and _vice versa_, is also a source of
+danger. There should be three changes: one of the lightest texture for
+the warm weather of summer, a medium for spring and fall, and the pure
+wool for winter, which in this climate need not be very heavy.
+Waterproof shoes, rubbers, furs, etc., are not recommended for
+customary use, and should be worn only when absolutely indicated.
+
+The best preventive of recurrent colds is the judicious use of the
+sponge or cold shower bath. The ordinary bath should usually be of a
+temperature not disagreeable to the body, but after the question of
+cleanliness has been attended to, an application, either by means of a
+sponge or shower, of ordinary cold water should be made. This should
+be of short duration, and friction with a coarse towel follow at once.
+When properly conducted, a reaction sets in so that there is no danger
+from this, and the toning effect of the method is of the utmost value
+in the prevention of colds. This applies, of course, only to persons
+in ordinarily good health. Even in these cases there are rare
+occasions in which this method is not advisable, and it may on general
+principles be stated that it should not be used by persons who do not
+react promptly. As stated, however, the application of cold water
+should be only momentary. The daily application of cold water to the
+throat and chest is also a useful practice for strengthening these
+parts.
+
+In addition to these means there are certain injurious conditions that
+it would be well to avoid. One almost universally present in large
+cities is that of dust. The constant inhalation of the small particles
+of sand and of organic impurities of which dust is composed has an
+irritating effect on the delicate lining of the nose and throat, which
+may develop a chronic inflammation, resulting in injury to both the
+throat and ear. This evil, however, can be prevented by the artificial
+watering of our streets.
+
+Excessive tobacco smoking produces injurious effects in the nose and
+throat. Of all forms of smoking, the cigarette is the most injurious,
+and allowing the smoke to pass through the nostrils the most
+dangerous. Occasionally ladies inhale the smoke of a closed room
+where the male members of the household are smoking, and this is
+injurious to a delicate throat.
+
+Loud and excessive talking is sometimes a factor in throat diseases.
+The former is more apt to be exercised in transit in our steam or
+electric cars, and members of the theatrical profession realize this
+so well that they rarely use their voice while traveling. In excessive
+talking, in addition to the mechanical wear and tear of the throat,
+the respiration is usually spasmodic, a combination that is likely to
+lead to evil results. At puberty, when the voices of boys and girls
+are changing, the former sometimes almost an octave and the latter
+usually a note or two, special care should be taken of the voice, and
+singing or vocal exercises should be discontinued until the change has
+been finally established.
+
+The effect of singing on the throat is of much interest, but it is one
+of such an extensive character that it can be only casually referred
+to here. The exercise required in singing improves the healthy throat
+in the same manner that exercise benefits the body in general. The
+diseased throat, however, may be injured by this practice, as no form
+of vocal culture can remedy a mechanical interference in its action.
+The method of singing is also of the utmost importance; an erroneous
+one may not only injure a promising voice, but may also have a bad
+effect on a normal throat. The subject of register requires careful
+consideration. The placing of the voice in the wrong register is
+fruitful of evil; the ambition of the singer to reach a few notes
+higher or lower than her range may also work severe injury to the
+throat.
+
+The throat may be improved or strengthened by any of the forms of
+exercise, especially the out-of-door, which have been advised for the
+health in general. In addition to this, breathing exercises are of
+special value. These consist of taking deep inhalations through the
+nose, holding the breath for a few seconds and then gently expiring
+it, the body in the meanwhile being free from all restraint from tight
+clothing. The practice of this exercise for five minutes mornings and
+evenings will have a remarkable effect in developing the chest and
+throat.
+
+In order to anticipate serious complications, children should be
+taught to allow their mothers to examine their throats freely and
+without resistance. I feel especially the importance of this subject,
+as I have frequently seen children almost sacrificed on account of the
+nervous dread of having their throats examined, or by their inability
+to control themselves. The method is exceedingly simple: the child is
+placed facing a bright window, and the handle of a spoon placed on the
+tongue and so depressed that the posterior part of the throat can be
+distinctly seen. At first this may be difficult, but the child soon
+becomes accustomed to the manipulation and the throat may then be
+examined without difficulty. Another advantage of this procedure is
+that the mother becomes familiar with the normal appearance of the
+throat, and can easily note any change due to disease.
+
+In view of the important function of the nose in warming, cleaning,
+and moistening the inspired air, the greatest care should be taken to
+teach children to breathe through the nostrils. When only a portion of
+the air enters through the mouth, the irritation is not as marked as
+when all the air is inhaled in this manner, but it nevertheless
+develops a condition of chronic irritation which is easily recognized
+by one familiar with its appearance, and which may lead to important
+complications. In many cases, mouth breathing is not due to habit, but
+to some obstruction in the nostrils or throat. These cases form a
+proper subject for the consideration of the physician. After the
+removal of any existing obstruction, children will sometimes, from
+force of habit, continue to breathe through the mouth, but this can
+usually be overcome by attention and firmness on the part of the
+parents.
+
+The prevention of grave throat diseases, such as diphtheria,
+necessarily forms a subject of much interest to the public in general
+and to mothers in particular. The causation of this disease has been
+much cleared up in later years, and we now know that the important
+factor is a bacillus--a small organism of the vegetable kingdom--which
+is the cause of this disease and a necessary material for its
+propagation. Bacteriologic investigations have shown that the
+so-called "membranous croup" is in by far the largest number of cases
+identical with diphtheria, and the same precautions which apply to the
+latter should therefore also be carried out in this disease.
+
+As diphtheria is strictly an infectious disease, and one which must be
+directly or indirectly contracted from a similar case, there is no
+sanitary reason why this dreaded malady in the course of time should
+not be entirely eliminated from the earth. In view of the fact that
+diphtheria is so frequently present in our larger cities, this may
+appear at present a Utopian idea. It is not so many years ago,
+however, when smallpox was almost universal, and yet we now but rarely
+have it in our midst. Not only is this the case, but the health
+authorities are severely criticised when a number of these cases
+exist, as indicating that there has been a lack of watchfulness in
+carrying out certain well-known means of prevention.
+
+While we have at the present time no means of inoculation that will
+permanently protect against infection from diphtheria, still it is not
+of such an infectious character as smallpox, as the cases are usually
+limited to children, and its spread may therefore be more easily
+prevented. Not only should children who have had diphtheria be
+prevented from returning to school until infection is no longer
+possible, but other children of the same household should also be kept
+at home. A few years ago a certain school in this city was rarely
+without a case of diphtheria among its pupils for many months. I am
+convinced that had the principal of the school or the parents insisted
+upon the other children of the infected household remaining at home,
+the spread in this direction would have been arrested and much
+suffering avoided.
+
+When a patient has recovered from diphtheria, thorough disinfection is
+a most important measure. Unfortunately, however, many persons
+consider it a hardship if articles which can not be disinfected are
+destroyed, and many will even use every endeavor to prevent the
+representatives of the Board of Health from carrying out their
+regulations. In this way the germ of the disease remains on the
+premises, and under suitable conditions again finds another victim in
+the household. To illustrate this, I recall an instance some years ago
+in which I was called in consultation to see a most malignant case of
+diphtheria. The little patient fortunately recovered, and the premises
+were thoroughly disinfected, the parents being anxious to avoid any
+repetition of the dreaded malady. Five months later, however, a
+younger child became ill, and was found to have diphtheria. In view of
+the vigorous efforts which had been made to disinfect the house
+thoroughly, and of the fact that the child could not have contracted
+it elsewhere, not having left its home for several weeks, the cause at
+first appeared a mystery. Careful inquiry, however, soon elicited a
+fact which clearly explained the case. The first patient had used a
+mouth-organ just before its illness, and when this was abandoned, the
+toy was carelessly thrown on the top of a bookcase, the nature of the
+child's illness at the time not being known. The second child, just
+before its illness, had accidentally found this toy and used it
+frequently. This experience explains the necessity of disinfection in
+all its details, and also illustrates the tenacious character of the
+germ which produces this disease.
+
+Our knowledge of the specific cause of scarlet fever is not as
+complete as that of diphtheria, but we have much useful information
+which is of importance from a hygienic standpoint. As in diphtheria,
+the specific poison is probably produced in the throat of the patient,
+and may therefore be spread by the dried secretion from the mouth and
+throat. The most common means of contagion, however, is the skin,
+which peels off in the later stage of the disease, infection being
+produced by the inhalation into the nostrils of some of the diseased
+particles.
+
+A predisposing factor which applies alike to diphtheria and all other
+throat affections is the abnormal condition of the nose and throat.
+When these important parts are in an unhealthy condition, where mouth
+breathing exists and other conditions inimical to normal health, the
+patient is more predisposed to all forms of maladies of this region,
+and the attack when developed is more apt to be of a serious
+character. The more ordinary forms of sore throat, such as tonsilitis,
+are frequently due to defects in the sanitary conditions and
+surroundings of the home. While modern sanitary plumbing, when
+properly constructed, adds much to the convenience of the household,
+it is a certain menace to all its members if, through improper
+construction or defective ventilation, decomposing matter collects in
+the waste pipes and vitiates the atmosphere of the rooms. Many
+recurrent cases of tonsilitis are due to this cause. Even the ordinary
+stationary washstands may be a source of danger, especially in the
+bedroom, unless thoroughly ventilated and care exercised that the
+traps are not filled with decomposing matter. A physician of large
+experience in this city is so imbued with the danger of this form of
+plumbing that he condemns it _in toto_. When well constructed and well
+ventilated, however, they can not be the source of danger in the
+household.
+
+Tuberculosis, which is responsible for so enormous a mortality,
+frequently also affects the throat as well as the lungs. Although it
+usually originates within the chest, it sometimes finds its primary
+origin in the throat, and in a large percentage of cases the throat
+affection forms a complication of tuberculosis of the lungs. In spite
+of the numerous remedies which have been advocated for the cure of
+this disease, it must be admitted that our chief reliance is in proper
+nourishment and climatic effects, and that hygiene is the sheet-anchor
+which will eventually rescue us from this terrible foe of the human
+race.
+
+Recent investigations tend to prove more and more that tuberculosis is
+inherited in but rare cases; that inheritance is simply a predisposing
+factor, and that the real cause is infection. As an illustration of
+this, all have seen instances in which there had been apparently no
+cases in a family for ten or fifteen years, when from some cause one
+case develops, and this is soon followed by other cases in the same
+family. Whatever rôle heredity may play in these cases, this simply
+shows that the first case produced the infectious material which found
+a suitable soil in the other members of the family and developed a
+similar disease. The inheritance theory has been the source of much
+injury by causing members of the afflicted family to submit to the
+apparently inevitable instead of instituting measures for its
+prevention. The infectious product in tuberculosis is not the breath,
+as is so frequently believed by the laity, but simply the
+expectoration which comes from the diseased lungs or throat. When this
+is allowed to come in contact with clothing or other material in the
+room, it becomes dry and loads the atmosphere with a dust which
+contains the infectious bacillus, which may cause a similar disease in
+a person predisposed by heredity or sickness to this affection.
+
+The germ of tuberculosis is the seed, and the predisposed person the
+soil, and it requires a combination of both to develop the disease. To
+illustrate the necessity of suitable conditions for the development of
+plants--for it is now almost universally admitted that the germ of
+tuberculosis is a micro-organism which belongs to the vegetable
+kingdom--I remember some years ago, while in North Europe, seeing in a
+hothouse a plant which is here commonly known as the "four o'clock."
+The gardener in charge of the conservatory considered it a remarkable
+plant, but difficult to propagate, and stated that it was absolutely
+impossible to raise it out of doors. In this part of the world,
+however, we know that this plant grows so easily that once established
+in a garden it is difficult to keep it within limits. In both of the
+cases we have the same seed, the difference being only in the soil and
+the conditions favorable for its development. The absence of either
+the seed or the soil will absolutely prevent tuberculosis, and if the
+laws of hygiene are properly carried out, both in destroying the seed
+and in preventing the formation of a suitable soil, favorable effects
+will soon be shown.
+
+Hygiene in regard to patients demands simply that the infectious
+character of the expectoration be destroyed. The vessels for this
+purpose should contain some disinfecting solution, should be cleaned
+regularly, and handkerchiefs, towels, or other material with which the
+expectoration has come in contact should be sterilized by being placed
+for at least half an hour in boiling water. This is necessary not only
+for those in the same room with the patient, but also for the patient,
+as it is quite possible that a former expectoration may produce
+reinfection of the patient himself.
+
+Another method of contracting tuberculosis is by means of animals,
+such as cows, used for food and milking, which are known to be subject
+to this disease. It has been shown in some localities that one cow out
+of every twenty-five was affected with tubercular disease. This
+suggests the importance of having competent veterinarians to examine
+not only the meat which is sold, but also the cows used for milking
+purposes. Where there is the slightest doubt as to the nature of the
+meat or milk, the former should be thoroughly cooked and the latter
+sterilized before using.
+
+In this connection it would be well to refer to the subject of
+spitting in street cars and in public places. While this nuisance is
+the subject of danger to every one in the street cars, especially in
+winter, when the windows are closed and a large amount of impurities
+is inhaled, it is more particularly so to ladies, whose skirts, in
+spite of every care, are soiled by the filthy expectoration, thus
+making them subject not only to the inhalation in the car, but also
+to carrying the infectious material to their homes.
+
+The danger of this condition is not merely speculative. It has been
+bacteriologically demonstrated that the organisms of various
+contagious diseases thus find a lodging place in our cars and public
+places, and experiments on animals, in which the inoculation has
+developed diseases, have shown that these organisms retain their
+vitality in these places and may propagate disease under favorable
+conditions.
+
+A factor in the spread of diseases of the throat and mouth that should
+not be overlooked is kissing. Unfortunately, this matter has usually
+been treated with much levity, and where a sanitarian is bold enough
+to condemn the habit he is frequently made the subject of all forms of
+ridicule in the public press.
+
+The tender lining of the lips, mouth, and throat, and its large blood
+supply, make it peculiarly susceptible to contagion, and I have no
+doubt that the habit of kissing is responsible for many cases of
+infection. Last year I noticed a lady coming from a house from which a
+diphtheria flag was flying, who walked to the corner to take the
+street car, when a nurse with a small child approached. The lady
+without hesitation stooped down and kissed the little child. As it is
+well known that a healthy person may transmit a disease without
+incurring the disease himself, this lady voluntarily risked the danger
+of inflicting this disease upon the innocent child. It is not an
+uncommon thing for nurses to kiss the children under their charge, and
+here in New Orleans even the colored nurses sometimes practice this
+habit, occasionally with the permission of the parents. In fact, a
+fashionable lady on one occasion told me, when I remonstrated with her
+about this, that she feared to hurt the feelings of the old nurse, who
+had been a valuable servant in the family for many years.
+
+How often this habit is productive of evil results is of course only
+speculation. I recall, however, an instance in which two small
+children of one family developed a specific disease which originated
+in the mouth and affected the whole system. Examination proved this to
+have been caused by a nurse, a white woman, who had been in the habit
+of kissing the children. If women will voluntarily incur risks
+by using kissing as a form of salutation in all stages of
+acquaintanceship, I would at least request that the innocent children
+be spared the possible consequences.
+
+The subject of the hygiene of the ear is so intimately connected with
+conditions influencing the nose and throat, which have already been
+explained, that but few words are needed to cover this part of my
+subject. In general, the best care of the ear is to leave it alone.
+Ear scoops are injurious; the ear should be cleaned simply on the
+outside, and nothing, as a rule, should be inserted into the external
+canal. I have seen many cases of abscess and the most severe
+inflammation due to endeavors to clean the ear with the omnipresent
+hairpin and other objects used for this purpose. The use of cotton in
+the ear in general is to be condemned. It produces an artificial
+condition in the outer canal of the ear which reduces its physical
+resistance and makes it more liable to injury from exposure. The ear
+is sometimes injured by the entrance of cold water. This happens
+occasionally during ordinary bathing, but more frequently in outdoor
+bathing and in swimming. In surf bathing, where the water is thrown up
+with considerable force, it is much more liable to enter the external
+orifice of the ear, and severe inflammation may originate from this
+cause.
+
+Salt water has been claimed to be more injurious than fresh, but my
+personal experience leads me to believe that it is more a question of
+temperature than of the quality of the water. Some years ago a large
+reservoir was built by an educational institute near this city, the
+water, which was quite cold even in summer, being supplied by an
+artesian well. The tank was used for bathing purposes, but earache
+soon became so frequent among the boys that the use of the reservoir
+for this purpose had to be entirely abandoned. In ordinary bathing,
+the entrance of water into the ear can easily be avoided. In swimming
+or surf bathing it is advisable to use a pledget of lamb's wool to
+close the opening of the ears. Ordinary cotton soon becomes saturated
+and is of no use in this connection, but the wool, which is slightly
+oily, forms an excellent protection in these cases.
+
+The "running ear" is a diseased condition which should not be tampered
+with by the inexperienced, but which should not be neglected. The old
+idea that the child will outgrow it, or that it is a secretion of the
+head which if interfered with would prove dangerous, has been fruitful
+of many cases of deafness and even more serious complications.
+
+Another condition to which I would call your attention is the
+incipient development of deafness in children. Where the capacity of
+hearing is quickly lowered from the normal to fifty per cent, it is so
+striking that the patient is much distressed and even confused. But
+when this change takes place insidiously from day to day, it is
+frequently not observed by either the patient or those around him
+until it has greatly advanced. Children thus affected hear only with
+difficulty and by straining certain small muscles of the ear, which
+soon become fatigued, and the child becomes listless and inattentive.
+I have seen numerous cases in which children have been severely
+punished for inattention, when this was due to defective hearing.
+Watchfulness and early attention in these cases will frequently
+prevent the more serious forms of deafness.
+
+
+
+
+THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE WEST INDIES.
+
+BY F. L. OSWALD.
+
+
+I.--THE FAUNA OF THE ANTILLES: MAMMALS.
+
+The study of the geographical distribution of plants and animals has
+revealed facts almost as enigmatical as the origin of life itself.
+Water barriers, as broad as that of the Atlantic, have not prevented
+the spontaneous spread of some species, while others limit their
+habitat to narrowly circumscribed though not geographically isolated
+regions.
+
+Tapirs are found both in the Amazon Valley and on the Malay Peninsula;
+the brook trout of southern New Zealand are identical with those of
+the Austrian Alps. Oaks and _Ericacea_ (heather plants) cover northern
+Europe from the mouth of the Seine to the sources of the Ural; then
+suddenly cease, and are not found anywhere in the vast Siberian
+territories, with a north-to-south range rivaling that of all British
+North America.
+
+But still more remarkable is the zoölogical contrast of such
+close-neighborhood countries as Africa and Madagascar, or Central
+America and the West Indian archipelago. The Madagascar virgin woods
+harbor no lions, leopards, hyenas, or baboons, but boast not less than
+thirty-five species of mammals unknown to the African continent, and
+twenty-six found nowhere else in the world.
+
+Of a dozen different kinds of deer, abundant in North America as well
+as in Asia and Europe, not a single species has found its way to the
+West Indies. The fine mountain meadows of Hayti have originated no
+antelopes, no wild sheep or wild goats.
+
+In the Cuban sierras, towering to a height of 8,300 feet, there are no
+hill foxes. There are caverns--subterranean labyrinths with countless
+ramifications, some of them--but no cave bears or badgers, no marmots
+or weasels even, nor one of the numerous weasel-like creatures
+clambering about the rock clefts of Mexico. The magnificent coast
+forests of the Antilles produce wild-growing nuts enough to freight a
+thousand schooners every year, but--almost incredible to say--the
+explorers of sixteen generations have failed to discover a single
+species of squirrels.
+
+The Old-World tribes of our tree-climbing relatives are so totally
+different from those of the American tropics that Humboldt's traveling
+companion, Bonplant, renounced the theory of a unitary center of
+creation (or evolution), and maintained that South America must have
+made a separate though unsuccessful attempt to rise from lemurs to
+manlike apes and men. Of such as they are, Brazil alone has
+forty-eight species of monkeys, and Venezuela at least thirty. How
+shall we account for the fact that not one of the large West Indian
+islands betrays a vestige of an effort in the same direction?
+
+More monkey-inviting forests than those of southern Hayti can not be
+found in the tropics, but not even a marmoset or squirrel-monkey
+accepted the invitation. In an infinite series of centuries not one
+pair of quadrumana availed itself of the chance to cross a sea gap,
+though at several points the mainland approaches western Cuba within
+less than two hundred miles--about half the distance that separates
+southern Asia from Borneo, where fourhanders of all sizes and colors
+compete for the products of the wilderness, and, according to Sir
+Philip Maitland, the "native women avoid the coast jungles for fear of
+meeting Mr. Darwin's grandfather."
+
+The first Spanish explorers of the Antilles were, in fact, so amazed
+at the apparently complete absence of quadrupeds that their only
+explanation was a conjecture that the beasts of the forest must have
+been exterminated by order of some native potentate, perhaps the great
+Kubla Khan, whose possessions they supposed to extend _eastward_ from
+Lake Aral to the Atlantic. The chronicle of Diego Columbus says
+positively that San Domingo and San Juan Bautista (Porto Rico) were
+void of mammals, but afterward modifies that statement by mentioning a
+species of rodent, the _hutia_, or bush rat, that annoyed the
+colonists of Fort Isabel, and caused them to make an appropriation for
+importing a cargo of cats.
+
+Bush rats and moles were, up to the end of the sixteenth century, the
+only known indigenous quadrupeds of the entire West Indian
+archipelago, for the "Carib dogs," which Valverde saw in Jamaica, were
+believed to have been brought from the mainland by a horde of
+man-hunting savages.
+
+But natural history has kept step with the advance of other sciences,
+and the list of undoubtedly aboriginal mammals on the four main
+islands of the Antilles is now known to comprise more than twenty
+species. That at least fifteen of them escaped the attention of the
+Spanish creoles is as strange as the fact that the Castilian cattle
+barons of Upper California did not suspect the existence of precious
+metals, though nearly the whole bonanza region of the San Joaquin
+Valley had been settled before the beginning of the seventeenth
+century. But the conquerors of the Philippines even overlooked a
+variety of elephants that roams the coast jungles of Mindanao.
+
+Eight species of those West Indian _incognito_ mammals, it is true,
+are creatures of a kind which the Spanish zoölogists of Valverde's
+time would probably have classed with birds--bats, namely, including
+the curious _Vespertilio molossus_, or mastiff bat, and several
+varieties of the owl-faced _Chilonycteris_, that takes wing in the
+gloom preceding a thunderstorm, as well as in the morning and evening
+twilight, and flits up and down the coast rivers with screams that
+can be heard as plainly as the screech of a paroquet. The _Vespertilio
+scandens_ of eastern San Domingo has a peculiar habit of flitting from
+tree to tree, and clambering about in quest of insects, almost with
+the agility of a flying squirrel. There are times when the moonlit
+woods near Cape Rafael seem to be all alive with the restless little
+creatures; that keep up a clicking chirp, and every now and then
+gather in swarms to contest a tempting find, or to settle some probate
+court litigation. San Domingo also harbors one species of those
+prototypes of the harpies, the fruit-eating bats. It passes the
+daylight hours in hollow trees, but becomes nervous toward sunset and
+apt to betray its hiding place by an impatient twitter--probably a
+collocution of angry comments on the length of time between meals. The
+moment the twilight deepens into gloom the chatterers flop out to fall
+on the next mango orchard and eat away like mortgage brokers. They do
+not get fat--champion gluttons rarely do--but attain a weight of six
+ounces, and the Haytian darkey would get even with them after a manner
+of their own if their prerogatives were not protected by the intensity
+of their musky odor. The above-mentioned _hutia_ rat appears to have
+immigrated from some part of the world where the shortness of the
+summer justified the accumulation of large reserve stores of food, and
+under the influence of a hereditary hoarding instinct it now passes
+its existence constructing and filling a series of subterranean
+granaries. Besides, the females build nurseries, and all these burrows
+are connected by tunnels that enable their constructors to pass the
+rainy season under shelter. They gather nuts, _belotas_ (a sort of
+sweet acorns), and all kinds of cereals, and with their _penchant_ for
+appropriating roundish wooden objects on general principles would
+probably give a Connecticut nutmeg peddler the benefit of the doubt.
+
+They also pilfer raisins, and a colony of such tithe collectors is a
+formidable nuisance, for the _hutia_ is a giant of its tribe, and
+attains a length of sixteen inches, exclusive of the tail. It is found
+in Cuba, Hayti, Jamaica, Porto Rico, Antigua, Trinidad, the Isle of
+Pines, Martinique, and two or three of the southern Bahama Islands,
+and there may have been a time when it had the archipelago all to
+itself. The Lucayans had a tradition that their ancestors found it on
+their arrival from the mainland, and in some coast regions of eastern
+Cuba it may still be seen basking in the sunlight--
+
+ "Sole sitting on the shore of old romance,"
+
+and wondering if there are any larger mammals on this planet.
+
+Its next West Indian congener is the Jamaica rice rat, and there are
+at least ten species of mice, all clearly distinct from any Old-World
+rodent, though it is barely possible that some of them may have stolen
+a ride on Spanish trading vessels from Central America.
+
+Water-moles burrow in the banks of several Cuban rivers, and two
+genera of aquatic mammals have solved the problem of survival: the
+bayou porpoise and the manatee, both known to the creoles of the early
+colonial era, and vaguely even to the first discoverers, since
+Columbus himself alludes to a "sort of mermaids (_sirenas_) that half
+rose from the water and scanned the boat's crew with curious eyes."
+
+Naturally the manatee is, indeed, by no means a timid creature, but
+bitter experience has changed its habits since the time when the
+down-town sportsmen of Santiago used to start in sailboats for the
+outer estuary and return before night with a week's supply of manatee
+meat. The best remaining hunting grounds are the reed shallows of
+Samana Bay (San Domingo) and the deltas of the Hayti swamp rivers. Old
+specimens are generally as wary as the Prybilof fur seal that dive out
+of sight at the first glimpse of a sail; still, their slit-eyed
+youngsters are taken alive often enough, to be kept as public pets in
+many town ponds, where they learn to come to a whistle and waddle
+ashore for a handful of cabbage leaves.
+
+Fish otters have been caught in the lagoons of Puerto Principe
+(central Cuba) and near Cape Tiburon, on the south coast of San
+Domingo, the traveler Gerstaecker saw a kind of "bushy-tailed
+dormouse, too small to be called a squirrel."
+
+But the last four hundred years have enlarged the list of indigenous
+mammals in more than one sense, and the Chevalier de Saint-Méry should
+not have been criticised for describing the bush dog of Hayti as a
+"_canis Hispaniolanus_." Imported dogs enacted a declaration of
+independence several centuries before the revolt of the Haytian
+slaves, and their descendants have become as thoroughly West Indian as
+the Franks have become French. A continued process of elimination has
+made the survivors climate-proof and self-supporting, and above all
+they have ceased to vary; Nature has accepted their modified type as
+wholly adapted to the exigencies of their present habitat. And if it
+is true that all runaway animals revert in some degree to the
+characteristics of their primeval relatives, the ancestor of the
+domestic dog would appear to have been a bush-tailed, brindle-skinned,
+and black-muzzled brute, intermittently gregarious, and combining the
+burrowing propensity of the fox with the co-operative hunting
+_penchant_ of the wolf.
+
+Fourteen years of bushwhacker warfare have almost wholly exterminated
+the half-wild cattle of the Cuban sierras, but the bush dog has come
+to stay. The yelping of its whelps can be heard in thousands of jungle
+woods and mountain ravines, both of Cuba and Hayti, and no variety of
+thoroughbreds will venture to follow these renegades into the
+penetralia of their strongholds. Sergeant Esterman, who shared the
+potluck of a Cuban insurgent camp in the capacity of a gunsmith,
+estimates the wild-dog population of the province of Santiago alone at
+half a million, and predicts that in years to come their raids will
+almost preclude the possibility of profitable cattle-breeding in
+eastern Cuba.
+
+Still, the _perro pelon_, or "tramp dog," as the creoles call the
+wolfish cur, is perhaps a lesser evil, where its activity has tended
+to check the over-increase of another assisted immigrant. Three
+hundred years ago West Indian sportsmen began to import several breeds
+of Spanish rabbits, and with results not always foreseen by the
+agricultural neighbors of the experimenters. Rabbit meat, at first a
+luxury, soon became an incumbrance of the provision markets, and
+finally unsalable at any price. Every family with a dog or a
+trap-setting boy could have rabbit stew for dinner six times a week,
+and load their peddlers with bundles of rabbit skins.
+
+The burrowing coneys threatened to undermine the agricultural basis of
+support, when it was learned that the planters of the Fort Isabel
+district (Hayti) had checked the evil by forcing their dogs to live on
+raw coney meat. The inexpensiveness of the expedient recommended its
+general adoption, and the rapidly multiplying quadrupeds soon found
+that "there were others." The Spanish hounds, too, could astonish the
+census reporter where their progeny was permitted to survive, and
+truck farmers ceased to complain.
+
+In stress of circumstances the persecuted rodents then took refuge in
+the highlands, where they can still be seen scampering about the
+grassy dells in all directions, and the curs of the coast plain turned
+their attention to _hutia_ venison and the eggs of the chaparral
+pheasant and other gallinaceous birds. On the seacoast they also have
+learned to catch turtles and subdivide them, regardless of
+antivivisection laws. How they can get a business opening through the
+armor of the larger varieties seems a puzzle, but the _canis rutilus_
+of the Sunda Islands overcomes even the dog-resisting ability of the
+giant tortoise, and in Sumatra the bleaching skeletons of the victims
+have often been mistaken for the mementos of a savage battle.
+
+Near Bocanso in southeastern Cuba the woods are alive with capuchin
+monkeys, that seem to have escaped from the wreck of some South
+American trading vessel and found the climate so congenial that they
+proceeded to make themselves at home, like the ring-tailed colonists
+of Fort Sable, in the Florida Everglades. The food supply may not be
+quite as abundant as in the equatorial birthland of their species, but
+that disadvantage is probably more than offset by the absence of
+tree-climbing carnivora.
+
+Millions of runaway hogs roam the coast swamps of all the larger
+Antilles, and continue to multiply like our American pension
+claimants. The hunters of those jungle woods, indeed, must often smile
+to remember the complaint of the early settlers that the pleasure of
+the chase in the West Indian wilderness was modified by the scarcity
+of four-footed game, and in the total number (as distinct from the
+number of species) of wild or half-wild mammals Cuba and Hayti have
+begun to rival the island of Java.
+
+[_To be continued._]
+
+
+
+
+IRON IN THE LIVING BODY.
+
+BY M. A. DASTRE.
+
+
+Iron occurs, in small and almost infinitesimal proportions, in
+numerous organic structures, in which its presence may usually be
+detected by the high color it imparts; and in the animal tissues is an
+important ingredient, though far from being a large one. It is
+essential, however, that the animal tissues, and particularly the
+liquids that circulate through them, should be of nearly even weight,
+else the equilibrium of the body would be too easily disturbed, and
+disaster arising therefrom would be always imminent. Hence the iron is
+always found combined and associated with a large accompaniment of
+other lighter elements which, reducing or neutralizing its superior
+specific gravity, hold it up and keep it afloat. Thus the molecule of
+the red matter of the blood contains, for each atom of iron, 712 atoms
+of carbon, 1,130 of hydrogen, 214 of nitrogen, 245 of oxygen, and 2 of
+sulphur, or 2,303 atoms in all. Existing in compounds of so complex
+composition, iron can be present only in very small proportions to the
+whole. Though an essential element, there is comparatively but little
+of it. The whole body of man does not contain more than one part in
+twenty thousand of it. The blood contains only five ten-thousandths;
+and an organ is rich in it if, like the liver, it contains one and a
+half ten-thousandths. When, then, we seek to represent to ourselves
+the changes undergone by organic iron, we shall have to modify
+materially the ideas we have formed respecting the largeness and the
+littleness of units of measure and as to the meaning of the words
+abundant and rare. We must get rid of the notion that a thousandth or
+even a ten-thousandth is a proportion that may be neglected. The
+humble ten-thousandth, which is usually supposed not to be of much
+consequence, becomes here a matter of value. Chemists working with
+iron in its ordinary compounds may consider that they are doing fairly
+well if they do not lose sight of more than a thousandth of it; but
+such looseness would be fatal in a biological investigation, where
+accuracy is necessary down to the infinitesimal fraction. The balances
+of the biologists must weigh the thousandth of a milligramme, as their
+microscopes measure the thousandth of a millimetre.
+
+The great part performed by iron in organisms, what we may call its
+biological function, appertains to the chemical property it possesses
+of favoring combustion, of being an agent for promoting the oxidation
+of organic matters.
+
+The chemistry of living bodies differs from that of the laboratory in
+a feature that is peculiar to it--that instead of performing its
+reactions directly it uses special agents. It employs intermediaries
+which, while they are not entirely unknown to mineral chemistry, yet
+rarely intervene in it. If it is desired, for example, to add a
+molecule of water to starch to form sugar, the chemist would do it by
+heating the starch with acidulated water. The organism, which is
+performing this process all the time, or after every meal, does it in
+a different way, without special heating and without the acid. A
+soluble ferment, a diastase or enzyme, serves as the oxidizing agent
+to produce the same result. Looking at the beginning and the end, the
+two operations are the same. The special agent gives up none of its
+substance. It withdraws after having accomplished its work, and not a
+trace of it is left. Here, in the mechanism of the action of these
+soluble ferments, resides the mystery, still complete, of vital
+chemistry. It may be conceived that these agents, which leave none of
+their substance behind their operations, which suffer no loss, do not
+have to be represented in considerable quantities, however great the
+need of them may be. They only require time to do their work. The most
+remarkable characteristic of the soluble ferments lies, in fact, here,
+in the magnitude of the action as contrasted with infinitesimal
+proportion of the agent, and the necessity of having time for the
+accomplishment of the operation.
+
+Iron behaves in precisely the same way in the combustion of organic
+substances. These substances are incapable at ordinary temperatures of
+fixing oxygen directly, and will not burn till they are raised to a
+high temperature; but in the presence of iron they are capable of
+burning without extreme heat, and undergo slow combustion. And as iron
+gives up none of its substance in the operation, and acts, as a simple
+intermediary, only to draw oxygen from the inexhaustible atmosphere
+and present it to the organic substance, we see that it need not be
+abundant to perform its office, provided it have time enough. This
+action resembles that of the soluble ferments in that there is no
+mystery about it, and its innermost mechanism is perfectly known.
+
+Iron readily combines with oxygen--too readily, we might say, if we
+regarded only the uses we make of it. It exists as an oxide in Nature;
+and the metallurgy of it has no other object than to revivify burned
+iron, remove the oxygen from it, and extract the metal. Of the two
+oxides of iron, the ferrous, or lower one, is an energetic base,
+readily combining with even the weakest acids, and forming with them
+ferrous or protosalts. Ferric oxide, on the other hand, is a feeble
+base, which combines only slowly with even strong acids to form ferric
+salts or persalts, and not at all with weak acids like carbonic acid
+and those of the tissues of living beings. It is these last, more
+highly oxidized ferric compounds that provide organic substances with
+the oxygen that consumes them, when, as a result of the operation,
+they themselves return to the ferrous state.
+
+Facts of this sort are too nearly universal not to have been observed
+very long ago, but they were not fully understood till about the
+middle of this century. The chemists of the time--Liebig, Dumas, and
+especially Schönbein, Wöhler, Stenhouse, and many others--established
+the fact that ferric oxide provokes at ordinary temperatures a rapid
+action of combustion on a large number of substances: grass, sawdust,
+peat, charcoal, humus, arable land, and animal matter. A very common
+example is the destruction of linen by rust spots; the substance of
+the fiber is slowly burned up by the oxygen yielded by the oxide.
+About the same time, Claude Bernard inquired whether the process took
+place within the tissues, in contact with living matter in the same
+way as we have just seen it did with dead matter--the remains of
+organisms that had long since submitted to the action of physical
+laws--and received an affirmative answer. Injecting a ferric salt into
+the jugular vein of an animal, he found it excreted, deprived of a
+part of its oxygen, as a ferrous salt.
+
+This slow combustion of organic matter, living or dead, accomplished
+in the cold by iron, represents only one of the aspects of its
+biological function. A counterpart to it is necessary in order to
+complete the picture. It is easy to perceive that the phenomenon would
+have no bearing or consequence if it was limited to this first action.
+With the small provision of oxygen in the iron salt used up, and, if
+reduced to the minimum of oxidation, the source of oxygen being
+exhausted, the combustion of organic matter would stop. The oxidation
+obtained would be insignificant, while the oxidation should be
+indefinite and unlimited, and it is really so.
+
+There is a counterpart. The iron salt, which has gone back to the
+minimum of oxidation and become a ferrous salt, can not remain long in
+that state in contact with the air and with other sources of the gas
+to which it is exposed. It has always been known that ferrous
+compounds absorb oxygen from the air and pass into the ferric state;
+we might say that we have seen it done, for the transformation is
+accompanied by a characteristic change of color, by a transition from
+the pale green tint of ferrous bases to the ochery or red color of
+ferric compounds.
+
+We can understand now what should happen when the ferruginous compound
+is placed in contact alternately with organic matter and oxygen. In
+the former phase the iron will yield oxygen to the organic matter; in
+the second phase it will take again from the atmosphere the
+combustible which it has lost, and will be again where it started. The
+same series of operations may be continued a second time and a third
+time, and indefinitely, as long as the alternations of contact with
+organic matter and exposure to atmospheric oxygen are kept up, the
+iron simply performing the part of a broker. The same result will
+occur if atmospheric air and organic matter are constantly together;
+the consumption will continue indefinitely, and the iron will perform
+the part of an intermediary till one of the elements of the process is
+exhausted.
+
+This explanation was necessary to make clear the solution of the
+mystery of slow or cool combustion, the existence of which has been
+known since Lavoisier, without its mechanism being understood. That
+illustrious student gave out the theory that animal heat and the
+energy developed by vital action originated in the chemical reactions
+of the organism, and that, on the other hand, the reactions that
+produce heat consisted of simple combustions, slow combustions, that
+differed only in intensity from that of the burning torch. The
+development of chemistry has shown that this figure was too much
+simplified from the reality, and that most of these phenomena, while
+they are in the end equivalent to a combustion, differ greatly from it
+in mechanism and mode of execution. By this we do not mean to say that
+all the combustions are of this character, and that there do not exist
+in the organism a large number of such as Lavoisier understood, and of
+such as the combustions effected by the intervention of iron furnish
+the type of. Lavoisier's successors, Liebig among them, tried to find
+reactions conformed to this type. Their attempts were unsuccessful,
+but they had the happy result of revealing, if not the real function
+of iron in the blood, at least that of the red matter in which it is
+fixed.
+
+The question of the presence of iron in the coloring matter of the
+blood gave rise to long discussions. Vauquelin denied it. He made the
+mistake of looking for iron in the form of a known compound, in direct
+combination with the blood, while later researches have shown that it
+is found almost exclusively in the red matter that tinges the
+globules, in a complicated combination that escapes the ordinary
+tests; or, according to a usual method of expression, it is
+dissimulated. Liebig also failed to find this combination, and it was
+not till 1864 that Hoppe-Seyler succeeded in obtaining it pure and
+crystallized. But Liebig had already perceived its essential
+properties, and was able to point out approximately its functions as
+early as 1845; yet the single fact that there was no assimilation
+possible between this substance and the salts of iron, cut this
+question off into a kind of negative suspense. Different from these
+compounds, it could not behave like them, and accomplish slow
+combustions of the same type. It is a remarkable fact, and one that
+illustrates well how iron preserves through all its vicissitudes some
+trace of its fundamental property of favoring the action of oxygen on
+substances, that this composition, so special and so different from
+the salts of iron, behaves nearly as they do. While it is not of
+itself an energetic combustible, it is, according to Liebig's
+expression, "a transporter of oxygen"--a luminous view, which the
+future was destined to confirm. Although the transportation is not
+produced by the mechanism supposed by Liebig, but by another, the
+general result is very much the same from the point of view of the
+physiology of the blood. The coloring matter of the blood conveyed by
+the globules fixes oxygen in contact with the pulmonary air, and
+distributes it as it passes through the capillaries upon the tissues.
+The globule of blood brings nothing else and distributes nothing else,
+contrary to the opinion that had been held before. The theory of slow
+combustion effected through iron, while not absolutely contradicted in
+principle, was not entirely confirmed in detail, so far as concerned
+iron, or the more prominently ferruginous tissue.
+
+No search was made for other tissues or organs presenting more
+favorable conditions, for no others were known that had iron in
+themselves. The liver and the spleen were supposed to receive it from
+the blood under the complicated form in which it exists there, or
+under some equivalent form. It was not, therefore, supposed till
+within a very few years that the two conditions were realized in any
+organ that were required to secure a slow combustion by iron--that is,
+combinations resembling ferrous and ferric salts with a weak acid and
+a source of oxygen. The doubt has been resolved by recent studies. The
+liver fulfils the requirement. It contains iron existing under forms
+precisely comparable to the ferrous and ferric compounds, and is
+washed by the blood which carries oxygen in a state of simple solution
+in its plasma and of loose combination in its globules. Thus all the
+conditions necessary for the production of slow combustion are
+gathered here, and we can not doubt that it takes place. A new
+function is therefore assigned to the liver, and it becomes one of the
+great furnaces of the organism.
+
+Compounds of iron are so abundant in the ground and the water that we
+need not be surprised when we find them in various parts of plants,
+and particularly in the green parts. Their habitual presence does not,
+however, authorize the conclusion that this metal is necessary to the
+support and development of vegetable life. Some substances, evidently
+indifferent, foreign, and even injurious, if they exist abundantly in
+a soil, may be drawn into roots through the movement of the sap, and
+fix themselves in various organs. This occurs with copper in certain
+exceptional circumstances when the soil is saturated with its
+compounds, and if such a condition should be found to be repeated over
+a large extent of country, we might be led, by analysis alone of its
+vegetable productions, to the false conclusion that copper was an
+essential or even necessary constituent of them. But the value of the
+part performed by an element can not be determined by analysis alone.
+Direct proofs are necessary for that, methodical and comparative
+experiments in cultivation in mediums artificially deprived or
+furnished with the element the importance of which we wish to
+estimate. This has been done for combinations of iron, and the utility
+of that metal, especially to the higher plants, has been made thereby
+to appear.
+
+If iron is absent from the nutritive medium the plant will wither. If
+we sprout seeds in a solution from which this metal has been carefully
+excluded, the development will follow its regular course as long as
+the plant is in the condition properly called that of germination, or
+while it does not have to draw anything from the soil. The stem rises
+and the first leaves are formed as usual. But all these parts will
+continue pale, and the green matter, the granulation of chlorophyll,
+will not appear. Now, if we add a small quantity of salt of iron to
+the ground in which the roots are planted, or a much-diluted solution
+is sprinkled on the leaves and the stem, the chlorotic plant will
+recover its health and take on its normal coloration. Experiments of
+this sort make well manifest that iron is necessary to green plants,
+and they show, besides, the bearing of its action, and that what is
+most special and most characteristic in the phenomena of vegetable
+life may be traced exactly to the organization of that green matter.
+It was long thought that if iron was necessary for the formation of
+chlorophyll, it was because it had a part in its constitution. We know
+now that this is not so. The metal does nothing but accompany the
+chlorophyll in the granulation in which it is found.
+
+The influence which iron exerts in the development of the lower
+plants, like the muscidenes, was illustrated with great precision in a
+study made about thirty years ago by M. Raulin, who experimented with
+the common mold (_Aspergillus niger_), to determine the coefficient of
+importance of all the elements that have a part in its vegetation.
+When the iron was removed from a medium that had been shown capable of
+giving a maximum crop of that mold, the plants languished, and the
+return fell off immediately to one third. Estimating the quantity of
+metal that produces this effect, it was found that the addition of one
+part of iron was sufficient to determine the production of a weight of
+plant nearly nine hundred times as great. The suppression of the iron
+further caused an irreparable loss, for when it was sought to remedy
+the wilting of the plants by restoring the iron which had been taken
+from the medium--an experiment which had been successful with higher
+plants--the attempt was a failure, and the plants could not be
+prevented from perishing.
+
+These facts are full of interest in themselves, and they further show
+well the necessity or utility of iron in plant life, but they teach us
+no more. They reveal nothing of the mechanism of the action, and if we
+wish to penetrate further in the matter we always have to turn to
+animal physiology.--_Translated for the Popular Science Monthly from
+the Revue des Deux Mondes._
+
+
+
+
+THE MALAY LANGUAGE.
+
+BY R. CLYDE FORD,
+
+PROFESSOR OF GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE, ALBION COLLEGE.
+
+
+A gentleman who had lived for several years among the Indians of the
+Canadian northwest said that he went among them believing they were an
+untutored race. But when they told him of a dozen kinds of berries
+growing in a locality where he knew but two, brought him flowers he
+could not find after careful search, and around their council fires
+showed as deep an insight into the mysteries of life as the _savants_
+of his university, then he concluded they could no longer be called
+untutored.
+
+And why should they be? Is there no culture or civilization outside of
+the enlightenment of Europe or America? And because a civilization
+does not exactly fit the grooves in which most of the world has moved,
+may it not be a real civilization for all that? If such is possible,
+then we vote the Malays a cultured people. Of course, their culture is
+not like our own; it knows no railroads, no telegraphs, boasts of no
+intricate political machinery, has no complicated social despotisms.
+Native princes rule for the most part over peaceful states, and
+politics means no more than the regulation of quiet village life. But
+what need of railroads, when the rivers are avenues of trade and
+communication? Why telegraphs, when the world is bounded by the jungle
+horizon? Or why, in short, severe civil and social enactments, when
+the common _Wahlspruch_ of life is, "Fear disgrace rather than death"?
+Such a civilization, we admit, is a humble one; but it also has the
+advantage of being a happy one. And where contentment dwells, where
+honesty prevails, where the home is a stronghold, there are culture
+and civilization, even though they may not coincide with our own.
+
+The Malays are not barbarians, and their language by its grace and
+adaptability has shown its right to be. To-day it is the mother tongue
+of more than forty millions of people, and the _lingua franca_ of
+Chinamen, Hindus, European, and natives. It is spoken from Madagascar
+to the distant islands of the Pacific, and from the Philippines to
+Australia. With it one can barter in Celebes and sell in Java;
+converse with a sultan in Sumatra or a Spaniard in Manila. Moreover,
+it is soft and melodious, rich in expression, poetical in idiom, and
+simple in structure--a language almost without grammar and yet of
+immense vocabulary, with subtle distinctions and fine gradations of
+thought and meaning; a language that sounds in one's ears long after
+_Tanah Malayu_ and the coral islands and the jungle strand have sunk
+into hazy recollection, just as they once dropped out of sight behind
+one's departing ship.
+
+Malay is written in the Arabic character, which was adopted with
+Mohammedanism, probably in the thirteenth century. Anciently, the
+Malays used a writing of their own, but it is not yet clearly settled
+what it was. There are now thirty-four characters employed, each
+varying in form, according as it is isolated, final, medial, or
+initial. Naturally, the Arabic influence over the language has been a
+marked one; the priest who dictates in the religion of a people is a
+molder and shaper of language. We have only to recall the Catholic
+Church and the influence of the Latin tongue in the mouths of her
+priests to know that this is so. Many Arabic words and phrases have
+been adopted, but more in the language of literature than in that of
+everyday speech. A large number of expressions of court and royalty,
+and terms of law and religion, are Arabic; also the names of months,
+days, and many articles of commerce and trade; nevertheless, the
+language of common speech is still Malay.
+
+Another influence, also, has been felt in the Malay--that of the
+Sanskrit language. The presence of many Sanskrit words has caused some
+very ingenious theories to be constructed in proof that the Malays
+were of Indian origin, and such word fragments the survival of the
+primitive tongue. Such theories, however, have not stood the test of
+philology, and the fact still remains that the language is essentially
+unique, with an origin lost in the darkness of remote antiquity.
+However, Sanskrit influence has been much greater, and has penetrated
+much deeper into the elemental structure of the language than the
+Arabic. In fact, the aboriginal language, before it felt the animating
+spirit of the Aryan tongue, must have been a barren one, the language
+of a primitive man, a fisherman, a hunter, a careless tiller of the
+soil. As Maxwell says in his Manual of the Malay Language, the
+Sanskrit word _hala_ (plow) marks a revolution in Malayan agriculture
+and, one may say further, Malayan civilization. What changed the
+methods of cultivating the soil, changed the people themselves. It is
+probable that this change came through contact with people to whom
+Sanskrit was a vernacular tongue, but whether through conquest by the
+sword or by religion is hard to tell. Perhaps it was by both. At any
+rate, it was deep and strong, and left a lasting impression on the
+language. Sanskrit names fastened on trees, plants, grain, fruits,
+household and agricultural implements, parts of the body, articles of
+commerce, animals, metals and minerals, time and its division and
+measurement, family relationships, abstract conceptions, warfare, and
+fundamental ideas of religion and superstition. Such a conquest must
+have been an early and tremendous one.
+
+Strangely enough, Malay is almost a grammarless tongue. It has no
+proper article, and its substantives may serve equally well as verbs,
+being singular or plural, and entirely genderless. However, adjectives
+and a process of reduplication often indicate number, and gender words
+are added to nouns to make sex allusions plain. Whatever there is of
+declension is prepositional as in English, and possessives are formed
+by putting the adjectives after the noun as in Italian. Nouns are
+primitive and derivative, the derivations being formed by suffixes or
+prefixes, or both, and one's mastery of the language may be gauged by
+the idiomatic way in which he handles these _Anhängsel_. Adjectives
+are uninflected.
+
+The use of the pronouns involves an extensive knowledge of Oriental
+etiquette--some being used by the natives among one another, some
+between Europeans and natives, some employed when an inferior
+addresses a superior and _vice versa_, some used only when the native
+addresses his prince or sovereign; and, last of all, some being
+distinctly literary, and never employed colloquially. Into this maze
+one must go undaunted, and trust to time and patience to smooth out
+difficulties.
+
+Verbs, like nouns, are primitive and derivative, with some few
+auxiliaries and a good many particles which are suffixed or prefixed
+to indicate various states and conditions. These things are apt to be
+confusing, and when the student learns that a verb may be past,
+present, or future without any change in form, he does not know
+whether to congratulate himself or not. Prepositions, too, are many
+and expressive; conjunctions, some colloquial, some pedantic.
+
+We now come to a peculiarity which Malay has in common with other
+Indo-Chinese languages--the "numeral co-efficients," as Maxwell calls
+them, which are always employed with a certain class of objects, just
+as we say "head" of horses, "sail" of ships, etc. They are very many
+as compared with English, and very idiomatic in their use. For
+instance, the Malay says, "Europeans, three _persons_," "cats, four
+_tails_," "ships, five _fruits_," "cocoanuts, three _seeds_," "spears,
+two _stems_," "planks, five _pieces_," "houses, two _ladders_," and so
+on to fifteen or twenty different classes of articles or objects. By
+some this has been regarded as a peculiarity of the languages of
+southeastern Asia; but the same thing may be noticed in the Indian
+languages of our own continent.
+
+As a language Malay is easily learned and has much to repay for so
+doing. It is full of wonders and surprises--among other things is the
+natural home of euphemism, where a spade is called anything but a
+spade. For instance, to die is beautifully expressed in Malay as a
+return to the mercy of Allah. The language is decidedly rich in
+poetical expression and imagery. A neighbor is one whom you permit to
+ascend the ladder of your cottage, and your friend is a sharer of your
+joys and sorrows. Interest is the flower of money, a spring is an eye
+of water, the sun the eye of day, and a policeman all eyes. A walk is
+a stroll to eat the wind, a man drunk is one who rides a green horse,
+and a coward a duck without spurs. A flatterer is one who has sugar
+cane on his lips, a sharper is a man of brains, a fool a brain-lacker.
+
+In his proverbs also the Malay shows a matchless use of metaphor and
+imagery, his words having the softness of the jungle breeze, and at
+the same time the grimness of the jungle shades. Nowhere does the
+nature of his race or the peculiar genius of his language show out
+better than in these terse, pithy sayings which the Malay uses to
+sweeten his speech or lend effectiveness to it. The real Malay is a
+creature of the forest or the sea, whence he draws his livelihood, and
+it is but natural that he should envelop his daily and perhaps
+dangerous life with homely philosophy. He loves the freedom which he
+enjoys; take him away from it and he eats his heart out in
+homesickness. "Though you feed a jungle fowl from a golden plate, it
+will return to the jungle again." In his humble life he has discovered
+that blood, be it good or bad, counts for something, and he thinks of
+the forest lairs; "a kitten and small, but a tiger's cub." He is beset
+with dangers by sea and land; often he is between the devil and the
+deep. "One may escape the tiger, and fall into the jaws of the
+crocodile." He recognizes the inevitable, and draws what consolation
+he can. "When the prow is wrecked the shark gets his fill"--a very
+stoical recognition of ill winds. "For fear of the ghost he hugs the
+corpse," is often the solution of his dilemma. Sometimes he indulges
+in drollery, but is never unphilosophical. "To love one's children,
+one must weep for them now and then; to love one's wife, one must
+leave her now and then." The language is full of such expressions;
+they are the natural products of the speech of a poetical and
+Nature-loving folk. Without attempting a classification we give a few
+of the most characteristic proverbs, drawing largely on a collection
+made in the Malay Peninsula by W. E. Maxwell, at one time British
+resident there:
+
+ Will the crocodile respect the carcass?
+ Follow your heart, death; follow your feelings, destruction.
+ You find grasshoppers where you find a field.
+ Earth does not become grain.
+ Don't grind pepper for a bird on the wing.
+ The flower comes, age comes.
+ When the father is spotted, the son is spotted.
+ The plant sprouts before it climbs.
+ When he can't wring the ear, he pulls the horn.
+ The creel says the basket is poorly made.
+ Ask from one who has,
+ Make vows at a shrine,
+ Sulk with him who loves you.
+ When the house is done the chisel finds fault.
+ As the crow goes back to his nest (no richer, no poorer).
+ Whoever eats chilies burns his mouth.
+ Because of the mouth the body comes to harm.
+ If you are at the river's mouth at nightfall, what's the use of
+ talking of return?
+ A broken thread may be mended, but charcoal never.
+ The pea forgets its pod.
+ As water rolls from a _kladi_ leaf.
+ A shipwrecked vessel may float again, a heart once broken is broken
+ forever.
+ It is a project, and the result with God.
+ He carries a torch in daylight.
+ A slave who does well is never praised; if he does badly, never
+ forgiven.
+ It rains gold afar, but stone at home.
+ What if you sit on a cushion of gold with an uneasy mind!
+ When money leaves, your friend goes.
+ If you dip your hand into the fish tub, go to the bottom.
+ Whoever digs a hole falls into it himself.
+ If your legs are long, have your blanket long.
+ Like a frog under a cocoanut shell, he thinks he sees the sky.
+ If you can't get rattan, bind with roots.
+ The plantain does not bear twice.
+ He sits like a cat, but leaps like a tiger.
+ The tortoise lays a thousand eggs and tells no one; the hen lays a
+ single egg and tells all the world.
+ Those will die of thirst who empty the jar when it thunders in a dry
+ time.
+ Handsome as a princess, poisonous as a snake.
+ Small as an ant, wise as a mouse-deer.
+
+
+
+
+LIFE ON A SOUTH SEA WHALER.[13]
+
+BY FRANK T. BULLEN.
+
+
+Cachalots, or sperm whales, must have been captured on the coasts of
+Europe in a desultory way from a very early date, by the incidental
+allusions to the prime products spermaceti and ambergris which are
+found in so many ancient writers. Shakespeare's reference--"The
+sovereign'st thing on earth was parmaceti for an inward bruise"--will
+be familiar to most people, as well as Milton's mention of the
+delicacies at Satan's feast--"Grisamber steamed"--not to carry
+quotation any further.
+
+But in the year 1690 the brave and hardy fishermen of the northeast
+coasts of North America established that systematic pursuit of the
+cachalot which has thriven so wonderfully ever since, although it must
+be confessed that the last few years have witnessed a serious decline
+in this great branch of trade.
+
+For many years the American colonists completely engrossed this branch
+of the whale fishery, contentedly leaving to Great Britain and the
+continental nations the monopoly of the northern or arctic fisheries,
+while they cruised the stormy, if milder, seas around their own
+shores.
+
+As, however, the number of ships engaged increased, it was inevitable
+that the known grounds should become exhausted, and in 1788, Messrs.
+Enderby's ship, the Emilia, first ventured round Cape Horn, as the
+pioneer of a greater trade than ever. The way once pointed out, other
+ships were not slow to follow, until, in 1819, the British whale ship
+Syren opened up the till then unexplored tract of ocean in the western
+part of the North Pacific, afterward familiarly known as the "Coast of
+Japan." From these teeming waters alone, for many years an average
+annual catch of forty thousand barrels of oil was taken, which, at the
+average price of £8 per barrel, will give some idea of the value of
+the trade generally.
+
+From the crushing blow of the civil war the American sperm-whale
+fishery has never fully recovered. When the writer was in the trade,
+some twenty-two years ago, it was credited with a fleet of between
+three and four hundred sail; now it may be doubted whether the numbers
+reach an eighth of that amount. A rigid conservatism of method hinders
+any revival of the industry, which is practically conducted to-day as
+it was fifty or even a hundred years ago; and it is probable that
+another decade will witness the final extinction of what was once one
+of the most important maritime industries in the world.
+
+In the following pages an attempt has been made--it is believed for
+the first time--to give an account of the cruise of a South Sea whaler
+from the seaman's standpoint. Its aim is to present to the general
+reader a simple account of the methods employed and the dangers met
+with in a calling about which the great mass of the public knows
+absolutely nothing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At the age of eighteen, after a sea experience of six years from the
+time when I dodged about London streets, a ragged Arab, with wits
+sharpened by the constant fight for food, I found myself roaming the
+streets of New Bedford, Massachusetts.
+
+My money was all gone, I was hungry for a ship; and so, when a long,
+keen-looking man with a goatlike beard, and mouth stained with dry
+tobacco juice, hailed me one afternoon at the street corner, I
+answered very promptly, scenting a berth. "Lookin' fer a ship,
+stranger?" said he. "Yes; do you want a hand?" said I anxiously. He
+made a funny little sound something like a pony's whinny, then
+answered: "Wall, I should surmise that I want between fifty and sixty
+hands, ef yew kin lay me onto 'em; but, kem along, every dreep's a
+drop, an' yew seem likely enough." With that he turned and led the way
+until we reached a building, around which was gathered one of the most
+nondescript crowds I had ever seen. There certainly did not appear to
+be a sailor among them--not so much by their rig, though that is not a
+great deal to go by, but by their actions and speech. However, I
+signed and passed on, engaged to go I knew not where, in some ship I
+did not know even the name of, in which I was to receive I did not
+know how much or how little for my labor, nor how long I was going to
+be away.
+
+From the time we signed the articles, we were never left to ourselves.
+Truculent-looking men accompanied us to our several boarding houses,
+paid our debts for us, finally bringing us by boat to a ship lying out
+in the bay. As we passed under her stern, I read the name Cachalot, of
+New Bedford; but as soon as we ranged alongside, I realized that I was
+booked for the sailor's horror--a cruise in a whaler. Badly as I
+wanted to get to sea, I had not bargained for this, and would have run
+some risks to get ashore again; but they took no chances, so we were
+all soon aboard. Before going forward, I took a comprehensive glance
+around, and saw that I was on board of a vessel belonging to a type
+which has almost disappeared off the face of the waters. A more
+perfect contrast to the trim-built English clipper ships that I had
+been accustomed to I could hardly imagine. She was one of a class
+characterized by sailors as "built by the mile, and cut off in lengths
+as you want 'em," bow and stern almost alike, masts standing straight
+as broomsticks, and bowsprit soaring upward at an angle of about
+forty-five degrees. She was as old-fashioned in her rig as in her
+hull. Right in the center of the deck, occupying a space of about ten
+feet by eight, was a square erection of brickwork, upon which my
+wondering gaze rested longest, for I had not the slightest idea what
+it could be. But I was rudely roused from my meditations by the harsh
+voice of one of the officers, who shouted, "Naow then, git below an'
+stow yer dunnage, 'n look lively up agin!" Tumbling down the steep
+ladder, I entered the gloomy den which was to be for so long my home,
+finding it fairly packed with my shipmates. The whole space was
+undivided by partition, but I saw at once that black men and white had
+separated themselves, the blacks taking the port side and the whites
+the starboard. Finding a vacant bunk by the dim glimmer of the ancient
+teapot lamp that hung amidships, giving out as much smoke as light, I
+hurriedly shifted my coat for a "jumper" or blouse, put on an old cap,
+and climbed into the fresh air again. Even _my_ seasoned head was
+feeling bad with the villainous reek of the place. I had hardly
+reached the deck when I was confronted by a negro, the biggest I ever
+saw in my life. He looked me up and down for a moment, then opening
+his ebony features in a wide smile, he said: "Great snakes! why,
+here's a sailor man for sure! Guess thet's so, ain't it, Johnny?" I
+said "yes" very curtly, for I hardly liked his patronizing air; but he
+snapped me up short with "yes, _sir_, when yew speak to me, yew blank
+limejuicer. I'se de fourf mate of dis yar ship, en my name's Mistah
+Jones, 'n yew jest freeze on to dat ar, ef yew want ter lib long 'n
+die happy. See, sonny?" I _saw_, and answered promptly, "I beg your
+pardon, sir, I didn't know." "Ob cawse yew didn't know, dat's all
+right, little Britisher; naow jest skip aloft 'n loose dat
+fore-taupsle." "Ay, ay, sir," I answered cheerily, springing at once
+into the fore-rigging and up the ratlines like a monkey, but not too
+fast to hear him chuckle, "Dat's a smart kiddy, I bet." On deck I
+could see a crowd at the windlass heaving up anchor. I said to myself,
+"They don't waste any time getting this packet away." Evidently they
+were not anxious to test any of the crew's swimming powers. They were
+wise, for had she remained at anchor that night I verily believe some
+of the poor wretches would have tried to escape.
+
+The anchor came aweigh, the sails were sheeted home, and I returned on
+deck to find the ship gathering way for the heads, fairly started on
+her long voyage.
+
+Before nightfall we were fairly out to sea, and the ceremony of
+dividing the crew into watches was gone through. I found myself in the
+chief mate's or "port" watch (they called it "larboard," a term I had
+never heard used before, it having long been obsolete in merchant
+ships), though the huge negro fourth mate seemed none too well pleased
+that I was not under his command, his being the starboard watch under
+the second mate.
+
+I was pounced upon next morning by "Mistah" Jones, the fourth mate,
+whom I heard addressed familiarly as "Goliath" and "Anak" by his
+brother officers, and ordered to assist him in rigging the
+"crow's-nest" at the main royal-mast head. It was a simple affair.
+There were a pair of cross-trees fitted to the mast, upon which was
+secured a tiny platform about a foot wide on each side of the mast,
+while above this foothold a couple of padded hoops like a pair of
+giant spectacles were secured at a little higher than a man's waist.
+When all was fast one could creep up on the platform, through the
+hoop, and, resting his arms upon the latter, stand comfortably and
+gaze around, no matter how vigorously the old barky plunged and kicked
+beneath him. From that lofty eerie I had a comprehensive view of the
+vessel. She was about three hundred and fifty tons and full
+ship-rigged--that is to say, she carried square sails on all three
+masts. Her deck was flush fore and aft, the only obstructions being
+the brick-built "try-works" in the waist, the galley, and cabin
+skylight right aft by the taffrail. Her bulwarks were set thickly
+round with clumsy-looking wooden cranes, from which depended five
+boats. Two more boats were secured bottom up upon a gallows aft, so
+she seemed to be well supplied in that direction.
+
+The weather being fine, with a steady northeast wind blowing, so that
+the sails required no attention, work proceeded steadily all the
+morning. The oars were sorted, examined for flaws, and placed in the
+boats; the whale line, Manilla rope like yellow silk, an inch and a
+half round, was brought on deck, stretched, and coiled down with the
+greatest care into tubs holding, some two hundred fathoms, and others
+one hundred fathoms each. New harpoons were fitted to poles of rough
+but heavy wood, without any attempt at neatness but every attention to
+strength. The shape of these weapons was not, as is generally thought,
+that of an arrow, but rather like an arrow with one huge barb, the
+upper part of which curved out from the shaft. The whole of the barb
+turned on a stout pivot of steel, but was kept in line with the shaft
+by a tiny wooden peg which passed through barb and shaft, being then
+cut off smoothly on both sides. The point of the harpoon had at one
+side a wedge-shaped edge, ground to razor keenness; the other side was
+flat. The shaft, about thirty inches long, was of the best malleable
+iron, so soft that it would tie into a knot and straighten out again
+without fracture. Three harpoons, or "irons" as they were always
+called, were placed in each boat, fitted one above the other in the
+starboard bow, the first for use being always one unused before.
+Opposite to them in the boat were fitted three lances for the purpose
+of _killing_ whales, the harpoons being only the means by which the
+boat was attached to a fish, and quite useless to inflict a fatal
+wound. These lances were slender spears of malleable iron about four
+feet long, with oval or heart-shaped points of fine steel about two
+inches broad, their edges kept keen as a surgeon's lancet. By means of
+a socket at the other end they were attached to neat handles, or
+"lance poles," about as long again, the whole weapon being thus about
+eight feet in length, and furnished with a light line, or "lance
+warp," for the purpose of drawing it back again when it had been
+darted at a whale. The other furniture of a boat comprised five oars
+of varying lengths from sixteen to nine feet, one great steering oar
+of nineteen feet, a mast and two sails of great area for so small a
+craft, spritsail shape; two tubs of whale line containing together
+eighteen hundred feet, a keg of drinking water, and another long,
+narrow one with a few biscuits, a lantern, candles and matches
+therein; a bucket and "piggin" for baling, a small spade, a flag or
+"wheft," a shoulder bomb gun and ammunition, two knives, and two small
+axes. A rudder hung outside by the stern.
+
+With all this gear, although snugly stowed, a boat looked so loaded
+that I could not help wondering how six men would be able to work in
+her; but, like most "deep-water" sailors, I knew very little about
+boating. I was going to learn.
+
+The reports I had always heard of the laziness prevailing on board
+whale ships were now abundantly falsified. From dawn to dark work went
+on without cessation. Everything was rubbed and scrubbed and scoured
+until no speck or soil could be found; indeed, no gentleman's yacht or
+man-of-war is kept more spotlessly clean than was the Cachalot.
+
+On the fourth day after leaving port we were all busy as usual except
+the four men in the "crow's-nests," when a sudden cry of "Porps!
+porps!" brought everything to a standstill. A large school of
+porpoises had just joined us, in their usual clownish fashion, rolling
+and tumbling around the bows as the old barky wallowed along,
+surrounded by a wide ellipse of snowy foam. All work was instantly
+suspended, and active preparations made for securing a few of these
+frolicsome fellows. A "block," or pulley, was bung out at the bowsprit
+end, a whale line passed through it and "bent" (fastened) on to a
+harpoon. Another line with a running "bowline," or slip noose, was
+also passed out to the bowsprit end, being held there by one man in
+readiness. Then one of the harpooners ran out along the back ropes,
+which keep the jib boom down, taking his stand beneath the bowsprit
+with the harpoon ready. Presently he raised his iron and followed the
+track of a rising porpoise with its point until the creature broke
+water. At the same instant the weapon left his grasp, apparently
+without any force behind it; but we on deck, holding the line, soon
+found that our excited hauling lifted a big vibrating body clean out
+of the smother beneath. "'Vast hauling!" shouted the mate, while, as
+the porpoise hung dangling, the harpooner slipped the ready bowline
+over his body, gently closing its grip round the "small" by the broad
+tail. Then we hauled on the noose line, slacking away the harpoon, and
+in a minute had our prize on deck. He was dragged away at once and the
+operation repeated. Again and again we hauled them in, until the fore
+part of the deck was alive with the kicking, writhing sea pigs, at
+least twenty of them. All hands were soon busy skinning the blubber
+from the bodies. Porpoises have no skin--that is, hide--the blubber or
+coating of lard which incases them being covered by a black substance
+as thin as tissue paper. The porpoise hide of the bootmaker is really
+leather, made from the skin of the _Beluga_, or "white whale," which
+is found only in the far north. The cover was removed from the
+"try-works" amidships, revealing two gigantic pots set in a frame of
+brickwork side by side, capable of holding two hundred gallons
+each--such a cooking apparatus as might have graced a Brobdingnagian
+kitchen. Beneath the pots was the very simplest of furnaces, hardly as
+elaborate as the familiar copper hole sacred to washing day. Square
+funnels of sheet iron were loosely fitted to the flues, more as a
+protection against the oil boiling over into the fire than to carry
+away the smoke, of which from the peculiar nature of the fuel there
+was very little. At one side of the try-works was a large wooden
+vessel, or "hopper," to contain the raw blubber; at the other, a
+copper cistern or cooler of about three hundred gallons capacity, into
+which the prepared oil was baled to cool off, preliminary to its being
+poured into the casks. Beneath the furnaces was a space as large as
+the whole area of the try-works, about a foot deep, which, when the
+fires were lighted, was filled with water to prevent the deck from
+burning.
+
+It may be imagined that the blubber from our twenty porpoises made but
+a poor show in one of the pots; nevertheless, we got a barrel of very
+excellent oil from them. The fires were fed with "scrap," or pieces of
+blubber from which the oil had been boiled, some of which had been
+reserved from the previous voyage. They burned with a fierce and
+steady blaze, leaving but a trace of ash. I was then informed by one
+of the harpooners that no other fuel was ever used for boiling blubber
+at any time, there being always amply sufficient for the purpose.
+
+We were now in the haunts of the sperm whale, or "cachalot," a
+brilliant lookout being continually kept for any signs of their
+appearing. One officer and a foremast hand were continually on watch
+during the day in the main crow's-nest, one harpooner and a seaman in
+the fore one. A bounty of ten pounds of tobacco was offered to whoever
+should first report a whale, should it be secured; consequently there
+were no sleepy eyes up there.
+
+At last, one beautiful day, the boats were lowered and manned, and
+away went the greenies on their first practical lesson in the business
+of the voyage. There were two greenies in each boat, they being so
+arranged that whenever one of them "caught a crab," which of course
+was about every other stroke, his failure made little difference to
+the boat's progress. They learned very fast under the terrible
+imprecations and storm of blows from the iron-fisted and iron-hearted
+officers, so that before the day was out the skipper was satisfied of
+our ability to deal with a "fish" should he be lucky enough to "raise"
+one. I was, in virtue of my experience, placed at the after oar in the
+mate's boat, where it was my duty to attend to the "main sheet" when
+the sail was set, where also I had the benefit of the lightest oar
+except the small one used by the harpooner in the bow.
+
+The very next day after our first exhaustive boat drill, a school of
+"blackfish" was reported from aloft, and with great glee the officers
+prepared for what they considered a rattling day's fun.
+
+The blackfish (_Phocæna sp._) is a small toothed whale, not at all
+unlike a miniature cachalot, except that its head is rounded at the
+front, while its jaw is not long and straight, but bowed. It is as
+frolicsome as the porpoise, gamboling about in schools of from twenty
+to fifty or more, as if really delighted to be alive. Its average size
+is from ten to twenty feet long and seven or eight feet in girth;
+weight, from one to three tons. Blubber about three inches thick,
+while the head is almost all oil, so that a good rich specimen will
+make between one and two barrels of oil of medium quality.
+
+We lowered and left the ship, pulling right toward the school, the
+noise they were making in their fun effectually preventing them from
+hearing our approach. It is etiquette to allow the mate's boat first
+place, unless his crew is so weak as to be unable to hold their own;
+but as the mate always has first pick of the men this seldom happens.
+So, as usual, we were first, and soon I heard the order given, "Stand
+up, Louey, and let 'em have it!" Sure enough, here we were right
+among them. Louis let drive, "fastening" a whopper about twenty feet
+long. The injured animal plunged madly forward, accompanied by his
+fellows, while Louis calmly bent another iron to a "short warp," or
+piece of whale line, the loose end of which he made a bowline with
+round the main line which was fast to the "fish." Then he fastened
+another "fish," and the queer sight was seen of these two monsters
+each trying to flee in opposite directions, while the second one
+ranged about alarmingly as his "bridle" ran along the main line.
+Another one was secured in the same way, then the game was indeed
+great. The school had by this time taken the alarm and cleared out,
+but the other boats were all fast to fish, so that didn't matter. Now,
+at the rate our "game" were going, it would evidently be a long while
+before they died, although, being so much smaller than a whale proper,
+a harpoon will often kill them at a stroke. Yet they were now so
+tangled or "snarled erp," as the mate said, that it was no easy matter
+to lance them without great danger of cutting the line. However, we
+hauled up as close to them as we dared, and the harpooner got a good
+blow in, which gave the biggest of the three "Jesse," as he said,
+though why "Jesse" was a stumper. Anyhow, it killed him promptly,
+while almost directly after another one saved further trouble by
+passing in his own checks. But he sank at the same time, drawing the
+first one down with him, so that we were in considerable danger of
+having to cut them adrift or be swamped. The "wheft" was waved thrice
+as an urgent signal to the ship to come to our assistance with all
+speed, but in the meantime our interest lay in the surviving blackfish
+keeping alive. Should _he_ die and, as was most probable, sink, we
+should certainly have to cut and loose the lot, tools included.
+
+We waited in grim silence while the ship came up, so slowly,
+apparently, that she hardly seemed to move, but really at a good pace
+of about four knots an hour, which for her was not at all bad. She got
+alongside of us at last, and we passed up the bight of our line, our
+fish all safe, very much pleased with ourselves, especially when we
+found that the other boats had only five between the three of them.
+
+Chain slings were passed around the carcasses, the end of the "fall,"
+or tackle rope, was taken to the windlass, and we hove away cheerily,
+lifting the monsters right on deck. A mountainous pile they made.
+After dinner all hands turned to again to "flench" the blubber and
+prepare for trying out. This was a heavy job, keeping us busy until it
+was quite dark, the latter part of the work being carried on by the
+light of a "cresset," the flames of which were fed with "scrap," which
+blazed brilliantly, throwing a big glare over all the ship. The last
+of the carcasses was launched overboard by about eight o'clock that
+evening, but not before some vast junks of beef had been cut off and
+hung up in the rigging for our food supply.
+
+"Trying out" went on busily all night, and by nightfall of the next
+day the ship had resumed her normal appearance, and we were a tun and
+a quarter of oil to the good. Blackfish oil is of medium quality, but
+I learned that, according to the rule of "roguery in all trades," it
+was the custom to mix quantities such as we had just obtained with
+better class whale oil, and thus get a much higher price than it was
+really worth.
+
+We had now been eight days out, having had nothing, so far, but steady
+breezes and fine weather. As it was late autumn--the first week in
+October--I rather wondered at this, for even in my brief experience I
+had learned to dread a "fall" voyage across the "Western Ocean."
+
+Gradually the face of the sky changed, and the feel of the air, from
+balmy and genial, became raw and cheerless. The little wave tops broke
+short off and blew backward, apparently against the wind, while the
+old vessel had an uneasy, unnatural motion, caused by a long, new
+swell rolling athwart the existing set of the sea.
+
+We were evidently in for a fair specimen of Western Ocean weather, but
+the clumsy-looking, old-fashioned Cachalot made no more fuss over it
+than one of the long-winged sea birds that floated around, intent only
+upon snapping up any stray scraps that might escape from us. Higher
+rose the wind, heavier rolled the sea, yet never a drop of water did
+we ship, nor did anything about the deck betoken what a heavy gale was
+blowing. During the worst of the weather, and just after the wind had
+shifted back into the northeast, making an uglier cross sea than ever
+get up, along comes an immense four-masted iron ship homeward bound.
+She was staggering under a veritable mountain of canvas, fairly
+burying her bows in the foam at every forward drive, and actually
+wetting the clews of the upper topsails in the smothering masses of
+spray, that every few minutes almost hid her hull from sight.
+
+It was a splendid picture; but--for the time--I felt glad I was not on
+board of her. In a very few minutes she was out of our ken, followed
+by the admiration of all. Then came, from the other direction, a huge
+steamship, taking no more notice of the gale than as if it were calm.
+Straight through the sea she rushed, dividing the mighty rollers to
+the heart, and often bestriding three seas at once, the center one
+spreading its many tons of foaming water fore and aft, so that from
+every orifice spouted the seething brine. Compared with these
+greyhounds of the wave, we resembled nothing so much as some old
+lightship bobbing serenely around, as if part and parcel of the
+mid-Atlantic.
+
+The gale gradually blew itself out, leaving behind only a long and
+very heavy swell to denote the deep-reaching disturbance that the
+ocean had endured. And now we were within the range of the sargasso
+weed, that mysterious _fucus_ that makes the ocean look like some vast
+hayfield, and keeps the sea from rising, no matter how high the wind.
+It fell a dead calm, and the harpooners amused themselves by dredging
+up great masses of the weed, and turning out the many strange
+creatures abiding therein.
+
+We were all gathered about the fo'lk'sle scuttle one evening, a few
+days after the gale referred to above, and the question of
+whale-fishing came up for discussion. Until that time, strange as it
+may seem, no word of this, the central idea of all our minds, had been
+mooted. Every man seemed to shun the subject, although we were in
+daily expectation of being called upon to take an active part in
+whale-fighting. Once the ice was broken, nearly all had something to
+say about it, and very nearly as many addle-headed opinions were
+ventilated as at a Colney Hatch debating society. For we none of us
+_knew_ anything about it. It was Saturday evening, and while at home
+people were looking forward to a day's respite from work and care, I
+felt that the coming day, though never taken much notice of on board,
+was big with the probabilities of strife such as I at least had at
+present no idea of--so firmly was I possessed by the prevailing
+feeling.
+
+The night was very quiet. A gentle breeze was blowing, and the sky was
+of the usual "trade" character--that is, a dome of dark blue fringed
+at the horizon with peaceful cumulus clouds, almost motionless. I
+turned in at 4 A. M. from the middle watch and, as usual, slept like a
+babe. Suddenly I started wide awake, a long, mournful sound sending a
+thrill to my very heart. As I listened breathlessly, other sounds of
+the same character but in different tones joined in, human voices
+monotonously intoning in long-drawn-out expirations the single word
+"bl-o-o-o-ow." Then came a hurricane of noise overhead, and
+adjurations in no gentle language to the sleepers to "tumble up lively
+there, no skulking, sperm whales." At last, then, fulfilling all the
+presentiments of yesterday, the long-dreaded moment had arrived.
+Happily, there was no time for hesitation; in less than two minutes we
+were all on deck, and hurrying to our respective boats. The skipper
+was in the main crow's-nest with his binoculars. Presently he shouted:
+"Naow then, Mr. Count, lower away soon's y'like. Small pod o' cows,
+an' one 'r two bulls layin' off to west'ard of 'em." Down went the
+boats into the water quietly enough; we all scrambled in and shoved
+off. A stroke or two of the oars were given to get clear of the ship
+and one another, then oars were shipped and up went the sails. As I
+took my allotted place at the main-sheet, and the beautiful craft
+started off like some big bird, Mr. Count leaned forward, saying
+impressively to me: "Y'r a smart youngster, an' I've kinder took
+t'yer; but don't ye look ahead an' get gallied, 'r I'll knock ye
+stiff wi' th' tiller; y'hear me? N' don't ye dare to make thet sheet
+fast, 'r ye'll die so sudden y' won't know whar y'r hurted." I said as
+cheerfully as I could, "All right, sir," trying to look unconcerned,
+telling myself not to be a coward, and all sorts of things; but the
+cold truth is that I was scared almost to death, because I didn't know
+what was coming. However, I did the best thing under the
+circumstances, obeyed orders and looked steadily astern, or up into
+the bronzed impassive face of my chief, who towered above me, scanning
+with eagle eyes the sea ahead. The other boats were coming flying
+along behind us, spreading wider apart as they came, while in the bows
+of each stood the harpooner with his right hand on his first iron,
+which lay ready, pointing over the bow in a raised fork of wood called
+the "crutch."
+
+All of a sudden, at a motion of the chief's hand, the peak of our
+mainsail was dropped, and the boat swung up into the wind, laying
+"hove to," almost stationary. The centerboard was lowered to stop her
+drifting to leeward, although I can not say it made much difference
+that ever I saw. _Now_, what's the matter? I thought, when to my
+amazement the chief addressing me said, "Wonder why we've hauled up,
+don't ye?" "Yes, sir, I do," said I. "Wall," said he, "the fish hev
+sounded, an' 'ef we run over 'em, we've seen the last ov 'em. So we
+wait awhile till they rise agin, 'n then we'll prob'ly git thar' 'r
+thareabouts before they sound agin." With this explanation I had to be
+content, although if it be no clearer to my readers than it then was
+to me, I shall have to explain myself more fully later on. Silently we
+lay, rocking lazily upon the gentle swell, no other word being spoken
+by any one. At last Louis, the harpooner, gently breathed "Blo-o-o-w";
+and there, sure enough, not half a mile away on the lee beam, was a
+little bushy cloud of steam apparently rising from the sea. At almost
+the same time as we kept away all the other boats did likewise, and
+just then, catching sight of the ship, the reason for this apparently
+concerted action was explained. At the mainmast head of the ship was a
+square blue flag, and the ensign at the peak was being dipped. These
+were signals well understood and promptly acted upon by those in
+charge of the boats, who were thus guided from a point of view at
+least one hundred feet above the sea.
+
+"Stand up, Louey," the mate murmured softly. I only just stopped
+myself in time from turning my head to see why the order was given.
+Suddenly there was a bump, at the same moment the mate yelled, "Give't
+to him, Louey, give't to him!" and to me, "Haul that main sheet, naow
+haul, why don't ye?" I hauled it flat aft, and the boat shot up into
+the wind, rubbing sides as she did so with what to my troubled sight
+seemed an enormous mass of black India rubber floating. As we
+_crawled_ up into the wind, the whale went into convulsions befitting
+his size and energy. He raised a gigantic tail on high, thrashing the
+water with deafening blows, rolling at the same time from side to side
+until the surrounding sea was white with froth. I felt in an agony
+lest we should be crushed under one of those fearful strokes, for Mr.
+Count appeared to be oblivious of possible danger, although we seemed
+to be now drifting back on to the writhing leviathan. In the agitated
+condition of the sea it was a task of no ordinary difficulty to unship
+the tall mast, which was of course the first thing to be done. After a
+desperate struggle, and a narrow escape from falling overboard of one
+of the men, we got the long "stick," with the sail bundled around it,
+down and "fleeted" aft, where it was secured by the simple means of
+sticking the "heel" under the after thwart, two thirds of the mast
+extending out over the stern. Meanwhile, we had certainly been in a
+position of the greatest danger, our immunity from damage being
+unquestionably due to anything but precaution taken to avoid it.
+
+By the time the oars were handled, and the mate had exchanged places
+with the harpooner, our friend the enemy had "sounded"--that is, he
+had gone below for a change of scene, marveling, no doubt, what
+strange thing had befallen him. Agreeably to the accounts which I,
+like most boys, had read of the whale-fishery, I looked for the
+rushing of the line round the loggerhead (a stout wooden post built
+into the boat aft), to raise a cloud of smoke with occasional bursts
+of flame; so, as it began to slowly surge round the post, I timidly
+asked the harpooner whether I should throw any water on it. "Wot for?"
+growled he, as he took a couple more turns with it. Not knowing "what
+for," and hardly liking to quote my authorities here, I said no more,
+but waited events. "Hold him up, Louey, hold him up, cain't ye?"
+shouted the mate, and to my horror, down went the nose of the boat
+almost under water, while at the mate's order everybody scrambled aft
+into the elevated stern sheets.
+
+The line sang quite a tune as it was grudgingly allowed to surge round
+the loggerhead, filling one with admiration at the strength shown by
+such a small rope. This sort of thing went on for about twenty
+minutes, in which time we quite emptied the large tub and began on the
+small one.
+
+Suddenly our boat fell backward from her "slantindicular" position
+with a jerk, and the mate immediately shouted, "Haul line, there! look
+lively, now! you--so on, etcetera, etcetera" (he seemed to invent new
+epithets on every occasion). The line came in hand over hand, and was
+coiled in a wide heap in the stern sheets, for, silky as it was, it
+could not be expected in its wet state to lie very close. As it came
+flying in, the mate kept a close gaze upon the water immediately
+beneath us, apparently for the first glimpse of our antagonist. When
+the whale broke water, however, he was some distance off, and
+apparently as quiet as a lamb. Now, had Mr. Count been a prudent or
+less ambitious man, our task would doubtless have been an easy one, or
+comparatively so; but, being a little over-grasping, he got us all
+into serious trouble. We were hauling up to our whale in order to
+lance it, and the mate was standing, lance in hand, only waiting to
+get near enough, when up comes a large whale right alongside of our
+boat, so close, indeed, that I might have poked my finger in his
+little eye, if I had chosen. The sight of that whale at liberty, and
+calmly taking stock of us like that, was too much for the mate. He
+lifted his lance and hurled it at the visitor, in whose broad flank it
+sank, like a knife into butter, right up to the pole-hitches. The
+recipient disappeared like a flash, but before one had time to think,
+there was an awful crash beneath us, and the mate shot up into the air
+like a bomb from a mortar. He came down in a sitting posture on the
+mast thwart; but as he fell, the whole framework of the boat collapsed
+like a derelict umbrella. Louis quietly chopped the line and severed
+our connection with the other whale, while in accordance with our
+instructions we drew each man his oar across the boat and lashed it
+firmly down with a piece of line spliced to each thwart for the
+purpose. This simple operation took but a minute, but before it was
+completed we were all up to our necks in the sea--still in the boat,
+it is true, and therefore not in such danger of drowning as if we were
+quite adrift; but, considering that the boat was reduced to a mere
+bundle of loose planks, I, at any rate, was none too comfortable. Now,
+had he known it, was the whale's golden opportunity; but he, poor
+wretch, had had quite enough of our company, and cleared off without
+any delay, wondering, no doubt, what fortunate accident had rid him of
+our very unpleasant attentions.
+
+I was assured that we were all as safe as if we were on board the
+ship, to which I answered nothing; but, like Jack's parrot, I did some
+powerful thinking. Every little wave that came along swept clean over
+our heads, sometimes coming so suddenly as to cut a breath in half. If
+the wind should increase--but no--I wouldn't face the possibility of
+such a disagreeable thing. I was cool enough now in a double sense,
+for, although we were in the tropics, we soon got thoroughly chilled.
+
+Help came at last, and we were hauled alongside. Long exposure had
+weakened us to such an extent that it was necessary to hoist us on
+board, especially the mate, whose "sudden stop," when he returned to
+us after his little aërial excursion, had shaken his sturdy frame
+considerably, a state of body which the subsequent soaking had by no
+means improved. In my innocence I imagined that we should be
+commiserated for our misfortunes by Captain Slocum, and certainly be
+relieved from further duties until we were a little recovered from the
+rough treatment we had just undergone. But I never made a greater
+mistake. The skipper cursed us all (except the mate, whose sole fault
+the accident undoubtedly was) with a fluency and vigor that was, to
+put it mildly, discouraging.
+
+A couple of slings were passed around the boat, by means of which she
+was carefully hoisted on board, a mere dilapidated bundle of sticks
+and raffle of gear. She was at once removed aft out of the way, the
+business of cutting in the whale claiming precedence over everything
+else just then. The preliminary proceedings consisted of rigging the
+"cutting stage." This was composed of two stout planks a foot wide and
+ten feet long, the inner ends of which were suspended by strong ropes
+over the ship's side about four feet from the water, while the outer
+extremities were upheld by tackles from the main rigging, and a small
+crane abreast the try-works.
+
+These planks were about thirty feet apart, their two outer ends being
+connected by a massive plank which was securely bolted to them. A
+handrail about as high as a man's waist, supported by light iron
+stanchions, ran the full length of this plank on the side nearest the
+ship, the whole fabric forming an admirable standing place whence the
+officers might, standing in comparative comfort, cut and carve at the
+great mass below to their hearts' content.
+
+So far the prize had been simply held alongside by the whale line,
+which at death had been "rove" through a hole cut in the solid gristle
+of the tail; but now it became necessary to secure the carcass to the
+ship in some more permanent fashion. Therefore, a massive chain like a
+small ship's cable was brought forward, and in a very ingenious way,
+by means of a tiny buoy and a hand lead, passed round the body, one
+end brought through a ring in the other, and hauled upon until it
+fitted tight round the "small" or part of the whale next the broad
+spread of the tail. The free end of the fluke chain was then passed in
+through a mooring pipe forward, firmly secured to a massive bitt at
+the heel of the bowsprit (the fluke-chain bitt), and all was ready.
+
+The first thing to be done was to cut the whale's head off. This
+operation, involving the greatest amount of labor in the whole of the
+cutting in, was taken in hand by the first and second mates, who,
+armed with twelve-foot spades, took their station upon the stage,
+leaned over the handrail to steady themselves, and plunged their
+weapons vigorously down through the massive neck of the animal--if
+neck it could be said to have--following a well-defined crease in the
+blubber. At the same time the other officers passed a heavy chain
+sling around the long, narrow lower jaw, hooking one of the big
+cutting tackles into it, the "fall" of which was then taken to the
+windlass and hove tight, turning the whale on her back. A deep cut
+was then made on both sides of the rising jaw, the windlass was kept
+going, and gradually the whole of the throat was raised high enough
+for a hole to be cut through its mass, into which the strap of the
+second cutting tackle was inserted and secured by passing a huge
+toggle of oak through its eye. The second tackle was then hove taut,
+and the jaw, with a large piece of blubber attached, was cut off from
+the body with a boarding knife, a tool not unlike a cutlass blade set
+into a three-foot-long wooden handle.
+
+Upon being severed the whole piece swung easily inboard and was
+lowered on deck. The fast tackle was now hove upon while the third
+mate on the stage cut down diagonally into the blubber on the body,
+which the purchase ripped off in a broad strip or "blanket" about five
+feet wide and a foot thick. Meanwhile the other two officers carved
+away vigorously at the head, varying their labors by cutting a hole
+right through the snout. This, when completed, received a heavy chain
+for the purpose of securing the head. When the blubber had been about
+half stripped off the body, a halt was called in order that the work
+of cutting off the head might be finished, for it was a task of
+incredible difficulty. It was accomplished at last, and the mass
+floated astern by a stout rope, after which the windlass pawls
+clattered merrily, the "blankets" rose in quick succession, and were
+cut off and lowered into the square of the main hatch or "blubber
+room." A short time sufficed to strip off the whole of the body
+blubber, and when at last the tail was reached, the backbone was cut
+through, the huge mass of flesh floating away to feed the innumerable
+scavengers of the sea. No sooner was the last of the blubber lowered
+into the hold than the hatches were put on and the head hauled up
+alongside. Both tackles were secured to it and all hands took to the
+windlass levers. This was a small cow whale of about thirty
+barrels--that is, yielding that amount of oil--so it was just possible
+to lift the entire head on board; but as it weighed as much as three
+full-grown elephants, it was indeed a heavy lift for even our united
+forces, trying our tackle to the utmost. The weather was very fine,
+and the ship rolled but little; even then, the strain upon the mast
+was terrific, and right glad was I when at last the immense cube of
+fat, flesh, and bone was eased inboard and gently lowered on deck.
+
+As soon as it was secured the work of dividing it began. From the
+snout a triangular mass was cut, which was more than half pure
+spermaceti. This substance was contained in spongy cells held together
+by layers of dense white fiber, exceedingly tough and elastic, and
+called by the whalers "white horse." The whole mass, or "junk," as it
+is called, was hauled away to the ship's side and firmly lashed to the
+bulwarks for the time being, so that it might not "take charge" of the
+deck during the rest of the operations.
+
+The upper part of the head was now slit open lengthwise, disclosing an
+oblong cistern or "case" full of liquid spermaceti, clear as water.
+This was baled out with buckets into a tank, concreting as it cooled
+into a waxlike substance, bland and tasteless. There being now nothing
+more remaining about the skull of any value, the lashings were loosed,
+and the first leeward roll sent the great mass plunging overboard with
+a mighty splash. It sank like a stone, eagerly followed by a few small
+sharks that were hovering near.
+
+As may be imagined, much oil was running about the deck, for so
+saturated was every part of the creature with it that it really gushed
+like water during the cutting-up process. None of it was allowed to
+run to waste, though, for the scupper holes which drain the deck were
+all carefully plugged, and as soon as the "junk" had been dissected
+all the oil was carefully "squeegeed" up and poured into the try-pots.
+
+Two men were now told off as "blubber-room men," whose duty it became
+to go below and, squeezing themselves in as best they could between
+the greasy mass of fat, cut it up into "horse-pieces" about eighteen
+inches long and six inches square. Doing this, they became perfectly
+saturated with oil, as if they had taken a bath in a tank of it; for
+as the vessel rolled it was impossible to maintain a footing, and
+every fall was upon blubber running with oil. A machine of wonderful
+construction had been erected on deck in a kind of shallow trough
+about six feet long by four feet wide and a foot deep. At some remote
+period of time it had no doubt been looked upon as a triumph of
+ingenuity, a patent mincing machine. Its action was somewhat like that
+of a chaff-cutter, except that the knife was not attached to the
+wheel, and only rose and fell, since it was not required to cut right
+through the "horse-pieces" with which it was fed. It will be readily
+understood that, in order to get the oil quickly out of the blubber,
+it needs to be sliced as thin as possible, but for convenience in
+handling the refuse (which is the only fuel used) it is not chopped up
+in small pieces, but every "horse-piece" is very deeply scored as it
+were, leaving a thin strip to hold the slices together. This, then,
+was the order of work: Two harpooners attended the try-pots,
+replenishing them with minced blubber from the hopper at the port
+side, and baling out the sufficiently boiled oil into the great
+cooling tank on the starboard. One officer superintended the mincing,
+another exercised a general supervision over all. So we toiled watch
+and watch, six hours on and six off, the work never ceasing for an
+instant night or day. Though the work was hard and dirty, and the
+discomfort of being so continually wet through with oil great, there
+was only one thing dangerous about the whole business. That was the
+job of filling and shifting the huge casks of oil. Some of these were
+of enormous size, containing three hundred and fifty gallons when
+full, and the work of moving them about the greasy deck of a rolling
+ship was attended with a terrible amount of risk. For only four men at
+most could get fair hold of a cask, and when she took it into her
+silly old hull to start rolling, just as we had got one halfway across
+the deck, with nothing to grip your feet, and the knowledge that one
+stumbling man would mean a sudden slide of the ton and a half weight,
+and a little heap of mangled corpses somewhere in the lee
+scuppers--well, one always wanted to be very thankful when the
+lashings were safely passed.
+
+The whale being a small one, as before noted, the whole business was
+over within three days, and the decks scrubbed and rescrubbed until
+they had quite regained their normal whiteness. The oil was poured by
+means of a funnel and long canvas hose into the casks stowed in the
+ground tier at the bottom of the ship, and the gear, all carefully
+cleaned and neatly "stopped up," stowed snugly away below again.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[13] From The Cruise of the Cachalot. By Frank T. Bullen.
+(Illustrated.) New York: D. Appleton and Company. Pp. 379.
+
+
+
+
+SKETCH OF MANLY MILES.
+
+
+To Dr. Manly Miles belongs the distinction of having been the first
+professor of practical agriculture in the United States, as he was
+appointed to that then newly instituted position in the Michigan
+Agricultural College in 1865.
+
+Professor Miles was born in Homer, Cortland County, New York, July 20,
+1826, the son of Manly Miles, a soldier of the Revolution; while his
+mother, Mary Cushman, was a lineal descendant of Miles Standish and
+Thomas Cushman, whose father, Joshua Cushman, joining the Mayflower
+colony at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1621, left him there with
+Governor Bradford when he returned to England.
+
+When Manly, the son, was eleven years old, the family removed to
+Flint, Michigan, where he employed his time in farm work and the
+acquisition of knowledge, and later in teaching. He had a
+common-school education, and improved all the time he could spare from
+his regular occupations in reading and study. It is recorded of him in
+those days that he was always successful in whatever he undertook. In
+illustration of the skill and thoroughness with which he performed his
+tasks, his sister relates an incident of his sowing plaster for the
+first time, when his father expressed pleasure at his having
+distributed the lime so evenly and so well. It appears that he did not
+spare himself in doing the work, for so completely was he covered that
+he is said to have looked like a plaster cast, "with only his bright
+eyes shining through." A thrashing machine was brought on to the
+farm, and Manly and his brother went round thrashing for the
+neighbors. Industrious in study as well as in work, the boy never
+neglected his more prosaic duties to gratify his thirst for knowledge.
+He studied geometry while following the plow, drawing the problems on
+a shingle, which he tacked to the plow-beam. Whenever he was missed
+and inquiry was made about him, the answer invariably was, "Somewhere
+with a book." He was most interested in the natural sciences,
+particularly in chemistry in its applications to agriculture, and in
+comparative physiology and anatomy, and was a diligent student and
+collector of mollusks.
+
+Choosing the profession of medicine, Mr. Miles was graduated M. D.
+from Rush Medical College, Chicago, in 1850, and practiced till 1859.
+In the meantime he became greatly interested in the subject of a
+geographical survey of the State, for which an act was passed and
+approved in 1858. In the organization of the survey, in 1859, he was
+appointed Assistant State Geologist in the department of zoölogy; and
+in the next year was appointed professor of zoölogy and animal
+physiology in the State Agricultural College at Lansing.
+
+In his work as zoölogist to the State Geological Survey, in 1859,
+1860, and 1861, he displayed rare qualities as a naturalist, so that
+Mr. Walter R. Barrows, in recording his death in the bulletin of the
+Michigan Ornithological Club, expresses regret that many of the years
+he afterward devoted to the development of experimental agriculture
+"were not spent in unraveling some of the important biological
+problems which the State afforded, which his skill and perseverance
+would surely have solved." He was a "born collector," Mr. Barrows
+adds, "as the phrase is, and his keen eyes, tireless industry, and
+mathematical precision led to the accumulation of thousands of
+valuable specimens and more valuable observations."
+
+Mr. Bryant Walker, of Detroit, who knew Professor Miles well in later
+years, and had opportunity to review his zoölogical work, regards the
+part he took during this service in developing the knowledge of the
+fauna of the State as having been very prominent. "The catalogues he
+published in the report for 1860 have been the basis for all work
+since that time." He kept in correspondence with the most eminent
+American naturalists of the period, including Cope, Prime, Lea, W. G.
+Binney, Baird, and Agassiz, and supplied them with large quantities of
+valuable material. From the many letters written by these naturalists
+which are in the possession of his friends, we take, as illustrating
+the character of the service he rendered and of the trust they reposed
+in him, even previous to his going on the survey, one from Agassiz, of
+February 4, 1856:
+
+"DEAR SIR: As you have already furnished me with invaluable materials
+for the natural history of the fishes of your State, I am emboldened
+to ask another favor of you. I am preparing a map of the Geographical
+Distribution of the Turtles of North America, and would be greatly
+indebted to you for any information respecting the range of those
+found in your State, as far as you have noticed them, even if you
+should know them only by their common names, my object being simply to
+ascertain how far they extend over different parts of the country. If
+you could add specimens of them, to identify them with precision, it
+would be, of course, so much the better; but as I am almost ready for
+the press, I could not for this paper await the return of spring, but
+would thank you for what you could furnish me now. I am particularly
+interested in ascertaining how far north the different species
+inhabiting this continent extend." On the back of this letter was Dr.
+Miles's indorsement that a box had been sent.
+
+A number of letters from Professor Baird, of 1860 and 1861, relate to
+the identification of specimens collected by Dr. Miles, and to the
+fishes of Michigan, and contain inquiries about gulls and eggs. Dr.
+Miles likewise supplied Cope with a considerable amount of material
+concerning Michigan reptiles and fishes.
+
+While mollusks were the favorite object of Dr. Miles's investigations,
+he also made studies and valuable collections of birds, mammals,
+reptiles, and fishes; and he seems, Mr. Barrows says, "to have
+possessed, in a high degree, that strong characteristic of a true
+naturalist, a full appreciation of the value of good specimens. Many
+of his specimens are now preserved at the Agricultural College, and
+among his shells are many which are of more than ordinary value from
+having served as types of new species, or as specimens from type
+localities, or as part or all of the material which has helped to
+clear up mistakes and misconceptions about species and their
+distribution." Mr. Walker speaks of his having done a great work in
+conchology. His catalogue, which contained a list of one hundred and
+sixty-one species, was by far the most complete published up to that
+time. "He described two new species--_Planorbis truncatus_ and _Unio
+leprosus_. The former is one of the few species which are, so far as
+known, peculiar to Michigan, and is a very beautiful and distinct
+form; while the latter, although now considered as synonymous with
+another species, has peculiarities which in the then slight knowledge
+of the variability of the species was a justification of his position.
+He was also the discoverer of two other forms which were named after
+him by one of our most eminent conchologists--viz., _Campeloma
+Milesii_ (Lea) and _Guiobasis Milesii_ (Lea)." Mr. Walker believes
+that "in general, it can be truthfully stated that Dr. Miles did more
+to develop the general natural history of that State (Michigan) than
+any other man either before or since he completed his work as State
+Geologist."
+
+As professor of zoölogy and animal physiology, Dr. Miles is described
+by one of his students, who afterward became a professor in the
+college and then its president, as having been thoroughly interested
+in the subjects he taught, and shown that interest in his work and in
+his treatment of his students. He labored as faithfully and
+industriously with the class of five to which President Clute belonged
+as if it "had numbered as many score." He supplemented the meager
+equipment of his department from his more extensive private apparatus
+and collections, which were freely used for class work; and, when
+there was need, he had the skill to prepare new pieces of apparatus.
+"He was on the alert for every chance for illustration which occasion
+offered: an animal slaughtered for the tables gave him an opportunity
+to lecture on its viscera; a walk over the drift-covered fields found
+many specimens of rock which he taught us to distinguish; the mud and
+the sand banks along the river showed how in the periods of the dim
+past were formed fossil footprints and ripples; the woods and swamps
+and lakes gave many useful living specimens, some of which became the
+material for the improvised dissecting room; the crayon in his hand
+produced on board or paper the chart of geologic ages, the table of
+classification, or the drawing of the part of an animal under
+discussion."
+
+Prof. R. C. Kedzie came to the college a little later, in 1863, when
+Dr. Miles had been for two years a professor, and found him then the
+authority "for professors and students alike on beasts, birds, and
+reptiles, on the stones of the field, and insects of the air,"
+thorough, scholarly, and enthusiastic, and therefore very popular with
+his classes.
+
+The projection of agricultural colleges under the Agricultural College
+Land Grant Act of 1862 stimulated a demand for teachers of scientific
+agriculture, and it was found that they were rare. Of old school
+students of science there was no lack--able men, as President Clute
+well says, who were familiar with their little laboratories and with
+the old theories and methods, but who did not possess the new vision
+of evolution and the conservation of energy, men of the study rather
+than the field, and least of all men of the orchard and stock farm;
+and they knew nothing of the practical application of chemistry to
+fertilization and the raising of crops and the composition of feed
+stuffs, of physiology to stock-breeding, and of geology and physics to
+the study of the soils.
+
+With a thorough knowledge of science and familiarity with practical
+agriculture Professor Miles had an inclination to enter this field,
+and this inclination was encouraged by President Abbott and some of
+the members of the Board of Agriculture. He had filled the
+professorship of zoölogy and animal physiology with complete success,
+and had he consulted his most cherished tastes alone he would have
+remained there, but he gradually suffered himself to be called to
+another field. The duties of "acting superintendent of the farm" were
+attached to his chair in 1864. In 1865 he became professor of animal
+physiology and practical agriculture and superintendent of the farm;
+in 1869 he ceased to teach physiology, and gave his whole time to the
+agricultural branch of his work; and in 1875 the work of the
+superintendent of the farm was consigned to other hands, and he
+confined himself to the professorship proper of practical agriculture.
+
+The farm and its appurtenances, with fields cumbered with stumps and
+undrained, with inadequate and poorly constructed buildings, with
+inferior live stock, and everything primitive, were in poor condition
+for the teaching or the successful practice of agriculture. Professor
+Miles's first business was to set these things in order. Year by year
+something was done to remove evils or improve existing features in
+some of the departments of the life and management of the premises,
+till the concern in a certain measure approached the superintendent's
+ideal--as being a laboratory for teaching agriculture, conducting
+experiments, and training men, rather than a money-making
+establishment.
+
+In this new field, Professor Kedzie says, Professor Miles was even
+more popular than before with students, and created an enthusiasm for
+operations and labors of the farm which had been regarded before as a
+disagreeable drudgery. The students "were never happier than when
+detailed for a day's work with Dr. Miles in laying out some difficult
+ditch or surveying some field. One reason why he was so popular was
+that he was not afraid of soiling his hands. His favorite uniform for
+field work was a pair of brown overalls. The late Judge Tenney came to
+a gang of students at work on a troublesome ditch and inquired where
+he could find Dr. Miles. 'That man in overalls down in the quicksands
+of the ditch is Dr. Miles'; the professor of practical agriculture was
+in touch with the soil."
+
+Prof. Byron D. Halsted, of the New Jersey Agricultural College
+Experiment Station, who was an agricultural pupil of Dr. Miles in
+Lansing, characterizes him as having been a full man who knew his
+subjects deeply and fondly. "In those days I am safe in writing that
+he represented the forefront of advanced agriculture in America. He
+was in close touch with such men as Lawes and Gilbert, Rothamstead,
+England, the famous field-crop experimenters of the world, and as for
+his knowledge of breeds of live stock and their origin, Miles's
+Stock-Breeding is a classic work. Dr. Miles, in short, was a close
+student, a born investigator, hating an error, but using it as a
+stepping-stone toward truth. He did American farming a lasting
+service, and his deeds live after him."
+
+While loved by his students, most of whom have been successful and
+many have gained eminence as agricultural professors or workers in
+experiment stations, and while receiving sympathy and support from
+President Abbott, Dr. Miles was not appreciated by the politicians, or
+by all of the Board of Agriculture, or even by the public at large.
+Unkind and captious criticisms were made of his work, and it was found
+fault with on economical grounds, as if its prime purpose had been to
+make money. He therefore resigned his position in 1875, and accepted
+the professorship of agriculture in the Illinois State University.
+Thence he removed to the Houghton Farm of Lawson Valentine, near
+Mountainville, N. Y., where he occupied himself with scientific
+experimental investigation. He was afterward professor of agriculture
+in the Massachusetts Agricultural College, at Amherst. In announcing
+this appointment to the students, Dr. Chadbourne, then president of
+the institution, and himself a most successful teacher, stated that he
+considered Dr. Miles as the ablest man in the United States for that
+position. In 1886, shortly after Dr. Chadbourne's death, Dr. Miles
+returned to his old home in Lansing, Michigan, where he spent the rest
+of his life in study, research, and the writing of books and articles
+for scientific publications.
+
+During these later years of his life he took up again with what had
+been his favorite pursuit in earlier days, but with which he had not
+occupied himself for thirty years--the study of mollusks--with the
+enthusiasm of a young man, Mr. Walker says, who being interested in
+the same study, was in constant correspondence with him at this time;
+"and as far as his strength permitted labored with all the acumen and
+attention to details which were so characteristic of him. I was
+particularly struck with his familiarity with the present drift of
+scientific investigation and thought, and his thorough appreciation of
+modern methods of work. He was greatly interested in the work I was
+carrying on with reference to the geographical distribution of the
+mollusca, and, as would naturally be supposed from his own work in
+heredity in connection with our domestic animals, took great pleasure
+in discussing the relations of the species as they are now found and
+their possible lines of descent. He was a careful and accurate
+observer of Nature, and if he had not drifted into other lines of work
+would undoubtedly have made his mark as a great naturalist. As it is,
+his name will always have an honored place in the scientific history
+of Michigan."
+
+When Professor Miles began to teach in the Michigan Agricultural
+College, the "new education" was new indeed, and the textbook method
+still held sway. But the improved methods were gradually taking the
+place of the old ones, and Professor Miles was one of the first to
+co-operate in them, and he did it with effect. He used text-books,
+"but his living word," President Clute says, "supplemented the book;
+and the animal from the farm under his knife and ours, the shells
+which he led us to find under the rotten logs and along the rivers and
+lakes, the insects he taught us to collect and classify, the minerals
+and fossils he had collected on the geological survey of Michigan, all
+were used to instruct and inspire his students, to cultivate in them
+the scientific spirit and method."
+
+Among the more important books by Professor Miles are Stock-Breeding,
+which had a wide circulation and has been much used as a class-book;
+Experiments with Indian Corn, giving the results of some important
+work which he did at Houghton Farm; Silos and Ensilage, which helped
+much in diffusing knowledge of the silo in the times when it had to
+fight for recognition; and Land Drainage. Of his papers, he published
+in the Popular Science Monthly articles on Scientific Farming at
+Rothamstead; Ensilage and Fermentation; Lines of Progress in
+Agriculture; Progress in Agricultural Science; and How Plants and
+Animals Grow. To the American Association for the Advancement of
+Science he contributed papers on Energy as a Factor in Rural Economy;
+Heredity of Acquired Characters (also to the American Naturalist);
+Surface Tension of Water and Evaporation; Energy as a Factor in
+Nutrition; and Limits of Biological Experiments (also to the American
+Naturalist). Other articles in the American Naturalist were on Animal
+Mechanics and the Relative Efficiency of Animals as Machines. In the
+Proceedings of the American Educational Association is an address by
+him on Instruction in Manual Arts in Connection with Scientific
+Studies. The records of the U and I Club, of Lansing, of which he was
+a valued member for ten years, contain papers on a variety of
+scientific subjects which were read before it, and were highly
+appreciated. This list does not contain all of Professor Miles's
+contributions to the literature of science, for throughout his life he
+was a frequent contributor to the agricultural and scientific press,
+and a frequent speaker before associations and institutes, "where his
+lectures were able and practical."
+
+No special record is made of the work of Professor Miles in the
+American Agriculturist, but the correspondence of Professor Thurber
+with him furnishes ample proof that he was one of the most trusted
+advisers in the editorial conduct of that journal. The familiar tone
+of Professor Thurber's letters, and the undoubting assurance with
+which he asked for information and aid on various subjects, well
+demonstrate how well the editor knew whom he could rely upon in an
+emergency.
+
+In all his work the great desire of Professor Miles was to find and
+present the truth. His merits were recognized by many scientific
+societies. He was made a corresponding member of the Buffalo Society
+of Natural Sciences in 1862; a corresponding member of the
+Entomological Society of Philadelphia in January, 1863; a
+correspondent of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia in
+1864; a member of the American Association for the Advancement of
+Science in 1880, and a Fellow of the same body in 1890; and held
+memberships or other relations with other societies; and he received
+the degree of D. V. S. from Columbia Veterinary College, New York, in
+March, 1880.
+
+His students and friends speak in terms of high admiration of the
+genial qualities of Professor Miles as a companion. The resolutions of
+the U and I Club of Lansing describe him as an easy and graceful
+talker, a cheerful dispenser of his learning to others. "To spend an
+hour in his 'den,' and watch his delicate experiments with 'films,'"
+says President Clute, "and see the light in his eyes as he talked of
+them, was a delight." "He was particularly fond of boys," says
+another, "and never seemed happier than when in the company of boys or
+young men who were trying to study and to inform themselves, and if he
+could in any way assist them he was only too glad to do so"; and he
+liked pets and children. Incidents are related showing that he had a
+wonderful accuracy in noting and recollecting the minutest details
+that came under his observation--a power that he was able to bring to
+bear instantly when its exercise was called for.
+
+Dr. Miles kept up his habits of reading and study to the last days of
+his life; but all public work was made difficult to him in later years
+by an increasing deafness. He was tireless in investigation, patient,
+and always cheerful and looking for the bright side; and when one
+inquired of him concerning his health, his usual answer was that he
+was "all right," or, if he could not say that, that he would be "all
+right to-morrow."
+
+No sketch of Dr. Miles is complete without a word of tribute to his
+high personal character, his life pure and noble in every
+relationship, his unswerving devotion to truth, and the unfaltering
+loyalty to his friends, which make his memory a benediction and an
+inspiration to all who knew him well.
+
+He was married in 1851 to Miss Mary E. Dodge, who remained his devoted
+companion until his death, which occurred February 15, 1898.
+
+
+
+
+Editor's Table.
+
+
+_SCIENCE AND CULTURE._
+
+We do not know from whom the philosopher Locke quotes the saying,
+"_Non vitæ sed scholæ discimus_," but he translates it well, "We learn
+not to live, but to dispute." The adage has reference to the old
+systems of education which had for their aim neither the discovery of
+truth nor the perfecting of the human faculties in any broad sense,
+but the fitting of the individual to take his place in a world of
+conventional ideas and discuss conventional topics upon conventional
+lines. In other words, the preparation was for school, not for life,
+the whole subsequent career of the individual being regarded simply as
+a prolongation of the intellectual influences and discipline of the
+school. That system, which was ecclesiastical in its origin, has now,
+save for strictly ecclesiastical purposes, passed away. We consider
+life as the end of school and not school as the end of life.
+
+It may be questioned, however, whether we have as yet thoroughly
+adapted our educational methods to this change of standpoint. Do we as
+yet take a sufficiently broad view of life? If we conceive life
+narrowly as essentially a business struggle, and adapt our procedure
+to that conception, the results will show very little relation to the
+larger and truer conception according to which life means development
+of faculty, activity of function, and a harmonious adjustment of
+relations between man and man. If, again, we make too much of
+knowledge that has only a conventional value, having little or no
+bearing on the understanding of things or the accomplishment of useful
+work, we are so far falling into the old error of "learning for
+school." The address by Sir Archibald Geikie, which we published last
+month, gives a useful caution against undervaluing "the older
+learning." The older learning can certainly be made an effective
+instrument for the cultivation of taste, of sympathy, and of
+intellectual accuracy along certain lines. It tends further, we
+believe, to promote a certain intellectual self-respect, which is a
+valuable quality. In the study of language and literature the human
+mind surveys, as it were, its own peculiar possessions, and thus
+acquires a sense of proprietorship which a study of the external world
+can hardly give. Still, it is well to cultivate a consciousness of the
+essentially limited and arbitrary nature of such knowledge. It is
+important, we may admit, to have a good text of such an author as
+Chaucer; but the minutiæ into which critics of his text enter can not
+be said to possess any broad human interest. Whether he wrote this
+word or that word, adopted this spelling or that, can not be a
+question on which much depends; and could one know the exact truth on
+a thousand such points, he would not really be much the wiser. Among
+Chaucer scholars he could speak with a good deal of confidence; but
+the knowledge of these details would not really help to round out any
+useful _system_ of knowledge, nor could any single fact possess the
+illuminating power which sometimes belongs to some single and, at
+first sight, unimportant fact in the realm of natural knowledge.
+
+This is not said with any intention of disparaging the culture that
+comes of literary study. It is a culture that tends to brighten human
+intercourse and to sweeten a man's own thoughts. It is a culture
+eminently favorable to flexibility of mind and quick insight into
+human character. So far it is a culture "for life"; but too often it
+tends to become a culture "for school"--that is to say, when things
+are learned simply to meet conventional demands and conform to the
+fashion of the time.
+
+A true and sufficient culture can never, as we conceive, be founded on
+literature and language alone. No mind can be truly liberalized
+without imbibing and assimilating the fundamental principles of
+science. There is darkness in the mind that believes that anything can
+come out of nothing and which has never obtained a glimpse of the
+exactness with which Nature solves her equations. In the region of
+mechanics alone there are a thousand beautiful and varied
+illustrations of the unfailing constancy of natural laws. It is a
+liberal education to trace the operation of one law under numberless
+disguises, and thus arrive at an ineradicable conviction that the same
+law must be reckoned with always and everywhere. The persistence of
+force, the laws of the composition and resolution of forces, the laws
+of falling bodies and projectiles, the conservation of energy, the
+laws of heat, to mention only a few heads of elementary scientific
+study, are capable, if properly unfolded and illustrated, of producing
+in any mind open to large thoughts a sense of harmony and a trust in
+the underlying reason of things, which are constitutive elements of
+the very highest culture. Only, care must be taken to approach these
+studies in a right spirit. There is a way of regarding the laws of
+Nature which tends to vulgarize rather than refine the mind. If we
+approach Nature merely as something to be exploited, we get no culture
+from the study of it; but if we approach it as the great men of old
+did, and feel that in learning its laws we are grasping the thoughts
+which went to the building of the universe, and, by so doing, are
+affirming our own high calling as intelligent beings, then every
+moment given to the study of Nature means intellectual, moral, and
+spiritual gain. When we look into literature there is much to charm,
+much to delight and satisfy; and doubtless, in relation to what any
+one man can accomplish, the field is infinite; but still we know we
+are looking into the limited. On the other hand, when we are face to
+face with Nature, we know we are looking into the infinite, and that,
+however many veils we may take away, there is still "veil after veil
+behind."
+
+It is needless to say that there are thousands of minds in the world
+possessed of good native power, but laboring under serious disability
+for the want of that culture which science alone can bestow. Some of
+these are sick with morbid longings for unattainable knowledge, and
+openly or secretly rebellious at the limitations of a Nature whose
+powers they have never even begun to explore. To such persons anything
+like an adequate insight into the harmony amid diversity of Nature's
+laws would come with all the force of a revelation, and would, we may
+well believe, clear their minds of the feverish fancies which have
+made them so restless and dissatisfied; but, alas! it is rarely that
+such enlightenment comes to those who have not in youth imbibed a
+portion of the scientific spirit. In this class are to be found the
+victims of spiritualism, of the Keeley motor, and even of that
+grotesque satire, the success of which we remember almost with fear
+and trembling, the "sympsychograph." Still, to all such we would say:
+
+ "Come forth into the light of things;
+ Let Nature be your teacher."
+
+The "Nature" which we require to teach us for the peace and
+tranquillity of our souls is the Nature of everyday phenomena, the
+Nature that forms the clouds and rounds the raindrops, that springs in
+the grass and pulses in the tides, that glances in the sunbeam and
+breathes in the flower, that works witchery in the crystal and breaks
+into glory in the sunset. The mind that knows what can be known of
+these things has feasted full of wonder and beauty, and makes no
+greedy demand for higher grace or mightier miracle.
+
+Then again there are those who for want of a little elementary
+scientific knowledge, and particularly for want of an assured
+conviction that Nature gives nothing for nothing, are continually
+attempting the impossible in the way of projected inventions. They
+catch at a phrase and think it must represent a fact; they fall
+victims to a verbal mythology of their own manufacture. If there was
+much hope of their learning anything of value through disappointment,
+they might be left to the teaching of experience, costly as the
+lessons of that master are. But they do not learn: their hopes are
+blasted, their fortunes, if they had any, are wrecked, but their
+infatuations survive. Where is the inventor of a perpetual motion who
+ever ceased to have confidence in his peculiar contrivance? The thing
+may be as motionless as a tombstone, save when urged by external force
+into a momentary lumbering activity; but all the same, it only needs,
+its misguided author thinks, a little doctoring, a trifling change
+here or there, to make it tear round like mad. And so with other
+inventors of the impossible: they take counsel not with Nature, but
+with their own wholly incorrect notions of what the operations of
+Nature are. The least power of truly analyzing a natural phenomenon,
+and separating the factors that produce it, would show them the
+falsity of their ideas; but that power they do not possess.
+
+We can not, then, plead too strongly for the teaching of science, not
+with a view to results in money, but with a view to the improvement of
+the mind and heart of the learner, or, in other words, as a source of
+culture. Literature introduces us to the world of human thought and
+action, to the kingdom of man; and science shows us how the thought
+and powers of man can be indefinitely enlarged by an ever increasing
+acquaintance with the laws of the universe. Literature alone leaves
+the mind without any firm grasp of the reality of things, and science
+alone tends to produce a hard, prosaic, and sometimes antisocial
+temper. Each helps to bring out the best possible results of the
+other; and it is only by their joint action that human faculties and
+human character can ever be brought to their perfection.
+
+
+_SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST._
+
+It is singular what a propensity some writers have to misunderstand
+and misrepresent the views of Mr. Herbert Spencer, even upon points in
+regard to which he has made every possible effort to avoid occasion
+for misapprehension. The term "survival of the fittest" is one which
+Mr. Spencer himself introduced as being, perhaps, a little less open
+to misunderstanding than the Darwinian expression "natural selection."
+The latter seemed to imply purposive action, and Mr. Spencer thought
+that this implication would be less prominent if the phrase were
+changed to "survival of the fittest." From the very first, however, he
+recognized that the difference between the two terms in this respect
+was, if we may so express it, purely quantitative; and he took care to
+make it clear that by "the fittest" he did not in the least intend to
+signify any form of ideal or subjective fitness, but simply a superior
+degree of adaptation, as a matter of actual fact, to environing
+conditions. The conditions at any given moment are as they are, and
+the "fitness" of any particular organism is such a correspondence with
+those conditions as permits and favors its perpetuation. The
+conditions do not create fitness; they merely eliminate unfitness; nor
+does Mr. Spencer conceive any agency as producing _ab extra_ the
+fitness which enables an organism or a number of organisms to survive.
+He differs, however, from what is perhaps the dominant school of
+biology to-day, in holding that the higher forms of organic life are,
+as he expresses it, "directly equilibrated" with their surroundings
+through the inheritance of physical features resulting from effort and
+habit.
+
+To whatever cause it may be attributed, few writers whose intellectual
+activity has extended over so long a term of years as Mr. Spencer's
+have been so consistent in their utterances at different stages as he.
+The "Synthetic Philosophy" is the realization of a scheme of thought
+no less wonderful in its coherence and solidity than in its compass,
+the author having planted himself from the first at a point of view
+which gave him a clear command of his entire field. To say that no
+other system of thought equally comprehensive and equally coherent
+exists in the world to-day would be to make a statement which few
+competent and dispassionate authorities would deny. Notwithstanding
+this, there are writers not a few, particularly of the class "who
+write with ease," who, as we said at the outset, have a propensity for
+misunderstanding Mr. Spencer, and who consequently accuse him of
+inconsistencies and self-contradictions for which nothing that he has
+ever said affords any warrant. One of these gentlemen is the Duke of
+Argyll, who has lately offered the world another superfluous book
+under the title of Organic Evolution Cross-examined. The duke
+particularly concerns himself with Mr. Spencer's teaching in regard to
+the "survival of the fittest," and Mr. Spencer, in the columns of
+Nature, replies to him in a brief but sufficient manner. It is safe to
+say that Mr. Spencer's philosophy will show Cyclopean remains
+generations after the name of his ducal critic shall have passed
+forever into the mists of oblivion; and the "survival of the fittest"
+will thus be illustrated in a sense in which Mr. Spencer himself never
+used the words.
+
+
+
+
+Scientific Literature.
+
+
+SPECIAL BOOKS.
+
+The study of the methods through which the topographical features and
+rock forms of particular districts have been worked out, as presented
+in numerous popular monographs, is a fascinating one; and we can
+hardly doubt that many persons who would never otherwise have thought
+of it have been made interested in geology by some of these masterly
+picturesque descriptions of regions with which they were superficially
+familiar. Other treatises on the origin of surface features, dealing
+with the subject more fundamentally, but likewise of limited scope,
+are not wanting. Yet, as Prof. _James Geikie_ well says, there is no
+English work to which readers not skilled in geology can turn for a
+general account of the whole subject. Professor Geikie has therefore
+prepared his elaborate book on _Earth Sculpture_[14] to supply this
+want, to furnish an introductory treatise for those persons who may be
+desirous of acquiring some broad knowledge of the results arrived at
+by geologists as to the development of land forms generally. A vast
+number of geological questions are involved in the exhaustive
+treatment of the subject. All the forces with which geologists become
+acquainted in the study of the earth, and their operation, come into
+consideration. The effects of these forces assume aspects that vary
+according to the nature of the material on which they operate, and
+they are again modified according to the peculiar combinations of
+forces at work. The subject is therefore not the easy one it may be
+supposed at first sight to be, and the reader who peruses Professor
+Geikie's work with the intention of mastering it will find he has some
+studying to do. Yet Professor Geikie is clear, and it is only because
+he has gone deeper than the others that he may be harder. The first
+point he insists upon is that in the fashioning of the earth's surface
+no hard-and-fast line separates past and present. The work has been
+going on for a long time, and is still in progress, under a law of
+evolution as true for the crust of the globe as for the plants and
+animals. In setting out upon our inquiry we must in the first place
+know something about rocks and the mode of their arrangement, of the
+structure or architecture of the earth's crust. This leads to the
+distinction between the igneous and the subaqueous, the volcanic,
+plutonic, and metamorphic, and the derivative rocks on which epigene
+agencies have performed their shaping work. These rocks have been
+modified in various ways, and the surface appearance of the earth has
+been affected by forces operating from the interior, and by external
+factors, the work of which is called denudation. The agents of
+denudation are described--air, water, heat, frost, chemical action,
+plants, and animals--often so closely associated in their operations
+that their individual shares in the final result can hardly be
+determined. The various influences of these factors as exerted upon
+different forms of geological structure and different sorts of rocks
+are then taken up and described as applied to land forms in regions of
+horizontal, or gently inclined, and of highly folded and disturbed
+strata, and in regions affected by normal faults or vertical
+displacements. Land forms due directly or indirectly to igneous action
+and the influence of rock character on the determination of land forms
+are subjects of special chapters. Glacial action is one of the most
+important factors in modifying the forms of northern lands, and is
+treated with considerable fullness. Æolian action--of the air and
+wind--has peculiar and important effects in arid regions, and
+underground water in limestone districts, and these receive attention.
+Then come basins--those due to crustal deformation, crater lakes,
+river lakes, glacial basins, and others, and coast lines. Finally, a
+classification is given of these land forms as plains or plateaus of
+accumulation and of erosion, original or tectonic and subsequent or
+relict hills and mountains, original or tectonic and subsequent or
+erosion valleys, basins, and coast lines, and the conclusions are
+reached that we do not know, except as a matter of probability,
+whether we have still visible any original wrinkles of the earth's
+crust; and that some of the estimates of the time it has taken to
+produce the changes of which we witness the results have been very
+much exaggerated.
+
+The curious conclusions obtained by Dr. _Le Bon_ in his psychological
+investigations,[15] delivered to us in startling language, are said to
+be the fruit of extensive travel and of the personal measurement of
+thousands of skulls. His memoir on cervical researches, published in
+1879, upholds the theory that the volume of the skull varies with the
+intelligence. This theory has perhaps suffered a permanent
+adumbration. Facts seem to prove that the bony structure of the skull,
+or even its cranial capacity, gives no positive indication of
+intellect.
+
+In the present volume the theme of discussion is the soul of races.
+Anthropological classification is set aside and mankind is divided
+into four groups according to mental characteristics: the primitive,
+inferior, average, and superior races--the standard of judgment being
+the degree of their aptitude for dominating reflex impulses. It is
+perhaps worthy of note that while the Frenchman belongs to a superior
+race, the Semitic peoples are placed in the class below, or the
+average sort. For the primitive varieties it is not necessary to
+observe a South Sea islander, the lower strata of Europeans furnishing
+numerous examples. When greater differentiation is reached, the word
+"race" is used in a historical sense. It requires, however, more
+complete fusion than some nations exhibit to earn this title; for,
+although there are Germans and Americans, "it is not clear as yet that
+there are Italians." The race having been once evolved, acquires
+wondrous potentialities with Dr. Le Bon. He compares it to the
+totality of cells constituting a living organism, asserts that its
+mental constitution is as unvarying as its anatomical structure, that
+it is a permanent being independent of time and founded alone by its
+dead. It is a short step to endow this entity with a soul consisting
+of common sentiments, interests, and beliefs--what in brief, robbed of
+hyperbole, we should call national character. He states that the
+notion of a country is not possible until a national soul is formed.
+This, in time, like germ-plasm, becomes so stable that assimilation
+with foreign elements is impossible. Like natural species, it has
+secondary characteristics that may be modified, but its fundamental
+character is like the fin of the fish or the beak of the bird. The
+acquisition of this soul marks the apogee of the greatness of a
+people. Psychological species, however, are not eternal, but may decay
+if the functioning of their organs is troubled profoundly.
+
+The soul of the race is best expressed in its art, not in its history
+or institutions, and, as it can not bequeath its soul, so it can not
+impress its civilization or art upon an alien race. It was on account
+of this incompatibility of soul that Grecian art failed to be
+implanted in India. The unaltering constituent of the soul corresponds
+to character, while intellectual qualities are variable. By character
+is meant perseverance, energy, power of self-control, also morality.
+The latter is hereditary respect for the rules on which a society is
+based. This definition would make polygamy a moral notion for Mormons.
+The knowledge of character "can be acquired neither in laboratories
+nor in books, but only in the course of long travel." Whence it is
+learned that different races can not have mutual comprehension.
+Luckily for the student who is unable to travel, the same phenomenon
+may be observed in the gulf that separates the civilized man and
+woman. Although highly educated, "they might converse with each other
+for centuries without understanding one another." These differences
+between races and individuals demonstrate the falsity of the notion of
+equality. Indeed, through _science_ "man has learned that to be slaves
+is the natural condition of all human beings." Naturally he becomes
+dispirited, anarchy seizes upon the uneducated and sullen indifference
+the more cultivated. "Like a ship that has lost its compass, the
+modern man wanders haphazard through the spaces formerly peopled by
+the gods and rendered a desert by science." In France morality is
+gradually dying out, while the United States is threatened by a
+gigantic civil war. What to do is problematical, since we are informed
+"that people have never derived much advantage from too great a desire
+to reason and think," and what is most harmful to a people is to
+attain too high a degree of intelligence and culture, the groundwork
+of the soul beginning to decline when this level is reached. The
+remedy suggested to us is "the organization of a very severe military
+service and the permanent menace of disastrous wars." But if we fail
+to see the improving tendency of this advice, it is probably because
+we are like historians, "simple-minded," while Dr. Le Bon is much too
+complex for our understanding. According to his own theory, there is
+no hope that we may comprehend him, since the outpourings of a soul of
+the Latin race can not be transferred by a simple bridge of
+translation to the apprehension of an Anglo-Saxon mind, separated, as
+he would term it, by "the dead weight of thousands of generations."
+
+
+GENERAL NOTICES.
+
+In preparing the new edition of his _Text-Book of Mineralogy_[16]
+first published in 1877, Prof. _E. S. Dana_ has found it necessary to
+rewrite the whole as well as to add much new matter and many new
+illustrations. The work being designed chiefly for use in class or
+private instruction, the choice of topics discussed, the order and
+fullness of treatment, and the method of presentation have been
+determined by that object. The different types of crystal forms are
+described under the thirty-two groups now accepted, classed according
+to their symmetry. In the chapters on physical and chemical
+mineralogy, the plan of the former edition is retained of presenting
+somewhat fully the elementary principles of the science on which the
+mineral characters depend, and the author has tried to give the
+student the means of becoming practically familiar with the modern
+means of investigation. Especial attention is given to the optical
+qualities of crystals as revealed by the microscope; and frequent
+references are introduced to important papers on the different
+subjects discussed. The descriptive part of the volume is essentially
+an abridgment of the sixth edition of Dana's System of Mineralogy,
+published in 1892, to which the student is referred for fuller and
+supplementary information. A full topical index is furnished in
+addition to the usual index of species.
+
+The title, _The Story of the Railroad_,[17] carries with it the
+suggestion of an eventful history. The West, in the author's view,
+begins with the Missouri River. The story of its railroad is the story
+of the line, now very multiple, that leads to the Pacific Ocean. The
+beginning of white men's travels in these routes is traced by the
+editor to the Spanish adventurers of the sixteenth century, who made
+miserable journeys in search of gold or visionary objects, through
+regions now traversed by some of the more southern lines. Then came
+trappers; next costly and painfully undertaken Government expeditions
+into the then regions of the unknown, the stories of which were the
+boyhood delight of men now living. The period of practical traversing
+of the continent began with the raging of the California gold fever,
+when the journey of many weeks was tiresomely made with ox teams, in
+the face of actual perils of the desert, starvation, thirst, and the
+Indians. After California became important, stage and express lines
+were put on; but still, at the time Mr. Warman takes up the story,
+less than sixty years ago, the idea of building a railroad to the
+Pacific was regarded as too visionary to be entertained, and Asa
+Whitney sacrificed a fortune trying to induce somebody to take it up.
+The first dreams were for a short route to the Orient. Eventually the
+idea was developed that the American West might be worth going after,
+and then the idea of a railroad to it began to assume practical form.
+Young Engineer Dodge, afterward Major General, began surveys before
+the civil war; after it General Sherman gave the scheme a great
+impulse, and the Union Pacific Railroad was built--when and how are
+graphically and dramatically told in Mr. Warman's book. Next came the
+Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé, and other transcontinental lines, the
+histories of all of which are related in similar style, with stories
+of adventures, perils encountered, and lively incidents, including the
+war between two of the lines for the possession of the Arkansas Cañon;
+financial mishaps, and political scandal. Then came the settlement of
+the plains, road-making in Mexico, and the opening of Oklahoma, all of
+which were made possible by the railroads, and have in turn
+contributed to support them. The beginnings and growth of the express
+business are described, and the later lines that have penetrated the
+plains are mentioned.
+
+Prof. _William Benjamin Smith's_ treatise on the _Infinitesimal
+Analysis_[18] has been written, the author says, on what appeared, in
+the light of ten years' experience in teaching the calculus, to be
+lines of least resistance. The aim has been, within a prescribed
+expense of time and energy, to penetrate as far as possible into the
+subject, and in as many directions, so that the student shall attain
+as wide knowledge of the matter, as full comprehension of the methods,
+and as clear consciousness of the spirit and power of this analysis as
+the nature of the case would admit. The author has accordingly often
+followed what seemed to be natural suggestions and impulses toward
+near-lying extensions or generalizations, and has even allowed them to
+direct the course of the discussion. In accordance with the plan and
+purpose of the book as given, "Weierstressian rigor" has been excluded
+from many investigations, and the postponement has been compelled of
+some important discussions, which were considered too subtle for an
+early age of study. Real difficulties, however, have not been
+knowingly disguised, and pains have been taken on occasion to warn the
+reader that the treatment given is only provisional, and must await
+further precision or delimitation. Where the subject has been found
+too large for the compass of the intended work, or too abstruse or
+difficult for the contemplated students, the treatment has been
+compressed or curtailed. The book is, in fact, written for such as
+feel a genuine interest in the subject; and the illustrations and
+exercises have been chosen with frequent reference to practical or
+theoretic importance or to historic interest.
+
+Mr. _George Jacob Holyoake_ has written with much enthusiasm the
+_Jubilee History of the Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society_.[19]
+Many schemes have been started on lines similar to those of this one,
+but very few besides it have grown from the very beginning, and,
+having become to all appearance a permanent institution, can look back
+upon a career of fifty years with complete satisfaction. The society
+began in times of public distress. The ground was prepared for it by
+the "Redemption" Society, which was founded at Leeds in 1845, by
+admirers of Robert Owen, after the experiment at Queenswood had
+failed. It practiced a kind of co-operation and had some distinguished
+friends to wish it well. Among the speakers at its meetings was Dr.
+Frederic Hollick, still living, now a resident of New York city. The
+co-operative society was started as a means of getting cheaper flour
+for its members. On February 25, 1847, an appeal headed "Holbeck
+Anti-Corn Mill Association" was issued to the working classes of Leeds
+and vicinity by the "working people of Messrs. Benyon & Co.'s mill,"
+Holbeck, inviting combination and subscriptions for establishing a
+mill to be the property of the subscribers and their successors, "in
+order to supply them with flour and flour only." Meetings were held,
+an organization was effected, and the mill was started. The history of
+the society and how it grew, how "flour only" was stricken from its
+scheme and other things were added and it branched out, how
+co-operative stores were established, how it gained the confidence of
+the public and the respect of rivals in business, its successes and
+its mistakes, its triumphs and failures, are told by Mr. Holyoake,
+year by year, in a detail in which everything is set down and nothing
+covered up. In 1897 the cooperative society had productive departments
+of flour, bakery, bespoke clothing, boot and shoe factory, brush
+factory, cabinet making, building, millinery, and dressmaking,
+employing 541 hands and turning over £26,949; 80 large stores for the
+sale of these and various other kinds of goods in Leeds and vicinity;
+drapery branches and boot and shoe stores; 43 butchering branches; and
+37,000 subscribing purchasers. Its capital stood at £447,000; and its
+sales for the year amounted to £1,042,616.
+
+D. Appleton and Company have added to their Home Reading Series _The
+Earth and Sky_, a primer of Astronomy for Young Readers, by Prof.
+_Edward S. Holden_. It is intended to be the first of a series of
+three or more volumes, all treating of astronomy in one form or
+another, and suited for reading in the school. The treatment is based
+on the principle that "it is not so simple as it appears to fix in the
+child's mind the fundamental fact that it is Nature which is true, and
+the book or the engraving which is a true copy of it. 'It says' is the
+snare of children as well as of their more sophisticated elders. The
+vital point to be insisted on is a constant reference from words to
+things." The volume is written as a conversation with a young lad. He
+is first shown how he may know for himself that the earth is not flat,
+though it certainly appears to be so. The next step is to show him
+that he may know that the earth is in fact round, and that it is a
+globe of immense size. Its situation in space is next considered, and
+the child's mind is led to some formal conclusions respecting space
+itself. It is then directed to the sun, to the moon and its changes,
+to the stars and their motions, to the revolution of the earth, etc.
+
+In 1887 _E. S. Holden_ published through the Regents of the University
+of California a list of recorded earthquakes on the Pacific coast, it
+being the first systematic publication of the sort. The purpose of it
+was to bring to light all the general facts about the various shocks,
+and enable studies to be made of particular earthquake phenomena. It
+was necessary at the Lick Observatory to keep a register of the times
+of occurrence of all shocks on account of their possible effects on
+the instruments. With this was associated in 1888, when the
+observatory began its active work, the collection of reports of shocks
+felt elsewhere on the Pacific coast. Mr. Holden now reprints this
+pamphlet through the Smithsonian Institution in _A Catalogue of
+Earthquakes felt on the Pacific Coast, 1769 to 1897_, with many
+corrections and additions, including a complete account of the
+earthquake observations at Mount Hamilton from 1887 to 1897, and an
+abstract of the great amount of information that has been collected
+regarding other Pacific coast earthquakes during the same interval.
+
+The _Psychologie als Erfahrungs-Wissenschaft_ of _Hans Cornelius_ is
+not intended for a complete account and review of the facts of
+psychical life, but rather to present the fundamentals of a purely
+empirical theory, excluding all metaphysical views. Such an account
+should not start from any arbitrary abstractions or hypotheses, but
+simply from actually ascertained, directly perceived psychical
+experiences. On the other hand, an empirical definition should be
+required for all the terms that are used in a comprehensive
+description of the experience; and no term should be used without the
+psychical manifestation described by it being pointed out. After an
+introduction in which the method and place of psychology, subjective
+and objective, physiological and genetic, are referred to, the
+elementary facts of consciousness are discussed. The coherency of
+knowledge is treated of in the next chapter, and in the third,
+Psychical Analysis and the conception of unobserved consciousness; and
+the succeeding chapters are devoted to Sensation, Memory, and Fancy;
+The Objective World, Truth and Error, and Feeling and Will. (Published
+at Leipsic, Germany: B. G. Teubner.)
+
+An extremely interesting book is given us in the publications of the
+Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Society of studies by _George
+W._ and _Elizabeth Peckham_, of the _Instincts and Habits of the
+Solitary Wasps_. These insects are familiar enough to us all, as we
+meet them or see their nests of one or a few cells every day, and then
+think no more of them. But Mr. and Mrs. Peckham, following them to
+their haunts and keeping company with them, have found them
+manifesting remarkable instincts and exercising curious customs, which
+they describe in the style of persons who are in love with their work.
+The opportunity for the studies was given in two gardens, one on the
+top of a hill and the other lower down, with an island in a lake close
+by and acres of woodland all about, offering a rich variety of nesting
+places. There are more than a thousand species of these solitary wasps
+in the United States, to only about fifty of the social ones, and they
+live without knowledge of their progenitors and without relations with
+others of their kind.
+
+The eighth volume of the report of the _Iowa Geological Survey_
+comprises the accounts of surveys completed during 1897 in six
+counties, making up the whole number of twenty-six counties in which
+the areal work has been completed. This does not, however, represent
+the whole extent of the operations of the survey, for some work has
+been done in nearly every county in the State, and in many counties it
+will require but little additional work to make a complete report. In
+addition to the areal work, too, special studies of coal, clay,
+artesian waters, gypsum, lead, zinc, etc., have engaged attention. A
+growing public appreciation of the work of the survey as illustrated
+in the demand for the volumes of the reports and for special papers,
+is recognized by the State Geologist, Mr. _Samuel Calvin_; and an
+increasing use of the reports as works for reference and for general
+study in high schools and other educational institutions is observed.
+The survey is now collecting statistics of production of various
+minerals mined in the State.
+
+One of the features most likely to attract attention in the _Annual
+Report of the State Geologist_ of New Jersey for 1897 is the paper of
+Mr. C. C. Vermeule on the Drainage of the Hackensack and Newark Tide
+Marshes. In it a scheme is unfolded for the reclamation and diking of
+the flats, under which an ample navigable waterway shall be developed,
+and the cities which now stop at their edges may be extended and built
+up to the very banks of the new harbor, made a highway for ocean
+sailing vessels. An interesting paper is published by Lewis Woolman on
+Artesian and Bored and other Wells, in which many important wells are
+described with reference to the geological strata they penetrate.
+Other papers relate to iron mining and brick and clay industries,
+mineral statistics, and statistics of clays, bricks, and terra cotta.
+The field reports describe progress in the surveys of the surface
+geology, the Newark system, and the upper Cretaceous formations.
+
+On the basis of a reconnoissance made by him for Alexander Agassiz,
+Mr. _Robert T. Hill_ has published through the Bulletin of the Museum
+of Comparative Zoölogy at Harvard University, a paper on _The
+Geological History of the Isthmus of Panama and Portions of Costa
+Rica_. He finds that there is considerable evidence that a land
+barrier in the tropical region separated the two oceans as far back as
+Jurassic time, and continued through the Cretaceous period. The
+geological structure of the Isthmus and Central American regions, so
+far as investigated, when considered aside from the paleontology,
+presents no evidence by which the former existence of a free
+communication of oceanic waters across the present tropical barriers
+can be established. The paleontological evidence indicates the
+ephemeral existence of a passage at the close of the Eocene period.
+All lines of inquiry give evidence that no communication has existed
+between the two oceans since the close of the Oligocene.
+
+The _Twenty-second Annual Report of the Department of Geology and
+Natural Resources_ of Indiana, _W. S. Blatchley_, State Geologist,
+embraces, in part, the results of the work of the several departments
+of the survey during 1897. These appear in the form of papers of
+economic importance on the petroleum, stone, and clay resources of the
+State, natural gases and illuminating oils, a description of the
+curious geological and topographical region of Lake and Porter
+Counties, and an extended paper on the Birds of Indiana, with specific
+descriptions. A large proportion of the energies of the department
+were employed during the year in gathering data for a detailed report
+on the coal area of the State, which is now in course of preparation.
+
+The _Report of the United States Commissioner of Education_ for
+1896-'97 records an increase in the enrollment of schools and colleges
+of 257,586, the whole number of pupils being 14,712,077 in public
+institutions and schools, and 1,513,016 in private. The increase is
+confined to the public institutions, the private ones having suffered
+from "hard times." Among the numerous papers published in the volume
+containing the report are those on Education in Great Britain and
+Ireland, France, Denmark, Norway, Central Europe, and Greece;
+Commercial Education in Europe; the Teaching of Civics in France,
+Switzerland, and England; Sunday Schools, including accounts of the
+several denominational systems; the Legal Rights of Children; and
+sketches of Horace Mann and Henry Barnard and their work in furthering
+education.
+
+Mr. _David T. Day's_ report on the _Mineral Resources of the United
+States_ for 1896 appears as Part V of the Eighteenth Annual Report of
+the United States Geological Survey, in two volumes of fourteen
+hundred pages in all; the first of which is devoted to Metallic
+Products and Coal, and the second to Nonmetallic Products except Coal.
+The report covers the calendar year 1896, and shows only a slight
+increase in total values over 1895. Of some substances, however--gold,
+copper, aluminum, and petroleum being the most important ones--the
+value was the greatest ever attained. Of other substances, including
+lead, bituminous coal, building stones, mineral waters, salt, and
+pyrites, the product was increased in amount, but the value was less.
+A paper, by Mr. George F. Becker, on the Witwatersrand Banket, records
+observations made by him in the Transvaal gold fields.
+
+_A Geological Reconnoissance of the Coal Fields of the Indian
+Territory_, published in the Contributions to Biology of the Hopkins
+Seaside Laboratory of Leland Stanford Junior University, by _Noah
+Fields Drake_, is based upon a six months' examination made by the
+author during the spring, summer, and fall of 1896, of the larger part
+of the coal measures and adjacent formations of Indian and Oklahoma
+Territories. The best maps that could then be had being exceedingly
+inaccurate, sketch maps were made of areas that were especially
+important. On account of features of particular geological interest,
+nearly all the area south and east of the Canadian River and the
+bordering areas of the Boone chert and limestones were sketched and
+studied rather closely.
+
+The _American Catholic Historical Society_ at Philadelphia publishes
+in its _Quarterly Records_ much that, while it must be of deep
+interest to historical students holding the Roman Catholic faith,
+possesses, perhaps, a strong though more general interest to all
+students of American history; for the men of that faith have had no
+small part in the colonization and development of this country. The
+number for June, 1898, contains a portrait and a bibliographical
+sketch of the Rev. Peter Henry Lemke, O. S. B., of Pennsylvania,
+Kansas, and Elizabeth, N. J.; a poem on the Launch of the American
+Frigate United States, whose commander was a Catholic; articles on the
+Sir John James Fund, and Catholic Chronicles of Lancaster, Pa., and
+Extracts from the Diary of the Rev. Patrick Kenny.
+
+A memoir on _A Determination of the Ratio ([Greek: chi]) of the
+Specific Heats at Constant Pressure and at Constant Volume for Air,
+Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide, and Hydrogen_ gives the result of a series of
+investigations by Drs. _O. Lummer_ and _E. Pringshein_, of
+Charlottenburg, Germany, made with the aid of a grant from the
+Hodgkins Fund of the Smithsonian Institution. Besides being of
+exceptional importance in thermodynamics, the specific heat ratio is
+of interest as affording a clew to the character of the molecule. In
+the present investigation coincident results on the gases examined
+appear to have been reached for the first time. (Published by the
+Smithsonian Institution.)
+
+From the greater lightness of the air and the higher velocity of its
+currents, it is evident that the materials it may carry and deposit
+will be somewhat different in composition and structure from those
+which are laid down in water. They are as a rule finer, they exhibit a
+different bedding, and are more capriciously placed. Mr. _Johan August
+Udden_ has made a careful study of the subject, the results of which
+he publishes under the title of _The Mechanical Composition of Wind
+Deposits_, as the first number of the Augustana Library Series, at the
+Lutheran Augustana Book Concern, Rock Island, Ill.
+
+The _History Reader for Elementary Schools_ (The Macmillan Company, 60
+cents), prepared by _L. L. W. Wilson_ and arranged with special
+reference to holidays, contains readings for each month of the school
+year, classified according to different periods and phases of American
+history generally, so chosen that some important topic of the group
+shall bear a relation to the month in which it is to be read. The
+groups concern the Indians, the Discovery of America, Thanksgiving,
+Other Settlements (than those of Virginia and the Pilgrims), Dr.
+Franklin, Lincoln and Washington, the Revolution, Arbor Day, and Brave
+Sea Captains, etc., closing with articles in reference to Flag Day.
+The insertion of an article on the War with Spain seems premature.
+Public sentiment is not yet at rest on the subject.
+
+
+PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.
+
+Agricultural Experiment Stations. Bulletins and Reports. Cornell
+University: No. 160. Hints on Rural School Grounds. By L. H. Bailey.
+Pp. 20; No. 161. Annual Flowers. By G. N. Lanman and L. H. Bailey. Pp.
+32; No. 162. The Period of Gestation in Cows. By H. H. Wing. Pp.
+120.--Delaware College: No. 43 (abridged edition). The European and
+Japanese Chestnuts in the United States. By G. H. Powell. Pp.
+16.--Michigan: Nos. 164 and 165. Methods and Results of Tillage, and
+Draft of Farm Implements. By M. W. Fulton. Pp. 24; Elementary Science
+Bulletin, No. 5. Branches of Sugar Maple and Beech as seen in Winter.
+By W. J. Beal. Pp. 4; do., No. 6. Potatoes, Rutabagas, and Onions. By
+W. J. Beal. Pp. 6.--New Jersey: No. 133. Peach Growing in New Jersey.
+By A. T. Jordan. Pp. 16; No. 134. Fermentation and Germ Life. By
+Julius Nelson. Pp. 24.--North Dakota: No. 15. Some Chemical Problems
+Investigated. Pp. 28.--Ohio: Newspaper Bulletin 188. Sugar Beets and
+Sorghum in Ohio. Pp. 2.
+
+Aston, W. G. A History of Japanese Literature. New York: D. Appleton
+and Company. Pp. 408. $1.50.
+
+Berry, Arthur. A Short History of Astronomy. New York: Charles
+Scribner's Sons. Pp. 440. $1.50.
+
+Brush and Pencil. An Illustrated Magazine of the Arts and Crafts.
+Monthly. Chicago: Arts and Crafts Company. Pp. 64. 25 cents. $2.50 a
+year.
+
+Bulletins, Reports, etc. Colgate University, Department of Geology and
+Natural History: Announcement. Pp. 16.--Field Columbian Museum,
+Chicago: Annual Report of the Board of Directors for 1897-'98. Pp. 90,
+with plates.--Financial Reform Association: 1848 to 1898. Fifty Years'
+Retrospect. London. Pp. 54, with plates; Financial Reform Almanac for
+1899. London. Pp. 316. 1 shilling.--New York State Library:
+Legislative Bulletin for 1898. Pp. 132. 25 cents.--New York
+University: Catalogue and Announcements for 1898-'99. Pp.
+358.--Perkins Institution and Massachusetts School for the Blind:
+Sixty-seventh Annual Report of the Trustees, to August 31, 1898. Pp.
+305.--United States Department of Labor: Bulletin No. 20, January,
+1899. Edited by Carroll D. Wright and Oren W. Weaver. Pp. 170.
+
+Byrd, Mary E. Laboratory Manual in Astronomy. Boston: Ginn & Co. Pp.
+273.
+
+Cajori, Florian. A History of Physics in its Elementary Branches,
+including the Evolution of Physical Laboratories. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 323. $1.60.
+
+Callie, J. W. S. John Smith's Reply to "Merrie England, Defense of the
+Liberal Programme." London: John Heywood. Pp. 88. Sixpence.
+
+Chapman, Frank H., Editor. Bird Lore. February, 1898, Vol. I, No. 1.
+Bimonthly. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 32. 20 cents. $1 a
+year.
+
+Davenport, Charles B. Experimental Morphology. Part II. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 509. $2.
+
+Evans, A. H. Birds (The Cambridge Natural History, edited by S. F.
+Harmer and A. E. Shipley, Vol. IX). New York: The Macmillan Company.
+Pp. 635. $3.50.
+
+Egbert, Seneca. A Manual of Hygiene and Sanitation. Philadelphia: Lea
+Brothers & Co. Pp. 368.
+
+Foulke, William Dudley. Slav or Saxon: a Study of the Growth and
+Tendencies of Russian Civilization. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. Pp.
+141. $1.
+
+Huntington, Elon. The Earth's Rotation and its Interior Heat. Pp. 33.
+
+Janes, Lewis G. Our Nation's Peril. Social Ideas and Social Progress.
+Pp. 31. 25 cents.
+
+McLellan, J. A., and Ames, A. F. The Public School Mental Arithmetic.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 138. 25 cents. Boston: James H.
+West & Co.
+
+Maltbie, Milo Ray. Municipal Functions. A Study of the Development,
+Scope, and Tendency of Municipal Socialism. (Municipal Affairs,
+December, 1898.) New York: Reform Club, Committee of Municipal
+Administration. Pp. 230. 75 cents.
+
+Mason, Hon. William E. Speech in the United States Senate on the
+Government of Foreign Peoples. Pp. 26.
+
+Patten, Simon N. The Development of English Thought. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 415. $3.
+
+Pittsburg Press Almanac, The, for 1899. Quarterly. St. Louis: The
+Press Publishing Company. Pp. 536.
+
+Récéjac, E. Essay on the Basis of the Mystic Knowledge. Translated by
+Sera Carr Upton. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Pp. 287. $2.50.
+
+Reprints. Caldwell, Otis W. The Life History of Lemna Minor. Pp.
+32.--Calkins, G. N. Some Hydroids from Puget Sound. Pp. 24, with six
+plates.--Cope, Edward D. Vertebrate Remains from the Port Kennedy Bone
+Deposit. Pp. 75, with plates.--Fitz, G. W. Play as a Factor in
+Development. Pp. 7; The Hygiene of Instruction in Elementary Schools.
+Pp. 7.--Howard, William Lee. Double Personality; Lenten Hysteria. Pp.
+8.--Howe, R. H., Jr. North American Wood Frogs.--Hunt, Charles
+Wallace. The Engineer: His Work, his Ethics, his Pleasures.
+(President's Address, American Society of Mechanical Engineers.)
+Pp. 15.--Hunter, S. J. The Coccidæ of Kansas. Pp. 15, with
+plates.--Krauss, W. C. The Stigmata of Degeneration. Pp. 360.--Lichty,
+D. Thalassic Submersion a Means of Disposal of the Dead. Pp.
+12.--McDonald, Arthur. Emile Zola. Pp. 16.--Phillips, W. B. Iron
+Making in Alabama. Montgomery. Pp. 380.--Saunders, De Alten.
+Phycological Memoirs. Pp. 20, with plates.--Schlicht, Paul J. A New
+Process of Combustion. Pp. 32.--Stevens, F. L. The Effect of Aqueous
+Solutions upon the Germination of Fungus Spores. Pp. 30.--Stock, H. H.
+The International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pennsylvania. Pp.
+12.--Urn, The. Modern Thought on Modern Cremation. United States
+Cremation Company. Pp. 40.--Veeder, M. A. The Relative Importance of
+Flies and Water Supply in Spreading Disease. Pp. 8.
+
+Robinson, Albert Gardner. The Porto Rico of To-day. New York: Charles
+Scribner's Sons. Pp. 240, with maps. $1.50.
+
+Salazar, A. E. Kalkules de Kañerius de Agua (Calculations of Water
+Conduits). Santiago de Chile. Pp. 246.
+
+Schnabel, Dr. Carl. Handbook of Metallurgy. Translated by Henry Louis.
+2 vols. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 876 and 732. $10.
+
+Seligman, E. R. A. The Shifting and Incidence of Taxation. Second
+edition. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 337. $3.
+
+Semon, Richard. In the Australian Bush and on the Coast of the Coral
+Sea. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 552. $6.50.
+
+Spencer, Baldwin, and Gillen, F. J. The Native Tribes of Central
+Australia. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 671, with plates.
+$6.50.
+
+Technology Review, The. A Quarterly Magazine relating to the
+Massachusetts Institute of Technology. January, 1899. Pp. 143. 35
+cents.
+
+United States National Museum. Annual Report for the Year ending June
+30, 1896. (Smithsonian Institution.) Washington. Pp. 1107, with
+plates.
+
+Weir, James. The Dawn of Reason. Mental Traits in the Lower Animals.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 234. $1.25.
+
+Westcott, Edward N. David Harum. New York: D. Appleton and Company.
+Pp. 392. $1.50.
+
+Whipple, G. C. The Microscopy of Drinking Water. New York: John Wiley
+& Sons. Pp. 300, with nineteen plates. $3.50.
+
+Wilkinson, F. The Story of the Cotton Plant. (Library of Useful
+Stories.) New York: D. Appleton and Company. Pp. 191. 40 cents.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[14] Earth Sculpture, or the Origin of Land Forms. By James Geikie.
+New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. Pp. 397. Price, $2.
+
+[15] The Psychology of Peoples. By Gustave Le Bon. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 236. Price, $1.50.
+
+[16] A Text-Book of Mineralogy, with an Extended Treatise on
+Crystallography and Physical Mineralogy. By Edmund Salisbury Dana. New
+edition, entirely rewritten and enlarged. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
+Pp. 593. $4.
+
+[17] The Story of the Railroad. By Cy Warman. New York: D. Appleton
+and Company (Story of the West Series). Pp. 280. Price, $1.50.
+
+[18] Infinitesimal Analysis. By William Benjamin Smith. Vol. I.
+Elementary; Real Variables. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 352.
+$3.25.
+
+[19] The Jubilee History of the Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society
+from 1847 to 1897. Traced Year by Year. By George Jacob Holyoake.
+Leeds (Eng.) Central Co-operative Office. Pp. 260.
+
+
+
+
+Fragments of Science.
+
+
+=The Nernst Electric Lamp.=--Prof. Walter Nernst, of the University of
+Göttingen, has recently devised an electric lamp which promises to be
+an important addition to our present methods of lighting. The part of
+the lamp which emits the light consists of a small rod of highly
+refractory material, said to be chiefly thoria, which is supported
+between two platinum electrodes. The rod is practically a nonconductor
+when cold, but by heating it (in the smaller sizes a match is
+sufficient) its conductivity is so raised that a current will pass
+through it; after the current is once started the heat produced by the
+resistance of the rod is sufficient to keep up its conductivity, and
+the latter is raised to a state of intense incandescence, and gives
+out a brilliant white light. As the preliminary heating by means of a
+match or other flame would in some cases be an inconvenience,
+Professor Nernst has devised a lamp which, by means of a platinum
+resistance attachment, can be started by simply turning a switch. The
+life of the rods is about five hundred hours. The lamps are said to
+work equally well with either alternating or direct currents, and
+there is no vacuum necessary. If this lamp proves a success as a
+commercial apparatus, it will be but another example of how slight a
+matter may make all the difference between success and failure. There
+have been numerous experimenters trying for the last ten years, and in
+fact ever since the appearance of the arc lamp, to utilize in an
+electric lamp the great light-giving power of the refractory earths in
+a state of incandescence; but, owing to their high resistance at
+ordinary temperatures, no results were obtained until Professor Nernst
+thought of heating his thoria rod, and this simple procedure seems to
+have solved the whole difficulty. It is claimed that the Nernst lamp
+is a much more economical transformer of electricity into light than
+the present incandescent electric lamps. An apparatus called a kaolin
+candle, which has been suggested as an anticipation of Professor
+Nernst's lamp, was constructed by Paul Jablochkoff in 1877 or 1878. It
+consisted of a strip of kaolin, along which ran a "match" of some
+conducting material. The current was passed through this "match" until
+the kaolin strip became heated sufficiently to become a conductor
+itself. The lamp did not, however, prove a commercial success.
+
+=Laws of Climatic Evolution.=--The problem of the laws of climatic
+evolution was characterized by Dr. Marsden Manson, in a paper read at
+the British Association, as one of the grandest and most far-reaching
+problems in geological physics, since it embraces principles and laws
+applicable to other planets than ours. After presenting a formulation
+of those laws, the author pointed out that in consequence of their
+working, a hot spheroid rotating in space and revolving about a
+central sun, and holding fluids of similar properties to water and air
+within the sphere of its control, must pass through a series of
+uniform climates at sea level, gradually decreasing in temperature and
+terminating in an ice age, and that this age must be succeeded by a
+series of zonal climates gradually increasing in temperature and
+extent. The conclusions thus reached were that in the case of the
+earth zonal distribution of climates was inaugurated at the
+culmination of the ice age, and is gradually increasing in temperature
+and extent by the trapping of the solar energy in the lower
+atmosphere, and that the rise has a moderate limit; that the ice age
+was unique and due to the physical properties of water and air, and to
+the difference in specific heat of land and water; and that prior to
+the ice age local formation of glaciers could occur at any latitude
+and period. Dr. Manson then observed that Jupiter was apparently in a
+condition through which the earth has already passed, and Mars was in
+one toward which the climatic evolution of the earth was tending.
+
+=Poisonous Plants.=--Statistics in regard to poisonous plants are
+lacking on account of a general ignorance of the subject, and it is
+therefore impossible to form even an approximate estimate of the
+damage done by them. Besides the criminal uses that may be made of
+them, there are some other problems connected with them that are of
+general public interest. The common law of England holds those who
+possess and cultivate such plants responsible for damages accruing
+from them; and a New York court has awarded damages in a case of
+injury from poison ivy growing in a cemetery. In order to obtain
+information on the subject, the botanical division of the Department
+of Agriculture arranged to receive notices through the clipping
+bureaus of the cases of poisoning recorded in the newspapers. Thus
+through the persons named in the articles or through the local
+postmaster it was put in correspondence with the physician in the
+case, who furnished the authentic facts. A large number of correct and
+valuable data were thus secured. It is proved by these facts that all
+poisonous plants are not equally injurious to all persons nor to all
+forms of life. Thus poison ivy has no apparent external effect upon
+animals, and a few of them eat its leaves with impunity; and it acts
+upon the skin of the majority of persons with varying intensity--on
+some hardly at all, while others are extremely sensitive to it. A
+similar variability is found in the effects of poisonous plants taken
+internally. In some cases often regarded as of that kind, death is
+attributable not to any poison which the plant contains, but to
+immoderate or incautious eating, or to mechanical injury such as is
+produced in horses by the hairs of crimson clover, or to the effect of
+parasitic growths, such as ergot on rye. Excluding all which operate
+in these ways, there are, however, a large number of really poisonous
+plants, the properties of which are comparatively unknown. It is
+concerning these that information has been sought by the botanical
+division. Its report contains descriptions of about forty plants, with
+figures, belonging to seventeen families.
+
+=The United States Biological Survey.=--The Biological Survey of the
+United States Department of Agriculture aims to define and map the
+agricultural belts of the country in order to ascertain what products
+of the soil can and what can not be grown successfully in each, to
+guide the farmer in the intelligent introduction of foreign crops, and
+to point out his friends and his enemies among the native birds and
+animals. For information on these subjects so important to him the
+farmer has had to rely on his own experiments or those of his
+neighbors, often carried on at enormous cost to persons little able to
+bear it. The Survey and its predecessor, the division of ornithology
+and mammology, have had small parties in the field traversing the
+public domain for the purpose of studying the geographic distribution
+of our native land animals and plants and mapping the boundaries of
+the areas they inhabit. It was early learned that North America is
+divisible into seven transcontinental belts or life zones and a much
+larger number of minor areas or _faunas_, each characterized by
+particular associations of animals and plants. The inference was
+natural and has been verified that these same zones and areas, up to
+the northern limit of profitable agriculture, are adapted to the needs
+of particular kinds or varieties of cultivated crops. The Survey is
+engaged in tracing as precisely as possible the actual boundaries of
+these belts and areas, and in finding out and designating the
+varieties of crops best adapted to each. In this undertaking it aims
+to point out such exotic products as, from their importance in other
+lands, are likely to prove of value if introduced on fit soils and
+under proper climatic conditions. The importance of this work will be
+realized when it is recollected that all the climatic life zones of
+the world, except the hottest tropical, are represented in our
+country. The colored maps prepared by the Survey furnish the best
+guide the farmer can have for judging what crops will be best adapted
+for his particular region; and in connection with the work of the
+entomologist, show the belts along which noxious insects are likely to
+spread. The report of the Survey, prepared under the direction of its
+chief, C. Hart Merriam, though full of valuable information not before
+presented consecutively, is preliminary and only touches the edge of a
+subject which is susceptible of copious elaboration, and is destined
+to be worked up with immense profit.
+
+=A Neolithic Lake Dwelling.=--A crannog, or lake dwelling, discovered
+in the summer of 1898 on the banks of the Clyde, has received much
+attention from English archæologists because of its unique situation
+on a tidal stream, and of its being apparently neolithic or far more
+ancient than any other crannog yet examined, in all others the relics
+being of the bronze age. Careful excavations have been made in it and
+are still in progress, and the refuse mound of the former settlement
+has been sifted, with results that have made it plain that there were
+design and execution in the building, and that it was occupied and
+inhabited for a long period. Positive evidence of fire is afforded in
+the shape of numerous firestones and calcined embers, and indications
+of the condition of life at the period are given by the implements,
+ornaments, and tools recovered. The crannog is about sixteen hundred
+yards east of the Castle Rock of Dumbarton, and about fifty yards from
+the river at low tide, but is submerged when the tide is in to a depth
+of from three to twelve feet, and is one hundred and eighty-four feet
+in circuit. The piles in the outer circle are of oak, which below the
+mud surface is still quite fresh. The transverse beams and pavement
+inside are of wood of the consistence of cheese--willow, alder, and
+oak--while the smaller branches are of fir, birch, and hazel, with
+bracken, moss, and chips. The stones in the outer circle and along the
+causeway leading to the dwelling place seem to have been set in a
+methodical order, most of the bowlders being about a lift for a man.
+The refuse mound extends for about twelve feet outside for the
+greater part of the circuit, and here most of the bone and flint
+implements have been discovered. The largest article found in the site
+was a very fine canoe, thirty-seven feet long and forty inches beam,
+dug out of a single oak tree, which lay in what has proved to have
+been a dock. A curious ladder was also found here, the rungs of which
+were cut out of the solid wood, and which has somewhat the general
+appearance of a post of a post-and-rail fence. The exploration of the
+site is much interfered with by the rising of the tide, which covers
+the crannog for a considerable time every day. All the relics
+found--consisting chiefly of objects of bone, staghorn, jet, chert,
+and cannel coal, with some querns, the canoe, ladder, etc.--have been
+placed in the museum at Glasgow.
+
+=Portland Cement.=--The following facts are taken from an address
+delivered before the Franklin Institute by Mr. Robert W. Lesley: "It
+was not until the end of the last century that the true principles of
+hydraulic cement were discovered by Smeaton, who, in the construction
+of the Eddystone Lighthouse, made a number of experiments with the
+English limestones, and laid down, as a result, the principle that a
+limestone yielding from fifteen to twenty-five per cent of residue
+when dissolved in hydrochloric acid will set under water. These
+limestones he denominated hydraulic limestones, and from the principle
+so laid down by him come the two great definitions of what we now know
+as cement, namely, the natural and artificial cements of commerce. The
+natural variety, such as the Rosendale, Lehigh, and Cumberland
+cements, was first made by Joseph Parker in 1796, who discovered what
+he called 'Roman cement,' based upon the calcination at low
+temperatures of the nodules found in the septaria geological formation
+in England. This was practically the first cement of commerce, and
+gave excellent results. Joseph Aspdin, a bricklayer or plasterer, took
+out a patent in England in 1824 on a high-grade artificial cement,
+and, at great personal deprivation, succeeded in manufacturing it on a
+commercial scale by combining English chalks with clay from the river
+beds, drying the mixed paste, and after calcining at high heat the
+material thus produced, grinding it to powder. This cement, which was
+the first Portland cement in the market, obtained its name from its
+resemblance when it became stone to the celebrated Portland stone, one
+of the leading building materials in England. The rocks used in the
+manufacture of Portland cement are very similar to those from which
+natural cement is made. The various layers in the natural rock may
+vary in size or stratification, so that the lime, alumina, and silica
+may not be in position to combine under heat, or there may be too much
+of one ingredient, or not enough of the others in close proximity to
+each other. In making Portland cement, these rocks, properly
+proportioned, are accordingly ground to an impalpable powder, the
+natural rock being broken down and the laminæ distributed in many
+small grains. This powder is then mixed with water, and is made into a
+new stone in the shape of the brick, or block, in which all the small
+grains formerly composing the laminæ of the original rock are
+distributed and brought into a close mechanical juxtaposition to each
+other. The new rock thus made is put into kilns with layers of coke,
+and is then calcined at temperatures from 1,600° to 1,800°. The
+clinker, as it comes from the kiln, is then crushed and ground to an
+impalpable powder, which is the Portland cement of commerce. Portland
+cement may be made from other materials, such as chalk and clay,
+limestone and clay, cement rock and limestone, and marls and clays. In
+every case the principle is the same, the breaking down and the
+redistributing of the materials so that the fine particles may be in
+close mechanical union when subjected to the heat of the kiln."
+
+=The French Nontoxic Matches.=--It is believed, by Frenchmen at least,
+that the problem long sought, of finding a composition for a match
+head in which all the advantages of white phosphorus shall be
+preserved while its deleterious qualities are eliminated or greatly
+reduced, has been solved in the new matches which the French
+Government has placed upon the market. These matches are marked S. C.,
+by the initials of the inventors, MM. Sévène and Cahen, are made in
+the factories at Trélazé, Begles, and Samtines, and have been well
+received by the public. In preparing the composition, the chlorate of
+potash of the old flashing and safety matches has been retained, and
+the sesquisulphide of phosphorus is used instead of the white or red
+phosphorus of the old matches. The latter substance, besides the
+indispensable qualities of fixity and resistance to atmospheric
+influences, has the two important properties of inflaming at 95° C.,
+much nearer the igniting point of white phosphorus (60° C.) than of
+red (260° C.), and being therefore easier to light; and of having a
+low latent or specific heat. With these properties embodied in the
+inflammable composition of the head, the new match is expected to be
+comparatively free from accidental explosions during manufacture and
+export, to take fire by friction, and to burn steadily and regularly.
+The expectation has so far been fulfilled. The phosphorus compound has
+a special odor, in which the sulphur characteristic predominates, but,
+not boiling under 380° C., does not become offensive in the shops; and
+the match heads made with it do not emit the phosphorescence which is
+often exhibited by matches made with white phosphorus. It is only
+feebly toxic by direct absorption, experiments on guinea pigs
+indicating that it is only about one tenth as much so as white
+phosphorus.
+
+=Trees as Land Formers.=--John Gifford, in a paper presented to the
+Franklin Institute on Forestry in Relation to Physical Geography and
+Engineering, mentions as illustrating the way forests counteract
+certain destructive forces, the mangrove tree as "the great land
+former which, supplementing the work of the coral polyp, has added to
+the warm seashore regions of the globe immense areas of land." The
+trees grow in salt water several feet deep, where their labyrinth of
+roots and branches collect and hold sediment and flotage. Thus the
+shore line advances. The seeds, germinating on the plant, the
+plantlets fall into the water, float away till their roots touch the
+bottom, and there form the nucleus of new islands and life. The forest
+constantly improves the soil, provided the latter is not removed or
+allowed to burn. The roots of trees penetrate to its deeper layers and
+absorb great quantities of mineral matters, a large percentage of
+which goes to the leaves, and is ultimately deposited on the surface.
+"The surface soil is both enriched by these mineral substances and
+protected by a mulch of humus in varying stages of decomposition. As
+the lower layers rot, new layers of leaves and twigs are being
+constantly deposited, so that the forest soil, in the course of time,
+fairly reeks with nourishing plant food, which seeps out more or less
+to enrich neighboring soils." The forest is also a soil former. "Even
+the most tender rootlet, because of its acidity, is able to dissolve
+its way through certain kinds of rock. This, together with the acids
+formed in the decomposition of humus, is a potent and speedy agent in
+the production of soil. The roots of many species of trees have no
+difficulty whatever in penetrating limestone and in disintegrating
+rocks of the granitic series. As the rock crumbles, solid inorganic
+materials are released, which enrich neighboring soils, especially
+those of the valleys in regions where the forest is relegated to the
+mountain sides and top, as should be the case in all mountainous
+regions. In view of the destruction caused by mankind, it is a
+consoling fact that Nature, although slowly, is gradually improving
+her waste lands. If not interrupted, the barest rock and the fallowest
+field, under conditions which may be called unfavorable, will become,
+in course of time, forest-clad and fertile. The most important
+function of the forest in relation to the soil, however, is in holding
+it in place and protecting it from the erosive action of wind and
+rain."
+
+=The Atlantic Slope.=--The Atlantic slope of the United States is
+described in the New Jersey State Geological Survey's report on the
+Physical Geography of the State as "a fairly distinct geographical
+province. Its eastern boundary is the sea; its western boundary on the
+north is the divide between the drainage flowing southeast to the sea
+and that flowing northeast to the St. Lawrence. Farther south its
+western limit is the divide between the streams flowing east to the
+Atlantic and those flowing west to the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers."
+The line between it and the geographical province next west follows
+the watershed of the Appalachian system of mountains. It is divided,
+according to elevations, into several subprovinces, all of which
+elongate in a direction roughly parallel to the shore. Next to the
+coast there is usually a belt of lowland, few or many miles wide,
+called the _Coastal Plain_. Inland from the Coastal Plain is an
+intermediate height, between the Coastal Plain to the east and the
+mountains to the west, known in the South as the _Piedmont Plateau_.
+The mountainous part of the slope constitutes the third province,
+known as the _Appalachian Zone_. The Atlantic slope may be divided
+into two sections--a northern and a southern--in which the Coastal
+Plain is narrow and wide respectively. These two sections meet in New
+Jersey, where the division runs from the Raritan River, just below New
+Brunswick, to Trenton. South of this line the Coastal Plain expands,
+and all considerable elevations recede correspondingly from the shore.
+These three subprovinces are especially well shown in the southern
+section of the Atlantic slope. They are less well developed in the
+northern section, and even where the topography is comparable the
+underlying rock structure is different. In New Jersey a fourth belt,
+the Triassic formation, is interposed between the Coastal Plain and
+the Highlands corresponding to the Piedmont Plateau. North of New
+Jersey the Coastal Plain has little development, though Long Island
+and some small areas farther east and northeast are to be looked upon
+as parts of it.
+
+=American Fresh-water Pearls.=--The facts cited by Mr. George F. Kunz
+in his paper, published in the Report of the United States Fish
+Commission, on the Fresh-water Pearls and Pearl Fisheries of the
+United States, give considerable importance to this feature of our
+natural history. The mound explorations attest that fresh-water pearls
+were gathered and used by the prehistoric peoples of the country "to
+an extent that is astonishing. On the hearths of some of these mounds
+in Ohio the pearls have been found, not by hundreds, but by thousands
+and even by bushels--now, of course, damaged and half decomposed by
+centuries of burial and by the heat of superficial fires." The
+narratives of the early Spanish explorers make several mentions of
+pearls in the possession of the Indians. For a considerable period
+after the first explorations, however, American pearls attracted but
+little attention, and "for some two centuries the Unios [or
+'fresh-water mussels'] lived and multiplied in the rivers and streams,
+unmolested by either the native tribes that had used them for food, or
+by the pioneers of the new race that had not yet learned of their
+hidden treasures." Within recent years the gathering of Unio pearls
+has attained such importance as to start economical problems
+warranting and even demanding careful and detailed inquiry. The first
+really important discovery of Unio pearls was made near Paterson, N.
+J., in 1857, in the form of the "queen pearl" of fine luster, weighing
+ninety-three grains, which was sold to Eugénie, wife of Napoleon III,
+for twenty-five hundred dollars, and is now worth four times that
+amount. As a result the Unios at Notch Brook, where it was found, were
+gathered by the million and destroyed. Within a year fully fifteen
+thousand dollars' worth of pearls were sent to the New York market.
+Then the shipments gradually fell off. Some of the best American
+pearls that were next found were at Waynesville, Ohio, where Mr.
+Israel H. Harris formed an exceedingly fine collection. It contained
+more than two thousand specimens, weighing more than as many grains.
+Among them were one button-shaped on the back and weighing
+thirty-eight grains, several almost transparent pink ones, and one
+showing where the pearl had grown almost entirely through the Unio. In
+1889 a number of magnificently colored pearls were found at different
+places in the creeks and rivers of Wisconsin, of which more than ten
+thousand dollars' worth were sent to New York within three months.
+These discoveries led to immense activity in pearl hunting through all
+the streams of the region, and in three or four seasons the shells
+were nearly exhausted. The pearl fisheries of this State have produced
+at least two hundred and fifty thousand dollars' worth of pearls since
+1889. Another outbreak of the "pearl mania" occurred in Arkansas in
+1897, and extended into the Indian Territory, Missouri, Georgia, and
+other States.
+
+=Distribution of Cereals in the United States.=--To inquiries made
+preparatory to drawing up a report on the Distribution of Cereals in
+North America (Department of Agriculture, Biological Survey), Mr. C.
+S. Plumb received one thousand and thirty-three answers, eight
+hundred and ninety-seven of which came from the United States and the
+rest from the Canadian provinces. These reports showed that in many
+localities, particularly in the East and South, but little attention
+is paid to keeping varieties pure, and many farmers use mixed,
+unknown, or local varieties of ordinary merit for seed. In New England
+but little grain is grown from sowing, owing to the cheapness of
+Western grain, and wheat is rarely reported. Oats are now mostly sown
+from Western seed, and the resulting crop is mown for hay, while most
+of the corn is cut for green fodder or silage. On certain fine
+lowlands--as, for example, in the Connecticut Valley--oats, and more
+especially corn, are often grown for grain. While reports on most of
+the cereals were rendered from the lower austral zone, or the region
+south of the Appalachians and the old Missouri Compromise line, this
+region, except where it merges with the upper austral or the one north
+of it, is apparently outside the area of profitable cultivation of
+wheat and oats. In Louisiana and most of the other parts of the lower
+austral, except in northern Texas and Oklahoma, wheat is almost an
+unknown crop. The warm, moist climatic conditions here favor the
+development of fungous diseases to such a degree that the plants are
+usually ruined or greatly injured at an early stage of growth. In
+Florida, as a rule, cereals are rarely cultivated except on the
+uplands at the northern end of the State. In a general way, corn and
+wheat are most successfully grown in the upper austral zone, or
+central States, while oats are best and most productive in the
+transition zone (or northern and Lake States and the Dakotas), or
+along the border of the upper austral and transition. The gradual
+acclimation of varieties of cereals, through years of selection and
+cultivation, has gone so far, however, that some varieties are now
+much better adapted to one zone than to another.
+
+=Spanish Silkworm Gut.=--The business of manufacturing silkworm gut in
+Spain is a considerable industry. The method of preparation is thus
+described in the Journal of the Society of Arts: After the silkworm
+grub has eaten enough mulberry leaves, and before it begins to spin,
+which is during the months of May and June, it is thrown into vinegar
+for several hours. The insect is killed and the substance which the
+grub, if alive, would have spun into a cocoon is drawn out from the
+dead worm into a much thicker and shorter silken thread, in which
+operation considerable dexterity and experience are required. Two
+thick threads from each grub are placed for about four hours in clear
+cold water, after which they are put for ten or fifteen minutes in a
+solution of some caustic. This loosens a fine outer skin on the
+threads, which is removed by the hands, the workman holding the
+threads in his teeth. The silk is then hung up to dry in a shady
+place, the sun rendering it brittle. In some parts of the country
+these silk guts are bleached with sulphur vapor, which makes them
+beautifully glossy and snow-white, while those naturally dried have a
+yellowish tint. The quality of the gut is decided according to the
+healthy condition of the worm, round indicating a good quality and
+flat an inferior one.
+
+=The Nests of Burrowing Bees.=--Prof. John B. Smith, having explained
+to his section of the American Association a method which has been
+successfully applied, of taking casts in plaster of Paris of the homes
+of burrowing insects, with their branchings, to the depth of six feet,
+described some of the results of its application. Bees, of the genus
+_Calletes_, dig vertically to the depth of eighteen inches or more,
+then burrow horizontally from two to five inches farther, and
+construct a thin, parchmentlike cell of saliva, in which the egg is
+deposited, with pollen and honey for the food of the larva. They then
+start a new horizontal burrow a little distance from the first, and
+perhaps a third, but no more. The vertical tubes are then filled up,
+so that when the bees come to life they must burrow from six to
+twenty-four inches before they can reach the surface. Another genus
+makes a twisted burrow; another makes a vertical burrow that may be
+six feet deep. About a foot below the surface it sends off a lateral
+branch, and in this it excavates a chamber from one to two and a half
+inches in diameter. Tubes are sent down from this chamber, as many
+perhaps as from six to twenty together, and these are lined with clay
+to make them water-tight. This bee, when it begins its burrow, makes
+an oblique gallery from four to six inches long before it starts in
+the vertical direction, and all the dirt is carried through this
+oblique gallery. Then the insect continues the tube vertically upward
+to just below the surface, and makes a small concealed opening to it
+here, taking care to pile no sand near it. This is the regular
+entrance to the burrow.
+
+
+MINOR PARAGRAPHS.
+
+In a report of an inspection of three French match factories,
+published as a British Parliamentary paper, Dr. T. Oliver records as
+his impressions and deductions that while until recently the match
+makers suffered severely from phosphorus poisoning, there is now
+apparently a reduction in the severe forms of the illness; that this
+reduction is attributable to greater care in the selection of the work
+people, to raising the age of admission into the factory, to medical
+examination on entrance, subsequent close supervision, and repeated
+dental examination; to personal cleanliness on the part of the
+workers; to early suspension on the appearance of symptoms of ill
+health; and to improved methods of manufacture. The French Government
+is furthering by all possible means new methods of manufacture in the
+hope of finding a safer one; and a match free from white phosphorus
+and still capable of striking anywhere is already manufactured.
+
+A mechanical and engineering section is to be organized in the
+Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, to be devoted to the consideration
+of subjects bearing upon the mechanic arts and the engineering
+problems connected therewith. The growth of the various departments of
+this institution--which has been fitly termed a "democratic learned
+society," from the close affiliation in it of the men of the
+professions and the men of the workshops--by natural accretion, and
+the steadily growing demands for the extension of its educational work
+during the past decade, have increased the costs for maintenance and
+administration and have been the cause of a deficit in nearly every
+year. A movement is now on foot, approved by the board of managers,
+and directed by a special committee, to secure for it an endowment,
+toward which a number of subscriptions ranging from two hundred and
+fifty to twenty-five hundred dollars have already been received.
+
+The earthquake which took place in Assam, June 12, 1897, was described
+by Mr. R. D. Oldham in the British Association as having been the most
+violent of which there is any record. The shock was sensible over an
+area of 1,750,000 square miles, and if it had occurred in England, not
+a house would have been left standing between Manchester and London.
+Landslips on an unprecedented scale were produced, a number of lakes
+were formed, and mountain peaks were moved vertically and
+horizontally. Monuments of solid stone and forest trees were broken
+across. Bridges were overthrown, displaced, and in some places thrust
+bodily up to a height of about twenty feet, and the rails on the
+railroads were twisted and bent. Earth fissures were formed over an
+area larger than the United Kingdom, and sand rents, from which sand
+and water were forced in solid streams to a height of three or four
+feet above the ground, were opened "in incalculable numbers." The loss
+of life was comparatively small, as the earthquake occurred about five
+o'clock in the afternoon, and the damage done was reduced by the fact
+that there were no large cities within the area of greatest violence;
+but in extent and capacity of destruction, as distinguished from
+destruction actually accomplished, this earthquake surpassed any of
+which there was historical mention, not even excepting the great
+earthquake of Lisbon in 1755.
+
+The first section of the electric railway up the Jungfrau, which is
+intended to reach the top of the mountain, was opened about the first
+of October, 1898. The line starts from the Little Scheidegg station of
+the existing Wengern Alp Railway, 6,770 feet above the sea, and
+ascends the mountain masses from the north side, passing the Eiger
+Glacier, Eiger Wand, Eismeer, and Jungfraujoch stations, to Lift,
+13,430 feet, whence the ascent is completed by elevator to the summit,
+13,670 feet. The road starts on a gradient of ten per cent, which is
+increased to twenty per cent about halfway to the Eiger Glacier
+station, and to twenty-five per cent, the steepest, after passing that
+station. There are about 85 yards in tunnel on the section now opened,
+but beyond the Eiger Glacier the road will not touch the surface
+except at the stations. About 250 yards of the long tunnel have been
+excavated so far. The stations beyond Eiger Wand will be built within
+the rock, and will be furnished with restaurants and beds. At the
+Eiger Wand and Eismeer stations passengers will contemplate the view
+through windows or balconies from the inside; but at the Jungfraujoch
+station tourists will be able to go out and take sledges for the great
+Aletsch Glacier. The cars will accommodate forty passengers each, and
+the company expects to complete the railroad by 1904.
+
+Alexander A. Lawes, civil engineer, of Sydney, Australia, suggests a
+plan of mechanical flight on beating wings as presenting advantages
+that transcend all other schemes. He believes that the amount of power
+required to operate wings and the difficulty in applying it are
+exaggerated beyond all measure. The wings or sustainers of the bird in
+flight, he urges, are held in the outstretched position without any
+exertion on its part; and many birds, like the albatross, sustain
+themselves for days at a stretch. "This constitutes its aërial
+support, and is analogous to the support derived by other animals from
+land and water." The sole work done by the bird is propulsion and
+elevation by the beating action of the wings. Mr. Adams's machine,
+which he does not say he has tried, is built in conformity to this
+principle, and its sails are modeled as nearly as possible in form and
+as to action with those of the bird. The aid of an air cylinder is
+further called in, through which a pressure is exerted balancing the
+wings. The wings are moved by treadles, and the author's picture of
+the aëronaut looks like a man riding an aërial bicycle.
+
+Carborundum, a substance highly extolled by its manufacturers
+as an abrasive, is composed of carbon and silicon in atomic
+proportions--thirty parts by weight of carbon and seventy of silicon.
+It is represented as being next to the diamond in hardness and as
+cutting emery and corundum with ease, but as not as tough as the
+diamond. It is a little more than one and a fifth times the weight of
+sand, is infusible at the highest attainable heat, but is decomposed
+in the electric arc, and is insoluble in any of the ordinary solvents,
+water, oils, and acids, even hydrofluoric acid having no effect upon
+it. Pure carborundum is white. In the commercial manufacture the
+crystals are produced in many colors and shades, partly as the result
+of impurities and partly by surface oxidation. The prevailing colors
+are green, black, and blue. The color has no effect upon the hardness.
+Crude carborundum, as taken from the furnace, usually consists of
+large masses or aggregations of crystals, which are frequently very
+beautifully colored and of adamantine luster.
+
+A peculiarity of Old English literary usage is pointed out by Prof.
+Dr. L. Kellner, of Vienna, as illustrated in a sentence like "the mob
+is ignorant, and they are often cruel." This is considered a bad
+solecism in modern English, but in Old and Middle English
+constructions of exactly the same kind are so often met with that it
+is impossible to account for them as slips and mistakes. They may be
+brought under several heads, as, Number (the same collective noun used
+as a singular and a plural); Case (the same verb or adjective
+governing the genitive and accusative, the genitive and dative, or the
+dative and accusative); Pronoun ("thou" and "ye" used in addressing
+the same person); Tense (past and perfect, or past and historical
+present used in the same breath); Mood (indicative and subjunctive
+used in the same clause). Finite verb and infinitive dependent on the
+same verb; simple and prepositional infinitives dependent on the same
+verb; infinitive and verbal noun used side by side; different
+prepositions dependent on the same verb, like Caxton's "He was eaten
+by bears and of lions"; direct and indirect speech alternating in the
+same clause. These facts, which are met with as late as 1611 (Bible,
+authorized version), point to the conclusion that what to us appears
+as a grammatical inconsistency was once considered a welcome break in
+the monotony of construction.
+
+Mr. Fischer Sigwart is quoted in the _Revue Scientifique_ as having
+studied the life of frogs for thirty years, and found that they are
+night wanderers, keeping comparatively quiet during the day and
+seeking their prey after dark. In the fall they leave their hunting
+grounds in the fields and woods and take refuge near swamps and ponds,
+passing the winter in the banks of rivers or the mud in the bottoms of
+ponds, whence they come out in the spring, when the process of
+reproduction begins. The frog is not sexually mature till it is four
+or five years old. The coupling process lasts from three to thirty
+days. Between its spring wakening and spawning the frog eats nothing
+except, perhaps, its own skin, which it moults periodically. After
+spawning, frogs leave the water and go to the fields and woods. They
+can be fed, when kept captive, upon insects and earthworms.
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+A relation has been discovered by Professor Dolbear and Carl A. and
+Edward A. Bessey between the chirping of crickets and the temperature,
+the chirps increasing as frequently as the temperature rises. The
+Besseys relate, in The American Naturalist, that when, one cool
+evening, a cricket was caught and brought into a warm room, it began
+in a few minutes to chirp nearly twice as rapidly as the out-of-door
+crickets, and that its rate very nearly conformed to the observed rate
+maintained other evenings out of doors under the same temperature
+conditions.
+
+C. Drieberg, of Colombo, Ceylon, records, in Nature, a rainfall at
+Nedunkeni, in the northern province of Ceylon, December 15 and 16,
+1897, of 31.76 inches in twenty-four hours. The highest previous
+records, as cited by him, are at Joyeuse, France, 31.17 inches in
+twenty-two hours; Genoa, 30 inches in twenty-six hours; on the hills
+above Bombay, 24 inches in one night; and on the Khasia Hills, India,
+30 inches in each of five successive days. The average annual rainfall
+at Nedunkeni has been 64.70 inches, but in 1897 the total amount was
+121.85 inches. The greatest annual rainfall is on the Khasia Hills,
+India, with 600 inches. The wettest station in Ceylon is Padupola, in
+the central province, with 230.85 inches as the mean of twenty-six
+years, but in 1897 the amount was 243.07 inches.
+
+The Korean postage stamps are printed in the United States. As
+explained in the United States consular reports, they are of four
+denominations, and all alike except in color and denomination. Of the
+inscriptions, the characters on the top are ancient Chinese, and those
+at the bottom, having the same meaning, are Korean; the characters on
+the right are Korean and those on the left are Chinese, both giving
+the denominations, with the English translation just below the center
+of the stamp. The plum blossom in each corner is the royal flower of
+the present Ye dynasty, which has been in existence more than five
+hundred years, and the figures at the corners of the center piece
+represent the four spirits that stand at the corners of the earth and
+support it on their shoulders. The national emblem in the center is an
+ancient Chinese phallic device.
+
+A paragraph in _La Nature_ calls to mind that the year 1898 was the
+"jubilee" of the sea serpent, the first mention of a sight of the
+monster--whether fabulous or not is still undecided--having been made
+by the captain and officers of the British ship Dædalus in 1848. They
+said they saw it between the Cape of Good Hope and St. Helena, and
+that it was about six hundred feet long. Since then views of sea
+serpents have been reported nearly every year, but none has ever been
+caught or seen so near or for so long a time as to be positively
+identified. There are several creatures of the deep which, seen for an
+instant, might be mistaken with the aid of an excited imagination for
+a marine serpent; and it is not wholly impossible that some
+descendants of the gigantic saurians of old may still be living in the
+ocean undetected by science.
+
+The results of a study of the winter food of the chickadee by Clarence
+M. Weed, of the New Hampshire College Agricultural Experiment Station,
+shows that more than half of it consists of insects, a very large
+proportion of which are taken in the form of eggs. Vegetation of
+various sorts made up a little less than a quarter of the food; but
+two thirds of this consisted of buds and bud scales that were
+accidentally introduced along with plant-lice eggs. These eggs made up
+more than one fifth of the entire food, and formed the most remarkable
+element of the bill of fare. The destruction of these eggs of plant
+lice is probably the most important service which the chickadee
+renders during its winter residence. Insect eggs of many other kinds
+were found in the food, among them those of the tent caterpillar and
+the fall cankerworm, and the larvæ of several kinds of moths,
+including those of the common apple worm.
+
+The Merchants' Association of San Francisco has been trying the
+experiment of sprinkling a street with sea water, and finds that such
+water binds the dirt together between the paving stones, so that when
+it is dry no loose dust is formed to be raised by the wind; that sea
+water does not dry so quickly as fresh water, so that it has been
+claimed when salt water has been used that one load of it is equal to
+three loads of fresh water. The salt water which is deposited on the
+street absorbs moisture from the air during the night, whereby the
+street is thoroughly moist during the early morning, and has the
+appearance of having been freshly sprinkled.
+
+The Tarahumare people, who live in the most inaccessible part of
+northern Mexico, were described by Dr. Krauss in the British
+Association as ignorant and primitive, and many still living in caves.
+What villages they have are at altitudes of about eight thousand feet
+above the sea level. They are a small and wiry people, with great
+powers of endurance. Their only food is _pinoli_, or maize, parched
+and ground. They have a peculiar drink, called _teshuin_, also
+produced from maize and manufactured with considerable ceremony, which
+tastes like a mixture of sour milk and turpentine. Their language is
+limited to about three hundred words. Their imperfect knowledge of
+numbers renders them unable to count beyond ten. Their religion seems
+to be a distorted and imperfect conception of Christian traditions,
+mixed with some of their own ideas and superstitions.
+
+The directory of the School of Anthropology of Paris, which consists
+chiefly of the professors in the institution, has chosen Dr. Capitan,
+professor of pathological anthropology, to succeed M. Gabriel de
+Mortillet, deceased, as professor of prehistoric anthropology. Dr.
+Capitan's former chair is suppressed.
+
+The highest cog-wheel railroad in Europe and probably in the world is
+the one from Zermatt, Switzerland, to the summit of the Görner Grat,
+upward of eleven thousand five hundred feet above the sea. It is
+between five and six miles long, and rises nearly fifty-two hundred
+feet, with a maximum grade of twenty per cent. There are two
+intermediate stations, at the Riffel Alp and the Riffelberg, and the
+ascent is made in ninety minutes. The height of this road will be
+surpassed by that of the one now being erected up the Jungfrau.
+
+Extraordinary advantages are claimed by Mrs. Theodore R. MacClure, of
+the State Board of Health, for Michigan as a summer and health-resort
+State. The State has more than sixteen hundred miles of lake line, the
+greater part of which is or can be utilized for summer-resort
+purposes; there are in its limits 5,173 inland lakes varying in size
+and having a total area of 712,864 square acres of water. The many
+rivers running through the State furnish on their banks delightful
+places for camping and for recreation.
+
+An action of bacteria on photographic plates was described by Prof. P.
+P. Frankland at the last meeting of the British Association. Ordinary
+bacterial cultures in gelatin and agar-agar are found to be capable of
+affecting the photographic film even at a distance of half an inch,
+while, when they are placed in contact with the film, definite
+pictures of the bacterial growths can be obtained. The action does not
+take place through glass, and therefore, as in the case of Dr. W. J.
+Russell's observations with some other substances, it is considered
+probably due to the evolution of volatile chemical materials which
+react with the sensitive film. Many varieties of bacteria exert the
+action, but to a different degree. Bacterial growths which are
+luminous in the dark are much more active than the non-luminous
+bacteria hitherto tried.
+
+Telephonic communication, it is said, has been established between a
+number of farms in Australia by means of wire fences. A correspondent
+of the Australian Agriculturist from a station near Colmar represents
+that it is easy to converse with a station eight miles distant by
+means of instruments connected on the wire fences, and that the same
+kind of communication has been established over a distance of eight
+miles. Several stations are connected in this way.
+
+We have to record the deaths of F. A. Obach, electrical engineer, at
+Grätz, Austria, December 27th, aged forty-six years. He was author of
+numerous papers on subjects of electrical science in English and
+German publications, and of lectures on the chemistry of India rubber
+and gutta percha; Dr. Reinhold Ehret, seismologist and author of books
+on earthquakes and seismometers, who died from an Alpine accident in
+the Susten Pass; Dr. Joseph Coats, professor of pathology at the
+University of Glasgow, and author of a manual of pathology, a work on
+tuberculosis, etc.; Thomas Hincks, F. R. S., author of books on marine
+zoölogy, February 2d; Major J. Hotchkiss, president in 1895 of the
+Geological Section of the American Association and author of papers on
+economic geology and engineering; Wilbur Wilson Thoburn, professor of
+biomechanics at Leland Stanford Junior University; Dr. Giuseppe
+Gibelli, professor of botany in the University of Turin; Dr. G.
+Wolffhüzel, professor of hygiene in the University of Göttingen; Dr.
+Dareste de Chavannes, author of researches in animal teratology, and
+formerly president of the French Society of Anthropology; Dr. Rupert
+Böck, professor of mechanics in the Technical Institute of Vienna;
+William Colenso, F. R. S., of New Zealand, naturalist and author of
+investigations of Maori antiquities and myths; Dr. Lench, assistant in
+the observatory at Zürich, Switzerland; Dr. Franz Lang, rector and
+teacher of natural history in the cantonal schools of Soleure,
+Switzerland, and one of the presidents of the Swiss Natural History
+Society, aged seventy-eight years; Dr. William Rutherford, professor
+of physiology in the University of Edinburgh, and author of several
+books in that science, February 21st, in his sixtieth year; and Sir
+Douglas Galton, president of the British Association in 1895 and an
+authority and author on sanitation, March 10th, in his seventy seventh
+year.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+ARTICLES MARKED WITH AN ASTERISK ARE ILLUSTRATED.
+
+
+ Academy della Crusca, The. (Frag.), 572
+
+ Adulteration of Butter with Glucose. (Frag.), 570
+
+ Allen, Grant. The Season of the Year, 230
+
+ America, Middle. Was it Peopled from Asia? E. S. Morse, 1
+
+ Animals' Bites. (Frag.), 430
+
+ Anthropology. Decorated Skulls and the Power ascribed to them
+ (Frag.), 570
+
+ " Estrays from Civilization. (Frag.), 573
+
+ " Huichol Indians of Jalisco. (Frag.), 574
+
+ " Lessons of. (Table), 411
+
+ " Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments. E. S. Morse*, 712
+
+ " Superstitions, Aboriginal, about Bones. (Frag.), 572
+
+ " Superstition and Crime. E. P. Evans, 206
+
+ Archæology. Earliest Writing in France. G. de Mortillet, 546
+
+ " Lake Dwelling, A Neolithic, 856
+
+ " Stone Age in Egypt. J. de Morgan, 202
+
+ Architectural Forms in Nature. S. Dellenbaugh*, 63
+
+ Astronomical Photographs, A Library of. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Astronomy. Bombardment, The Great. C. F. Holder*, 506
+
+ Atkinson, E. Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States, 145
+
+ " " The Wheat Problem again, 759
+
+ Atlantic Slope, The. (Frag.), 858
+
+
+ Bactrian Camel for the Klondike. (Frag.), 136
+
+ Barr, M. W. Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare*, 746
+
+ Bede, Chair of the Venerable. (Frag.), 283
+
+ Bees, Burrowing, The Nests of. (Frag.), 860
+
+ Bering Sea Controversy and the Scientific Expert. G. A. Clark, 654
+
+ Biological Survey, The United States. (Frag.), 856
+
+ Blackford, Charles Minor, Jr. Soils and Fertilizers, 392
+
+ Blake, I. W. Our Florida Alligator*, 330
+
+ Bombardment, The Great. C. F. Holder*, 506
+
+ Books Noticed 126, 274, 415, 559, 704, 845
+ Agriculture. Michigan Board, Thirty-fifth Annual Report of, 423.
+ Alexander, A. Theories of the Will in the History of
+ Philosophy, 566.
+ Andrews, C. M. The Historical Development of Modern Europe, 126.
+ Anthropology. Indians of Northern British Columbia, Facial Paintings
+ of. F. Boas, 710.
+ Archæology, Introduction to the Study of North American. C.
+ Thomas, 420.
+ Arthur and Trembly. Living Plants and their Properties, 564.
+ Astronomy, A Text-Book of Geodetic. J. F. Hayford, 129.
+ -- Corona and Coronet. M. L. Todd, 418.
+ -- Earth and Sky, The. E. S. Holden, 850.
+ -- Tides, The. G. H. Darwin, 705.
+ Bailey, L. H. Evolution of our Native Fruits, 704.
+ Baldwin, J. M. The Story of the Mind, 565.
+ Barnes, C. R. Form and Function of Plant Life, 277.
+ Barra, Eduardo de la. Literature arcaica, 280.
+ Beauchamp, W. M. Polished-Stone Articles used by New York Aborigines
+ before and during European Occupation, 279.
+ Beddard, F. E. Elementary Zoölogy, 706.
+ Béker, G. A. Rrimas, 280.
+ Binet, Alfred. L'Année Psychologique, 129.
+ Björling, P. R. Mechanical Engineer's Pocketbook, 132.
+ Boas, Franz. Facial Paintings of the Indians of Northern British
+ Columbia, 710.
+ Bolton, H. C. Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals
+ (1665-1895), 566.
+ Botany. Familiar Life in Field and Forest. F. S. Mathews, 418.
+ -- Fossil Plants. A. C. Seward, 127.
+ -- Fruits, The Evolution of our Native. L. H. Bailey, 704.
+ -- Function and Forms of Plant Life. C. R. Barnes, 277.
+ -- Les Végétaux et les Milieux Cosmiques, 132.
+ -- Living Plants and their Properties. Arthur and Trembly, 564.
+ -- Practical Plant Physiology, 128.
+ Brain Weight, Indexes of. McCurdy and Mohyliansky, 709.
+ Brush, George J. Manual of Determinative Mineralogy, 707.
+ Butler, Amos W. The Birds of Indiana, 422.
+ Carus-Wilson, C. A. Electro-Dynamics, 277.
+ Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals (1665-1895). H. C.
+ Bolton, 566.
+ Chemical Analysis, Manual of. G. S. Newth, 708.
+ Chemistry. Inorganic according to the Periodic Law. Venable and
+ Howe, 567.
+ -- Qualitative Analysis. E. A. Congdon, 567.
+ -- Short Manual of Analytical. John Muter, 419.
+ Clark, William J. Commercial Cuba, 564.
+ Conant, F. S. Biographical Pamphlet, 132.
+ Congdon, E. A. Brief Course in Qualitative Analysis, 567.
+ Cornelius, Hans. Psychologie als Erfahrungs-wissenschaft, 850.
+ Costantin, M. J. Les Végétaux et les Milieux Cosmiques, 132.
+ Creighton, J. E. An Introductory Logic, 706.
+ Crook, J. W. History of German Wage Theories, 708.
+ Cuba, Commercial. William J. Clark, 564.
+ Dana, E. S. Text-Book of Mineralogy, 848.
+ Dana, James D. Revised Text-Book of Geology, 418.
+ Darwin, George Howard. The Tides, 705.
+ Davis, H. S. Star Catalogues, 280.
+ Day, D. T. Mineral Resources of the United States, 852.
+ Detmer, W. Practical Plant Physiology, 128.
+ Drey, Sylvan. A Theory of Life, 280.
+ Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast. E. S. Holden, 850.
+ Economics. Commercial Cuba. William J. Clark, 564.
+ -- German Wage Theories, History of. J. W. Crook, 708.
+ -- Public Administration in Massachusetts. R. H. Whitten, 422.
+ Education. Greek Prose. H. C. Pearson, 708.
+ -- Handbook of Nature Study for Elementary Schools, 130.
+ -- Harold's Rambles. J. W. Troeger, 567.
+ -- On a Farm. N. L. Helm, 423.
+ -- United States Commissioner's Report for 1896-'97, 852.
+ Electricity. Electro-Dynamics. C. A. Carus-Wilson, 277.
+ -- Industrial. A. G. Elliott, 132.
+ -- The Discharge of, through Gases. J. J. Thomson, 565.
+ -- The Storage Battery. A. Treadwell, 421.
+ Elliott, A. G. Industrial Electricity, 132.
+ Engineering. Mechanical Engineer's Pocketbook, 132.
+ Ethnology. Explorations in Honduras. G. B. Gordon, 133.
+ Forestry. American Woods. R. B. Hough, 276.
+ -- Conditions in Wisconsin. F. Noth, 709.
+ Geikie, James. Earth Sculpture, 845.
+ Geography. Natural Advanced. Redway and Hinman, 421.
+ -- Philippine Islands and their People. D. C. Worcester, 415.
+ -- Physical, of New Jersey. R. D. Salisbury, 422.
+ Geological Bulletin, Part II, Vol. III, of the University of
+ Upsala, 280.
+ Geological Survey of Kansas. Vol. IV. S. W. Williston, 709.
+ Geology. Earth Sculpture. James Geikie, 845.
+ -- Indiana, Twenty-second Annual Report of Department of, 852.
+ -- Indian Territory, Reconnaissance of Coal Fields of. N. F.
+ Drake, 852.
+ -- Iowa Survey. Eighth volume, 851.
+ -- Mineralogy, Manual of Determinative, 707.
+ -- Mineralogy, Text-Book of. E. S. Dana, 848.
+ -- Mineral Resources of the United States. D. T. Day, 852.
+ -- New Jersey State Report for 1897, 851.
+ -- Panama, Geological History of the Isthmus of. R. T. Hill, 851.
+ -- Text-Book of. J. D. Dana, 418.
+ Giddings, Franklin H. Elements of Sociology, 559.
+ Goldman, Henry. The Arithmetician, 279.
+ Goode, G. B. Report of United States National Museum for 1895, 710.
+ Gordon, G. B. Ethnological Explorations in Honduras, 133.
+ Groos, Karl. The Play of Animals, 274.
+ Harris, Edith D. Story of Rob Roy, 709.
+ Hayford, J. P. Text-Book of Geodetic Astronomy, 129.
+ Helm, Nellie Lathrop. On a Farm, 423.
+ Hill, R. T. Geological History of the Isthmus of Panama, 851.
+ History. Commune, The. Lissagaray. Translated by E. M. Aveling, 423.
+ -- Europe, The Historical Development of Modern. C. M. Andrews, 126.
+ -- Napoleon III and his Court. Imbert de Saint-Amand, 422.
+ -- Reader for Elementary Schools. L. L. W. Wilson, 853.
+ -- Spanish Literature. J. Fitzmaurice-Kelly, 275.
+ Hoffman, F. S. The Sphere of Science, 128.
+ Holden, E. S. Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast, 1769-1897, 850.
+ -- The Earth and Sky, 850.
+ Holyoake, G. J. Jubilee History of the Leeds Co-operative
+ Society, 849.
+ Hough, R. B. American Woods, 276.
+ Iowa State University Bulletin, Vol. IV, No. 3, 279.
+ James, William. Human Immortality, 708.
+ Jayne, Horace. The Mammalian Anatomy of the Cat, 278.
+ Jordan, D. S. Lest we Forget, 568.
+ Keyser, L. S. News from the Birds, 567.
+ Lambert, R. A. Differential and Integral Calculus, 421.
+ Lange, D. Handbook of Nature Study for Elementary Schools, 130.
+ Lantern Land, In. (Monthly.) Allen and Carleton, 708.
+ Le Bon, Gustave. The Psychology of Peoples, 847.
+ Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society, Jubilee History of. G. J.
+ Holyoake, 849.
+ Library Bulletin, No. 9, New York State, 133.
+ Lissagaray. History of the Commune. Translated by E. M.
+ Aveling, 423.
+ Logic, An Introductory. J. E. Creighton, 706.
+ Lyte, E. O. Elementary English, 279.
+ McConachie, L. G. Congressional Committees, 131.
+ Mathematics. Differential and Integral Calculus. R. A. Lambert, 421.
+ -- Infinitesimal Analysis. William B. Smith, 849.
+ -- Lectures on the Geometry of Position. T. R. Reye. Translated.
+ Mathews, F. Schuyler. Familiar Life in Field and Forest, 418.
+ Maurice-Kelly, James Fitz. History of Spanish Literature, 275.
+ Meteorology. Wind Deposits, Mechanical Composition of. J. A.
+ Udden, 853.
+ Mills, Wesley. Nature and Development of Animal Intelligence, 562.
+ Mivart, St. George. The Groundwork of Science, 563.
+ Music, A Short Course in. Ripley and Tupper, 133.
+ Muter, John. Manual of Analytical Chemistry, 419.
+ Natural History. Animal Intelligence, Nature and Development of.
+ Wesley Mills, 562.
+ -- Birds, News from the. L. S. Keyser, 567.
+ -- Birds of Indiana, 422.
+ -- Four-footed Americans and their Kin. M. O. Wright, 563.
+ -- Solitary Wasps, Habits of. G. W. and E. P. Peckham, 851.
+ -- Taxidermy, The Art of. John Rowley, 420.
+ -- Wild Animals I have Known. E. S. Thompson, 417.
+ Newth, G. S. Manual of Chemical Analysis, 708.
+ Ornithology. How to Name the Birds. H. E. Parkhurst, 131.
+ Overton, Frank. Physiology, Applied, 277.
+ -- Physiology for Advanced Grades, 566.
+ Paleontology. Fossil Plants. A. C. Seward, 127.
+ Parkhurst, H. E. How to Name the Birds, 131.
+ Pearson, H. C. Greek Prose, 708.
+ Peckham, G. W. and E. P. Habits of the Solitary Wasps, 851.
+ Philosophy. Immortality, Human. William James, 708.
+ Physiology, Applied. Frank Overton, 277.
+ -- Applied, for Advanced Grades. F. Overton, 566.
+ Psychology. Child, The Study of the. A. R. Taylor, 564.
+ -- L'Année Psychologique, 129.
+ -- Mind, The Story of the. J. M. Baldwin, 565.
+ -- of Peoples. G. Le Bon, 847.
+ -- Play of Animals, The. Karl Groos, 274.
+ -- Psychologie als Erfahrungs-wissenschaft. Hans Cornelius, 850.
+ -- Will, Theories of the, in the History of Philosophy. A.
+ Alexander, 566.
+ Quinn, D. A. Stenotypy. Second edition, 279.
+ Redway, J. W., and Hinman K. Natural Advanced Geography, 421.
+ Reye, Theodor R. Lectures on the Geometry of Position.
+ Translated, 419.
+ Rice, W., and Eastman Barrett. Under the Stars, and Other
+ Verses, 134.
+ Richter, J. P. F. Selections from the Works of, 279.
+ Ripley, F. H., and Tupper, T. A Short Course in Music, 133.
+ Rollin, H. J. Yetta Ségal, 278.
+ Rowley, John. The Art of Taxidermy, 420.
+ Saint-Amand, Imbert de. Napoleon III and his Court, 422.
+ Salisbury, Rollin D. Physical Geography of New Jersey, 422.
+ Science, Groundwork of, The. St. George Mivart, 563.
+ -- Sphere of. F. S. Hoffman, 128.
+ Seward, A. C. Fossil Plants, 127.
+ Smith, William B. Infinitesimal Analysis, 849.
+ Sociology. Congressional Committees. L. G. McConachie, 131.
+ -- Currency Problems of the United States in 1897-'98. A. B.
+ Stickney, 133.
+ -- Elements of. F. H. Giddings, 559.
+ -- The State. W. Wilson, 130.
+ -- Workers, The. W. A. Wyckoff, 707.
+ Stickney, A. B. Currency Problem of the United States in
+ 1897-'98, 133.
+ Still, A. Alternating Currents and the Theory of Transformers, 133.
+ Story of the Railroad, The. Cy Warman, 848.
+ Taylor, A. R. The Study of the Child, 564.
+ Thomas, C. Introduction to North American Archæology, 129.
+ Thompson, Ernest Seton. Wild Animals I have Known, 417.
+ Thomson, J. J. The Discharge of Electricity through Gases, 565.
+ Todd, Mabel L. Corona and Coronet, 418.
+ Treadwell, Augustus. The Storage Battery, 421.
+ Troeger, John W. Harold's Rambles, 567.
+ Udden, J. A. Mechanical Composition of Wind Deposits, 853.
+ United States National Museum, Report of, for 1895, 710.
+ Venable and Howe. Inorganic Chemistry according to the Periodic
+ Law, 567.
+ Waring, George E., Jr. Street-Cleaning Methods in European
+ Cities, 131.
+ Warman, Cy. Story of the Railroad, 848.
+ Whitten, Robert H. Public Administration in Massachusetts, 422.
+ Wilson, L. L. W. History Reader, for Elementary Schools, 853.
+ Wilson, Woodrow. The State, 130.
+ Winter, H. L. Notes on Criminal Anthropology, 280.
+ Worcester, Dean C. The Philippine Islands and their People, 415.
+ Wright, Mabel Osgood. Four-footed Americans and their Kin, 563.
+ Wyckoff, W. A. The Workers, 707.
+ Zoölogy, Elementary. E. E. Beddard, 706.
+
+ Botany. English Names for Plants. (Frag.), 428
+
+ " Forest Planting on the Plains. (Frag.), 718
+
+ " Light and Vegetation. D. T. MacDougall, 193
+
+ " Plant Characters, Changes in. (Frag.), 286
+
+ " Poisonous Plants. (Frag.), 855
+
+ " Seeds, Dispersal of. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Boyer, M. J. Sketch of Clémence Royer. (With Portrait), 690
+
+ Brain Weights and Intellectual Capacity. J. Simms, 243
+
+ Brooks, William Keith. Mivart's Groundwork of Science, 450
+
+ Bullen, Frank T. Life on a South Sea Whaler, 818
+
+
+ Canada, The Interior of. (Frag.), 141
+
+ Catbird, The Coming of the. S. Trotter, 772
+
+ Causses of Southern France, The. (Frag.), 138
+
+ Cereals in the United States. Distribution of. (Frag.), 859
+
+ Clarke, F. W. Sketch. (With Portrait), 110
+
+ Clark, George A. The Scientific Expert and the Bering Sea
+ Controversy, 654
+
+ Climatic Evolution, Laws of. (Frag.), 855
+
+ Collier, J. The Evolution of Colonies, 52, 289, 577
+
+ Colonies, The Evolution of. J. Collier, 52, 289, 577
+
+ Commensals. (Frag.), 716
+
+ Cooking Schools in Philadelphia. (Frag.), 428
+
+ Cordillera Region of Canada. (Frag.), 283
+
+ Cram, W. E. Concerning Weasels*, 786
+
+ Criminology. California Penal System. C. H. Shinn*, 644
+
+ Cuba, The Climate of. (Frag.), 426
+
+ Curious Habit, Origin of a. (Frag.), 286
+
+
+ Dastre, M. Iron in the Living Body, 807
+
+ Dawson, E. R. The Torrents of Switzerland, 46
+
+ Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap. T. A. Jaggar*, 475
+
+ Decorated Skulls and the Power ascribed to them. (Frag.), 570
+
+ Dellenbaugh, F. S. Architectural Forms in Nature*, 63
+
+ Dodge, C. R. Possible Fiber Industries of the United States*, 15
+
+ Dorsey, George A. Up the Skeena River*, 181
+
+ D Q, The New Planet. (Frag.), 426
+
+ Dream and Reality. M. C. Melinand, 96
+
+ " " " (Table), 103
+
+ Dreams, The Stuff of. Havelock Ellis, 721
+
+ Dresslar, F. B. Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences, 781
+
+ Dutch Charity, A Practical. J. H. Gore, 103
+
+
+ Earliest Writing in France, The. G. de Mortillet, 542
+
+ Earthquakes, Modern Studies of. George Geraland, 362
+
+ Economics. Cereals, Distribution of, in the United States, 859
+
+ " Conquest, The Spirit of. J. Novicow, 518
+
+ " Gold, Marvelous Increase in Production of. A. E.
+ Outerbridge, Jr., 635
+
+ " Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States. E.
+ Atkinson, 145
+
+ " Wheat Problem, The. E. Atkinson, 759
+
+ Education and Evolution. (Smith.) (Corr.), 554
+
+ " and Evolution. (Table), 269
+
+ " German School Journeys. (Frag.), 573
+
+ " History of Scientific Instruction. J. N. Lockyer, 372, 529
+
+ " Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School. L. L. W.
+ Wilson, 313
+
+ " Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools. L. G. Oakley, 176
+
+ " Science and Culture. (Table), 842
+
+ " Science in. Sir A. Geikie, 672
+
+ " Series Method, The. A Comparison. Charlotte Taylor, 537
+
+ " Should Children under Ten learn to Read and Write? G. T. W.
+ Patrick, 382
+
+ " The Goal of. (Table), 118
+
+ Electricity. The Nernst Electric Lamp. (Frag.), 854
+
+ Ellis, Havelock. The Stuff that Dreams are made of, 721
+
+ Emerson and Evolution. (Alexander.) (Corr.), 555
+
+ " " " (Table), 558
+
+ Estrays from Civilization. (Frag.), 573
+
+ Ethnology. Was Middle America Peopled from Asia? E. S. Morse, 1
+
+ Evans, E. P. Superstition and Crime, 206
+
+ Evolution and Education. (Smith.) (Corr.), 554
+
+ " and Education. (Table), 269
+
+ " Extra Organic Factors of. (Frag.), 427
+
+ " of Pleasure Gardens. (Frag.), 717
+
+ " Social. What is it? Herbert Spencer, 35
+
+ " Survival of the Fittest. (Table), 844
+
+
+ Fads and Frauds. (Table), 701
+
+ Fiber Industries of the United States. C. R. Dodge*, 15
+
+ Florida Alligator, Our. I. W. Blake*, 330
+
+ Ford, R. Clyde. The Malay Language, 813
+
+ Forest Planting on the Plains. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Fossils as Criterions of Geological Ages. (Frag.), 427
+
+ Foundation, A Borrowed. (Table), 273
+
+ French Science, Two Gifts to. M. H. de Parville*, 81
+
+
+ Galax and its Affinities. (Frag.), 571
+
+ Geikie, Sir A. Science in Education, 672
+
+ Geography. Atlantic Slope, The. (Frag.), 858
+
+ " West Indies, Physical, of. F. L. Oswald, 802
+
+ Geological Romance, A. J. A. Udden*, 222
+
+ Geology. Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap. T. A. Jaggar*, 475
+
+ " Glacial, in America. D. S. Martin, 356
+
+ " Siamese Geological Theory, A. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Geraland, George. Modern Studies of Earthquakes, 362
+
+ German School Journeys. (Frag.), 573
+
+ Glacial Geology in America. D. S. Martin, 356
+
+ Glaciation and Carbonic Acid. (Frag.), 135
+
+ Gold, Marvelous Increase in Production of. A. E. Outerbridge, Jr., 635
+
+ Gore, J. H. A Practical Dutch Charity, 103
+
+ Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences. F. B. Dresslar, 781
+
+
+ Hanging an Elephant. (Frag.), 286
+
+ Herrings at Dinner. (Frag.), 574
+
+ Hitchcock, Charles H., Sketch of*, 260
+
+ Holder, C. F. The Great Bombardment*, 506
+
+ Huichol Indians of Jalisco. (Frag.), 574
+
+ Huxley Lecture, The. (Frag.), 425
+
+ Hygiene. Rebreathed Air as a Poison. (Frag.), 714
+
+ " Throat and Ear, Care of the. W. Scheppegrell, 791
+
+
+ Ide, Mrs. G. E. Shall we Teach our Daughters the Value of Money?, 686
+
+ Indian Idea of the "Midmost Self." (Frag.), 136
+
+ Ireland, W. Alleyn. The Labor Problem in the Tropics, 481
+
+ Iron in the Living Body. M. Dastre, 807
+
+ Iztaccihuatl (the White Lady Mountain). (Frag.), 569
+
+
+ Jaggar, T. A. Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap*, 475
+
+ Jastrow, Joseph. The Mind's Eye*, 289
+
+ Jordan, D. S. True Tales of Birds and Beasts, 352
+
+
+ Kekulé, Friedrich August. Sketch. (With Portrait), 401
+
+
+ Labor Problem in the Tropics. W. A. Ireland, 481
+
+ Lake Dwelling, A Neolithic. (Frag.), 856
+
+ Light and Vegetation. D. T. MacDougall, 193
+
+ Lockyer, J. N. A Short History of Scientific Instruction, 372, 529
+
+
+ MacDougall. Light and Vegetation, 193
+
+ Malay Language. R. C. Ford, 813
+
+ Martel, M. E. A. Speleology, or Cave Exploration, 255
+
+ Martin, D. S. Glacial Geology in America, 356
+
+ Melinand, M. C. Dream and Reality, 96
+
+ Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. M. W. Barr*, 746
+
+ Meteorology, Climatic Evolution, Laws of, 855
+
+ " Sahara, Winds of. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Miles, Manly, Sketch of. (With Portrait), 834
+
+ Mind's Eye, The. Joseph Jastrow*, 289
+
+ Missouri Botanical Garden, Additions to. (Frag.), 135
+
+ Molecular Asymmetry and Life. (Frag.), 139
+
+ Mongoose in Jamaica, The. C. W. Willis*, 86
+
+ Moon and the Weather, The. G. J. Varney. (Corr.), 118
+
+ Morgan, J. de. Stone Age in Egypt, 202
+
+ Morse, E. S. Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments.* (Frag.), 712
+
+ " " Was Middle America Peopled from Asia?, 1
+
+ Mortillet, Gabriel de, Sketch of. (With Portrait), 546
+
+ " " " The Earliest Writing in France, 542
+
+
+ Names, Technical and Popular. (Frag.), 285
+
+ Naples Aquarium, The. (School for the Study of Life under the Sea.) E.
+ H. Patterson, 668
+
+ Natural History. Catbird, The Coming of the. S. Trotter, 772
+
+ " " Commensals. (Frag.), 716
+
+ " " Herrings at Dinner. (Frag.), 574
+
+ " " Origin of a Curious Habit. (Frag.), 286
+
+ " " School for the Study of Life under the Sea. E. H.
+ Patterson, 668
+
+ " " Scorpion, My Pet. Norman Robinson*, 605
+
+ " " Weasels. W. E. Cram*, 786
+
+ Natural Selection and Fortuitous Variation. (Frag.), 141
+
+ Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School. L. L. W. Wilson, 313
+
+ Nernst Electric Lamp, The. (Frag.), 854
+
+ Neufeld, Dr. (Frag.), 140
+
+ Nicaragua and its Ferns. (Frag.), 137
+
+ Nontoxic Matches, The French. (Frag.), 857
+
+ Novicow, J. The Spirit of Conquest, 518
+
+
+ Oakley, Isabella G. Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools, 176
+
+ Observation, The Science of. C. L. Whittle*, 456
+
+ Ocean Currents, Drift of. (Frag.), 716
+
+ Oswald, F. L. Physical Geography of the West Indies, 802
+
+ Outerbridge, A. E., Jr. Marvelous Increase in Production of Gold, 635
+
+
+ Parville, M. H. de. Two Gifts to French Science*, 81
+
+ Patrick, G. T. W. Should Children under Ten learn to Read and
+ Write?, 382
+
+ Patterson, Eleanor H. A School for the Study of Life under the
+ Sea, 668
+
+ Pearls, American Fresh-Water. (Frag.), 859
+
+ Pedigree Photographs. (Frag.), 428
+
+ Physics. Utilization of Wave Power. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Physiology. Iron in the Living Body. M. Dastre, 807
+
+ Plant Characters, Changes in. (Frag.), 286
+
+ Plant Names, English. (Frag.), 428
+
+ Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools. Isabella G. Oakley, 163
+
+ Pleasure Gardens, Evolution of. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Plumandon, J. R. The Cause of Rain, 89
+
+ Poisonous Plants. (Frag.), 855
+
+ Portland Cement. (Frag.), 856
+
+ Potteries, Doulton. (Frag.), 430
+
+ Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments. E. S. Morse*, 712
+
+ Psychology. Dreams. Havelock Ellis, 721
+
+ " Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences. F. B.
+ Dresslar, 781
+
+ Pulpit, A Voice from the. (Table), 409
+
+
+ Rabies Bacillus, The. (Frag.), 284
+
+ Racial Geography of Europe. W. Z. Ripley, 163, 338, 614
+
+ Rain, The Cause of. J. R. Plumandon, 89
+
+ Rebreathed Air as a Poison. (Frag.), 714
+
+ Ripley, W. Z. Racial Geography of Europe, 163, 338, 614
+
+ Robinson, Norman. My Pet Scorpion*, 605
+
+ Royer, Clémence, Sketch of. (With Portrait.) M. J. Boyer, 690
+
+ Russell's Photographic Researches. (Frag.), 139
+
+
+ Saghalin, The Island of. (Frag.), 285
+
+ St. Kildans, The. (Frag.), 284
+
+ Scheppegrell, W. Care of the Throat and Ear, 791
+
+ Science, A Doubtful Appendix to. (Table), 120
+
+ " and Culture. (Table), 842
+
+ " Christian. The New Superstition. (Table), 557
+
+ " Education in. (Words of a Master.) (Table), 699
+
+ " Mivart's Groundwork of. W. K. Brooks, 450
+
+ " The Advance of. (Table), 415
+
+ Scientific Instruction, A Short History of. J. N. Lockyer, 372, 529
+
+ Scorpion, My Pet. Norman Robinson*, 605
+
+ Seasons of the Year, The. Grant Allen, 230
+
+ Seeds, Dispersal of. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Series Method, The. A Comparison. Charlotte Taylor, 537
+
+ Shinn, Charles Howard. The California Penal System*, 644
+
+ Siamese Geological Theory, A. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Silkworm Gut, Spanish. (Frag.), 860
+
+ Simms, Joseph. Brain Weights and Intellectual Capacity, 243
+
+ Skeena River, Up the. George A. Dorsey*, 181
+
+ Smell, The Physics of. (Frag.), 283
+
+ Smith, Franklin. Politics as a Form of Civil War, 588
+
+ Smith, Stephen. Vegetation a Remedy for the Summer Heat of
+ Cities*, 433
+
+ Social Decadence, An Example of. (Table), 412
+
+ Sociology. California Penal System. C. H. Shinn*, 644
+
+ " Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. M. W. Barr*, 746
+
+ " Politics as a Form of Civil War. F. Smith, 588
+
+ " The Foundation of. (Giddings.) (Corr.), 553
+
+ Soils and Fertilizers. C. M. Blackford, Jr., 392
+
+ South Sea Whaler, Life on a. F. T. Bullen, 818
+
+ Spain's Decadence, The Cause of. (Table), 122
+
+ Speleology, or Cave Exploration. M. E. A. Martel, 255
+
+ Spencer, Herbert. What is Social Evolution?, 35
+
+ Spirit of Conquest, The. J. Novicow, 518
+
+ Stone Age in Egypt, The. J. de Morgan, 202
+
+ Submarine Telegraphy, Early. (Frag.), 569
+
+ Superstition and Crime. E. P. Evans, 206
+
+ " Aboriginal, about Bones. (Frag.), 572
+
+ " The New. (Table), 557
+
+ Survival of the Fittest. (Table), 844
+
+ Switzerland, The Torrents of. E. B. Dawson, 46
+
+
+ Taxation, Principles of. Hon. D. A. Wells, 319, 490, 736
+
+ Taylor, Charlotte. The Series Method, 537
+
+ Throat and Ear, Care of the. W. Scheppegrell, 791
+
+ Toes in Walking, The. (Frag.), 429
+
+ Trade Hunting, Scientific. (Frag.), 140
+
+ Trait, A, Common to us all. (Frag.), 429
+
+ Travel. Up the Skeena River. George A. Dorsey, 181
+
+ Tree Planting in Arid Regions. (Frag.), 282
+
+ Trees as Land Formers. (Frag.), 858
+
+ Trotter, Spencer. The Coming of the Catbird, 772
+
+ True Tales of Birds and Beasts. D. S. Jordan, 352
+
+
+ Udden, J. A. A Geological Romance*, 222
+
+
+ Varney, G. J. The Moon and the Weather. (Corr.), 118
+
+ Vegetation a Remedy against the Summer Heat of Cities. Dr. S.
+ Smith, 433
+
+
+ War, The "Hell" of. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Wave Length and other Measurements. (Frag.), 137
+
+ Wave Power, The Utilization of. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Weasels, Concerning. W. E. Cram*, 786
+
+ Weir, J., Jr. The Herds of the Yellow Ant*, 75
+
+ Wells, David Ames, Death of. (Table), 271
+
+ " " " Principles of Taxation, 319, 490, 736
+
+ West Indies, Physical Geography of. F. L. Oswald, 802
+
+ Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States. E. Atkinson, 145
+
+ Wheat Problem, The, again. E. Atkinson, 759
+
+ White Lady Mountain, The. (Frag.), 569
+
+ Whittle, C. L. The Science of Observation*, 456
+
+ Willis, C. W. The Mongoose in Jamaica*, 86
+
+ Wilson, L. L. W. Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School, 313
+
+ Winds of the Sahara. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Words of a Master. (Table), 699
+
+
+ Yellow Ant, The Herds of the. J. Weir, Jr.*, 75
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+
+Words surrounded by _ are italicized.
+
+Words surrounded by = are bold.
+
+Obvious printer's errors have been repaired, other inconsistent
+spellings have been kept, including inconsistent use of hyphen (e.g.
+"co-operative" and "cooperative") and capitalisation (e.g.
+"Fresh-Water" and "Fresh-water").
+
+Captions added to captionless illustrations.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Appletons' Popular Science Monthly,
+April 1899, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44544 ***
diff --git a/44544-h/44544-h.htm b/44544-h/44544-h.htm
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+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY, April 1899, Vol. LIV, No. 6, edited by WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS
+ </title>
+ <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg"/>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+body {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+h1,h2,h3 {text-align: center; clear: both;}
+p {margin-top: .75em; text-align: justify; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+
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+
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+
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+.lowercase {text-transform:lowercase;}
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+
+/* Images */
+.figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;}
+
+/* Footnotes */
+.footnotes {border: dashed 1px;}
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+.footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
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+
+/* Transcriber's notes */
+.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA; color: black; font-size:smaller; padding:0.5em; margin-bottom:5em; font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
+
+/* Poetry */
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+.poem span.i0 {display: block; margin-left: 0em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44544 ***</div>
+
+<p class="center">
+Established by Edward L. Youmans</p>
+
+<h1>APPLETONS'<br/>
+POPULAR SCIENCE<br/>
+MONTHLY</h1>
+
+<p class="center space-above spaced">EDITED BY<br/>
+<big>WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS</big></p>
+
+<p class="center space-above spaced">VOL. LIV<br/>
+
+NOVEMBER, 1898, TO APRIL, 1899</p>
+
+<p class="center space-above">NEW YORK<br/>
+D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br/>
+1899
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1899,<br/>
+By</span> D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Vol. LIV.</span><span class="smcap rspace lspace">Established by Edward L. Youmans.</span><span class="smcap">No. 6.</span><br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="center space-above"><big>APPLETONS'
+POPULAR SCIENCE
+MONTHLY.</big></p>
+
+<p class="center">APRIL, 1899.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>EDITED BY WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center">CONTENTS.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="CONTENTS">
+<tr><td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><span class="smcap lowercase">PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">I.</td><td align="left">The Stuff that Dreams are made of. By <span class="smcap">Havelock Ellis</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_721">721</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">II.</td><td align="left">The Best Methods of Taxation. By the Late Hon. <span class="smcap">David A. Wells</span>. Part I</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_736">736</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">III.</td><td align="left">Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. By <span class="smcap">Martin W. Barr</span>, M. D. (Illustrated.)</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_746">746</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">IV.</td><td align="left">The Wheat Problem again. By <span class="smcap">Edward Atkinson</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_759">759</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">V.</td><td align="left">The Coming of the Catbird. By <span class="smcap">Spencer Trotter</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_772">772</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VI.</td><td align="left">Guessing, as Influenced by Number Preferences. By <span class="smcap">F. B. Dresslar</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_781">781</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VII.</td><td align="left">Concerning Weasels. By <span class="smcap">William E. Cram</span>. (Illustrated.)</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_786">786</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VIII.</td><td align="left">Care of the Throat and Ear. By <span class="smcap">W. Scheppegrell</span>, M. D.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_791">791</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">IX.</td><td align="left">The Physical Geography of the West Indies. I. The Mammals of the Antilles. By Dr. <span class="smcap">F. L. Oswald</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_802">802</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">X.</td><td align="left">Iron in the Living Body. By <span class="smcap">M. A. Dastre</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_807">807</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XI.</td><td align="left">The Malay Language. By Prof. <span class="smcap">R. Clyde Ford</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_813">813</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XII.</td><td align="left">Life on a South Sea Whaler. By <span class="smcap">Frank T. Bullen</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_818">818</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIII.</td><td align="left">Sketch of Manly Miles. (With Portrait.)</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_834">834</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIV.</td><td align="left">Editor's Table: Science and Culture.&mdash;Survival of the Fittest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_842">842</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XV.</td><td align="left">Scientific Literature</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_845">845</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVI.</td><td align="left">Fragments of Science</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_854">854</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVII.</td><td align="left">Index to Vol. LIV</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_865">865</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center space-above">
+NEW YORK:<br/>
+D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,<br/>
+72 FIFTH AVENUE.<br/>
+<br/>
+<span class="smcap rspace">Single Number, 50 Cents.</span><span class="smcap lspace">Yearly Subscription, $5.00.</span><br/>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center"><small><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1898, by</span> D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.<br/>
+Entered at the Post Office at New York, and admitted for transmission through the mails at second-class rates.</small><br/>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_721" id="Page_721">[Pg 721]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/illo_005_manly.jpg" width="400" height="514" alt="MANLY MILES." />
+<span class="caption">MANLY MILES.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[Pg 433]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><big>APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE
+MONTHLY.</big></p>
+
+<p class="center space-above">FEBRUARY, 1899.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>THE STUFF THAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By HAVELOCK ELLIS.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>In our dreams we are taken back into an earlier world. It is a
+world much more like that of the savage, the child, the criminal,
+the madman, than is the world of our respectable civilized waking
+life. That is, in large part, it must be confessed, the charm of
+dreams. It is also the reason of their scientific value. Through
+our dreams we may realize our relation to stages of evolution we
+have long left behind, and by the self-vivisection of our sleeping life
+we may learn to know something regarding the mind of primitive
+man and the source of some of his beliefs, thus throwing light on the
+facts we obtain by ethnographic research.</p>
+
+<p>This aspect of dreams has not always been kept steadily in sight,
+though it can no longer be said that the study of dreams is neglected.
+From one point of view or another&mdash;not only by the religious
+sect which, it appears, constitutes a "Dream Church" in Denmark,
+but by such carefully inquisitive investigators as those who have been
+trained under the inspiring influence of Prof. Stanley Hall&mdash;dreaming
+is seriously studied. I need not, therefore, apologize for the fact
+that I have during many years taken note from time to time and
+recorded the details and circumstances of vivid dreams when I
+could study their mechanism immediately on awakening, and that I
+have occupied myself, not with the singularities and marvels of dreaming&mdash;of
+which, indeed, I know little or nothing&mdash;but with their
+simplest and most general laws and tendencies. A few of these laws
+and tendencies I wish to set forth and illustrate. The interest of such
+a task is twofold. It not only reveals to us an archaic world of vast
+emotions and imperfect thoughts, but by helping us to attain a clear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_722" id="Page_722">[Pg 722]</a></span>
+knowledge of the ordinary dream processes, it enables us in advance
+to deal with many of the extraordinary phenomena of dreaming, sometimes
+presented to us by wonder-loving people as awesomely mysterious,
+if not indeed supernatural. The careful analysis of mere ordinary
+dreams frequently gives us the key to these abnormal dreams.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the chief and most frequent tendency in the mechanism
+of dreaming is that by which isolated impressions from waking life
+flow together in dreams to be welded into a whole. There is then
+produced, in the strictest sense, a confusion. For instance, a lady,
+who in the course of the day has admired a fine baby and bought a
+big fish for dinner, dreams with horror and surprise of finding a
+fully developed baby in a large codfish. The confusion may be more
+remote, embodying abstract ideas and without reference to recent
+impressions. Thus I dreamed that my wife was expounding to me a
+theory by which the substitution of slates for tiles in roofing had
+been accompanied by, and intimately associated with, the growing
+diminution of crime in England. Amid my wife's rather contemptuous
+opposition, I opposed this theory, pointing out the picturesqueness
+of tiles, their cheapness, greater comfort both in winter and summer,
+but at the same time it occurred to me as a peculiar coincidence
+that tiles should have a sanguinary tinge suggestive of criminal bloodthirstiness.
+I need scarcely say that this bizarre theory had never
+suggested itself to my waking thoughts. There was, however, a real
+connecting link in the confusion&mdash;the redness&mdash;and it is a noteworthy
+point, of great significance in the interpretation of dreams, that that
+link, although clearly active from the first, remained subconscious
+until the end of the dream, when it presented itself as an entirely
+novel coincidence.</p>
+
+<p>The best simile for the mechanism of the most usual type of
+dream phenomena is the magic lantern. Our dreams are like dissolving
+views in which the dissolving process is carried on swiftly
+or slowly, but always uninterruptedly, so that, at any moment, two
+(often indeed more) incongruous pictures are presented to consciousness
+which strives to make one whole of them, and sometimes succeeds
+and is sometimes baffled. Or we may say that the problem presented
+to dreaming consciousness resembles that experiment in which psychologists
+pronounce three wholly unconnected words, and require
+the subject to combine them at once in a connected sentence. It is
+unnecessary to add that such analogies fail to indicate the subtle complexity
+of the apparatus which is at work in the manufacture of
+dreams.</p>
+
+<p>It is the presence of the strife I have just referred to between
+apparently irreconcilable groups of images, in the effort of overcoming
+the critical skepticism of sleeping consciousness&mdash;a feeble skepticism,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_723" id="Page_723">[Pg 723]</a></span>
+it may be, but, as many people do not seem to recognize, a real
+skepticism&mdash;that the impressive emotional effects of dreams are often
+displayed. It sometimes happens that two irreconcilable groups of
+impressions reach sleeping consciousness, one flowing from a recent
+stratum of memories, the other from an older stratum. A typical
+form of this phenomenon often occurs in our dreams of dead friends.
+Professor Sully remarks that in dreams of the dead "awareness of the
+fact of death wholly disappears, or reduces itself to a vague feeling
+of something delightfully wonderful in the restored presence."
+That, however, as I have elsewhere shown,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> is not the typical process
+in dreaming of the dead; although in the later dreams of those who
+often see their dead friends during sleep, the process is abbreviated,
+and the friend's presence is accepted without a struggle&mdash;a very interesting
+point, for it tends to show that in dreams, as in the hypnotic
+state, the recollection of previous similar states of consciousness persists,
+and the illusion is strengthened by repetition.</p>
+
+<p>In typical dreams of a dead friend there is a struggle between
+that stream of recent memories which represents him as dead and
+that older stream which represents him as living. These two streams
+are inevitably caused by the fact of death, which sets up a barrier between
+them and renders one set of memories incongruous with the
+other set. In dreams we are not able to arrange our memories chronologically,
+but we are perpetually reasoning and striving to be logical.
+Consequently the two conflicting streams of memories break against
+each other in restless conflict, and sleeping consciousness endeavors
+to propound some theory which will reconcile them. The most frequent
+theories are, as I have found, either that the news of the friend's
+death was altogether false, or that he had been buried alive by mistake,
+or else that having really died his soul has returned to earth for
+a brief space. The mental and emotional conflict which such dreams
+involve renders them very vivid. They make a profound impression
+even after awakening, and for some sensitive persons are too sacred to
+speak of. Even so cautious and skeptical a thinker as Renan, when,
+after the death of his beloved sister Henriette, he dreamed more than
+once that she had been buried alive, and that he heard her voice calling
+to him from her grave, had to still his horrible suspicions by the
+consideration that she had been tended by experienced doctors. On
+less well-balanced minds, and more especially in primitive stages of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_724" id="Page_724">[Pg 724]</a></span>
+civilization, we can scarcely doubt that such dreams, resting as they
+do on the foundation of consciousness, have had a powerful influence
+in persuading man that death is but a transient fact, and that
+the soul is independent of the body. I do not wish to assert that they
+suffice to originate the belief.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>While dreams are thus often formed by the molding together of
+more or less congruous images by a feeble but still intelligent sleeping
+activity, another factor is to be found in the involuntary wavering
+and perpetually mere meaningless change of dream imagery.
+Such concentration as is possible during sleep always reveals a shifting,
+oscillating, uncertain movement of the vision before us. We are, as
+it were, reading a sign-post in the dusk, or making guesses at the names
+of the stations as our express train flashes by the painted letters.
+Any one who has ever been subject to the hypnagogic imagery sometimes
+seen in the half-waking state, or who has ever taken mescal,
+knows that it is absolutely impossible to fix an image. It is this
+factor in dreams which causes them so often to baffle our analysis. In
+addition to the mere, as it were, mechanical flowing together of
+images and ideas, and the more or less intelligent molding of them
+into a whole, there is thus a failure of sleeping attention to fix definitely
+the final result&mdash;a failure which itself may evidently serve to
+carry on the dream process by suggesting new images and combinations.
+I dreamed once that I was with a doctor in his surgery, and
+saw in his hand a note from a patient saying that doctors were fools
+and did him no good, but he had lately taken some <i>selvdrolla</i>, recommended
+by a friend, and it had done him more good than anything,
+so please send him some more. I saw the note clearly, not, indeed,
+being conscious of reading it word by word, but only of its meaning
+as I looked at it; the one word I actually seemed to see, letter by letter,
+was the name of the drug, and that changed and fluctuated beneath
+my vision as I gazed at it, the final impression being <i>selvdrolla</i>. The
+doctor took from a shelf a bottle containing a bright yellow oleaginous
+fluid, and poured a little out, remarking that it had lately come into
+favor, especially in uric-acid disorders, but was extremely expensive.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_725" id="Page_725">[Pg 725]</a></span>
+I expressed my surprise, having never before heard of it. Then,
+again to my surprise, he poured rather copiously from the bottle on
+to a plate of food, saying, in explanation, that it was pleasant to
+take and not dangerous. This was a vivid morning dream, and on
+awakening I had no difficulty in detecting the source of its various
+minor details, especially a note received on the previous evening and
+containing a dubious figure, the precise nature of which I had used
+my pocket lens to determine. But what was <i>selvdrolla</i>, the most
+vivid element of the dream? I sought vainly among my recent memories,
+and had almost renounced the search when I recalled a large
+bottle of salad oil seen on the supper table the previous evening; not,
+indeed, resembling the dream bottle, but containing a precisely similar
+fluid. <i>Selvdrolla</i> was evidently a corruption of "salad oil." I
+select this dream to illustrate the uncertainty of dream consciousness,
+because it also illustrates at the same time the element of certainty in
+dream <i>subconsciousness</i>. Throughout my dream I remained, consciously,
+in entire ignorance as to the real nature of <i>selvdrolla</i>, yet
+a latent element in consciousness was all the time presenting it to
+me in ever-clearer imagery.</p>
+
+<p>While the confusions of dreaming are usually the union of unconnected
+streams of imagery which have, as it were, come from
+widely remote parts of the memory system to strike together at the
+narrow focus of shaping consciousness, in some rarer cases the fused
+images are really suggested by analogy and are not accidental.
+Maury records successions of dream imagery strung together by verbal
+resemblances; I have found such dreams rare, but other forms of
+association fairly common. Thus I once dreamed that I was with a
+dentist who was about to extract a tooth from a patient. Before
+applying the forceps he remarked to me (at the same time setting
+fire to a perfumed cloth at the end of something like a broomstick
+in order to dissipate the unpleasant odor) that it was the largest
+tooth he had ever seen. When extracted I found that it was indeed
+enormous, in the shape of a caldron, with walls an inch
+thick. Taking from my pocket a tape measure (such as I always
+carry in waking life) I founds the diameter to be not less than
+twenty-five inches; the interior was like roughly hewn rock, and
+there were sea-weeds and lichenlike growths within. The size of
+the tooth seemed to me large, but not extraordinarily so. It is well
+known that pain in the teeth, or the dentist's manipulations, cause
+those organs to seem of extravagant extent; in dreams this tendency
+rules unchecked; thus a friend once dreamed that mice were playing
+about in a cavity in her tooth. But for the dream first quoted
+there was no known dental origin; it arose solely or chiefly from a
+walk during the previous afternoon among the rocks of the Cornish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_726" id="Page_726">[Pg 726]</a></span>
+coast at low tide, and the fantastic analogy, which had not occurred to
+waking consciousness, suggested itself during sleep.</p>
+
+<p>The following dream illustrates an association of quite a different
+order: I imagined I was sitting at a window, at the top of a
+house, writing. As I looked up from my table I saw, with all the
+emotions naturally accompanying such a sight, a woman in her night
+dress appear at a lofty window some distance off and throw herself
+down. I went on writing, however, and found that in the course of
+my literary employment&mdash;I am not clear as to its precise nature&mdash;the
+very next thing I had to do was to describe exactly such a scene as
+I had just witnessed. I was extremely puzzled at such an extraordinary
+coincidence: it seemed to me wholly inexplicable. Such dreams,
+reduplicating the imagery in a new sensory medium, are fairly common,
+with me at all events, though I can not easily explain them.
+The association is not so much of analogy as of sensory media, in this
+case the visual image becoming a verbal motor image. In other cases
+a scene is first seen as in reality, and then in a picture. It is interesting
+to observe the profound astonishment with which sleeping
+consciousness apperceives such simple reduplication.</p>
+
+<p>It sometimes happens that the confused imagery of dreams includes
+elements drawn from forgotten memories&mdash;that is to say, that
+sleeping consciousness can draw on faint impressions of the past which
+waking consciousness is unable to reach. This is a very important
+type of dream because of its bearing on the explanation of certain
+dream phenomena which we are sometimes asked to bow down before
+as supernatural. I may illustrate what I mean by the following
+very instructive case. I woke up recalling the chief items of a rather
+vivid dream: I had imagined myself in a large old house, where the
+furniture, though of good quality, was ancient, and the chairs threatened
+to give way as one sat on them. The place belonged to one Sir
+Peter Bryan, a hale old gentleman who was accompanied by his son
+and grandson. There was a question of my buying the place from
+him, and I was very complimentary to the old gentleman's appearance
+of youthfulness, absurdly affecting not to know which was the
+grandfather and which the grandson. On awaking I said to myself
+that here was a purely imaginative dream, quite unsuggested by any
+definite experiences. But when I began to recall the trifling incidents
+of the previous day I realized that that was far from being the
+case. So far from the dream having been a pure effort of imagination
+I found that every minute item could be traced to some separate
+source. The name of Sir Peter Bryan alone completely baffled me;
+I could not even recall that I had at that time ever heard of any one
+called Bryan. I abandoned the search and made my notes of the
+dream and its sources. I had scarcely done so when I chanced to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_727" id="Page_727">[Pg 727]</a></span>
+take up a volume of biographies which I had glanced through carelessly
+the day before. I found that it contained, among others, the
+lives of Lord <i>Peter</i>borough and George <i>Bryan</i> Brummel. I had
+certainly seen those names the day before; yet before I took up the
+book once again it would have been impossible for me to recall the
+exact name of Beau Brummel, and I should have been inclined to say
+that I had never even heard the name of Bryan. I repeat that I
+regard this as, psychologically, a most instructive dream. It rarely
+happens (though I could give one or two more examples from the
+experience of friends) that we can so clearly and definitely demonstrate
+the presence of a forgotten memory in a dream; in the case
+of old memories it is usually impossible. It so happened that the forgotten
+memory which in this case re-emerged to sleeping consciousness
+was a fact of no consequence to myself or any one else. But
+if it had been the whereabouts of a lost deed or a large sum of money,
+and I had been able to declare, as in this case, that the impression
+received in my dream had never to my knowledge existed in waking
+consciousness, and yet were to declare my faith that the dream probably
+had a simple and natural explanation, on every hand I should
+be sarcastically told that there is no credulity to match the credulity
+of the skeptic.</p>
+
+<p>The profound emotions of waking life, the questions and problems
+on which we spread our chief voluntary mental energy, are not
+those which usually present themselves at once to dream consciousness.
+It is, so far as the immediate past is concerned, mostly the
+trifling, the incidental, the "forgotten" impressions of daily life
+which reappear in our dreams. The psychic activities that are awake
+most intensely are those that sleep most profoundly. If we preserve
+the common image of the "stream of consciousness," we might say
+that the grave facts of life sink too deeply into the flood to reappear
+at once in the calm of repose, while the mere light and buoyant
+trifles of life, flung carelessly in during the day, at once rise to the
+surface, to dance and mingle and evolve in ways that this familiar
+image of "the stream of consciousness" will not further help us to
+picture.</p>
+
+<p>So far I have been discussing only one of the great groups into
+which dreams may be divided. Most investigators of dreams agree
+that there are two such groups, the one having its basis in memories,
+the other founded on actual physical sensations experienced at the
+moment of dreaming and interpreted by sleeping consciousness. Various
+names have been given to these two groups; Sully, for instance,
+terms them central and peripheral. Perhaps the best names, however,
+are those adopted by Miss Calkins, who calls the first group
+representative, the second group presentative.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_728" id="Page_728">[Pg 728]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All writers on dreaming have brought forward presentative
+dreams, and there can be no doubt that impressions received during
+sleep from any of the external senses may serve as a basis for dreams.
+I need only record one example to illustrate this main and most obvious
+group of presentative dreams. I dreamed that I was listening to
+a performance of Haydn's Creation, the chief orchestral part of the
+performance seeming to consist chiefly of the very realistic representation
+of the song of birds, though I could not identify the note
+of any particular bird. Then followed solos by male singers, whom
+I saw, especially one who attracted my attention by singing at the
+close in a scarcely audible voice. On awakening the source of the
+dream was not immediately obvious, but I soon realized that it was
+the song of a canary in another room. I had never heard Haydn's
+Creation, except in fragments, nor thought of it at any recent period;
+its reputation as regards the realistic representation of natural sounds
+had evidently caused it to be put forward by sleeping consciousness
+as a plausible explanation of the sounds heard, and the visual centers
+had accepted the theory.</p>
+
+<p>It is a familiar fact that internal sensations also form a frequent
+basis of dreams. All the internal organs, when disturbed or distended
+or excited, may induce dreams, and especially that aggravated
+kind of dreaming which we call nightmare. This fact is so
+well known that such dreams are usually dismissed without further
+analysis. It is a mistake, however, so to dismiss them, for it seems
+probable that it is precisely here that we may find the most instructive
+field of dream psychology. On account of the profoundly emotional
+effect of such dreams they are very interesting to study, but this very
+element of emotion renders them somewhat obscure objects of study.
+I do not venture to offer with absolute certainty one or two novel suggestions
+which dream experiences have led me to regard as probable.</p>
+
+<p>Dreams of flying have so often been recorded&mdash;from the time of
+St. Jerome, who mentions that he was subject to them&mdash;that they
+may fairly be considered to constitute one of the commonest forms
+of dreaming. All my life, it seems to me, I have at intervals had
+such dreams in which I imagined myself rhythmically bounding into
+the air and supported on the air. These dreams, in my case at all
+events, are not generally remembered immediately on awakening
+(seeming to indicate that they depend on a cause which does not usually
+come into action at the end of sleep), but they leave behind them
+a vague but profound sense of belief in their reality and reasonableness.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
+Several writers have attempted to explain this familiar phenomenon.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_729" id="Page_729">[Pg 729]</a></span>
+Gowers considers that a spontaneous contraction of the
+stapedius muscle of the ear during sleep causes a sensation of falling.
+Stanley Hall, who has himself from childhood had dreams of
+flying, boldly argues that we have here "some faint reminiscent atavistic
+echo from the primeval sea"; and that such dreams are really
+survivals&mdash;psychic vestigial remains&mdash;taking us back to the far past,
+in which man's ancestors needed no feet to swim or float. Such a
+theory may accord with the profound conviction of reality that accompanies
+such dreams, though this may be more simply accounted
+for, even by mere repetition, as with dreams of the dead; but it is
+rather a hazardous theory, and it seems to me infinitely more probable
+that such dreams are a misinterpretation of actual internal sensations.</p>
+
+<p>My own explanation was immediately suggested by the following
+dream. I dreamed that I was watching a girl acrobat, in appropriate
+costume, who was rhythmically rising to a great height in the
+air and then falling, without touching the floor, though each time she
+approached quite close to it. At last she ceased, exhausted and perspiring,
+and had to be led away. Her movements were not controlled
+by mechanism, and apparently I did not regard mechanism as necessary.
+It was a vivid dream, and I awoke with a distinct sensation of
+oppression in the chest. In trying to account for this dream, which
+was not founded on any memory, it occurred to me that probably I
+had here the key to a great group of dreams. The rhythmic rising
+and falling of the acrobat was simply the objectivation of the rhythmic
+rising and falling of my own respiratory muscles under the influence
+of some slight and unknown physical oppression, and this oppression
+was further translated into a condition of perspiring exhaustion
+in the girl, just as it is recorded that a man with heart disease
+dreamed habitually of sweating and panting horses climbing
+up hill. We may recall also the curious sensation as of the body being
+transformed into a vast bellows which is often the last sensation felt
+before the unconsciousness produced by nitrous oxide gas. When we
+are lying down there is a real rhythmic rising and falling of the chest
+and abdomen, centering in the diaphragm, a series of oscillations
+which at both extremes are only limited by the air. Moreover, in this
+position we have to recognize that the whole internal organism&mdash;the
+circulatory, nervous, and other systems&mdash;are differently balanced from
+what they are in the upright position, and that a disturbance of internal
+equilibrium always accompanies falling. Further, it is possible
+that the misinterpretation is confirmed to sleeping consciousness
+by sensations from without, by the absence of the tactile pressure produced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_730" id="Page_730">[Pg 730]</a></span>
+by boots on the foot, or the contact of the ground with the
+soles; we are at once conscious of movement and conscious that the
+soles of the feet are in contact only with the air. Thus in normal
+sleep the conditions may be said to be always favorable for producing
+dreams of flying or of floating in the air, and any slight thoracic
+disturbance, even in healthy persons, arising from lungs, heart, or
+stomach, and serving to bring these conditions to sleeping consciousness,
+may determine such a dream.</p>
+
+<p>There is another common class of dreams which, it seems fairly
+evident to me, must also find their psychological explanation chiefly
+in the visceral sensations&mdash;I mean dreams of murder. Many psychologists
+have referred with profound concern to the facility and
+prevalence of murder in dreams, sometimes as a proof of the innate
+wickedness of human nature made manifest in the unconstraint of
+sleep, sometimes as evidence of an atavistic return to the modes of
+feeling of our ancestors, the thin veneer of civilization being removed
+during sleep. Maudsley and Mme. de Manac&eacute;&iuml;ne, for example, find
+evidence in such dreams of a return to primitive modes of feeling.
+It may well be that there is some element of truth in this view, but
+even if so we still have to account for the production of such dreams.
+For this we must, in part at least, fall back upon the logical outcome
+of dream confusions, owing to which, for instance, a lady who has
+carved a duck at dinner may a few hours later wake up exhausted by
+the imaginary effort of cutting off her husband's head. But I think
+we may find evidence that the dream of murder is often a falsely
+logical deduction from abnormal visceral and especially digestive sensations.</p>
+
+<p>I may illustrate such dreams by the following example: A lady
+dreamed that her husband called her aside and said: "Now, do not
+scream or make a fuss; I am going to tell you something. I have to
+kill a man. It is necessary, to put him out of his agony." He then
+took her into his study and showed her a young man lying on the
+floor with a wound in his breast, and covered with blood. "But how
+will you do it?" she asked. "Never mind," he replied, "leave that
+to me." He took something up and leaned over the man. She
+turned aside and heard a horrible gurgling sound. Then all was
+over. "Now," he said, "we must get rid of the body. I want you
+to send for So-and-so's cart, and tell him I wish to drive it." The cart
+came. "You must help me to make the body into a parcel," he said
+to his wife; "give me plenty of brown paper." They made it into
+a parcel, and with terrible difficulty and effort the wife assisted her
+husband to get the body down stairs and lift it into the cart. At
+every stage, however, she presented to him the difficulties of the
+situation. But he carelessly answered all objections, said he would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_731" id="Page_731">[Pg 731]</a></span>
+take the body up to the moor, among the stones, remove the brown
+paper, and people would think the murdered man had killed himself.
+He drove off and soon returned with the empty cart. "What's this
+blood in my cart?" asked the man to whom it belonged, looking
+inside. "Oh, that's only paint," replied the husband. But the
+dreamer had all along been full of apprehension lest the deed should
+be discovered, and the last thing she could recall, before waking in
+terror, was looking out of the window at a large crowd which surrounded
+the house with shouts of "Murder!" and threats.</p>
+
+<p>This tragedy, with its almost Elizabethan air, was built up out of
+a few commonplace impressions received during the previous day,
+none of which impressions contained any suggestion of murder. The
+tragic element appears to have been altogether due to the psychic influences
+of indigestion arising from a supper of pheasant. To account
+for our oppression during sleep, sleeping consciousness assumes
+moral causes which alone appear to it of sufficient gravity to be the
+adequate cause of the immense emotions we are experiencing. Even
+in our waking and fully conscious states we are inclined to give the
+preference to moral over physical causes, quite irrespective of the
+justice of our preferences; in our sleeping states this tendency is
+exaggerated, and the reign of purely moral causes is not disturbed by
+even a suggestion of mere physical causation.</p>
+
+<p>There is certainly no profounder emotional excitement during
+sleep than that which arises from a disturbed or distended stomach,
+and is reflected by the pneumogastric to the accelerated heart and
+the impeded respiration.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> We are thereby thrown into a state of uninhibited
+emotional agitation, a state of agony and terror such as we
+rarely or never attain during waking life. Sleeping consciousness,
+blindfolded and blundering, a prey to these massive waves from below,
+and fumbling about desperately for some explanation, jumps at
+the idea that only the attempt to escape some terrible danger or the
+guilty consciousness of some awful crime can account for this immense
+emotional uproar. Thus the dream is suffused by a conviction which
+the continued emotion serves to support. We do not&mdash;it seems most
+simple and reasonable to conclude&mdash;experience terror because we
+think we have committed a crime, but we think we have committed
+a crime because we experience terror. And the fact that in such
+dreams we are far more concerned with escape from the results of
+crime than with any agony of remorse is not, as some have thought,
+due to our innate indifference to crime, but simply to the fact that
+our emotional state suggests to us active escape from danger rather
+than the more passive grief of remorse. Thus our dreams bear witness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_732" id="Page_732">[Pg 732]</a></span>
+to the fact that our intelligence is often but a tool in the hands
+of our emotions.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
+
+<p>I have had frequent occasion to refer to the objectivation of subjective
+sensations as a phenomenon of dreaming. It is, indeed, so
+frequent and so important a phenomenon that it needs some further
+reference. In hysteria (which by some of the most recent authorities,
+like Sollier, is regarded as a species of somnambulism), in "demon-possession,"
+and many other abnormal phenomena it is well known
+that there is, as it were, a doubling of personality; the <i>ego</i> is split up
+into two or more parts, each of which may act as a separate personality.
+The literature of morbid psychology is full of extraordinary and
+varied cases exhibiting this splitting up of personality. But it is
+usually forgotten that in dreams the doubling of personality is a
+normal and constant phenomenon in all healthy people. In dreaming
+we can divide our body between ourselves and another person.
+Thus a medical friend dreamed that in conversation with a lady
+patient he found his hand resting on her knee and was unable to remove
+it; awakening in horror from this unprofessional situation he
+found his own hand firmly clasped between his knees; the hand had
+remained his own, the knee had become another person's, the hand
+being claimed, rather than the knee, on account of its greater tactile
+sensibility. Again, we sometimes objectify our own physical discomforts
+felt during sleep in the emotions of some other person, or
+even in some external situations. And, possibly, every dream in
+which there is any dramatic element is an instance of the same splitting
+up of personality; in our dreams we may experience shame or
+confusion from the rebuke or the arguments of other persons, but the
+persons who administer the rebuke or apply the argument are still
+ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>When we consider that this dream process, with its perpetual
+dramatization of our own personality, has been going on as long as
+man has been man&mdash;and probably much longer, for it is evident that
+animals dream&mdash;it is impossible to overestimate its immense influence
+on human belief. Men's primitive conceptions of religion, of morals,
+of many of the mightiest phenomena of life, especially the more exceptional
+phenomena, have certainly been influenced by this constant
+dream experience. It is the universal primitive explanation of abnormal
+psychic and even physical phenomena that some other person
+or spirit is working within the subject of the abnormal experience.
+Certainly dreaming is not the sole source of such conceptions, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_733" id="Page_733">[Pg 733]</a></span>
+they could scarcely have been found convincing, and possibly could
+not ever have arisen, among races who were wholly devoid of dream
+experiences. A large part of all progress in psychological knowledge,
+and, indeed, a large part of civilization itself, lies in realizing
+that the apparently objective is really subjective, that the angels and
+demons and geniuses of all sorts that seemed at first to take possession
+of the feeble and vacant individuality are themselves but modes of
+action of marvelously rich and varied personalities. But in our
+dreams we are brought back into the magic circle of early culture,
+and we shrink and shudder in the presence of imaginative phantoms
+that are built up of our own thoughts and emotions, and are really our
+own flesh.</p>
+
+<p>There is one other general characteristic of dreams that is worth
+noting, because its significance is not usually recognized. In dreams
+we are always reasoning. It is sometimes imagined that reason is in
+abeyance during sleep. So far from this being the case, we may
+almost be said to reason much more during sleep than when we are
+awake. That our reasoning is bad, even preposterous, that it constantly
+ignores the most elementary facts of waking life, scarcely
+affects the question. All dreaming is a process of reasoning. That
+artful confusion of ideas and images which at the outset I referred
+to as the most constant feature of dream mechanism is nothing but
+a process of reasoning, a perpetual effort to argue out harmoniously
+the absurdly limited and incongruous data present to sleeping consciousness.
+Binet, grounding his conclusions on hypnotic experiments,
+has very justly determined that reasoning is the fundamental
+part of all thinking, the very texture of thought. It is founded on
+perception itself, which already contains all the elements of the ancient
+syllogism. For in all perception, as he shows, there is a succession
+of three images, of which the first fuses with the second, which
+in its turn suggests the third. Now this establishment of new associations,
+this construction of images, which, as we may easily convince
+ourselves, is precisely what takes place in dreaming, is reasoning itself.</p>
+
+<p>Reasoning is a synthesis of images suggested by resemblance and
+contiguity, indeed a sort of logical vision, more intense even than
+actual vision, since it produces hallucinations. To reasoning all
+forms of mental activity may finally be reduced; mind, as Wundt
+has said, is a thing that reasons. When we apply these general
+statements to dreaming, we may see that the whole phenomenon of
+dreaming is really the same process of image-formation, based on
+resemblance and contiguity, which is at the basis of reasoning. Every
+dream is the outcome of this strenuous, wide-ranging instinct to reason.
+The supposed "imaginative faculty," regarded as so highly
+active during sleep, is simply the inevitable play of this automatic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_734" id="Page_734">[Pg 734]</a></span>
+logic. The characteristic of the reasoning of dreams is that it is
+unusually bad, and this badness is due chiefly to the absence of memory
+elements that would be present to waking consciousness, and to
+the absence of sensory elements to check the false reasoning which
+without them appears to us conclusive. That is to say&mdash;to fall back
+on the excellent generalization which Parish has elaborately applied
+to all forms of hallucination&mdash;there is a process of dissociation by
+which ordinary channels of association are temporarily blocked and
+the conditions prepared for the formation of the hallucination. It
+is, as Parish has argued, in sleep and in those sleep-resembling states
+called hypnagogic that a condition of dissociation leading to hallucination
+is most apt to occur.</p>
+
+<p>The following dream illustrates the part played by dissociation:
+A lady dreamed that an acquaintance wished to send a small sum
+of money to a person in Ireland. She rashly offered to take it over to
+Ireland. On arriving home she began to repent of her promise, as
+the weather was extremely wild and cold. She began, however, to
+make preparations for dressing warmly, and went to consult an Irish
+friend, who said she would have to be floated over to Ireland tightly
+jammed in a crab basket. On returning home she fully discussed
+the matter with her husband, who thought it would be folly to undertake
+such a journey, and she finally relinquished it, with great relief.
+In this dream&mdash;the elements of which could all be accounted for&mdash;the
+association between sending money and postal orders which would
+at once occur to waking consciousness was closed; consciousness was a
+prey to such suggestions as reached it, but on the basis of these suggestions
+it reasoned and concluded quite sagaciously. The phenomena
+of dreaming furnish a delightful illustration of the fact that
+reasoning, in its rough form, is only the crudest and most elementary
+form of intellectual operation, and that the finer forms of thinking
+only become possible when we hold in check this tendency to reason.
+"All the thinking in the world," as Goethe puts it, "will not lead
+us to thought."</p>
+
+<p>It is in such characteristics as these&mdash;at once primitive, childlike,
+and insane&mdash;that we may find the charm of dreaming. In our sleeping
+emotional life we are much more like ourselves than we are in
+our sleeping intellectual life. It is a mistake to imagine that our
+moral and &aelig;sthetic instincts are abolished in dreams; they are often
+weakened, but by no means abolished. Such a result is natural when
+we remember that our emotions and instincts are both more primitive
+and less under the dominion of the external senses than are our ideas.
+Yet in both respects we are removed a stage backward in our dreams.
+The emotional intensity, the absurd logic, the tendency to personification&mdash;nearly
+all the points I have referred to as characterizing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_735" id="Page_735">[Pg 735]</a></span>
+our dreams&mdash;are the characteristics of the child, the savage, and the
+madman. Time and space are annihilated, gravity is suspended, and
+we are joyfully borne up in the air, as it were, in the arms of angels;
+we are brought into a deeper communion with Nature, and in his
+dreams a man will listen to the arguments of his dog with as little
+surprise as Balaam heard the reproaches of his ass. The unexpected
+limitations of our dream world, the exclusion of so many elements
+which are present even unconsciously in waking life, imparts a splendid
+freedom and ease to the intellectual operations of the sleeping
+mind, and an extravagant romance, a poignant tragedy, to our emotions.
+"He has never known happiness," said Lamb, speaking out of
+his own experience, "who has never been mad." And there are many
+who taste in dreams a happiness they never know when awake. In
+the waking moments of our complex civilized life we are ever in a
+state of suspense which makes all great conclusions impossible; the
+multiplicity of the facts of life, always present to consciousness, restrains
+the free play of logic (except for that happy dreamer, the
+mathematician) and surrounds most of our pains and nearly all our
+pleasures with infinite qualifications; we are tied down to a sober
+tameness. In our dreams the fetters of civilization are loosened, and
+we know the fearful joy of freedom.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time it is these characteristics which make dreams
+a fit subject of serious study. It was not until the present century
+that the psychological importance of the study of insanity was recognized.
+So recent is the study of savage mind that the workers who
+have laid its foundation are yet all living. The systematic investigation
+of children only began yesterday. To-day our dreams begin
+to seem to us an allied subject of study, inasmuch as they reveal within
+ourselves a means of entering sympathetically into ideas and emotional
+attitudes belonging to narrow or ill-adjusted states of consciousness
+which otherwise we are now unable to experience. And they
+have this further value, that they show us how many abnormal phenomena&mdash;possession,
+double consciousness, unconscious memory, and
+so forth&mdash;which have often led the ignorant and unwary to many
+strange conclusions, really have a simple explanation in the healthy
+normal experience of all of us during sleep. Here, also, it is true
+that we ourselves and our beliefs are to some extent "such stuff as
+dreams are made of."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The harmonious and equitable evolution of man, says President Dabney,
+of the University of Tennessee, "does not mean that every man must
+be educated just like his fellow. The harmony is within each individual.
+That community is most highly educated in which each individual has
+attained the maximum of his possibilities in the direction of his peculiar
+talents and opportunities."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_736" id="Page_736">[Pg 736]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>THE BEST METHODS OF TAXATION.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By the Late Hon. DAVID A. WELLS.</span></p>
+
+
+<h3>PART I.</h3>
+
+<p>This historical survey of tax experience among peoples widely differing
+in their economic condition and social relations, and this
+examination of the scope and practice of taxation, with especial reference
+to the tax systems of the United States as defined and interpreted
+by judicial authority, prepare the way for a discussion of the
+best methods of taxation for a country situated as is the United States.
+General as are the theoretical principles underlying taxation, the application
+of these principles to existing conditions must be modified
+to meet the long usage and inherited prejudice of the people, and
+the form of production or manner of distributing wealth. This holds
+true in the face of appearances so opposed to it as to defy definition
+and acceptance. No less promising field for an income tax can be
+pictured than British India, and few more promising fields than
+France. Yet India has borne such a tax for years, while France will
+not permit a true tax on income to be adopted as a part of its revenue
+system. In the latter country the plea is made that the upper and
+middle classes already pay under other forms of taxation more
+than their due proportion of the public burdens, and an additional
+and necessarily discriminating duty laid upon them will
+only make this inequality the greater. Class interest may thus oppose
+its veto to a change that promises to reduce the burdens of one
+class of taxpayers at the expense of another; or may even oppose a
+change that offers the chance of collecting a larger revenue with less
+real difficulty and sacrifice on the part of the taxed. No opposition
+can set aside even temporarily the great rules that clearly define a
+tax from tribute, a legal and beneficial taking by the state of a certain
+part of the public wealth from a demand that involves waste or
+mischievous expenditure, for which the state or people derive no advantage
+commensurate with the cost, or from which individuals obtain
+a gain not defensible in justice, and at the expense of only one
+part of the community.</p>
+
+<p>After so many centuries of experiment, in which hardly a possible
+source of state revenue has escaped attention, some knowledge
+of the great principles of taxation might have been evolved. Unfortunately,
+the experience of one nation is not accepted as containing
+lessons applicable to the needs or conditions of another, and one generation
+rarely appeals to history save to defend its own experiments.
+Ignorance, half knowledge, which is quite as dangerous, and interest
+guide or influence legislation, and those who predict failure or danger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_737" id="Page_737">[Pg 737]</a></span>
+are regarded as theorists, and denounced as unpractical. Nowhere
+is the tendency to move independent of enlightened knowledge more
+evident than in the United States. At every appearance of the tax
+question, State and national legislatures are overwhelmed with
+measures that have been tried in the past, and after a thorough test
+condemned beyond any hope of defense.</p>
+
+<p>Yet history shows the gradual disappearance of certain forms of
+taxation which enjoyed great popularity for a time, and accomplished
+the end of their creation in a crude and often cruel manner. Looking
+over long periods of time, it is seen that some advances have been
+made, rather from a change in the economic condition of the people
+than from a true appreciation of the principles in question. The
+development of popular liberty has been an essential factor, and the
+alterations in tax methods require a close analysis of the causes leading
+to the rise and dominance of political and constitutional principle.
+While it is true that a popular uprising against fiscal exactions usually
+marked the limit of endurance of an oppressive system, it is also true
+that the same uprisings marked the completion of one stage of political
+development, and the readiness or even the need of entering upon
+a new stage. In one sense the progress of a people toward civilization
+in its highest meaning may be illustrated by its fiscal machinery
+and methods of obtaining its revenue from the people.
+It will be of interest to glance at some of these passing phases
+which have generally come down to a late day, and are still
+to be found in activity in some of the most advanced states of
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The practice of farming out the revenues of a state or any part
+of it has become nearly obsolete, and where it does exist is the mark of
+a fiscal machinery as yet not fully developed. The opportunities and
+temptation which the contract system offered for oppressing the taxpayers
+were apparent long before the state was in a position to assert
+its ability to make its own collections. In France the <i>fermiers g&eacute;n&eacute;raux</i>
+were a political factor, standing between the king and his
+people, regarded as necessary to the former and as oppressors of the
+latter. Their unpopularity, in part justified by their conduct, was
+a not unimportant item in the arraignment of royalty by the people.
+Wherever introduced, the farming of taxes proved in the long run
+as unwise politically as it was unprofitable financially; and the only
+reasonable defense for adopting it was the want of strength in the
+state to command its own revenue&mdash;a want as likely to arise from
+the dishonesty of its agents as from a political weakness. In early
+times the most universal manner of supplying the treasury of the state,
+the farming of taxes has become so rare as to be classed as a curiosity.
+Italy still employs this machinery to collect her taxes on tobacco, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_738" id="Page_738">[Pg 738]</a></span>
+Spain from necessity has mortgaged her taxes to the bank, with the
+task of collecting them.</p>
+
+<p>Of the same general character are the state lotteries, of which
+some few and quite important instances may still be found in action.
+Of the immorality of these instruments there can be little doubt, and
+there is quite as unanimous an opinion as to their inefficiency as fiscal
+instruments. Yet it is only within very recent years that state lotteries
+have been discarded even in the most advanced countries. The
+machinery of lotteries has often been modified, but, no matter how
+altered in details, they all have appealed to the love of games of
+chance. Adam Smith asserted that the "absurd presumption" of
+men in their own good fortune is even more universal than the overweening
+conceit which the greater part of men have in their own
+abilities.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> Yet another assertion of the same writer is as true: "The
+world neither ever saw, nor ever will see, a perfectly fair lottery, or
+one in which the whole gain compensated the whole loss." Where
+the state undertakes it, there is a profit generally assured to the
+state, but that profit is by no means certain, and can not make good the
+demoralization introduced among the people. State lotteries are still
+a part of the revenue system in Italy and Austria (proper), where the
+receipts are important, but show a decided tendency to diminish;
+Hungary and Denmark, where they are of little moment; and in
+Spain, where they are retained because of the general incapacity of
+the administration to reach other and more profitable sources of
+revenue. The experience of the State of Louisiana in connection with
+a State lottery is too recent to require examination. It is not probable
+that once abandoned such an instrument for obtaining money from
+the people will be revived, save as a last resort.</p>
+
+<p>The state monopoly in the manufacture and sale of an article for
+fiscal purposes holds a place in European countries of high importance,
+and is met elsewhere under conditions not so favorable to its
+maintenance. As an example of the latter may be cited the colonial
+policy of the Dutch in their possessions in the East. After the termination
+of the trading companies, the Government undertook the
+entire control of the colonies, and sought to make them a source of
+revenue. The natives were to be taxed, but, having little of their own
+to be taxed, and practicing no occupation that could of its own volition
+become a profitable source of revenue, the state undertook to
+organize industry, and, by creating an opportunity for employing the
+labor of the natives, to receive the profits of production for its own
+uses. The native chiefs were made "masters of industry" and collectors
+of the revenue; and a certain part of the labor of the natives,
+one day in every five, was decreed to the state. In order to derive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_739" id="Page_739">[Pg 739]</a></span>
+a profit, this labor must be bestowed in cultivating some product as
+find a market in international trade. Hence arose the importance
+of the sugar, coffee, tobacco, and spice crops of these Dutch islands,
+and for many years a handsome profit to the treasury was obtained
+from the management and sales of product. With the great fall in
+prices of sugar and coffee throughout the world, and the narrowing
+of the market for cane sugar, the Government obtained a less income
+each year, and has found it of advantage to relax the conditions surrounding
+cultivation, and to throw the management of the plantations
+more and more into private hands. To such an extent has this
+transition been effected that the state can no longer be considered as
+controlling a monopoly in product or sales, and is content with a revenue
+from other sources, one that does not even cover the expenses incurred
+in the colonial system. This experiment differs widely from
+those industries undertaken with the aid or encouragement of the
+state to be found in India. It was not with a fiscal object that they
+were established, and not infrequently the state sacrifices revenue by
+releasing them from tax burdens they would ordinarily endure. As
+one of the few remaining instances of the direct participation of a
+state in the production of products intended for foreign markets, yet
+undertaken and maintained for fiscal reasons, the history of the Dutch
+colonies in the East is instructive.</p>
+
+<p>In Prussia the working of certain mines is in the hands of the
+state, and was originally looked upon as an important contribution to
+the income of the state. As in the Dutch experience, the changes in
+production throughout the world have greatly reduced the returns
+and made the income variable; yet there is little disposition to dispose
+of these possessions. "The danger of mineral supplies being worked in
+a reckless and extravagant manner without regard to the welfare of
+future generations, and the dread of combinations by the producers of
+such commodities as tin, copper, and salt, with the aim of raising
+prices, have both tended to hinder the alienation of state mines."<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
+
+<p>The more common form of state monopoly is that which occupies
+a middle position, established for reasons of public safety or utility
+as well as of revenue. The salt monopoly enforced in Prussia was only
+abolished in 1867, and is still maintained in every canton of Switzerland.
+The strongest plea in its defense has been the guarantee by
+the state of the purity of the article sold, and this phase of the question
+has superseded the revenue aspect. Few articles of prime necessity,
+like salt, are subject to monopolies imposed by the state, and by
+a process of elimination it is only articles of luxury or voluntary consumption
+that are regarded as fit objects of monopoly for the benefit
+of the state.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_740" id="Page_740">[Pg 740]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A tax imposed upon an article at a certain stage of its production
+or manufacture may enforce the expediency or necessity of a state
+monopoly. Where the supervision of the state agents must be so
+close as to interfere with the conduct of the industry, the state intervenes
+and itself controls the manufacture and sale. Tobacco has long
+been subject to this fiscal <i>r&eacute;gime</i>, and, proving so productive of revenue,
+there is little to be said against a monopoly by the state of its
+manufacture and sale.</p>
+
+<p>In Italy the tobacco monopoly is conceded to a company, but its
+return of net revenue to the state is nearly as large as the revenue derived
+from the taxes on real property (about thirty-eight million dollars
+a year). Prussia imposes a charge on the home-grown tobacco by a tax
+on the land devoted to its culture, but the return is very small, and
+Bismarck wished to introduce a true tobacco monopoly, modeled
+on that of France. But the conditions were opposed to his scheme,
+for the use of tobacco is general throughout the empire, and a proposition
+to increase its price by taxation or modify its free manufacture
+and distribution excited a widespread opposition. France maintains
+a full monopoly, and finds it too profitable to be lightly set aside
+unless some equally profitable source of revenue is discovered to make
+good the loss its abolition would involve.</p>
+
+<p>While historical support is given to the maintenance of a monopoly
+as in France, it is not probable that the system will find imitators in
+other states, however tempting the returns obtained might seem.
+Great Britain has by her insular position solved the problem in another
+way. By interdicting the domestic cultivation of tobacco, all
+that is consumed must be imported, and a customs duty offers a ready
+instrument for making the plant, in whatever form it enters, contribute
+its dues to the exchequer. In Russia, as in the United States,
+where tobacco is a domestic product, the tax is imposed upon its
+manufacture, and this method requires supervision but no monopoly
+of the state.</p>
+
+<p>The tobacco <i>r&eacute;gime</i> is defended almost entirely on fiscal grounds,
+and as a monopoly, an extreme measure, has proved its value as an
+instrument of taxation. Other reasons, of a moral character, are
+urged to induce the state to monopolize the manufacture and sale of
+distilled spirits. Both France and Germany have considered this
+question, and, in spite of confident predictions of a large profit, have
+decided not to undertake it. Russia, on the other hand, has taken
+it up quite as much on social as on revenue grounds, and is gradually
+securing a monopoly of the trade in spirits. The initial cost
+of the undertaking is large, and, as the system has not yet been perfected,
+it is too early to give a judgment on its availability as a financial
+instrument.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_741" id="Page_741">[Pg 741]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The transit dues, once commonly used by different countries, have
+been generally abandoned, and in China must they be sought for in
+their original forms of vexatious and unprofitable force. They arose
+from a desire to derive some benefit from a commerce permitted
+grudgingly, and rarely attaining any high results. The same end was
+sought by duties on exports, much employed when the country was
+supposed to be drained of its wealth by what was sent out of it. The
+conditions necessary for a successful duty on exports are not often
+found, and only in a few countries are they now existent. In Italy,
+South America, and Asia, exports of certain natural products are
+taxed, and, as in the case of Brazil, yield a notable revenue. In
+view of the rapid advancement of production in new countries and
+of inventions in the old, whereby many natural monopolies have been
+destroyed and competition made more general, such duties prove to be
+more obstructive to trade than productive of revenue, and are rapidly
+being abandoned. In spite of a formal prohibition of export duties
+in the Constitution of the United States, they are sometimes suggested
+in all seriousness.</p>
+
+<p>In thus clearing the path of what may be called dead or dying
+methods of recent tax systems, the advantages enjoyed by the United
+States in their freedom from such survivals become more evident.
+The practice of farming taxes never gained a foothold in any part of
+the country. Lotteries have been occasional, and with two exceptions
+have been conducted on a limited scale&mdash;that of Louisiana is
+well known; an earlier instance is less known. During the Revolution
+one of the means resorted to by the Continental Congress for
+income was a lottery, but the attempt proved disastrous to all concerned,
+and was finally abandoned even more thoroughly than was
+the continental currency. State monopolies of production and sale
+of any commodity have never met with favor, and stand condemned
+in the desire for individual initiative. As sources of revenue, the
+public lands, state control of the post office, and of such municipal
+undertakings as the water and, in a very few cases, the gas
+supply, has been employed, and in place of profit the mere cost of
+management is sought. More than any country of continental Europe,
+the United States has depended upon taxes, pure and simple,
+unsupported or modified by state domains, state mines, state manufactures,
+or state monopolies. Even Great Britain in her local
+taxation is bound and hampered by precedent, and pursues a system
+that is notoriously confused, costly, and vexatious. Long usage and
+the erection of independent and conflicting authorities on principles
+other than fiscal have imposed upon the local agents the duty of
+assessing and collecting county and borough taxes which are as indefensible
+in theory as they are difficult in practice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_742" id="Page_742">[Pg 742]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>From this weight of tradition and precedent the United States has
+been almost entirely free, and it was possible to construct out of small
+beginnings systems of Federal and State taxation at least reasonable
+and consistent, producing an increasing revenue with the rapid development
+of wealth and the larger number of taxable objects; and
+so elastic as to adapt themselves to such changes as are inevitable in any
+progressive movement of commerce or industry. That no such system
+has resulted after a century of national life, and an even longer
+term of local (colonial and State) activities, these papers have tended
+to show. That the time is at hand when the problem of a thorough
+reform of both State and Federal taxation must be met, current facts
+prove beyond any doubt. If I have aided in a proper comprehension
+of these problems, and, by collecting certain experiences in taxation
+among other peoples and in different stages of civilization, contributed
+toward a proper solution, the end of this work will have been
+attained. It is not possible to introduce a complete change of policy
+at once; it is not only feasible but necessary to indicate the direction
+this change should take, and the ends to be secured in making them.
+And first as to Federal taxation:</p>
+
+<p>In a democracy like that of the United States, the continuance
+of a mixed system of direct and indirect taxes is a foregone conclusion.
+Not that there is an absence of change or modification in the
+details of this double system, or in the application or distribution of a
+particular impost or duty. To deny such modification is to deny any
+movement in the body politic, or any progress in the industrial and
+commercial economy of the people. There is a steady and continuous
+movement in every direction, and the mere effort to escape taxation
+results in a new adjustment of related facts. This development
+has, partly through necessity and partly through a rising consciousness
+of what a tax implies, been tending from indirect to direct
+taxes. Ever restive under a rigid supervision by the state of private
+concerns, there has been a wholesome opposition to inquisitorial taxes.
+But this opposition has been carried too far, and is due more to the
+ignorant and at times brutal disregard by the agents selected for enforcing
+the law than to an appreciation of the injustice of the tax.
+Whether in customs or excise, the same blunders of management
+have been committed, and created a spirit in the people that is injurious
+to their best interests. On the one hand, private enterprises have
+been unduly favored by the removal of foreign competition, a favor
+that is now disappearing through the remarkable development of
+domestic competition. Thus taxes have been extensively used for
+other purposes than to obtain revenue, and for private ends. On
+the other hand, there has been created the feeling that taxation is
+a proper instrument for effecting a more equal distribution of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_743" id="Page_743">[Pg 743]</a></span>
+wealth among the people, and readily becomes an instrument of
+oppression.</p>
+
+<p>The almost absolute dependence of the Federal Government upon
+the customs duties for revenue through a great part of its existence was
+a striking fact. The simplicity of collection and the comparatively
+moderate scale of duties, although considered high at the time of
+imposition, gave this branch of the possible sources of revenue a magnified
+importance. The development of the country was slow, and
+at times greatly hampered by the tariff policy; but until about 1857
+no other source of income was needed to meet the expenditures of
+the Government in a time of peace.</p>
+
+<p>In recent years this has all changed, and not for the better. The
+immense development in manufactures and financial ability accomplished
+since 1860 has made a tariff for protection an anachronism.
+The political features of customs legislation have been pushed so far
+as almost to overshadow the fiscal qualities. The wave of protectionism
+that followed the abrogation of the commercial treaties of Europe
+about 1880 has resulted in tariffs framed with the desire to injure the
+commerce of other states rather than to meet the needs of a treasury.
+In the United States this policy has been carried beyond that of Europe,
+and the tariff now in existence is more protective than any
+hitherto enforced, short of absolute prohibition of imports.</p>
+
+<p>In more respects than one the tariff law of 1897 was an extreme
+application of the protective policy. Each year the United States has
+demonstrated its ability not only to meet the industrial competition
+of the world on an equal footing, but to engage with it aggressively
+and with complete success. It is not necessary to give the figures of
+exports of manufactures to establish this fact; it is now beyond question.
+To frame a measure of extreme protection was, therefore, to
+overlook the most striking phase of the industrial situation existing in
+the United States. With an ability to manufacture cheaply and on
+a grand scale, and with a capacity to supply the demands of a market
+larger than any home market, there was no foreign competition to
+encounter, and the higher rates of duties meant nothing, either for
+protection or for revenue. In carrying further into action a tariff
+framed more for protection than for revenue, a twofold error was
+committed. The provisions were so complicated as to make the application
+difficult, and in applying these provisions inquisitorial and
+vexatious regulations were necessary to assure even a reasonable fulfillment
+of the requirements. In former tariff laws a general description
+carried a large class of articles, and a uniform duty, usually <i>ad
+valorem</i>, was collected. But under the demand for a more scientific
+tariff, these general classes were broken up into a number of enumerated
+articles, each one carrying a specific or mixed duty, and an omnium<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_744" id="Page_744">[Pg 744]</a></span>
+or basket clause at the end to catch any article that could not be included
+in any enumeration. This desire to fix specific rates upon
+each imported commodity has been applied more generally in the
+law of 1897 than in any previous tariff act. An examination of the
+imports of manufactures of textile fibers will illustrate this increase
+of complexity without any increase of revenue. Indeed, these classifications
+and rates, being suggested by interested parties, have for
+their object a reduction of imports, and as a rule a reduction in revenue
+from them follows.</p>
+
+<p>The second objection to the increasing complexity of the tariff
+laws is to be found in the petty annoyances imposed upon importers
+and others in enforcing the not always consistent provisions of the
+law. These vexations are made all the more telling by the fact that
+the administration of the law is apt to be in the hands of those who are
+openly hostile to foreign importations, and therefore regard the importer
+in an unfriendly spirit. The power given to the customs
+agents is enormous, and it is not remarkable that it is abused. The
+demand for samples, the appraisement of articles, the classification
+of new or compound commodities, all offer room for controversy,
+which is not always decided by an appeal to the courts of justice.
+In special instances, where a section of the law has been framed in
+behalf of a special interest, the attempt to enforce it becomes petty
+tyranny of the most intolerable kind.</p>
+
+<p>In operation the law soon exhibited its failure as a revenue measure.
+Although duties were generally increased, the more important
+articles taxed yielded a smaller revenue than under lower rates.
+The aggregate collections under the bill did not meet the expectations
+of its sponsors, and for two reasons: first, because the higher duties
+discouraged imports; and secondly, the demand for imported articles
+was steadily decreasing under the expanding ability of home manufactures
+to meet the needs of the market. No measure short of a
+direct encouragement to importations can change this situation, or
+prevent the further shrinkage in the use of foreign manufactures.
+It follows that the tariff, unless radically altered, can no longer be depended
+on for a return sufficient to defray one half of the rapidly
+increasing expenditures of the national Government. By refusing
+to impose moderate duties on articles of general consumption, revenue
+is sacrificed; by insisting upon imposing protective duties where little
+revenue can be had, the tariff is converted into a political weapon.
+Its dangerous qualities are strengthened by turning these duties
+against the products of certain countries, a policy specially fit to invite
+reprisals.</p>
+
+<p>Even the framers of this latest tariff entertained the belief that
+some provision should be made for breaking its full effect. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_745" id="Page_745">[Pg 745]</a></span>
+familiar scheme for reciprocity treaties, under which moderate concessions
+in some of the duties could be made, was retained; but France
+was the only power that could have an object in seriously entertaining
+the proposition to enter into a negotiation. No real reduction
+in duties could be given to Germany or any other country, and it
+has become a recognized fact that Germany does not hesitate to seize
+an opportunity to exclude the products of the United States, and on
+the same grounds as support the high duties in the American tariff.
+The system of drawbacks has ceased to be of much moment in our
+customs policy, and in the export interest in canned goods finds its
+chief exercise. Nor does a privilege to manufacture in bond affect
+more than one article of importance&mdash;ores of lead containing silver.
+No matter how it is regarded, the tariff of 1897 was not framed for
+revenue, and in experience has not proved sufficiently productive to
+meet its share of the expenditures of Government. The animus of
+its sponsors in attaining the immediate political object sacrificed the
+more important and permanent object of revenue.</p>
+
+<p>Were the true object of customs duties&mdash;revenue&mdash;to be kept in
+view in tariff legislation, it would be a simple matter to devise a
+measure that would be satisfactory and highly productive of revenue.
+In the fifteen hundred or more articles enumerated in the tariff
+schedules, more than fourteen hundred are nonproductive, or yield so
+small a return as to have in the aggregate no appreciable effect on
+the total receipts. The number left after so large an exclusion can
+be still further reduced without reducing the revenue one tenth;
+and it is from a small number of articles, hardly twenty-five, that the
+great part of the customs revenue is obtained. By reducing the rates
+of duties on these to a point of highest revenue efficiency, at which the
+import is not interfered with and yet not encouraged, a higher return
+could be had than from the existing complicated, overloaded,
+and political compilation of duties, usually imposed for any reason
+other than what they will bring into the treasury.</p>
+
+<p>When, therefore, the best methods of Federal taxation are
+broached, the reform of the tariff stands first in importance. It is
+necessary to bring it more into line with the industrial conditions of
+to-day, which call for foreign markets rather than a domestic or
+closed market; and for a liberal commercial policy in place of one that
+regards the products of other countries, whether imported in the
+crude or manufactured forms, as constituting a menace to American
+labor and American interests. It calls for a systematic and intelligent
+revision, which shall throw out such duties as are no longer of
+service even for protection, and to reduce those that are hostile to the
+products of other countries and bear in themselves the seeds of reprisals
+in the future. Now that the United States is going into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_746" id="Page_746">[Pg 746]</a></span>
+great markets with its manufactures, and obtaining a foothold against
+all competitors, the invitation to retaliation holds a danger far greater
+to its own interests than any that can be inflicted on other peoples.
+The greater the advances made the more readily will recourse be had
+to reprisals and hostile legislation; and in support of every act appeal
+may be had to examples set by the United States.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h2>MENTAL DEFECTIVES AND THE SOCIAL WELFARE.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By MARTIN W. BARR, M. D.</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap lowercase">CHIEF PHYSICIAN, PENNSYLVANIA TRAINING SCHOOL FOR FEEBLE-MINDED CHILDREN, ELWYN, PA.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>Periods of extraordinary efflorescence or fruitage are followed
+by exhaustion and sterility not infrequently demanding the free
+use of the pruning knife; and, just as we remark how frequent is
+idiocy the offspring of genius, so do we find the same seeming paradox,
+of mental defect in rank and increasing growth the product of this
+most wonderful nineteenth century.</p>
+
+<p>True, science has contributed to numbers by revealing as mental
+defectives the many "misunderstood," "the backward," "the feebly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_747" id="Page_747">[Pg 747]</a></span>
+gifted," as well as by showing what was once esteemed moral perversion
+to be moral imbecility; but a truth to which science also
+attests is, that unstable nerve centers uniting and reacting through
+successive generations, producing various forms of neuroses, evidenced
+in insanity, moral and mental imbecility, idiocy and epilepsy, do
+show the influence of a highly nervous age.</p>
+
+<p>Our last census reports, although necessarily uncertain and unreliable,
+yet show ninety thousand mental defectives, not including
+the insane. Unrecognized and unacknowledged cases swell the number
+easily to one hundred thousand within our present borders&mdash;how
+many we are going to annex remains to be seen; but this is an enemy
+that attacks not our frontiers but our hearthstones. We have
+reached that point when we must conquer it, lest it should conquer
+us, and the means to this end may be summed up in three words&mdash;separation,
+asexualization, and permanent sequestration. "Diseases
+desperate grown by desperate appliances are relieved, or not at all,"
+and we must recognize that heroic measures now are as essential to
+the welfare of the unfortunate as to society, which will then naturally
+adjust itself to new conditions. Viewing the separation and massing
+of these irresponsibles&mdash;innocent victims of ignorance, debauchery,
+or selfish lust&mdash;men will come to realize that a greater crime than
+taking is the giving of such life; and so a greater reverence for
+the sacredness of marriage, a deeper sense of the great responsibilities
+of parenthood, will do more to avert this evil than the most stringent
+marriage laws. That the present demands some restraint upon the
+ignorant and the indifferent there can be no doubt, and laws preventing
+the marriage of defectives and of their immediate descendants
+would go far to stem the tide of harmful heredity.</p>
+
+<p>But what to do with those now in our midst is the vital question!
+They must be provided for in a way that shall insure safety to society,
+economy to the State, and protection and happiness to the individual.
+The answer found in the experience of half a century is, briefly,
+asylums for the helpless&mdash;training schools and colonies for those capable
+of becoming helpful. These in very name and nature being
+widely separate, just as separate as titles and names indicate, should
+be their working systems. Work among the feeble-minded, a philanthropic
+movement directed first toward the idiot, soon found a limit
+in dealing with a subject not trainable and but slightly if at all improvable.
+Thence, diverging and broadening as idiocy became better
+understood and imbecility in various phases became recognized, it
+found its true province in strengthening and encouraging feeble intellects,
+arousing and stimulating indolent and weak wills, and in
+training and directing into healthful channels the abnormal energy
+of those destitute of the moral sense. How wide the divergence can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_748" id="Page_748">[Pg 748]</a><br /><a name="Page_749" id="Page_749">[Pg 749]</a></span>
+readily be seen, as also how entirely incompatible with union must
+be work further apart in reality than is the training of an imbecile
+and a normal child.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 748px;">
+<img src="images/illo_033_excitable.jpg" width="748" height="384" alt="Excitable Idiot. Practically unimprovable. - Apathetic Idiot. Practically unimprovable. - Idio-Imbecile. But slight hope of improvement." />
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" width="100%" summary="illo caption">
+<tr><td><span class="smcap"><b>Excitable Idiot.</b></span><br />Practically unimprovable.</td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>Apathetic Idiot.</b></span><br />Practically unimprovable.</td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>Idio-Imbecile.</b></span><br />But slight hope of improvement.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>For the idiot, who not only can not be trained, but who in many
+cases is unimprovable even in the simplest matters of self-help, nothing
+is needed but that care and attention found in every well-regulated
+nursery of delicate children, the <i>sine qua non</i> being regular hours,
+simple nourishing food, frequent baths, and tender mothering. As
+many are paralyzed, blind, lame, or epileptic, it is desirable that the
+dormitories, well ventilated, be on the same floor with the living rooms
+and of easy access to bathrooms and playgrounds. Covered and
+carefully guarded porches should afford the much-needed fresh air
+and outdoor life in all weathers. These, with cheerful, sunny playrooms,
+provided with simple toys and furnished with bright decorations
+varying with the season, will contribute the maximum of pleasure
+for this life of perpetual infancy. Low vitality, general poverty of
+the whole physical make-up, the prevalence of phthisis and epilepsy
+and kindred diseases require the daily inspection of a physician, while
+the comfort and well-being of the whole, both workers and children,
+are insured by a capable and sympathetic house mother.</p>
+
+<p>The character of attendants is of the first importance, as these are
+they who live with the children; it should combine that firmness, tenderness,
+and balance that constitute an even temperament, capable
+of recognizing and meeting an occasion without loss of self-control.
+The duties involve not only the care of the idiots, but the training and
+direction of idio-imbeciles as aids, and this dealing with natures often
+wholly animal, requires a certain refinement and dignity of character&mdash;at
+least an entire absence of coarseness&mdash;while a knowledge of the
+simpler manual arts, and if possible of drawing and music, will do
+much to soften and brighten these darkened natures. As these qualities
+are valuable as well as rare, the remuneration should be in proportion;
+certainly sufficient to induce permanency and to compensate
+for such isolation. A life of constant wear and tear demands also
+regular periods of rest, and the corps therefore should be sufficiently
+large to give relief hours daily as well as vacations.</p>
+
+<p>The idio-imbecile, but one remove from his weaker brother, to
+whose wants he may be trained to minister, finds here his fitting place,
+and the domestic service of these asylums may be largely drawn
+from this class and also from that of the low-grade imbecile. Working
+as an aid, never alone, always under direction, he finds in a
+monotonous round of the simplest daily avocations his life happiness,
+his only safety from lapsing into idiocy, and therefore his true home.</p>
+
+<p>The relief to the home, the actual benefit to the State in this
+housing and care of the idiot and idio-imbecile can never be fully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_750" id="Page_750">[Pg 750]</a></span>
+estimated. It is reckoned, however, in a general way that for every
+idiot sequestrated the energies of two if not four normal persons are
+returned to society.</p>
+
+<p>Imbecility, mental or moral, congenital or accidental, is either an
+inherent defect or an irrecoverable loss, an incurable disease for which
+hospitals can do nothing, nor can reformatories form again that which
+never has been formed. Could language be made clear enough to
+enable the public mind to grasp this fact, the work of training schools,
+the only hope of the imbecile, would then be simplified, and people
+might be willing to accept what they can give, in the only way in
+which it can be given, to be of any permanent value. As it is, the
+few charlatans who profess to train and in a few years send out an
+imbecile ready to take a high-school or college course not only deceive
+those from whom they may gather a few thousands, but their representations,
+coupled with that of a sensational press, effectually impede
+the progress of a work which must eventually find its true place
+in the system of public education.</p>
+
+<p>Influenced by these misrepresentations, parents come with profound
+idiots and high hopes of a course of training (here is one of the
+misfortunes of an idiot asylum within a training school), and simply
+refuse to accept a negative to their expectations. Again&mdash;to waifs and
+strays, high-grade imbeciles, developing after years of labored training
+proficiency in music, drawing, or some one of the industrial arts,
+friends will suddenly crop up and, dazzled by what seems phenomenal
+genius, seek to withdraw them just as they become useful to the community.
+Little do they know of the weak will, indolent nature,
+and utter lack of "go," that forbid competition with normal labor
+and must forever be subject to the will of another; still less of the weak
+physical build that is kept intact only by watchful care, and which
+would succumb to any undue hardship. So much for the difficulties
+that beset the work. Now as to the work itself.</p>
+
+<p>As this must vary according to the status of the individual, a
+careful study and a correct diagnosis are of primary importance in
+order that the work may be fitted to the child, not the child to the
+work. The plan pursued is as follows: A thorough examination&mdash;physical,
+mental, and moral&mdash;is first made by the chief physician in
+connection with papers properly filled out giving personal and family
+history. He is then sent to the hospital for a fortnight to insure
+immunity from disease. There, while perfectly free and unrestrained
+among his fellows, he is under constant observation of the nurses;
+these observations, carefully noted, are returned to the chief physician,
+who turns both over to the principal of schools, designating the
+grade in which he is to enter for probation. Here under different
+environment he is again tested for some weeks and finally placed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_751" id="Page_751">[Pg 751]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 748px;">
+<img src="images/illo_036_high.jpg" width="748" height="394" alt="High-grade Imbecile. - High-grade Imbecile. Very improvable&mdash;can read, write, draw, etc. - Low-grade Imbecile. Only slightly improvable." />
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" width="100%" summary="illo caption">
+<tr><td><span class="smcap"><b>High-grade Imbecile.</b></span></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>High-grade Imbecile.</b></span><br />Very improvable&mdash;can read, write, draw, etc.</td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>Low-grade Imbecile.</b></span><br />Only slightly improvable.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_752" id="Page_752">[Pg 752]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is hard for the uninitiated to understand that the grade, be it
+high, middle, or low, is not associated with promotion and advancement
+as in schools for normal children. On the contrary, it signifies
+the quality and status of the individual, his limitations, his
+possibilities, and consequently determines almost unfailingly the training
+for his life work; not by any hard-and-fast lines, but by a general
+mapping out of means which experience has proved will best insure
+his development, because best suited to his needs. Every latitude is
+allowed and, as the comfort of both the teacher and the entire class
+depends upon each going to his own place, there is easy and natural
+transference according to the necessity indicated by either progress
+or retrogression; but the varied occupations in each grade give ample
+scope for indulgence of individual proclivity in the means of development,
+and it is found that the original diagnosis, based upon experience,
+rarely errs.</p>
+
+<p>The motto of the schools&mdash;"We learn by doing; the working
+hand makes strong the working brain"&mdash;shows manual training to be
+the basis of the scheme of development, varied for each grade to suit
+the intelligence. Thus classified, various occupations are arranged
+and presented with the double intent of securing all-round development,
+and of giving at the same time opportunity for choice according
+to individual bent, the child being gradually permitted to devote
+himself more exclusively to that in which he shows a tendency to
+excel, and to gain a certain automatic ease in what shall prove the
+initial of a life employment. A knowledge of writing and of numbers
+is acquired incidentally as a necessary part of these occupations
+in daily practice, and arithmetic, taught with objects, is chiefly counting,
+separating into fractional parts, and practical measurements.
+Books are used rather as a convenient means of attracting and holding
+attention while inducing habits of consecutive thinking than for
+a knowledge of facts to be memorized. Those who can learn to read
+gain naturally a means of self-entertainment, of self-instruction,
+hence a certain amount of culture, so long as protected in an institution
+from indiscriminate and pernicious literature.</p>
+
+<p>The low-grade imbecile, but a slight degree removed from the idio-imbecile,
+is, like him, totally incapable of grasping artificial signs or
+symbols. He can therefore never learn to read or write; figures have
+no meaning for him, nor numbers, beyond the very simplest counting
+acquired in the daily repetition of some simple task such as knitting,
+netting, braiding rope, straw, or knotting twine. The excitation of
+interest in these, which will also give hand and arm power, the arousing
+of the sluggish, indolent will, through the stimulus of pleasurable
+emotions, the physical development by means of the various drills and
+the moral influence of refined, orderly surroundings&mdash;these, together<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_753" id="Page_753">[Pg 753]</a><br /><a name="Page_754" id="Page_754">[Pg 754]</a></span>
+with some practical work of house, garden, or farm, which forms part
+of the daily routine, are all that school life can do for him.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 748px;">
+<img src="images/illo_038_moral.jpg" width="748" height="430" alt="Moral Imbecile of High Grade. - Moral Imbecile of Middle Grade. - Moral Imbecile, Low Grade." />
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" width="100%" summary="illo caption">
+<tr><td><span class="smcap"><b>Moral Imbecile<br />of High Grade.</b></span></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>Moral Imbecile<br />of Middle Grade.</b></span></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>Moral Imbecile,<br />Low Grade.</b></span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>From this preparation he passes to the industrial department,
+where he receives training in that occupation which the school has
+indicated for him, becoming in his limited way a useful and contented
+member of a community which should be his life home. As
+both of these types develop either extreme docility or perversity&mdash;the
+one quiet, gentle, obedient, following any suggestion even of a comrade's
+stronger will; the other obstinate, indolent, often brutal and
+cruel&mdash;the necessity for constant guardianship is therefore self-evident.</p>
+
+<p>When we consider that the training of a high-grade imbecile takes
+four times the period commonly allotted to a normal child, some idea
+of the vital energy expended on the training of the lower grades may
+be found in the following example:</p>
+
+<p>I find in our museum of educational work a little ball which I
+am inclined to regard the most valuable thing in the whole collection.
+The boy who made it was a low-grade imbecile. His hand against every
+man, he fancied every man's against him. Always under strict custodial
+care, that he might harm neither himself nor others, he would
+vent his spleen in tearing his clothing. His teacher, a woman of
+rare patience and devotedness, sat beside him one day, tearing strips
+of old linen and laying them in order. "See, Willie, let us make
+some pretty strips and lay them so." His wonder grew apace at seeing
+her doing what he had been reproved for doing; at once he responded,
+and a new bond of sympathy was established between them.
+She was playing his game&mdash;the only one, poor little lad, that he was
+capable of&mdash;and he joined in.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, we will draw out the pretty threads and lay them in rows."
+For weeks the boy found quiet pastime in this occupation, and the
+violent nature grew quieter in proportion. One day the teacher said,
+"Let us tie these threads together and make a long string." It took
+him months and months to learn to tie those knots, but meanwhile
+his attendants were having breathing space. "Now we will wind
+this into a pretty ball, and I will cover all you make for the boys to
+play with"; and a new occupation was added to his meager list.</p>
+
+<p>The next link in this chain of development was a lesson in knitting.
+Again, through months of patient teaching, it was at last accomplished,
+and the boy to the day of his death found his life happiness
+in knitting caps for the children, in place of tearing both them
+and their clothing. You see the teacher was wise enough to utilize the
+natural activities of the child and divert evil propensities into healthful
+channels. Had she brought knitting and bright yarn or anything
+foreign to him first, it would in truth have been fitting new cloth to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_755" id="Page_755">[Pg 755]</a></span>
+old garments and the rent would have been widened: his obstinacy
+would have been aroused, and he would have continued to tear to
+the end of the chapter.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_040_high.jpg" width="600" height="459" alt="High-grade Imbeciles" />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">High-grade Imbeciles (Feebly Gifted) at Sloyd Work.</span></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The imbecile of middle grade receives that fuller presentation of
+work suited to fuller capacity. Some time is devoted to the three
+"Rs," as it is found that attention may be aroused and concentrated in
+the phonetic drills, more especially if associated with pictures, and
+the drawing of the objects named free-hand; thus eye, ear, and hand
+are encouraged to work simultaneously. Those who accomplish
+finally the reading of short simple stories not only enjoy evenings in
+the library, but may be enabled to glean suggestions for the various
+handicrafts for which they are being trained. This effort at quick
+observation and original thinking is further carried forward in the
+ambidextrous movements of free-hand drawing, designing, and
+sketching from life&mdash;finding ready and practical application in the
+daily use of tools. The value of the rule and the try-square is tested
+in the manufacture of the various useful articles in both paper and
+wood included under the head of sloyd, and "a boy can not learn to
+take a straight shaving off a plank," says Ruskin, "or to drive a fine
+curve without faltering, or to lay a brick level in the mortar, without
+learning a multitude of other matters which life of man could never
+teach him."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_756" id="Page_756">[Pg 756]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Equally useful to the girl in the workroom as to the boy in the
+shop is this training of a ready eye, this quick intuition of balance and
+proportion, this practice of obedience of hand and arm to brain, until
+it becomes automatic. To both, therefore, the value of such preparation
+will be incalculable. It is noticeable that boys of this grade
+turn out as good workers in the ordinary crafts of shoemaking, carpentering,
+and house painting as those of higher grade who, although
+capable of grasping more intelligently the details of work, yet do not
+bring to it that energy and perseverance of one who finds in it "this
+one thing I do." With the imbecile of high grade, able to accomplish
+studies equal to about the first intermediate of the public schools, there
+is a diffusion of interest; the intelligence broadens rather than deepens
+during the school period in natural response to environment. With
+greater grasp of numerical values and of letters he attains proficiency
+impossible to the lower grades in drawing, in music, in printing, and
+in cabinet work. Other industries will probably be provided for him
+as the demand increases, for it must be remembered that this is a
+class whose needs have been the last to be recognized in a work begun,
+as I have before said, for the idiot. Regarded as queer, unlike
+other children&mdash;unable to keep up&mdash;he has, after an unsuccessful trial
+at school, been kept at home, in some cases an aid, in others a tyrant,
+to those relatives charged with his care.</p>
+
+<p>Changed conditions of both family and school, fortunately for
+him, combine to render this no longer possible, as absence of proper
+training is always certain to result in deterioration. The pressure
+upon the primary schools in the struggle for higher education leaves
+no time to contend with dull, backward children. In the family the
+care-takers grow fewer in proportion as the home-makers become
+home-winners, and so these feeble ones are a burden instead of an
+aid in the ordinary household offices.</p>
+
+<p>The next hope is a training school where, with false hopes fostered
+by ignorance and sensationalism, they are entered, and after a
+few years, a time all too short for any lasting benefit, a sentimentality
+equally stupid withdraws them from that guardianship absolutely
+essential, with just that little knowledge which will render them
+more dangerous to society, because less recognizable&mdash;an evil element
+perpetuating an evil growth. Under both conditions these unfortunates
+have suffered from that lack of constant care and supervision
+which should be theirs from the cradle to the grave.</p>
+
+<p>The separation of backward children in the schools and the placing
+of them in special classes for special training is the first step in
+the right direction. Here, after sufficient time for observation and
+diagnosing by teacher and physician, the defectives so adjudged will
+naturally drift to the training schools for the feeble-minded; these,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_757" id="Page_757">[Pg 757]</a></span>
+if relieved of the odium as well as the care of their helpless population,
+will then be encouraged to arrange for this brighter class of
+defectives industries which will provide not only for development and
+happiness, but will largely aid in maintenance. The recognition of
+the necessity for this weeding out of the schools, having place first
+on the Continent, next in England, and later in our own country,
+marks an era in the national as well as in the special schools. Both
+will be benefited largely, and formal expression of this, found in the
+addition to our National Educational Association of a department
+representing the training of all classes of defectives, is one of the most
+encouraging signs of the times.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_042_middle.jpg" width="600" height="473" alt="Middle-grade Imbeciles." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Middle-grade Imbeciles.</span></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The same experience which dictates the separation of the idiot
+from the imbecile, the backward from the normal child, urges also
+that a permanent sequestration would tend alike to the safety and
+happiness of the normal and abnormal classes. The experiment made
+of preparing and sending out into the world these irresponsibles has
+proved, to say the least, not encouraging, and the advisability of their
+permanent detention has become self-evident.</p>
+
+<p>The heads of training schools here are a unit in urging that provision
+be made for those who have reached the limit of school progress.
+That experience has reached a similar conclusion in England is testified<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_758" id="Page_758">[Pg 758]</a></span>
+in the munificent gift lately made to the Royal Albert Asylum,
+and by the opinion of its superintendent, Dr. T. Telford-Smith, thus
+clearly expressed:</p>
+
+<p>"It is yearly more noticeable that the public mind is coming
+gradually but surely to recognize the threefold value of the work of
+such institutions as the Royal Albert Asylum. The educational
+and the custodial aspects early
+aroused the sympathies of the
+charitable; but the preventive aspect
+is another which must force
+itself upon all who thoughtfully
+consider the subject. The far-reaching
+and inexorable law of
+heredity is written large for those
+who study the imbecile."</p>
+
+<p>The following paragraph,
+from a daily paper, shows that, in
+America at least, public opinion
+and the acts of the legislature
+have become ripe for action:</p>
+
+<p>"The State of Connecticut is
+about to try a curious experiment
+in social legislation, having passed
+a law forbidding any man or
+woman, imbecile or feeble-minded,
+to marry under forty-five
+years of age, the penalty being
+imprisonment for not less than
+three years; and persons aiding
+and abetting are also liable. The
+hope of the legislature is to keep
+down d&eacute;generate families."</p>
+
+<p>That this experiment is wise
+and justifiable who can doubt?</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 290px;">
+<img src="images/illo_043_low.jpg" width="290" height="600" alt="Low-grade Imbeciles. No. 1, obstinate,
+perverse, indolent; No. 2, gentle and
+obedient." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Low-grade Imbeciles.</span><br />
+No. 1, obstinate, perverse, indolent;<br />
+No. 2, gentle and obedient.</span></div>
+
+<p>To glance at another and
+sadder, but not less real, side of
+the same question, can any one doubt but that the adolescent and adult
+female imbecile needs lifelong care and protection? Surely the noble
+gift to the asylum by Sir Thomas Storey of a home for forty such cases
+is a wise, far-seeing, and statesmanlike act.</p>
+
+<p>It is greatly to be hoped that this noble example may be speedily
+emulated on both sides of the sea, and that each State may shortly
+possess, in addition to its training school, its own colony farm with all
+the industries of a village, drawing its workers from the well-directed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_759" id="Page_759">[Pg 759]</a></span>
+energies of a carefully guarded community. Cottages, each with its
+house mother, would insure that sense of home, and that affectionate
+and sympathetic oversight so essential to this society composed of
+those who are always children, while measures, which science has
+already pointed out and experience proved as advisable, might, if protected
+by wise legislation, permit less vigilance on the part of care-takers
+and consequent happiness because of greater freedom to its
+members.</p>
+
+<p>It is a happy coincidence that Massachusetts, the pioneer State in
+the work among the feeble-minded, should in its fifty-first year celebrate
+the beginning of its second half century by the inauguration of
+this most eventful step in the onward progress of the work. The
+training school at Waltham has lately purchased sixteen hundred and
+sixty acres of land for the establishment of a colony which is to have
+natural and healthful growth from the fostering care of the parent
+institution.</p>
+
+<p>As these colonies increase, drawing from society a pernicious element
+and transforming it under watchful care into healthful growth,
+may not in time the national Government, finding these homes of
+prevention a more excellent way than prison houses of cure for ill, be
+induced to provide a national colony for this race more to be commiserated
+because of a childhood more hopeless than that of the two
+others in our midst on whom so much has been expended?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>THE WHEAT PROBLEM AGAIN.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By EDWARD ATKINSON.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>In a recent article in the North American Review, Mr. John Hyde,
+the statistician of the United States Department of Agriculture,
+a gentleman of very high authority and repute, presents this problem
+in such terms as to throw a doubt upon the validity of any forecast
+of the potential increase in the product of wheat, or, in fact, of any
+crop in this country. Without referring to myself by name, he yet
+makes it very plain that he does not attach any value to my recent
+forecast of wheat production printed in the Popular Science Monthly
+for December, 1898.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, he rightly says that since Tyndall's address to
+the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1874 no
+treatise presented to that association has excited so general an interest
+or provoked so much unfavorable criticism as Sir William Crookes's
+recent utterances on the subject of the approaching scarcity in the
+supply of wheat.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_760" id="Page_760">[Pg 760]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hyde disclaims any intention to give his own views, but yet
+no one can read his treatise without noting a substantial agreement
+with Sir William Crookes, perhaps almost unconsciously to himself.
+In his closing paragraph he says: "To discuss the extent to which
+under conceivable conditions the United States may, <i>notwithstanding
+the somewhat dubious outlook</i>, still continue to contribute to the food
+supply of other nations, would be little more than speculation."</p>
+
+<p>The Italics are my own.</p>
+
+<p>I venture to point out that the use of the word "speculation" is
+an example of many instances. Like a dog, one may give a word a
+bad name, yet it may be a good dog and a very good word when
+rightly used. In the true and very innocent meaning of the word
+"speculation" we find exactly what the public has a right to expect
+and even to demand from the Department of Agriculture. In Webster's
+Dictionary I find that, when used in such a connection as this
+problem of the potential of this country in farm productions, the word
+"speculation" stands for "a mental view of anything in its various
+aspects and relations; contemplation; intellectual examination."</p>
+
+<p>If any "mental view" has yet been taken in the Department of
+Agriculture of the proportion of the land of this country which may
+be termed "arable," I have yet to find the record. If any "contemplation"
+has been devoted to the proportions of this arable land
+which may be devoted to different crops in each section, I have been
+remiss in not securing the reports. If any "mental view" has been
+taken of the relative area now devoted to each principal crop, and
+that which may be so devoted hereafter in order to meet the prospective
+demand upon the land, either for the supply of our own population
+or of other nations, where is the record? If there is no such
+"speculation" now of record, is it not time that a true agricultural
+survey corresponding to our geologic and geodetic surveys should be
+entered upon? I have reason to believe that such surveys have been
+made by many European states in which all the arable land in some
+kingdoms is classified, listed, and so recorded that any one wishing to
+know the best place for any special product can get the information
+by reference to the proper department of the Government.</p>
+
+<p>I have had occasion to make several studies of this kind. In order
+to inform myself on the potential of the South in the production
+of cotton, I undertook a study of the physical geography and climatology
+of the cotton States and of other cotton-producing countries
+nearly forty years ago. The results of this research were first given in
+Cheap Cotton by Free Labor, published in 1861. In that pamphlet
+and in many treatises following, finally in an address in Atlanta, in
+1880, a true forecast or "speculation" or "intellectual examination"
+will be found of the production of the cotton fiber, the potential<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_761" id="Page_761">[Pg 761]</a></span>
+of the future and of the cotton-seed-oil industry, then almost unheard
+of in this country. In 1880 I also entered upon my first "speculation"
+(not in the market) on the lines of a "contemplation" or
+forecast of the effect of agricultural machinery applied to our wheat
+land, coupled with the prospective reduction in the cost of carrying
+wheat to England, upon the condition of the American farmer and
+the British landlord. That forecast of prosperity to our farmers in
+the supply of bread at low cost to our kin beyond the sea has been
+justified at every point and in every detail. I therefore ventured to
+review Sir William Crookes's address, and I am well assured that what
+Mr. Hyde now calls a "somewhat dubious outlook" is subject to no
+doubt whatever as to our ability to continue our full supply for domestic
+consumption and export for the next century.</p>
+
+<p>Let me now repeat again what I have often said: statistics are
+good servants, but very bad masters. I long since ceased to put any
+great reliance upon averages of crops, wages, or products covering
+wide areas and varying conditions, unless I could find out, <i>first</i>, the
+personal equation of the man who compiled them; <i>second</i>, ascertain
+what he knew himself about the subject of which his statistics or
+figures were the symbols; and, <i>third</i>, unless I could verify these great
+averages from one or more typical areas of farm land, or from one or
+more representative factories or workshops, of the conditions of which
+I could myself obtain personal information.</p>
+
+<p>General statistics and averages of farm products and earnings I
+regard with more suspicion than almost any others because of the immense
+variation in conditions.</p>
+
+<p>I have sometimes almost come to the conclusion that so many of
+the figures of the United States census are mere statistical rubbish as
+to throw a doubt on nearly all the schedules. Yet without accurate
+statistics on many points, many of them yet to be secured, the conduct
+of our national affairs must become as uncertain as would be the
+conduct of any great business corporation without a true ledger account
+and a trial balance. Hence the necessity for a permanent
+census bureau and for a careful "speculation" or "intellectual" and
+intelligent examination and "contemplation" or study of the facts
+about our land by which our future welfare must be governed.</p>
+
+<p>A good beginning has been made by the authorities of many
+States, yet more by the body of well-trained men in charge of the
+Agricultural Experiment Station, in whose support too much can
+not be said. To them I appealed when trying to get an adequate conception
+of our potential in wheat.</p>
+
+<p>When we think of the blunders which have been made in very
+recent years, we may well have some suspicion that we may still be
+very ignorant on many points about our own country. Who really<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_762" id="Page_762">[Pg 762]</a></span>
+knows very much about the great middle section of the South, what
+is called the "Land of the Sky," comprising the upland plateaus and
+mountain sections of Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia,
+Alabama, eastern Tennessee, and Kentucky? Within this area, as
+large as France and twice as large as Great Britain, will be found
+timber and minerals equal to both the countries named, and a potential
+in agriculture equal to either, as yet very sparsely populated.</p>
+
+<p>Yet under a craze for centrifugal expansion we are now in danger
+of trying to develop tropical islands far away, already somewhat
+densely peopled, where white men can not work and live, to our detriment,
+danger, and loss, while we fail to see that if we expand centripetally
+by the occupation and use of the most healthy and productive
+section of our own country, we may add immensely to our prosperity,
+our wealth, to our profit without cost and without militarism.
+This sparsely settled Land of the Sky is greater in area and far greater
+in its potential than the Philippine Islands, Cuba, and Porto Rico
+combined. Verily, it seems as if common sense were a latent and
+sluggish force, often endangered by the noisy and blatant influence of
+the venal politician and the greed of the unscrupulous advocates of
+vassal colonies who now attempt to pervert the power of government
+to their own purposes of private gain.</p>
+
+<p>Witness the blunders of the past:</p>
+
+<p>We nearly gave away Oregon because it was held not to be worth
+retaining.</p>
+
+<p>When the northern boundary of Wisconsin was being determined,
+it was put as far north as it was then supposed profitable farming could
+ever extend, excluding Minnesota, now one of our greatest sources of
+wheat.</p>
+
+<p>The Great American Desert in my own school atlas covered a
+large part of the most fertile land now under cultivation.</p>
+
+<p>What blunders are we now making for lack of "speculation"
+or "intellectual examination" as to the future of American farming
+and farm lands?</p>
+
+<p>On one point to which Mr. Hyde refers I must cry <i>peccavi</i>. He
+rebukes the editor of the Popular Science Monthly for admitting an
+article in which a potential of 400,000,000 bushels of wheat is attributed
+to the State of Idaho. The total depravity of the type-writing
+machine caused the mechanism to spell Montana in the letters
+I-d-a-h-o. What I imputed to Idaho is true of Montana, if the Chief
+of the Agricultural Experiment Stations of Montana is a competent
+witness, if all its arable land were devoted to wheat. It will be
+observed that I mentioned Idaho incidentally (meaning Montana),
+taking no cognizance of the estimate given, because it was at present
+of no practical importance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_763" id="Page_763">[Pg 763]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I have expressed my distrust of great averages in respect to agriculture
+and farm products.</p>
+
+<p>In illustration of this fallacy, the figures presented by Mr. Hyde
+will now be dealt with. It is held that in 1930, which is the year
+when Sir William Crookes predicts starvation among the bread-eating
+people of the world for lack of wheat (as if good bread could
+only be made from wheat), the population of this country may be
+computed at 130,000,000. The requirements of that year for our
+own consumption Mr. Hyde estimates at 700,000,000 bushels of
+wheat, 1,250,000,000 bushels of oats, 3,450,000,000 bushels of corn
+(maize), and 100,000,000 tons of hay; and, although other products
+are not named by him, we may assume a corresponding increase.</p>
+
+<p>Subsequently Mr. Hyde gives the present delusive average yields
+per acre of the whole country, and then throws a doubt on the future
+progress of agricultural science, saying, "Whatever agricultural science
+may be able to do in the next thirty years, up to the present time
+it has only succeeded in arresting that decline in the rate of production
+with which we have been continually threatened." Without
+dealing at present with this want of and true consideration of or
+"speculation" upon the progress made in the last decade under the
+lead of the experiment stations and other beginnings in remedying
+the wasteful and squalid methods that have been so conspicuous in
+pioneer farming, let us take Mr. Hyde's averages and see what demand
+upon land the requirements of 1930 will make, even at the present
+meager average product per acre.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hyde apparently computes this prospective product as one
+that will be required for the domestic consumption of 130,000,000
+people by ratio to our present product. He ignores the fact that our
+present product suffices for 75,000,000, with an excess of live stock,
+provisions, and dairy products exported nearly equal in value to all
+the grain exported, and in excess of the exports of wheat. If we can
+increase proportionally in one class of products, why not in another?
+Whichever pays best will be produced and exported.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>1897 and 1930 compared.&mdash;Data of 1897.</i></p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Crop production">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>Products.</td>
+ <td>Average per acre.</td>
+ <td>Area required.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Maize</td>
+ <td align="right">1,902,967,933 bushels.</td>
+ <td align="right">23.8 &nbsp; bushels.</td>
+ <td align="right">125,150 square miles.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wheat</td>
+ <td align="right">530,149,168<span class="h">bus</span>"<span class="h">hels</span></td>
+ <td align="right">13.4&nbsp;<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">61,660<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Oats</td>
+ <td align="right">698,767,809<span class="h">bus</span>"<span class="h">hels</span></td>
+ <td align="right">27.2&nbsp;<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">40,200<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Hay</td>
+ <td align="right">60,664,770 <span style="margin-right: 1.5em;">tons.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">1.43<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">66,290<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Total in square miles</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">293,300 square miles.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>All other farm crops carry the total to less than 400,000 square
+miles now under the plow, probably not exceeding 360,000.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_764" id="Page_764">[Pg 764]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Prospective demand of 1930, at the same meager average product
+per acre, without progress in agricultural science:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Crop production">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>Crop called for.</td>
+ <td>Per acre.</td>
+ <td>Area required.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Maize</td>
+ <td align="right">3,450,000,000 bushels.</td>
+ <td align="right">23.8 &nbsp; bushels.</td>
+ <td align="right">226,600 square miles.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wheat</td>
+ <td align="right">700,000,000<span class="h">bus</span>"<span class="h">hels</span></td>
+ <td align="right">13.4&nbsp;<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">81,600<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Oats</td>
+ <td align="right">1,250,000,000<span class="h">bus</span>"<span class="h">hels</span></td>
+ <td align="right">27.2&nbsp;<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">70,800<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Hay</td>
+ <td align="right">100,000,000 <span style="margin-right: 1.5em;">tons.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">1.43<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">109,400<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Total in square miles</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">488,400 square miles.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>Assuming all land under the plow in 1930 in the ratio as above,
+the area of all now in all crops 400,000 square miles&mdash;an excessive
+estimate&mdash;that year (1930) will call for 667,000 square miles of
+arable land in actual cultivation.</p>
+
+<p>I have been accustomed to consider one half our national domain,
+exclusive of Alaska, good arable land in the absence of any "speculation"
+on that point in the records of the Department of Agriculture;
+but from the returns given by the chiefs of the experiment stations
+and secretaries of agriculture of the States hereafter cited, that estimate
+may be increased probably to two thirds, or 2,000,000 square
+miles of arable land out of a total of 3,000,000 square miles, omitting
+Alaska.</p>
+
+<p>Assuming that we possess 2,000,000 square miles of arable land,
+capable at least of producing the present meager average product
+cited above, the conditions of 1930 will be graphically presented on
+the following diagram:</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Prospective Use of Land in the Year 1930 on Present Crop Average.</i><br />
+(Arable land assumed to be 2,000,000 square miles in the outer lines of the diagram)</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="prospective use of land">
+<tr><td class="center bor_bottop_yes bor_side_yes">Oats,<br /> 70,800<br /> sq. miles.</td>
+ <td rowspan="2" class="center bor_top_yes bor_side_yes">Wheat,<br />81,600<br /> sq.miles.</td>
+ <td rowspan="2" class="center bor_top_yes bor_side_yes">Hay,<br /> 109,400<br /> sq. miles.</td>
+ <td rowspan="3" class="center bor_top_yes bor_side_yes">Miscellaneous.<br /> Roots, cotton,<br /> tobacco, etc.,<br /> 168,600 sq. m.<br /> Excessive.</td>
+ <td rowspan="3" class="center bor_top_yes bor_side_yes">Maize,<br /> Indian corn,<br /> 226,600<br /> sq. miles.</td>
+ <td rowspan="3" class="center bor_top_yes bor_side_yes">Wheat<br /> for<br /> export,<br /> 143,000<br /> sq. miles.<br /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bor_left_yes">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bor_left_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bor_top_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bor_top_yes">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="3" class="bor_left_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bor_top_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bor_top_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bor_top_yes bor_right_yes">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="4" class="bor_left_yes" align="left">Arable land unassigned</td>
+ <td colspan="2" class="bor_right_yes" align="right">1,200,000 square miles.</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="4" class="bor_left_yes" align="left">Deduct for cities, towns, parks, and reserves of all kinds</td>
+ <td colspan="2" class="bor_right_yes" align="right">200,000<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="4" class="bor_left_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td colspan="2" class="bor_right_yes" align="left">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="4" class="bor_left_yes">Reserve for future use</td>
+ <td colspan="2" class="bor_right_yes" align="right">1,000,000<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="6" class="bor_bottom_yes bor_side_yes" align="left">Forest, mountain, arid, etc., not counted, about 1,000,000 square miles,<br />
+ not included in these lines or squares.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>No reduction on area cultivated on prospective improvement in the present methods of
+farming, although it may be assumed that the prospective increase of crop per acre will
+exert great influence.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>If the facts should be in 1930 consistent with Mr. Hyde's "speculation"
+it would therefore appear that our ability to meet the domestic
+demand of 1930 with proportionate export of cattle, provisions,
+and dairy products, and to set apart a little patch of land for the
+export of 1,226,000,000 bushels of wheat raised at the rate of only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_765" id="Page_765">[Pg 765]</a></span>
+13.4 bushels per acre from 143,000 square miles of land will be met
+by the cultivation of not exceeding 700,000 square miles out of
+2,000,000 available.</p>
+
+<p>I should not venture to question the conclusions emanating from
+the Department of Agriculture, or the deductions of so eminent a
+scientist as Sir William Crookes, had I not taken the usual precaution
+of a business man in studying a business question. I went to
+the men who know the subject as well as the figures on which statistics
+are to be compiled.</p>
+
+<p>Being supplied by the Popular Science Monthly with one hundred
+proofs of the first nine and a half pages of the December article in
+which the terms of the problem are stated, I sent those proofs to the
+chiefs of the experiment stations and to the secretaries of agriculture
+in all the States from which any considerable product of wheat
+is now or may be hereafter derived; also to many makers of wheat
+harvesters; to the secretaries of Chambers of Commerce, and to several
+economic students in the wheat-growing States. This preliminary
+study was accompanied by the following circular of inquiry:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><span class="smcap">Boston, Mass.</span>, <i>October 5, 1898</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>To the Chiefs of the Agricultural Experiment Stations and others in
+Authority</i>:</p>
+
+<p>Calling your attention to the inclosed advance sheets of an article
+which will by and by appear in the Popular Science Monthly, I beg
+to put to you certain questions.</p>
+
+<p>If the matter interests you, will you kindly fill up the blanks below
+and let me have your replies within the present month of October,
+to the end that I may compile them and give a digest of the results?
+I shall state in the article that I am indebted to you and others for the
+information submitted.</p>
+
+<p>Area of the State of....................... square miles.</p>
+
+<p>1. What proportion of this area do you believe to be arable land
+of fair quality, including pasture that might be put under the plow?</p>
+
+<p class="right">Answer ................... square miles.</p>
+
+<p>2. What proportion is now in forest or mountain sections which
+may not be available for agriculture for a long period?</p>
+
+<p class="right">Answer ................... square miles.</p>
+
+<p>3. What has been done or may be done by irrigation?</p>
+
+<p class="right">....................................................................
+....................................................................
+....................................................................</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_766" id="Page_766">[Pg 766]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>4. What proportion of the arable land above measured should you
+consider suitable to the production of wheat under general conditions
+such as are given in the text, say, a stable price of one dollar per bushel
+in London?</p>
+
+<p class="right">Answer ................... square miles.</p>
+
+<p>5. To what extent, in your judgment, is wheat becoming the cash
+or surplus crop of a varied system of agriculture as distinct from the
+methods which prevail in the opening of new lands of cropping with
+wheat for a term of years?</p>
+
+<p class="right">....................................................................
+....................................................................
+....................................................................</p>
+
+<p>What further remarks can you add which will enable me to elucidate
+this case, to complete the article and to convey a true impression
+of the facts to English readers?</p>
+
+<p class="right">....................................................................
+....................................................................
+....................................................................</p>
+
+<p>Your assistance in this matter will be gratefully received.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span style="margin-right: 3em;">Respectfully submitted,</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">Edward Atkinson</span>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>To this circular I received twenty-four detailed replies, containing
+statistics mostly very complete; also many suggestive letters, in every
+case giving full support to the general views which I had submitted
+in the proof sheets. It has been impossible for me to give individual
+credit within the limits of a magazine article to the gentlemen who
+have so fully supplied the data. Space will only permit me to submit
+a digest of the more important facts in a table derived from these
+replies:</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="agricultural data from survey">
+<tr><td rowspan="2">Name.</td><td colspan="3"><span class="smcap lowercase">FROM RETURNS MADE TO MY INQUIRY.</span></td><td rowspan="2">From United<br />States report<br />in wheat,<br />1897.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Area of State.</td><td>Arable.</td><td>Suitable to<br />wheat</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Minnesota</td><td align="right">84,287</td><td align="right">66,000</td><td align="right">50,000</td><td align="right">7,189</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">South Dakota</td><td align="right">76,000</td><td align="right">42,500</td><td align="right">40,000</td><td align="right">4,187</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">North Dakota</td><td align="right">74,312</td><td align="right">50,000</td><td align="right">50,000</td><td align="right">4,300</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Illinois</td><td align="right">56,000</td><td align="right">54,000</td><td align="right">20,000</td><td align="right">2,292</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Missouri</td><td align="right">68,000</td><td align="right">64,000</td><td align="right">64,000</td><td align="right">2,448</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wisconsin</td><td align="right">56,000</td><td align="right">35,000</td><td align="right">35,000</td><td align="right">961</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">414,599</td><td align="right">311,500</td><td align="right">259,000</td><td align="right">21,372</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">===========</td><td align="right">=========</td><td align="right">=========</td><td align="right">=========</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Texas</td><td align="right">269,694</td><td align="right">200,000</td><td align="right">100,000</td><td align="right">700</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">California</td><td align="right">158,360</td><td align="right">54,000</td><td align="right">30,000</td><td align="right">5,062</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Montana</td><td align="right">145,310</td><td align="right">30,000</td><td align="right">25,000</td><td align="right">109</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Idaho</td><td align="right">87,000</td><td align="right">30,000</td><td align="right">15,000</td><td align="right">192</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">660,364</td><td align="right">314,000</td><td align="right">170,000</td><td align="right">6,063</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">===========</td><td align="right">=========</td><td align="right">=========</td><td align="right">=========</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">1,074,963</td><td align="right">625,500</td><td align="right">429,000</td><td align="right">27,435</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_767" id="Page_767">[Pg 767]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I do not give the data of the Eastern and Southern States, and I
+have selected only the most complete data of the other States, choosing
+the more conservative where two returns have been made from one
+State.</p>
+
+<p>The foregoing States produced a little over one third of the wheat
+crop of 1897. They comprise a little over one third the area of the
+land of the United States, excluding Alaska.</p>
+
+<p>The list covers States like Illinois, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, now
+very fully occupied relatively to Texas, Montana, and Idaho, as yet
+but sparsely settled.</p>
+
+<p>Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, Oregon, and
+Washington combined far exceed the above list in wheat production;
+but, as I have no complete data from these States, I can only say that
+the national or census statistics, as far as they go, develop corresponding
+conditions to those above given. The very small product of
+Texas and Montana, even of Idaho, as compared with the claimed
+potential, will attract notice, and perhaps excite incredulity. But
+let it be remembered that in 1880 the Territory of Dakota yielded
+less than 3,000,000 bushels of wheat, while in 1898 the two States
+of North and South Dakota, formerly in one Territory, claim to have
+produced 100,000,000 bushels. Perhaps it will then be admitted
+that the potential of Montana, and even of Idaho, may be attained in
+some measure corresponding to the reports from those States; but as
+yet their product is a negligible quantity, as that of Dakota was only
+twenty years since.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_768" id="Page_768">[Pg 768]</a></span></p>
+<p>Again, let it be remembered that Texas will produce a cotton crop,
+marketed in 1898-'99, above the average of the five ante-war crops of
+the whole country, and nearly equal to the largest crop ever grown
+in the United States before the war. Texas could not only produce
+the present entire cotton crop of the United States but of
+the world, on but a small part of her land which is well suited to
+cotton. When these facts are considered, perhaps the potential of
+that great State in wheat and other grain, in cattle and in sheep, as
+well as in cotton, may begin to be comprehended.</p>
+
+<p>The writer is well aware that this treatment of a great problem
+is very incomplete, but it is the best that the leisure hours of a very
+busy business life would permit. If it discloses the general ignorance
+of our resources, the total inadequacy of many of our official statistics,
+the lack of any real agricultural survey, and the necessity for a reorganization
+and concentration of the scientific departments of the Government
+as well as of a permanent census bureau, it will have served a
+useful purpose.</p>
+
+<p>If it also serves to call attention to the meager average crops and
+the poor quality of our agriculture as a whole down to a very recent
+period, it may suggest even to those to whose minds the statistics of
+the past convey but gloomy and "doubtful views" of the future, that
+the true progress in scientific agriculture could only begin when substantially
+all the fertile land in the possession of the Government had
+either been given away or otherwise distributed. So long as "sod
+crops" and the single-crop system yielded adequate returns to unskilled
+farmers, no true science of agriculture could be expected, any
+more than a large product of wool can be hoped for in States where
+it has been wittily said that "every poor man keeps one cur dog, and
+every d&mdash;d poor man keeps two or more."</p>
+
+<p>Finally, if I shall have drawn attention to the very effective
+work which is being done in the agricultural experiment stations
+by men of first-rate ability, I shall have drawn attention to a great
+fact. This work has already led to a complete revolution from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_769" id="Page_769">[Pg 769]</a></span>
+old practice of maltreating land, and to the renovation of soils that
+had been partially exhausted. Governor Henry A. Wise, of Virginia,
+long since condemned the old methods of Southern agriculture by telling
+his hearers, "The niggers skinned the land and the white men
+skinned the niggers." We are changing all that by new and progressive
+methods. I hope that in this recognition of the work of the
+experiment stations I shall have made some return for the attention
+which has been given to my inquiry by so many of my correspondents
+that the space assigned me forbids a list of my authorities being given
+by name.</p>
+
+<p>When the suggestion is made from the Department of Agriculture
+that all that science has yet accomplished has been to stop a tendency
+to a lessened production from the land now under the plow, and
+when it is even suggested that in 1930 the present meager average of
+crops per acre may still exist, it seems to me that little credit is given
+to the good work already accomplished in the short period in which
+the separate Department of Agriculture has been represented in the
+Cabinet, especially in the last five or six years, while the suggestion
+itself shows very little consideration of the great work of the experiment
+stations.</p>
+
+<p>Unless it can be proved that my correspondents and myself have
+entered into a conspiracy to mislead the public in dealing with the
+potential of this country in wheat production, nearly all the deductions
+from the figures of the past must be considered mere statistical rubbish.
+These statistics cover sections and States in which wheat should never
+be grown or attempted in competition with the true wheat soils and
+climate. As well might misplaced iron furnaces, built to boom city
+lots where there are no favorable conditions for the production of
+iron, be included in an average and held up as a standard of our potential
+in iron and steel production.</p>
+
+<p>In my efforts to discover the rule of progress in the arts and occupations
+of the people of this country, it has become plain that in
+ratio to the application of science and invention to every art the quantity
+of product is increased, the number of workmen is relatively
+diminished, the price of the product tends to diminish, while the
+wages or earnings of those who do the work are augmented.
+I have investigated many branches of industry, and find evidence
+conclusive to my own mind that such is the law of industrial development.
+This rule is subject to temporary variations under the
+restriction of statutes. In my own judgment, the so-called protective
+principle or policy of interference with commerce by imposing
+fines on foreign imports has retarded the progress of the specially
+protected arts, and has in some measure obstructed the diversity
+of manufactures; but the opposite policy of absolutely free trade in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_770" id="Page_770">[Pg 770]</a></span>
+our domestic traffic over a greater area and among a much larger
+number of people than have elsewhere secured their own liberty has
+been so much more potent in its progressive influence as to have lessened
+the evils of the restrictions on foreign trade.</p>
+
+<p>According to my observation, all the efforts to regulate railroad
+charges by State legislation and under the interstate commerce act
+have greatly retarded the progress of the railway, and have deprived
+great States, notably Texas, of any service at all commensurate to the
+demand which might otherwise have been supplied to the mutual
+benefit of the owners of the railways and the inhabitants of the State.
+The most serious retarding influence, especially evil in its effect upon
+farmers, was the useless panic of 1893, caused by the silver craze&mdash;that
+is to say, by the effort to enact a force bill by which the producers
+of our great crops would have been compelled to accept money
+of half the purchasing power of that to which their industry had been
+long adjusted. This caused a temporary paralysis of industry, in
+which I think none suffered so much as the farmers of the country.</p>
+
+<p>But admitting these temporary variations, I find the same rule
+governing the products of the farm that governs the mine, the factory,
+and the workshop&mdash;namely, a lessening of the number occupied in
+ratio to the product; a great reduction in the cost of labor; an increased
+return in due proportion of the skill and intelligence of the
+farmer; a rapid reduction in the farm mortgages, ending at the present
+date in making the farmers of the grain-growing States the creditors
+of the world, especially those occupied upon wheat.</p>
+
+<p>But in the development of this progress we find the reverse of
+the practice in the factory and the workshop. The most important
+applications of science and invention led first to what might be called
+the manufacture of wheat on an extensive method of making a single
+crop on great areas of land. That phase has about spent its force; the
+great farms are in process of division; the single-crop system has about
+ended; the intensive system of making a larger product from a lessened
+area with alternation and variation in crops is rapidly taking the
+place of former methods.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, while many branches of manufacturing tend more and
+more to the collective method, the tendency in agriculture is more
+and more to individualism in dealing with the land itself, coupled
+with collective ownership in the more expensive farm machinery, in
+creameries, cheese factories, and the like. We are apparently at a
+halfway stage in this revolution of agriculture. The intelligent and
+intensive methods of breeding cattle and sheep is also rapidly taking
+the place of the semibarbarous conditions of the ranch.</p>
+
+<p>If these points are well taken, the very suggestion that we must
+compute the land which should be under the plow in 1890 in order to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_771" id="Page_771">[Pg 771]</a></span>
+supply the needs of 130,000,000 people on the basis of the imperfect
+statistics and inadequate data of the past, becomes almost an impertinence.
+It is much more probable that the 400,000 square miles which
+now meet the needs of 75,000,000 people, with an enormous excess
+for export, will in 1930 still suffice for the domestic supply of
+130,000,000 people, with a proportionate export corresponding to the
+present.</p>
+
+<p>If the product of the farms of the West now yielding the largest
+crops, or of the renovated lands of the South now yielding the best
+crops, be taken as the average standard of the near future, as they
+should be, then it may be true in 1930, as it is now, that one fifth of
+the arable land of this country when put under the plow will still
+suffice for all existing demands, the remainder of our great domain
+extending the promise of future abundance and welfare to the yet
+greater numbers who will occupy the land a century hence.</p>
+
+<p>I may add that in the course of a very friendly correspondence
+with Sir William Crookes, while we are still at variance in our estimates
+of the area which may be converted to the production of wheat
+in this country without trenching upon any other product, we are
+wholly at an agreement on a most material point. I quote from one
+of his letters: "Under the present wasteful method of cultivation
+there will be in a limited number of years an insufficient supply of
+wheat. Apply artificial fertilizers judiciously, and the supply may
+be increased indefinitely." I would only venture to add to the judgment
+of so eminent a writer the words "or natural," to the end that
+the paragraph should read, "Apply artificial or natural fertilizers
+judiciously, and the supply can be increased indefinitely."</p>
+
+<p>Many years ago I was asked among others, "What would be the
+next great discovery of science or invention?" To which I replied,
+"A supply of nitrogen at low cost." Has not that discovery been
+made in the recent development of the functions of the bacteria which,
+living and dying upon the leguminous plants, dissociate the nitrogen
+of the atmosphere and convert it through the plant to the renovation
+of the soil? Is not the invention of methods of nitrifying the soil by
+distributing the germs of bacteria one of the most wonderful discoveries
+of science ever yet attained? Can any one yet measure the
+potential of any given area of land in any part of this country in the
+production of any one of its great crops? That there is a limit may
+be admitted. Can any one venture to say that any of our average
+crops yet approach beyond a small fractional measure the true limit
+of production, whatever it may be, either in cotton, maize, wheat, or
+any other product of the soil?</p>
+
+<p>In this, as in many other developments of the theory of evolution,
+the factor of mental energy, which is the prime factor in all material<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_772" id="Page_772">[Pg 772]</a></span>
+production, may have been or is almost wholly ignored. We are
+ceasing to treat the soil as a mine subject to exhaustion, but we have
+as yet made only a beginning in treating it as an instrument of production
+which will for a long period respond in its increasing product
+in exact ratio to the mental energy which is applied to the cultivation
+of the land.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>THE COMING OF THE CATBIRD.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SPENCER TROTTER.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>In southeastern Pennsylvania there comes a day in February that
+brings with it an indefinable sense of joyousness. A southerly
+wind wanders up the Delaware with a touch of the spring in its air
+that quickens, for the first time, the slumbering life. It is then that
+those mysterious forces in the cells of living things begin their subtle
+work&mdash;hidden in the dark, underground storehouses of plants and the
+sluggish tissues of animals buried in their winter sleep. On such
+a day the ground hog ventures from his burrow, some restless bee is
+lured from the hive to wander disconsolate over bare fields, a snake
+crawls from its hole to bask awhile in the sunshine, and one looks
+instinctively for the first breaking of the earth that tells of the early
+crocus and the peeping forth of daffodils. The southerly wind is
+more apt than not to be a telltale, for with all its springtime softness
+it is drawing toward some storm center, near or remote, that will inevitably
+follow with rough weather in its sweep. The country folk
+rightly call such a day a "weather breeder," and even the ground hog
+knows its portent in the very sign of his shadow. Come as it will,
+the day is really a day borrowed in advance from the spring, as though
+to hearten one through all the dreary days that will follow and, in
+starting the growing forces of vegetation, to make ready for the season's
+coming.</p>
+
+<p>With this forerunner of the year come the harbingers of the bird
+migration. With the rise of the temperature to sixty or over, a well-marked
+bird wave from the south spreads over the Delaware Valley.
+On this balmy, springlike day we hear for the first time since November
+the croaking of grackles as a loose flock wings overhead or
+scatters among the tree tops. A few robins may show themselves,
+and the mellow piping of bluebirds lends its sweet influence to
+the charm of such a day. There is a sense of uncertain whereabouts
+in the bluebird's note, a sort of hazy, in-the-air feeling that suggests
+sky space. It does not seem to have the tangible element by which
+we can locate the bird as in the voices of the robin and the song sparrow.
+It is on such a day as this that song sparrows are first heard&mdash;cheery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_773" id="Page_773">[Pg 773]</a></span>
+ditties from the weather-beaten fences and the bare, brown
+tangle of brier patches. The day may close lurid with the frayed
+streamers of lofty cirrus clouds streaking across the sky&mdash;the vaporous
+overflow of a coming storm&mdash;or a week of the same bright weather
+may continue with the wind all the while blowing softly out of the
+south, but sooner or later the inevitable winter storm must close
+this foretaste of the spring.</p>
+
+<p>A decided wave of rising temperature usually reaches the Delaware
+Valley from the middle to the last of March, maintaining itself
+longer than the February rise, and ushering in a well-marked bird
+wave. It is about this time that the vanguard of the robin migration
+scatters over the country. The grackles or crow blackbirds, which
+have been more or less in evidence since their first appearance in February,
+begin renovating the old nests or laying the foundations of new
+ones in the tops of tall pines. The shrill call of the flicker sounds
+through the woods, and before the end of the month one is sure to
+hear the plaintive song of the field sparrow. This is about the time
+that the spicebush shows its yellow blossoms through the grays and
+browns of the spring underwoods, and the skunk cabbage unfolds its
+fresh, green leafage in rank abundance along the boggy course of
+woodland rills. A week earlier the streaked yellow and purple of its
+fleshy spathes shows here and there in the oozy ground by the side
+of the folded leaf spikes. It is just at this time, too, that one must
+go to the woods for the first spring wild flowers&mdash;bloodroot, hepatica,
+anemones, and the yellow dog-tooth violet&mdash;if one would get the real
+freshness of spring into his soul. The crows, that all through the
+winter filed away each evening in straggling lines of flight toward
+the distant roost, have broken ranks, and go rambling in small groups
+through the woods and over the fields of green winter wheat. Like
+the grackles, they have thoughts of courtship and the more earnest
+business of family cares. The liquid notes of meadow larks sound
+clear and sweet in the greening fields and pastures, and small flocks
+of vociferous killdeers scatter in wheeling flight over the newly
+plowed lands. In tangle covers the rustle of dead leaves here and
+there tells of the whereabouts of a flock of fox sparrows halting in
+their northward pilgrimage. The pewee is back, inspecting her last
+year's house under the span of some old bridge, and the melancholy
+voice of the dove is borne on the air from the fence rows and cedars
+along the farther side of fields.</p>
+
+<p>After the 1st of April the tide of migration sets in with force,
+and the earlier waves bring several species of summer birds&mdash;those
+that come to build and breed in our woods&mdash;that rarely if ever make
+their appearance before this time. It is an interesting fact that none
+of the migrants that make their first appearance in April are ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_774" id="Page_774">[Pg 774]</a></span>
+found in the Delaware Valley during the winter, though several, if
+not all, of the species that come on the March waves are occasionally
+met with in the winter months. It appears, further, that the winter
+quarters of certain birds which are summer residents with us and some
+that are transient, passing on to more northern breeding grounds, lie
+not so very far to the south. If the last of March has been marked
+by warm weather lapping over into the first days of April, then one
+may expect soon to hear the familiar notes of the chipping sparrow
+from the swelling branches of garden shrubbery and the trees about
+the lawn, and a brown thrasher is sure to be heard volubly proclaiming
+his arrival from some near-by tree top. Among the budding
+sprigs of thickets the elusive chewink breaks into occasional fragments
+of song, and from the red-blossomed maples and the jungle of
+pussy willows and alders that fringe the meadow brook the metallic
+creaking notes of the red-winged blackbirds sound not unpleasingly.
+This jargon of the red-wing has a true vernal ring about it, suggesting
+the fresh green of oozy bogs and the loosening up of sap.</p>
+
+<p>From the middle to the last of April there are several big waves
+of migration that bring many of the summer residents as well as some
+transient species, forerunning the greater waves that are to follow in
+May. On certain warm April days the barn and the bank swallows
+appear, and the chimney swifts are seen scurrying to and fro above
+the trees and house tops. These are genuine signs of the coming
+summer, for swallows and swifts feed only on the minute gnats and
+other ephemera that develop under conditions of warm temperature.
+Whoever knows of a martin box that year after year is visited by its
+colony has an unfailing source of delight at this time in watching the
+lovely birds. The martins are very prompt in their arrival, rarely
+coming before the 1st of April nor later than the 10th. We are
+aware for the first time that the house wren has come back by the
+voluble song that greets us some morning from the branches just
+beyond our window&mdash;a song that only the lover of his own rooftree
+can fully appreciate, for the wren's chant, more than any other bird
+song, seems to voice the home instinct in a man. By the last week
+of April the woods are fast closing up their vistas in a rich profusion
+of unfolding leafage. The umbrellalike leaves of the May apple are
+scattered everywhere through the woods and fields, forming conspicuous
+patches of green. During this last week of the month a few
+straggling thrushes make their appearance&mdash;the hermit thrush with
+its russet tail, the veery, and the wood thrush. The first two are transients,
+flitting through the underwoods or rustling among fallen leaves
+in search of their insect food. To hear the incomparable matins and
+vespers of the hermit one must follow to the bird's breeding range on
+the wooded slopes of the Appalachians or farther into the deep recesses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_775" id="Page_775">[Pg 775]</a></span>
+of the Canadian forests. The wood thrush breeds with us,
+and the melody of its notes adds a peculiar charm to our groves and
+woodlands that would leave an unfilled blank in the choir if the bird
+were a transient like the hermit or the veery.</p>
+
+<p>From the 1st to the 10th of May a succession of bird waves
+comes from the south of such vast proportions as to the number of
+individuals and variety of species that all the previous migratory
+waves seem insignificant in comparison. It is the flood tide of the
+migration, bringing with it the host of warblers, vireos, orioles,
+tanagers, and thrushes that suddenly make our woods almost tropical
+in the variety of richly colored species and strange bird notes. It
+would take a volume to describe the wood warblers, sylvan nymphs
+of such bizarre color patterns and dainty forms that one is fain to
+imagine himself in the heart of some wondrous forest of a far-away
+land. Their curious dry notes, each different in its kind and expression,
+yet all of the same insectlike quality; their quick, active
+motions, now twisting head downward around the branches, prying
+into every nook and cranny in their eager search for food, or fluttering
+about the clusters of leaves, add to the strange effect. Their
+names, too, are richly stimulative to the color sense&mdash;the black-throated
+green, the black-throated blue, the chestnut-sided, the bay-breasted,
+the black and yellow, the cerulean, the Blackburnian, the
+blue-winged yellow, the golden-winged, the blue-yellow-backed or
+parula warbler, and the Maryland yellow-throat are each suggestive
+of a wealth of coloring. Others have names that carry us to southern
+realms, like the myrtle and the palm warblers; and others again tell
+of curious habits, as the worm-eating warbler, the hooded fly-catching
+warbler, and the black and white creeping warbler that scrambles
+about the tree trunks like a true creeper. There is nothing in all the
+year quite like the May woods. Then, if never again, you can step
+from your dooryard into an enchanted forest. The light yellowish
+effects of new green in the feathery masses of the oak catkins and
+the fresh, unfolding leafage of the forest trees are a rich feast to the
+eyes. Against this wealth of green the dogwood spreads its snow-white
+masses of bloom. In sunlit spaces of greenness the scarlet flash
+of a tanager, the rich blue coloring of the indigo bird, newly arrived
+from its winter quarters in South America, and the glimpse of a
+rose-breasted grosbeak among the high tree tops are strangely suggestive
+of a tropical forest. The ear, too, is charmed with a multitude
+of curious notes. The weird cries of the great-crested flycatcher
+among the topmost branches, and the loud chant of the ovenbird
+with its rising cadence coming from farther depths of the wood are
+two of the most characteristic bird voices of the May woodlands. If
+one would have the famous song of the mocking bird in this sylvan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_776" id="Page_776">[Pg 776]</a></span>
+carnival he has only to loiter in the nearest grove to hear the wonderful
+performance of the catbird. The catbird is the real harbinger
+of summer. He is familiar throughout the countryside, liked or
+disliked according to the dispositions of folks, but when he appears
+amid the May-day throng every one knows that summer has come.
+As a countryman once said to me: "You can't place any dependence
+on the robin&mdash;it may snow the very day he comes; but a catbird never
+makes a mistake&mdash;it's summer with him for sure."</p>
+
+<p>The passing on of the great warbler waves to the north and the
+ending of the migration likewise mean the passing of the spring. It
+is summer any time after the 15th of May, or, to be more accurate,
+after the last of the migratory warblers, thrushes, and tanagers have
+passed beyond our woods. To a New-Englander summer will come
+a little later, nearer the true almanac date of June 1st. To a dweller
+in Virginia the last of April is the passing of spring and the advent
+of summer.</p>
+
+<p>Some ten or more years ago several enthusiastic ornithologists living
+in the neighborhood of Philadelphia began keeping records of the
+times of arrival of the different species of birds, and at the same time
+noted the conditions of temperature in relation to the abundance of
+individuals. After several years of these observations they were able
+to see clearly that these bird waves were directly related to the waves
+of rising temperature marking the advent of warm spells of weather.
+One of the most significant facts deduced from these observations was
+the remarkable regularity in the first appearance of certain species.
+For example, the Baltimore oriole in eight years of observation never
+arrived before the 1st of May, and only twice later than the 4th&mdash;viz.,
+once on the fifth and once on the 7th. The list on the opposite page
+shows the date of first arrivals extending over a period of eight years,
+from 1885 to 1892.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Arrival of Birds">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td>1885.</td><td>1886.</td><td>1887.</td><td>1888.</td><td>1889.</td><td>1890.</td><td>1891.</td><td>1892.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Flicker</td><td align="left"> April 10</td><td align="left">Mar. 24</td><td align="left"> Mar. 26</td><td align="left"> Mar. 30</td><td align="left"> Mar. 28</td><td align="left"> Mar. 26</td><td align="left"> Mar. 30</td><td align="left"> April 2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Chimney swift</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 23</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 20</td><td align="left"> April 15</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 16</td><td align="left"> April 27</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Hummingbird</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 14</td><td align="left"> .......</td><td align="left"> May 7</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> .......</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Kingbird</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 7</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 14</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Crested flycatcher</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 8</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Pewee</td><td align="left"> April 3</td><td align="left"> Mar. 20</td><td align="left"> Mar. 21</td><td align="left"> Mar. 22</td><td align="left"> Mar. 27</td><td align="left"> Mar. 27</td><td align="left"> Mar. 31</td><td align="left"> April 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wood pewee</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 15</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 13</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 14</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 17</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Red-winged blackbird</td><td align="left"> Mar. 4</td><td align="left">Feb. 19</td><td align="left">Feb. 19</td><td align="left"> Feb. 21</td><td align="left">Mar. 13</td><td align="left"> Mar. 12</td><td align="left"> Feb. 25</td><td align="left"> Mar. 9</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Meadow lark</td><td align="left"> .......</td><td align="left"> Feb. 10</td><td align="left"> Mar. 19</td><td align="left"> Mar. 21</td><td align="left">Mar. 14</td><td align="left"> Mar. 12</td><td align="left"> Feb. 23</td><td align="left"> Mar. 17</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Baltimore oriole</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 7</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Purple grackle</td><td align="left"> Mar. 16</td><td align="left"> Mar. 7</td><td align="left"> Feb. 19</td><td align="left"> Feb. 21</td><td align="left"> Mar. 2</td><td align="left"> Feb. 13</td><td align="left"> Feb. 18</td><td align="left"> Mar. 6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Chipping sparrow</td><td align="left"> April 8</td><td align="left"> April 9</td><td align="left"> April 8</td><td align="left"> Mar. 31</td><td align="left"> Mar. 29</td><td align="left"> April 8</td><td align="left"> April 13</td><td align="left"> April 4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Field sparrow</td><td align="left"> April 11</td><td align="left"> April 7</td><td align="left"> April 9</td><td align="left"> April 2</td><td align="left"> Mar. 29</td><td align="left"> Mar. 13</td><td align="left"> Mar. 15</td><td align="left"> Mar. 26</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Chewink</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 23</td><td align="left"> April 27</td><td align="left"> April 18</td><td align="left"> April 11</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> April 18</td><td align="left"> April 24</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Indigo bird</td><td align="left"> May 16</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 7</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 10</td><td align="left"> May 8</td><td align="left"> May 10</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Scarlet tanager</td><td align="left"> May 9</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 8</td><td align="left"> May 9</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> April 28</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Barn swallow</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> April 21</td><td align="left"> April 12</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> April 24</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Red-eyed vireo</td><td align="left"> May 7</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Black-and-white warbler</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> April 27</td><td align="left"> April 21</td><td align="left"> April 20</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> April 24</td><td align="left"> May 1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Yellow warbler</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 8</td><td align="left"> May 4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Myrtle warbler</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> April 10</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> April 25</td><td align="left"> April 20</td><td align="left"> April 27</td><td align="left"> April 18</td><td align="left"> April 7</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Black-throated green warbler</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> April 26</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> April 30</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ovenbird</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> April 30</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Maryland yellow-throat</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> April 24</td><td align="left"> April 28</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Chat</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Redstart</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> April 30</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Catbird</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> April 30</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Brown thrasher</td><td align="left"> April 24</td><td align="left"> April 25</td><td align="left"> April 28</td><td align="left"> April 15</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> April 30</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">House wren</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> April 27</td><td align="left"> April 24</td><td align="left"> April 28</td><td align="left"> April 14</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> May 5</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wood thrush</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> April 23</td><td align="left"> May 2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Veery</td><td align="left"> .......</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> April 25</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> April 28</td><td align="left"> May 4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Hermit thrush</td><td align="left"> April 13</td><td align="left"> April 7</td><td align="left"> April 9</td><td align="left"> April 3</td><td align="left"> April 10</td><td align="left"> April 13</td><td align="left"> April 12</td><td align="left"> April 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Robin</td><td align="left"> Mar. 7</td><td align="left"> Mar. 10</td><td align="left"> Feb. 28</td><td align="left"> Feb. 19</td><td align="left"> Mar. 7</td><td align="left"> Feb. 26</td><td align="left"> Feb. 24</td><td align="left"> Mar. 9</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Bluebird</td><td align="left"> Mar. 18</td><td align="left"> .......</td><td align="left"> Feb. 17</td><td align="left"> Feb. 21</td><td align="left"> Mar. 8</td><td align="left"> Feb. 23</td><td align="left"> Feb. 17</td><td align="left"> Mar. 9</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p>Another fact of great interest which bears on the south-to-north
+movement of migrating birds, and which these observations very
+clearly brought out, was the earlier appearance of individuals of various
+species at points nearer the river, the first arrival of the same
+species at points back from the river being, in many instances, several
+days later. The first report of the arrival of a given species usually
+came from a low, marshy tract of land immediately bordering the
+western shore of the Delaware. The second report came from a
+locality several miles back of the eastern shore of the river, but situated
+in the low plain of the river valley and within tide-water limits.
+The third report came from a place some miles back from the river
+on the uplands, but near the head of a stream emptying into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_777" id="Page_777">[Pg 777]</a></span>
+Delaware from the west. The last two places to report arrivals were
+situated farther up the river and some distance back from it. All
+this confirms the general idea that in migrating most, if not all, of
+the various land birds follow river valleys and invade the upland
+districts, lying back from either side, by way of the smaller tributaries.</p>
+
+<p>The fact of greatest importance resulting from these observations
+was that relating to temperature. It was found that there was always
+a marked increase in the number of individuals of a given species following
+a warm wave of temperature as marked by a decided rise of
+the thermometer. The following graphic representation, based on
+the abundance from day to day of three common and easily observed
+species&mdash;the brown thrasher, chipping sparrow, and flicker&mdash;affords
+an interesting illustration of the relative movements of the two waves.
+It will be understood that the numbers in the extreme left-hand
+column refer to the relative abundance of individuals of the three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_778" id="Page_778">[Pg 778]</a></span>
+species collectively. The inside column refers to temperature. The
+period of observation was twenty days, as shown by the line across the
+top of the figure.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_063_a.jpg" width="600" height="461" alt="A graph of A, migration; B, temperature." />
+<span class="caption">A, migration; B, temperature.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The advent of spring is marked by the northward progression of
+the isotherm of 42.8&deg; F., which is the initial temperature required to
+awaken the dormant reproductive and germinating activities in animals
+and plants. With the gradual invasion of the United States,
+from the south northward, by temperatures above this, there passes
+over the different regions the ever-old but ever-new panorama of the
+spring with its opening blossoms, its unfolding green, and its waves
+of migrating birds. The restlessness produced by the periodic development
+of the reproductive function under the stimulus of increased
+temperature causes the highly organized bird life to spread out from
+its winter quarters, wherever those may be, and follow the zone of
+new green that steadily widens northward with its increase of food
+supply in the form of myriads of insects. The comparative regularity
+in the recurrence of this phenomenon year after year is attested by
+the observations just noted. Each species has a certain, definite
+physiological relation to temperature, and its migratory movement
+toward the breeding ground is determined by the movement of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_779" id="Page_779">[Pg 779]</a></span>
+isotherm of this temperature. Just as warm a spell of weather may
+occur in early April as in the first week of May, but it does not represent
+the permanent summer rise; and the majority of the warblers,
+the catbird, the tanager, the rose-breasted grosbeak, the two species of
+oriole, the vireos, and the kingbird, are rarely if ever seen in abundance
+in the Delaware Valley before the 1st of May. The migratory
+movement of such species is as regular as any other periodic phenomenon
+in Nature.</p>
+
+<p>It is hard to realize the enormous multitude of birds that form a
+so-called "wave." During the whole period of migration there is
+a general northward movement of all the migratory species, but under
+the influence of warm spells of weather this more or less uniform
+movement rises into a vast wavelike sweep of birds. These bird
+waves, as already noted, <i>follow</i> the rise of temperature appearing at
+any given locality about a day or two after the first day of the warm
+spell. Many species of land birds migrate at night&mdash;such, for example,
+as the orioles, tanagers, warblers, vireos, wrens, the majority
+of the finches, the woodpeckers, and the thrushes, excepting the robin.
+During the passing of one of the May waves the darkness overhead is
+alive with flying birds. One may stand for hours at a time and hear
+the incessant chirping and twittering of hundreds of birds calling to
+one another through the night as though to keep from getting separated.
+The great mass of individuals are probably guided by these
+call notes.</p>
+
+<p>The usually accepted notion that birds migrate from south to
+north in traveling to their breeding grounds is largely true of shore
+birds and waterfowl, but among many of the species of land birds
+conditions of topography tend to deflect a direct northward movement.
+The Atlantic coast plain, reaching up into southern New
+Jersey, and the Mississippi basin, each offers a broad south-to-north
+highway for birds leaving the Gulf shores of the United States on
+their northward journey in the spring. A great majority of species
+find in the wilderness of the Appalachian highland, from the Catskills
+to Georgia, breeding grounds quite as well adapted to their needs as
+the forests of Maine and Canada. Large numbers of birds, according
+to their regional relations, will constantly turn from the Atlantic
+coast plain up the numerous rivers, which become great highways of
+migration, leading to the highlands. The northward movement has
+thus a large westerly deflection on the Atlantic slope of the middle
+United States. It is also quite certain that many birds winter in
+favorable localities on the Atlantic coast plain much farther north
+than is generally supposed. This is especially true of the holly thickets
+among the coastwise sand dunes of southern New Jersey and the
+cedar swamps and pine barrens in the vicinity of Cape May. Many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_780" id="Page_780">[Pg 780]</a></span>
+of the finches, the marsh wrens, red-winged blackbirds, meadow larks,
+thrashers, and myrtle warblers are frequently seen in these localities
+through the winter. I spent one first day of February some years ago
+among the dunes below Atlantic City, N. J. At Philadelphia
+that morning it was bleak winter weather, but two hours later we
+found ourselves in a warm expanse of sunlight on the seaward beaches.
+The balmy air was filled with bird notes, and the holly thickets and
+bay bushes fairly swarmed with myrtle warblers. It seems to be a
+fact that many birds thus make comparatively short migratory movements
+between the seacoast plain and the mountains, up and down the
+river valleys.</p>
+
+<p>The phenomenon of the migrating bird has always appealed in a
+wonderful manner to the human mind. The guiding geographical
+sense that all animals, and wild animals and birds in particular, possess
+is peculiarly attractive to men of civilized society, because they have
+largely lost this same natural instinct of direction, and now look
+upon it in wonderment. Birds have very sure landmarks; their senses
+are keen for noting features of topography. They undoubtedly know
+the Potomac, the Susquehanna, the Delaware, the Hudson, and the
+Connecticut, and never confuse one with another. They know to
+which side the sea lies and that the rivers flow down from a wild,
+wooded region where there are plenty of food and the best possible
+places to raise their young. All these facts get fixed in their brains.
+The bird's brain-cell structure is built on these lines and is only waiting
+to get the impressions of the first migratory experience. They keep
+in with one another, follow their chirpings in the night, learn to
+tell the Hudson from the Delaware, or where this or that stretch of
+woodland lies, just as they learned when first out of the nest how to
+tell good from bad sorts of food, or how to find their way about the
+home woods, and that an owl or a fox was an undesirable acquaintance.
+In the fall migration the young birds follow the older ones in the
+general movement southward, and are often belated, showing that
+the impulse to leave their birthplaces is forced upon them, rather
+from necessity than choice, and is not the well-developed instinct impressed
+by former experience which their elders seem to possess. The
+old birds who have bred and reared these young ones set the example
+of early departure which the birds of the year through inexperience
+are tardy in appreciating. The habit waits upon experience.</p>
+
+<p>Each year, from midwinter, when the first warmth of advancing
+sunlight calls to the sleeping life, on to the first fervid heat of the
+reproductive summer, we have the joyous pageant of the spring.
+This steady waxing of the new light appealed to the pagan mind of
+western Europe with a far deeper sense than the modern mind can
+appreciate. To our rude ancestors it was the goddess E&aacute;stre, bountiful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_781" id="Page_781">[Pg 781]</a></span>
+in her gift of warmth and the magic of reproductive life, that each
+year came with the light to drive away the frost giants. And with
+the goddess, whom we still love to picture as a maiden tripping lightly
+through the budding groves in her wind-blown garments, came the
+birds. It was the cuckoo that brought the summer with "daisies
+pied and violets blue," and to-day, when its voice is heard for the
+first time in the year, every one knows that summer has come again
+to the hedgerows of England and the lands of the Rhine. So with
+us across the Atlantic, summer comes when the catbird first pours out
+its babel of sweet notes in green woodland ways and the tangled nooks
+of old gardens.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>GUESSING, AS INFLUENCED BY NUMBER PREFERENCES.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By F. B. DRESSLAR.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>About two years ago a certain progressive clothing company of
+Los Angeles, California, procured a very large squash&mdash;so
+large, indeed, as to attract much attention. This they placed uncut
+in a window of their place of business, and advertised that they would
+give one hundred dollars in gold to the one guessing the number of
+seeds it contained. In case two or more persons guessed the correct
+number, the money was to be divided equally among them. The
+only prerequisite for an opportunity to guess was that the one wishing
+to guess should walk inside and register his name, address, and his
+guess in the notebook kept for that purpose.</p>
+
+<p>The result of this offer was that 7,700 people registered guesses,
+and but three of these guessed 811, the number of seeds which the
+squash contained.</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to me that a study of these guesses would reveal some
+interesting number preferences, if any existed, for the conditions were
+unusually favorable for calling forth na&iuml;ve and spontaneous results,
+there being no way of approximating the number of seeds by calculation,
+and very little or no definite experience upon which to rely for
+guidance. It seemed probable, therefore, that the guesses would
+cover a wide range, and by reason of this furnish evidence of whatever
+number preference might exist. It is undoubtedly safe to
+assume, too, that the guesses made were honest attempts to state as
+nearly as possible best judgments under conditions given; but even
+if some of the guesses were more or less facetiously made, the data
+would be equally valuable for the main purpose in hand.</p>
+
+<p>According to the theory of probability, had there been no preference
+at all for certain digits or certain combinations of digits within<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_782" id="Page_782">[Pg 782]</a></span>
+the limits of the guesses, one figure would occur about as often as another
+in units' or tens' place. It was argued, therefore, that any
+marked or persistent variation from such regularity in such a great
+number of cases would reveal what might be termed an unconscious
+preference for such numbers or digits for these places.</p>
+
+<p>The purpose of this study, then, was to determine whether or not
+there existed in the popular mind, under the conditions offered, any
+such preferences.</p>
+
+<p>After the very arduous and tedious task of collating and classifying
+all the guesses for men and women separately had been done, the
+following facts appeared:</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, marked preference is shown for certain digits
+both for units' and tens' places. This statement is based on a study of
+the 6,863 guesses falling below one thousand. Of these, 4,238 were
+made by men and 2,625 were made by women. By tabulations of
+the digits used in units' place by both men and women, the following
+facts have been determined: 800 used 9, while but 374 used 8; 1,070
+used 7, and 443 preferred 6; 881 used 5, and only 295 preferred 4;
+862 chose 3, while 331 used 2; 577 ended with 1, while 1,230 preferred
+0 as the last figure.</p>
+
+<p>A tabulation of the figures used in tens' place shows, save in the
+case of 2 and 3, where 2 is used oftener than 3, the same curious
+preferences, but in a much less marked degree. To go into detail,
+850 chose 9 for tens' place, while 559 took 8; 907 used 7, while
+only 637 selected 6; 748 took 5, while only 536 used 4; 601 used
+3, and 634 chose 2; 728 used 1, as against 872 who used 0.</p>
+
+<p>Were it not that the selections here in the main correspond with
+the preferences shown in units' place, the significance of these figures
+would be much less important; but the evidence here can not
+wholly be ignored when taken in connection with the facts obtained
+in the preferences shown in the case of the figures occupying
+units' place.</p>
+
+<p>We are enabled, then, as a result of the study of these guesses,
+to say that under the conditions offered, aside from a preference of
+0 over 1 to end the numbers selected, digits representing odd numbers
+are conspicuously preferred to those representing even numbers.
+How far this will hold under other conditions can not now be stated,
+but the facts here observed are of such a nature as to suggest the possibility
+of an habitual tendency in this direction. However, further
+investigations can alone determine whether or not this bias for certain
+numbers is potent in a general way.</p>
+
+<p>The curve on the next page, exhibiting the results noted above,
+shows at a glance the marked and persistent preference for the odd
+numbers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_783" id="Page_783">[Pg 783]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It will be noticed that of the digits preferred, 7 surpasses any
+of the others. Not only, then, do we tend to select an odd number
+for units' place when the guess ranges between one and a thousand,
+but of these digits 7 is much preferred. In connection with this fact
+one immediately recalls all he has heard about 7 as a sacred number,
+and its professed significance in the so-called "occult sciences." I
+think one is warranted in saying from an introspective point of view
+that there is a shadow of superstition present in all attempts at pure
+guessing. There appears to be some unexpressed feeling of lucky
+numbers or some mental easement when one unreasoned position is
+taken rather than any other.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_068.jpg" width="600" height="399" alt="Choice of Digits in Tens' and Units' Places (Men and Women)" />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Choice of Digits in Tens' and Units' Places (Men and Women).</span><br />
+<br />Vertical distance shows the number of times the figure on the horizontal line immediately
+below was used.</span></div>
+
+<p>It is impossible on the evidence furnished by this study to give
+more than hints at the probable reason for the preference here indicated.
+But it is worth while to glance backward to earlier conditions,
+when the scientific attitude toward all the facts of life and mind
+was far more subordinated to supernatural interpretations than it
+is to-day. In this way we may catch a thread which still binds us
+to habits formed in the indefinite past.</p>
+
+<p>The Greeks considered the even numbers as representative of the
+feminine principle, and as belonging and applying to things terrestrial.
+To them the odd numbers were endowed with a masculine
+virtue, which in time was strengthened into supernatural and celestial
+qualities. The same belief was prevalent among the Chinese. With<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_784" id="Page_784">[Pg 784]</a></span>
+them even numbers were connected with earthly things, partaking
+of the feminine principle of Yang. Odd numbers were looked upon
+as proceeding out of the divine and endued with the masculine principle.
+Thirty was called the number of earth, because it was made
+up by the addition of the even numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10. On the
+other hand, 25, the sum of the five odd numbers 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9, was
+called the number of heaven.</p>
+
+<p>It is generally true that, as lower peoples developed the need of
+numbers and the power to use them, certain of these numbers came
+to be surrounded with a superstitious importance and endued with
+certain qualities which led at once to numerical preferences more or
+less dominant in all their thinking connected with numbers.</p>
+
+<p>It would certainly be unjustifiable to conclude from the evidence
+at hand that the preferences shown in the guesses under consideration
+are directly traceable to some such superstition; and yet one can
+scarcely prevent himself from linking them vaguely together.
+Especially is this true when some consideration is given to a probable
+connecting link as shown in our modern superstitious notions. I
+have found through a recent study of these superstitions that where
+numbers are introduced, the odd are used to the almost complete exclusion
+of the even. For example, I have collected and tabulated
+a series of more than sixty different superstitions using odd numbers,
+and have found but four making use of the even. Besides these specific
+examples there are many more which in some form or another
+express the belief that odd numbers have some vital relation with
+luck both good and bad.</p>
+
+<p>It would be impossible to define precisely or even approximately
+just what sort of a mental state the word "luck" stands for, but one
+element in its composition is a more or less na&iuml;ve belief in supernatural
+and occult influences which at one time work for and at
+another time against the believer. In its more pronounced forms,
+the belief in luck lifts itself into a sort of a blind dependence upon
+some ministering spirit which interposes between rational causes and
+their effects. In a way one may say that the more or less vague and
+shadowy notions of luck which float in the minds of people to-day are
+but the emaciated and famishing forms of a once all-embracing superstition,
+and that these shadows possess a potency over life and action
+oftentimes beyond our willingness to believe.</p>
+
+<p>There is another interesting and somewhat curious thing to be
+noticed in connection with these guesses. There is a persistent tendency
+to the duplication of digits, or, if one thinks of the numbers as
+at first conceived in terms of language, a tendency to alliteration.
+For example, the numbers 111, 222, 333, 444, 555, 666, 777, 888,
+and 999 occur oftener by sixty-seven per cent than any other combination<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_785" id="Page_785">[Pg 785]</a></span>
+possible in the tens thus represented. That is to say, other
+things equal, one would have a right to expect 334 or 332 to occur
+as often as 333. But the fact is, in this particular case, 333 occurred
+forty-eight times, while the other two put together occurred only
+three times. Here, however, we have the combined influence of the
+preference for the odd over the even and the digital sequence. Still,
+if we select 444, we find that this number, made up though it is of three
+digits in general least selected of all, the preference for alliterative
+effect is strong enough to make the number occur 28 times to 14
+times for both 443 and 445. If we take 777, we find that it was used
+more times than all the other combinations from 770 to 779 inclusive,
+put together.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, under conditions similar to those presented for these
+guesses, one would be safe to expect these duplicative or alliterative
+numbers to occur much oftener than any other single number in the
+series.</p>
+
+<p>It would evidently be unsafe to generalize upon the basis of this
+study, notwithstanding the large number of guesses considered.
+However, it seems to me that the results here obtained at least suggest
+a field of inquiry which promises interesting returns. If it be
+true, as here suggested, that odd numbers are preferred by guessers,
+advantage could be taken of this preference in many ways. Furthermore,
+as I suspect, it may be that this probable preference points to
+a habit of mind which more or less influences results not depending
+strictly on guessing. It has been shown, for example, that the length
+of criminal sentences has been largely affected by preferences for 5
+or multiples of 5&mdash;that is to say, where judges have power to fix the
+length of sentence within certain limits, there is a strong probability
+that they will be influenced in their judgments by the habitual use
+of 5 or its multiples. Here it would seem that unconscious preference
+overrides what one has a right to consider the most careful and
+impartial judgments possible, based upon actual and well-digested
+data.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
+
+<p>Another thing is noticeable in these guesses. The consciousness
+of number beyond 1,000 falls off very rapidly. The difference in
+the values of 1,000 and 1,500 seems to have had less weight with the
+guessers than a difference of 50 had at any place below 1,000. And
+so, in a way, 1,000 seems to mark the limit of any sort of definite
+mental measurement. This fact is more and more emphasized as the
+numbers representing the guesses increase until one can see there
+exists absolutely no conception of the value of numbers. For example,
+many guessed 1,000,000, while several guessed more than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_786" id="Page_786">[Pg 786]</a></span>
+10,000,000. Guessing means, with many people, no attempt at any
+sort of reasonable measurement, but rather an attempt to express their
+guess in such a way as to afford them the greatest amount of mental
+relief. And this relief can not be wholly accomplished without satisfying
+number preferences. Therefore, guessing is likely to exhibit,
+in a greater or less degree, some habitual lines of preference subject
+to predetermination. It may be that much practical advantage has
+been taken of these facts in games of chance where number selections
+play an important part.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>CONCERNING WEASELS.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> WILLIAM E. CRAM.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_071.jpg" width="600" height="437" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Why is it that while popular fancy has attributed all sorts of
+uncanny and supernatural qualities to owls and cats, and that
+no ghost story or tale of horrid murder has been considered quite
+complete without its rat peering from some dark corner, or spider
+with expanded legs suddenly spinning down from among the rafters,
+no such grewsome association has ever attached itself to the weasels,
+creatures whose every habit and characteristic would seem to suggest
+something of the sort? Now, fond as I am of cats, I should never
+think of denying that they are uncanny creatures, to say the least.
+But, suppose it was the custom of our domestic tabbies to vanish abruptly
+or even gradually on occasion, like the Cheshire cat after its
+interview with Alice,
+that would at least
+furnish some excuse
+for the general prejudice
+against them, but
+would really be no
+more than some of our
+commonest weasels do
+whenever it serves
+their purpose. I remember
+one summer
+afternoon I was trout-fishing
+along a little
+brook that ran between pine-covered hills. As I lay stretched on the
+bank at the foot of a great maple I saw a weasel run along in the
+brush fence some distance away. A few seconds later he was standing
+on the exposed root of the tree hardly a yard from my eyes. I
+lay motionless and examined the beautiful creature minutely, till suddenly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_787" id="Page_787">[Pg 787]</a></span>
+I found myself staring at the smooth greenish-gray root of
+the maple with no weasel in sight. Judging from my own experience,
+I should say that this is the usual termination of any chance
+observations of either weasels or minks.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally they may be seen to dart into the bushes or behind
+some log or projecting bank, but much more frequently they vanish
+with a suddenness that defies the keenest eyesight.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_072.jpg" width="600" height="366" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>In all probability this vanishing is accomplished by extreme rapidity
+of motion, but if this is the case then the creature succeeds in doing
+something utterly impossible to any other warm-blooded animal of
+its size. Mice, squirrels, and some of the smaller birds are all of them
+swift enough at times, but except in the case of the humming bird
+none of them, I believe, succeed in accomplishing the result achieved
+by the weasels. The humming bird, in spite of its small size, leaves
+us a pretty definite impression of the direction it has taken when it
+darts away; but when a
+mink, half a yard in length
+and weighing several
+pounds, stands motionless
+before one with his dark
+coat conspicuous against almost
+any background, and
+the next instant is gone
+without a rustle or the
+tremor of a blade of grassA weasel, it
+leaves one with an impression of witchcraft difficult to dispel; and
+best appreciated when one sees it for one's self. Nor is the everyday
+life of the weasel quiet or commonplace; his one object in life apparently
+is to kill, first to appease his hunger, then to satisfy his thirst for
+warm blood, and after that for the mere joy of killing.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_073.jpg" width="600" height="392" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The few opportunities I have had for observing these animals
+have never shown them occupied in any other way, nor can any hint
+of anything different be gained from the various writers on the subject,
+while accounts of their attacking and even killing human beings
+in a kind of blind fury are too numerous and apparently well
+authenticated to be entirely ignored. These attacks are said usually
+to be made by a number of weasels acting in concert, and the motive
+would appear to be revenge for some injury done to one of their number.
+There seems to be something peculiar about the entire family
+of weasels. The American sable or pine marten is said to have strange
+ways that have puzzled naturalists and hunters for years. In the
+wilderness no amount of trapping has any effect on their numbers,
+nor do they show any especial fear of man or his works, occasionally
+even coming into lumber camps at night and being especially fond of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_788" id="Page_788">[Pg 788]</a></span>
+old logging roads and woods that have been swept by fire; but at the
+slightest hint of approaching civilization they disappear, not gradually,
+but at once and forever, and the woods know them no more. If there
+is anything in the theory of the survival of the fittest, why is it that not
+one marten has discovered that, like other animals of its size, it could
+manage to live comfortably enough in the vicinity of man? The
+mink and otter still follow the course of every brook and river
+and manage to avoid the keen eyes of the duck hunter, while for
+six months in the
+year their paths
+are sprinkled with
+steel traps set
+either especially
+for them or for
+the more plebeian
+muskrat. If a
+pair of sables
+could be persuaded
+to take up
+their quarters in
+some parts of New
+England they could travel for dozens of miles through dark evergreen
+woods with hollow and decaying trees in abundance, while at present
+there are almost no traps set in a manner that need disturb creatures of
+their habits. Partridges, rabbits, and squirrels, which form their principal
+food, are nearly if not quite as abundant as before the country was
+settled, so that it would certainly not require any very decided change
+of habits to enable them to exist, but evidently the root of the matter
+goes deeper than that, and, like some tribes of Indians, it is impossible
+for them to multiply or flourish except in the primeval forest.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_074.jpg" width="600" height="277" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The common weasel or ermine, which is the only kind I have seen
+hereabouts, would seem to have everything on its side in the struggle
+for existence, and when one happens to be killed by some larger inhabitant
+of the woods it must be due entirely to its own carelessness.
+Nevertheless, they do occasionally fall victims to owls and foxes, and
+I once shot a red-tailed hawk that was in the act of devouring one.
+Still, these casualties among weasels are probably few and far between.
+Fortunately, however, they never increase to any great extent.
+Occasionally in the winter the snow for miles will be covered
+with their tracks all made in a single night, and then for weeks not a
+track is to be seen; but usually they prefer to hunt alone, each having
+its beat a mile or more in length, over which it travels back and forth
+throughout the season, passing any given point at intervals of two
+or three days. This habit of keeping to the same route instead of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_789" id="Page_789">[Pg 789]</a></span>
+wandering at random about the woods is characteristic of the family,
+the length of the route depending to a certain extent on the size of
+the animal. The mink is usually about a week in going his rounds,
+and may cover a dozen miles in that time, while the otter is generally
+gone a fortnight or three weeks. When it is possible the ermine prefers
+to follow the course of old tumble-down stone walls, and lays its
+course accordingly. In favorable districts he is able to keep to these
+for miles together, squeezing into the smallest crevices in pursuit of
+mice or chipmunks. All the weasels travel in a similar manner&mdash;that
+is, by a series of leaps or bounds in such a way that the hind feet
+strike exactly in the prints made by the fore paws, so that the tracks
+left in the snow are peculiar and bear a strong family resemblance.
+On soft snow the slender body of the ermine leaves its imprint extending
+from one pair of footprints to the next, and as these are from
+four to six feet apart, or even more, the impression left in the snow
+is like the track of some extremely long and slender serpent with pairs
+of short legs at intervals along its body. I have said that the ermine
+is the only true weasel I have found in this vicinity, but this is not
+strictly true, at least I hope not. One winter I repeatedly noticed
+the tracks of an exceedingly large weasel&mdash;so very large, in fact, that
+I was almost forced to believe them to be those of a mink. The impression
+of its body in the snow was quite as large as that made by a small
+mink, but the footprints themselves were smaller, and the creature
+appeared to avoid the water in a manner quite at variance with the
+well-known habits of its more amphibious cousin, while, unlike the
+common weasel, it never followed stone walls or fences. I put my
+entire mind to the capture of the little beast, and set dozens of traps,
+but it was well along in the month of March before I succeeded. It
+proved to be a typical specimen of the Western long-tailed weasel,
+though I can find no account of
+any other having been taken east
+of the Mississippi. Its entire
+length was about eighteen inches;
+the tail, which was a little over
+six, gave the effect at first glance
+of being tipped with gray instead
+of black, but a closer inspection showed that the black hairs were
+confined to the very extremity and were partly concealed by the
+overlying white ones; the rest of the fur was white, with a slight
+reddish tinge, and much longer and coarser than that of an ermine.
+Since then I have occasionally seen similar tracks, but have
+not succeeded in capturing a second specimen. In all probability
+the least weasel is also to be found here if one has the
+patience to search carefully enough; none, however, have come under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_790" id="Page_790">[Pg 790]</a></span>
+my observation as yet. All the small weasels that I have seen have
+proved on close inspection to be young ermines with thickly furred
+black-tipped tails; in the least weasel the tail is thinly covered with
+short hair and without any black whatever. Late in the autumn
+or early in the winter the ermine changes from reddish-brown to
+white, sometimes slightly washed with greenish-yellow or cream color,
+and again as brilliantly white as anything in Nature or art; the end
+of the tail, however, remains intensely black, and at first thought
+might be supposed to make the animal conspicuous on the white background
+of snow, but in reality has just the opposite effect. Place
+an ermine on new-fallen snow in such a way that it casts no shadow,
+and you will find that the black point holds your eye in spite of yourself,
+and that at a little distance it is quite impossible to follow the
+outline of the weasel itself. Cover the tail with snow, and you can
+begin to make out the position of the rest of the animal, but as long
+as the tip of the tail is in sight you see that and that only. The ptarmigan
+and northern hare also retain some spot or point of dark color
+when they take on their winter
+dress, and these dark
+points undoubtedly serve the
+same purpose as in the case of
+the ermine.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_075.jpg" width="600" height="237" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>An old hunter, one of the
+closest observers of Nature I
+have ever known, once told
+me that female minks hibernated
+in winter in the same
+manner as bears, though it
+was his belief that, unlike
+the bears, they never brought
+forth their young at that season. At first I refused to take the
+slightest stock in what he said; the whole thing appeared so
+absurd and so utterly at variance with the teachings of those
+naturalists who have made the closest possible study of the habits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_791" id="Page_791">[Pg 791]</a></span>
+of minks. Since then, however, I have kept my eyes open for
+any hint that might have the slightest bearing on the subject, and
+to my surprise have found many things that would seem to point to
+the correctness of the old hunter's theory. To begin with, he said
+that late in the winter he had repeatedly known female minks to
+make their appearance from beneath snow that had lain undisturbed
+for days or even weeks, the tracks apparently beginning where he
+first observed them, the difference in size between the two sexes being
+sufficient to make it easy to distinguish between their tracks at a
+glance; and, moreover, since he first began trapping he had noticed
+that while the sexes were about equally abundant in the autumn, the
+females always became very scarce at the approach of winter and
+remained so until spring, when they suddenly increased in numbers
+and became much the more abundant of the two.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_075a.jpg" width="600" height="480" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>This is also the experience of trappers in general, and may be
+verified by any one who cares to take the trouble to look into the
+matter. Evidently no one has ever discovered a mink in a state of
+hibernation; at any rate, no such case appears ever to have been reported;
+but this does not necessarily prove that it is not a regular habit
+among them.</p>
+
+<p>The cry of the mink is seldom heard, even in places where they
+are fairly abundant, as they have evidently learned that the greatest
+safety lies in silence. It is a peculiarly shrill, rattling, whistlelike
+scream, that can be heard at a considerable distance.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>CARE OF THE THROAT AND EAR.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> W. SCHEPPEGRELL, A. M., M. D.,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap lowercase">PRESIDENT WESTERN OPTHALMOLOGIC AND OTO-LARYNGOLOGIC ASSOCIATION, NEW ORLEANS, LA.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>Hygiene is that branch of medical science which relates to
+the preservation and improvement of the health. As the prevention
+of disease is more important than its cure&mdash;in fact, superior
+to all methods for its cure&mdash;this is a subject which demands our most
+earnest attention. Hygiene is not limited to the preservation and improvement
+of the health of the individual, but includes that of whole
+communities. As, however, the health of a community depends upon
+the state of the health of the various families composing it, and this
+again of its members, the proper understanding of the hygienic laws
+by each individual is of the utmost importance.</p>
+
+<p>For some reason, however, the subject of hygiene or the prevention
+of disease does not create the enthusiasm caused by methods advocated
+for its cure. A Koch, who publishes to the world a supposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_792" id="Page_792">[Pg 792]</a></span>
+means of curing tuberculosis, or a Behring, who introduces the
+serum therapy of diphtheria, arouses an interest which is limited
+only by the four corners of the world. The modest worker in sanitation,
+however, who explains the means of the development of these
+diseases, and the conditions and laws by means of which they may be
+prevented, is looked upon without interest and frequently with disfavor.
+But in spite of these conditions, the laws of hygiene are gradually
+becoming more farspread, and their influence is felt more with
+each advancing year.</p>
+
+<p>The nose, throat, and ear are so intimately connected with the
+other parts of the body that their health depends to a large extent
+upon the condition of the system in general. The laws of hygiene and
+their application which refer to the body in general are also applicable
+to these parts, and whatever condition benefits the former will
+have a useful influence on the upper respiratory passages, and, inversely,
+any injurious effect will injure the health of these organs.</p>
+
+<p>The physiology of this region is of much importance. Formerly
+the nose was considered principally in its relation to the organ of
+smell. This is a most important function, as it is a constant sentinel
+over the air we breathe and the food we eat. It is a curious
+circumstance that many of the functions that are referred to the
+organ of taste really belong to that of smell. In eating ice cream,
+for instance, the sense of taste simply informs us that it is sweet
+or otherwise, but the flavor is perceived only by the sense of
+smell. A proof of this is that where this function is destroyed, all
+ability in this direction disappears, and the patient thus affected will
+frequently complain that his sense of taste is defective, not realizing
+that it is the sense of smell which performs this act.</p>
+
+<p>The nose, however, has a much more important function to perform&mdash;viz.,
+in respiration. Strange to say, however, this has only
+recently been realized, and it is even yet not well understood. You
+have all observed that, when you had a severe "cold" which prevented
+nasal breathing, the next morning the mouth and throat
+were dry and parched and frequently inflamed, the voice sometimes
+hoarse, and there was a general feeling of depression. While the
+progress of the inflammatory process may be a factor in this, still the
+mechanical obstruction of the nose from any cause whatsoever will
+have a similar effect. In patients in whom, for various reasons,
+an artificial opening has been made in the trachea, the air of the room
+has to be heated to an almost intolerable point and saturated with
+moisture, or severe bronchial inflammation will soon develop in the
+patient, simply because the nose has not taken an active part in the act
+of respiration. These effects, therefore, clearly demonstrate that the
+nasal passages have an important function to perform in the breathing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_793" id="Page_793">[Pg 793]</a></span>
+process. Summarized in a few words, it is simply to warm, moisten,
+and clean the air which we inhale.</p>
+
+<p>The healthy nostrils are anatomically and physiologically so
+formed that when the current of air passes through them it will have
+been freed of its mechanical impurities, warmed to within a few degrees
+of the temperature of the body, and moistened to saturation.
+This has been experimentally demonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>The opening of the passage of the ear into the throat has several
+objects, the most important being ventilation and the adjustment of
+the atmospheric equilibrium. This passage leads outward until it
+enters the cavity of the middle ear, which is closed by the drum on
+the outside, thus separating it from the external canal of the ear. We
+know that atmospheric pressure varies at different times and in different
+altitudes. It is much less, for instance, at the top of a mountain
+than at the seaside. The opening into the throat allows the air
+to enter, and adjusts the atmospheric pressure within the ear to these
+various external conditions. Those of you who have ascended Lookout
+Mountain by means of the incline cable car may have noticed the
+adjustment taking place by a peculiar click when different altitudes
+were reached.</p>
+
+<p>So intimately are the nose, throat, and ear connected that it is
+unusual to find one affected to any considerable extent without the
+others being involved. While the rules of hygiene in general are
+applicable to the nose, throat, and ear, there are certain special conditions
+which deserve consideration. One of the most common causes
+of injurious effects to the nose, throat, and ear is the so-called "cold."
+The cold in this connection is, of course, understood to be simply the
+cause, the condition itself being a peculiar inflammation of the parts
+concerned. As cold is so frequently a cause of diseases of these parts,
+it would be well to consider under what circumstances it develops and
+the best mode of prevention.</p>
+
+<p>I have often noticed that persons who suffer most frequently and
+severely from colds usually insist that they exercise the greatest care
+to avoid exposure. They have dressed in the warmest clothing,
+wrapped the neck in the heaviest mufflers, remained in the closest
+rooms, and avoided every draught, and yet they continually "take
+cold." The street urchin, on the other hand, with only two or three
+garments and without shoes, and who lives out of doors, suffers less
+frequently from this affection.</p>
+
+<p>"Colds" have truly been called a product of modern civilization.
+The trouble was rare among the aborigines and is more common
+among the cultured than among the laboring classes. If we make a
+plant an exotic, we must keep it in the conservatory, and even here it is
+not free from danger. On the other hand, if we wish to harden it and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_794" id="Page_794">[Pg 794]</a></span>
+make it proof against atmospheric and climatic changes, we must prepare
+it by judicious exposure for these conditions. The warm clothing
+which is thought to be a protection against cold is frequently the
+most fertile cause. It relaxes the body, moistens the skin, and the
+perspiration which is induced especially prepares the unresisting body
+for its attacks. This applies especially to warm covering around the
+neck, to which the air has periodic access. Except in unusually
+severe weather, the throat requires no more covering or protection
+than the face.</p>
+
+<p>The method of having only two systems of underclothing, the
+heavy to be worn until it is quite warm, and <i>vice versa</i>, is also a
+source of danger. There should be three changes: one of the lightest
+texture for the warm weather of summer, a medium for spring and
+fall, and the pure wool for winter, which in this climate need not be
+very heavy. Waterproof shoes, rubbers, furs, etc., are not recommended
+for customary use, and should be worn only when absolutely
+indicated.</p>
+
+<p>The best preventive of recurrent colds is the judicious use of the
+sponge or cold shower bath. The ordinary bath should usually be of
+a temperature not disagreeable to the body, but after the question of
+cleanliness has been attended to, an application, either by means of a
+sponge or shower, of ordinary cold water should be made. This
+should be of short duration, and friction with a coarse towel follow
+at once. When properly conducted, a reaction sets in so that
+there is no danger from this, and the toning effect of the method is
+of the utmost value in the prevention of colds. This applies, of
+course, only to persons in ordinarily good health. Even in these
+cases there are rare occasions in which this method is not advisable,
+and it may on general principles be stated that it should not be used
+by persons who do not react promptly. As stated, however, the application
+of cold water should be only momentary. The daily application
+of cold water to the throat and chest is also a useful practice
+for strengthening these parts.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to these means there are certain injurious conditions
+that it would be well to avoid. One almost universally present in
+large cities is that of dust. The constant inhalation of the small particles
+of sand and of organic impurities of which dust is composed has
+an irritating effect on the delicate lining of the nose and throat, which
+may develop a chronic inflammation, resulting in injury to both the
+throat and ear. This evil, however, can be prevented by the artificial
+watering of our streets.</p>
+
+<p>Excessive tobacco smoking produces injurious effects in the nose
+and throat. Of all forms of smoking, the cigarette is the most injurious,
+and allowing the smoke to pass through the nostrils the most dangerous.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_795" id="Page_795">[Pg 795]</a></span>
+Occasionally ladies inhale the smoke of a closed room where
+the male members of the household are smoking, and this is injurious
+to a delicate throat.</p>
+
+<p>Loud and excessive talking is sometimes a factor in throat diseases.
+The former is more apt to be exercised in transit in our steam
+or electric cars, and members of the theatrical profession realize this
+so well that they rarely use their voice while traveling. In excessive
+talking, in addition to the mechanical wear and tear of the throat,
+the respiration is usually spasmodic, a combination that is likely to
+lead to evil results. At puberty, when the voices of boys and girls are
+changing, the former sometimes almost an octave and the latter usually
+a note or two, special care should be taken of the voice, and singing
+or vocal exercises should be discontinued until the change has been
+finally established.</p>
+
+<p>The effect of singing on the throat is of much interest, but it is
+one of such an extensive character that it can be only casually referred
+to here. The exercise required in singing improves the healthy
+throat in the same manner that exercise benefits the body in general.
+The diseased throat, however, may be injured by this practice, as no
+form of vocal culture can remedy a mechanical interference in its
+action. The method of singing is also of the utmost importance; an
+erroneous one may not only injure a promising voice, but may also
+have a bad effect on a normal throat. The subject of register requires
+careful consideration. The placing of the voice in the wrong register
+is fruitful of evil; the ambition of the singer to reach a few notes
+higher or lower than her range may also work severe injury to the
+throat.</p>
+
+<p>The throat may be improved or strengthened by any of the forms
+of exercise, especially the out-of-door, which have been advised for the
+health in general. In addition to this, breathing exercises are of
+special value. These consist of taking deep inhalations through the
+nose, holding the breath for a few seconds and then gently expiring
+it, the body in the meanwhile being free from all restraint from tight
+clothing. The practice of this exercise for five minutes mornings and
+evenings will have a remarkable effect in developing the chest and
+throat.</p>
+
+<p>In order to anticipate serious complications, children should be
+taught to allow their mothers to examine their throats freely and
+without resistance. I feel especially the importance of this subject,
+as I have frequently seen children almost sacrificed on account of
+the nervous dread of having their throats examined, or by their inability
+to control themselves. The method is exceedingly simple: the
+child is placed facing a bright window, and the handle of a spoon
+placed on the tongue and so depressed that the posterior part of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_796" id="Page_796">[Pg 796]</a></span>
+throat can be distinctly seen. At first this may be difficult, but the
+child soon becomes accustomed to the manipulation and the throat
+may then be examined without difficulty. Another advantage of this
+procedure is that the mother becomes familiar with the normal appearance
+of the throat, and can easily note any change due to disease.</p>
+
+<p>In view of the important function of the nose in warming, cleaning,
+and moistening the inspired air, the greatest care should be taken
+to teach children to breathe through the nostrils. When only a portion
+of the air enters through the mouth, the irritation is not as
+marked as when all the air is inhaled in this manner, but it nevertheless
+develops a condition of chronic irritation which is easily recognized
+by one familiar with its appearance, and which may lead to important
+complications. In many cases, mouth breathing is not due to habit,
+but to some obstruction in the nostrils or throat. These cases form a
+proper subject for the consideration of the physician. After the removal
+of any existing obstruction, children will sometimes, from force
+of habit, continue to breathe through the mouth, but this can usually
+be overcome by attention and firmness on the part of the parents.</p>
+
+<p>The prevention of grave throat diseases, such as diphtheria, necessarily
+forms a subject of much interest to the public in general and to
+mothers in particular. The causation of this disease has been much
+cleared up in later years, and we now know that the important factor is
+a bacillus&mdash;a small organism of the vegetable kingdom&mdash;which is the
+cause of this disease and a necessary material for its propagation.
+Bacteriologic investigations have shown that the so-called "membranous
+croup" is in by far the largest number of cases identical with
+diphtheria, and the same precautions which apply to the latter should
+therefore also be carried out in this disease.</p>
+
+<p>As diphtheria is strictly an infectious disease, and one which must
+be directly or indirectly contracted from a similar case, there is no
+sanitary reason why this dreaded malady in the course of time should
+not be entirely eliminated from the earth. In view of the fact that
+diphtheria is so frequently present in our larger cities, this may appear
+at present a Utopian idea. It is not so many years ago, however,
+when smallpox was almost universal, and yet we now but rarely have
+it in our midst. Not only is this the case, but the health authorities
+are severely criticised when a number of these cases exist, as indicating
+that there has been a lack of watchfulness in carrying out certain well-known
+means of prevention.</p>
+
+<p>While we have at the present time no means of inoculation that
+will permanently protect against infection from diphtheria, still it
+is not of such an infectious character as smallpox, as the cases are
+usually limited to children, and its spread may therefore be more
+easily prevented. Not only should children who have had diphtheria<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_797" id="Page_797">[Pg 797]</a></span>
+be prevented from returning to school until infection is no longer
+possible, but other children of the same household should also be kept
+at home. A few years ago a certain school in this city was rarely
+without a case of diphtheria among its pupils for many months. I
+am convinced that had the principal of the school or the parents insisted
+upon the other children of the infected household remaining
+at home, the spread in this direction would have been arrested and
+much suffering avoided.</p>
+
+<p>When a patient has recovered from diphtheria, thorough disinfection
+is a most important measure. Unfortunately, however,
+many persons consider it a hardship if articles which can not be disinfected
+are destroyed, and many will even use every endeavor to
+prevent the representatives of the Board of Health from carrying out
+their regulations. In this way the germ of the disease remains on the
+premises, and under suitable conditions again finds another victim
+in the household. To illustrate this, I recall an instance some years
+ago in which I was called in consultation to see a most malignant case
+of diphtheria. The little patient fortunately recovered, and the
+premises were thoroughly disinfected, the parents being anxious to
+avoid any repetition of the dreaded malady. Five months later, however,
+a younger child became ill, and was found to have diphtheria.
+In view of the vigorous efforts which had been made to disinfect the
+house thoroughly, and of the fact that the child could not have contracted
+it elsewhere, not having left its home for several weeks, the
+cause at first appeared a mystery. Careful inquiry, however, soon
+elicited a fact which clearly explained the case. The first patient
+had used a mouth-organ just before its illness, and when this was
+abandoned, the toy was carelessly thrown on the top of a bookcase,
+the nature of the child's illness at the time not being known. The
+second child, just before its illness, had accidentally found this toy
+and used it frequently. This experience explains the necessity of
+disinfection in all its details, and also illustrates the tenacious character
+of the germ which produces this disease.</p>
+
+<p>Our knowledge of the specific cause of scarlet fever is not as complete
+as that of diphtheria, but we have much useful information
+which is of importance from a hygienic standpoint. As in diphtheria,
+the specific poison is probably produced in the throat of the
+patient, and may therefore be spread by the dried secretion from
+the mouth and throat. The most common means of contagion, however,
+is the skin, which peels off in the later stage of the disease,
+infection being produced by the inhalation into the nostrils of some
+of the diseased particles.</p>
+
+<p>A predisposing factor which applies alike to diphtheria and all
+other throat affections is the abnormal condition of the nose and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_798" id="Page_798">[Pg 798]</a></span>
+throat. When these important parts are in an unhealthy condition,
+where mouth breathing exists and other conditions inimical to normal
+health, the patient is more predisposed to all forms of maladies of this
+region, and the attack when developed is more apt to be of a serious
+character. The more ordinary forms of sore throat, such as tonsilitis,
+are frequently due to defects in the sanitary conditions and surroundings
+of the home. While modern sanitary plumbing, when properly
+constructed, adds much to the convenience of the household, it is a certain
+menace to all its members if, through improper construction or defective
+ventilation, decomposing matter collects in the waste pipes
+and vitiates the atmosphere of the rooms. Many recurrent cases of
+tonsilitis are due to this cause. Even the ordinary stationary washstands
+may be a source of danger, especially in the bedroom, unless
+thoroughly ventilated and care exercised that the traps are not filled
+with decomposing matter. A physician of large experience in this
+city is so imbued with the danger of this form of plumbing that he
+condemns it <i>in toto</i>. When well constructed and well ventilated,
+however, they can not be the source of danger in the household.</p>
+
+<p>Tuberculosis, which is responsible for so enormous a mortality,
+frequently also affects the throat as well as the lungs. Although it
+usually originates within the chest, it sometimes finds its primary
+origin in the throat, and in a large percentage of cases the throat affection
+forms a complication of tuberculosis of the lungs. In spite of the
+numerous remedies which have been advocated for the cure of this
+disease, it must be admitted that our chief reliance is in proper nourishment
+and climatic effects, and that hygiene is the sheet-anchor which
+will eventually rescue us from this terrible foe of the human race.</p>
+
+<p>Recent investigations tend to prove more and more that tuberculosis
+is inherited in but rare cases; that inheritance is simply a predisposing
+factor, and that the real cause is infection. As an illustration
+of this, all have seen instances in which there had been
+apparently no cases in a family for ten or fifteen years, when from
+some cause one case develops, and this is soon followed by other cases
+in the same family. Whatever r&ocirc;le heredity may play in these cases,
+this simply shows that the first case produced the infectious material
+which found a suitable soil in the other members of the family and
+developed a similar disease. The inheritance theory has been the
+source of much injury by causing members of the afflicted family to
+submit to the apparently inevitable instead of instituting measures
+for its prevention. The infectious product in tuberculosis is not the
+breath, as is so frequently believed by the laity, but simply the expectoration
+which comes from the diseased lungs or throat. When
+this is allowed to come in contact with clothing or other material in
+the room, it becomes dry and loads the atmosphere with a dust which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_799" id="Page_799">[Pg 799]</a></span>
+contains the infectious bacillus, which may cause a similar disease in
+a person predisposed by heredity or sickness to this affection.</p>
+
+<p>The germ of tuberculosis is the seed, and the predisposed person
+the soil, and it requires a combination of both to develop the disease.
+To illustrate the necessity of suitable conditions for the development
+of plants&mdash;for it is now almost universally admitted that the germ of
+tuberculosis is a micro-organism which belongs to the vegetable
+kingdom&mdash;I remember some years ago, while in North Europe, seeing
+in a hothouse a plant which is here commonly known as the "four
+o'clock." The gardener in charge of the conservatory considered it
+a remarkable plant, but difficult to propagate, and stated that it was
+absolutely impossible to raise it out of doors. In this part of the
+world, however, we know that this plant grows so easily that once
+established in a garden it is difficult to keep it within limits. In both
+of the cases we have the same seed, the difference being only in the
+soil and the conditions favorable for its development. The absence
+of either the seed or the soil will absolutely prevent tuberculosis,
+and if the laws of hygiene are properly carried out, both in destroying
+the seed and in preventing the formation of a suitable soil, favorable
+effects will soon be shown.</p>
+
+<p>Hygiene in regard to patients demands simply that the infectious
+character of the expectoration be destroyed. The vessels for this
+purpose should contain some disinfecting solution, should be cleaned
+regularly, and handkerchiefs, towels, or other material with which
+the expectoration has come in contact should be sterilized by being
+placed for at least half an hour in boiling water. This is necessary
+not only for those in the same room with the patient, but also for the
+patient, as it is quite possible that a former expectoration may produce
+reinfection of the patient himself.</p>
+
+<p>Another method of contracting tuberculosis is by means of animals,
+such as cows, used for food and milking, which are known to
+be subject to this disease. It has been shown in some localities that
+one cow out of every twenty-five was affected with tubercular disease.
+This suggests the importance of having competent veterinarians to
+examine not only the meat which is sold, but also the cows used for
+milking purposes. Where there is the slightest doubt as to the nature
+of the meat or milk, the former should be thoroughly cooked and the
+latter sterilized before using.</p>
+
+<p>In this connection it would be well to refer to the subject of spitting
+in street cars and in public places. While this nuisance is the
+subject of danger to every one in the street cars, especially in winter,
+when the windows are closed and a large amount of impurities is inhaled,
+it is more particularly so to ladies, whose skirts, in spite of
+every care, are soiled by the filthy expectoration, thus making them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_800" id="Page_800">[Pg 800]</a></span>
+subject not only to the inhalation in the car, but also to carrying the
+infectious material to their homes.</p>
+
+<p>The danger of this condition is not merely speculative. It has
+been bacteriologically demonstrated that the organisms of various
+contagious diseases thus find a lodging place in our cars and public
+places, and experiments on animals, in which the inoculation has developed
+diseases, have shown that these organisms retain their vitality
+in these places and may propagate disease under favorable conditions.</p>
+
+<p>A factor in the spread of diseases of the throat and mouth that
+should not be overlooked is kissing. Unfortunately, this matter has
+usually been treated with much levity, and where a sanitarian is bold
+enough to condemn the habit he is frequently made the subject of
+all forms of ridicule in the public press.</p>
+
+<p>The tender lining of the lips, mouth, and throat, and its large
+blood supply, make it peculiarly susceptible to contagion, and I have
+no doubt that the habit of kissing is responsible for many cases of infection.
+Last year I noticed a lady coming from a house from which
+a diphtheria flag was flying, who walked to the corner to take the
+street car, when a nurse with a small child approached. The lady
+without hesitation stooped down and kissed the little child. As it is
+well known that a healthy person may transmit a disease without incurring
+the disease himself, this lady voluntarily risked the danger
+of inflicting this disease upon the innocent child. It is not an uncommon
+thing for nurses to kiss the children under their charge,
+and here in New Orleans even the colored nurses sometimes practice
+this habit, occasionally with the permission of the parents. In fact,
+a fashionable lady on one occasion told me, when I remonstrated with
+her about this, that she feared to hurt the feelings of the old nurse,
+who had been a valuable servant in the family for many years.</p>
+
+<p>How often this habit is productive of evil results is of course
+only speculation. I recall, however, an instance in which two small
+children of one family developed a specific disease which originated
+in the mouth and affected the whole system. Examination proved
+this to have been caused by a nurse, a white woman, who had been
+in the habit of kissing the children. If women will voluntarily incur
+risks by using kissing as a form of salutation in all stages of acquaintanceship,
+I would at least request that the innocent children be spared
+the possible consequences.</p>
+
+<p>The subject of the hygiene of the ear is so intimately connected
+with conditions influencing the nose and throat, which have already
+been explained, that but few words are needed to cover this part of
+my subject. In general, the best care of the ear is to leave it alone.
+Ear scoops are injurious; the ear should be cleaned simply on the
+outside, and nothing, as a rule, should be inserted into the external<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_801" id="Page_801">[Pg 801]</a></span>
+canal. I have seen many cases of abscess and the most severe inflammation
+due to endeavors to clean the ear with the omnipresent hairpin
+and other objects used for this purpose. The use of cotton in the
+ear in general is to be condemned. It produces an artificial condition
+in the outer canal of the ear which reduces its physical resistance
+and makes it more liable to injury from exposure. The ear
+is sometimes injured by the entrance of cold water. This happens
+occasionally during ordinary bathing, but more frequently in outdoor
+bathing and in swimming. In surf bathing, where the water
+is thrown up with considerable force, it is much more liable to
+enter the external orifice of the ear, and severe inflammation may
+originate from this cause.</p>
+
+<p>Salt water has been claimed to be more injurious than fresh, but
+my personal experience leads me to believe that it is more a question
+of temperature than of the quality of the water. Some years ago a
+large reservoir was built by an educational institute near this city, the
+water, which was quite cold even in summer, being supplied by an
+artesian well. The tank was used for bathing purposes, but earache
+soon became so frequent among the boys that the use of the reservoir
+for this purpose had to be entirely abandoned. In ordinary bathing,
+the entrance of water into the ear can easily be avoided. In swimming
+or surf bathing it is advisable to use a pledget of lamb's wool
+to close the opening of the ears. Ordinary cotton soon becomes
+saturated and is of no use in this connection, but the wool, which is
+slightly oily, forms an excellent protection in these cases.</p>
+
+<p>The "running ear" is a diseased condition which should not be
+tampered with by the inexperienced, but which should not be neglected.
+The old idea that the child will outgrow it, or that it is a
+secretion of the head which if interfered with would prove dangerous,
+has been fruitful of many cases of deafness and even more serious
+complications.</p>
+
+<p>Another condition to which I would call your attention is the incipient
+development of deafness in children. Where the capacity
+of hearing is quickly lowered from the normal to fifty per cent, it is
+so striking that the patient is much distressed and even confused.
+But when this change takes place insidiously from day to day, it is
+frequently not observed by either the patient or those around him
+until it has greatly advanced. Children thus affected hear only with
+difficulty and by straining certain small muscles of the ear, which
+soon become fatigued, and the child becomes listless and inattentive.
+I have seen numerous cases in which children have been severely punished
+for inattention, when this was due to defective hearing. Watchfulness
+and early attention in these cases will frequently prevent the
+more serious forms of deafness.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_802" id="Page_802">[Pg 802]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE WEST INDIES.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> F. L. OSWALD.</p>
+
+
+<h3>I.&mdash;THE FAUNA OF THE ANTILLES: MAMMALS.</h3>
+
+<p>The study of the geographical distribution of plants and animals
+has revealed facts almost as enigmatical as the origin of life itself.
+Water barriers, as broad as that of the Atlantic, have not prevented
+the spontaneous spread of some species, while others limit their
+habitat to narrowly circumscribed though not geographically isolated
+regions.</p>
+
+<p>Tapirs are found both in the Amazon Valley and on the Malay
+Peninsula; the brook trout of southern New Zealand are identical
+with those of the Austrian Alps. Oaks and <i>Ericacea</i> (heather plants)
+cover northern Europe from the mouth of the Seine to the sources of
+the Ural; then suddenly cease, and are not found anywhere in the
+vast Siberian territories, with a north-to-south range rivaling that of
+all British North America.</p>
+
+<p>But still more remarkable is the zo&ouml;logical contrast of such close-neighborhood
+countries as Africa and Madagascar, or Central America
+and the West Indian archipelago. The Madagascar virgin woods
+harbor no lions, leopards, hyenas, or baboons, but boast not less than
+thirty-five species of mammals unknown to the African continent,
+and twenty-six found nowhere else in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Of a dozen different kinds of deer, abundant in North America
+as well as in Asia and Europe, not a single species has found its way
+to the West Indies. The fine mountain meadows of Hayti have
+originated no antelopes, no wild sheep or wild goats.</p>
+
+<p>In the Cuban sierras, towering to a height of 8,300 feet, there
+are no hill foxes. There are caverns&mdash;subterranean labyrinths with
+countless ramifications, some of them&mdash;but no cave bears or badgers,
+no marmots or weasels even, nor one of the numerous weasel-like creatures
+clambering about the rock clefts of Mexico. The magnificent
+coast forests of the Antilles produce wild-growing nuts enough to
+freight a thousand schooners every year, but&mdash;almost incredible to
+say&mdash;the explorers of sixteen generations have failed to discover a
+single species of squirrels.</p>
+
+<p>The Old-World tribes of our tree-climbing relatives are so totally
+different from those of the American tropics that Humboldt's traveling
+companion, Bonplant, renounced the theory of a unitary center
+of creation (or evolution), and maintained that South America must
+have made a separate though unsuccessful attempt to rise from
+lemurs to manlike apes and men. Of such as they are, Brazil alone
+has forty-eight species of monkeys, and Venezuela at least thirty.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_803" id="Page_803">[Pg 803]</a></span>
+How shall we account for the fact that not one of the large West
+Indian islands betrays a vestige of an effort in the same direction?</p>
+
+<p>More monkey-inviting forests than those of southern Hayti can
+not be found in the tropics, but not even a marmoset or squirrel-monkey
+accepted the invitation. In an infinite series of centuries
+not one pair of quadrumana availed itself of the chance to cross a
+sea gap, though at several points the mainland approaches western
+Cuba within less than two hundred miles&mdash;about half the distance
+that separates southern Asia from Borneo, where fourhanders of all
+sizes and colors compete for the products of the wilderness, and, according
+to Sir Philip Maitland, the "native women avoid the coast
+jungles for fear of meeting Mr. Darwin's grandfather."</p>
+
+<p>The first Spanish explorers of the Antilles were, in fact, so amazed
+at the apparently complete absence of quadrupeds that their only
+explanation was a conjecture that the beasts of the forest must have
+been exterminated by order of some native potentate, perhaps the
+great Kubla Khan, whose possessions they supposed to extend <i>eastward</i>
+from Lake Aral to the Atlantic. The chronicle of Diego Columbus
+says positively that San Domingo and San Juan Bautista
+(Porto Rico) were void of mammals, but afterward modifies that statement
+by mentioning a species of rodent, the <i>hutia</i>, or bush rat, that
+annoyed the colonists of Fort Isabel, and caused them to make an
+appropriation for importing a cargo of cats.</p>
+
+<p>Bush rats and moles were, up to the end of the sixteenth century,
+the only known indigenous quadrupeds of the entire West Indian
+archipelago, for the "Carib dogs," which Valverde saw in Jamaica,
+were believed to have been brought from the mainland by a horde of
+man-hunting savages.</p>
+
+<p>But natural history has kept step with the advance of other sciences,
+and the list of undoubtedly aboriginal mammals on the four
+main islands of the Antilles is now known to comprise more than
+twenty species. That at least fifteen of them escaped the attention
+of the Spanish creoles is as strange as the fact that the Castilian cattle
+barons of Upper California did not suspect the existence of precious
+metals, though nearly the whole bonanza region of the San Joaquin
+Valley had been settled before the beginning of the seventeenth century.
+But the conquerors of the Philippines even overlooked a
+variety of elephants that roams the coast jungles of Mindanao.</p>
+
+<p>Eight species of those West Indian <i>incognito</i> mammals, it is true,
+are creatures of a kind which the Spanish zo&ouml;logists of Valverde's
+time would probably have classed with birds&mdash;bats, namely, including
+the curious <i>Vespertilio molossus</i>, or mastiff bat, and several
+varieties of the owl-faced <i>Chilonycteris</i>, that takes wing in the gloom
+preceding a thunderstorm, as well as in the morning and evening twilight,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_804" id="Page_804">[Pg 804]</a></span>
+and flits up and down the coast rivers with screams that can
+be heard as plainly as the screech of a paroquet. The <i>Vespertilio
+scandens</i> of eastern San Domingo has a peculiar habit of flitting from
+tree to tree, and clambering about in quest of insects, almost with
+the agility of a flying squirrel. There are times when the moonlit
+woods near Cape Rafael seem to be all alive with the restless little
+creatures; that keep up a clicking chirp, and every now and then
+gather in swarms to contest a tempting find, or to settle some probate
+court litigation. San Domingo also harbors one species of those prototypes
+of the harpies, the fruit-eating bats. It passes the daylight
+hours in hollow trees, but becomes nervous toward sunset and apt
+to betray its hiding place by an impatient twitter&mdash;probably a collocution
+of angry comments on the length of time between meals.
+The moment the twilight deepens into gloom the chatterers flop out
+to fall on the next mango orchard and eat away like mortgage brokers.
+They do not get fat&mdash;champion gluttons rarely do&mdash;but attain a
+weight of six ounces, and the Haytian darkey would get even with
+them after a manner of their own if their prerogatives were not
+protected by the intensity of their musky odor. The above-mentioned
+<i>hutia</i> rat appears to have immigrated from some part of the world
+where the shortness of the summer justified the accumulation of large
+reserve stores of food, and under the influence of a hereditary hoarding
+instinct it now passes its existence constructing and filling a series
+of subterranean granaries. Besides, the females build nurseries, and
+all these burrows are connected by tunnels that enable their constructors
+to pass the rainy season under shelter. They gather nuts,
+<i>belotas</i> (a sort of sweet acorns), and all kinds of cereals, and with their
+<i>penchant</i> for appropriating roundish wooden objects on general principles
+would probably give a Connecticut nutmeg peddler the benefit
+of the doubt.</p>
+
+<p>They also pilfer raisins, and a colony of such tithe collectors is a
+formidable nuisance, for the <i>hutia</i> is a giant of its tribe, and attains a
+length of sixteen inches, exclusive of the tail. It is found in Cuba,
+Hayti, Jamaica, Porto Rico, Antigua, Trinidad, the Isle of Pines,
+Martinique, and two or three of the southern Bahama Islands, and
+there may have been a time when it had the archipelago all to itself.
+The Lucayans had a tradition that their ancestors found it on their
+arrival from the mainland, and in some coast regions of eastern Cuba
+it may still be seen basking in the sunlight&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Sole sitting on the shore of old romance,"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and wondering if there are any larger mammals on this planet.</p>
+
+<p>Its next West Indian congener is the Jamaica rice rat, and there
+are at least ten species of mice, all clearly distinct from any Old-World<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_805" id="Page_805">[Pg 805]</a></span>
+rodent, though it is barely possible that some of them may have
+stolen a ride on Spanish trading vessels from Central America.</p>
+
+<p>Water-moles burrow in the banks of several Cuban rivers, and two
+genera of aquatic mammals have solved the problem of survival: the
+bayou porpoise and the manatee, both known to the creoles of the
+early colonial era, and vaguely even to the first discoverers, since
+Columbus himself alludes to a "sort of mermaids (<i>sirenas</i>) that half
+rose from the water and scanned the boat's crew with curious eyes."</p>
+
+<p>Naturally the manatee is, indeed, by no means a timid creature,
+but bitter experience has changed its habits since the time when the
+down-town sportsmen of Santiago used to start in sailboats for the
+outer estuary and return before night with a week's supply of manatee
+meat. The best remaining hunting grounds are the reed shallows
+of Samana Bay (San Domingo) and the deltas of the Hayti swamp
+rivers. Old specimens are generally as wary as the Prybilof fur seal
+that dive out of sight at the first glimpse of a sail; still, their slit-eyed
+youngsters are taken alive often enough, to be kept as public pets in
+many town ponds, where they learn to come to a whistle and waddle
+ashore for a handful of cabbage leaves.</p>
+
+<p>Fish otters have been caught in the lagoons of Puerto Principe
+(central Cuba) and near Cape Tiburon, on the south coast of San
+Domingo, the traveler Gerstaecker saw a kind of "bushy-tailed dormouse,
+too small to be called a squirrel."</p>
+
+<p>But the last four hundred years have enlarged the list of indigenous
+mammals in more than one sense, and the Chevalier de Saint-M&eacute;ry
+should not have been criticised for describing the bush dog of
+Hayti as a "<i>canis Hispaniolanus</i>." Imported dogs enacted a declaration
+of independence several centuries before the revolt of the
+Haytian slaves, and their descendants have become as thoroughly
+West Indian as the Franks have become French. A continued process
+of elimination has made the survivors climate-proof and self-supporting,
+and above all they have ceased to vary; Nature has accepted their
+modified type as wholly adapted to the exigencies of their present
+habitat. And if it is true that all runaway animals revert in some degree
+to the characteristics of their primeval relatives, the ancestor of
+the domestic dog would appear to have been a bush-tailed, brindle-skinned,
+and black-muzzled brute, intermittently gregarious, and
+combining the burrowing propensity of the fox with the co-operative
+hunting <i>penchant</i> of the wolf.</p>
+
+<p>Fourteen years of bushwhacker warfare have almost wholly exterminated
+the half-wild cattle of the Cuban sierras, but the bush dog
+has come to stay. The yelping of its whelps can be heard in thousands
+of jungle woods and mountain ravines, both of Cuba and
+Hayti, and no variety of thoroughbreds will venture to follow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_806" id="Page_806">[Pg 806]</a></span>
+these renegades into the penetralia of their strongholds. Sergeant
+Esterman, who shared the potluck of a Cuban insurgent camp in the
+capacity of a gunsmith, estimates the wild-dog population of the province
+of Santiago alone at half a million, and predicts that in years to
+come their raids will almost preclude the possibility of profitable cattle-breeding
+in eastern Cuba.</p>
+
+<p>Still, the <i>perro pelon</i>, or "tramp dog," as the creoles call the
+wolfish cur, is perhaps a lesser evil, where its activity has tended to
+check the over-increase of another assisted immigrant. Three hundred
+years ago West Indian sportsmen began to import several breeds
+of Spanish rabbits, and with results not always foreseen by the agricultural
+neighbors of the experimenters. Rabbit meat, at first a
+luxury, soon became an incumbrance of the provision markets, and
+finally unsalable at any price. Every family with a dog or a trap-setting
+boy could have rabbit stew for dinner six times a week, and
+load their peddlers with bundles of rabbit skins.</p>
+
+<p>The burrowing coneys threatened to undermine the agricultural
+basis of support, when it was learned that the planters of the Fort
+Isabel district (Hayti) had checked the evil by forcing their
+dogs to live on raw coney meat. The inexpensiveness of the expedient
+recommended its general adoption, and the rapidly multiplying
+quadrupeds soon found that "there were others." The Spanish
+hounds, too, could astonish the census reporter where their progeny
+was permitted to survive, and truck farmers ceased to complain.</p>
+
+<p>In stress of circumstances the persecuted rodents then took refuge
+in the highlands, where they can still be seen scampering about the
+grassy dells in all directions, and the curs of the coast plain turned their
+attention to <i>hutia</i> venison and the eggs of the chaparral pheasant and
+other gallinaceous birds. On the seacoast they also have learned to
+catch turtles and subdivide them, regardless of antivivisection laws.
+How they can get a business opening through the armor of the larger
+varieties seems a puzzle, but the <i>canis rutilus</i> of the Sunda Islands
+overcomes even the dog-resisting ability of the giant tortoise, and in
+Sumatra the bleaching skeletons of the victims have often been mistaken
+for the mementos of a savage battle.</p>
+
+<p>Near Bocanso in southeastern Cuba the woods are alive with capuchin
+monkeys, that seem to have escaped from the wreck of some
+South American trading vessel and found the climate so congenial
+that they proceeded to make themselves at home, like the ring-tailed
+colonists of Fort Sable, in the Florida Everglades. The food supply
+may not be quite as abundant as in the equatorial birthland of their
+species, but that disadvantage is probably more than offset by the
+absence of tree-climbing carnivora.</p>
+
+<p>Millions of runaway hogs roam the coast swamps of all the larger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_807" id="Page_807">[Pg 807]</a></span>
+Antilles, and continue to multiply like our American pension claimants.
+The hunters of those jungle woods, indeed, must often smile
+to remember the complaint of the early settlers that the pleasure of
+the chase in the West Indian wilderness was modified by the scarcity
+of four-footed game, and in the total number (as distinct from the
+number of species) of wild or half-wild mammals Cuba and Hayti
+have begun to rival the island of Java.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<i>To be continued.</i>]</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h2>IRON IN THE LIVING BODY.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> M. A. DASTRE.</p>
+
+
+<p>Iron occurs, in small and almost infinitesimal proportions, in
+numerous organic structures, in which its presence may usually
+be detected by the high color it imparts; and in the animal tissues
+is an important ingredient, though far from being a large one. It
+is essential, however, that the animal tissues, and particularly the
+liquids that circulate through them, should be of nearly even weight,
+else the equilibrium of the body would be too easily disturbed, and
+disaster arising therefrom would be always imminent. Hence the
+iron is always found combined and associated with a large accompaniment
+of other lighter elements which, reducing or neutralizing its superior
+specific gravity, hold it up and keep it afloat. Thus the molecule
+of the red matter of the blood contains, for each atom of iron, 712
+atoms of carbon, 1,130 of hydrogen, 214 of nitrogen, 245 of oxygen,
+and 2 of sulphur, or 2,303 atoms in all. Existing in compounds of
+so complex composition, iron can be present only in very small proportions
+to the whole. Though an essential element, there is comparatively
+but little of it. The whole body of man does not contain more
+than one part in twenty thousand of it. The blood contains only five
+ten-thousandths; and an organ is rich in it if, like the liver, it contains
+one and a half ten-thousandths. When, then, we seek to represent
+to ourselves the changes undergone by organic iron, we shall
+have to modify materially the ideas we have formed respecting the
+largeness and the littleness of units of measure and as to the meaning
+of the words abundant and rare. We must get rid of the notion that
+a thousandth or even a ten-thousandth is a proportion that may be
+neglected. The humble ten-thousandth, which is usually supposed
+not to be of much consequence, becomes here a matter of value.
+Chemists working with iron in its ordinary compounds may consider
+that they are doing fairly well if they do not lose sight of more than
+a thousandth of it; but such looseness would be fatal in a biological<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_808" id="Page_808">[Pg 808]</a></span>
+investigation, where accuracy is necessary down to the infinitesimal
+fraction. The balances of the biologists must weigh the thousandth
+of a milligramme, as their microscopes measure the thousandth of a
+millimetre.</p>
+
+<p>The great part performed by iron in organisms, what we may
+call its biological function, appertains to the chemical property it
+possesses of favoring combustion, of being an agent for promoting
+the oxidation of organic matters.</p>
+
+<p>The chemistry of living bodies differs from that of the laboratory
+in a feature that is peculiar to it&mdash;that instead of performing its reactions
+directly it uses special agents. It employs intermediaries
+which, while they are not entirely unknown to mineral chemistry,
+yet rarely intervene in it. If it is desired, for example, to add a
+molecule of water to starch to form sugar, the chemist would do it
+by heating the starch with acidulated water. The organism, which
+is performing this process all the time, or after every meal, does it in
+a different way, without special heating and without the acid. A
+soluble ferment, a diastase or enzyme, serves as the oxidizing agent
+to produce the same result. Looking at the beginning and the end,
+the two operations are the same. The special agent gives up none of
+its substance. It withdraws after having accomplished its work, and
+not a trace of it is left. Here, in the mechanism of the action of these
+soluble ferments, resides the mystery, still complete, of vital chemistry.
+It may be conceived that these agents, which leave none of
+their substance behind their operations, which suffer no loss, do not
+have to be represented in considerable quantities, however great
+the need of them may be. They only require time to do their work.
+The most remarkable characteristic of the soluble ferments lies, in
+fact, here, in the magnitude of the action as contrasted with infinitesimal
+proportion of the agent, and the necessity of having time
+for the accomplishment of the operation.</p>
+
+<p>Iron behaves in precisely the same way in the combustion of
+organic substances. These substances are incapable at ordinary temperatures
+of fixing oxygen directly, and will not burn till they are
+raised to a high temperature; but in the presence of iron they are
+capable of burning without extreme heat, and undergo slow combustion.
+And as iron gives up none of its substance in the operation,
+and acts, as a simple intermediary, only to draw oxygen from the
+inexhaustible atmosphere and present it to the organic substance, we
+see that it need not be abundant to perform its office, provided it
+have time enough. This action resembles that of the soluble ferments
+in that there is no mystery about it, and its innermost mechanism
+is perfectly known.</p>
+
+<p>Iron readily combines with oxygen&mdash;too readily, we might say,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_809" id="Page_809">[Pg 809]</a></span>
+if we regarded only the uses we make of it. It exists as an oxide in
+Nature; and the metallurgy of it has no other object than to revivify
+burned iron, remove the oxygen from it, and extract the metal.
+Of the two oxides of iron, the ferrous, or lower one, is an energetic
+base, readily combining with even the weakest acids, and forming
+with them ferrous or protosalts. Ferric oxide, on the other hand, is
+a feeble base, which combines only slowly with even strong acids
+to form ferric salts or persalts, and not at all with weak acids like
+carbonic acid and those of the tissues of living beings. It is these
+last, more highly oxidized ferric compounds that provide organic
+substances with the oxygen that consumes them, when, as a result of
+the operation, they themselves return to the ferrous state.</p>
+
+<p>Facts of this sort are too nearly universal not to have been observed
+very long ago, but they were not fully understood till about
+the middle of this century. The chemists of the time&mdash;Liebig,
+Dumas, and especially Sch&ouml;nbein, W&ouml;hler, Stenhouse, and many
+others&mdash;established the fact that ferric oxide provokes at ordinary
+temperatures a rapid action of combustion on a large number of substances:
+grass, sawdust, peat, charcoal, humus, arable land, and animal
+matter. A very common example is the destruction of linen by
+rust spots; the substance of the fiber is slowly burned up by the
+oxygen yielded by the oxide. About the same time, Claude Bernard
+inquired whether the process took place within the tissues, in
+contact with living matter in the same way as we have just seen it
+did with dead matter&mdash;the remains of organisms that had long since
+submitted to the action of physical laws&mdash;and received an affirmative
+answer. Injecting a ferric salt into the jugular vein of an animal, he
+found it excreted, deprived of a part of its oxygen, as a ferrous salt.</p>
+
+<p>This slow combustion of organic matter, living or dead, accomplished
+in the cold by iron, represents only one of the aspects of its
+biological function. A counterpart to it is necessary in order to
+complete the picture. It is easy to perceive that the phenomenon
+would have no bearing or consequence if it was limited to this first
+action. With the small provision of oxygen in the iron salt used up,
+and, if reduced to the minimum of oxidation, the source of oxygen being
+exhausted, the combustion of organic matter would stop. The
+oxidation obtained would be insignificant, while the oxidation should
+be indefinite and unlimited, and it is really so.</p>
+
+<p>There is a counterpart. The iron salt, which has gone back to
+the minimum of oxidation and become a ferrous salt, can not remain
+long in that state in contact with the air and with other sources of the
+gas to which it is exposed. It has always been known that ferrous
+compounds absorb oxygen from the air and pass into the ferric state;
+we might say that we have seen it done, for the transformation is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_810" id="Page_810">[Pg 810]</a></span>
+accompanied by a characteristic change of color, by a transition from
+the pale green tint of ferrous bases to the ochery or red color of
+ferric compounds.</p>
+
+<p>We can understand now what should happen when the ferruginous
+compound is placed in contact alternately with organic matter
+and oxygen. In the former phase the iron will yield oxygen to the
+organic matter; in the second phase it will take again from the
+atmosphere the combustible which it has lost, and will be again where
+it started. The same series of operations may be continued a second
+time and a third time, and indefinitely, as long as the alternations of
+contact with organic matter and exposure to atmospheric oxygen
+are kept up, the iron simply performing the part of a broker. The
+same result will occur if atmospheric air and organic matter are constantly
+together; the consumption will continue indefinitely, and the
+iron will perform the part of an intermediary till one of the elements
+of the process is exhausted.</p>
+
+<p>This explanation was necessary to make clear the solution of the
+mystery of slow or cool combustion, the existence of which has been
+known since Lavoisier, without its mechanism being understood.
+That illustrious student gave out the theory that animal heat and
+the energy developed by vital action originated in the chemical reactions
+of the organism, and that, on the other hand, the reactions that
+produce heat consisted of simple combustions, slow combustions, that
+differed only in intensity from that of the burning torch. The development
+of chemistry has shown that this figure was too much simplified
+from the reality, and that most of these phenomena, while they
+are in the end equivalent to a combustion, differ greatly from it in
+mechanism and mode of execution. By this we do not mean to say
+that all the combustions are of this character, and that there do not
+exist in the organism a large number of such as Lavoisier understood,
+and of such as the combustions effected by the intervention of iron
+furnish the type of. Lavoisier's successors, Liebig among them, tried
+to find reactions conformed to this type. Their attempts were unsuccessful,
+but they had the happy result of revealing, if not the
+real function of iron in the blood, at least that of the red matter in
+which it is fixed.</p>
+
+<p>The question of the presence of iron in the coloring matter of
+the blood gave rise to long discussions. Vauquelin denied it. He
+made the mistake of looking for iron in the form of a known compound,
+in direct combination with the blood, while later researches
+have shown that it is found almost exclusively in the red matter that
+tinges the globules, in a complicated combination that escapes the
+ordinary tests; or, according to a usual method of expression, it is
+dissimulated. Liebig also failed to find this combination, and it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_811" id="Page_811">[Pg 811]</a></span>
+not till 1864 that Hoppe-Seyler succeeded in obtaining it pure and
+crystallized. But Liebig had already perceived its essential properties,
+and was able to point out approximately its functions as early as
+1845; yet the single fact that there was no assimilation possible between
+this substance and the salts of iron, cut this question off into
+a kind of negative suspense. Different from these compounds, it
+could not behave like them, and accomplish slow combustions of the
+same type. It is a remarkable fact, and one that illustrates well how
+iron preserves through all its vicissitudes some trace of its fundamental
+property of favoring the action of oxygen on substances,
+that this composition, so special and so different from the salts of
+iron, behaves nearly as they do. While it is not of itself an energetic
+combustible, it is, according to Liebig's expression, "a transporter
+of oxygen"&mdash;a luminous view, which the future was destined
+to confirm. Although the transportation is not produced by the
+mechanism supposed by Liebig, but by another, the general result
+is very much the same from the point of view of the physiology of
+the blood. The coloring matter of the blood conveyed by the globules
+fixes oxygen in contact with the pulmonary air, and distributes
+it as it passes through the capillaries upon the tissues. The globule
+of blood brings nothing else and distributes nothing else, contrary
+to the opinion that had been held before. The theory of slow combustion
+effected through iron, while not absolutely contradicted in
+principle, was not entirely confirmed in detail, so far as concerned
+iron, or the more prominently ferruginous tissue.</p>
+
+<p>No search was made for other tissues or organs presenting more
+favorable conditions, for no others were known that had iron in
+themselves. The liver and the spleen were supposed to receive it
+from the blood under the complicated form in which it exists there,
+or under some equivalent form. It was not, therefore, supposed till
+within a very few years that the two conditions were realized in any
+organ that were required to secure a slow combustion by iron&mdash;that
+is, combinations resembling ferrous and ferric salts with a weak
+acid and a source of oxygen. The doubt has been resolved by
+recent studies. The liver fulfils the requirement. It contains iron
+existing under forms precisely comparable to the ferrous and ferric
+compounds, and is washed by the blood which carries oxygen in a
+state of simple solution in its plasma and of loose combination in its
+globules. Thus all the conditions necessary for the production of
+slow combustion are gathered here, and we can not doubt that it takes
+place. A new function is therefore assigned to the liver, and it becomes
+one of the great furnaces of the organism.</p>
+
+<p>Compounds of iron are so abundant in the ground and the water
+that we need not be surprised when we find them in various parts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_812" id="Page_812">[Pg 812]</a></span>
+of plants, and particularly in the green parts. Their habitual presence
+does not, however, authorize the conclusion that this metal is
+necessary to the support and development of vegetable life. Some
+substances, evidently indifferent, foreign, and even injurious, if they
+exist abundantly in a soil, may be drawn into roots through the
+movement of the sap, and fix themselves in various organs. This
+occurs with copper in certain exceptional circumstances when the
+soil is saturated with its compounds, and if such a condition should be
+found to be repeated over a large extent of country, we might be
+led, by analysis alone of its vegetable productions, to the false conclusion
+that copper was an essential or even necessary constituent of
+them. But the value of the part performed by an element can not be
+determined by analysis alone. Direct proofs are necessary for that,
+methodical and comparative experiments in cultivation in mediums
+artificially deprived or furnished with the element the importance of
+which we wish to estimate. This has been done for combinations
+of iron, and the utility of that metal, especially to the higher plants,
+has been made thereby to appear.</p>
+
+<p>If iron is absent from the nutritive medium the plant will wither.
+If we sprout seeds in a solution from which this metal has been carefully
+excluded, the development will follow its regular course as long
+as the plant is in the condition properly called that of germination,
+or while it does not have to draw anything from the soil. The stem
+rises and the first leaves are formed as usual. But all these parts
+will continue pale, and the green matter, the granulation of chlorophyll,
+will not appear. Now, if we add a small quantity of salt of iron
+to the ground in which the roots are planted, or a much-diluted solution
+is sprinkled on the leaves and the stem, the chlorotic plant will
+recover its health and take on its normal coloration. Experiments of
+this sort make well manifest that iron is necessary to green plants,
+and they show, besides, the bearing of its action, and that what is
+most special and most characteristic in the phenomena of vegetable
+life may be traced exactly to the organization of that green matter.
+It was long thought that if iron was necessary for the formation of
+chlorophyll, it was because it had a part in its constitution. We
+know now that this is not so. The metal does nothing but accompany
+the chlorophyll in the granulation in which it is found.</p>
+
+<p>The influence which iron exerts in the development of the lower
+plants, like the muscidenes, was illustrated with great precision in a
+study made about thirty years ago by M. Raulin, who experimented
+with the common mold (<i>Aspergillus niger</i>), to determine the coefficient
+of importance of all the elements that have a part in its vegetation.
+When the iron was removed from a medium that had been
+shown capable of giving a maximum crop of that mold, the plants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_813" id="Page_813">[Pg 813]</a></span>
+languished, and the return fell off immediately to one third. Estimating
+the quantity of metal that produces this effect, it was found
+that the addition of one part of iron was sufficient to determine the
+production of a weight of plant nearly nine hundred times as great.
+The suppression of the iron further caused an irreparable loss, for
+when it was sought to remedy the wilting of the plants by restoring
+the iron which had been taken from the medium&mdash;an experiment
+which had been successful with higher plants&mdash;the attempt was a
+failure, and the plants could not be prevented from perishing.</p>
+
+<p>These facts are full of interest in themselves, and they further
+show well the necessity or utility of iron in plant life, but they
+teach us no more. They reveal nothing of the mechanism of the
+action, and if we wish to penetrate further in the matter we always
+have to turn to animal physiology.&mdash;<i>Translated for the Popular
+Science Monthly from the Revue des Deux Mondes.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>THE MALAY LANGUAGE.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> R. CLYDE FORD,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap lowercase">PROFESSOR OF GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE, ALBION COLLEGE.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>A gentleman who had lived for several years among the
+Indians of the Canadian northwest said that he went among
+them believing they were an untutored race. But when they told
+him of a dozen kinds of berries growing in a locality where he knew
+but two, brought him flowers he could not find after careful search,
+and around their council fires showed as deep an insight into the
+mysteries of life as the <i>savants</i> of his university, then he concluded
+they could no longer be called untutored.</p>
+
+<p>And why should they be? Is there no culture or civilization
+outside of the enlightenment of Europe or America? And because
+a civilization does not exactly fit the grooves in which most of the
+world has moved, may it not be a real civilization for all that? If
+such is possible, then we vote the Malays a cultured people. Of
+course, their culture is not like our own; it knows no railroads, no telegraphs,
+boasts of no intricate political machinery, has no complicated
+social despotisms. Native princes rule for the most part over peaceful
+states, and politics means no more than the regulation of quiet village
+life. But what need of railroads, when the rivers are avenues of trade
+and communication? Why telegraphs, when the world is bounded by
+the jungle horizon? Or why, in short, severe civil and social enactments,
+when the common <i>Wahlspruch</i> of life is, "Fear disgrace rather
+than death"? Such a civilization, we admit, is a humble one; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_814" id="Page_814">[Pg 814]</a></span>
+it also has the advantage of being a happy one. And where contentment
+dwells, where honesty prevails, where the home is a stronghold,
+there are culture and civilization, even though they may not coincide
+with our own.</p>
+
+<p>The Malays are not barbarians, and their language by its grace
+and adaptability has shown its right to be. To-day it is the mother
+tongue of more than forty millions of people, and the <i>lingua franca</i>
+of Chinamen, Hindus, European, and natives. It is spoken from
+Madagascar to the distant islands of the Pacific, and from the Philippines
+to Australia. With it one can barter in Celebes and sell in
+Java; converse with a sultan in Sumatra or a Spaniard in Manila.
+Moreover, it is soft and melodious, rich in expression, poetical in
+idiom, and simple in structure&mdash;a language almost without grammar
+and yet of immense vocabulary, with subtle distinctions and fine
+gradations of thought and meaning; a language that sounds in one's
+ears long after <i>Tanah Malayu</i> and the coral islands and the jungle
+strand have sunk into hazy recollection, just as they once dropped out
+of sight behind one's departing ship.</p>
+
+<p>Malay is written in the Arabic character, which was adopted with
+Mohammedanism, probably in the thirteenth century. Anciently,
+the Malays used a writing of their own, but it is not yet clearly settled
+what it was. There are now thirty-four characters employed, each
+varying in form, according as it is isolated, final, medial, or initial.
+Naturally, the Arabic influence over the language has been a marked
+one; the priest who dictates in the religion of a people is a molder
+and shaper of language. We have only to recall the Catholic Church
+and the influence of the Latin tongue in the mouths of her priests to
+know that this is so. Many Arabic words and phrases have been
+adopted, but more in the language of literature than in that of everyday
+speech. A large number of expressions of court and royalty, and
+terms of law and religion, are Arabic; also the names of months, days,
+and many articles of commerce and trade; nevertheless, the language
+of common speech is still Malay.</p>
+
+<p>Another influence, also, has been felt in the Malay&mdash;that of the
+Sanskrit language. The presence of many Sanskrit words has caused
+some very ingenious theories to be constructed in proof that the Malays
+were of Indian origin, and such word fragments the survival of the
+primitive tongue. Such theories, however, have not stood the test of
+philology, and the fact still remains that the language is essentially
+unique, with an origin lost in the darkness of remote antiquity. However,
+Sanskrit influence has been much greater, and has penetrated
+much deeper into the elemental structure of the language than the
+Arabic. In fact, the aboriginal language, before it felt the animating
+spirit of the Aryan tongue, must have been a barren one, the language<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_815" id="Page_815">[Pg 815]</a></span>
+of a primitive man, a fisherman, a hunter, a careless tiller of the soil.
+As Maxwell says in his Manual of the Malay Language, the Sanskrit
+word <i>hala</i> (plow) marks a revolution in Malayan agriculture and,
+one may say further, Malayan civilization. What changed the
+methods of cultivating the soil, changed the people themselves. It
+is probable that this change came through contact with people to
+whom Sanskrit was a vernacular tongue, but whether through conquest
+by the sword or by religion is hard to tell. Perhaps it was by both.
+At any rate, it was deep and strong, and left a lasting impression on
+the language. Sanskrit names fastened on trees, plants, grain, fruits,
+household and agricultural implements, parts of the body, articles of
+commerce, animals, metals and minerals, time and its division and
+measurement, family relationships, abstract conceptions, warfare, and
+fundamental ideas of religion and superstition. Such a conquest
+must have been an early and tremendous one.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, Malay is almost a grammarless tongue. It has
+no proper article, and its substantives may serve equally well as
+verbs, being singular or plural, and entirely genderless. However,
+adjectives and a process of reduplication often indicate number, and
+gender words are added to nouns to make sex allusions plain. Whatever
+there is of declension is prepositional as in English, and possessives
+are formed by putting the adjectives after the noun as in Italian.
+Nouns are primitive and derivative, the derivations being formed by
+suffixes or prefixes, or both, and one's mastery of the language may be
+gauged by the idiomatic way in which he handles these <i>Anh&auml;ngsel</i>.
+Adjectives are uninflected.</p>
+
+<p>The use of the pronouns involves an extensive knowledge of Oriental
+etiquette&mdash;some being used by the natives among one another,
+some between Europeans and natives, some employed when an inferior
+addresses a superior and <i>vice versa</i>, some used only when the
+native addresses his prince or sovereign; and, last of all, some being
+distinctly literary, and never employed colloquially. Into this maze
+one must go undaunted, and trust to time and patience to smooth out
+difficulties.</p>
+
+<p>Verbs, like nouns, are primitive and derivative, with some few
+auxiliaries and a good many particles which are suffixed or prefixed
+to indicate various states and conditions. These things are apt to be
+confusing, and when the student learns that a verb may be past,
+present, or future without any change in form, he does not know
+whether to congratulate himself or not. Prepositions, too, are many
+and expressive; conjunctions, some colloquial, some pedantic.</p>
+
+<p>We now come to a peculiarity which Malay has in common with
+other Indo-Chinese languages&mdash;the "numeral co-efficients," as Maxwell
+calls them, which are always employed with a certain class of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_816" id="Page_816">[Pg 816]</a></span>
+objects, just as we say "head" of horses, "sail" of ships, etc. They
+are very many as compared with English, and very idiomatic in their
+use. For instance, the Malay says, "Europeans, three <i>persons</i>,"
+"cats, four <i>tails</i>," "ships, five <i>fruits</i>," "cocoanuts, three <i>seeds</i>,"
+"spears, two <i>stems</i>," "planks, five <i>pieces</i>," "houses, two <i>ladders</i>,"
+and so on to fifteen or twenty different classes of articles or objects.
+By some this has been regarded as a peculiarity of the languages of
+southeastern Asia; but the same thing may be noticed in the Indian
+languages of our own continent.</p>
+
+<p>As a language Malay is easily learned and has much to repay for
+so doing. It is full of wonders and surprises&mdash;among other things is
+the natural home of euphemism, where a spade is called anything
+but a spade. For instance, to die is beautifully expressed in Malay as
+a return to the mercy of Allah. The language is decidedly rich in
+poetical expression and imagery. A neighbor is one whom you permit
+to ascend the ladder of your cottage, and your friend is a sharer
+of your joys and sorrows. Interest is the flower of money, a spring
+is an eye of water, the sun the eye of day, and a policeman all eyes.
+A walk is a stroll to eat the wind, a man drunk is one who rides a
+green horse, and a coward a duck without spurs. A flatterer is one
+who has sugar cane on his lips, a sharper is a man of brains, a fool a
+brain-lacker.</p>
+
+<p>In his proverbs also the Malay shows a matchless use of metaphor
+and imagery, his words having the softness of the jungle breeze, and
+at the same time the grimness of the jungle shades. Nowhere does
+the nature of his race or the peculiar genius of his language show
+out better than in these terse, pithy sayings which the Malay uses to
+sweeten his speech or lend effectiveness to it. The real Malay is a
+creature of the forest or the sea, whence he draws his livelihood, and
+it is but natural that he should envelop his daily and perhaps dangerous
+life with homely philosophy. He loves the freedom which
+he enjoys; take him away from it and he eats his heart out in homesickness.
+"Though you feed a jungle fowl from a golden plate, it
+will return to the jungle again." In his humble life he has discovered
+that blood, be it good or bad, counts for something, and he thinks of
+the forest lairs; "a kitten and small, but a tiger's cub." He is beset
+with dangers by sea and land; often he is between the devil and the
+deep. "One may escape the tiger, and fall into the jaws of the
+crocodile." He recognizes the inevitable, and draws what consolation
+he can. "When the prow is wrecked the shark gets his fill"&mdash;a
+very stoical recognition of ill winds. "For fear of the ghost he
+hugs the corpse," is often the solution of his dilemma. Sometimes
+he indulges in drollery, but is never unphilosophical. "To love one's
+children, one must weep for them now and then; to love one's wife,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_817" id="Page_817">[Pg 817]</a></span>
+one must leave her now and then." The language is full of such
+expressions; they are the natural products of the speech of a poetical
+and Nature-loving folk. Without attempting a classification we give
+a few of the most characteristic proverbs, drawing largely on a collection
+made in the Malay Peninsula by W. E. Maxwell, at one time
+British resident there:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Will the crocodile respect the carcass?<br />
+Follow your heart, death; follow your feelings, destruction.<br />
+You find grasshoppers where you find a field.<br />
+Earth does not become grain.<br />
+Don't grind pepper for a bird on the wing.<br />
+The flower comes, age comes.<br />
+When the father is spotted, the son is spotted.<br />
+The plant sprouts before it climbs.<br />
+When he can't wring the ear, he pulls the horn.<br />
+The creel says the basket is poorly made.<br />
+Ask from one who has,<br />
+Make vows at a shrine,<br />
+Sulk with him who loves you.<br />
+When the house is done the chisel finds fault.<br />
+As the crow goes back to his nest (no richer, no poorer).<br />
+Whoever eats chilies burns his mouth.<br />
+Because of the mouth the body comes to harm.<br />
+If you are at the river's mouth at nightfall, what's the use of talking of return?<br />
+A broken thread may be mended, but charcoal never.<br />
+The pea forgets its pod.<br />
+As water rolls from a <i>kladi</i> leaf.<br />
+A shipwrecked vessel may float again, a heart once broken is broken forever.<br />
+It is a project, and the result with God.<br />
+He carries a torch in daylight.<br />
+A slave who does well is never praised; if he does badly, never forgiven.<br />
+It rains gold afar, but stone at home.<br />
+What if you sit on a cushion of gold with an uneasy mind!<br />
+When money leaves, your friend goes.<br />
+If you dip your hand into the fish tub, go to the bottom.<br />
+Whoever digs a hole falls into it himself.<br />
+If your legs are long, have your blanket long.<br />
+Like a frog under a cocoanut shell, he thinks he sees the sky.<br />
+If you can't get rattan, bind with roots.<br />
+The plantain does not bear twice.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_818" id="Page_818">[Pg 818]</a></span>He sits like a cat, but leaps like a tiger.<br />
+The tortoise lays a thousand eggs and tells no one; the hen lays a single egg and tells all the world.<br />
+Those will die of thirst who empty the jar when it thunders in a dry time.<br />
+Handsome as a princess, poisonous as a snake.<br />
+Small as an ant, wise as a mouse-deer.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<h2>LIFE ON A SOUTH SEA WHALER.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> FRANK T. BULLEN.</p>
+
+
+<p>Cachalots, or sperm whales, must have been captured on the
+coasts of Europe in a desultory way from a very early date, by
+the incidental allusions to the prime products spermaceti and ambergris
+which are found in so many ancient writers. Shakespeare's
+reference&mdash;"The sovereign'st thing on earth was parmaceti for an inward
+bruise"&mdash;will be familiar to most people, as well as Milton's
+mention of the delicacies at Satan's feast&mdash;"Grisamber steamed"&mdash;not
+to carry quotation any further.</p>
+
+<p>But in the year 1690 the brave and hardy fishermen of the northeast
+coasts of North America established that systematic pursuit of
+the cachalot which has thriven so wonderfully ever since, although it
+must be confessed that the last few years have witnessed a serious
+decline in this great branch of trade.</p>
+
+<p>For many years the American colonists completely engrossed this
+branch of the whale fishery, contentedly leaving to Great Britain and
+the continental nations the monopoly of the northern or arctic fisheries,
+while they cruised the stormy, if milder, seas around their own
+shores.</p>
+
+<p>As, however, the number of ships engaged increased, it was inevitable
+that the known grounds should become exhausted, and in
+1788, Messrs. Enderby's ship, the Emilia, first ventured round Cape
+Horn, as the pioneer of a greater trade than ever. The way once
+pointed out, other ships were not slow to follow, until, in 1819, the
+British whale ship Syren opened up the till then unexplored tract
+of ocean in the western part of the North Pacific, afterward familiarly
+known as the "Coast of Japan." From these teeming waters alone,
+for many years an average annual catch of forty thousand barrels of oil
+was taken, which, at the average price of &pound;8 per barrel, will give some
+idea of the value of the trade generally.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_819" id="Page_819">[Pg 819]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>From the crushing blow of the civil war the American sperm-whale
+fishery has never fully recovered. When the writer was in
+the trade, some twenty-two years ago, it was credited with a fleet of
+between three and four hundred sail; now it may be doubted whether
+the numbers reach an eighth of that amount. A rigid conservatism of
+method hinders any revival of the industry, which is practically conducted
+to-day as it was fifty or even a hundred years ago; and
+it is probable that another decade will witness the final extinction
+of what was once one of the most important maritime industries in
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>In the following pages an attempt has been made&mdash;it is believed
+for the first time&mdash;to give an account of the cruise of a South Sea
+whaler from the seaman's standpoint. Its aim is to present to the
+general reader a simple account of the methods employed and the
+dangers met with in a calling about which the great mass of the
+public knows absolutely nothing.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>At the age of eighteen, after a sea experience of six years from the
+time when I dodged about London streets, a ragged Arab, with wits
+sharpened by the constant fight for food, I found myself roaming the
+streets of New Bedford, Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p>My money was all gone, I was hungry for a ship; and so, when a
+long, keen-looking man with a goatlike beard, and mouth stained with
+dry tobacco juice, hailed me one afternoon at the street corner, I
+answered very promptly, scenting a berth. "Lookin' fer a ship,
+stranger?" said he. "Yes; do you want a hand?" said I anxiously.
+He made a funny little sound something like a pony's whinny, then
+answered: "Wall, I should surmise that I want between fifty and sixty
+hands, ef yew kin lay me onto 'em; but, kem along, every dreep's a
+drop, an' yew seem likely enough." With that he turned and led
+the way until we reached a building, around which was gathered one
+of the most nondescript crowds I had ever seen. There certainly did
+not appear to be a sailor among them&mdash;not so much by their rig,
+though that is not a great deal to go by, but by their actions and speech.
+However, I signed and passed on, engaged to go I knew not where,
+in some ship I did not know even the name of, in which I was to receive
+I did not know how much or how little for my labor, nor how
+long I was going to be away.</p>
+
+<p>From the time we signed the articles, we were never left to ourselves.
+Truculent-looking men accompanied us to our several boarding
+houses, paid our debts for us, finally bringing us by boat to a ship
+lying out in the bay. As we passed under her stern, I read the name
+Cachalot, of New Bedford; but as soon as we ranged alongside, I
+realized that I was booked for the sailor's horror&mdash;a cruise in a whaler.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_820" id="Page_820">[Pg 820]</a></span>
+Badly as I wanted to get to sea, I had not bargained for this, and
+would have run some risks to get ashore again; but they took no
+chances, so we were all soon aboard. Before going forward, I took a
+comprehensive glance around, and saw that I was on board of a vessel
+belonging to a type which has almost disappeared off the face of the
+waters. A more perfect contrast to the trim-built English clipper
+ships that I had been accustomed to I could hardly imagine. She was
+one of a class characterized by sailors as "built by the mile, and cut
+off in lengths as you want 'em," bow and stern almost alike, masts
+standing straight as broomsticks, and bowsprit soaring upward at an
+angle of about forty-five degrees. She was as old-fashioned in her
+rig as in her hull. Right in the center of the deck, occupying a space
+of about ten feet by eight, was a square erection of brickwork, upon
+which my wondering gaze rested longest, for I had not the slightest
+idea what it could be. But I was rudely roused from my meditations
+by the harsh voice of one of the officers, who shouted, "Naow then,
+git below an' stow yer dunnage, 'n look lively up agin!" Tumbling
+down the steep ladder, I entered the gloomy den which was to be
+for so long my home, finding it fairly packed with my shipmates.
+The whole space was undivided by partition, but I saw at once that
+black men and white had separated themselves, the blacks taking the
+port side and the whites the starboard. Finding a vacant bunk by the
+dim glimmer of the ancient teapot lamp that hung amidships, giving
+out as much smoke as light, I hurriedly shifted my coat for a
+"jumper" or blouse, put on an old cap, and climbed into the fresh
+air again. Even <i>my</i> seasoned head was feeling bad with the villainous
+reek of the place. I had hardly reached the deck when I was
+confronted by a negro, the biggest I ever saw in my life. He looked
+me up and down for a moment, then opening his ebony features in
+a wide smile, he said: "Great snakes! why, here's a sailor man for
+sure! Guess thet's so, ain't it, Johnny?" I said "yes" very curtly,
+for I hardly liked his patronizing air; but he snapped me up short with
+"yes, <i>sir</i>, when yew speak to me, yew blank limejuicer. I'se de
+fourf mate of dis yar ship, en my name's Mistah Jones, 'n yew jest
+freeze on to dat ar, ef yew want ter lib long 'n die happy. See,
+sonny?" I <i>saw</i>, and answered promptly, "I beg your pardon, sir, I
+didn't know." "Ob cawse yew didn't know, dat's all right, little
+Britisher; naow jest skip aloft 'n loose dat fore-taupsle." "Ay, ay,
+sir," I answered cheerily, springing at once into the fore-rigging and
+up the ratlines like a monkey, but not too fast to hear him chuckle,
+"Dat's a smart kiddy, I bet." On deck I could see a crowd at the
+windlass heaving up anchor. I said to myself, "They don't waste
+any time getting this packet away." Evidently they were not anxious
+to test any of the crew's swimming powers. They were wise, for had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_821" id="Page_821">[Pg 821]</a></span>
+she remained at anchor that night I verily believe some of the poor
+wretches would have tried to escape.</p>
+
+<p>The anchor came aweigh, the sails were sheeted home, and I returned
+on deck to find the ship gathering way for the heads, fairly
+started on her long voyage.</p>
+
+<p>Before nightfall we were fairly out to sea, and the ceremony of
+dividing the crew into watches was gone through. I found myself
+in the chief mate's or "port" watch (they called it "larboard," a
+term I had never heard used before, it having long been obsolete in
+merchant ships), though the huge negro fourth mate seemed none too
+well pleased that I was not under his command, his being the starboard
+watch under the second mate.</p>
+
+<p>I was pounced upon next morning by "Mistah" Jones, the fourth
+mate, whom I heard addressed familiarly as "Goliath" and "Anak"
+by his brother officers, and ordered to assist him in rigging the "crow's-nest"
+at the main royal-mast head. It was a simple affair. There
+were a pair of cross-trees fitted to the mast, upon which was secured a
+tiny platform about a foot wide on each side of the mast, while above
+this foothold a couple of padded hoops like a pair of giant spectacles
+were secured at a little higher than a man's waist. When all was
+fast one could creep up on the platform, through the hoop, and, resting
+his arms upon the latter, stand comfortably and gaze around, no
+matter how vigorously the old barky plunged and kicked beneath him.
+From that lofty eerie I had a comprehensive view of the vessel. She
+was about three hundred and fifty tons and full ship-rigged&mdash;that is to
+say, she carried square sails on all three masts. Her deck was flush fore
+and aft, the only obstructions being the brick-built "try-works" in
+the waist, the galley, and cabin skylight right aft by the taffrail. Her
+bulwarks were set thickly round with clumsy-looking wooden cranes,
+from which depended five boats. Two more boats were secured bottom
+up upon a gallows aft, so she seemed to be well supplied in that
+direction.</p>
+
+<p>The weather being fine, with a steady northeast wind blowing, so
+that the sails required no attention, work proceeded steadily all the
+morning. The oars were sorted, examined for flaws, and placed in the
+boats; the whale line, Manilla rope like yellow silk, an inch and a half
+round, was brought on deck, stretched, and coiled down with the greatest
+care into tubs holding, some two hundred fathoms, and others one
+hundred fathoms each. New harpoons were fitted to poles of rough
+but heavy wood, without any attempt at neatness but every attention
+to strength. The shape of these weapons was not, as is generally
+thought, that of an arrow, but rather like an arrow with one huge barb,
+the upper part of which curved out from the shaft. The whole of
+the barb turned on a stout pivot of steel, but was kept in line with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_822" id="Page_822">[Pg 822]</a></span>
+the shaft by a tiny wooden peg which passed through barb and shaft,
+being then cut off smoothly on both sides. The point of the harpoon
+had at one side a wedge-shaped edge, ground to razor keenness; the
+other side was flat. The shaft, about thirty inches long, was of the
+best malleable iron, so soft that it would tie into a knot and straighten
+out again without fracture. Three harpoons, or "irons" as they
+were always called, were placed in each boat, fitted one above the other
+in the starboard bow, the first for use being always one unused before.
+Opposite to them in the boat were fitted three lances for the purpose of
+<i>killing</i> whales, the harpoons being only the means by which the boat
+was attached to a fish, and quite useless to inflict a fatal wound. These
+lances were slender spears of malleable iron about four feet long, with
+oval or heart-shaped points of fine steel about two inches broad, their
+edges kept keen as a surgeon's lancet. By means of a socket at the
+other end they were attached to neat handles, or "lance poles," about
+as long again, the whole weapon being thus about eight feet in length,
+and furnished with a light line, or "lance warp," for the purpose of
+drawing it back again when it had been darted at a whale. The
+other furniture of a boat comprised five oars of varying lengths
+from sixteen to nine feet, one great steering oar of nineteen feet, a
+mast and two sails of great area for so small a craft, spritsail shape; two
+tubs of whale line containing together eighteen hundred feet, a keg of
+drinking water, and another long, narrow one with a few biscuits, a lantern,
+candles and matches therein; a bucket and "piggin" for baling,
+a small spade, a flag or "wheft," a shoulder bomb gun and ammunition,
+two knives, and two small axes. A rudder hung outside by the
+stern.</p>
+
+<p>With all this gear, although snugly stowed, a boat looked so loaded
+that I could not help wondering how six men would be able to work
+in her; but, like most "deep-water" sailors, I knew very little about
+boating. I was going to learn.</p>
+
+<p>The reports I had always heard of the laziness prevailing on board
+whale ships were now abundantly falsified. From dawn to dark work
+went on without cessation. Everything was rubbed and scrubbed
+and scoured until no speck or soil could be found; indeed, no gentleman's
+yacht or man-of-war is kept more spotlessly clean than was the
+Cachalot.</p>
+
+<p>On the fourth day after leaving port we were all busy as usual
+except the four men in the "crow's-nests," when a sudden cry of
+"Porps! porps!" brought everything to a standstill. A large school
+of porpoises had just joined us, in their usual clownish fashion, rolling
+and tumbling around the bows as the old barky wallowed along, surrounded
+by a wide ellipse of snowy foam. All work was instantly
+suspended, and active preparations made for securing a few of these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_823" id="Page_823">[Pg 823]</a></span>
+frolicsome fellows. A "block," or pulley, was bung out at the bowsprit
+end, a whale line passed through it and "bent" (fastened) on to
+a harpoon. Another line with a running "bowline," or slip noose,
+was also passed out to the bowsprit end, being held there by one man
+in readiness. Then one of the harpooners ran out along the back
+ropes, which keep the jib boom down, taking his stand beneath the
+bowsprit with the harpoon ready. Presently he raised his iron and
+followed the track of a rising porpoise with its point until the creature
+broke water. At the same instant the weapon left his grasp, apparently
+without any force behind it; but we on deck, holding the line,
+soon found that our excited hauling lifted a big vibrating body clean
+out of the smother beneath. "'Vast hauling!" shouted the mate,
+while, as the porpoise hung dangling, the harpooner slipped the ready
+bowline over his body, gently closing its grip round the "small" by
+the broad tail. Then we hauled on the noose line, slacking away the
+harpoon, and in a minute had our prize on deck. He was dragged
+away at once and the operation repeated. Again and again we hauled
+them in, until the fore part of the deck was alive with the kicking,
+writhing sea pigs, at least twenty of them. All hands were soon busy
+skinning the blubber from the bodies. Porpoises have no skin&mdash;that
+is, hide&mdash;the blubber or coating of lard which incases them being covered
+by a black substance as thin as tissue paper. The porpoise hide of
+the bootmaker is really leather, made from the skin of the <i>Beluga</i>, or
+"white whale," which is found only in the far north. The cover was
+removed from the "try-works" amidships, revealing two gigantic pots
+set in a frame of brickwork side by side, capable of holding two hundred
+gallons each&mdash;such a cooking apparatus as might have graced a
+Brobdingnagian kitchen. Beneath the pots was the very simplest of
+furnaces, hardly as elaborate as the familiar copper hole sacred to
+washing day. Square funnels of sheet iron were loosely fitted to the
+flues, more as a protection against the oil boiling over into the fire than
+to carry away the smoke, of which from the peculiar nature of the
+fuel there was very little. At one side of the try-works was a large
+wooden vessel, or "hopper," to contain the raw blubber; at the other,
+a copper cistern or cooler of about three hundred gallons capacity, into
+which the prepared oil was baled to cool off, preliminary to its being
+poured into the casks. Beneath the furnaces was a space as large as
+the whole area of the try-works, about a foot deep, which, when the
+fires were lighted, was filled with water to prevent the deck from
+burning.</p>
+
+<p>It may be imagined that the blubber from our twenty porpoises
+made but a poor show in one of the pots; nevertheless, we got a barrel
+of very excellent oil from them. The fires were fed with "scrap," or
+pieces of blubber from which the oil had been boiled, some of which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_824" id="Page_824">[Pg 824]</a></span>
+had been reserved from the previous voyage. They burned with a
+fierce and steady blaze, leaving but a trace of ash. I was then informed
+by one of the harpooners that no other fuel was ever used for
+boiling blubber at any time, there being always amply sufficient for
+the purpose.</p>
+
+<p>We were now in the haunts of the sperm whale, or "cachalot,"
+a brilliant lookout being continually kept for any signs of their appearing.
+One officer and a foremast hand were continually on watch
+during the day in the main crow's-nest, one harpooner and a seaman in
+the fore one. A bounty of ten pounds of tobacco was offered to whoever
+should first report a whale, should it be secured; consequently
+there were no sleepy eyes up there.</p>
+
+<p>At last, one beautiful day, the boats were lowered and manned,
+and away went the greenies on their first practical lesson in the business
+of the voyage. There were two greenies in each boat, they being
+so arranged that whenever one of them "caught a crab," which of
+course was about every other stroke, his failure made little difference
+to the boat's progress. They learned very fast under the terrible imprecations
+and storm of blows from the iron-fisted and iron-hearted
+officers, so that before the day was out the skipper was satisfied of our
+ability to deal with a "fish" should he be lucky enough to "raise"
+one. I was, in virtue of my experience, placed at the after oar in the
+mate's boat, where it was my duty to attend to the "main sheet" when
+the sail was set, where also I had the benefit of the lightest oar except
+the small one used by the harpooner in the bow.</p>
+
+<p>The very next day after our first exhaustive boat drill, a school
+of "blackfish" was reported from aloft, and with great glee the
+officers prepared for what they considered a rattling day's fun.</p>
+
+<p>The blackfish (<i>Phoc&aelig;na sp.</i>) is a small toothed whale, not at all
+unlike a miniature cachalot, except that its head is rounded at the
+front, while its jaw is not long and straight, but bowed. It is as
+frolicsome as the porpoise, gamboling about in schools of from twenty
+to fifty or more, as if really delighted to be alive. Its average size
+is from ten to twenty feet long and seven or eight feet in girth; weight,
+from one to three tons. Blubber about three inches thick, while the
+head is almost all oil, so that a good rich specimen will make between
+one and two barrels of oil of medium quality.</p>
+
+<p>We lowered and left the ship, pulling right toward the school, the
+noise they were making in their fun effectually preventing them from
+hearing our approach. It is etiquette to allow the mate's boat first
+place, unless his crew is so weak as to be unable to hold their own;
+but as the mate always has first pick of the men this seldom happens.
+So, as usual, we were first, and soon I heard the order given, "Stand
+up, Louey, and let 'em have it!" Sure enough, here we were right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_825" id="Page_825">[Pg 825]</a></span>
+among them. Louis let drive, "fastening" a whopper about twenty
+feet long. The injured animal plunged madly forward, accompanied
+by his fellows, while Louis calmly bent another iron to a "short warp,"
+or piece of whale line, the loose end of which he made a bowline with
+round the main line which was fast to the "fish." Then he fastened
+another "fish," and the queer sight was seen of these two monsters
+each trying to flee in opposite directions, while the second one ranged
+about alarmingly as his "bridle" ran along the main line. Another
+one was secured in the same way, then the game was indeed great.
+The school had by this time taken the alarm and cleared out, but the
+other boats were all fast to fish, so that didn't matter. Now, at the
+rate our "game" were going, it would evidently be a long while before
+they died, although, being so much smaller than a whale proper,
+a harpoon will often kill them at a stroke. Yet they were now so
+tangled or "snarled erp," as the mate said, that it was no easy matter
+to lance them without great danger of cutting the line. However,
+we hauled up as close to them as we dared, and the harpooner got a
+good blow in, which gave the biggest of the three "Jesse," as he
+said, though why "Jesse" was a stumper. Anyhow, it killed him
+promptly, while almost directly after another one saved further trouble
+by passing in his own checks. But he sank at the same time, drawing
+the first one down with him, so that we were in considerable danger of
+having to cut them adrift or be swamped. The "wheft" was waved
+thrice as an urgent signal to the ship to come to our assistance with
+all speed, but in the meantime our interest lay in the surviving blackfish
+keeping alive. Should <i>he</i> die and, as was most probable, sink,
+we should certainly have to cut and loose the lot, tools included.</p>
+
+<p>We waited in grim silence while the ship came up, so slowly,
+apparently, that she hardly seemed to move, but really at a good pace
+of about four knots an hour, which for her was not at all bad. She
+got alongside of us at last, and we passed up the bight of our line, our
+fish all safe, very much pleased with ourselves, especially when we
+found that the other boats had only five between the three of them.</p>
+
+<p>Chain slings were passed around the carcasses, the end of the "fall,"
+or tackle rope, was taken to the windlass, and we hove away cheerily,
+lifting the monsters right on deck. A mountainous pile they made.
+After dinner all hands turned to again to "flench" the blubber and
+prepare for trying out. This was a heavy job, keeping us busy until
+it was quite dark, the latter part of the work being carried on by the
+light of a "cresset," the flames of which were fed with "scrap," which
+blazed brilliantly, throwing a big glare over all the ship. The last of
+the carcasses was launched overboard by about eight o'clock that evening,
+but not before some vast junks of beef had been cut off and hung
+up in the rigging for our food supply.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_826" id="Page_826">[Pg 826]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Trying out" went on busily all night, and by nightfall of the
+next day the ship had resumed her normal appearance, and we were a
+tun and a quarter of oil to the good. Blackfish oil is of medium
+quality, but I learned that, according to the rule of "roguery in all
+trades," it was the custom to mix quantities such as we had just obtained
+with better class whale oil, and thus get a much higher price
+than it was really worth.</p>
+
+<p>We had now been eight days out, having had nothing, so far, but
+steady breezes and fine weather. As it was late autumn&mdash;the first
+week in October&mdash;I rather wondered at this, for even in my brief experience
+I had learned to dread a "fall" voyage across the "Western
+Ocean."</p>
+
+<p>Gradually the face of the sky changed, and the feel of the air, from
+balmy and genial, became raw and cheerless. The little wave tops
+broke short off and blew backward, apparently against the wind, while
+the old vessel had an uneasy, unnatural motion, caused by a long, new
+swell rolling athwart the existing set of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>We were evidently in for a fair specimen of Western Ocean
+weather, but the clumsy-looking, old-fashioned Cachalot made no
+more fuss over it than one of the long-winged sea birds that floated
+around, intent only upon snapping up any stray scraps that might
+escape from us. Higher rose the wind, heavier rolled the sea, yet
+never a drop of water did we ship, nor did anything about the deck
+betoken what a heavy gale was blowing. During the worst of the
+weather, and just after the wind had shifted back into the northeast,
+making an uglier cross sea than ever get up, along comes an immense
+four-masted iron ship homeward bound. She was staggering under a
+veritable mountain of canvas, fairly burying her bows in the foam at
+every forward drive, and actually wetting the clews of the upper topsails
+in the smothering masses of spray, that every few minutes almost
+hid her hull from sight.</p>
+
+<p>It was a splendid picture; but&mdash;for the time&mdash;I felt glad I was not
+on board of her. In a very few minutes she was out of our ken, followed
+by the admiration of all. Then came, from the other direction,
+a huge steamship, taking no more notice of the gale than as if it were
+calm. Straight through the sea she rushed, dividing the mighty rollers
+to the heart, and often bestriding three seas at once, the center
+one spreading its many tons of foaming water fore and aft, so that from
+every orifice spouted the seething brine. Compared with these greyhounds
+of the wave, we resembled nothing so much as some old lightship
+bobbing serenely around, as if part and parcel of the mid-Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>The gale gradually blew itself out, leaving behind only a long
+and very heavy swell to denote the deep-reaching disturbance that the
+ocean had endured. And now we were within the range of the sargasso<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_827" id="Page_827">[Pg 827]</a></span>
+weed, that mysterious <i>fucus</i> that makes the ocean look like some vast
+hayfield, and keeps the sea from rising, no matter how high the wind.
+It fell a dead calm, and the harpooners amused themselves by dredging
+up great masses of the weed, and turning out the many strange creatures
+abiding therein.</p>
+
+<p>We were all gathered about the fo'lk'sle scuttle one evening,
+a few days after the gale referred to above, and the question of
+whale-fishing came up for discussion. Until that time, strange as
+it may seem, no word of this, the central idea of all our minds, had
+been mooted. Every man seemed to shun the subject, although we
+were in daily expectation of being called upon to take an active part in
+whale-fighting. Once the ice was broken, nearly all had something
+to say about it, and very nearly as many addle-headed opinions were
+ventilated as at a Colney Hatch debating society. For we none of us
+<i>knew</i> anything about it. It was Saturday evening, and while at
+home people were looking forward to a day's respite from work and
+care, I felt that the coming day, though never taken much notice of
+on board, was big with the probabilities of strife such as I at least
+had at present no idea of&mdash;so firmly was I possessed by the prevailing
+feeling.</p>
+
+<p>The night was very quiet. A gentle breeze was blowing, and the
+sky was of the usual "trade" character&mdash;that is, a dome of dark blue
+fringed at the horizon with peaceful cumulus clouds, almost motionless.
+I turned in at 4 <span class="smcap lowercase">A. M.</span> from the middle watch and, as usual,
+slept like a babe. Suddenly I started wide awake, a long, mournful
+sound sending a thrill to my very heart. As I listened breathlessly,
+other sounds of the same character but in different tones joined in,
+human voices monotonously intoning in long-drawn-out expirations
+the single word "bl-o-o-o-ow." Then came a hurricane of noise overhead,
+and adjurations in no gentle language to the sleepers to "tumble
+up lively there, no skulking, sperm whales." At last, then, fulfilling
+all the presentiments of yesterday, the long-dreaded moment had
+arrived. Happily, there was no time for hesitation; in less than two
+minutes we were all on deck, and hurrying to our respective boats.
+The skipper was in the main crow's-nest with his binoculars. Presently
+he shouted: "Naow then, Mr. Count, lower away soon's y'like.
+Small pod o' cows, an' one 'r two bulls layin' off to west'ard of 'em."
+Down went the boats into the water quietly enough; we all scrambled
+in and shoved off. A stroke or two of the oars were given to get
+clear of the ship and one another, then oars were shipped and up went
+the sails. As I took my allotted place at the main-sheet, and the beautiful
+craft started off like some big bird, Mr. Count leaned forward,
+saying impressively to me: "Y'r a smart youngster, an' I've kinder
+took t'yer; but don't ye look ahead an' get gallied, 'r I'll knock ye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_828" id="Page_828">[Pg 828]</a></span>
+stiff wi' th' tiller; y'hear me? N' don't ye dare to make thet sheet
+fast, 'r ye'll die so sudden y' won't know whar y'r hurted." I said
+as cheerfully as I could, "All right, sir," trying to look unconcerned,
+telling myself not to be a coward, and all sorts of things; but the cold
+truth is that I was scared almost to death, because I didn't know what
+was coming. However, I did the best thing under the circumstances,
+obeyed orders and looked steadily astern, or up into the bronzed impassive
+face of my chief, who towered above me, scanning with eagle
+eyes the sea ahead. The other boats were coming flying along behind
+us, spreading wider apart as they came, while in the bows of each
+stood the harpooner with his right hand on his first iron, which lay
+ready, pointing over the bow in a raised fork of wood called the
+"crutch."</p>
+
+<p>All of a sudden, at a motion of the chief's hand, the peak of our
+mainsail was dropped, and the boat swung up into the wind, laying
+"hove to," almost stationary. The centerboard was lowered to stop
+her drifting to leeward, although I can not say it made much difference
+that ever I saw. <i>Now</i>, what's the matter? I thought, when to
+my amazement the chief addressing me said, "Wonder why we've
+hauled up, don't ye?" "Yes, sir, I do," said I. "Wall," said he,
+"the fish hev sounded, an' 'ef we run over 'em, we've seen the last ov
+'em. So we wait awhile till they rise agin, 'n then we'll prob'ly git
+thar' 'r thareabouts before they sound agin." With this explanation I
+had to be content, although if it be no clearer to my readers than it
+then was to me, I shall have to explain myself more fully later on.
+Silently we lay, rocking lazily upon the gentle swell, no other word
+being spoken by any one. At last Louis, the harpooner, gently
+breathed "Blo-o-o-w"; and there, sure enough, not half a mile away
+on the lee beam, was a little bushy cloud of steam apparently rising
+from the sea. At almost the same time as we kept away all the other
+boats did likewise, and just then, catching sight of the ship, the
+reason for this apparently concerted action was explained. At the
+mainmast head of the ship was a square blue flag, and the ensign at
+the peak was being dipped. These were signals well understood and
+promptly acted upon by those in charge of the boats, who were thus
+guided from a point of view at least one hundred feet above the sea.</p>
+
+<p>"Stand up, Louey," the mate murmured softly. I only just
+stopped myself in time from turning my head to see why the order
+was given. Suddenly there was a bump, at the same moment the
+mate yelled, "Give't to him, Louey, give't to him!" and to me, "Haul
+that main sheet, naow haul, why don't ye?" I hauled it flat aft, and
+the boat shot up into the wind, rubbing sides as she did so with what
+to my troubled sight seemed an enormous mass of black India rubber
+floating. As we <i>crawled</i> up into the wind, the whale went into convulsions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_829" id="Page_829">[Pg 829]</a></span>
+befitting his size and energy. He raised a gigantic tail on
+high, thrashing the water with deafening blows, rolling at the same
+time from side to side until the surrounding sea was white with froth.
+I felt in an agony lest we should be crushed under one of those fearful
+strokes, for Mr. Count appeared to be oblivious of possible danger,
+although we seemed to be now drifting back on to the writhing leviathan.
+In the agitated condition of the sea it was a task of no ordinary
+difficulty to unship the tall mast, which was of course the first thing
+to be done. After a desperate struggle, and a narrow escape from
+falling overboard of one of the men, we got the long "stick," with the
+sail bundled around it, down and "fleeted" aft, where it was secured
+by the simple means of sticking the "heel" under the after thwart,
+two thirds of the mast extending out over the stern. Meanwhile, we
+had certainly been in a position of the greatest danger, our immunity
+from damage being unquestionably due to anything but precaution
+taken to avoid it.</p>
+
+<p>By the time the oars were handled, and the mate had exchanged
+places with the harpooner, our friend the enemy had "sounded"&mdash;that
+is, he had gone below for a change of scene, marveling, no doubt,
+what strange thing had befallen him. Agreeably to the accounts
+which I, like most boys, had read of the whale-fishery, I looked for
+the rushing of the line round the loggerhead (a stout wooden post
+built into the boat aft), to raise a cloud of smoke with occasional bursts
+of flame; so, as it began to slowly surge round the post, I timidly asked
+the harpooner whether I should throw any water on it. "Wot for?"
+growled he, as he took a couple more turns with it. Not knowing
+"what for," and hardly liking to quote my authorities here, I said no
+more, but waited events. "Hold him up, Louey, hold him up, cain't
+ye?" shouted the mate, and to my horror, down went the nose of
+the boat almost under water, while at the mate's order everybody
+scrambled aft into the elevated stern sheets.</p>
+
+<p>The line sang quite a tune as it was grudgingly allowed to surge
+round the loggerhead, filling one with admiration at the strength
+shown by such a small rope. This sort of thing went on for about
+twenty minutes, in which time we quite emptied the large tub and
+began on the small one.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly our boat fell backward from her "slantindicular" position
+with a jerk, and the mate immediately shouted, "Haul line, there!
+look lively, now! you&mdash;so on, etcetera, etcetera" (he seemed to invent
+new epithets on every occasion). The line came in hand over hand,
+and was coiled in a wide heap in the stern sheets, for, silky as it was, it
+could not be expected in its wet state to lie very close. As it came
+flying in, the mate kept a close gaze upon the water immediately beneath
+us, apparently for the first glimpse of our antagonist. When<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_830" id="Page_830">[Pg 830]</a></span>
+the whale broke water, however, he was some distance off, and apparently
+as quiet as a lamb. Now, had Mr. Count been a prudent or less
+ambitious man, our task would doubtless have been an easy one, or
+comparatively so; but, being a little over-grasping, he got us all into
+serious trouble. We were hauling up to our whale in order to lance
+it, and the mate was standing, lance in hand, only waiting to get
+near enough, when up comes a large whale right alongside of our boat,
+so close, indeed, that I might have poked my finger in his little eye,
+if I had chosen. The sight of that whale at liberty, and calmly taking
+stock of us like that, was too much for the mate. He lifted his
+lance and hurled it at the visitor, in whose broad flank it sank, like
+a knife into butter, right up to the pole-hitches. The recipient disappeared
+like a flash, but before one had time to think, there was an
+awful crash beneath us, and the mate shot up into the air like a bomb
+from a mortar. He came down in a sitting posture on the mast
+thwart; but as he fell, the whole framework of the boat collapsed like
+a derelict umbrella. Louis quietly chopped the line and severed our
+connection with the other whale, while in accordance with our instructions
+we drew each man his oar across the boat and lashed it firmly
+down with a piece of line spliced to each thwart for the purpose. This
+simple operation took but a minute, but before it was completed we
+were all up to our necks in the sea&mdash;still in the boat, it is true, and
+therefore not in such danger of drowning as if we were quite adrift;
+but, considering that the boat was reduced to a mere bundle of loose
+planks, I, at any rate, was none too comfortable. Now, had he known
+it, was the whale's golden opportunity; but he, poor wretch, had had
+quite enough of our company, and cleared off without any delay, wondering,
+no doubt, what fortunate accident had rid him of our very
+unpleasant attentions.</p>
+
+<p>I was assured that we were all as safe as if we were on board the
+ship, to which I answered nothing; but, like Jack's parrot, I did some
+powerful thinking. Every little wave that came along swept clean
+over our heads, sometimes coming so suddenly as to cut a breath in
+half. If the wind should increase&mdash;but no&mdash;I wouldn't face the
+possibility of such a disagreeable thing. I was cool enough now in
+a double sense, for, although we were in the tropics, we soon got thoroughly
+chilled.</p>
+
+<p>Help came at last, and we were hauled alongside. Long exposure
+had weakened us to such an extent that it was necessary to hoist us on
+board, especially the mate, whose "sudden stop," when he returned to
+us after his little a&euml;rial excursion, had shaken his sturdy frame considerably,
+a state of body which the subsequent soaking had by no
+means improved. In my innocence I imagined that we should be
+commiserated for our misfortunes by Captain Slocum, and certainly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_831" id="Page_831">[Pg 831]</a></span>
+be relieved from further duties until we were a little recovered from
+the rough treatment we had just undergone. But I never made a
+greater mistake. The skipper cursed us all (except the mate, whose
+sole fault the accident undoubtedly was) with a fluency and vigor
+that was, to put it mildly, discouraging.</p>
+
+<p>A couple of slings were passed around the boat, by means of which
+she was carefully hoisted on board, a mere dilapidated bundle of sticks
+and raffle of gear. She was at once removed aft out of the way, the business
+of cutting in the whale claiming precedence over everything else
+just then. The preliminary proceedings consisted of rigging the "cutting
+stage." This was composed of two stout planks a foot wide and ten
+feet long, the inner ends of which were suspended by strong ropes over
+the ship's side about four feet from the water, while the outer extremities
+were upheld by tackles from the main rigging, and a small
+crane abreast the try-works.</p>
+
+<p>These planks were about thirty feet apart, their two outer ends
+being connected by a massive plank which was securely bolted to
+them. A handrail about as high as a man's waist, supported by light
+iron stanchions, ran the full length of this plank on the side nearest
+the ship, the whole fabric forming an admirable standing place
+whence the officers might, standing in comparative comfort, cut and
+carve at the great mass below to their hearts' content.</p>
+
+<p>So far the prize had been simply held alongside by the whale line,
+which at death had been "rove" through a hole cut in the solid gristle
+of the tail; but now it became necessary to secure the carcass to the
+ship in some more permanent fashion. Therefore, a massive chain
+like a small ship's cable was brought forward, and in a very ingenious
+way, by means of a tiny buoy and a hand lead, passed round the body,
+one end brought through a ring in the other, and hauled upon until
+it fitted tight round the "small" or part of the whale next the broad
+spread of the tail. The free end of the fluke chain was then passed
+in through a mooring pipe forward, firmly secured to a massive bitt
+at the heel of the bowsprit (the fluke-chain bitt), and all was ready.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing to be done was to cut the whale's head off. This
+operation, involving the greatest amount of labor in the whole of the
+cutting in, was taken in hand by the first and second mates, who,
+armed with twelve-foot spades, took their station upon the stage,
+leaned over the handrail to steady themselves, and plunged their
+weapons vigorously down through the massive neck of the animal&mdash;if
+neck it could be said to have&mdash;following a well-defined crease in the
+blubber. At the same time the other officers passed a heavy chain
+sling around the long, narrow lower jaw, hooking one of the big cutting
+tackles into it, the "fall" of which was then taken to the windlass
+and hove tight, turning the whale on her back. A deep cut was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_832" id="Page_832">[Pg 832]</a></span>
+then made on both sides of the rising jaw, the windlass was kept going,
+and gradually the whole of the throat was raised high enough for a
+hole to be cut through its mass, into which the strap of the second cutting
+tackle was inserted and secured by passing a huge toggle of oak
+through its eye. The second tackle was then hove taut, and the jaw,
+with a large piece of blubber attached, was cut off from the body with
+a boarding knife, a tool not unlike a cutlass blade set into a three-foot-long
+wooden handle.</p>
+
+<p>Upon being severed the whole piece swung easily inboard and was
+lowered on deck. The fast tackle was now hove upon while the third
+mate on the stage cut down diagonally into the blubber on the body,
+which the purchase ripped off in a broad strip or "blanket" about
+five feet wide and a foot thick. Meanwhile the other two officers
+carved away vigorously at the head, varying their labors by cutting
+a hole right through the snout. This, when completed, received a
+heavy chain for the purpose of securing the head. When the blubber
+had been about half stripped off the body, a halt was called in order
+that the work of cutting off the head might be finished, for it was a
+task of incredible difficulty. It was accomplished at last, and the
+mass floated astern by a stout rope, after which the windlass pawls
+clattered merrily, the "blankets" rose in quick succession, and were
+cut off and lowered into the square of the main hatch or "blubber
+room." A short time sufficed to strip off the whole of the body
+blubber, and when at last the tail was reached, the backbone was cut
+through, the huge mass of flesh floating away to feed the innumerable
+scavengers of the sea. No sooner was the last of the blubber lowered
+into the hold than the hatches were put on and the head hauled up
+alongside. Both tackles were secured to it and all hands took to the
+windlass levers. This was a small cow whale of about thirty barrels&mdash;that
+is, yielding that amount of oil&mdash;so it was just possible to lift the
+entire head on board; but as it weighed as much as three full-grown
+elephants, it was indeed a heavy lift for even our united forces, trying
+our tackle to the utmost. The weather was very fine, and the ship
+rolled but little; even then, the strain upon the mast was terrific, and
+right glad was I when at last the immense cube of fat, flesh, and bone
+was eased inboard and gently lowered on deck.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as it was secured the work of dividing it began. From
+the snout a triangular mass was cut, which was more than half pure
+spermaceti. This substance was contained in spongy cells held together
+by layers of dense white fiber, exceedingly tough and elastic,
+and called by the whalers "white horse." The whole mass, or
+"junk," as it is called, was hauled away to the ship's side and firmly
+lashed to the bulwarks for the time being, so that it might not "take
+charge" of the deck during the rest of the operations.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_833" id="Page_833">[Pg 833]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The upper part of the head was now slit open lengthwise, disclosing
+an oblong cistern or "case" full of liquid spermaceti, clear as water.
+This was baled out with buckets into a tank, concreting as it cooled
+into a waxlike substance, bland and tasteless. There being now nothing
+more remaining about the skull of any value, the lashings were
+loosed, and the first leeward roll sent the great mass plunging overboard
+with a mighty splash. It sank like a stone, eagerly followed by
+a few small sharks that were hovering near.</p>
+
+<p>As may be imagined, much oil was running about the deck, for
+so saturated was every part of the creature with it that it really gushed
+like water during the cutting-up process. None of it was allowed to
+run to waste, though, for the scupper holes which drain the deck were
+all carefully plugged, and as soon as the "junk" had been dissected all
+the oil was carefully "squeegeed" up and poured into the try-pots.</p>
+
+<p>Two men were now told off as "blubber-room men," whose duty it
+became to go below and, squeezing themselves in as best they could
+between the greasy mass of fat, cut it up into "horse-pieces" about
+eighteen inches long and six inches square. Doing this, they became
+perfectly saturated with oil, as if they had taken a bath in a tank of it;
+for as the vessel rolled it was impossible to maintain a footing, and
+every fall was upon blubber running with oil. A machine of wonderful
+construction had been erected on deck in a kind of shallow trough
+about six feet long by four feet wide and a foot deep. At some remote
+period of time it had no doubt been looked upon as a triumph of
+ingenuity, a patent mincing machine. Its action was somewhat like
+that of a chaff-cutter, except that the knife was not attached to the
+wheel, and only rose and fell, since it was not required to cut right
+through the "horse-pieces" with which it was fed. It will be readily
+understood that, in order to get the oil quickly out of the blubber, it
+needs to be sliced as thin as possible, but for convenience in handling
+the refuse (which is the only fuel used) it is not chopped up in small
+pieces, but every "horse-piece" is very deeply scored as it were, leaving
+a thin strip to hold the slices together. This, then, was the order
+of work: Two harpooners attended the try-pots, replenishing them
+with minced blubber from the hopper at the port side, and baling out
+the sufficiently boiled oil into the great cooling tank on the starboard.
+One officer superintended the mincing, another exercised a
+general supervision over all. So we toiled watch and watch, six hours
+on and six off, the work never ceasing for an instant night or day.
+Though the work was hard and dirty, and the discomfort of being so
+continually wet through with oil great, there was only one thing dangerous
+about the whole business. That was the job of filling and
+shifting the huge casks of oil. Some of these were of enormous size,
+containing three hundred and fifty gallons when full, and the work<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_834" id="Page_834">[Pg 834]</a></span>
+of moving them about the greasy deck of a rolling ship was attended
+with a terrible amount of risk. For only four men at most could get
+fair hold of a cask, and when she took it into her silly old hull to
+start rolling, just as we had got one halfway across the deck, with
+nothing to grip your feet, and the knowledge that one stumbling man
+would mean a sudden slide of the ton and a half weight, and a little
+heap of mangled corpses somewhere in the lee scuppers&mdash;well, one
+always wanted to be very thankful when the lashings were safely
+passed.</p>
+
+<p>The whale being a small one, as before noted, the whole business
+was over within three days, and the decks scrubbed and rescrubbed
+until they had quite regained their normal whiteness. The oil was
+poured by means of a funnel and long canvas hose into the casks
+stowed in the ground tier at the bottom of the ship, and the gear, all
+carefully cleaned and neatly "stopped up," stowed snugly away below
+again.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>SKETCH OF MANLY MILES.</h2>
+
+
+<p>To Dr. Manly Miles belongs the distinction of having been the
+first professor of practical agriculture in the United States, as
+he was appointed to that then newly instituted position in the Michigan
+Agricultural College in 1865.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Miles was born in Homer, Cortland County, New
+York, July 20, 1826, the son of Manly Miles, a soldier of the Revolution;
+while his mother, Mary Cushman, was a lineal descendant of
+Miles Standish and Thomas Cushman, whose father, Joshua Cushman,
+joining the Mayflower colony at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in
+1621, left him there with Governor Bradford when he returned to
+England.</p>
+
+<p>When Manly, the son, was eleven years old, the family removed
+to Flint, Michigan, where he employed his time in farm work
+and the acquisition of knowledge, and later in teaching. He had
+a common-school education, and improved all the time he could spare
+from his regular occupations in reading and study. It is recorded of
+him in those days that he was always successful in whatever he undertook.
+In illustration of the skill and thoroughness with which he
+performed his tasks, his sister relates an incident of his sowing plaster
+for the first time, when his father expressed pleasure at his having
+distributed the lime so evenly and so well. It appears that he did
+not spare himself in doing the work, for so completely was he
+covered that he is said to have looked like a plaster cast, "with only
+his bright eyes shining through." A thrashing machine was brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_835" id="Page_835">[Pg 835]</a></span>
+on to the farm, and Manly and his brother went round thrashing for
+the neighbors. Industrious in study as well as in work, the boy
+never neglected his more prosaic duties to gratify his thirst for knowledge.
+He studied geometry while following the plow, drawing the
+problems on a shingle, which he tacked to the plow-beam. Whenever
+he was missed and inquiry was made about him, the answer invariably
+was, "Somewhere with a book." He was most interested
+in the natural sciences, particularly in chemistry in its applications
+to agriculture, and in comparative physiology and anatomy, and was
+a diligent student and collector of mollusks.</p>
+
+<p>Choosing the profession of medicine, Mr. Miles was graduated
+M. D. from Rush Medical College, Chicago, in 1850, and practiced
+till 1859. In the meantime he became greatly interested in the subject
+of a geographical survey of the State, for which an act was
+passed and approved in 1858. In the organization of the survey,
+in 1859, he was appointed Assistant State Geologist in the department
+of zo&ouml;logy; and in the next year was appointed professor of
+zo&ouml;logy and animal physiology in the State Agricultural College
+at Lansing.</p>
+
+<p>In his work as zo&ouml;logist to the State Geological Survey, in 1859,
+1860, and 1861, he displayed rare qualities as a naturalist, so that
+Mr. Walter R. Barrows, in recording his death in the bulletin of
+the Michigan Ornithological Club, expresses regret that many of
+the years he afterward devoted to the development of experimental
+agriculture "were not spent in unraveling some of the important
+biological problems which the State afforded, which his skill and
+perseverance would surely have solved." He was a "born collector,"
+Mr. Barrows adds, "as the phrase is, and his keen eyes,
+tireless industry, and mathematical precision led to the accumulation
+of thousands of valuable specimens and more valuable observations."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bryant Walker, of Detroit, who knew Professor Miles well in
+later years, and had opportunity to review his zo&ouml;logical work, regards
+the part he took during this service in developing the knowledge
+of the fauna of the State as having been very prominent.
+"The catalogues he published in the report for 1860 have
+been the basis for all work since that time." He kept in correspondence
+with the most eminent American naturalists of the period, including
+Cope, Prime, Lea, W. G. Binney, Baird, and Agassiz, and
+supplied them with large quantities of valuable material. From the
+many letters written by these naturalists which are in the possession
+of his friends, we take, as illustrating the character of the service
+he rendered and of the trust they reposed in him, even previous to his
+going on the survey, one from Agassiz, of February 4, 1856:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_836" id="Page_836">[Pg 836]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>: As you have already furnished me with invaluable
+materials for the natural history of the fishes of your State, I am
+emboldened to ask another favor of you. I am preparing a map of
+the Geographical Distribution of the Turtles of North America, and
+would be greatly indebted to you for any information respecting the
+range of those found in your State, as far as you have noticed them,
+even if you should know them only by their common names, my
+object being simply to ascertain how far they extend over different
+parts of the country. If you could add specimens of them, to identify
+them with precision, it would be, of course, so much the better;
+but as I am almost ready for the press, I could not for this paper
+await the return of spring, but would thank you for what you could
+furnish me now. I am particularly interested in ascertaining how
+far north the different species inhabiting this continent extend." On
+the back of this letter was Dr. Miles's indorsement that a box had
+been sent.</p>
+
+<p>A number of letters from Professor Baird, of 1860 and 1861,
+relate to the identification of specimens collected by Dr. Miles, and
+to the fishes of Michigan, and contain inquiries about gulls and eggs.
+Dr. Miles likewise supplied Cope with a considerable amount of material
+concerning Michigan reptiles and fishes.</p>
+
+<p>While mollusks were the favorite object of Dr. Miles's investigations,
+he also made studies and valuable collections of birds, mammals,
+reptiles, and fishes; and he seems, Mr. Barrows says, "to have
+possessed, in a high degree, that strong characteristic of a true
+naturalist, a full appreciation of the value of good specimens.
+Many of his specimens are now preserved at the Agricultural
+College, and among his shells are many which are of more than
+ordinary value from having served as types of new species, or as
+specimens from type localities, or as part or all of the material
+which has helped to clear up mistakes and misconceptions about
+species and their distribution." Mr. Walker speaks of his having
+done a great work in conchology. His catalogue, which contained
+a list of one hundred and sixty-one species, was by far the most
+complete published up to that time. "He described two new
+species&mdash;<i>Planorbis truncatus</i> and <i>Unio leprosus</i>. The former is one
+of the few species which are, so far as known, peculiar to Michigan, and
+is a very beautiful and distinct form; while the latter, although now
+considered as synonymous with another species, has peculiarities
+which in the then slight knowledge of the variability of the species
+was a justification of his position. He was also the discoverer of two
+other forms which were named after him by one of our most eminent
+conchologists&mdash;viz., <i>Campeloma Milesii</i> (Lea) and <i>Guiobasis Milesii</i>
+(Lea)." Mr. Walker believes that "in general, it can be truthfully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_837" id="Page_837">[Pg 837]</a></span>
+stated that Dr. Miles did more to develop the general natural
+history of that State (Michigan) than any other man either before or
+since he completed his work as State Geologist."</p>
+
+<p>As professor of zo&ouml;logy and animal physiology, Dr. Miles is described
+by one of his students, who afterward became a professor in
+the college and then its president, as having been thoroughly interested
+in the subjects he taught, and shown that interest in his work
+and in his treatment of his students. He labored as faithfully and
+industriously with the class of five to which President Clute belonged
+as if it "had numbered as many score." He supplemented the
+meager equipment of his department from his more extensive private
+apparatus and collections, which were freely used for class work;
+and, when there was need, he had the skill to prepare new pieces of
+apparatus. "He was on the alert for every chance for illustration
+which occasion offered: an animal slaughtered for the tables gave
+him an opportunity to lecture on its viscera; a walk over the drift-covered
+fields found many specimens of rock which he taught us to
+distinguish; the mud and the sand banks along the river showed how
+in the periods of the dim past were formed fossil footprints and
+ripples; the woods and swamps and lakes gave many useful living
+specimens, some of which became the material for the improvised dissecting
+room; the crayon in his hand produced on board or paper
+the chart of geologic ages, the table of classification, or the drawing
+of the part of an animal under discussion."</p>
+
+<p>Prof. R. C. Kedzie came to the college a little later, in 1863, when
+Dr. Miles had been for two years a professor, and found him then
+the authority "for professors and students alike on beasts, birds, and
+reptiles, on the stones of the field, and insects of the air," thorough,
+scholarly, and enthusiastic, and therefore very popular with his
+classes.</p>
+
+<p>The projection of agricultural colleges under the Agricultural
+College Land Grant Act of 1862 stimulated a demand for teachers
+of scientific agriculture, and it was found that they were rare. Of
+old school students of science there was no lack&mdash;able men, as President
+Clute well says, who were familiar with their little laboratories
+and with the old theories and methods, but who did not possess the
+new vision of evolution and the conservation of energy, men of
+the study rather than the field, and least of all men of the orchard
+and stock farm; and they knew nothing of the practical application
+of chemistry to fertilization and the raising of crops and the composition
+of feed stuffs, of physiology to stock-breeding, and of geology and
+physics to the study of the soils.</p>
+
+<p>With a thorough knowledge of science and familiarity with practical
+agriculture Professor Miles had an inclination to enter this field,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_838" id="Page_838">[Pg 838]</a></span>
+and this inclination was encouraged by President Abbott and some of
+the members of the Board of Agriculture. He had filled the professorship
+of zo&ouml;logy and animal physiology with complete success, and
+had he consulted his most cherished tastes alone he would have
+remained there, but he gradually suffered himself to be called to
+another field. The duties of "acting superintendent of the farm"
+were attached to his chair in 1864. In 1865 he became professor
+of animal physiology and practical agriculture and superintendent
+of the farm; in 1869 he ceased to teach physiology, and gave his
+whole time to the agricultural branch of his work; and in 1875 the
+work of the superintendent of the farm was consigned to other hands,
+and he confined himself to the professorship proper of practical agriculture.</p>
+
+<p>The farm and its appurtenances, with fields cumbered with
+stumps and undrained, with inadequate and poorly constructed buildings,
+with inferior live stock, and everything primitive, were in poor
+condition for the teaching or the successful practice of agriculture.
+Professor Miles's first business was to set these things in order. Year
+by year something was done to remove evils or improve existing features
+in some of the departments of the life and management of the
+premises, till the concern in a certain measure approached the superintendent's
+ideal&mdash;as being a laboratory for teaching agriculture, conducting
+experiments, and training men, rather than a money-making
+establishment.</p>
+
+<p>In this new field, Professor Kedzie says, Professor Miles was even
+more popular than before with students, and created an enthusiasm
+for operations and labors of the farm which had been regarded
+before as a disagreeable drudgery. The students "were never happier
+than when detailed for a day's work with Dr. Miles in laying
+out some difficult ditch or surveying some field. One reason why he
+was so popular was that he was not afraid of soiling his hands. His
+favorite uniform for field work was a pair of brown overalls. The
+late Judge Tenney came to a gang of students at work on a troublesome
+ditch and inquired where he could find Dr. Miles. 'That man
+in overalls down in the quicksands of the ditch is Dr. Miles'; the
+professor of practical agriculture was in touch with the soil."</p>
+
+<p>Prof. Byron D. Halsted, of the New Jersey Agricultural College
+Experiment Station, who was an agricultural pupil of Dr. Miles in
+Lansing, characterizes him as having been a full man who knew his
+subjects deeply and fondly. "In those days I am safe in writing
+that he represented the forefront of advanced agriculture in America.
+He was in close touch with such men as Lawes and Gilbert, Rothamstead,
+England, the famous field-crop experimenters of the world, and
+as for his knowledge of breeds of live stock and their origin, Miles's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_839" id="Page_839">[Pg 839]</a></span>
+Stock-Breeding is a classic work. Dr. Miles, in short, was a close
+student, a born investigator, hating an error, but using it as a stepping-stone
+toward truth. He did American farming a lasting service, and
+his deeds live after him."</p>
+
+<p>While loved by his students, most of whom have been successful
+and many have gained eminence as agricultural professors or workers
+in experiment stations, and while receiving sympathy and support
+from President Abbott, Dr. Miles was not appreciated by the
+politicians, or by all of the Board of Agriculture, or even by the
+public at large. Unkind and captious criticisms were made of his
+work, and it was found fault with on economical grounds, as if its
+prime purpose had been to make money. He therefore resigned his
+position in 1875, and accepted the professorship of agriculture in
+the Illinois State University. Thence he removed to the Houghton
+Farm of Lawson Valentine, near Mountainville, N. Y., where he
+occupied himself with scientific experimental investigation. He was
+afterward professor of agriculture in the Massachusetts Agricultural
+College, at Amherst. In announcing this appointment to the
+students, Dr. Chadbourne, then president of the institution, and himself
+a most successful teacher, stated that he considered Dr. Miles as
+the ablest man in the United States for that position. In 1886,
+shortly after Dr. Chadbourne's death, Dr. Miles returned to his old
+home in Lansing, Michigan, where he spent the rest of his life in
+study, research, and the writing of books and articles for scientific
+publications.</p>
+
+<p>During these later years of his life he took up again with what
+had been his favorite pursuit in earlier days, but with which he had
+not occupied himself for thirty years&mdash;the study of mollusks&mdash;with
+the enthusiasm of a young man, Mr. Walker says, who being interested
+in the same study, was in constant correspondence with him at
+this time; "and as far as his strength permitted labored with all the
+acumen and attention to details which were so characteristic of him.
+I was particularly struck with his familiarity with the present drift
+of scientific investigation and thought, and his thorough appreciation
+of modern methods of work. He was greatly interested in the work
+I was carrying on with reference to the geographical distribution of
+the mollusca, and, as would naturally be supposed from his own work
+in heredity in connection with our domestic animals, took great pleasure
+in discussing the relations of the species as they are now found
+and their possible lines of descent. He was a careful and accurate
+observer of Nature, and if he had not drifted into other lines of work
+would undoubtedly have made his mark as a great naturalist. As
+it is, his name will always have an honored place in the scientific
+history of Michigan."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_840" id="Page_840">[Pg 840]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When Professor Miles began to teach in the Michigan Agricultural
+College, the "new education" was new indeed, and the textbook
+method still held sway. But the improved methods were gradually
+taking the place of the old ones, and Professor Miles was one of
+the first to co-operate in them, and he did it with effect. He used
+text-books, "but his living word," President Clute says, "supplemented
+the book; and the animal from the farm under his knife and
+ours, the shells which he led us to find under the rotten logs and
+along the rivers and lakes, the insects he taught us to collect and
+classify, the minerals and fossils he had collected on the geological
+survey of Michigan, all were used to instruct and inspire his students,
+to cultivate in them the scientific spirit and method."</p>
+
+<p>Among the more important books by Professor Miles are Stock-Breeding,
+which had a wide circulation and has been much used as
+a class-book; Experiments with Indian Corn, giving the results of
+some important work which he did at Houghton Farm; Silos and
+Ensilage, which helped much in diffusing knowledge of the silo in
+the times when it had to fight for recognition; and Land Drainage.
+Of his papers, he published in the Popular Science Monthly articles
+on Scientific Farming at Rothamstead; Ensilage and Fermentation;
+Lines of Progress in Agriculture; Progress in Agricultural Science;
+and How Plants and Animals Grow. To the American Association
+for the Advancement of Science he contributed papers on Energy
+as a Factor in Rural Economy; Heredity of Acquired Characters
+(also to the American Naturalist); Surface Tension of Water and
+Evaporation; Energy as a Factor in Nutrition; and Limits of Biological
+Experiments (also to the American Naturalist). Other articles
+in the American Naturalist were on Animal Mechanics and the
+Relative Efficiency of Animals as Machines. In the Proceedings of
+the American Educational Association is an address by him on Instruction
+in Manual Arts in Connection with Scientific Studies. The
+records of the U and I Club, of Lansing, of which he was a valued
+member for ten years, contain papers on a variety of scientific subjects
+which were read before it, and were highly appreciated. This
+list does not contain all of Professor Miles's contributions to the literature
+of science, for throughout his life he was a frequent contributor
+to the agricultural and scientific press, and a frequent speaker before
+associations and institutes, "where his lectures were able and practical."</p>
+
+<p>No special record is made of the work of Professor Miles in the
+American Agriculturist, but the correspondence of Professor Thurber
+with him furnishes ample proof that he was one of the most
+trusted advisers in the editorial conduct of that journal. The familiar
+tone of Professor Thurber's letters, and the undoubting assurance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_841" id="Page_841">[Pg 841]</a></span>
+with which he asked for information and aid on various subjects,
+well demonstrate how well the editor knew whom he could
+rely upon in an emergency.</p>
+
+<p>In all his work the great desire of Professor Miles was to find and
+present the truth. His merits were recognized by many scientific
+societies. He was made a corresponding member of the Buffalo
+Society of Natural Sciences in 1862; a corresponding member of the
+Entomological Society of Philadelphia in January, 1863; a correspondent
+of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia in
+1864; a member of the American Association for the Advancement of
+Science in 1880, and a Fellow of the same body in 1890; and held
+memberships or other relations with other societies; and he received
+the degree of D. V. S. from Columbia Veterinary College, New York,
+in March, 1880.</p>
+
+<p>His students and friends speak in terms of high admiration of
+the genial qualities of Professor Miles as a companion. The resolutions
+of the U and I Club of Lansing describe him as an easy and
+graceful talker, a cheerful dispenser of his learning to others. "To
+spend an hour in his 'den,' and watch his delicate experiments with
+'films,'" says President Clute, "and see the light in his eyes as he
+talked of them, was a delight." "He was particularly fond of boys,"
+says another, "and never seemed happier than when in the company
+of boys or young men who were trying to study and to inform themselves,
+and if he could in any way assist them he was only too glad
+to do so"; and he liked pets and children. Incidents are related
+showing that he had a wonderful accuracy in noting and recollecting
+the minutest details that came under his observation&mdash;a power
+that he was able to bring to bear instantly when its exercise was
+called for.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Miles kept up his habits of reading and study to the last days
+of his life; but all public work was made difficult to him in later years
+by an increasing deafness. He was tireless in investigation, patient,
+and always cheerful and looking for the bright side; and when one inquired
+of him concerning his health, his usual answer was that he
+was "all right," or, if he could not say that, that he would be "all
+right to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>No sketch of Dr. Miles is complete without a word of tribute to
+his high personal character, his life pure and noble in every relationship,
+his unswerving devotion to truth, and the unfaltering loyalty to
+his friends, which make his memory a benediction and an inspiration
+to all who knew him well.</p>
+
+<p>He was married in 1851 to Miss Mary E. Dodge, who remained
+his devoted companion until his death, which occurred February 15,
+1898.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_842" id="Page_842">[Pg 842]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>Editor's Table.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><i>SCIENCE AND CULTURE.</i></h3>
+
+<p>We do not know from whom the
+philosopher Locke quotes the
+saying, "<i>Non vit&aelig; sed schol&aelig; discimus</i>,"
+but he translates it well,
+"We learn not to live, but to dispute."
+The adage has reference to
+the old systems of education which
+had for their aim neither the discovery
+of truth nor the perfecting of
+the human faculties in any broad
+sense, but the fitting of the individual
+to take his place in a world of
+conventional ideas and discuss conventional
+topics upon conventional
+lines. In other words, the preparation
+was for school, not for life, the
+whole subsequent career of the individual
+being regarded simply as a
+prolongation of the intellectual influences
+and discipline of the school.
+That system, which was ecclesiastical
+in its origin, has now, save for
+strictly ecclesiastical purposes, passed
+away. We consider life as the end
+of school and not school as the end
+of life.</p>
+
+<p>It may be questioned, however,
+whether we have as yet thoroughly
+adapted our educational methods to
+this change of standpoint. Do we as
+yet take a sufficiently broad view of
+life? If we conceive life narrowly as
+essentially a business struggle, and
+adapt our procedure to that conception,
+the results will show very little
+relation to the larger and truer
+conception according to which life
+means development of faculty, activity
+of function, and a harmonious
+adjustment of relations between man
+and man. If, again, we make too
+much of knowledge that has only a
+conventional value, having little or
+no bearing on the understanding of
+things or the accomplishment of
+useful work, we are so far falling
+into the old error of "learning for
+school." The address by Sir Archibald
+Geikie, which we published last
+month, gives a useful caution against
+undervaluing "the older learning."
+The older learning can certainly be
+made an effective instrument for the
+cultivation of taste, of sympathy, and
+of intellectual accuracy along certain
+lines. It tends further, we believe,
+to promote a certain intellectual self-respect,
+which is a valuable quality.
+In the study of language and literature
+the human mind surveys, as it
+were, its own peculiar possessions,
+and thus acquires a sense of proprietorship
+which a study of the external
+world can hardly give. Still, it
+is well to cultivate a consciousness of
+the essentially limited and arbitrary
+nature of such knowledge. It is important,
+we may admit, to have a
+good text of such an author as
+Chaucer; but the minuti&aelig; into which
+critics of his text enter can not be
+said to possess any broad human interest.
+Whether he wrote this word
+or that word, adopted this spelling
+or that, can not be a question on
+which much depends; and could one
+know the exact truth on a thousand
+such points, he would not really be
+much the wiser. Among Chaucer
+scholars he could speak with a good
+deal of confidence; but the knowledge
+of these details would not really
+help to round out any useful <i>system</i>
+of knowledge, nor could any single
+fact possess the illuminating power
+which sometimes belongs to some
+single and, at first sight, unimportant
+fact in the realm of natural
+knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>This is not said with any intention
+of disparaging the culture that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_843" id="Page_843">[Pg 843]</a></span>
+comes of literary study. It is a culture
+that tends to brighten human
+intercourse and to sweeten a man's
+own thoughts. It is a culture eminently
+favorable to flexibility of
+mind and quick insight into human
+character. So far it is a culture "for
+life"; but too often it tends to become
+a culture "for school"&mdash;that is
+to say, when things are learned simply
+to meet conventional demands
+and conform to the fashion of the
+time.</p>
+
+<p>A true and sufficient culture can
+never, as we conceive, be founded on
+literature and language alone. No
+mind can be truly liberalized without
+imbibing and assimilating the
+fundamental principles of science.
+There is darkness in the mind that
+believes that anything can come out
+of nothing and which has never obtained
+a glimpse of the exactness
+with which Nature solves her equations.
+In the region of mechanics
+alone there are a thousand beautiful
+and varied illustrations of the unfailing
+constancy of natural laws.
+It is a liberal education to trace the
+operation of one law under numberless
+disguises, and thus arrive at an
+ineradicable conviction that the same
+law must be reckoned with always
+and everywhere. The persistence of
+force, the laws of the composition
+and resolution of forces, the laws of
+falling bodies and projectiles, the
+conservation of energy, the laws of
+heat, to mention only a few heads of
+elementary scientific study, are capable,
+if properly unfolded and illustrated,
+of producing in any mind
+open to large thoughts a sense of
+harmony and a trust in the underlying
+reason of things, which are constitutive
+elements of the very highest
+culture. Only, care must be taken
+to approach these studies in a right
+spirit. There is a way of regarding
+the laws of Nature which tends to
+vulgarize rather than refine the
+mind. If we approach Nature merely
+as something to be exploited, we
+get no culture from the study of it;
+but if we approach it as the great
+men of old did, and feel that in
+learning its laws we are grasping
+the thoughts which went to the
+building of the universe, and, by so
+doing, are affirming our own high
+calling as intelligent beings, then
+every moment given to the study
+of Nature means intellectual, moral,
+and spiritual gain. When we look
+into literature there is much to
+charm, much to delight and satisfy;
+and doubtless, in relation to what
+any one man can accomplish, the
+field is infinite; but still we know
+we are looking into the limited. On
+the other hand, when we are face to
+face with Nature, we know we are
+looking into the infinite, and that,
+however many veils we may take
+away, there is still "veil after veil
+behind."</p>
+
+<p>It is needless to say that there are
+thousands of minds in the world
+possessed of good native power, but
+laboring under serious disability for
+the want of that culture which science
+alone can bestow. Some of
+these are sick with morbid longings
+for unattainable knowledge, and
+openly or secretly rebellious at the
+limitations of a Nature whose powers
+they have never even begun to
+explore. To such persons anything
+like an adequate insight into the
+harmony amid diversity of Nature's
+laws would come with all the force
+of a revelation, and would, we may
+well believe, clear their minds of the
+feverish fancies which have made
+them so restless and dissatisfied; but,
+alas! it is rarely that such enlightenment
+comes to those who have not
+in youth imbibed a portion of the
+scientific spirit. In this class are to
+be found the victims of spiritualism,
+of the Keeley motor, and even of
+that grotesque satire, the success of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_844" id="Page_844">[Pg 844]</a></span>
+which we remember almost with
+fear and trembling, the "sympsychograph."
+Still, to all such we would
+say:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Come forth into the light of things;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let Nature be your teacher."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The "Nature" which we require to
+teach us for the peace and tranquillity
+of our souls is the Nature of everyday
+phenomena, the Nature that
+forms the clouds and rounds the
+raindrops, that springs in the grass
+and pulses in the tides, that glances
+in the sunbeam and breathes in the
+flower, that works witchery in the
+crystal and breaks into glory in
+the sunset. The mind that knows
+what can be known of these things
+has feasted full of wonder and
+beauty, and makes no greedy demand
+for higher grace or mightier
+miracle.</p>
+
+<p>Then again there are those who
+for want of a little elementary scientific
+knowledge, and particularly
+for want of an assured conviction that
+Nature gives nothing for nothing, are
+continually attempting the impossible
+in the way of projected inventions.
+They catch at a phrase and
+think it must represent a fact; they
+fall victims to a verbal mythology
+of their own manufacture. If there
+was much hope of their learning
+anything of value through disappointment,
+they might be left to the
+teaching of experience, costly as the
+lessons of that master are. But
+they do not learn: their hopes are
+blasted, their fortunes, if they had
+any, are wrecked, but their infatuations
+survive. Where is the inventor
+of a perpetual motion who ever
+ceased to have confidence in his peculiar
+contrivance? The thing may
+be as motionless as a tombstone, save
+when urged by external force into a
+momentary lumbering activity; but
+all the same, it only needs, its misguided
+author thinks, a little doctoring,
+a trifling change here or there,
+to make it tear round like mad.
+And so with other inventors of the
+impossible: they take counsel not
+with Nature, but with their own
+wholly incorrect notions of what the
+operations of Nature are. The least
+power of truly analyzing a natural
+phenomenon, and separating the factors
+that produce it, would show them
+the falsity of their ideas; but that
+power they do not possess.</p>
+
+<p>We can not, then, plead too strongly
+for the teaching of science, not
+with a view to results in money, but
+with a view to the improvement of
+the mind and heart of the learner, or,
+in other words, as a source of culture.
+Literature introduces us to the world
+of human thought and action, to the
+kingdom of man; and science shows
+us how the thought and powers of
+man can be indefinitely enlarged by
+an ever increasing acquaintance with
+the laws of the universe. Literature
+alone leaves the mind without any
+firm grasp of the reality of things,
+and science alone tends to produce
+a hard, prosaic, and sometimes antisocial
+temper. Each helps to bring
+out the best possible results of the
+other; and it is only by their joint
+action that human faculties and human
+character can ever be brought
+to their perfection.</p>
+
+
+<h3><i>SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST.</i></h3>
+
+<p>It is singular what a propensity
+some writers have to misunderstand
+and misrepresent the views of Mr.
+Herbert Spencer, even upon points in
+regard to which he has made every
+possible effort to avoid occasion for
+misapprehension. The term "survival
+of the fittest" is one which Mr.
+Spencer himself introduced as being,
+perhaps, a little less open to misunderstanding
+than the Darwinian expression
+"natural selection." The
+latter seemed to imply purposive action,
+and Mr. Spencer thought that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_845" id="Page_845">[Pg 845]</a></span>
+this implication would be less prominent
+if the phrase were changed to
+"survival of the fittest." From the
+very first, however, he recognized
+that the difference between the two
+terms in this respect was, if we may
+so express it, purely quantitative;
+and he took care to make it clear
+that by "the fittest" he did not in
+the least intend to signify any form
+of ideal or subjective fitness, but simply
+a superior degree of adaptation,
+as a matter of actual fact, to environing
+conditions. The conditions at
+any given moment are as they are,
+and the "fitness" of any particular
+organism is such a correspondence
+with those conditions as permits and
+favors its perpetuation. The conditions
+do not create fitness; they
+merely eliminate unfitness; nor does
+Mr. Spencer conceive any agency
+as producing <i>ab extra</i> the fitness
+which enables an organism or a
+number of organisms to survive.
+He differs, however, from what is
+perhaps the dominant school of biology
+to-day, in holding that the higher
+forms of organic life are, as he expresses
+it, "directly equilibrated"
+with their surroundings through the
+inheritance of physical features resulting
+from effort and habit.</p>
+
+<p>To whatever cause it may be attributed,
+few writers whose intellectual
+activity has extended over so
+long a term of years as Mr. Spencer's
+have been so consistent in their utterances
+at different stages as he.
+The "Synthetic Philosophy" is the
+realization of a scheme of thought
+no less wonderful in its coherence
+and solidity than in its compass, the
+author having planted himself from
+the first at a point of view which
+gave him a clear command of his
+entire field. To say that no other
+system of thought equally comprehensive
+and equally coherent exists
+in the world to-day would be to
+make a statement which few competent
+and dispassionate authorities
+would deny. Notwithstanding this,
+there are writers not a few, particularly
+of the class "who write with
+ease," who, as we said at the outset,
+have a propensity for misunderstanding
+Mr. Spencer, and who consequently
+accuse him of inconsistencies
+and self-contradictions for which
+nothing that he has ever said affords
+any warrant. One of these gentlemen
+is the Duke of Argyll, who has
+lately offered the world another
+superfluous book under the title of
+Organic Evolution Cross-examined.
+The duke particularly concerns himself
+with Mr. Spencer's teaching in
+regard to the "survival of the fittest,"
+and Mr. Spencer, in the columns
+of Nature, replies to him in a
+brief but sufficient manner. It is
+safe to say that Mr. Spencer's philosophy
+will show Cyclopean remains
+generations after the name of his
+ducal critic shall have passed forever
+into the mists of oblivion; and the
+"survival of the fittest" will thus be
+illustrated in a sense in which Mr.
+Spencer himself never used the words.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>Scientific Literature.</h2>
+
+
+<h3>SPECIAL BOOKS.</h3>
+
+<p>The study of the methods through which the topographical features
+and rock forms of particular districts have been worked out, as presented
+in numerous popular monographs, is a fascinating one; and we can hardly
+doubt that many persons who would never otherwise have thought of it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_846" id="Page_846">[Pg 846]</a></span>
+have been made interested in geology by some of these masterly picturesque
+descriptions of regions with which they were superficially familiar. Other
+treatises on the origin of surface features, dealing with the subject more
+fundamentally, but likewise of limited scope, are not wanting. Yet, as
+Prof. <i>James Geikie</i> well says, there is no English work to which readers
+not skilled in geology can turn for a general account of the whole subject.
+Professor Geikie has therefore prepared his elaborate book on <i>Earth Sculpture</i><a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>
+to supply this want, to furnish an introductory treatise for those
+persons who may be desirous of acquiring some broad knowledge of the results
+arrived at by geologists as to the development of land forms generally.
+A vast number of geological questions are involved in the exhaustive
+treatment of the subject. All the forces with which geologists become
+acquainted in the study of the earth, and their operation, come into consideration.
+The effects of these forces assume aspects that vary according
+to the nature of the material on which they operate, and they are again
+modified according to the peculiar combinations of forces at work. The
+subject is therefore not the easy one it may be supposed at first sight to
+be, and the reader who peruses Professor Geikie's work with the intention
+of mastering it will find he has some studying to do. Yet Professor
+Geikie is clear, and it is only because he has gone deeper than the others
+that he may be harder. The first point he insists upon is that in the fashioning
+of the earth's surface no hard-and-fast line separates past and present.
+The work has been going on for a long time, and is still in progress,
+under a law of evolution as true for the crust of the globe as for the plants
+and animals. In setting out upon our inquiry we must in the first place
+know something about rocks and the mode of their arrangement, of the
+structure or architecture of the earth's crust. This leads to the distinction
+between the igneous and the subaqueous, the volcanic, plutonic, and metamorphic,
+and the derivative rocks on which epigene agencies have performed
+their shaping work. These rocks have been modified in various
+ways, and the surface appearance of the earth has been affected by forces
+operating from the interior, and by external factors, the work of which is
+called denudation. The agents of denudation are described&mdash;air, water,
+heat, frost, chemical action, plants, and animals&mdash;often so closely associated
+in their operations that their individual shares in the final result can hardly
+be determined. The various influences of these factors as exerted upon
+different forms of geological structure and different sorts of rocks are then
+taken up and described as applied to land forms in regions of horizontal,
+or gently inclined, and of highly folded and disturbed strata, and in regions
+affected by normal faults or vertical displacements. Land forms
+due directly or indirectly to igneous action and the influence of rock character
+on the determination of land forms are subjects of special chapters.
+Glacial action is one of the most important factors in modifying the forms
+of northern lands, and is treated with considerable fullness. &AElig;olian action&mdash;of
+the air and wind&mdash;has peculiar and important effects in arid regions,
+and underground water in limestone districts, and these receive attention.
+Then come basins&mdash;those due to crustal deformation, crater lakes, river
+lakes, glacial basins, and others, and coast lines. Finally, a classification
+is given of these land forms as plains or plateaus of accumulation and of
+erosion, original or tectonic and subsequent or relict hills and mountains,
+original or tectonic and subsequent or erosion valleys, basins, and coast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_847" id="Page_847">[Pg 847]</a></span>
+lines, and the conclusions are reached that we do not know, except as a
+matter of probability, whether we have still visible any original wrinkles
+of the earth's crust; and that some of the estimates of the time it has taken
+to produce the changes of which we witness the results have been very
+much exaggerated.</p>
+
+<p>The curious conclusions obtained by Dr. <i>Le Bon</i> in his psychological
+investigations,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> delivered to us in startling language, are said to be the
+fruit of extensive travel and of the personal measurement of thousands
+of skulls. His memoir on cervical researches, published in 1879, upholds
+the theory that the volume of the skull varies with the intelligence. This
+theory has perhaps suffered a permanent adumbration. Facts seem to prove
+that the bony structure of the skull, or even its cranial capacity, gives no
+positive indication of intellect.</p>
+
+<p>In the present volume the theme of discussion is the soul of races.
+Anthropological classification is set aside and mankind is divided into
+four groups according to mental characteristics: the primitive, inferior,
+average, and superior races&mdash;the standard of judgment being the degree
+of their aptitude for dominating reflex impulses. It is perhaps worthy
+of note that while the Frenchman belongs to a superior race, the Semitic
+peoples are placed in the class below, or the average sort. For the primitive
+varieties it is not necessary to observe a South Sea islander, the
+lower strata of Europeans furnishing numerous examples. When greater
+differentiation is reached, the word "race" is used in a historical sense. It
+requires, however, more complete fusion than some nations exhibit to earn
+this title; for, although there are Germans and Americans, "it is not
+clear as yet that there are Italians." The race having been once evolved,
+acquires wondrous potentialities with Dr. Le Bon. He compares it to
+the totality of cells constituting a living organism, asserts that its mental
+constitution is as unvarying as its anatomical structure, that it is a permanent
+being independent of time and founded alone by its dead. It is
+a short step to endow this entity with a soul consisting of common sentiments,
+interests, and beliefs&mdash;what in brief, robbed of hyperbole, we should
+call national character. He states that the notion of a country is not
+possible until a national soul is formed. This, in time, like germ-plasm,
+becomes so stable that assimilation with foreign elements is impossible.
+Like natural species, it has secondary characteristics that may be modified,
+but its fundamental character is like the fin of the fish or the beak of the
+bird. The acquisition of this soul marks the apogee of the greatness of
+a people. Psychological species, however, are not eternal, but may decay
+if the functioning of their organs is troubled profoundly.</p>
+
+<p>The soul of the race is best expressed in its art, not in its history or
+institutions, and, as it can not bequeath its soul, so it can not impress its
+civilization or art upon an alien race. It was on account of this incompatibility
+of soul that Grecian art failed to be implanted in India. The
+unaltering constituent of the soul corresponds to character, while intellectual
+qualities are variable. By character is meant perseverance, energy,
+power of self-control, also morality. The latter is hereditary respect for
+the rules on which a society is based. This definition would make polygamy
+a moral notion for Mormons. The knowledge of character "can be
+acquired neither in laboratories nor in books, but only in the course of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_848" id="Page_848">[Pg 848]</a></span>
+long travel." Whence it is learned that different races can not have mutual
+comprehension. Luckily for the student who is unable to travel, the same
+phenomenon may be observed in the gulf that separates the civilized man
+and woman. Although highly educated, "they might converse with each
+other for centuries without understanding one another." These differences
+between races and individuals demonstrate the falsity of the notion
+of equality. Indeed, through <i>science</i> "man has learned that to be slaves
+is the natural condition of all human beings." Naturally he becomes dispirited,
+anarchy seizes upon the uneducated and sullen indifference the
+more cultivated. "Like a ship that has lost its compass, the modern
+man wanders haphazard through the spaces formerly peopled by the gods
+and rendered a desert by science." In France morality is gradually dying
+out, while the United States is threatened by a gigantic civil war. What
+to do is problematical, since we are informed "that people have never derived
+much advantage from too great a desire to reason and think," and
+what is most harmful to a people is to attain too high a degree of intelligence
+and culture, the groundwork of the soul beginning to decline when
+this level is reached. The remedy suggested to us is "the organization
+of a very severe military service and the permanent menace of disastrous
+wars." But if we fail to see the improving tendency of this advice, it is
+probably because we are like historians, "simple-minded," while Dr. Le
+Bon is much too complex for our understanding. According to his own
+theory, there is no hope that we may comprehend him, since the outpourings
+of a soul of the Latin race can not be transferred by a simple bridge
+of translation to the apprehension of an Anglo-Saxon mind, separated, as
+he would term it, by "the dead weight of thousands of generations."</p>
+
+
+<h3>GENERAL NOTICES.</h3>
+
+<p>In preparing the new edition of his <i>Text-Book
+of Mineralogy</i><a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> first published in 1877,
+Prof. <i>E. S. Dana</i> has found it necessary to
+rewrite the whole as well as to add much
+new matter and many new illustrations. The
+work being designed chiefly for use in class
+or private instruction, the choice of topics
+discussed, the order and fullness of treatment,
+and the method of presentation have
+been determined by that object. The different
+types of crystal forms are described
+under the thirty-two groups now accepted,
+classed according to their symmetry. In the
+chapters on physical and chemical mineralogy,
+the plan of the former edition is retained
+of presenting somewhat fully the elementary
+principles of the science on which the mineral
+characters depend, and the author has
+tried to give the student the means of becoming
+practically familiar with the modern
+means of investigation. Especial attention
+is given to the optical qualities of crystals as
+revealed by the microscope; and frequent
+references are introduced to important papers
+on the different subjects discussed. The
+descriptive part of the volume is essentially
+an abridgment of the sixth edition of Dana's
+System of Mineralogy, published in 1892,
+to which the student is referred for fuller
+and supplementary information. A full
+topical index is furnished in addition to the
+usual index of species.</p>
+
+<p>The title, <i>The Story of the Railroad</i>,<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>
+carries with it the suggestion of an eventful
+history. The West, in the author's view, begins
+with the Missouri River. The story of
+its railroad is the story of the line, now very
+multiple, that leads to the Pacific Ocean.
+The beginning of white men's travels in
+these routes is traced by the editor to the
+Spanish adventurers of the sixteenth century,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_849" id="Page_849">[Pg 849]</a></span>
+who made miserable journeys in search of
+gold or visionary objects, through regions
+now traversed by some of the more southern
+lines. Then came trappers; next costly and
+painfully undertaken Government expeditions
+into the then regions of the unknown, the
+stories of which were the boyhood delight
+of men now living. The period of practical
+traversing of the continent began with the
+raging of the California gold fever, when
+the journey of many weeks was tiresomely
+made with ox teams, in the face of actual
+perils of the desert, starvation, thirst, and
+the Indians. After California became important,
+stage and express lines were put on;
+but still, at the time Mr. Warman takes up
+the story, less than sixty years ago, the idea
+of building a railroad to the Pacific was regarded
+as too visionary to be entertained,
+and Asa Whitney sacrificed a fortune trying
+to induce somebody to take it up. The first
+dreams were for a short route to the Orient.
+Eventually the idea was developed that the
+American West might be worth going after,
+and then the idea of a railroad to it began to
+assume practical form. Young Engineer
+Dodge, afterward Major General, began surveys
+before the civil war; after it General
+Sherman gave the scheme a great impulse, and
+the Union Pacific Railroad was built&mdash;when
+and how are graphically and dramatically told
+in Mr. Warman's book. Next came the Atchison,
+Topeka, and Santa F&eacute;, and other transcontinental
+lines, the histories of all of which are
+related in similar style, with stories of adventures,
+perils encountered, and lively incidents,
+including the war between two of the
+lines for the possession of the Arkansas
+Ca&ntilde;on; financial mishaps, and political scandal.
+Then came the settlement of the
+plains, road-making in Mexico, and the opening
+of Oklahoma, all of which were made
+possible by the railroads, and have in turn
+contributed to support them. The beginnings
+and growth of the express business are described,
+and the later lines that have penetrated
+the plains are mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>Prof. <i>William Benjamin Smith's</i> treatise
+on the <i>Infinitesimal Analysis</i><a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> has been
+written, the author says, on what appeared,
+in the light of ten years' experience in teaching
+the calculus, to be lines of least resistance.
+The aim has been, within a prescribed
+expense of time and energy, to penetrate as
+far as possible into the subject, and in as
+many directions, so that the student shall attain
+as wide knowledge of the matter, as full
+comprehension of the methods, and as clear
+consciousness of the spirit and power of this
+analysis as the nature of the case would admit.
+The author has accordingly often followed
+what seemed to be natural suggestions
+and impulses toward near-lying extensions
+or generalizations, and has even allowed them
+to direct the course of the discussion. In
+accordance with the plan and purpose of the
+book as given, "Weierstressian rigor" has
+been excluded from many investigations, and
+the postponement has been compelled of
+some important discussions, which were considered
+too subtle for an early age of study.
+Real difficulties, however, have not been
+knowingly disguised, and pains have been
+taken on occasion to warn the reader that
+the treatment given is only provisional, and
+must await further precision or delimitation.
+Where the subject has been found too large
+for the compass of the intended work, or too
+abstruse or difficult for the contemplated
+students, the treatment has been compressed
+or curtailed. The book is, in fact, written
+for such as feel a genuine interest in the
+subject; and the illustrations and exercises
+have been chosen with frequent reference to
+practical or theoretic importance or to historic
+interest.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. <i>George Jacob Holyoake</i> has written
+with much enthusiasm the <i>Jubilee History
+of the Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society</i>.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>
+Many schemes have been started on lines
+similar to those of this one, but very few
+besides it have grown from the very beginning,
+and, having become to all appearance a
+permanent institution, can look back upon
+a career of fifty years with complete satisfaction.
+The society began in times of public
+distress. The ground was prepared for it
+by the "Redemption" Society, which was
+founded at Leeds in 1845, by admirers of
+Robert Owen, after the experiment at Queenswood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_850" id="Page_850">[Pg 850]</a></span>
+had failed. It practiced a kind of
+co-operation and had some distinguished
+friends to wish it well. Among the speakers
+at its meetings was Dr. Frederic Hollick,
+still living, now a resident of New York city.
+The co-operative society was started as a
+means of getting cheaper flour for its members.
+On February 25, 1847, an appeal
+headed "Holbeck Anti-Corn Mill Association"
+was issued to the working classes of
+Leeds and vicinity by the "working people
+of Messrs. Benyon &amp; Co.'s mill," Holbeck,
+inviting combination and subscriptions for
+establishing a mill to be the property of the
+subscribers and their successors, "in order to
+supply them with flour and flour only."
+Meetings were held, an organization was
+effected, and the mill was started. The history
+of the society and how it grew, how
+"flour only" was stricken from its scheme
+and other things were added and it branched
+out, how co-operative stores were established,
+how it gained the confidence of the public
+and the respect of rivals in business, its successes
+and its mistakes, its triumphs and
+failures, are told by Mr. Holyoake, year by
+year, in a detail in which everything is set
+down and nothing covered up. In 1897 the
+cooperative society had productive departments
+of flour, bakery, bespoke clothing,
+boot and shoe factory, brush factory, cabinet
+making, building, millinery, and dressmaking,
+employing 541 hands and turning over &pound;26,949;
+80 large stores for the sale of these
+and various other kinds of goods in Leeds
+and vicinity; drapery branches and boot and
+shoe stores; 43 butchering branches; and
+37,000 subscribing purchasers. Its capital
+stood at &pound;447,000; and its sales for the
+year amounted to &pound;1,042,616.</p>
+
+<p>D. Appleton and Company have added to
+their Home Reading Series <i>The Earth and
+Sky</i>, a primer of Astronomy for Young Readers,
+by Prof. <i>Edward S. Holden</i>. It is intended
+to be the first of a series of three or more
+volumes, all treating of astronomy in one
+form or another, and suited for reading in
+the school. The treatment is based on the
+principle that "it is not so simple as it appears
+to fix in the child's mind the fundamental
+fact that it is Nature which is true,
+and the book or the engraving which is a
+true copy of it. 'It says' is the snare of
+children as well as of their more sophisticated
+elders. The vital point to be insisted on is
+a constant reference from words to things."
+The volume is written as a conversation with
+a young lad. He is first shown how he may
+know for himself that the earth is not flat,
+though it certainly appears to be so. The
+next step is to show him that he may know
+that the earth is in fact round, and that it is
+a globe of immense size. Its situation in
+space is next considered, and the child's
+mind is led to some formal conclusions respecting
+space itself. It is then directed to
+the sun, to the moon and its changes, to the
+stars and their motions, to the revolution of
+the earth, etc.</p>
+
+<p>In 1887 <i>E. S. Holden</i> published through
+the Regents of the University of California
+a list of recorded earthquakes on the Pacific
+coast, it being the first systematic publication
+of the sort. The purpose of it was to
+bring to light all the general facts about the
+various shocks, and enable studies to be
+made of particular earthquake phenomena.
+It was necessary at the Lick Observatory to
+keep a register of the times of occurrence of
+all shocks on account of their possible effects
+on the instruments. With this was associated
+in 1888, when the observatory began
+its active work, the collection of reports of
+shocks felt elsewhere on the Pacific coast.
+Mr. Holden now reprints this pamphlet
+through the Smithsonian Institution in <i>A
+Catalogue of Earthquakes felt on the Pacific
+Coast, 1769 to 1897</i>, with many corrections
+and additions, including a complete account
+of the earthquake observations at Mount
+Hamilton from 1887 to 1897, and an abstract
+of the great amount of information that has
+been collected regarding other Pacific coast
+earthquakes during the same interval.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Psychologie als Erfahrungs-Wissenschaft</i>
+of <i>Hans Cornelius</i> is not intended for
+a complete account and review of the facts
+of psychical life, but rather to present the
+fundamentals of a purely empirical theory,
+excluding all metaphysical views. Such an
+account should not start from any arbitrary
+abstractions or hypotheses, but simply from
+actually ascertained, directly perceived psychical
+experiences. On the other hand, an
+empirical definition should be required for
+all the terms that are used in a comprehensive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_851" id="Page_851">[Pg 851]</a></span>
+description of the experience; and no
+term should be used without the psychical
+manifestation described by it being pointed
+out. After an introduction in which the
+method and place of psychology, subjective
+and objective, physiological and genetic, are
+referred to, the elementary facts of consciousness
+are discussed. The coherency of
+knowledge is treated of in the next chapter,
+and in the third, Psychical Analysis and
+the conception of unobserved consciousness;
+and the succeeding chapters are devoted to
+Sensation, Memory, and Fancy; The Objective
+World, Truth and Error, and Feeling
+and Will. (Published at Leipsic, Germany:
+B. G. Teubner.)</p>
+
+<p>An extremely interesting book is given
+us in the publications of the Wisconsin Geological
+and Natural History Society of studies
+by <i>George W.</i> and <i>Elizabeth Peckham</i>, of the
+<i>Instincts and Habits of the Solitary Wasps</i>.
+These insects are familiar enough to us all,
+as we meet them or see their nests of one or
+a few cells every day, and then think no
+more of them. But Mr. and Mrs. Peckham,
+following them to their haunts and keeping
+company with them, have found them manifesting
+remarkable instincts and exercising
+curious customs, which they describe in the
+style of persons who are in love with their
+work. The opportunity for the studies was
+given in two gardens, one on the top of a hill
+and the other lower down, with an island in
+a lake close by and acres of woodland all
+about, offering a rich variety of nesting places.
+There are more than a thousand species of
+these solitary wasps in the United States, to
+only about fifty of the social ones, and they
+live without knowledge of their progenitors
+and without relations with others of their
+kind.</p>
+
+<p>The eighth volume of the report of the
+<i>Iowa Geological Survey</i> comprises the accounts
+of surveys completed during 1897 in
+six counties, making up the whole number
+of twenty-six counties in which the areal
+work has been completed. This does not,
+however, represent the whole extent of the
+operations of the survey, for some work has
+been done in nearly every county in the
+State, and in many counties it will require
+but little additional work to make a complete
+report. In addition to the areal work, too,
+special studies of coal, clay, artesian waters,
+gypsum, lead, zinc, etc., have engaged attention.
+A growing public appreciation of the
+work of the survey as illustrated in the demand
+for the volumes of the reports and for
+special papers, is recognized by the State
+Geologist, Mr. <i>Samuel Calvin</i>; and an increasing
+use of the reports as works for reference
+and for general study in high schools
+and other educational institutions is observed.
+The survey is now collecting statistics of production
+of various minerals mined in the
+State.</p>
+
+<p>One of the features most likely to attract
+attention in the <i>Annual Report of the State
+Geologist</i> of New Jersey for 1897 is the
+paper of Mr. C. C. Vermeule on the Drainage
+of the Hackensack and Newark Tide
+Marshes. In it a scheme is unfolded for
+the reclamation and diking of the flats, under
+which an ample navigable waterway
+shall be developed, and the cities which now
+stop at their edges may be extended and
+built up to the very banks of the new harbor,
+made a highway for ocean sailing vessels.
+An interesting paper is published by
+Lewis Woolman on Artesian and Bored and
+other Wells, in which many important wells
+are described with reference to the geological
+strata they penetrate. Other papers relate
+to iron mining and brick and clay industries,
+mineral statistics, and statistics of
+clays, bricks, and terra cotta. The field reports
+describe progress in the surveys of the
+surface geology, the Newark system, and the
+upper Cretaceous formations.</p>
+
+<p>On the basis of a reconnoissance made by
+him for Alexander Agassiz, Mr. <i>Robert T.
+Hill</i> has published through the Bulletin of
+the Museum of Comparative Zo&ouml;logy at Harvard
+University, a paper on <i>The Geological
+History of the Isthmus of Panama and Portions
+of Costa Rica</i>. He finds that there is
+considerable evidence that a land barrier in
+the tropical region separated the two oceans
+as far back as Jurassic time, and continued
+through the Cretaceous period. The geological
+structure of the Isthmus and Central
+American regions, so far as investigated,
+when considered aside from the paleontology,
+presents no evidence by which the former existence
+of a free communication of oceanic
+waters across the present tropical barriers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_852" id="Page_852">[Pg 852]</a></span>
+can be established. The paleontological evidence
+indicates the ephemeral existence of
+a passage at the close of the Eocene period.
+All lines of inquiry give evidence that
+no communication has existed between the
+two oceans since the close of the Oligocene.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Twenty-second Annual Report of the
+Department of Geology and Natural Resources</i>
+of Indiana, <i>W. S. Blatchley</i>, State
+Geologist, embraces, in part, the results of
+the work of the several departments of the
+survey during 1897. These appear in the
+form of papers of economic importance on
+the petroleum, stone, and clay resources of
+the State, natural gases and illuminating oils,
+a description of the curious geological and
+topographical region of Lake and Porter
+Counties, and an extended paper on the
+Birds of Indiana, with specific descriptions.
+A large proportion of the energies of the department
+were employed during the year in
+gathering data for a detailed report on the
+coal area of the State, which is now in course
+of preparation.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Report of the United States Commissioner
+of Education</i> for 1896-'97 records an
+increase in the enrollment of schools and
+colleges of 257,586, the whole number of
+pupils being 14,712,077 in public institutions
+and schools, and 1,513,016 in private.
+The increase is confined to the public institutions,
+the private ones having suffered from
+"hard times." Among the numerous papers
+published in the volume containing the report
+are those on Education in Great Britain
+and Ireland, France, Denmark, Norway, Central
+Europe, and Greece; Commercial Education
+in Europe; the Teaching of Civics in
+France, Switzerland, and England; Sunday
+Schools, including accounts of the several denominational
+systems; the Legal Rights of
+Children; and sketches of Horace Mann and
+Henry Barnard and their work in furthering
+education.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. <i>David T. Day's</i> report on the <i>Mineral
+Resources of the United States</i> for 1896
+appears as Part V of the Eighteenth Annual
+Report of the United States Geological Survey,
+in two volumes of fourteen hundred
+pages in all; the first of which is devoted to
+Metallic Products and Coal, and the second
+to Nonmetallic Products except Coal. The
+report covers the calendar year 1896, and
+shows only a slight increase in total values
+over 1895. Of some substances, however&mdash;gold,
+copper, aluminum, and petroleum being
+the most important ones&mdash;the value was
+the greatest ever attained. Of other substances,
+including lead, bituminous coal,
+building stones, mineral waters, salt, and
+pyrites, the product was increased in amount,
+but the value was less. A paper, by Mr.
+George F. Becker, on the Witwatersrand
+Banket, records observations made by him
+in the Transvaal gold fields.</p>
+
+<p><i>A Geological Reconnoissance of the Coal
+Fields of the Indian Territory</i>, published
+in the Contributions to Biology of the Hopkins
+Seaside Laboratory of Leland Stanford
+Junior University, by <i>Noah Fields
+Drake</i>, is based upon a six months' examination
+made by the author during the spring,
+summer, and fall of 1896, of the larger part of
+the coal measures and adjacent formations
+of Indian and Oklahoma Territories. The
+best maps that could then be had being exceedingly
+inaccurate, sketch maps were made
+of areas that were especially important. On
+account of features of particular geological
+interest, nearly all the area south and east of
+the Canadian River and the bordering areas
+of the Boone chert and limestones were
+sketched and studied rather closely.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>American Catholic Historical Society</i>
+at Philadelphia publishes in its <i>Quarterly
+Records</i> much that, while it must be of
+deep interest to historical students holding
+the Roman Catholic faith, possesses, perhaps,
+a strong though more general interest
+to all students of American history; for the
+men of that faith have had no small part in
+the colonization and development of this
+country. The number for June, 1898, contains
+a portrait and a bibliographical sketch
+of the Rev. Peter Henry Lemke, O. S. B., of
+Pennsylvania, Kansas, and Elizabeth, N. J.;
+a poem on the Launch of the American
+Frigate United States, whose commander
+was a Catholic; articles on the Sir John
+James Fund, and Catholic Chronicles of
+Lancaster, Pa., and Extracts from the Diary
+of the Rev. Patrick Kenny.</p>
+
+<p>A memoir on <i>A Determination of the
+Ratio (&#967;) of the Specific Heats at Constant
+Pressure and at Constant Volume for Air,
+Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide, and Hydrogen</i> gives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_853" id="Page_853">[Pg 853]</a></span>
+the result of a series of investigations by Drs.
+<i>O. Lummer</i> and <i>E. Pringshein</i>, of Charlottenburg,
+Germany, made with the aid of a
+grant from the Hodgkins Fund of the Smithsonian
+Institution. Besides being of exceptional
+importance in thermodynamics, the
+specific heat ratio is of interest as affording
+a clew to the character of the molecule. In
+the present investigation coincident results
+on the gases examined appear to have been
+reached for the first time. (Published by the
+Smithsonian Institution.)</p>
+
+<p>From the greater lightness of the air and
+the higher velocity of its currents, it is evident
+that the materials it may carry and deposit
+will be somewhat different in composition
+and structure from those which are laid
+down in water. They are as a rule finer, they
+exhibit a different bedding, and are more
+capriciously placed. Mr. <i>Johan August Udden</i>
+has made a careful study of the subject,
+the results of which he publishes under the
+title of <i>The Mechanical Composition of Wind
+Deposits</i>, as the first number of the Augustana
+Library Series, at the Lutheran Augustana
+Book Concern, Rock Island, Ill.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>History Reader for Elementary
+Schools</i> (The Macmillan Company, 60 cents),
+prepared by <i>L. L. W. Wilson</i> and arranged
+with special reference to holidays, contains
+readings for each month of the school year,
+classified according to different periods and
+phases of American history generally, so
+chosen that some important topic of the
+group shall bear a relation to the month in
+which it is to be read. The groups concern
+the Indians, the Discovery of America,
+Thanksgiving, Other Settlements (than those
+of Virginia and the Pilgrims), Dr. Franklin,
+Lincoln and Washington, the Revolution,
+Arbor Day, and Brave Sea Captains, etc.,
+closing with articles in reference to Flag
+Day. The insertion of an article on the
+War with Spain seems premature. Public
+sentiment is not yet at rest on the subject.</p>
+
+
+<h3>PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.</h3>
+
+<p>Agricultural Experiment Stations. Bulletins
+and Reports. Cornell University:
+No. 160. Hints on Rural School Grounds.
+By L. H. Bailey. Pp. 20; No. 161. Annual
+Flowers. By G. N. Lanman and L. H.
+Bailey. Pp. 32; No. 162. The Period of
+Gestation in Cows. By H. H. Wing. Pp.
+120.&mdash;Delaware College: No. 43 (abridged
+edition). The European and Japanese
+Chestnuts in the United States. By G. H.
+Powell. Pp. 16.&mdash;Michigan: Nos. 164 and
+165. Methods and Results of Tillage, and
+Draft of Farm Implements. By M. W.
+Fulton. Pp. 24; Elementary Science Bulletin,
+No. 5. Branches of Sugar Maple and
+Beech as seen in Winter. By W. J. Beal.
+Pp. 4; do., No. 6. Potatoes, Rutabagas,
+and Onions. By W. J. Beal. Pp. 6.&mdash;New
+Jersey: No. 133. Peach Growing in New
+Jersey. By A. T. Jordan. Pp. 16; No. 134.
+Fermentation and Germ Life. By Julius
+Nelson. Pp. 24.&mdash;North Dakota: No. 15.
+Some Chemical Problems Investigated.
+Pp. 28.&mdash;Ohio: Newspaper Bulletin 188.
+Sugar Beets and Sorghum in Ohio. Pp. 2.</p>
+
+<p>Aston, W. G. A History of Japanese
+Literature. New York: D. Appleton and
+Company. Pp. 408. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>Berry, Arthur. A Short History of Astronomy.
+New York: Charles Scribner's
+Sons. Pp. 440. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>Brush and Pencil. An Illustrated
+Magazine of the Arts and Crafts. Monthly.
+Chicago: Arts and Crafts Company.
+Pp. 64. 25 cents. $2.50 a year.</p>
+
+<p>Bulletins, Reports, etc. Colgate University,
+Department of Geology and Natural
+History: Announcement. Pp. 16.&mdash;Field
+Columbian Museum, Chicago: Annual
+Report of the Board of Directors for
+1897-'98. Pp. 90, with plates.&mdash;Financial
+Reform Association: 1848 to 1898. Fifty
+Years' Retrospect. London. Pp. 54, with
+plates; Financial Reform Almanac for
+1899. London. Pp. 316. 1 shilling.&mdash;New
+York State Library: Legislative Bulletin
+for 1898. Pp. 132. 25 cents.&mdash;New York
+University: Catalogue and Announcements
+for 1898-'99. Pp. 358.&mdash;Perkins Institution
+and Massachusetts School for the
+Blind: Sixty-seventh Annual Report of
+the Trustees, to August 31, 1898. Pp. 305.&mdash;United
+States Department of Labor: Bulletin
+No. 20, January, 1899. Edited by
+Carroll D. Wright and Oren W. Weaver.
+Pp. 170.</p>
+
+<p>Byrd, Mary E. Laboratory Manual in
+Astronomy. Boston: Ginn &amp; Co. Pp. 273.</p>
+
+<p>Cajori, Florian. A History of Physics
+in its Elementary Branches, including the
+Evolution of Physical Laboratories. New
+York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 323.
+$1.60.</p>
+
+<p>Callie, J. W. S. John Smith's Reply to
+"Merrie England, Defense of the Liberal
+Programme." London: John Heywood.
+Pp. 88. Sixpence.</p>
+
+<p>Chapman, Frank H., Editor. Bird Lore.
+February, 1898, Vol. I, No. 1. Bimonthly.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp.
+32. 20 cents. $1 a year.</p>
+
+<p>Davenport, Charles B. Experimental
+Morphology. Part II. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 509. $2.</p>
+
+<p>Evans, A. H. Birds (The Cambridge
+Natural History, edited by S. F. Harmer
+and A. E. Shipley, Vol. IX). New York:
+The Macmillan Company. Pp. 635. $3.50.</p>
+
+<p>Egbert, Seneca. A Manual of Hygiene
+and Sanitation. Philadelphia: Lea Brothers
+&amp; Co. Pp. 368.</p>
+
+<p>Foulke, William Dudley. Slav or Saxon:
+a Study of the Growth and Tendencies of
+Russian Civilization. New York: G. P.
+Putnam's Sons. Pp. 141. $1.</p>
+
+<p>Huntington, Elon. The Earth's Rotation
+and its Interior Heat. Pp. 33.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_854" id="Page_854">[Pg 854]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Janes, Lewis G. Our Nation's Peril.
+Social Ideas and Social Progress. Pp. 31.
+25 cents.</p>
+
+<p>McLellan, J. A., and Ames, A. F. The
+Public School Mental Arithmetic. New
+York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 138.
+25 cents. Boston: James H. West &amp; Co.</p>
+
+<p>Maltbie, Milo Ray. Municipal Functions.
+A Study of the Development, Scope,
+and Tendency of Municipal Socialism.
+(Municipal Affairs, December, 1898.) New
+York: Reform Club, Committee of Municipal
+Administration. Pp. 230. 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>Mason, Hon. William E. Speech in the
+United States Senate on the Government
+of Foreign Peoples. Pp. 26.</p>
+
+<p>Patten, Simon N. The Development of
+English Thought. New York: The Macmillan
+Company. Pp. 415. $3.</p>
+
+<p>Pittsburg Press Almanac, The, for 1899.
+Quarterly. St. Louis: The Press Publishing
+Company. Pp. 536.</p>
+
+<p>R&eacute;c&eacute;jac, E. Essay on the Basis of the
+Mystic Knowledge. Translated by Sera
+Carr Upton. New York: Charles Scribner's
+Sons. Pp. 287. $2.50.</p>
+
+<p>Reprints. Caldwell, Otis W. The Life
+History of Lemna Minor. Pp. 32.&mdash;Calkins,
+G. N. Some Hydroids from Puget
+Sound. Pp. 24, with six plates.&mdash;Cope,
+Edward D. Vertebrate Remains from the
+Port Kennedy Bone Deposit. Pp. 75, with
+plates.&mdash;Fitz, G. W. Play as a Factor in
+Development. Pp. 7; The Hygiene of Instruction
+in Elementary Schools. Pp. 7.&mdash;Howard,
+William Lee. Double Personality;
+Lenten Hysteria. Pp. 8.&mdash;Howe, R. H.,
+Jr. North American Wood Frogs.&mdash;Hunt,
+Charles Wallace. The Engineer: His
+Work, his Ethics, his Pleasures. (President's
+Address, American Society of Mechanical
+Engineers.) Pp. 15.&mdash;Hunter, S.
+J. The Coccid&aelig; of Kansas. Pp. 15, with
+plates.&mdash;Krauss, W. C. The Stigmata of
+Degeneration. Pp. 360.&mdash;Lichty, D. Thalassic
+Submersion a Means of Disposal of
+the Dead. Pp. 12.&mdash;McDonald, Arthur.
+Emile Zola. Pp. 16.&mdash;Phillips, W. B. Iron
+Making in Alabama. Montgomery. Pp.
+380.&mdash;Saunders, De Alten. Phycological
+Memoirs. Pp. 20, with plates.&mdash;Schlicht,
+Paul J. A New Process of Combustion.
+Pp. 32.&mdash;Stevens, F. L. The Effect of
+Aqueous Solutions upon the Germination
+of Fungus Spores. Pp. 30.&mdash;Stock, H. H.
+The International Correspondence Schools,
+Scranton, Pennsylvania. Pp. 12.&mdash;Urn,
+The. Modern Thought on Modern Cremation.
+United States Cremation Company.
+Pp. 40.&mdash;Veeder, M. A. The Relative Importance
+of Flies and Water Supply in
+Spreading Disease. Pp. 8.</p>
+
+<p>Robinson, Albert Gardner. The Porto
+Rico of To-day. New York: Charles Scribner's
+Sons. Pp. 240, with maps. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>Salazar, A. E. Kalkules de Ka&ntilde;erius
+de Agua (Calculations of Water Conduits).
+Santiago de Chile. Pp. 246.</p>
+
+<p>Schnabel, Dr. Carl. Handbook of Metallurgy.
+Translated by Henry Louis. 2
+vols. New York: The Macmillan Company.
+Pp. 876 and 732. $10.</p>
+
+<p>Seligman, E. R. A. The Shifting and
+Incidence of Taxation. Second edition.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp.
+337. $3.</p>
+
+<p>Semon, Richard. In the Australian
+Bush and on the Coast of the Coral Sea.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp.
+552. $6.50.</p>
+
+<p>Spencer, Baldwin, and Gillen, F. J.
+The Native Tribes of Central Australia.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp.
+671, with plates. $6.50.</p>
+
+<p>Technology Review, The. A Quarterly
+Magazine relating to the Massachusetts
+Institute of Technology. January, 1899.
+Pp. 143. 35 cents.</p>
+
+<p>United States National Museum. Annual
+Report for the Year ending June 30,
+1896. (Smithsonian Institution.) Washington.
+Pp. 1107, with plates.</p>
+
+<p>Weir, James. The Dawn of Reason.
+Mental Traits in the Lower Animals. New
+York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 234.
+$1.25.</p>
+
+<p>Westcott, Edward N. David Harum.
+New York: D. Appleton and Company.
+Pp. 392. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>Whipple, G. C. The Microscopy of
+Drinking Water. New York: John Wiley
+&amp; Sons. Pp. 300, with nineteen plates.
+$3.50.</p>
+
+<p>Wilkinson, F. The Story of the Cotton
+Plant. (Library of Useful Stories.) New
+York: D. Appleton and Company. Pp. 191.
+40 cents.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>Fragments of Science.</h2>
+
+
+<p><b>The Nernst Electric Lamp.</b>&mdash;Prof. Walter
+Nernst, of the University of G&ouml;ttingen,
+has recently devised an electric lamp which
+promises to be an important addition to our
+present methods of lighting. The part of
+the lamp which emits the light consists of a
+small rod of highly refractory material, said
+to be chiefly thoria, which is supported between
+two platinum electrodes. The rod is
+practically a nonconductor when cold, but by
+heating it (in the smaller sizes a match is
+sufficient) its conductivity is so raised that a
+current will pass through it; after the current
+is once started the heat produced by the
+resistance of the rod is sufficient to keep up
+its conductivity, and the latter is raised to a
+state of intense incandescence, and gives out
+a brilliant white light. As the preliminary
+heating by means of a match or other flame
+would in some cases be an inconvenience,
+Professor Nernst has devised a lamp which,
+by means of a platinum resistance attachment,
+can be started by simply turning a switch.
+The life of the rods is about five hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_855" id="Page_855">[Pg 855]</a></span>
+hours. The lamps are said to work equally
+well with either alternating or direct currents,
+and there is no vacuum necessary. If
+this lamp proves a success as a commercial
+apparatus, it will be but another example of
+how slight a matter may make all the difference
+between success and failure. There
+have been numerous experimenters trying
+for the last ten years, and in fact ever since
+the appearance of the arc lamp, to utilize in
+an electric lamp the great light-giving power
+of the refractory earths in a state of incandescence;
+but, owing to their high resistance
+at ordinary temperatures, no results were obtained
+until Professor Nernst thought of heating
+his thoria rod, and this simple procedure
+seems to have solved the whole difficulty.
+It is claimed that the Nernst lamp is a much
+more economical transformer of electricity
+into light than the present incandescent
+electric lamps. An apparatus called a kaolin
+candle, which has been suggested as an anticipation
+of Professor Nernst's lamp, was
+constructed by Paul Jablochkoff in 1877 or
+1878. It consisted of a strip of kaolin,
+along which ran a "match" of some conducting
+material. The current was passed
+through this "match" until the kaolin strip
+became heated sufficiently to become a conductor
+itself. The lamp did not, however,
+prove a commercial success.</p>
+
+<p><b>Laws of Climatic Evolution.</b>&mdash;The problem
+of the laws of climatic evolution was
+characterized by Dr. Marsden Manson, in a
+paper read at the British Association, as one
+of the grandest and most far-reaching problems
+in geological physics, since it embraces
+principles and laws applicable to other planets
+than ours. After presenting a formulation
+of those laws, the author pointed out
+that in consequence of their working, a hot
+spheroid rotating in space and revolving
+about a central sun, and holding fluids of
+similar properties to water and air within the
+sphere of its control, must pass through a
+series of uniform climates at sea level, gradually
+decreasing in temperature and terminating
+in an ice age, and that this age must be
+succeeded by a series of zonal climates gradually
+increasing in temperature and extent.
+The conclusions thus reached were that in
+the case of the earth zonal distribution of
+climates was inaugurated at the culmination
+of the ice age, and is gradually increasing in
+temperature and extent by the trapping of
+the solar energy in the lower atmosphere,
+and that the rise has a moderate limit; that
+the ice age was unique and due to the physical
+properties of water and air, and to the
+difference in specific heat of land and water;
+and that prior to the ice age local formation
+of glaciers could occur at any latitude and
+period. Dr. Manson then observed that Jupiter
+was apparently in a condition through
+which the earth has already passed, and
+Mars was in one toward which the climatic
+evolution of the earth was tending.</p>
+
+<p><b>Poisonous Plants.</b>&mdash;Statistics in regard
+to poisonous plants are lacking on account
+of a general ignorance of the subject, and it
+is therefore impossible to form even an approximate
+estimate of the damage done by
+them. Besides the criminal uses that may be
+made of them, there are some other problems
+connected with them that are of general
+public interest. The common law of England
+holds those who possess and cultivate
+such plants responsible for damages accruing
+from them; and a New York court has
+awarded damages in a case of injury from
+poison ivy growing in a cemetery. In order
+to obtain information on the subject, the botanical
+division of the Department of Agriculture
+arranged to receive notices through
+the clipping bureaus of the cases of poisoning
+recorded in the newspapers. Thus
+through the persons named in the articles or
+through the local postmaster it was put in
+correspondence with the physician in the
+case, who furnished the authentic facts. A
+large number of correct and valuable data
+were thus secured. It is proved by these
+facts that all poisonous plants are not
+equally injurious to all persons nor to all
+forms of life. Thus poison ivy has no apparent
+external effect upon animals, and a
+few of them eat its leaves with impunity;
+and it acts upon the skin of the majority of
+persons with varying intensity&mdash;on some
+hardly at all, while others are extremely sensitive
+to it. A similar variability is found in
+the effects of poisonous plants taken internally.
+In some cases often regarded as of
+that kind, death is attributable not to any
+poison which the plant contains, but to immoderate
+or incautious eating, or to mechanical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_856" id="Page_856">[Pg 856]</a></span>
+injury such as is produced in horses by
+the hairs of crimson clover, or to the effect
+of parasitic growths, such as ergot on rye.
+Excluding all which operate in these ways,
+there are, however, a large number of really
+poisonous plants, the properties of which are
+comparatively unknown. It is concerning
+these that information has been sought by
+the botanical division. Its report contains
+descriptions of about forty plants, with figures,
+belonging to seventeen families.</p>
+
+<p><b>The United States Biological Survey.</b>&mdash;The
+Biological Survey of the United States
+Department of Agriculture aims to define
+and map the agricultural belts of the country
+in order to ascertain what products of
+the soil can and what can not be grown successfully
+in each, to guide the farmer in the
+intelligent introduction of foreign crops, and
+to point out his friends and his enemies
+among the native birds and animals. For
+information on these subjects so important
+to him the farmer has had to rely on his own
+experiments or those of his neighbors, often
+carried on at enormous cost to persons little
+able to bear it. The Survey and its predecessor,
+the division of ornithology and mammology,
+have had small parties in the field
+traversing the public domain for the purpose
+of studying the geographic distribution of
+our native land animals and plants and mapping
+the boundaries of the areas they inhabit.
+It was early learned that North
+America is divisible into seven transcontinental
+belts or life zones and a much larger
+number of minor areas or <i>faunas</i>, each characterized
+by particular associations of animals
+and plants. The inference was natural
+and has been verified that these same zones
+and areas, up to the northern limit of profitable
+agriculture, are adapted to the needs of
+particular kinds or varieties of cultivated
+crops. The Survey is engaged in tracing as
+precisely as possible the actual boundaries
+of these belts and areas, and in finding out
+and designating the varieties of crops best
+adapted to each. In this undertaking it
+aims to point out such exotic products as,
+from their importance in other lands, are
+likely to prove of value if introduced on fit
+soils and under proper climatic conditions.
+The importance of this work will be realized
+when it is recollected that all the climatic
+life zones of the world, except the hottest
+tropical, are represented in our country.
+The colored maps prepared by the Survey
+furnish the best guide the farmer can have
+for judging what crops will be best adapted
+for his particular region; and in connection
+with the work of the entomologist, show the
+belts along which noxious insects are likely
+to spread. The report of the Survey, prepared
+under the direction of its chief, C.
+Hart Merriam, though full of valuable information
+not before presented consecutively,
+is preliminary and only touches the edge of a
+subject which is susceptible of copious elaboration,
+and is destined to be worked up with
+immense profit.</p>
+
+<p><b>A Neolithic Lake Dwelling.</b>&mdash;A crannog,
+or lake dwelling, discovered in the summer
+of 1898 on the banks of the Clyde, has received
+much attention from English arch&aelig;ologists
+because of its unique situation on a
+tidal stream, and of its being apparently
+neolithic or far more ancient than any other
+crannog yet examined, in all others the relics
+being of the bronze age. Careful excavations
+have been made in it and are still in progress,
+and the refuse mound of the former settlement
+has been sifted, with results that have
+made it plain that there were design and
+execution in the building, and that it was
+occupied and inhabited for a long period.
+Positive evidence of fire is afforded in the
+shape of numerous firestones and calcined
+embers, and indications of the condition of
+life at the period are given by the implements,
+ornaments, and tools recovered. The crannog
+is about sixteen hundred yards east of
+the Castle Rock of Dumbarton, and about
+fifty yards from the river at low tide, but is
+submerged when the tide is in to a depth of
+from three to twelve feet, and is one hundred
+and eighty-four feet in circuit. The
+piles in the outer circle are of oak, which
+below the mud surface is still quite fresh.
+The transverse beams and pavement inside
+are of wood of the consistence of cheese&mdash;willow,
+alder, and oak&mdash;while the smaller
+branches are of fir, birch, and hazel, with
+bracken, moss, and chips. The stones in the
+outer circle and along the causeway leading
+to the dwelling place seem to have been set
+in a methodical order, most of the bowlders
+being about a lift for a man. The refuse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_857" id="Page_857">[Pg 857]</a></span>
+mound extends for about twelve feet outside
+for the greater part of the circuit, and here
+most of the bone and flint implements have
+been discovered. The largest article found in
+the site was a very fine canoe, thirty-seven
+feet long and forty inches beam, dug out of a
+single oak tree, which lay in what has proved
+to have been a dock. A curious ladder was
+also found here, the rungs of which were cut
+out of the solid wood, and which has somewhat
+the general appearance of a post of a
+post-and-rail fence. The exploration of the
+site is much interfered with by the rising of
+the tide, which covers the crannog for a considerable
+time every day. All the relics
+found&mdash;consisting chiefly of objects of bone,
+staghorn, jet, chert, and cannel coal, with
+some querns, the canoe, ladder, etc.&mdash;have
+been placed in the museum at Glasgow.</p>
+
+<p><b>Portland Cement.</b>&mdash;The following facts
+are taken from an address delivered before
+the Franklin Institute by Mr. Robert W.
+Lesley: "It was not until the end of the last
+century that the true principles of hydraulic
+cement were discovered by Smeaton, who, in
+the construction of the Eddystone Lighthouse,
+made a number of experiments with
+the English limestones, and laid down, as a
+result, the principle that a limestone yielding
+from fifteen to twenty-five per cent of residue
+when dissolved in hydrochloric acid will
+set under water. These limestones he denominated
+hydraulic limestones, and from
+the principle so laid down by him come the
+two great definitions of what we now know
+as cement, namely, the natural and artificial
+cements of commerce. The natural variety,
+such as the Rosendale, Lehigh, and Cumberland
+cements, was first made by Joseph Parker
+in 1796, who discovered what he called
+'Roman cement,' based upon the calcination
+at low temperatures of the nodules found in
+the septaria geological formation in England.
+This was practically the first cement of commerce,
+and gave excellent results. Joseph
+Aspdin, a bricklayer or plasterer, took out a
+patent in England in 1824 on a high-grade artificial
+cement, and, at great personal deprivation,
+succeeded in manufacturing it on a commercial
+scale by combining English chalks
+with clay from the river beds, drying the
+mixed paste, and after calcining at high heat
+the material thus produced, grinding it to powder.
+This cement, which was the first Portland
+cement in the market, obtained its name
+from its resemblance when it became stone
+to the celebrated Portland stone, one of the
+leading building materials in England. The
+rocks used in the manufacture of Portland
+cement are very similar to those from which
+natural cement is made. The various layers
+in the natural rock may vary in size or stratification,
+so that the lime, alumina, and silica
+may not be in position to combine under
+heat, or there may be too much of one ingredient,
+or not enough of the others in close
+proximity to each other. In making Portland
+cement, these rocks, properly proportioned,
+are accordingly ground to an impalpable
+powder, the natural rock being broken
+down and the lamin&aelig; distributed in many
+small grains. This powder is then mixed
+with water, and is made into a new stone
+in the shape of the brick, or block, in
+which all the small grains formerly composing
+the lamin&aelig; of the original rock
+are distributed and brought into a close
+mechanical juxtaposition to each other.
+The new rock thus made is put into kilns
+with layers of coke, and is then calcined at
+temperatures from 1,600&deg; to 1,800&deg;. The
+clinker, as it comes from the kiln, is then
+crushed and ground to an impalpable powder,
+which is the Portland cement of commerce.
+Portland cement may be made from
+other materials, such as chalk and clay, limestone
+and clay, cement rock and limestone,
+and marls and clays. In every case the principle
+is the same, the breaking down and the
+redistributing of the materials so that the fine
+particles may be in close mechanical union
+when subjected to the heat of the kiln."</p>
+
+<p><b>The French Nontoxic Matches.</b>&mdash;It is
+believed, by Frenchmen at least, that the
+problem long sought, of finding a composition
+for a match head in which all the advantages
+of white phosphorus shall be preserved while
+its deleterious qualities are eliminated or
+greatly reduced, has been solved in the new
+matches which the French Government has
+placed upon the market. These matches are
+marked S. C., by the initials of the inventors,
+MM. S&eacute;v&egrave;ne and Cahen, are made in the factories
+at Tr&eacute;laz&eacute;, Begles, and Samtines, and
+have been well received by the public. In preparing
+the composition, the chlorate of potash<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_858" id="Page_858">[Pg 858]</a></span>
+of the old flashing and safety matches
+has been retained, and the sesquisulphide
+of phosphorus is used instead of the white
+or red phosphorus of the old matches. The
+latter substance, besides the indispensable
+qualities of fixity and resistance to atmospheric
+influences, has the two important properties
+of inflaming at 95&deg; C., much nearer the
+igniting point of white phosphorus (60&deg; C.)
+than of red (260&deg; C.), and being therefore
+easier to light; and of having a low latent
+or specific heat. With these properties embodied
+in the inflammable composition of the
+head, the new match is expected to be comparatively
+free from accidental explosions
+during manufacture and export, to take fire
+by friction, and to burn steadily and regularly.
+The expectation has so far been fulfilled.
+The phosphorus compound has a
+special odor, in which the sulphur characteristic
+predominates, but, not boiling under
+380&deg; C., does not become offensive in the
+shops; and the match heads made with it
+do not emit the phosphorescence which is
+often exhibited by matches made with white
+phosphorus. It is only feebly toxic by direct
+absorption, experiments on guinea pigs
+indicating that it is only about one tenth as
+much so as white phosphorus.</p>
+
+<p><b>Trees as Land Formers.</b>&mdash;John Gifford,
+in a paper presented to the Franklin Institute
+on Forestry in Relation to Physical Geography
+and Engineering, mentions as illustrating
+the way forests counteract certain destructive
+forces, the mangrove tree as "the great
+land former which, supplementing the work
+of the coral polyp, has added to the warm
+seashore regions of the globe immense areas
+of land." The trees grow in salt water several
+feet deep, where their labyrinth of roots
+and branches collect and hold sediment and
+flotage. Thus the shore line advances. The
+seeds, germinating on the plant, the plantlets
+fall into the water, float away till their roots
+touch the bottom, and there form the nucleus
+of new islands and life. The forest constantly
+improves the soil, provided the latter
+is not removed or allowed to burn. The
+roots of trees penetrate to its deeper layers
+and absorb great quantities of mineral matters,
+a large percentage of which goes to the
+leaves, and is ultimately deposited on the
+surface. "The surface soil is both enriched
+by these mineral substances and protected
+by a mulch of humus in varying stages of
+decomposition. As the lower layers rot, new
+layers of leaves and twigs are being constantly
+deposited, so that the forest soil, in
+the course of time, fairly reeks with nourishing
+plant food, which seeps out more or less
+to enrich neighboring soils." The forest is
+also a soil former. "Even the most tender
+rootlet, because of its acidity, is able to dissolve
+its way through certain kinds of rock.
+This, together with the acids formed in the
+decomposition of humus, is a potent and
+speedy agent in the production of soil. The
+roots of many species of trees have no difficulty
+whatever in penetrating limestone and
+in disintegrating rocks of the granitic series.
+As the rock crumbles, solid inorganic materials
+are released, which enrich neighboring
+soils, especially those of the valleys in regions
+where the forest is relegated to the mountain
+sides and top, as should be the case in all
+mountainous regions. In view of the destruction
+caused by mankind, it is a consoling
+fact that Nature, although slowly, is gradually
+improving her waste lands. If not interrupted,
+the barest rock and the fallowest
+field, under conditions which may be called
+unfavorable, will become, in course of time,
+forest-clad and fertile. The most important
+function of the forest in relation to the soil,
+however, is in holding it in place and protecting
+it from the erosive action of wind
+and rain."</p>
+
+<p><b>The Atlantic Slope.</b>&mdash;The Atlantic slope
+of the United States is described in the New
+Jersey State Geological Survey's report on
+the Physical Geography of the State as "a
+fairly distinct geographical province. Its
+eastern boundary is the sea; its western
+boundary on the north is the divide between
+the drainage flowing southeast to the sea and
+that flowing northeast to the St. Lawrence.
+Farther south its western limit is the divide
+between the streams flowing east to the Atlantic
+and those flowing west to the Ohio and
+Mississippi Rivers." The line between it and
+the geographical province next west follows
+the watershed of the Appalachian system of
+mountains. It is divided, according to elevations,
+into several subprovinces, all of
+which elongate in a direction roughly parallel
+to the shore. Next to the coast there is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_859" id="Page_859">[Pg 859]</a></span>
+usually a belt of lowland, few or many miles
+wide, called the <i>Coastal Plain</i>. Inland from
+the Coastal Plain is an intermediate height,
+between the Coastal Plain to the east and
+the mountains to the west, known in the
+South as the <i>Piedmont Plateau</i>. The mountainous
+part of the slope constitutes the
+third province, known as the <i>Appalachian
+Zone</i>. The Atlantic slope may be divided
+into two sections&mdash;a northern and a southern&mdash;in
+which the Coastal Plain is narrow and
+wide respectively. These two sections meet
+in New Jersey, where the division runs from
+the Raritan River, just below New Brunswick,
+to Trenton. South of this line the
+Coastal Plain expands, and all considerable
+elevations recede correspondingly from the
+shore. These three subprovinces are especially
+well shown in the southern section of
+the Atlantic slope. They are less well developed
+in the northern section, and even
+where the topography is comparable the underlying
+rock structure is different. In New
+Jersey a fourth belt, the Triassic formation,
+is interposed between the Coastal Plain and
+the Highlands corresponding to the Piedmont
+Plateau. North of New Jersey the
+Coastal Plain has little development, though
+Long Island and some small areas farther
+east and northeast are to be looked upon as
+parts of it.</p>
+
+<p><b>American Fresh-water Pearls.</b>&mdash;The facts
+cited by Mr. George F. Kunz in his paper,
+published in the Report of the United States
+Fish Commission, on the Fresh-water Pearls
+and Pearl Fisheries of the United States, give
+considerable importance to this feature of
+our natural history. The mound explorations
+attest that fresh-water pearls were
+gathered and used by the prehistoric peoples
+of the country "to an extent that is astonishing.
+On the hearths of some of these
+mounds in Ohio the pearls have been found,
+not by hundreds, but by thousands and even
+by bushels&mdash;now, of course, damaged and
+half decomposed by centuries of burial and
+by the heat of superficial fires." The narratives
+of the early Spanish explorers make
+several mentions of pearls in the possession
+of the Indians. For a considerable period
+after the first explorations, however, American
+pearls attracted but little attention, and
+"for some two centuries the Unios [or 'fresh-water
+mussels'] lived and multiplied in the
+rivers and streams, unmolested by either the
+native tribes that had used them for food,
+or by the pioneers of the new race that had
+not yet learned of their hidden treasures."
+Within recent years the gathering of Unio
+pearls has attained such importance as to
+start economical problems warranting and
+even demanding careful and detailed inquiry.
+The first really important discovery of Unio
+pearls was made near Paterson, N. J., in 1857,
+in the form of the "queen pearl" of fine
+luster, weighing ninety-three grains, which
+was sold to Eug&eacute;nie, wife of Napoleon III,
+for twenty-five hundred dollars, and is now
+worth four times that amount. As a result
+the Unios at Notch Brook, where it was
+found, were gathered by the million and destroyed.
+Within a year fully fifteen thousand
+dollars' worth of pearls were sent to
+the New York market. Then the shipments
+gradually fell off. Some of the best American
+pearls that were next found were at
+Waynesville, Ohio, where Mr. Israel H. Harris
+formed an exceedingly fine collection. It
+contained more than two thousand specimens,
+weighing more than as many grains.
+Among them were one button-shaped on the
+back and weighing thirty-eight grains, several
+almost transparent pink ones, and one
+showing where the pearl had grown almost
+entirely through the Unio. In 1889 a number
+of magnificently colored pearls were
+found at different places in the creeks and
+rivers of Wisconsin, of which more than ten
+thousand dollars' worth were sent to New
+York within three months. These discoveries
+led to immense activity in pearl hunting
+through all the streams of the region, and in
+three or four seasons the shells were nearly
+exhausted. The pearl fisheries of this State
+have produced at least two hundred and fifty
+thousand dollars' worth of pearls since 1889.
+Another outbreak of the "pearl mania"
+occurred in Arkansas in 1897, and extended
+into the Indian Territory, Missouri, Georgia,
+and other States.</p>
+
+<p><b>Distribution of Cereals in the United
+States.</b>&mdash;To inquiries made preparatory to
+drawing up a report on the Distribution of
+Cereals in North America (Department of
+Agriculture, Biological Survey), Mr. C. S.
+Plumb received one thousand and thirty-three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_860" id="Page_860">[Pg 860]</a></span>
+answers, eight hundred and ninety-seven of
+which came from the United States and the
+rest from the Canadian provinces. These
+reports showed that in many localities, particularly
+in the East and South, but little attention
+is paid to keeping varieties pure, and
+many farmers use mixed, unknown, or local
+varieties of ordinary merit for seed. In
+New England but little grain is grown from
+sowing, owing to the cheapness of Western
+grain, and wheat is rarely reported. Oats
+are now mostly sown from Western seed, and
+the resulting crop is mown for hay, while
+most of the corn is cut for green fodder or
+silage. On certain fine lowlands&mdash;as, for example,
+in the Connecticut Valley&mdash;oats, and
+more especially corn, are often grown for
+grain. While reports on most of the cereals
+were rendered from the lower austral zone,
+or the region south of the Appalachians and
+the old Missouri Compromise line, this region,
+except where it merges with the upper austral
+or the one north of it, is apparently outside
+the area of profitable cultivation of
+wheat and oats. In Louisiana and most of
+the other parts of the lower austral, except
+in northern Texas and Oklahoma, wheat is
+almost an unknown crop. The warm, moist
+climatic conditions here favor the development
+of fungous diseases to such a degree
+that the plants are usually ruined or greatly
+injured at an early stage of growth. In
+Florida, as a rule, cereals are rarely cultivated
+except on the uplands at the northern
+end of the State. In a general way, corn
+and wheat are most successfully grown in
+the upper austral zone, or central States,
+while oats are best and most productive in
+the transition zone (or northern and Lake
+States and the Dakotas), or along the border
+of the upper austral and transition. The
+gradual acclimation of varieties of cereals,
+through years of selection and cultivation,
+has gone so far, however, that some varieties
+are now much better adapted to one zone
+than to another.</p>
+
+<p><b>Spanish Silkworm Gut.</b>&mdash;The business
+of manufacturing silkworm gut in Spain is
+a considerable industry. The method of
+preparation is thus described in the Journal
+of the Society of Arts: After the silkworm
+grub has eaten enough mulberry leaves, and
+before it begins to spin, which is during the
+months of May and June, it is thrown into
+vinegar for several hours. The insect is
+killed and the substance which the grub, if
+alive, would have spun into a cocoon is
+drawn out from the dead worm into a much
+thicker and shorter silken thread, in which
+operation considerable dexterity and experience
+are required. Two thick threads from
+each grub are placed for about four hours in
+clear cold water, after which they are put
+for ten or fifteen minutes in a solution of
+some caustic. This loosens a fine outer
+skin on the threads, which is removed by
+the hands, the workman holding the threads
+in his teeth. The silk is then hung up to
+dry in a shady place, the sun rendering it
+brittle. In some parts of the country these
+silk guts are bleached with sulphur vapor,
+which makes them beautifully glossy and
+snow-white, while those naturally dried have
+a yellowish tint. The quality of the gut is
+decided according to the healthy condition of
+the worm, round indicating a good quality
+and flat an inferior one.</p>
+
+<p><b>The Nests of Burrowing Bees.</b>&mdash;Prof.
+John B. Smith, having explained to his section
+of the American Association a method
+which has been successfully applied, of taking
+casts in plaster of Paris of the homes of
+burrowing insects, with their branchings, to
+the depth of six feet, described some of the
+results of its application. Bees, of the genus
+<i>Calletes</i>, dig vertically to the depth of eighteen
+inches or more, then burrow horizontally
+from two to five inches farther, and
+construct a thin, parchmentlike cell of saliva,
+in which the egg is deposited, with pollen
+and honey for the food of the larva.
+They then start a new horizontal burrow a
+little distance from the first, and perhaps a
+third, but no more. The vertical tubes are
+then filled up, so that when the bees come
+to life they must burrow from six to twenty-four
+inches before they can reach the surface.
+Another genus makes a twisted burrow;
+another makes a vertical burrow that
+may be six feet deep. About a foot below
+the surface it sends off a lateral branch,
+and in this it excavates a chamber from
+one to two and a half inches in diameter.
+Tubes are sent down from this chamber, as
+many perhaps as from six to twenty together,
+and these are lined with clay to make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_861" id="Page_861">[Pg 861]</a></span>
+them water-tight. This bee, when it begins
+its burrow, makes an oblique gallery from
+four to six inches long before it starts in the
+vertical direction, and all the dirt is carried
+through this oblique gallery. Then the insect
+continues the tube vertically upward to
+just below the surface, and makes a small
+concealed opening to it here, taking care to
+pile no sand near it. This is the regular entrance
+to the burrow.</p>
+
+
+<h3>MINOR PARAGRAPHS.</h3>
+
+<p>In a report of an inspection of three
+French match factories, published as a British
+Parliamentary paper, Dr. T. Oliver records
+as his impressions and deductions that
+while until recently the match makers suffered
+severely from phosphorus poisoning,
+there is now apparently a reduction in the
+severe forms of the illness; that this reduction
+is attributable to greater care in the selection
+of the work people, to raising the
+age of admission into the factory, to medical
+examination on entrance, subsequent close
+supervision, and repeated dental examination;
+to personal cleanliness on the part of
+the workers; to early suspension on the appearance
+of symptoms of ill health; and to
+improved methods of manufacture. The
+French Government is furthering by all possible
+means new methods of manufacture in
+the hope of finding a safer one; and a match
+free from white phosphorus and still capable
+of striking anywhere is already manufactured.</p>
+
+<p>A mechanical and engineering section
+is to be organized in the Franklin Institute,
+Philadelphia, to be devoted to the consideration
+of subjects bearing upon the mechanic
+arts and the engineering problems connected
+therewith. The growth of the various departments
+of this institution&mdash;which has
+been fitly termed a "democratic learned society,"
+from the close affiliation in it of the
+men of the professions and the men of the
+workshops&mdash;by natural accretion, and the
+steadily growing demands for the extension
+of its educational work during the past decade,
+have increased the costs for maintenance
+and administration and have been the
+cause of a deficit in nearly every year. A
+movement is now on foot, approved by the
+board of managers, and directed by a special
+committee, to secure for it an endowment,
+toward which a number of subscriptions
+ranging from two hundred and fifty to
+twenty-five hundred dollars have already
+been received.</p>
+
+<p>The earthquake which took place in
+Assam, June 12, 1897, was described by Mr.
+R. D. Oldham in the British Association as
+having been the most violent of which there
+is any record. The shock was sensible over
+an area of 1,750,000 square miles, and if it
+had occurred in England, not a house would
+have been left standing between Manchester
+and London. Landslips on an unprecedented
+scale were produced, a number of lakes were
+formed, and mountain peaks were moved
+vertically and horizontally. Monuments of
+solid stone and forest trees were broken
+across. Bridges were overthrown, displaced,
+and in some places thrust bodily up to a
+height of about twenty feet, and the rails on
+the railroads were twisted and bent. Earth
+fissures were formed over an area larger than
+the United Kingdom, and sand rents, from
+which sand and water were forced in solid
+streams to a height of three or four feet
+above the ground, were opened "in incalculable
+numbers." The loss of life was comparatively
+small, as the earthquake occurred
+about five o'clock in the afternoon, and the
+damage done was reduced by the fact that
+there were no large cities within the area of
+greatest violence; but in extent and capacity
+of destruction, as distinguished from destruction
+actually accomplished, this earthquake
+surpassed any of which there was historical
+mention, not even excepting the great earthquake
+of Lisbon in 1755.</p>
+
+<p>The first section of the electric railway
+up the Jungfrau, which is intended to reach
+the top of the mountain, was opened about the
+first of October, 1898. The line starts from
+the Little Scheidegg station of the existing
+Wengern Alp Railway, 6,770 feet above the
+sea, and ascends the mountain masses from
+the north side, passing the Eiger Glacier,
+Eiger Wand, Eismeer, and Jungfraujoch stations,
+to Lift, 13,430 feet, whence the ascent
+is completed by elevator to the summit, 13,670
+feet. The road starts on a gradient of
+ten per cent, which is increased to twenty per<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_862" id="Page_862">[Pg 862]</a></span>
+cent about halfway to the Eiger Glacier station,
+and to twenty-five per cent, the steepest,
+after passing that station. There are about 85
+yards in tunnel on the section now opened,
+but beyond the Eiger Glacier the road will
+not touch the surface except at the stations.
+About 250 yards of the long tunnel have
+been excavated so far. The stations beyond
+Eiger Wand will be built within the
+rock, and will be furnished with restaurants
+and beds. At the Eiger Wand and Eismeer
+stations passengers will contemplate the view
+through windows or balconies from the inside;
+but at the Jungfraujoch station tourists
+will be able to go out and take sledges
+for the great Aletsch Glacier. The cars will
+accommodate forty passengers each, and the
+company expects to complete the railroad by
+1904.</p>
+
+<p>Alexander A. Lawes, civil engineer, of
+Sydney, Australia, suggests a plan of mechanical
+flight on beating wings as presenting
+advantages that transcend all other
+schemes. He believes that the amount of
+power required to operate wings and the
+difficulty in applying it are exaggerated beyond
+all measure. The wings or sustainers
+of the bird in flight, he urges, are held in the
+outstretched position without any exertion on
+its part; and many birds, like the albatross,
+sustain themselves for days at a stretch.
+"This constitutes its a&euml;rial support, and is
+analogous to the support derived by other
+animals from land and water." The sole
+work done by the bird is propulsion and elevation
+by the beating action of the wings.
+Mr. Adams's machine, which he does not say
+he has tried, is built in conformity to this
+principle, and its sails are modeled as nearly
+as possible in form and as to action with
+those of the bird. The aid of an air cylinder
+is further called in, through which a
+pressure is exerted balancing the wings. The
+wings are moved by treadles, and the author's
+picture of the a&euml;ronaut looks like a man riding
+an a&euml;rial bicycle.</p>
+
+<p>Carborundum, a substance highly extolled
+by its manufacturers as an abrasive, is composed
+of carbon and silicon in atomic proportions&mdash;thirty
+parts by weight of carbon
+and seventy of silicon. It is represented
+as being next to the diamond in hardness
+and as cutting emery and corundum with
+ease, but as not as tough as the diamond.
+It is a little more than one and a fifth
+times the weight of sand, is infusible at the
+highest attainable heat, but is decomposed
+in the electric arc, and is insoluble in any of
+the ordinary solvents, water, oils, and acids,
+even hydrofluoric acid having no effect upon
+it. Pure carborundum is white. In the
+commercial manufacture the crystals are produced
+in many colors and shades, partly as
+the result of impurities and partly by surface
+oxidation. The prevailing colors are green,
+black, and blue. The color has no effect
+upon the hardness. Crude carborundum, as
+taken from the furnace, usually consists of
+large masses or aggregations of crystals,
+which are frequently very beautifully colored
+and of adamantine luster.</p>
+
+<p>A peculiarity of Old English literary
+usage is pointed out by Prof. Dr. L. Kellner,
+of Vienna, as illustrated in a sentence
+like "the mob is ignorant, and they are often
+cruel." This is considered a bad solecism in
+modern English, but in Old and Middle English
+constructions of exactly the same kind
+are so often met with that it is impossible to
+account for them as slips and mistakes.
+They may be brought under several heads,
+as, Number (the same collective noun used
+as a singular and a plural); Case (the same
+verb or adjective governing the genitive and
+accusative, the genitive and dative, or the
+dative and accusative); Pronoun ("thou"
+and "ye" used in addressing the same person);
+Tense (past and perfect, or past and
+historical present used in the same breath);
+Mood (indicative and subjunctive used in the
+same clause). Finite verb and infinitive dependent
+on the same verb; simple and prepositional
+infinitives dependent on the same
+verb; infinitive and verbal noun used side by
+side; different prepositions dependent on the
+same verb, like Caxton's "He was eaten by
+bears and of lions"; direct and indirect
+speech alternating in the same clause. These
+facts, which are met with as late as 1611
+(Bible, authorized version), point to the
+conclusion that what to us appears as a
+grammatical inconsistency was once considered
+a welcome break in the monotony of
+construction.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fischer Sigwart is quoted in the
+<i>Revue Scientifique</i> as having studied the life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_863" id="Page_863">[Pg 863]</a></span>
+of frogs for thirty years, and found that they
+are night wanderers, keeping comparatively
+quiet during the day and seeking their prey
+after dark. In the fall they leave their hunting
+grounds in the fields and woods and take
+refuge near swamps and ponds, passing the
+winter in the banks of rivers or the mud in
+the bottoms of ponds, whence they come out
+in the spring, when the process of reproduction
+begins. The frog is not sexually mature
+till it is four or five years old. The coupling
+process lasts from three to thirty days. Between
+its spring wakening and spawning the
+frog eats nothing except, perhaps, its own
+skin, which it moults periodically. After
+spawning, frogs leave the water and go to
+the fields and woods. They can be fed, when
+kept captive, upon insects and earthworms.</p>
+
+
+<h3>NOTES.</h3>
+
+<p>A relation has been discovered by Professor
+Dolbear and Carl A. and Edward A.
+Bessey between the chirping of crickets and
+the temperature, the chirps increasing as frequently
+as the temperature rises. The Besseys
+relate, in The American Naturalist, that
+when, one cool evening, a cricket was caught
+and brought into a warm room, it began in
+a few minutes to chirp nearly twice as rapidly
+as the out-of-door crickets, and that its
+rate very nearly conformed to the observed
+rate maintained other evenings out of doors
+under the same temperature conditions.</p>
+
+<p>C. Drieberg, of Colombo, Ceylon, records,
+in Nature, a rainfall at Nedunkeni, in the
+northern province of Ceylon, December 15
+and 16, 1897, of 31.76 inches in twenty-four
+hours. The highest previous records, as
+cited by him, are at Joyeuse, France, 31.17
+inches in twenty-two hours; Genoa, 30
+inches in twenty-six hours; on the hills
+above Bombay, 24 inches in one night; and
+on the Khasia Hills, India, 30 inches in each
+of five successive days. The average annual
+rainfall at Nedunkeni has been 64.70 inches,
+but in 1897 the total amount was 121.85
+inches. The greatest annual rainfall is on
+the Khasia Hills, India, with 600 inches.
+The wettest station in Ceylon is Padupola,
+in the central province, with 230.85 inches
+as the mean of twenty-six years, but in 1897
+the amount was 243.07 inches.</p>
+
+<p>The Korean postage stamps are printed
+in the United States. As explained in the
+United States consular reports, they are of
+four denominations, and all alike except in
+color and denomination. Of the inscriptions,
+the characters on the top are ancient
+Chinese, and those at the bottom, having the
+same meaning, are Korean; the characters
+on the right are Korean and those on the
+left are Chinese, both giving the denominations,
+with the English translation just below
+the center of the stamp. The plum blossom
+in each corner is the royal flower of the present
+Ye dynasty, which has been in existence
+more than five hundred years, and the figures
+at the corners of the center piece represent
+the four spirits that stand at the corners
+of the earth and support it on their shoulders.
+The national emblem in the center is an ancient
+Chinese phallic device.</p>
+
+<p>A paragraph in <i>La Nature</i> calls to mind
+that the year 1898 was the "jubilee" of the
+sea serpent, the first mention of a sight of
+the monster&mdash;whether fabulous or not is
+still undecided&mdash;having been made by the
+captain and officers of the British ship D&aelig;dalus
+in 1848. They said they saw it between
+the Cape of Good Hope and St. Helena,
+and that it was about six hundred feet
+long. Since then views of sea serpents have
+been reported nearly every year, but none
+has ever been caught or seen so near or for
+so long a time as to be positively identified.
+There are several creatures of the deep which,
+seen for an instant, might be mistaken with
+the aid of an excited imagination for a marine
+serpent; and it is not wholly impossible
+that some descendants of the gigantic saurians
+of old may still be living in the ocean
+undetected by science.</p>
+
+<p>The results of a study of the winter food
+of the chickadee by Clarence M. Weed, of
+the New Hampshire College Agricultural Experiment
+Station, shows that more than half
+of it consists of insects, a very large proportion
+of which are taken in the form of eggs.
+Vegetation of various sorts made up a little
+less than a quarter of the food; but two
+thirds of this consisted of buds and bud
+scales that were accidentally introduced
+along with plant-lice eggs. These eggs
+made up more than one fifth of the entire
+food, and formed the most remarkable element
+of the bill of fare. The destruction
+of these eggs of plant lice is probably the
+most important service which the chickadee
+renders during its winter residence. Insect
+eggs of many other kinds were found in the
+food, among them those of the tent caterpillar
+and the fall cankerworm, and the larv&aelig;
+of several kinds of moths, including those of
+the common apple worm.</p>
+
+<p>The Merchants' Association of San Francisco
+has been trying the experiment of
+sprinkling a street with sea water, and finds
+that such water binds the dirt together between
+the paving stones, so that when it is
+dry no loose dust is formed to be raised by
+the wind; that sea water does not dry so
+quickly as fresh water, so that it has been
+claimed when salt water has been used that
+one load of it is equal to three loads of fresh
+water. The salt water which is deposited on
+the street absorbs moisture from the air during
+the night, whereby the street is thoroughly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_864" id="Page_864">[Pg 864]</a></span>
+moist during the early morning, and
+has the appearance of having been freshly
+sprinkled.</p>
+
+<p>The Tarahumare people, who live in the
+most inaccessible part of northern Mexico,
+were described by Dr. Krauss in the British
+Association as ignorant and primitive, and
+many still living in caves. What villages
+they have are at altitudes of about eight
+thousand feet above the sea level. They are
+a small and wiry people, with great powers
+of endurance. Their only food is <i>pinoli</i>, or
+maize, parched and ground. They have a
+peculiar drink, called <i>teshuin</i>, also produced
+from maize and manufactured with considerable
+ceremony, which tastes like a mixture
+of sour milk and turpentine. Their language
+is limited to about three hundred words.
+Their imperfect knowledge of numbers renders
+them unable to count beyond ten. Their
+religion seems to be a distorted and imperfect
+conception of Christian traditions, mixed
+with some of their own ideas and superstitions.</p>
+
+<p>The directory of the School of Anthropology
+of Paris, which consists chiefly of the
+professors in the institution, has chosen Dr.
+Capitan, professor of pathological anthropology,
+to succeed M. Gabriel de Mortillet, deceased,
+as professor of prehistoric anthropology.
+Dr. Capitan's former chair is suppressed.</p>
+
+<p>The highest cog-wheel railroad in Europe
+and probably in the world is the one from Zermatt,
+Switzerland, to the summit of the G&ouml;rner
+Grat, upward of eleven thousand five hundred
+feet above the sea. It is between five and
+six miles long, and rises nearly fifty-two hundred
+feet, with a maximum grade of twenty
+per cent. There are two intermediate stations,
+at the Riffel Alp and the Riffelberg,
+and the ascent is made in ninety minutes.
+The height of this road will be surpassed by
+that of the one now being erected up the
+Jungfrau.</p>
+
+<p>Extraordinary advantages are claimed
+by Mrs. Theodore R. MacClure, of the State
+Board of Health, for Michigan as a summer
+and health-resort State. The State has more
+than sixteen hundred miles of lake line, the
+greater part of which is or can be utilized
+for summer-resort purposes; there are in its
+limits 5,173 inland lakes varying in size and
+having a total area of 712,864 square acres
+of water. The many rivers running through
+the State furnish on their banks delightful
+places for camping and for recreation.</p>
+
+<p>An action of bacteria on photographic
+plates was described by Prof. P. P. Frankland
+at the last meeting of the British Association.
+Ordinary bacterial cultures in gelatin
+and agar-agar are found to be capable
+of affecting the photographic film even at a
+distance of half an inch, while, when they
+are placed in contact with the film, definite
+pictures of the bacterial growths can be obtained.
+The action does not take place
+through glass, and therefore, as in the case
+of Dr. W. J. Russell's observations with
+some other substances, it is considered probably
+due to the evolution of volatile chemical
+materials which react with the sensitive film.
+Many varieties of bacteria exert the action,
+but to a different degree. Bacterial growths
+which are luminous in the dark are much
+more active than the non-luminous bacteria
+hitherto tried.</p>
+
+<p>Telephonic communication, it is said, has
+been established between a number of farms
+in Australia by means of wire fences. A
+correspondent of the Australian Agriculturist
+from a station near Colmar represents
+that it is easy to converse with a station
+eight miles distant by means of instruments
+connected on the wire fences, and that the
+same kind of communication has been established
+over a distance of eight miles. Several
+stations are connected in this way.</p>
+
+<p>We have to record the deaths of F. A.
+Obach, electrical engineer, at Gr&auml;tz, Austria,
+December 27th, aged forty-six years. He
+was author of numerous papers on subjects
+of electrical science in English and German
+publications, and of lectures on the chemistry
+of India rubber and gutta percha; Dr.
+Reinhold Ehret, seismologist and author of
+books on earthquakes and seismometers, who
+died from an Alpine accident in the Susten
+Pass; Dr. Joseph Coats, professor of pathology
+at the University of Glasgow, and
+author of a manual of pathology, a work on
+tuberculosis, etc.; Thomas Hincks, F. R. S.,
+author of books on marine zo&ouml;logy, February
+2d; Major J. Hotchkiss, president in 1895 of
+the Geological Section of the American Association
+and author of papers on economic
+geology and engineering; Wilbur Wilson Thoburn,
+professor of biomechanics at Leland
+Stanford Junior University; Dr. Giuseppe
+Gibelli, professor of botany in the University
+of Turin; Dr. G. Wolffh&uuml;zel, professor of
+hygiene in the University of G&ouml;ttingen; Dr.
+Dareste de Chavannes, author of researches
+in animal teratology, and formerly president
+of the French Society of Anthropology; Dr.
+Rupert B&ouml;ck, professor of mechanics in
+the Technical Institute of Vienna; William
+Colenso, F. R. S., of New Zealand, naturalist
+and author of investigations of Maori antiquities
+and myths; Dr. Lench, assistant in
+the observatory at Z&uuml;rich, Switzerland; Dr.
+Franz Lang, rector and teacher of natural
+history in the cantonal schools of Soleure,
+Switzerland, and one of the presidents of the
+Swiss Natural History Society, aged seventy-eight
+years; Dr. William Rutherford, professor
+of physiology in the University of
+Edinburgh, and author of several books in
+that science, February 21st, in his sixtieth
+year; and Sir Douglas Galton, president of
+the British Association in 1895 and an authority
+and author on sanitation, March 10th,
+in his seventy seventh year.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_865" id="Page_865">[Pg 865]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>INDEX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap lowercase">ARTICLES MARKED WITH AN ASTERISK ARE ILLUSTRATED.</span></p>
+
+
+<div>
+Academy della Crusca, The. (Frag.), 572<br />
+<br />
+Adulteration of Butter with Glucose. (Frag.), 570<br />
+<br />
+Allen, Grant. The Season of the Year, 230<br />
+<br />
+America, Middle. Was it Peopled from Asia? E. S. Morse, 1<br />
+<br />
+Animals' Bites. (Frag.), 430<br />
+<br />
+Anthropology. Decorated Skulls and the Power ascribed to them (Frag.), 570<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Estrays from Civilization. (Frag.), 573<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Huichol Indians of Jalisco. (Frag.), 574<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Lessons of. (Table), 411<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments. E. S. Morse*, 712<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Superstitions, Aboriginal, about Bones. (Frag.), 572<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Superstition and Crime. E. P. Evans, 206<br />
+<br />
+Arch&aelig;ology. Earliest Writing in France. G. de Mortillet, 546<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Arch&aelig;</span>"<span class="h">ology.</span>Lake Dwelling, A Neolithic, <a href="#Page_856">856</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Arch&aelig;</span>"<span class="h">ology.</span>Stone Age in Egypt. J. de Morgan, 202<br />
+<br />
+Architectural Forms in Nature. S. Dellenbaugh*, 63<br />
+<br />
+Astronomical Photographs, A Library of. (Frag.), 717<br />
+<br />
+Astronomy. Bombardment, The Great. C. F. Holder*, 506<br />
+<br />
+Atkinson, E. Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States, 145<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Atki</span>"<span class="h">nson,</span>" The Wheat Problem again, <a href="#Page_759">759</a><br />
+<br />
+Atlantic Slope, The. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_858">858</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Bactrian Camel for the Klondike. (Frag.), 136<br />
+<br />
+Barr, M. W. Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare*, <a href="#Page_746">746</a><br />
+<br />
+Bede, Chair of the Venerable. (Frag.), 283<br />
+<br />
+Bees, Burrowing, The Nests of. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_860">860</a><br />
+<br />
+Bering Sea Controversy and the Scientific Expert. G. A. Clark, 654<br />
+<br />
+Biological Survey, The United States. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_856">856</a><br />
+<br />
+Blackford, Charles Minor, Jr. Soils and Fertilizers, 392<br />
+<br />
+Blake, I. W. Our Florida Alligator*, 330<br />
+<br />
+Bombardment, The Great. C. F. Holder*, 506<br />
+<br />
+Books Noticed, 126, 274, 415, 559, 704, <a href="#Page_845">845</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Agriculture. Michigan Board, Thirty-fifth Annual Report of, 423.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Alexander, A. Theories of the Will in the History of Philosophy, 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Andrews, C. M. The Historical Development of Modern Europe, 126.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Anthropology. Indians of Northern British Columbia, Facial Paintings of. F. Boas, 710.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Arch&aelig;ology, Introduction to the Study of North American. C. Thomas, 420.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Arthur and Trembly. Living Plants and their Properties, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Astronomy, A Text-Book of Geodetic. J. F. Hayford, 129.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Corona and Coronet. M. L. Todd, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Earth and Sky, The. E. S. Holden, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_866" id="Page_866">[Pg 866]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Tides, The. G. H. Darwin, 705.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bailey, L. H. Evolution of our Native Fruits, 704.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Baldwin, J. M. The Story of the Mind, 565.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Barnes, C. R. Form and Function of Plant Life, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Barra, Eduardo de la. Literature arcaica, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Beauchamp, W. M. Polished-Stone Articles used by New York Aborigines before and during European Occupation, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Beddard, F. E. Elementary Zo&ouml;logy, 706.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">B&eacute;ker, G. A. Rrimas, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Binet, Alfred. L'Ann&eacute;e Psychologique, 129.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bj&ouml;rling, P. R. Mechanical Engineer's Pocketbook, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Boas, Franz. Facial Paintings of the Indians of Northern British Columbia, 710.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bolton, H. C. Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals (1665-1895), 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Botany. Familiar Life in Field and Forest. F. S. Mathews, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Fossil Plants. A. C. Seward, 127.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Fruits, The Evolution of our Native. L. H. Bailey, 704.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Function and Forms of Plant Life. C. R. Barnes, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Les V&eacute;g&eacute;taux et les Milieux Cosmiques, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Living Plants and their Properties. Arthur and Trembly, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Practical Plant Physiology, 128.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Brain Weight, Indexes of. McCurdy and Mohyliansky, 709.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Brush, George J. Manual of Determinative Mineralogy, 707.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Butler, Amos W. The Birds of Indiana, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Carus-Wilson, C. A. Electro-Dynamics, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals (1665-1895). H. C. Bolton, 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chemical Analysis, Manual of. G. S. Newth, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chemistry. Inorganic according to the Periodic Law. Venable and Howe, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Qualitative Analysis. E. A. Congdon, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Short Manual of Analytical. John Muter, 419.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Clark, William J. Commercial Cuba, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Conant, F. S. Biographical Pamphlet, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Congdon, E. A. Brief Course in Qualitative Analysis, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cornelius, Hans. Psychologie als Erfahrungs-wissenschaft, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Costantin, M. J. Les V&eacute;g&eacute;taux et les Milieux Cosmiques, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Creighton, J. E. An Introductory Logic, 706.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Crook, J. W. History of German Wage Theories, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cuba, Commercial. William J. Clark, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dana, E. S. Text-Book of Mineralogy, <a href="#Page_848">848</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dana, James D. Revised Text-Book of Geology, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Darwin, George Howard. The Tides, 705.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Davis, H. S. Star Catalogues, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Day, D. T. Mineral Resources of the United States, <a href="#Page_852">852</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Detmer, W. Practical Plant Physiology, 128.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Drey, Sylvan. A Theory of Life, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast. E. S. Holden, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Economics. Commercial Cuba. William J. Clark, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; German Wage Theories, History of. J. W. Crook, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Public Administration in Massachusetts. R. H. Whitten, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Education. Greek Prose. H. C. Pearson, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Handbook of Nature Study for Elementary Schools, 130.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Harold's Rambles. J. W. Troeger, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; On a Farm. N. L. Helm, 423.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; United States Commissioner's Report for 1896-'97, <a href="#Page_852">852</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Electricity. Electro-Dynamics. C. A. Carus-Wilson, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Industrial. A. G. Elliott, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; The Discharge of, through Gases. J. J. Thomson, 565.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; The Storage Battery. A. Treadwell, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Elliott, A. G. Industrial Electricity, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Engineering. Mechanical Engineer's Pocketbook, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ethnology. Explorations in Honduras. G. B. Gordon, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Forestry. American Woods. R. B. Hough, 276.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Conditions in Wisconsin. F. Noth, 709.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Geikie, James. Earth Sculpture, <a href="#Page_845">845</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Geography. Natural Advanced. Redway and Hinman, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Philippine Islands and their People. D. C. Worcester, 415.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Physical, of New Jersey. R. D. Salisbury, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Geological Bulletin, Part II, Vol. III, of the University of Upsala, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Geological Survey of Kansas. Vol. IV. S. W. Williston, 709.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Geology. Earth Sculpture. James Geikie, <a href="#Page_845">845</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Indiana, Twenty-second Annual Report of Department of, <a href="#Page_852">852</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Indian Territory, Reconnaissance of Coal Fields of. N. F. Drake, <a href="#Page_852">852</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Iowa Survey. Eighth volume, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Mineralogy, Manual of Determinative, 707.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Mineralogy, Text-Book of. E. S. Dana, <a href="#Page_848">848</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Mineral Resources of the United States. D. T. Day, <a href="#Page_852">852</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; New Jersey State Report for 1897, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Panama, Geological History of the Isthmus of. R. T. Hill, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_867" id="Page_867">[Pg 867]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Text-Book of. J. D. Dana, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Giddings, Franklin H. Elements of Sociology, 559.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Goldman, Henry. The Arithmetician, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Goode, G. B. Report of United States National Museum for 1895, 710.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Gordon, G. B. Ethnological Explorations in Honduras, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Groos, Karl. The Play of Animals, 274.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Harris, Edith D. Story of Rob Roy, 709.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hayford, J. P. Text-Book of Geodetic Astronomy, 129.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Helm, Nellie Lathrop. On a Farm, 423.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hill, R. T. Geological History of the Isthmus of Panama, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">History. Commune, The. Lissagaray. Translated by E. M. Aveling, 423.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Europe, The Historical Development of Modern. C. M. Andrews, 126.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Napoleon III and his Court. Imbert de Saint-Amand, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Reader for Elementary Schools. L. L. W. Wilson, <a href="#Page_853">853</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Spanish Literature. J. Fitzmaurice-Kelly, 275.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hoffman, F. S. The Sphere of Science, 128.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Holden, E. S. Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast, 1769-1897, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; The Earth and Sky, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Holyoake, G. J. Jubilee History of the Leeds Co-operative Society, <a href="#Page_849">849</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hough, R. B. American Woods, 276.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Iowa State University Bulletin, Vol. IV, No. 3, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">James, William. Human Immortality, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Jayne, Horace. The Mammalian Anatomy of the Cat, 278.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Jordan, D. S. Lest we Forget, 568.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Keyser, L. S. News from the Birds, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lambert, R. A. Differential and Integral Calculus, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lange, D. Handbook of Nature Study for Elementary Schools, 130.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lantern Land, In. (Monthly.) Allen and Carleton, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Le Bon, Gustave. The Psychology of Peoples, <a href="#Page_847">847</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society, Jubilee History of. G. J. Holyoake, <a href="#Page_849">849</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Library Bulletin, No. 9, New York State, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lissagaray. History of the Commune. Translated by E. M. Aveling, 423.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Logic, An Introductory. J. E. Creighton, 706.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lyte, E. O. Elementary English, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">McConachie, L. G. Congressional Committees, 131.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mathematics. Differential and Integral Calculus. R. A. Lambert, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Infinitesimal Analysis. William B. Smith, <a href="#Page_849">849</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Lectures on the Geometry of Position. T. R. Reye. Translated.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mathews, F. Schuyler. Familiar Life in Field and Forest, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Maurice-Kelly, James Fitz. History of Spanish Literature, 275.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Meteorology. Wind Deposits, Mechanical Composition of. J. A. Udden, <a href="#Page_853">853</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mills, Wesley. Nature and Development of Animal Intelligence, 562.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mivart, St. George. The Groundwork of Science, 563.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Music, A Short Course in. Ripley and Tupper, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Muter, John. Manual of Analytical Chemistry, 419.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Natural History. Animal Intelligence, Nature and Development of. Wesley Mills, 562.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Birds, News from the. L. S. Keyser, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Birds of Indiana, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Four-footed Americans and their Kin. M. O. Wright, 563.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Solitary Wasps, Habits of. G. W. and E. P. Peckham, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Taxidermy, The Art of. John Rowley, 420.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Wild Animals I have Known. E. S. Thompson, 417.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Newth, G. S. Manual of Chemical Analysis, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ornithology. How to Name the Birds. H. E. Parkhurst, 131.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Overton, Frank. Physiology, Applied, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Physiology for Advanced Grades, 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Paleontology. Fossil Plants. A. C. Seward, 127.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Parkhurst, H. E. How to Name the Birds, 131.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pearson, H. C. Greek Prose, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Peckham, G. W. and E. P. Habits of the Solitary Wasps, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Philosophy. Immortality, Human. William James, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Physiology, Applied. Frank Overton, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Applied, for Advanced Grades. F. Overton, 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Psychology. Child, The Study of the. A. R. Taylor, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; L'Ann&eacute;e Psychologique, 129.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Mind, The Story of the. J. M. Baldwin, 565.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; of Peoples. G. Le Bon, <a href="#Page_847">847</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Play of Animals, The. Karl Groos, 274.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Psychologie als Erfahrungs-wissenschaft. Hans Cornelius, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Will, Theories of the, in the History of Philosophy. A. Alexander, 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Quinn, D. A. Stenotypy. Second edition, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Redway, J. W., and Hinman K. Natural Advanced Geography, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reye, Theodor R. Lectures on the Geometry of Position. Translated, 419.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rice, W., and Eastman Barrett. Under the Stars, and Other Verses, 134.</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_868" id="Page_868">[Pg 868]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Richter, J. P. F. Selections from the Works of, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ripley, F. H., and Tupper, T. A Short Course in Music, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rollin, H. J. Yetta S&eacute;gal, 278.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rowley, John. The Art of Taxidermy, 420.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Saint-Amand, Imbert de. Napoleon III and his Court, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Salisbury, Rollin D. Physical Geography of New Jersey, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Science, Groundwork of, The. St. George Mivart, 563.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Sphere of. F. S. Hoffman, 128.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Seward, A. C. Fossil Plants, 127.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Smith, William B. Infinitesimal Analysis, <a href="#Page_849">849</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sociology. Congressional Committees. L. G. McConachie, 131.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Currency Problems of the United States in 1897-'98. A. B. Stickney, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Elements of. F. H. Giddings, 559.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; The State. W. Wilson, 130.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Workers, The. W. A. Wyckoff, 707.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Stickney, A. B. Currency Problem of the United States in 1897-'98, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Still, A. Alternating Currents and the Theory of Transformers, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Story of the Railroad, The. Cy Warman, <a href="#Page_848">848</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Taylor, A. R. The Study of the Child, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thomas, C. Introduction to North American Arch&aelig;ology, 129.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thompson, Ernest Seton. Wild Animals I have Known, 417.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thomson, J. J. The Discharge of Electricity through Gases, 565.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Todd, Mabel L. Corona and Coronet, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treadwell, Augustus. The Storage Battery, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Troeger, John W. Harold's Rambles, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Udden, J. A. Mechanical Composition of Wind Deposits, <a href="#Page_853">853</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">United States National Museum, Report of, for 1895, 710.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Venable and Howe. Inorganic Chemistry according to the Periodic Law, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Waring, George E., Jr. Street-Cleaning Methods in European Cities, 131.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Warman, Cy. Story of the Railroad, <a href="#Page_848">848</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Whitten, Robert H. Public Administration in Massachusetts, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilson, L. L. W. History Reader, for Elementary Schools, <a href="#Page_853">853</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilson, Woodrow. The State, 130.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Winter, H. L. Notes on Criminal Anthropology, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Worcester, Dean C. The Philippine Islands and their People, 415.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wright, Mabel Osgood. Four-footed Americans and their Kin, 563.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wyckoff, W. A. The Workers, 707.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Zo&ouml;logy, Elementary. E. E. Beddard, 706.</span><br />
+<br />
+Botany. English Names for Plants. (Frag.), 428<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Bot</span>"<span class="h">any.</span>Forest Planting on the Plains. (Frag.), 718<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Bot</span>"<span class="h">any.</span>Light and Vegetation. D. T. MacDougall, 193<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Bot</span>"<span class="h">any.</span>Plant Characters, Changes in. (Frag.), 286<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Bot</span>"<span class="h">any.</span>Poisonous Plants. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_855">855</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Bot</span>"<span class="h">any.</span>Seeds, Dispersal of. (Frag.), 715<br />
+<br />
+Boyer, M. J. Sketch of Cl&eacute;mence Royer. (With Portrait), 690<br />
+<br />
+Brain Weights and Intellectual Capacity. J. Simms, 243<br />
+<br />
+Brooks, William Keith. Mivart's Groundwork of Science, 450<br />
+<br />
+Bullen, Frank T. Life on a South Sea Whaler, <a href="#Page_818">818</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Canada, The Interior of. (Frag.), 141<br />
+<br />
+Catbird, The Coming of the. S. Trotter, <a href="#Page_772">772</a><br />
+<br />
+Causses of Southern France, The. (Frag.), 138<br />
+<br />
+Cereals in the United States. Distribution of. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_859">859</a><br />
+<br />
+Clarke, F. W. Sketch. (With Portrait), 110<br />
+<br />
+Clark, George A. The Scientific Expert and the Bering Sea Controversy, 654<br />
+<br />
+Climatic Evolution, Laws of. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_855">855</a><br />
+<br />
+Collier, J. The Evolution of Colonies, 52, 289, 577<br />
+<br />
+Colonies, The Evolution of. J. Collier, 52, 289, 577<br />
+<br />
+Commensals. (Frag.), 716<br />
+<br />
+Cooking Schools in Philadelphia. (Frag.), 428<br />
+<br />
+Cordillera Region of Canada. (Frag.), 283<br />
+<br />
+Cram, W. E. Concerning Weasels*, <a href="#Page_786">786</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_869" id="Page_869">[Pg 869]</a></span>Criminology. California Penal System. C. H. Shinn*, 644<br />
+<br />
+Cuba, The Climate of. (Frag.), 426<br />
+<br />
+Curious Habit, Origin of a. (Frag.), 286<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Dastre, M. Iron in the Living Body, <a href="#Page_807">807</a><br />
+<br />
+Dawson, E. R. The Torrents of Switzerland, 46<br />
+<br />
+Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap. T. A. Jaggar*, 475<br />
+<br />
+Decorated Skulls and the Power ascribed to them. (Frag.), 570<br />
+<br />
+Dellenbaugh, F. S. Architectural Forms in Nature*, 63<br />
+<br />
+Dodge, C. R. Possible Fiber Industries of the United States*, 15<br />
+<br />
+Dorsey, George A. Up the Skeena River*, 181<br />
+<br />
+D Q, The New Planet. (Frag.), 426<br />
+<br />
+Dream and Reality. M. C. Melinand, 96<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Dr</span>"<span class="h">eam </span>"<span class="h"> Rea</span>"<span class="h">lity. </span>(Table), 103<br />
+<br />
+Dreams, The Stuff of. Havelock Ellis, <a href="#Page_721">721</a><br />
+<br />
+Dresslar, F. B. Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences, <a href="#Page_781">781</a><br />
+<br />
+Dutch Charity, A Practical. J. H. Gore, 103<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Earliest Writing in France, The. G. de Mortillet, 542<br />
+<br />
+Earthquakes, Modern Studies of. George Geraland, 362<br />
+<br />
+Economics. Cereals, Distribution of, in the United States, <a href="#Page_859">859</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Econo</span>"<span class="h">mics.</span>Conquest, The Spirit of. J. Novicow, 518<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Econo</span>"<span class="h">mics.</span>Gold, Marvelous Increase in Production of. A. E. Outerbridge, Jr., 635<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Econo</span>"<span class="h">mics.</span>Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States. E. Atkinson, 145<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Econo</span>"<span class="h">mics.</span>Wheat Problem, The. E. Atkinson, <a href="#Page_759">759</a><br />
+<br />
+Education and Evolution. (Smith.) (Corr.), 554<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>and Evolution. (Table), 269<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>German School Journeys. (Frag.), 573<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>History of Scientific Instruction. J. N. Lockyer, 372, 529<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School. L. L. W. Wilson, 313<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools. L. G. Oakley, 176<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Science and Culture. (Table), <a href="#Page_842">842</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Science in. Sir A. Geikie, 672<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Series Method, The. A Comparison. Charlotte Taylor, 537<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Should Children under Ten learn to Read and Write? G. T. W. Patrick, 382<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>The Goal of. (Table), 118<br />
+<br />
+Electricity. The Nernst Electric Lamp. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_854">854</a><br />
+<br />
+Ellis, Havelock. The Stuff that Dreams are made of, <a href="#Page_721">721</a><br />
+<br />
+Emerson and Evolution. (Alexander.) (Corr.), 555<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Eme</span>"<span class="h">rson </span>"<span class="h"> Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution. </span>(Table), 558<br />
+<br />
+Estrays from Civilization. (Frag.), 573<br />
+<br />
+Ethnology. Was Middle America Peopled from Asia? E. S. Morse, 1<br />
+<br />
+Evans, E. P. Superstition and Crime, 206<br />
+<br />
+Evolution and Education. (Smith.) (Corr.), 554<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution</span>and Education. (Table), 269<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution</span>Extra Organic Factors of. (Frag.), 427<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution</span>of Pleasure Gardens. (Frag.), 717<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution</span>Social. What is it? Herbert Spencer, 35<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_870" id="Page_870">[Pg 870]</a></span><span class="h">Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution</span>Survival of the Fittest. (Table), <a href="#Page_844">844</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Fads and Frauds. (Table), 701<br />
+<br />
+Fiber Industries of the United States. C. R. Dodge*, 15<br />
+<br />
+Florida Alligator, Our. I. W. Blake*, 330<br />
+<br />
+Ford, R. Clyde. The Malay Language, <a href="#Page_813">813</a><br />
+<br />
+Forest Planting on the Plains. (Frag.), 718<br />
+<br />
+Fossils as Criterions of Geological Ages. (Frag.), 427<br />
+<br />
+Foundation, A Borrowed. (Table), 273<br />
+<br />
+French Science, Two Gifts to. M. H. de Parville*, 81<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Galax and its Affinities. (Frag.), 571<br />
+<br />
+Geikie, Sir A. Science in Education, 672<br />
+<br />
+Geography. Atlantic Slope, The. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_858">858</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Geogr</span>"<span class="h">aphy.</span>West Indies, Physical, of. F. L. Oswald, <a href="#Page_802">802</a><br />
+<br />
+Geological Romance, A. J. A. Udden*, 222<br />
+<br />
+Geology. Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap. T. A. Jaggar*, 475<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Geol</span>"<span class="h">ogy.</span>Glacial, in America. D. S. Martin, 356<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Geol</span>"<span class="h">ogy.</span>Siamese Geological Theory, A. (Frag.), 718<br />
+<br />
+Geraland, George. Modern Studies of Earthquakes, 362<br />
+<br />
+German School Journeys. (Frag.), 573<br />
+<br />
+Glacial Geology in America. D. S. Martin, 356<br />
+<br />
+Glaciation and Carbonic Acid. (Frag.), 135<br />
+<br />
+Gold, Marvelous Increase in Production of. A. E. Outerbridge, Jr., 635<br />
+<br />
+Gore, J. H. A Practical Dutch Charity, 103<br />
+<br />
+Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences. F. B. Dresslar, <a href="#Page_781">781</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Hanging an Elephant. (Frag.), 286<br />
+<br />
+Herrings at Dinner. (Frag.), 574<br />
+<br />
+Hitchcock, Charles H., Sketch of*, 260<br />
+<br />
+Holder, C. F. The Great Bombardment*, 506<br />
+<br />
+Huichol Indians of Jalisco. (Frag.), 574<br />
+<br />
+Huxley Lecture, The. (Frag.), 425<br />
+<br />
+Hygiene. Rebreathed Air as a Poison. (Frag.), 714<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Hygi</span>"<span class="h">ene.</span>Throat and Ear, Care of the. W. Scheppegrell, <a href="#Page_791">791</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Ide, Mrs. G. E. Shall we Teach our Daughters the Value of Money?, 686<br />
+<br />
+Indian Idea of the "Midmost Self." (Frag.), 136<br />
+<br />
+Ireland, W. Alleyn. The Labor Problem in the Tropics, 481<br />
+<br />
+Iron in the Living Body. M. Dastre, <a href="#Page_807">807</a><br />
+<br />
+Iztaccihuatl (the White Lady Mountain). (Frag.), 569<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Jaggar, T. A. Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap*, 475<br />
+<br />
+Jastrow, Joseph. The Mind's Eye*, 289<br />
+<br />
+Jordan, D. S. True Tales of Birds and Beasts, 352<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Kekul&eacute;, Friedrich August. Sketch. (With Portrait), 401<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Labor Problem in the Tropics. W. A. Ireland, 481<br />
+<br />
+Lake Dwelling, A Neolithic. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_856">856</a><br />
+<br />
+Light and Vegetation. D. T. MacDougall, 193<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_871" id="Page_871">[Pg 871]</a></span>Lockyer, J. N. A Short History of Scientific Instruction, 372, 529<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+MacDougall. Light and Vegetation, 193<br />
+<br />
+Malay Language. R. C. Ford, <a href="#Page_813">813</a><br />
+<br />
+Martel, M. E. A. Speleology, or Cave Exploration, 255<br />
+<br />
+Martin, D. S. Glacial Geology in America, 356<br />
+<br />
+Melinand, M. C. Dream and Reality, 96<br />
+<br />
+Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. M. W. Barr*, <a href="#Page_746">746</a><br />
+<br />
+Meteorology, Climatic Evolution, Laws of, <a href="#Page_855">855</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Meteor</span>"<span class="h">ology,</span>Sahara, Winds of. (Frag.), 717<br />
+<br />
+Miles, Manly, Sketch of. (With Portrait), <a href="#Page_834">834</a><br />
+<br />
+Mind's Eye, The. Joseph Jastrow*, 289<br />
+<br />
+Missouri Botanical Garden, Additions to. (Frag.), 135<br />
+<br />
+Molecular Asymmetry and Life. (Frag.), 139<br />
+<br />
+Mongoose in Jamaica, The. C. W. Willis*, 86<br />
+<br />
+Moon and the Weather, The. G. J. Varney. (Corr.), 118<br />
+<br />
+Morgan, J. de. Stone Age in Egypt, 202<br />
+<br />
+Morse, E. S. Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments.* (Frag.), 712<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Mo</span>"<span class="h">rse E</span>"<span class="h">. S.</span>Was Middle America Peopled from Asia?, 1<br />
+<br />
+Mortillet, Gabriel de, Sketch of. (With Portrait), 546<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Mor</span>"<span class="h">tillet, G</span>"<span class="h">abriel</span>" The Earliest Writing in France, 542<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Names, Technical and Popular. (Frag.), 285<br />
+<br />
+Naples Aquarium, The. (School for the Study of Life under the Sea.) E. H. Patterson, 668<br />
+<br />
+Natural History. Catbird, The Coming of the. S. Trotter, <a href="#Page_772">772</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>Commensals. (Frag.), 716<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>Herrings at Dinner. (Frag.), 574<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>Origin of a Curious Habit. (Frag.), 286<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>School for the Study of Life under the Sea. E. H. Patterson, 668<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>Scorpion, My Pet. Norman Robinson*, 605<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>Weasels. W. E. Cram*, <a href="#Page_786">786</a><br />
+<br />
+Natural Selection and Fortuitous Variation. (Frag.), 141<br />
+<br />
+Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School. L. L. W. Wilson, 313<br />
+<br />
+Nernst Electric Lamp, The. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_854">854</a><br />
+<br />
+Neufeld, Dr. (Frag.), 140<br />
+<br />
+Nicaragua and its Ferns. (Frag.), 137<br />
+<br />
+Nontoxic Matches, The French. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_857">857</a><br />
+<br />
+Novicow, J. The Spirit of Conquest, 518<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Oakley, Isabella G. Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools, 176<br />
+<br />
+Observation, The Science of. C. L. Whittle*, 456<br />
+<br />
+Ocean Currents, Drift of. (Frag.), 716<br />
+<br />
+Oswald, F. L. Physical Geography of the West Indies, <a href="#Page_802">802</a><br />
+<br />
+Outerbridge, A. E., Jr. Marvelous Increase in Production of Gold, 635<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Parville, M. H. de. Two Gifts to French Science*, 81<br />
+<br />
+Patrick, G. T. W. Should Children under Ten learn to Read and Write?, 382<br />
+<br />
+Patterson, Eleanor H. A School for the Study of Life under the Sea, 668<br />
+<br />
+Pearls, American Fresh-Water. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_859">859</a><br />
+<br />
+Pedigree Photographs. (Frag.), 428<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_872" id="Page_872">[Pg 872]</a></span>Physics. Utilization of Wave Power. (Frag.), 715<br />
+<br />
+Physiology. Iron in the Living Body. M. Dastre, <a href="#Page_807">807</a><br />
+<br />
+Plant Characters, Changes in. (Frag.), 286<br />
+<br />
+Plant Names, English. (Frag.), 428<br />
+<br />
+Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools. Isabella G. Oakley, 163<br />
+<br />
+Pleasure Gardens, Evolution of. (Frag.), 717<br />
+<br />
+Plumandon, J. R. The Cause of Rain, 89<br />
+<br />
+Poisonous Plants. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_855">855</a><br />
+<br />
+Portland Cement. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_856">856</a><br />
+<br />
+Potteries, Doulton. (Frag.), 430<br />
+<br />
+Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments. E. S. Morse*, 712<br />
+<br />
+Psychology. Dreams. Havelock Ellis, <a href="#Page_721">721</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Psych</span>"<span class="h">ology.</span>Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences. F. B. Dresslar, <a href="#Page_781">781</a><br />
+<br />
+Pulpit, A Voice from the. (Table), 409<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Rabies Bacillus, The. (Frag.), 284<br />
+<br />
+Racial Geography of Europe. W. Z. Ripley, 163, 338, 614<br />
+<br />
+Rain, The Cause of. J. R. Plumandon, 89<br />
+<br />
+Rebreathed Air as a Poison. (Frag.), 714<br />
+<br />
+Ripley, W. Z. Racial Geography of Europe, 163, 338, 614<br />
+<br />
+Robinson, Norman. My Pet Scorpion*, 605<br />
+<br />
+Royer, Cl&eacute;mence, Sketch of. (With Portrait.) M. J. Boyer, 690<br />
+<br />
+Russell's Photographic Researches. (Frag.), 139<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Saghalin, The Island of. (Frag.), 285<br />
+<br />
+St. Kildans, The. (Frag.), 284<br />
+<br />
+Scheppegrell, W. Care of the Throat and Ear, <a href="#Page_791">791</a><br />
+<br />
+Science, A Doubtful Appendix to. (Table), 120<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Sci</span>"<span class="h">ence,</span>and Culture. (Table), <a href="#Page_842">842</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Sci</span>"<span class="h">ence,</span>Christian. The New Superstition. (Table), 557<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Sci</span>"<span class="h">ence,</span>Education in. (Words of a Master.) (Table), 699<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Sci</span>"<span class="h">ence,</span>Mivart's Groundwork of. W. K. Brooks, 450<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Sci</span>"<span class="h">ence,</span>The Advance of. (Table), 415<br />
+<br />
+Scientific Instruction, A Short History of. J. N. Lockyer, 372, 529<br />
+<br />
+Scorpion, My Pet. Norman Robinson*, 605<br />
+<br />
+Seasons of the Year, The. Grant Allen, 230<br />
+<br />
+Seeds, Dispersal of. (Frag.), 715<br />
+<br />
+Series Method, The. A Comparison. Charlotte Taylor, 537<br />
+<br />
+Shinn, Charles Howard. The California Penal System*, 644<br />
+<br />
+Siamese Geological Theory, A. (Frag.), 718<br />
+<br />
+Silkworm Gut, Spanish. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_860">860</a><br />
+<br />
+Simms, Joseph. Brain Weights and Intellectual Capacity, 243<br />
+<br />
+Skeena River, Up the. George A. Dorsey*, 181<br />
+<br />
+Smell, The Physics of. (Frag.), 283<br />
+<br />
+Smith, Franklin. Politics as a Form of Civil War, 588<br />
+<br />
+Smith, Stephen. Vegetation a Remedy for the Summer Heat of Cities*, 433<br />
+<br />
+Social Decadence, An Example of. (Table), 412<br />
+<br />
+Sociology. California Penal System. C. H. Shinn*, 644<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Socio</span>"<span class="h">logy.</span>Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. M. W. Barr*, <a href="#Page_746">746</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Socio</span>"<span class="h">logy.</span>Politics as a Form of Civil War. F. Smith, 588<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_873" id="Page_873">[Pg 873]</a></span><span class="h">Socio</span>"<span class="h">logy.</span>The Foundation of. (Giddings.) (Corr.), 553<br />
+<br />
+Soils and Fertilizers. C. M. Blackford, Jr., 392<br />
+<br />
+South Sea Whaler, Life on a. F. T. Bullen, <a href="#Page_818">818</a><br />
+<br />
+Spain's Decadence, The Cause of. (Table), 122<br />
+<br />
+Speleology, or Cave Exploration. M. E. A. Martel, 255<br />
+<br />
+Spencer, Herbert. What is Social Evolution?, 35<br />
+<br />
+Spirit of Conquest, The. J. Novicow, 518<br />
+<br />
+Stone Age in Egypt, The. J. de Morgan, 202<br />
+<br />
+Submarine Telegraphy, Early. (Frag.), 569<br />
+<br />
+Superstition and Crime. E. P. Evans, 206<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Supers</span>"<span class="h">tition</span>Aboriginal, about Bones. (Frag.), 572<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Supers</span>"<span class="h">tition</span>The New. (Table), 557<br />
+<br />
+Survival of the Fittest. (Table), <a href="#Page_844">844</a><br />
+<br />
+Switzerland, The Torrents of. E. B. Dawson, 46<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Taxation, Principles of. Hon. D. A. Wells, 319, 490, <a href="#Page_736">736</a><br />
+<br />
+Taylor, Charlotte. The Series Method, 537<br />
+<br />
+Throat and Ear, Care of the. W. Scheppegrell, <a href="#Page_791">791</a><br />
+<br />
+Toes in Walking, The. (Frag.), 429<br />
+<br />
+Trade Hunting, Scientific. (Frag.), 140<br />
+<br />
+Trait, A, Common to us all. (Frag.), 429<br />
+<br />
+Travel. Up the Skeena River. George A. Dorsey, 181<br />
+<br />
+Tree Planting in Arid Regions. (Frag.), 282<br />
+<br />
+Trees as Land Formers. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_858">858</a><br />
+<br />
+Trotter, Spencer. The Coming of the Catbird, <a href="#Page_772">772</a><br />
+<br />
+True Tales of Birds and Beasts. D. S. Jordan, 352<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Udden, J. A. A Geological Romance*, 222<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Varney, G. J. The Moon and the Weather. (Corr.), 118<br />
+<br />
+Vegetation a Remedy against the Summer Heat of Cities. Dr. S. Smith, 433<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+War, The "Hell" of. (Frag.), 718<br />
+<br />
+Wave Length and other Measurements. (Frag.), 137<br />
+<br />
+Wave Power, The Utilization of. (Frag.), 715<br />
+<br />
+Weasels, Concerning. W. E. Cram*, <a href="#Page_786">786</a><br />
+<br />
+Weir, J., Jr. The Herds of the Yellow Ant*, 75<br />
+<br />
+Wells, David Ames, Death of. (Table), 271<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">We</span>"<span class="h">lls da</span>"<span class="h">vid a</span>"<span class="h">mes</span>Principles of Taxation, 319, 490, <a href="#Page_736">736</a><br />
+<br />
+West Indies, Physical Geography of. F. L. Oswald, <a href="#Page_802">802</a><br />
+<br />
+Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States. E. Atkinson, 145<br />
+<br />
+Wheat Problem, The, again. E. Atkinson, <a href="#Page_759">759</a><br />
+<br />
+White Lady Mountain, The. (Frag.), 569<br />
+<br />
+Whittle, C. L. The Science of Observation*, 456<br />
+<br />
+Willis, C. W. The Mongoose in Jamaica*, 86<br />
+<br />
+Wilson, L. L. W. Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School, 313<br />
+<br />
+Winds of the Sahara. (Frag.), 717<br />
+<br />
+Words of a Master. (Table), 699<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Yellow Ant, The Herds of the. J. Weir, Jr.*, 75<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>THE END.</big></p>
+
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> On Dreaming of the Dead. Psychological Review, September, 1895. In this paper I
+reported several cases showing the nature and evolution of dreams concerning dead friends.
+I have since received evidence from various friends and correspondents, scientific and unscientific,
+of both sexes, confirming my belief in a frequency of this type of dream. Professor
+Binet (L'Ann&eacute;e Psychologique, 1896) has also furnished a case in support of my view, and
+is seeking for further evidence.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> In Japan stories of the returning of the dead are very common. Lafcadio Hearn
+gives one as told by a Japanese which closely resembles the type of dream I am discussing.
+"A lover resolves to commit suicide on the grave of his sweetheart. He found her tomb
+and knelt before it and prayed and wept, and whispered to her that which he was about to
+do. And suddenly he heard her voice cry to him 'Anata!' and felt her hand upon his
+hand; and he turned and saw her kneeling beside him, smiling and beautiful as he remembered
+her, only a little pale. Then his heart leaped so that he could not speak for the
+wonder and the doubt and the joy of that moment. But she said: 'Do not doubt; it is
+really I. I am not dead. It was all a mistake. I was buried because my parents thought
+me dead&mdash;buried too soon. Yet you see I am not dead, not a ghost. It is I; do not
+doubt it!'"</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Many saints (Saint Ida, of Louvain, for example) claimed the power of rising into the
+air, and one asks one's self whether this faith may not be based on dream experiences mistranslated
+by a disordered brain. M. Raffaelli, the eminent French painter, who is subject
+to these sleeping experiences of floating on the air, confesses that they are so convincing
+that he has jumped out of bed on awaking and attempted to repeat the experience. "I
+need not tell you," he adds, "that I have never been able to succeed."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Other pains and discomforts&mdash;toothache, for instance&mdash;may, however, give rise to
+dreams of murder.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> It may be added that they also present evidence&mdash;to which attention has not, I
+believe, been previously called&mdash;in support of the James-Lange or physiological theory of
+emotion, according to which the element of bodily change in emotion is the cause and not
+the result of the emotion.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Wealth of Nations, vol. i, p. 112 (Rogers's edition).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Bastable. Public Finance, p. 181.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> "The old protectionist, with the stock arguments about the influence of the tariff upon
+wages and all the rest of it, is beginning to die out. He told us all he had to say about the
+'pauper labor' of Europe, by which he often meant the best educated and most skillful
+artisans of the world. We got tired of hearing about how the importer paid the tax, how
+it was Europe and England in particular that was all the time squeezing our lives out, till
+nearly all of us, being of English ancestry ourselves, wondered whether we, even, could be
+so good as we hoped we were, if we had sprung from something so essentially perverted
+and bad. We were told, too, that American tourists who went to Europe and spent money
+there which they ought to have squandered at home were not friends of their country, and
+that they did us a particularly hostile act when they brought clothing, statuary, or diamond
+rings back with them from foreign parts. A season of high prices was a real heaven, and
+wars and fires were good things because they destroyed property that would have to be
+replaced, and this would create that demand which, reacting on supply, would increase
+prices. To say that an article was cheap was to say that the political party in power was
+no longer worthy of public confidence. It was related that each government could make
+its people so rich, and the idea was thought to have been traced down from Henry C. Carey,
+that the rest of the world could be safely disregarded altogether.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Seriously, who believes any of this stuff nowadays? The protectionist is not reckoning
+with such popular impotency and stupidity. He believes in his fellow-man, and wants to
+give him a helping hand. He does not care what effect it has on England or Ireland. He
+is not sure that a protective tariff in and of itself will increase the wages of the workmen.
+He is even inclined to think that less wages and profits would do well enough for every
+man, if it were cheaper to live and there were not such extravagant demands upon every
+person from all sides&mdash;this without being a socialist. He is certain that 'a cheap coat'
+does not necessarily make 'a cheap man,' but the cheaper the coat the better it will be for
+the wearer. That is what we are all trying to do, improve our processes, increase our
+effective working power, which means, if you please, to make things cheaper."&mdash;<i>The Manufacturer</i>
+(organ of the Manufacturers' Club of Philadelphia).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> I have been permitted to review the detailed statements of the accounts of one of the
+great enterprises which I have called the manufacture of wheat on a large scale on various
+large farms, separated one from another but under one control, aggregating more than
+twenty thousand acres, in North Dakota. They are managed mainly from a long distance
+through agents and foremen, therefore at a relative disadvantage compared to a farmer
+owning his own land, acting as his own foreman, and saving heavily in expense. Such
+farmers, making no charge for their own time, are computed to have a cash advantage of
+one dollar an acre.
+</p>
+<p>
+A large part of this land has been cropped in wheat for twenty-four years, one farm of
+six thousand acres showing an average in excess of eighteen bushels per acre for the term
+of seventeen years. The details of the product of other farms are not given, but this may
+be considered a rule. Of course, this cropping can not be carried on indefinitely. The land
+is now being allowed to rest, and other crops, such as maize, oats, barley, millet, and timothy,
+are to some extent being raised in rotation, but not to the extent in which individual wheat
+farms are now passing into rotation, especially in Minnesota.
+</p>
+<p>
+In this enterprise the manufacture of wheat is the main purpose, but under the changed
+conditions on the small farms in Minnesota wheat is becoming rather the cash or excess
+crop in a rotation of four; at present, in North Dakota, wheat constitutes about three
+fourths the total product.
+</p>
+<p>
+In these accounts of this great farm are included all charges of every name and nature
+except what might be called the rent of land: the labor, the harvesting and thrashing, the
+general expense including the foreman and all other charges; the office expenses, the taxes,
+the insurance, and, when summer fallow is introduced, the cost of the summer fallow. Suffice
+it that these figures for 1898&mdash;a year of high charge for seed and one which yielded a fraction
+over the average in product&mdash;prove conclusively an average of all charges of less than five
+dollars an acre for the cost of the product. In different years under these conditions the
+cost of the wheat varies from a little over twenty cents to approximately thirty-five cents
+per bushel. The cost of oats, which are cultivated with the wheat mainly for use on the
+farms, ranges from ten to fifteen cents per bushel.
+</p>
+<p>
+These are facts. The pending question in this discussion is, How much land, occupied
+by owners but not now in use, is there in this section of the country on which similar
+results can be attained, with better results by individual farmers who possess mental energy
+and practical skill? The figures given by the chiefs of the agricultural experiment stations
+may rightly be taken in the solution of this question.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Prepared under the direction of
+the Delaware Valley Ornithological Club. By Witmer Stone. Philadelphia, 1894.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Stone. The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> See H. Le Poer. Influence of Number in Criminal Sentences. Harper's Weekly,
+May 14, 1896.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> From The Cruise of the Cachalot. By Frank T. Bullen. (Illustrated.) New York: D.
+Appleton and Company. Pp. 379.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Earth Sculpture, or the Origin of Land Forms. By James Geikie. New York: G. P. Putnam's
+Sons. Pp. 397. Price, $2.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> The Psychology of Peoples. By Gustave Le Bon. New York: The Macmillan Company.
+Pp. 236. Price, $1.50.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> A Text-Book of Mineralogy, with an Extended
+Treatise on Crystallography and Physical
+Mineralogy. By Edmund Salisbury Dana. New
+edition, entirely rewritten and enlarged. New
+York: John Wiley &amp; Sons. Pp. 593. $4.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> The Story of the Railroad. By Cy Warman.
+New York: D. Appleton and Company (Story of
+the West Series). Pp. 280. Price, $1.50.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Infinitesimal Analysis. By William Benjamin
+Smith. Vol. I. Elementary; Real Variables.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 352.
+$3.25.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> The Jubilee History of the Leeds Industrial
+Co-operative Society from 1847 to 1897. Traced
+Year by Year. By George Jacob Holyoake. Leeds
+(Eng.) Central Co-operative Office. Pp. 260.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<h2>Transcriber's Notes:</h2>
+
+
+<p>Obvious printer's errors have been repaired, other inconsistent
+spellings have been kept, including inconsistent use of hyphen (e.g.
+"co-operative" and "cooperative") and capitalisation (e.g. "Fresh-Water"
+and "Fresh-water").</p></div>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44544 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #44544 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/44544)
diff --git a/old/44544-8.txt b/old/44544-8.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Appletons' Popular Science Monthly, April
+1899, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Appletons' Popular Science Monthly, April 1899
+ Volume LIV, No. 6, April 1899
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: William Jay Youmans
+
+Release Date: December 30, 2013 [EBook #44544]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE, APRIL 1899 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Judith Wirawan, Greg Bergquist, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by Biodiversity Heritage Library.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Established by Edward L. Youmans
+
+ APPLETONS'
+ POPULAR SCIENCE
+ MONTHLY
+
+ EDITED BY
+ WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS
+
+ VOL. LIV
+
+ NOVEMBER, 1898, TO APRIL, 1899
+
+ NEW YORK
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
+ 1899
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1899,
+ BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.
+
+
+
+
+VOL. LIV. ESTABLISHED BY EDWARD L. YOUMANS. NO. 6.
+
+APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.
+
+APRIL, 1899.
+
+_EDITED BY WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ I. The Stuff that Dreams are made of. By HAVELOCK ELLIS 721
+
+ II. The Best Methods of Taxation. By the Late Hon. DAVID A.
+ WELLS. Part I 736
+
+ III. Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. By MARTIN W.
+ BARR, M. D. (Illustrated.) 746
+
+ IV. The Wheat Problem again. By EDWARD ATKINSON 759
+
+ V. The Coming of the Catbird. By SPENCER TROTTER 772
+
+ VI. Guessing, as Influenced by Number Preferences. By F. B.
+ DRESSLAR 781
+
+ VII. Concerning Weasels. By WILLIAM E. CRAM. (Illustrated.) 786
+
+ VIII. Care of the Throat and Ear. By W. SCHEPPEGRELL, M. D. 791
+
+ IX. The Physical Geography of the West Indies. I. The Mammals
+ of the Antilles. By Dr. F. L. OSWALD 802
+
+ X. Iron in the Living Body. By M. A. DASTRE 807
+
+ XI. The Malay Language. By Prof. R. CLYDE FORD 813
+
+ XII. Life on a South Sea Whaler. By FRANK T. BULLEN 818
+
+ XIII. Sketch of Manly Miles. (With Portrait.) 834
+
+ XIV. Editor's Table: Science and Culture.--Survival of the
+ Fittest 842
+
+ XV. Scientific Literature 845
+
+ XVI. Fragments of Science 854
+
+ XVII. Index to Vol. LIV 865
+
+
+
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,
+ 72 FIFTH AVENUE.
+
+ SINGLE NUMBER, 50 CENTS. YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION, $5.00.
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1899, BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.
+
+ Entered at the Post Office at New York, and admitted for
+ transmission through the mails at second-class rates.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MANLY MILES.]
+
+
+
+
+APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.
+
+APRIL, 1899.
+
+
+
+
+THE STUFF THAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF.
+
+BY HAVELOCK ELLIS.
+
+
+In our dreams we are taken back into an earlier world. It is a world
+much more like that of the savage, the child, the criminal, the
+madman, than is the world of our respectable civilized waking life.
+That is, in large part, it must be confessed, the charm of dreams. It
+is also the reason of their scientific value. Through our dreams we
+may realize our relation to stages of evolution we have long left
+behind, and by the self-vivisection of our sleeping life we may learn
+to know something regarding the mind of primitive man and the source
+of some of his beliefs, thus throwing light on the facts we obtain by
+ethnographic research.
+
+This aspect of dreams has not always been kept steadily in sight,
+though it can no longer be said that the study of dreams is neglected.
+From one point of view or another--not only by the religious sect
+which, it appears, constitutes a "Dream Church" in Denmark, but by
+such carefully inquisitive investigators as those who have been
+trained under the inspiring influence of Prof. Stanley Hall--dreaming
+is seriously studied. I need not, therefore, apologize for the fact
+that I have during many years taken note from time to time and
+recorded the details and circumstances of vivid dreams when I could
+study their mechanism immediately on awakening, and that I have
+occupied myself, not with the singularities and marvels of
+dreaming--of which, indeed, I know little or nothing--but with their
+simplest and most general laws and tendencies. A few of these laws and
+tendencies I wish to set forth and illustrate. The interest of such a
+task is twofold. It not only reveals to us an archaic world of vast
+emotions and imperfect thoughts, but by helping us to attain a clear
+knowledge of the ordinary dream processes, it enables us in advance to
+deal with many of the extraordinary phenomena of dreaming, sometimes
+presented to us by wonder-loving people as awesomely mysterious, if
+not indeed supernatural. The careful analysis of mere ordinary dreams
+frequently gives us the key to these abnormal dreams.
+
+Perhaps the chief and most frequent tendency in the mechanism of
+dreaming is that by which isolated impressions from waking life flow
+together in dreams to be welded into a whole. There is then produced,
+in the strictest sense, a confusion. For instance, a lady, who in the
+course of the day has admired a fine baby and bought a big fish for
+dinner, dreams with horror and surprise of finding a fully developed
+baby in a large codfish. The confusion may be more remote, embodying
+abstract ideas and without reference to recent impressions. Thus I
+dreamed that my wife was expounding to me a theory by which the
+substitution of slates for tiles in roofing had been accompanied by,
+and intimately associated with, the growing diminution of crime in
+England. Amid my wife's rather contemptuous opposition, I opposed this
+theory, pointing out the picturesqueness of tiles, their cheapness,
+greater comfort both in winter and summer, but at the same time it
+occurred to me as a peculiar coincidence that tiles should have a
+sanguinary tinge suggestive of criminal bloodthirstiness. I need
+scarcely say that this bizarre theory had never suggested itself to my
+waking thoughts. There was, however, a real connecting link in the
+confusion--the redness--and it is a noteworthy point, of great
+significance in the interpretation of dreams, that that link, although
+clearly active from the first, remained subconscious until the end of
+the dream, when it presented itself as an entirely novel coincidence.
+
+The best simile for the mechanism of the most usual type of dream
+phenomena is the magic lantern. Our dreams are like dissolving views
+in which the dissolving process is carried on swiftly or slowly, but
+always uninterruptedly, so that, at any moment, two (often indeed
+more) incongruous pictures are presented to consciousness which
+strives to make one whole of them, and sometimes succeeds and is
+sometimes baffled. Or we may say that the problem presented to
+dreaming consciousness resembles that experiment in which
+psychologists pronounce three wholly unconnected words, and require
+the subject to combine them at once in a connected sentence. It is
+unnecessary to add that such analogies fail to indicate the subtle
+complexity of the apparatus which is at work in the manufacture of
+dreams.
+
+It is the presence of the strife I have just referred to between
+apparently irreconcilable groups of images, in the effort of
+overcoming the critical skepticism of sleeping consciousness--a feeble
+skepticism, it may be, but, as many people do not seem to recognize,
+a real skepticism--that the impressive emotional effects of dreams are
+often displayed. It sometimes happens that two irreconcilable groups
+of impressions reach sleeping consciousness, one flowing from a recent
+stratum of memories, the other from an older stratum. A typical form
+of this phenomenon often occurs in our dreams of dead friends.
+Professor Sully remarks that in dreams of the dead "awareness of the
+fact of death wholly disappears, or reduces itself to a vague feeling
+of something delightfully wonderful in the restored presence." That,
+however, as I have elsewhere shown,[1] is not the typical process in
+dreaming of the dead; although in the later dreams of those who often
+see their dead friends during sleep, the process is abbreviated, and
+the friend's presence is accepted without a struggle--a very
+interesting point, for it tends to show that in dreams, as in the
+hypnotic state, the recollection of previous similar states of
+consciousness persists, and the illusion is strengthened by
+repetition.
+
+In typical dreams of a dead friend there is a struggle between that
+stream of recent memories which represents him as dead and that older
+stream which represents him as living. These two streams are
+inevitably caused by the fact of death, which sets up a barrier
+between them and renders one set of memories incongruous with the
+other set. In dreams we are not able to arrange our memories
+chronologically, but we are perpetually reasoning and striving to be
+logical. Consequently the two conflicting streams of memories break
+against each other in restless conflict, and sleeping consciousness
+endeavors to propound some theory which will reconcile them. The most
+frequent theories are, as I have found, either that the news of the
+friend's death was altogether false, or that he had been buried alive
+by mistake, or else that having really died his soul has returned to
+earth for a brief space. The mental and emotional conflict which such
+dreams involve renders them very vivid. They make a profound
+impression even after awakening, and for some sensitive persons are
+too sacred to speak of. Even so cautious and skeptical a thinker as
+Renan, when, after the death of his beloved sister Henriette, he
+dreamed more than once that she had been buried alive, and that he
+heard her voice calling to him from her grave, had to still his
+horrible suspicions by the consideration that she had been tended by
+experienced doctors. On less well-balanced minds, and more especially
+in primitive stages of civilization, we can scarcely doubt that such
+dreams, resting as they do on the foundation of consciousness, have
+had a powerful influence in persuading man that death is but a
+transient fact, and that the soul is independent of the body. I do not
+wish to assert that they suffice to originate the belief.[2]
+
+While dreams are thus often formed by the molding together of more or
+less congruous images by a feeble but still intelligent sleeping
+activity, another factor is to be found in the involuntary wavering
+and perpetually mere meaningless change of dream imagery. Such
+concentration as is possible during sleep always reveals a shifting,
+oscillating, uncertain movement of the vision before us. We are, as it
+were, reading a sign-post in the dusk, or making guesses at the names
+of the stations as our express train flashes by the painted letters.
+Any one who has ever been subject to the hypnagogic imagery sometimes
+seen in the half-waking state, or who has ever taken mescal, knows
+that it is absolutely impossible to fix an image. It is this factor in
+dreams which causes them so often to baffle our analysis. In addition
+to the mere, as it were, mechanical flowing together of images and
+ideas, and the more or less intelligent molding of them into a whole,
+there is thus a failure of sleeping attention to fix definitely the
+final result--a failure which itself may evidently serve to carry on
+the dream process by suggesting new images and combinations. I dreamed
+once that I was with a doctor in his surgery, and saw in his hand a
+note from a patient saying that doctors were fools and did him no
+good, but he had lately taken some _selvdrolla_, recommended by a
+friend, and it had done him more good than anything, so please send
+him some more. I saw the note clearly, not, indeed, being conscious of
+reading it word by word, but only of its meaning as I looked at it;
+the one word I actually seemed to see, letter by letter, was the name
+of the drug, and that changed and fluctuated beneath my vision as I
+gazed at it, the final impression being _selvdrolla_. The doctor took
+from a shelf a bottle containing a bright yellow oleaginous fluid, and
+poured a little out, remarking that it had lately come into favor,
+especially in uric-acid disorders, but was extremely expensive. I
+expressed my surprise, having never before heard of it. Then, again to
+my surprise, he poured rather copiously from the bottle on to a plate
+of food, saying, in explanation, that it was pleasant to take and not
+dangerous. This was a vivid morning dream, and on awakening I had no
+difficulty in detecting the source of its various minor details,
+especially a note received on the previous evening and containing a
+dubious figure, the precise nature of which I had used my pocket lens
+to determine. But what was _selvdrolla_, the most vivid element of the
+dream? I sought vainly among my recent memories, and had almost
+renounced the search when I recalled a large bottle of salad oil seen
+on the supper table the previous evening; not, indeed, resembling the
+dream bottle, but containing a precisely similar fluid. _Selvdrolla_
+was evidently a corruption of "salad oil." I select this dream to
+illustrate the uncertainty of dream consciousness, because it also
+illustrates at the same time the element of certainty in dream
+_subconsciousness_. Throughout my dream I remained, consciously, in
+entire ignorance as to the real nature of _selvdrolla_, yet a latent
+element in consciousness was all the time presenting it to me in
+ever-clearer imagery.
+
+While the confusions of dreaming are usually the union of unconnected
+streams of imagery which have, as it were, come from widely remote
+parts of the memory system to strike together at the narrow focus of
+shaping consciousness, in some rarer cases the fused images are really
+suggested by analogy and are not accidental. Maury records successions
+of dream imagery strung together by verbal resemblances; I have found
+such dreams rare, but other forms of association fairly common. Thus I
+once dreamed that I was with a dentist who was about to extract a
+tooth from a patient. Before applying the forceps he remarked to me
+(at the same time setting fire to a perfumed cloth at the end of
+something like a broomstick in order to dissipate the unpleasant odor)
+that it was the largest tooth he had ever seen. When extracted I found
+that it was indeed enormous, in the shape of a caldron, with walls an
+inch thick. Taking from my pocket a tape measure (such as I always
+carry in waking life) I founds the diameter to be not less than
+twenty-five inches; the interior was like roughly hewn rock, and there
+were sea-weeds and lichenlike growths within. The size of the tooth
+seemed to me large, but not extraordinarily so. It is well known that
+pain in the teeth, or the dentist's manipulations, cause those organs
+to seem of extravagant extent; in dreams this tendency rules
+unchecked; thus a friend once dreamed that mice were playing about in
+a cavity in her tooth. But for the dream first quoted there was no
+known dental origin; it arose solely or chiefly from a walk during the
+previous afternoon among the rocks of the Cornish coast at low tide,
+and the fantastic analogy, which had not occurred to waking
+consciousness, suggested itself during sleep.
+
+The following dream illustrates an association of quite a different
+order: I imagined I was sitting at a window, at the top of a house,
+writing. As I looked up from my table I saw, with all the emotions
+naturally accompanying such a sight, a woman in her night dress appear
+at a lofty window some distance off and throw herself down. I went on
+writing, however, and found that in the course of my literary
+employment--I am not clear as to its precise nature--the very next
+thing I had to do was to describe exactly such a scene as I had just
+witnessed. I was extremely puzzled at such an extraordinary
+coincidence: it seemed to me wholly inexplicable. Such dreams,
+reduplicating the imagery in a new sensory medium, are fairly common,
+with me at all events, though I can not easily explain them. The
+association is not so much of analogy as of sensory media, in this
+case the visual image becoming a verbal motor image. In other cases a
+scene is first seen as in reality, and then in a picture. It is
+interesting to observe the profound astonishment with which sleeping
+consciousness apperceives such simple reduplication.
+
+It sometimes happens that the confused imagery of dreams includes
+elements drawn from forgotten memories--that is to say, that sleeping
+consciousness can draw on faint impressions of the past which waking
+consciousness is unable to reach. This is a very important type of
+dream because of its bearing on the explanation of certain dream
+phenomena which we are sometimes asked to bow down before as
+supernatural. I may illustrate what I mean by the following very
+instructive case. I woke up recalling the chief items of a rather
+vivid dream: I had imagined myself in a large old house, where the
+furniture, though of good quality, was ancient, and the chairs
+threatened to give way as one sat on them. The place belonged to one
+Sir Peter Bryan, a hale old gentleman who was accompanied by his son
+and grandson. There was a question of my buying the place from him,
+and I was very complimentary to the old gentleman's appearance of
+youthfulness, absurdly affecting not to know which was the grandfather
+and which the grandson. On awaking I said to myself that here was a
+purely imaginative dream, quite unsuggested by any definite
+experiences. But when I began to recall the trifling incidents of the
+previous day I realized that that was far from being the case. So far
+from the dream having been a pure effort of imagination I found that
+every minute item could be traced to some separate source. The name of
+Sir Peter Bryan alone completely baffled me; I could not even recall
+that I had at that time ever heard of any one called Bryan. I
+abandoned the search and made my notes of the dream and its sources. I
+had scarcely done so when I chanced to take up a volume of
+biographies which I had glanced through carelessly the day before. I
+found that it contained, among others, the lives of Lord
+_Peter_borough and George _Bryan_ Brummel. I had certainly seen those
+names the day before; yet before I took up the book once again it
+would have been impossible for me to recall the exact name of Beau
+Brummel, and I should have been inclined to say that I had never even
+heard the name of Bryan. I repeat that I regard this as,
+psychologically, a most instructive dream. It rarely happens (though I
+could give one or two more examples from the experience of friends)
+that we can so clearly and definitely demonstrate the presence of a
+forgotten memory in a dream; in the case of old memories it is usually
+impossible. It so happened that the forgotten memory which in this
+case re-emerged to sleeping consciousness was a fact of no consequence
+to myself or any one else. But if it had been the whereabouts of a
+lost deed or a large sum of money, and I had been able to declare, as
+in this case, that the impression received in my dream had never to my
+knowledge existed in waking consciousness, and yet were to declare my
+faith that the dream probably had a simple and natural explanation, on
+every hand I should be sarcastically told that there is no credulity
+to match the credulity of the skeptic.
+
+The profound emotions of waking life, the questions and problems on
+which we spread our chief voluntary mental energy, are not those which
+usually present themselves at once to dream consciousness. It is, so
+far as the immediate past is concerned, mostly the trifling, the
+incidental, the "forgotten" impressions of daily life which reappear
+in our dreams. The psychic activities that are awake most intensely
+are those that sleep most profoundly. If we preserve the common image
+of the "stream of consciousness," we might say that the grave facts of
+life sink too deeply into the flood to reappear at once in the calm of
+repose, while the mere light and buoyant trifles of life, flung
+carelessly in during the day, at once rise to the surface, to dance
+and mingle and evolve in ways that this familiar image of "the stream
+of consciousness" will not further help us to picture.
+
+So far I have been discussing only one of the great groups into which
+dreams may be divided. Most investigators of dreams agree that there
+are two such groups, the one having its basis in memories, the other
+founded on actual physical sensations experienced at the moment of
+dreaming and interpreted by sleeping consciousness. Various names have
+been given to these two groups; Sully, for instance, terms them
+central and peripheral. Perhaps the best names, however, are those
+adopted by Miss Calkins, who calls the first group representative, the
+second group presentative.
+
+All writers on dreaming have brought forward presentative dreams, and
+there can be no doubt that impressions received during sleep from any
+of the external senses may serve as a basis for dreams. I need only
+record one example to illustrate this main and most obvious group of
+presentative dreams. I dreamed that I was listening to a performance
+of Haydn's Creation, the chief orchestral part of the performance
+seeming to consist chiefly of the very realistic representation of the
+song of birds, though I could not identify the note of any particular
+bird. Then followed solos by male singers, whom I saw, especially one
+who attracted my attention by singing at the close in a scarcely
+audible voice. On awakening the source of the dream was not
+immediately obvious, but I soon realized that it was the song of a
+canary in another room. I had never heard Haydn's Creation, except in
+fragments, nor thought of it at any recent period; its reputation as
+regards the realistic representation of natural sounds had evidently
+caused it to be put forward by sleeping consciousness as a plausible
+explanation of the sounds heard, and the visual centers had accepted
+the theory.
+
+It is a familiar fact that internal sensations also form a frequent
+basis of dreams. All the internal organs, when disturbed or distended
+or excited, may induce dreams, and especially that aggravated kind of
+dreaming which we call nightmare. This fact is so well known that such
+dreams are usually dismissed without further analysis. It is a
+mistake, however, so to dismiss them, for it seems probable that it is
+precisely here that we may find the most instructive field of dream
+psychology. On account of the profoundly emotional effect of such
+dreams they are very interesting to study, but this very element of
+emotion renders them somewhat obscure objects of study. I do not
+venture to offer with absolute certainty one or two novel suggestions
+which dream experiences have led me to regard as probable.
+
+Dreams of flying have so often been recorded--from the time of St.
+Jerome, who mentions that he was subject to them--that they may fairly
+be considered to constitute one of the commonest forms of dreaming.
+All my life, it seems to me, I have at intervals had such dreams in
+which I imagined myself rhythmically bounding into the air and
+supported on the air. These dreams, in my case at all events, are not
+generally remembered immediately on awakening (seeming to indicate
+that they depend on a cause which does not usually come into action at
+the end of sleep), but they leave behind them a vague but profound
+sense of belief in their reality and reasonableness.[3] Several
+writers have attempted to explain this familiar phenomenon. Gowers
+considers that a spontaneous contraction of the stapedius muscle of
+the ear during sleep causes a sensation of falling. Stanley Hall, who
+has himself from childhood had dreams of flying, boldly argues that we
+have here "some faint reminiscent atavistic echo from the primeval
+sea"; and that such dreams are really survivals--psychic vestigial
+remains--taking us back to the far past, in which man's ancestors
+needed no feet to swim or float. Such a theory may accord with the
+profound conviction of reality that accompanies such dreams, though
+this may be more simply accounted for, even by mere repetition, as
+with dreams of the dead; but it is rather a hazardous theory, and it
+seems to me infinitely more probable that such dreams are a
+misinterpretation of actual internal sensations.
+
+My own explanation was immediately suggested by the following dream. I
+dreamed that I was watching a girl acrobat, in appropriate costume,
+who was rhythmically rising to a great height in the air and then
+falling, without touching the floor, though each time she approached
+quite close to it. At last she ceased, exhausted and perspiring, and
+had to be led away. Her movements were not controlled by mechanism,
+and apparently I did not regard mechanism as necessary. It was a vivid
+dream, and I awoke with a distinct sensation of oppression in the
+chest. In trying to account for this dream, which was not founded on
+any memory, it occurred to me that probably I had here the key to a
+great group of dreams. The rhythmic rising and falling of the acrobat
+was simply the objectivation of the rhythmic rising and falling of my
+own respiratory muscles under the influence of some slight and unknown
+physical oppression, and this oppression was further translated into a
+condition of perspiring exhaustion in the girl, just as it is recorded
+that a man with heart disease dreamed habitually of sweating and
+panting horses climbing up hill. We may recall also the curious
+sensation as of the body being transformed into a vast bellows which
+is often the last sensation felt before the unconsciousness produced
+by nitrous oxide gas. When we are lying down there is a real rhythmic
+rising and falling of the chest and abdomen, centering in the
+diaphragm, a series of oscillations which at both extremes are only
+limited by the air. Moreover, in this position we have to recognize
+that the whole internal organism--the circulatory, nervous, and other
+systems--are differently balanced from what they are in the upright
+position, and that a disturbance of internal equilibrium
+always accompanies falling. Further, it is possible that the
+misinterpretation is confirmed to sleeping consciousness by sensations
+from without, by the absence of the tactile pressure produced by
+boots on the foot, or the contact of the ground with the soles; we are
+at once conscious of movement and conscious that the soles of the feet
+are in contact only with the air. Thus in normal sleep the conditions
+may be said to be always favorable for producing dreams of flying or
+of floating in the air, and any slight thoracic disturbance, even in
+healthy persons, arising from lungs, heart, or stomach, and serving to
+bring these conditions to sleeping consciousness, may determine such a
+dream.
+
+There is another common class of dreams which, it seems fairly evident
+to me, must also find their psychological explanation chiefly in the
+visceral sensations--I mean dreams of murder. Many psychologists have
+referred with profound concern to the facility and prevalence of
+murder in dreams, sometimes as a proof of the innate wickedness of
+human nature made manifest in the unconstraint of sleep, sometimes as
+evidence of an atavistic return to the modes of feeling of our
+ancestors, the thin veneer of civilization being removed during sleep.
+Maudsley and Mme. de Manacéïne, for example, find evidence in such
+dreams of a return to primitive modes of feeling. It may well be that
+there is some element of truth in this view, but even if so we still
+have to account for the production of such dreams. For this we must,
+in part at least, fall back upon the logical outcome of dream
+confusions, owing to which, for instance, a lady who has carved a duck
+at dinner may a few hours later wake up exhausted by the imaginary
+effort of cutting off her husband's head. But I think we may find
+evidence that the dream of murder is often a falsely logical deduction
+from abnormal visceral and especially digestive sensations.
+
+I may illustrate such dreams by the following example: A lady dreamed
+that her husband called her aside and said: "Now, do not scream or
+make a fuss; I am going to tell you something. I have to kill a man.
+It is necessary, to put him out of his agony." He then took her into
+his study and showed her a young man lying on the floor with a wound
+in his breast, and covered with blood. "But how will you do it?" she
+asked. "Never mind," he replied, "leave that to me." He took something
+up and leaned over the man. She turned aside and heard a horrible
+gurgling sound. Then all was over. "Now," he said, "we must get rid of
+the body. I want you to send for So-and-so's cart, and tell him I wish
+to drive it." The cart came. "You must help me to make the body into a
+parcel," he said to his wife; "give me plenty of brown paper." They
+made it into a parcel, and with terrible difficulty and effort the
+wife assisted her husband to get the body down stairs and lift it into
+the cart. At every stage, however, she presented to him the
+difficulties of the situation. But he carelessly answered all
+objections, said he would take the body up to the moor, among the
+stones, remove the brown paper, and people would think the murdered
+man had killed himself. He drove off and soon returned with the empty
+cart. "What's this blood in my cart?" asked the man to whom it
+belonged, looking inside. "Oh, that's only paint," replied the
+husband. But the dreamer had all along been full of apprehension lest
+the deed should be discovered, and the last thing she could recall,
+before waking in terror, was looking out of the window at a large
+crowd which surrounded the house with shouts of "Murder!" and threats.
+
+This tragedy, with its almost Elizabethan air, was built up out of a
+few commonplace impressions received during the previous day, none of
+which impressions contained any suggestion of murder. The tragic
+element appears to have been altogether due to the psychic influences
+of indigestion arising from a supper of pheasant. To account for our
+oppression during sleep, sleeping consciousness assumes moral causes
+which alone appear to it of sufficient gravity to be the adequate
+cause of the immense emotions we are experiencing. Even in our waking
+and fully conscious states we are inclined to give the preference to
+moral over physical causes, quite irrespective of the justice of our
+preferences; in our sleeping states this tendency is exaggerated, and
+the reign of purely moral causes is not disturbed by even a suggestion
+of mere physical causation.
+
+There is certainly no profounder emotional excitement during sleep
+than that which arises from a disturbed or distended stomach, and is
+reflected by the pneumogastric to the accelerated heart and the
+impeded respiration.[4] We are thereby thrown into a state of
+uninhibited emotional agitation, a state of agony and terror such as
+we rarely or never attain during waking life. Sleeping consciousness,
+blindfolded and blundering, a prey to these massive waves from below,
+and fumbling about desperately for some explanation, jumps at the idea
+that only the attempt to escape some terrible danger or the guilty
+consciousness of some awful crime can account for this immense
+emotional uproar. Thus the dream is suffused by a conviction which the
+continued emotion serves to support. We do not--it seems most simple
+and reasonable to conclude--experience terror because we think we have
+committed a crime, but we think we have committed a crime because we
+experience terror. And the fact that in such dreams we are far more
+concerned with escape from the results of crime than with any agony of
+remorse is not, as some have thought, due to our innate indifference
+to crime, but simply to the fact that our emotional state suggests to
+us active escape from danger rather than the more passive grief of
+remorse. Thus our dreams bear witness to the fact that our
+intelligence is often but a tool in the hands of our emotions.[5]
+
+I have had frequent occasion to refer to the objectivation of
+subjective sensations as a phenomenon of dreaming. It is, indeed, so
+frequent and so important a phenomenon that it needs some further
+reference. In hysteria (which by some of the most recent authorities,
+like Sollier, is regarded as a species of somnambulism), in
+"demon-possession," and many other abnormal phenomena it is well known
+that there is, as it were, a doubling of personality; the _ego_ is
+split up into two or more parts, each of which may act as a separate
+personality. The literature of morbid psychology is full of
+extraordinary and varied cases exhibiting this splitting up of
+personality. But it is usually forgotten that in dreams the doubling
+of personality is a normal and constant phenomenon in all healthy
+people. In dreaming we can divide our body between ourselves and
+another person. Thus a medical friend dreamed that in conversation
+with a lady patient he found his hand resting on her knee and was
+unable to remove it; awakening in horror from this unprofessional
+situation he found his own hand firmly clasped between his knees; the
+hand had remained his own, the knee had become another person's, the
+hand being claimed, rather than the knee, on account of its greater
+tactile sensibility. Again, we sometimes objectify our own physical
+discomforts felt during sleep in the emotions of some other person, or
+even in some external situations. And, possibly, every dream in which
+there is any dramatic element is an instance of the same splitting up
+of personality; in our dreams we may experience shame or confusion
+from the rebuke or the arguments of other persons, but the persons who
+administer the rebuke or apply the argument are still ourselves.
+
+When we consider that this dream process, with its perpetual
+dramatization of our own personality, has been going on as long as man
+has been man--and probably much longer, for it is evident that animals
+dream--it is impossible to overestimate its immense influence on human
+belief. Men's primitive conceptions of religion, of morals, of many of
+the mightiest phenomena of life, especially the more exceptional
+phenomena, have certainly been influenced by this constant dream
+experience. It is the universal primitive explanation of abnormal
+psychic and even physical phenomena that some other person or spirit
+is working within the subject of the abnormal experience. Certainly
+dreaming is not the sole source of such conceptions, but they could
+scarcely have been found convincing, and possibly could not ever have
+arisen, among races who were wholly devoid of dream experiences. A
+large part of all progress in psychological knowledge, and, indeed, a
+large part of civilization itself, lies in realizing that the
+apparently objective is really subjective, that the angels and demons
+and geniuses of all sorts that seemed at first to take possession of
+the feeble and vacant individuality are themselves but modes of action
+of marvelously rich and varied personalities. But in our dreams we are
+brought back into the magic circle of early culture, and we shrink and
+shudder in the presence of imaginative phantoms that are built up of
+our own thoughts and emotions, and are really our own flesh.
+
+There is one other general characteristic of dreams that is worth
+noting, because its significance is not usually recognized. In dreams
+we are always reasoning. It is sometimes imagined that reason is in
+abeyance during sleep. So far from this being the case, we may almost
+be said to reason much more during sleep than when we are awake. That
+our reasoning is bad, even preposterous, that it constantly ignores
+the most elementary facts of waking life, scarcely affects the
+question. All dreaming is a process of reasoning. That artful
+confusion of ideas and images which at the outset I referred to as the
+most constant feature of dream mechanism is nothing but a process of
+reasoning, a perpetual effort to argue out harmoniously the absurdly
+limited and incongruous data present to sleeping consciousness. Binet,
+grounding his conclusions on hypnotic experiments, has very justly
+determined that reasoning is the fundamental part of all thinking, the
+very texture of thought. It is founded on perception itself, which
+already contains all the elements of the ancient syllogism. For in all
+perception, as he shows, there is a succession of three images, of
+which the first fuses with the second, which in its turn suggests the
+third. Now this establishment of new associations, this construction
+of images, which, as we may easily convince ourselves, is precisely
+what takes place in dreaming, is reasoning itself.
+
+Reasoning is a synthesis of images suggested by resemblance and
+contiguity, indeed a sort of logical vision, more intense even than
+actual vision, since it produces hallucinations. To reasoning all
+forms of mental activity may finally be reduced; mind, as Wundt has
+said, is a thing that reasons. When we apply these general statements
+to dreaming, we may see that the whole phenomenon of dreaming is
+really the same process of image-formation, based on resemblance and
+contiguity, which is at the basis of reasoning. Every dream is the
+outcome of this strenuous, wide-ranging instinct to reason. The
+supposed "imaginative faculty," regarded as so highly active during
+sleep, is simply the inevitable play of this automatic logic. The
+characteristic of the reasoning of dreams is that it is unusually bad,
+and this badness is due chiefly to the absence of memory elements that
+would be present to waking consciousness, and to the absence of
+sensory elements to check the false reasoning which without them
+appears to us conclusive. That is to say--to fall back on the
+excellent generalization which Parish has elaborately applied to all
+forms of hallucination--there is a process of dissociation by which
+ordinary channels of association are temporarily blocked and the
+conditions prepared for the formation of the hallucination. It is, as
+Parish has argued, in sleep and in those sleep-resembling states
+called hypnagogic that a condition of dissociation leading to
+hallucination is most apt to occur.
+
+The following dream illustrates the part played by dissociation: A
+lady dreamed that an acquaintance wished to send a small sum of money
+to a person in Ireland. She rashly offered to take it over to Ireland.
+On arriving home she began to repent of her promise, as the weather
+was extremely wild and cold. She began, however, to make preparations
+for dressing warmly, and went to consult an Irish friend, who said she
+would have to be floated over to Ireland tightly jammed in a crab
+basket. On returning home she fully discussed the matter with her
+husband, who thought it would be folly to undertake such a journey,
+and she finally relinquished it, with great relief. In this dream--the
+elements of which could all be accounted for--the association between
+sending money and postal orders which would at once occur to waking
+consciousness was closed; consciousness was a prey to such suggestions
+as reached it, but on the basis of these suggestions it reasoned and
+concluded quite sagaciously. The phenomena of dreaming furnish a
+delightful illustration of the fact that reasoning, in its rough form,
+is only the crudest and most elementary form of intellectual
+operation, and that the finer forms of thinking only become possible
+when we hold in check this tendency to reason. "All the thinking in
+the world," as Goethe puts it, "will not lead us to thought."
+
+It is in such characteristics as these--at once primitive, childlike,
+and insane--that we may find the charm of dreaming. In our sleeping
+emotional life we are much more like ourselves than we are in our
+sleeping intellectual life. It is a mistake to imagine that our moral
+and æsthetic instincts are abolished in dreams; they are often
+weakened, but by no means abolished. Such a result is natural when we
+remember that our emotions and instincts are both more primitive and
+less under the dominion of the external senses than are our ideas. Yet
+in both respects we are removed a stage backward in our dreams.
+The emotional intensity, the absurd logic, the tendency to
+personification--nearly all the points I have referred to as
+characterizing our dreams--are the characteristics of the child, the
+savage, and the madman. Time and space are annihilated, gravity is
+suspended, and we are joyfully borne up in the air, as it were, in the
+arms of angels; we are brought into a deeper communion with Nature,
+and in his dreams a man will listen to the arguments of his dog with
+as little surprise as Balaam heard the reproaches of his ass. The
+unexpected limitations of our dream world, the exclusion of so many
+elements which are present even unconsciously in waking life, imparts
+a splendid freedom and ease to the intellectual operations of the
+sleeping mind, and an extravagant romance, a poignant tragedy, to our
+emotions. "He has never known happiness," said Lamb, speaking out of
+his own experience, "who has never been mad." And there are many who
+taste in dreams a happiness they never know when awake. In the waking
+moments of our complex civilized life we are ever in a state of
+suspense which makes all great conclusions impossible; the
+multiplicity of the facts of life, always present to consciousness,
+restrains the free play of logic (except for that happy dreamer, the
+mathematician) and surrounds most of our pains and nearly all our
+pleasures with infinite qualifications; we are tied down to a sober
+tameness. In our dreams the fetters of civilization are loosened, and
+we know the fearful joy of freedom.
+
+At the same time it is these characteristics which make dreams a fit
+subject of serious study. It was not until the present century that
+the psychological importance of the study of insanity was recognized.
+So recent is the study of savage mind that the workers who have laid
+its foundation are yet all living. The systematic investigation of
+children only began yesterday. To-day our dreams begin to seem to us
+an allied subject of study, inasmuch as they reveal within ourselves a
+means of entering sympathetically into ideas and emotional attitudes
+belonging to narrow or ill-adjusted states of consciousness which
+otherwise we are now unable to experience. And they have this further
+value, that they show us how many abnormal phenomena--possession,
+double consciousness, unconscious memory, and so forth--which have
+often led the ignorant and unwary to many strange conclusions, really
+have a simple explanation in the healthy normal experience of all of
+us during sleep. Here, also, it is true that we ourselves and our
+beliefs are to some extent "such stuff as dreams are made of."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] On Dreaming of the Dead. Psychological Review, September, 1895. In
+this paper I reported several cases showing the nature and evolution
+of dreams concerning dead friends. I have since received evidence from
+various friends and correspondents, scientific and unscientific, of
+both sexes, confirming my belief in a frequency of this type of dream.
+Professor Binet (L'Année Psychologique, 1896) has also furnished a
+case in support of my view, and is seeking for further evidence.
+
+[2] In Japan stories of the returning of the dead are very common.
+Lafcadio Hearn gives one as told by a Japanese which closely resembles
+the type of dream I am discussing. "A lover resolves to commit suicide
+on the grave of his sweetheart. He found her tomb and knelt before it
+and prayed and wept, and whispered to her that which he was about to
+do. And suddenly he heard her voice cry to him 'Anata!' and felt her
+hand upon his hand; and he turned and saw her kneeling beside him,
+smiling and beautiful as he remembered her, only a little pale. Then
+his heart leaped so that he could not speak for the wonder and the
+doubt and the joy of that moment. But she said: 'Do not doubt; it is
+really I. I am not dead. It was all a mistake. I was buried because my
+parents thought me dead--buried too soon. Yet you see I am not dead,
+not a ghost. It is I; do not doubt it!'"
+
+[3] Many saints (Saint Ida, of Louvain, for example) claimed the power
+of rising into the air, and one asks one's self whether this faith may
+not be based on dream experiences mistranslated by a disordered brain.
+M. Raffaelli, the eminent French painter, who is subject to these
+sleeping experiences of floating on the air, confesses that they are
+so convincing that he has jumped out of bed on awaking and attempted
+to repeat the experience. "I need not tell you," he adds, "that I have
+never been able to succeed."
+
+[4] Other pains and discomforts--toothache, for instance--may,
+however, give rise to dreams of murder.
+
+[5] It may be added that they also present evidence--to which
+attention has not, I believe, been previously called--in support of
+the James-Lange or physiological theory of emotion, according to which
+the element of bodily change in emotion is the cause and not the
+result of the emotion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The harmonious and equitable evolution of man, says President
+ Dabney, of the University of Tennessee, "does not mean that every
+ man must be educated just like his fellow. The harmony is within
+ each individual. That community is most highly educated in which
+ each individual has attained the maximum of his possibilities in
+ the direction of his peculiar talents and opportunities."
+
+
+
+
+THE BEST METHODS OF TAXATION.
+
+BY THE LATE HON. DAVID A. WELLS.
+
+
+PART I.
+
+This historical survey of tax experience among peoples widely
+differing in their economic condition and social relations, and this
+examination of the scope and practice of taxation, with especial
+reference to the tax systems of the United States as defined and
+interpreted by judicial authority, prepare the way for a discussion of
+the best methods of taxation for a country situated as is the United
+States. General as are the theoretical principles underlying taxation,
+the application of these principles to existing conditions must be
+modified to meet the long usage and inherited prejudice of the people,
+and the form of production or manner of distributing wealth. This
+holds true in the face of appearances so opposed to it as to defy
+definition and acceptance. No less promising field for an income tax
+can be pictured than British India, and few more promising fields than
+France. Yet India has borne such a tax for years, while France will
+not permit a true tax on income to be adopted as a part of its revenue
+system. In the latter country the plea is made that the upper and
+middle classes already pay under other forms of taxation more than
+their due proportion of the public burdens, and an additional and
+necessarily discriminating duty laid upon them will only make this
+inequality the greater. Class interest may thus oppose its veto to a
+change that promises to reduce the burdens of one class of taxpayers
+at the expense of another; or may even oppose a change that offers the
+chance of collecting a larger revenue with less real difficulty and
+sacrifice on the part of the taxed. No opposition can set aside even
+temporarily the great rules that clearly define a tax from tribute, a
+legal and beneficial taking by the state of a certain part of the
+public wealth from a demand that involves waste or mischievous
+expenditure, for which the state or people derive no advantage
+commensurate with the cost, or from which individuals obtain a gain
+not defensible in justice, and at the expense of only one part of the
+community.
+
+After so many centuries of experiment, in which hardly a possible
+source of state revenue has escaped attention, some knowledge of the
+great principles of taxation might have been evolved. Unfortunately,
+the experience of one nation is not accepted as containing lessons
+applicable to the needs or conditions of another, and one generation
+rarely appeals to history save to defend its own experiments.
+Ignorance, half knowledge, which is quite as dangerous, and interest
+guide or influence legislation, and those who predict failure or
+danger are regarded as theorists, and denounced as unpractical.
+Nowhere is the tendency to move independent of enlightened knowledge
+more evident than in the United States. At every appearance of the tax
+question, State and national legislatures are overwhelmed with
+measures that have been tried in the past, and after a thorough test
+condemned beyond any hope of defense.
+
+Yet history shows the gradual disappearance of certain forms of
+taxation which enjoyed great popularity for a time, and accomplished
+the end of their creation in a crude and often cruel manner. Looking
+over long periods of time, it is seen that some advances have been
+made, rather from a change in the economic condition of the people
+than from a true appreciation of the principles in question. The
+development of popular liberty has been an essential factor, and the
+alterations in tax methods require a close analysis of the causes
+leading to the rise and dominance of political and constitutional
+principle. While it is true that a popular uprising against fiscal
+exactions usually marked the limit of endurance of an oppressive
+system, it is also true that the same uprisings marked the completion
+of one stage of political development, and the readiness or even the
+need of entering upon a new stage. In one sense the progress of a
+people toward civilization in its highest meaning may be illustrated
+by its fiscal machinery and methods of obtaining its revenue from the
+people. It will be of interest to glance at some of these passing
+phases which have generally come down to a late day, and are still to
+be found in activity in some of the most advanced states of Europe.
+
+The practice of farming out the revenues of a state or any part of it
+has become nearly obsolete, and where it does exist is the mark of a
+fiscal machinery as yet not fully developed. The opportunities and
+temptation which the contract system offered for oppressing the
+taxpayers were apparent long before the state was in a position to
+assert its ability to make its own collections. In France the
+_fermiers généraux_ were a political factor, standing between the king
+and his people, regarded as necessary to the former and as oppressors
+of the latter. Their unpopularity, in part justified by their conduct,
+was a not unimportant item in the arraignment of royalty by the
+people. Wherever introduced, the farming of taxes proved in the long
+run as unwise politically as it was unprofitable financially; and the
+only reasonable defense for adopting it was the want of strength in
+the state to command its own revenue--a want as likely to arise from
+the dishonesty of its agents as from a political weakness. In early
+times the most universal manner of supplying the treasury of the
+state, the farming of taxes has become so rare as to be classed as a
+curiosity. Italy still employs this machinery to collect her taxes on
+tobacco, and Spain from necessity has mortgaged her taxes to the
+bank, with the task of collecting them.
+
+Of the same general character are the state lotteries, of which some
+few and quite important instances may still be found in action. Of the
+immorality of these instruments there can be little doubt, and there
+is quite as unanimous an opinion as to their inefficiency as fiscal
+instruments. Yet it is only within very recent years that state
+lotteries have been discarded even in the most advanced countries. The
+machinery of lotteries has often been modified, but, no matter how
+altered in details, they all have appealed to the love of games of
+chance. Adam Smith asserted that the "absurd presumption" of men in
+their own good fortune is even more universal than the overweening
+conceit which the greater part of men have in their own abilities.[6]
+Yet another assertion of the same writer is as true: "The world
+neither ever saw, nor ever will see, a perfectly fair lottery, or one
+in which the whole gain compensated the whole loss." Where the state
+undertakes it, there is a profit generally assured to the state, but
+that profit is by no means certain, and can not make good the
+demoralization introduced among the people. State lotteries are still
+a part of the revenue system in Italy and Austria (proper), where the
+receipts are important, but show a decided tendency to diminish;
+Hungary and Denmark, where they are of little moment; and in Spain,
+where they are retained because of the general incapacity of the
+administration to reach other and more profitable sources of revenue.
+The experience of the State of Louisiana in connection with a State
+lottery is too recent to require examination. It is not probable that
+once abandoned such an instrument for obtaining money from the people
+will be revived, save as a last resort.
+
+The state monopoly in the manufacture and sale of an article for
+fiscal purposes holds a place in European countries of high
+importance, and is met elsewhere under conditions not so favorable to
+its maintenance. As an example of the latter may be cited the colonial
+policy of the Dutch in their possessions in the East. After the
+termination of the trading companies, the Government undertook the
+entire control of the colonies, and sought to make them a source of
+revenue. The natives were to be taxed, but, having little of their own
+to be taxed, and practicing no occupation that could of its own
+volition become a profitable source of revenue, the state undertook to
+organize industry, and, by creating an opportunity for employing the
+labor of the natives, to receive the profits of production for its own
+uses. The native chiefs were made "masters of industry" and collectors
+of the revenue; and a certain part of the labor of the natives, one
+day in every five, was decreed to the state. In order to derive a
+profit, this labor must be bestowed in cultivating some product as
+find a market in international trade. Hence arose the importance of
+the sugar, coffee, tobacco, and spice crops of these Dutch islands,
+and for many years a handsome profit to the treasury was obtained from
+the management and sales of product. With the great fall in prices of
+sugar and coffee throughout the world, and the narrowing of the market
+for cane sugar, the Government obtained a less income each year, and
+has found it of advantage to relax the conditions surrounding
+cultivation, and to throw the management of the plantations more and
+more into private hands. To such an extent has this transition been
+effected that the state can no longer be considered as controlling a
+monopoly in product or sales, and is content with a revenue from other
+sources, one that does not even cover the expenses incurred in the
+colonial system. This experiment differs widely from those industries
+undertaken with the aid or encouragement of the state to be found in
+India. It was not with a fiscal object that they were established, and
+not infrequently the state sacrifices revenue by releasing them from
+tax burdens they would ordinarily endure. As one of the few remaining
+instances of the direct participation of a state in the production of
+products intended for foreign markets, yet undertaken and maintained
+for fiscal reasons, the history of the Dutch colonies in the East is
+instructive.
+
+In Prussia the working of certain mines is in the hands of the state,
+and was originally looked upon as an important contribution to the
+income of the state. As in the Dutch experience, the changes in
+production throughout the world have greatly reduced the returns and
+made the income variable; yet there is little disposition to dispose
+of these possessions. "The danger of mineral supplies being worked in
+a reckless and extravagant manner without regard to the welfare of
+future generations, and the dread of combinations by the producers of
+such commodities as tin, copper, and salt, with the aim of raising
+prices, have both tended to hinder the alienation of state mines."[7]
+
+The more common form of state monopoly is that which occupies a middle
+position, established for reasons of public safety or utility as well
+as of revenue. The salt monopoly enforced in Prussia was only
+abolished in 1867, and is still maintained in every canton of
+Switzerland. The strongest plea in its defense has been the guarantee
+by the state of the purity of the article sold, and this phase of the
+question has superseded the revenue aspect. Few articles of prime
+necessity, like salt, are subject to monopolies imposed by the state,
+and by a process of elimination it is only articles of luxury or
+voluntary consumption that are regarded as fit objects of monopoly for
+the benefit of the state.
+
+A tax imposed upon an article at a certain stage of its production or
+manufacture may enforce the expediency or necessity of a state
+monopoly. Where the supervision of the state agents must be so close
+as to interfere with the conduct of the industry, the state intervenes
+and itself controls the manufacture and sale. Tobacco has long been
+subject to this fiscal _régime_, and, proving so productive of
+revenue, there is little to be said against a monopoly by the state of
+its manufacture and sale.
+
+In Italy the tobacco monopoly is conceded to a company, but its return
+of net revenue to the state is nearly as large as the revenue derived
+from the taxes on real property (about thirty-eight million dollars a
+year). Prussia imposes a charge on the home-grown tobacco by a tax on
+the land devoted to its culture, but the return is very small, and
+Bismarck wished to introduce a true tobacco monopoly, modeled on that
+of France. But the conditions were opposed to his scheme, for the use
+of tobacco is general throughout the empire, and a proposition to
+increase its price by taxation or modify its free manufacture and
+distribution excited a widespread opposition. France maintains a full
+monopoly, and finds it too profitable to be lightly set aside unless
+some equally profitable source of revenue is discovered to make good
+the loss its abolition would involve.
+
+While historical support is given to the maintenance of a monopoly as
+in France, it is not probable that the system will find imitators in
+other states, however tempting the returns obtained might seem. Great
+Britain has by her insular position solved the problem in another way.
+By interdicting the domestic cultivation of tobacco, all that is
+consumed must be imported, and a customs duty offers a ready
+instrument for making the plant, in whatever form it enters,
+contribute its dues to the exchequer. In Russia, as in the United
+States, where tobacco is a domestic product, the tax is imposed upon
+its manufacture, and this method requires supervision but no monopoly
+of the state.
+
+The tobacco _régime_ is defended almost entirely on fiscal grounds,
+and as a monopoly, an extreme measure, has proved its value as an
+instrument of taxation. Other reasons, of a moral character, are urged
+to induce the state to monopolize the manufacture and sale of
+distilled spirits. Both France and Germany have considered this
+question, and, in spite of confident predictions of a large profit,
+have decided not to undertake it. Russia, on the other hand, has taken
+it up quite as much on social as on revenue grounds, and is gradually
+securing a monopoly of the trade in spirits. The initial cost of the
+undertaking is large, and, as the system has not yet been perfected,
+it is too early to give a judgment on its availability as a financial
+instrument.
+
+The transit dues, once commonly used by different countries, have been
+generally abandoned, and in China must they be sought for in their
+original forms of vexatious and unprofitable force. They arose from a
+desire to derive some benefit from a commerce permitted grudgingly,
+and rarely attaining any high results. The same end was sought by
+duties on exports, much employed when the country was supposed to be
+drained of its wealth by what was sent out of it. The conditions
+necessary for a successful duty on exports are not often found, and
+only in a few countries are they now existent. In Italy, South
+America, and Asia, exports of certain natural products are taxed, and,
+as in the case of Brazil, yield a notable revenue. In view of the
+rapid advancement of production in new countries and of inventions in
+the old, whereby many natural monopolies have been destroyed and
+competition made more general, such duties prove to be more
+obstructive to trade than productive of revenue, and are rapidly being
+abandoned. In spite of a formal prohibition of export duties in the
+Constitution of the United States, they are sometimes suggested in all
+seriousness.
+
+In thus clearing the path of what may be called dead or dying methods
+of recent tax systems, the advantages enjoyed by the United States in
+their freedom from such survivals become more evident. The practice of
+farming taxes never gained a foothold in any part of the country.
+Lotteries have been occasional, and with two exceptions have been
+conducted on a limited scale--that of Louisiana is well known; an
+earlier instance is less known. During the Revolution one of the means
+resorted to by the Continental Congress for income was a lottery, but
+the attempt proved disastrous to all concerned, and was finally
+abandoned even more thoroughly than was the continental currency.
+State monopolies of production and sale of any commodity have never
+met with favor, and stand condemned in the desire for individual
+initiative. As sources of revenue, the public lands, state control of
+the post office, and of such municipal undertakings as the water and,
+in a very few cases, the gas supply, has been employed, and in place
+of profit the mere cost of management is sought. More than any country
+of continental Europe, the United States has depended upon taxes, pure
+and simple, unsupported or modified by state domains, state mines,
+state manufactures, or state monopolies. Even Great Britain in her
+local taxation is bound and hampered by precedent, and pursues a
+system that is notoriously confused, costly, and vexatious. Long usage
+and the erection of independent and conflicting authorities on
+principles other than fiscal have imposed upon the local agents the
+duty of assessing and collecting county and borough taxes which are as
+indefensible in theory as they are difficult in practice.
+
+From this weight of tradition and precedent the United States has been
+almost entirely free, and it was possible to construct out of small
+beginnings systems of Federal and State taxation at least reasonable
+and consistent, producing an increasing revenue with the rapid
+development of wealth and the larger number of taxable objects; and so
+elastic as to adapt themselves to such changes as are inevitable in
+any progressive movement of commerce or industry. That no such system
+has resulted after a century of national life, and an even longer term
+of local (colonial and State) activities, these papers have tended to
+show. That the time is at hand when the problem of a thorough reform
+of both State and Federal taxation must be met, current facts prove
+beyond any doubt. If I have aided in a proper comprehension of these
+problems, and, by collecting certain experiences in taxation among
+other peoples and in different stages of civilization, contributed
+toward a proper solution, the end of this work will have been
+attained. It is not possible to introduce a complete change of policy
+at once; it is not only feasible but necessary to indicate the
+direction this change should take, and the ends to be secured in
+making them. And first as to Federal taxation:
+
+In a democracy like that of the United States, the continuance of a
+mixed system of direct and indirect taxes is a foregone conclusion.
+Not that there is an absence of change or modification in the details
+of this double system, or in the application or distribution of a
+particular impost or duty. To deny such modification is to deny any
+movement in the body politic, or any progress in the industrial and
+commercial economy of the people. There is a steady and continuous
+movement in every direction, and the mere effort to escape taxation
+results in a new adjustment of related facts. This development has,
+partly through necessity and partly through a rising consciousness of
+what a tax implies, been tending from indirect to direct taxes. Ever
+restive under a rigid supervision by the state of private concerns,
+there has been a wholesome opposition to inquisitorial taxes. But this
+opposition has been carried too far, and is due more to the ignorant
+and at times brutal disregard by the agents selected for enforcing the
+law than to an appreciation of the injustice of the tax. Whether in
+customs or excise, the same blunders of management have been
+committed, and created a spirit in the people that is injurious to
+their best interests. On the one hand, private enterprises have been
+unduly favored by the removal of foreign competition, a favor that is
+now disappearing through the remarkable development of domestic
+competition. Thus taxes have been extensively used for other purposes
+than to obtain revenue, and for private ends. On the other hand, there
+has been created the feeling that taxation is a proper instrument for
+effecting a more equal distribution of wealth among the people, and
+readily becomes an instrument of oppression.
+
+The almost absolute dependence of the Federal Government upon the
+customs duties for revenue through a great part of its existence was a
+striking fact. The simplicity of collection and the comparatively
+moderate scale of duties, although considered high at the time of
+imposition, gave this branch of the possible sources of revenue a
+magnified importance. The development of the country was slow, and at
+times greatly hampered by the tariff policy; but until about 1857 no
+other source of income was needed to meet the expenditures of the
+Government in a time of peace.
+
+In recent years this has all changed, and not for the better. The
+immense development in manufactures and financial ability accomplished
+since 1860 has made a tariff for protection an anachronism. The
+political features of customs legislation have been pushed so far as
+almost to overshadow the fiscal qualities. The wave of protectionism
+that followed the abrogation of the commercial treaties of Europe
+about 1880 has resulted in tariffs framed with the desire to injure
+the commerce of other states rather than to meet the needs of a
+treasury. In the United States this policy has been carried beyond
+that of Europe, and the tariff now in existence is more protective
+than any hitherto enforced, short of absolute prohibition of imports.
+
+In more respects than one the tariff law of 1897 was an extreme
+application of the protective policy. Each year the United States has
+demonstrated its ability not only to meet the industrial competition
+of the world on an equal footing, but to engage with it aggressively
+and with complete success. It is not necessary to give the figures of
+exports of manufactures to establish this fact; it is now beyond
+question. To frame a measure of extreme protection was, therefore, to
+overlook the most striking phase of the industrial situation existing
+in the United States. With an ability to manufacture cheaply and on a
+grand scale, and with a capacity to supply the demands of a market
+larger than any home market, there was no foreign competition to
+encounter, and the higher rates of duties meant nothing, either for
+protection or for revenue. In carrying further into action a tariff
+framed more for protection than for revenue, a twofold error was
+committed. The provisions were so complicated as to make the
+application difficult, and in applying these provisions inquisitorial
+and vexatious regulations were necessary to assure even a reasonable
+fulfillment of the requirements. In former tariff laws a general
+description carried a large class of articles, and a uniform duty,
+usually _ad valorem_, was collected. But under the demand for a more
+scientific tariff, these general classes were broken up into a number
+of enumerated articles, each one carrying a specific or mixed duty,
+and an omnium or basket clause at the end to catch any article that
+could not be included in any enumeration. This desire to fix specific
+rates upon each imported commodity has been applied more generally in
+the law of 1897 than in any previous tariff act. An examination of the
+imports of manufactures of textile fibers will illustrate this
+increase of complexity without any increase of revenue. Indeed, these
+classifications and rates, being suggested by interested parties, have
+for their object a reduction of imports, and as a rule a reduction in
+revenue from them follows.
+
+The second objection to the increasing complexity of the tariff laws
+is to be found in the petty annoyances imposed upon importers and
+others in enforcing the not always consistent provisions of the law.
+These vexations are made all the more telling by the fact that the
+administration of the law is apt to be in the hands of those who are
+openly hostile to foreign importations, and therefore regard the
+importer in an unfriendly spirit. The power given to the customs
+agents is enormous, and it is not remarkable that it is abused. The
+demand for samples, the appraisement of articles, the classification
+of new or compound commodities, all offer room for controversy, which
+is not always decided by an appeal to the courts of justice. In
+special instances, where a section of the law has been framed in
+behalf of a special interest, the attempt to enforce it becomes petty
+tyranny of the most intolerable kind.
+
+In operation the law soon exhibited its failure as a revenue measure.
+Although duties were generally increased, the more important articles
+taxed yielded a smaller revenue than under lower rates. The aggregate
+collections under the bill did not meet the expectations of its
+sponsors, and for two reasons: first, because the higher duties
+discouraged imports; and secondly, the demand for imported articles
+was steadily decreasing under the expanding ability of home
+manufactures to meet the needs of the market. No measure short of a
+direct encouragement to importations can change this situation, or
+prevent the further shrinkage in the use of foreign manufactures. It
+follows that the tariff, unless radically altered, can no longer be
+depended on for a return sufficient to defray one half of the rapidly
+increasing expenditures of the national Government. By refusing to
+impose moderate duties on articles of general consumption, revenue is
+sacrificed; by insisting upon imposing protective duties where little
+revenue can be had, the tariff is converted into a political weapon.
+Its dangerous qualities are strengthened by turning these duties
+against the products of certain countries, a policy specially fit to
+invite reprisals.
+
+Even the framers of this latest tariff entertained the belief that
+some provision should be made for breaking its full effect. The
+familiar scheme for reciprocity treaties, under which moderate
+concessions in some of the duties could be made, was retained; but
+France was the only power that could have an object in seriously
+entertaining the proposition to enter into a negotiation. No real
+reduction in duties could be given to Germany or any other country,
+and it has become a recognized fact that Germany does not hesitate to
+seize an opportunity to exclude the products of the United States, and
+on the same grounds as support the high duties in the American tariff.
+The system of drawbacks has ceased to be of much moment in our customs
+policy, and in the export interest in canned goods finds its chief
+exercise. Nor does a privilege to manufacture in bond affect more than
+one article of importance--ores of lead containing silver. No matter
+how it is regarded, the tariff of 1897 was not framed for revenue, and
+in experience has not proved sufficiently productive to meet its share
+of the expenditures of Government. The animus of its sponsors in
+attaining the immediate political object sacrificed the more important
+and permanent object of revenue.
+
+Were the true object of customs duties--revenue--to be kept in view in
+tariff legislation, it would be a simple matter to devise a measure
+that would be satisfactory and highly productive of revenue. In the
+fifteen hundred or more articles enumerated in the tariff schedules,
+more than fourteen hundred are nonproductive, or yield so small a
+return as to have in the aggregate no appreciable effect on the total
+receipts. The number left after so large an exclusion can be still
+further reduced without reducing the revenue one tenth; and it is from
+a small number of articles, hardly twenty-five, that the great part of
+the customs revenue is obtained. By reducing the rates of duties on
+these to a point of highest revenue efficiency, at which the import is
+not interfered with and yet not encouraged, a higher return could be
+had than from the existing complicated, overloaded, and political
+compilation of duties, usually imposed for any reason other than what
+they will bring into the treasury.
+
+When, therefore, the best methods of Federal taxation are broached,
+the reform of the tariff stands first in importance. It is necessary
+to bring it more into line with the industrial conditions of to-day,
+which call for foreign markets rather than a domestic or closed
+market; and for a liberal commercial policy in place of one that
+regards the products of other countries, whether imported in the crude
+or manufactured forms, as constituting a menace to American labor and
+American interests. It calls for a systematic and intelligent
+revision, which shall throw out such duties as are no longer of
+service even for protection, and to reduce those that are hostile to
+the products of other countries and bear in themselves the seeds of
+reprisals in the future. Now that the United States is going into the
+great markets with its manufactures, and obtaining a foothold against
+all competitors, the invitation to retaliation holds a danger far
+greater to its own interests than any that can be inflicted on other
+peoples. The greater the advances made the more readily will recourse
+be had to reprisals and hostile legislation; and in support of every
+act appeal may be had to examples set by the United States.[8]
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[6] Wealth of Nations, vol. i, p. 112 (Rogers's edition).
+
+[7] Bastable. Public Finance, p. 181.
+
+[8] "The old protectionist, with the stock arguments about the
+influence of the tariff upon wages and all the rest of it, is
+beginning to die out. He told us all he had to say about the 'pauper
+labor' of Europe, by which he often meant the best educated and most
+skillful artisans of the world. We got tired of hearing about how the
+importer paid the tax, how it was Europe and England in particular
+that was all the time squeezing our lives out, till nearly all of us,
+being of English ancestry ourselves, wondered whether we, even, could
+be so good as we hoped we were, if we had sprung from something so
+essentially perverted and bad. We were told, too, that American
+tourists who went to Europe and spent money there which they ought to
+have squandered at home were not friends of their country, and that
+they did us a particularly hostile act when they brought clothing,
+statuary, or diamond rings back with them from foreign parts. A season
+of high prices was a real heaven, and wars and fires were good things
+because they destroyed property that would have to be replaced, and
+this would create that demand which, reacting on supply, would
+increase prices. To say that an article was cheap was to say that the
+political party in power was no longer worthy of public confidence. It
+was related that each government could make its people so rich, and
+the idea was thought to have been traced down from Henry C. Carey,
+that the rest of the world could be safely disregarded altogether.
+
+"Seriously, who believes any of this stuff nowadays? The protectionist
+is not reckoning with such popular impotency and stupidity. He
+believes in his fellow-man, and wants to give him a helping hand. He
+does not care what effect it has on England or Ireland. He is not sure
+that a protective tariff in and of itself will increase the wages of
+the workmen. He is even inclined to think that less wages and profits
+would do well enough for every man, if it were cheaper to live and
+there were not such extravagant demands upon every person from all
+sides--this without being a socialist. He is certain that 'a cheap
+coat' does not necessarily make 'a cheap man,' but the cheaper the
+coat the better it will be for the wearer. That is what we are all
+trying to do, improve our processes, increase our effective working
+power, which means, if you please, to make things cheaper."--_The
+Manufacturer_ (organ of the Manufacturers' Club of Philadelphia).
+
+
+
+
+MENTAL DEFECTIVES AND THE SOCIAL WELFARE.
+
+BY MARTIN W. BARR, M. D.,
+
+CHIEF PHYSICIAN, PENNSYLVANIA TRAINING SCHOOL FOR FEEBLE-MINDED
+CHILDREN, ELWYN, PA.
+
+
+Periods of extraordinary efflorescence or fruitage are followed by
+exhaustion and sterility not infrequently demanding the free use of
+the pruning knife; and, just as we remark how frequent is idiocy the
+offspring of genius, so do we find the same seeming paradox, of mental
+defect in rank and increasing growth the product of this most
+wonderful nineteenth century.
+
+True, science has contributed to numbers by revealing as mental
+defectives the many "misunderstood," "the backward," "the feebly
+gifted," as well as by showing what was once esteemed moral perversion
+to be moral imbecility; but a truth to which science also attests is,
+that unstable nerve centers uniting and reacting through successive
+generations, producing various forms of neuroses, evidenced in
+insanity, moral and mental imbecility, idiocy and epilepsy, do show
+the influence of a highly nervous age.
+
+Our last census reports, although necessarily uncertain and
+unreliable, yet show ninety thousand mental defectives, not including
+the insane. Unrecognized and unacknowledged cases swell the number
+easily to one hundred thousand within our present borders--how many we
+are going to annex remains to be seen; but this is an enemy that
+attacks not our frontiers but our hearthstones. We have reached that
+point when we must conquer it, lest it should conquer us, and the
+means to this end may be summed up in three words--separation,
+asexualization, and permanent sequestration. "Diseases desperate grown
+by desperate appliances are relieved, or not at all," and we must
+recognize that heroic measures now are as essential to the welfare of
+the unfortunate as to society, which will then naturally adjust itself
+to new conditions. Viewing the separation and massing of these
+irresponsibles--innocent victims of ignorance, debauchery, or selfish
+lust--men will come to realize that a greater crime than taking is the
+giving of such life; and so a greater reverence for the sacredness of
+marriage, a deeper sense of the great responsibilities of parenthood,
+will do more to avert this evil than the most stringent marriage laws.
+That the present demands some restraint upon the ignorant and the
+indifferent there can be no doubt, and laws preventing the marriage of
+defectives and of their immediate descendants would go far to stem the
+tide of harmful heredity.
+
+But what to do with those now in our midst is the vital question! They
+must be provided for in a way that shall insure safety to society,
+economy to the State, and protection and happiness to the individual.
+The answer found in the experience of half a century is, briefly,
+asylums for the helpless--training schools and colonies for those
+capable of becoming helpful. These in very name and nature being
+widely separate, just as separate as titles and names indicate, should
+be their working systems. Work among the feeble-minded, a
+philanthropic movement directed first toward the idiot, soon found a
+limit in dealing with a subject not trainable and but slightly if at
+all improvable. Thence, diverging and broadening as idiocy became
+better understood and imbecility in various phases became recognized,
+it found its true province in strengthening and encouraging feeble
+intellects, arousing and stimulating indolent and weak wills, and in
+training and directing into healthful channels the abnormal energy of
+those destitute of the moral sense. How wide the divergence can
+readily be seen, as also how entirely incompatible with union must be
+work further apart in reality than is the training of an imbecile and
+a normal child.
+
+[Illustration: EXCITABLE IDIOT. Practically unimprovable.
+
+APATHETIC IDIOT. Practically unimprovable.
+
+IDIO-IMBECILE. But slight hope of improvement.]
+
+For the idiot, who not only can not be trained, but who in many cases
+is unimprovable even in the simplest matters of self-help, nothing is
+needed but that care and attention found in every well-regulated
+nursery of delicate children, the _sine qua non_ being regular hours,
+simple nourishing food, frequent baths, and tender mothering. As many
+are paralyzed, blind, lame, or epileptic, it is desirable that the
+dormitories, well ventilated, be on the same floor with the living
+rooms and of easy access to bathrooms and playgrounds. Covered and
+carefully guarded porches should afford the much-needed fresh air and
+outdoor life in all weathers. These, with cheerful, sunny playrooms,
+provided with simple toys and furnished with bright decorations
+varying with the season, will contribute the maximum of pleasure for
+this life of perpetual infancy. Low vitality, general poverty of the
+whole physical make-up, the prevalence of phthisis and epilepsy and
+kindred diseases require the daily inspection of a physician, while
+the comfort and well-being of the whole, both workers and children,
+are insured by a capable and sympathetic house mother.
+
+The character of attendants is of the first importance, as these are
+they who live with the children; it should combine that firmness,
+tenderness, and balance that constitute an even temperament, capable
+of recognizing and meeting an occasion without loss of self-control.
+The duties involve not only the care of the idiots, but the training
+and direction of idio-imbeciles as aids, and this dealing with natures
+often wholly animal, requires a certain refinement and dignity of
+character--at least an entire absence of coarseness--while a knowledge
+of the simpler manual arts, and if possible of drawing and music, will
+do much to soften and brighten these darkened natures. As these
+qualities are valuable as well as rare, the remuneration should be in
+proportion; certainly sufficient to induce permanency and to
+compensate for such isolation. A life of constant wear and tear
+demands also regular periods of rest, and the corps therefore should
+be sufficiently large to give relief hours daily as well as vacations.
+
+The idio-imbecile, but one remove from his weaker brother, to whose
+wants he may be trained to minister, finds here his fitting place, and
+the domestic service of these asylums may be largely drawn from this
+class and also from that of the low-grade imbecile. Working as an aid,
+never alone, always under direction, he finds in a monotonous round of
+the simplest daily avocations his life happiness, his only safety from
+lapsing into idiocy, and therefore his true home.
+
+The relief to the home, the actual benefit to the State in this
+housing and care of the idiot and idio-imbecile can never be fully
+estimated. It is reckoned, however, in a general way that for every
+idiot sequestrated the energies of two if not four normal persons are
+returned to society.
+
+Imbecility, mental or moral, congenital or accidental, is either an
+inherent defect or an irrecoverable loss, an incurable disease for
+which hospitals can do nothing, nor can reformatories form again that
+which never has been formed. Could language be made clear enough to
+enable the public mind to grasp this fact, the work of training
+schools, the only hope of the imbecile, would then be simplified, and
+people might be willing to accept what they can give, in the only way
+in which it can be given, to be of any permanent value. As it is, the
+few charlatans who profess to train and in a few years send out an
+imbecile ready to take a high-school or college course not only
+deceive those from whom they may gather a few thousands, but their
+representations, coupled with that of a sensational press, effectually
+impede the progress of a work which must eventually find its true
+place in the system of public education.
+
+Influenced by these misrepresentations, parents come with profound
+idiots and high hopes of a course of training (here is one of the
+misfortunes of an idiot asylum within a training school), and simply
+refuse to accept a negative to their expectations. Again--to waifs and
+strays, high-grade imbeciles, developing after years of labored
+training proficiency in music, drawing, or some one of the industrial
+arts, friends will suddenly crop up and, dazzled by what seems
+phenomenal genius, seek to withdraw them just as they become useful to
+the community. Little do they know of the weak will, indolent nature,
+and utter lack of "go," that forbid competition with normal labor and
+must forever be subject to the will of another; still less of the weak
+physical build that is kept intact only by watchful care, and which
+would succumb to any undue hardship. So much for the difficulties that
+beset the work. Now as to the work itself.
+
+As this must vary according to the status of the individual, a careful
+study and a correct diagnosis are of primary importance in order that
+the work may be fitted to the child, not the child to the work. The
+plan pursued is as follows: A thorough examination--physical, mental,
+and moral--is first made by the chief physician in connection with
+papers properly filled out giving personal and family history. He is
+then sent to the hospital for a fortnight to insure immunity from
+disease. There, while perfectly free and unrestrained among his
+fellows, he is under constant observation of the nurses; these
+observations, carefully noted, are returned to the chief physician,
+who turns both over to the principal of schools, designating the grade
+in which he is to enter for probation. Here under different
+environment he is again tested for some weeks and finally placed.
+
+[Illustration: HIGH-GRADE IMBECILE.
+
+HIGH-GRADE IMBECILE. Very improvable--can read, write, draw, etc.
+
+LOW-GRADE IMBECILE. Only slightly improvable.]
+
+It is hard for the uninitiated to understand that the grade, be it
+high, middle, or low, is not associated with promotion and advancement
+as in schools for normal children. On the contrary, it signifies the
+quality and status of the individual, his limitations, his
+possibilities, and consequently determines almost unfailingly the
+training for his life work; not by any hard-and-fast lines, but by a
+general mapping out of means which experience has proved will best
+insure his development, because best suited to his needs. Every
+latitude is allowed and, as the comfort of both the teacher and the
+entire class depends upon each going to his own place, there is easy
+and natural transference according to the necessity indicated by
+either progress or retrogression; but the varied occupations in each
+grade give ample scope for indulgence of individual proclivity in the
+means of development, and it is found that the original diagnosis,
+based upon experience, rarely errs.
+
+The motto of the schools--"We learn by doing; the working hand makes
+strong the working brain"--shows manual training to be the basis of
+the scheme of development, varied for each grade to suit the
+intelligence. Thus classified, various occupations are arranged and
+presented with the double intent of securing all-round development,
+and of giving at the same time opportunity for choice according to
+individual bent, the child being gradually permitted to devote himself
+more exclusively to that in which he shows a tendency to excel, and to
+gain a certain automatic ease in what shall prove the initial of a
+life employment. A knowledge of writing and of numbers is acquired
+incidentally as a necessary part of these occupations in daily
+practice, and arithmetic, taught with objects, is chiefly counting,
+separating into fractional parts, and practical measurements. Books
+are used rather as a convenient means of attracting and holding
+attention while inducing habits of consecutive thinking than for a
+knowledge of facts to be memorized. Those who can learn to read gain
+naturally a means of self-entertainment, of self-instruction, hence a
+certain amount of culture, so long as protected in an institution from
+indiscriminate and pernicious literature.
+
+The low-grade imbecile, but a slight degree removed from the
+idio-imbecile, is, like him, totally incapable of grasping artificial
+signs or symbols. He can therefore never learn to read or write;
+figures have no meaning for him, nor numbers, beyond the very simplest
+counting acquired in the daily repetition of some simple task such as
+knitting, netting, braiding rope, straw, or knotting twine. The
+excitation of interest in these, which will also give hand and arm
+power, the arousing of the sluggish, indolent will, through the
+stimulus of pleasurable emotions, the physical development by means of
+the various drills and the moral influence of refined, orderly
+surroundings--these, together with some practical work of house,
+garden, or farm, which forms part of the daily routine, are all that
+school life can do for him.
+
+[Illustration: MORAL IMBECILE OF HIGH GRADE.
+
+MORAL IMBECILE OF MIDDLE GRADE.
+
+MORAL IMBECILE, LOW GRADE.]
+
+From this preparation he passes to the industrial department, where he
+receives training in that occupation which the school has indicated
+for him, becoming in his limited way a useful and contented member of
+a community which should be his life home. As both of these types
+develop either extreme docility or perversity--the one quiet, gentle,
+obedient, following any suggestion even of a comrade's stronger will;
+the other obstinate, indolent, often brutal and cruel--the necessity
+for constant guardianship is therefore self-evident.
+
+When we consider that the training of a high-grade imbecile takes four
+times the period commonly allotted to a normal child, some idea of the
+vital energy expended on the training of the lower grades may be found
+in the following example:
+
+I find in our museum of educational work a little ball which I am
+inclined to regard the most valuable thing in the whole collection.
+The boy who made it was a low-grade imbecile. His hand against every
+man, he fancied every man's against him. Always under strict custodial
+care, that he might harm neither himself nor others, he would vent his
+spleen in tearing his clothing. His teacher, a woman of rare patience
+and devotedness, sat beside him one day, tearing strips of old linen
+and laying them in order. "See, Willie, let us make some pretty strips
+and lay them so." His wonder grew apace at seeing her doing what he
+had been reproved for doing; at once he responded, and a new bond of
+sympathy was established between them. She was playing his game--the
+only one, poor little lad, that he was capable of--and he joined in.
+
+"Now, we will draw out the pretty threads and lay them in rows." For
+weeks the boy found quiet pastime in this occupation, and the violent
+nature grew quieter in proportion. One day the teacher said, "Let us
+tie these threads together and make a long string." It took him months
+and months to learn to tie those knots, but meanwhile his attendants
+were having breathing space. "Now we will wind this into a pretty
+ball, and I will cover all you make for the boys to play with"; and a
+new occupation was added to his meager list.
+
+The next link in this chain of development was a lesson in knitting.
+Again, through months of patient teaching, it was at last
+accomplished, and the boy to the day of his death found his life
+happiness in knitting caps for the children, in place of tearing both
+them and their clothing. You see the teacher was wise enough to
+utilize the natural activities of the child and divert evil
+propensities into healthful channels. Had she brought knitting and
+bright yarn or anything foreign to him first, it would in truth have
+been fitting new cloth to old garments and the rent would have been
+widened: his obstinacy would have been aroused, and he would have
+continued to tear to the end of the chapter.
+
+[Illustration: HIGH-GRADE IMBECILES (FEEBLY GIFTED) AT SLOYD WORK.]
+
+The imbecile of middle grade receives that fuller presentation of work
+suited to fuller capacity. Some time is devoted to the three "Rs," as
+it is found that attention may be aroused and concentrated in the
+phonetic drills, more especially if associated with pictures, and the
+drawing of the objects named free-hand; thus eye, ear, and hand are
+encouraged to work simultaneously. Those who accomplish finally the
+reading of short simple stories not only enjoy evenings in the
+library, but may be enabled to glean suggestions for the various
+handicrafts for which they are being trained. This effort at quick
+observation and original thinking is further carried forward in the
+ambidextrous movements of free-hand drawing, designing, and sketching
+from life--finding ready and practical application in the daily use of
+tools. The value of the rule and the try-square is tested in the
+manufacture of the various useful articles in both paper and wood
+included under the head of sloyd, and "a boy can not learn to take a
+straight shaving off a plank," says Ruskin, "or to drive a fine curve
+without faltering, or to lay a brick level in the mortar, without
+learning a multitude of other matters which life of man could never
+teach him."
+
+Equally useful to the girl in the workroom as to the boy in the shop
+is this training of a ready eye, this quick intuition of balance and
+proportion, this practice of obedience of hand and arm to brain, until
+it becomes automatic. To both, therefore, the value of such
+preparation will be incalculable. It is noticeable that boys of this
+grade turn out as good workers in the ordinary crafts of shoemaking,
+carpentering, and house painting as those of higher grade who,
+although capable of grasping more intelligently the details of work,
+yet do not bring to it that energy and perseverance of one who finds
+in it "this one thing I do." With the imbecile of high grade, able to
+accomplish studies equal to about the first intermediate of the public
+schools, there is a diffusion of interest; the intelligence broadens
+rather than deepens during the school period in natural response to
+environment. With greater grasp of numerical values and of letters he
+attains proficiency impossible to the lower grades in drawing, in
+music, in printing, and in cabinet work. Other industries will
+probably be provided for him as the demand increases, for it must be
+remembered that this is a class whose needs have been the last to be
+recognized in a work begun, as I have before said, for the idiot.
+Regarded as queer, unlike other children--unable to keep up--he has,
+after an unsuccessful trial at school, been kept at home, in some
+cases an aid, in others a tyrant, to those relatives charged with his
+care.
+
+Changed conditions of both family and school, fortunately for him,
+combine to render this no longer possible, as absence of proper
+training is always certain to result in deterioration. The pressure
+upon the primary schools in the struggle for higher education leaves
+no time to contend with dull, backward children. In the family the
+care-takers grow fewer in proportion as the home-makers become
+home-winners, and so these feeble ones are a burden instead of an aid
+in the ordinary household offices.
+
+The next hope is a training school where, with false hopes fostered by
+ignorance and sensationalism, they are entered, and after a few years,
+a time all too short for any lasting benefit, a sentimentality equally
+stupid withdraws them from that guardianship absolutely essential,
+with just that little knowledge which will render them more dangerous
+to society, because less recognizable--an evil element perpetuating an
+evil growth. Under both conditions these unfortunates have suffered
+from that lack of constant care and supervision which should be theirs
+from the cradle to the grave.
+
+The separation of backward children in the schools and the placing of
+them in special classes for special training is the first step in the
+right direction. Here, after sufficient time for observation and
+diagnosing by teacher and physician, the defectives so adjudged will
+naturally drift to the training schools for the feeble-minded; these,
+if relieved of the odium as well as the care of their helpless
+population, will then be encouraged to arrange for this brighter class
+of defectives industries which will provide not only for development
+and happiness, but will largely aid in maintenance. The recognition of
+the necessity for this weeding out of the schools, having place first
+on the Continent, next in England, and later in our own country, marks
+an era in the national as well as in the special schools. Both will be
+benefited largely, and formal expression of this, found in the
+addition to our National Educational Association of a department
+representing the training of all classes of defectives, is one of the
+most encouraging signs of the times.
+
+[Illustration: MIDDLE-GRADE IMBECILES.]
+
+The same experience which dictates the separation of the idiot from
+the imbecile, the backward from the normal child, urges also that a
+permanent sequestration would tend alike to the safety and happiness
+of the normal and abnormal classes. The experiment made of preparing
+and sending out into the world these irresponsibles has proved, to say
+the least, not encouraging, and the advisability of their permanent
+detention has become self-evident.
+
+The heads of training schools here are a unit in urging that provision
+be made for those who have reached the limit of school progress. That
+experience has reached a similar conclusion in England is testified
+in the munificent gift lately made to the Royal Albert Asylum, and by
+the opinion of its superintendent, Dr. T. Telford-Smith, thus clearly
+expressed:
+
+"It is yearly more noticeable that the public mind is coming gradually
+but surely to recognize the threefold value of the work of such
+institutions as the Royal Albert Asylum. The educational and the
+custodial aspects early aroused the sympathies of the charitable; but
+the preventive aspect is another which must force itself upon all who
+thoughtfully consider the subject. The far-reaching and inexorable law
+of heredity is written large for those who study the imbecile."
+
+The following paragraph, from a daily paper, shows that, in America at
+least, public opinion and the acts of the legislature have become ripe
+for action:
+
+"The State of Connecticut is about to try a curious experiment in
+social legislation, having passed a law forbidding any man or woman,
+imbecile or feeble-minded, to marry under forty-five years of age, the
+penalty being imprisonment for not less than three years; and persons
+aiding and abetting are also liable. The hope of the legislature is to
+keep down dégenerate families."
+
+That this experiment is wise and justifiable who can doubt?
+
+[Illustration: LOW-GRADE IMBECILES. No. 1, obstinate, perverse,
+indolent; No. 2, gentle and obedient.]
+
+To glance at another and sadder, but not less real, side of the same
+question, can any one doubt but that the adolescent and adult female
+imbecile needs lifelong care and protection? Surely the noble gift to
+the asylum by Sir Thomas Storey of a home for forty such cases is a
+wise, far-seeing, and statesmanlike act.
+
+It is greatly to be hoped that this noble example may be speedily
+emulated on both sides of the sea, and that each State may shortly
+possess, in addition to its training school, its own colony farm with
+all the industries of a village, drawing its workers from the
+well-directed energies of a carefully guarded community. Cottages,
+each with its house mother, would insure that sense of home, and that
+affectionate and sympathetic oversight so essential to this society
+composed of those who are always children, while measures, which
+science has already pointed out and experience proved as advisable,
+might, if protected by wise legislation, permit less vigilance on the
+part of care-takers and consequent happiness because of greater
+freedom to its members.
+
+It is a happy coincidence that Massachusetts, the pioneer State in the
+work among the feeble-minded, should in its fifty-first year celebrate
+the beginning of its second half century by the inauguration of this
+most eventful step in the onward progress of the work. The training
+school at Waltham has lately purchased sixteen hundred and sixty acres
+of land for the establishment of a colony which is to have natural and
+healthful growth from the fostering care of the parent institution.
+
+As these colonies increase, drawing from society a pernicious element
+and transforming it under watchful care into healthful growth, may not
+in time the national Government, finding these homes of prevention a
+more excellent way than prison houses of cure for ill, be induced to
+provide a national colony for this race more to be commiserated
+because of a childhood more hopeless than that of the two others in
+our midst on whom so much has been expended?
+
+
+
+
+THE WHEAT PROBLEM AGAIN.
+
+BY EDWARD ATKINSON.
+
+
+In a recent article in the North American Review, Mr. John Hyde, the
+statistician of the United States Department of Agriculture, a
+gentleman of very high authority and repute, presents this problem in
+such terms as to throw a doubt upon the validity of any forecast of
+the potential increase in the product of wheat, or, in fact, of any
+crop in this country. Without referring to myself by name, he yet
+makes it very plain that he does not attach any value to my recent
+forecast of wheat production printed in the Popular Science Monthly
+for December, 1898.
+
+On the other hand, he rightly says that since Tyndall's address to the
+British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1874 no treatise
+presented to that association has excited so general an interest or
+provoked so much unfavorable criticism as Sir William Crookes's recent
+utterances on the subject of the approaching scarcity in the supply of
+wheat.
+
+Mr. Hyde disclaims any intention to give his own views, but yet no one
+can read his treatise without noting a substantial agreement with Sir
+William Crookes, perhaps almost unconsciously to himself. In his
+closing paragraph he says: "To discuss the extent to which under
+conceivable conditions the United States may, _notwithstanding the
+somewhat dubious outlook_, still continue to contribute to the food
+supply of other nations, would be little more than speculation."
+
+The Italics are my own.
+
+I venture to point out that the use of the word "speculation" is an
+example of many instances. Like a dog, one may give a word a bad name,
+yet it may be a good dog and a very good word when rightly used. In
+the true and very innocent meaning of the word "speculation" we find
+exactly what the public has a right to expect and even to demand from
+the Department of Agriculture. In Webster's Dictionary I find that,
+when used in such a connection as this problem of the potential of
+this country in farm productions, the word "speculation" stands for "a
+mental view of anything in its various aspects and relations;
+contemplation; intellectual examination."
+
+If any "mental view" has yet been taken in the Department of
+Agriculture of the proportion of the land of this country which may be
+termed "arable," I have yet to find the record. If any "contemplation"
+has been devoted to the proportions of this arable land which may be
+devoted to different crops in each section, I have been remiss in not
+securing the reports. If any "mental view" has been taken of the
+relative area now devoted to each principal crop, and that which may
+be so devoted hereafter in order to meet the prospective demand upon
+the land, either for the supply of our own population or of other
+nations, where is the record? If there is no such "speculation" now of
+record, is it not time that a true agricultural survey corresponding
+to our geologic and geodetic surveys should be entered upon? I have
+reason to believe that such surveys have been made by many European
+states in which all the arable land in some kingdoms is classified,
+listed, and so recorded that any one wishing to know the best place
+for any special product can get the information by reference to the
+proper department of the Government.
+
+I have had occasion to make several studies of this kind. In order to
+inform myself on the potential of the South in the production of
+cotton, I undertook a study of the physical geography and climatology
+of the cotton States and of other cotton-producing countries nearly
+forty years ago. The results of this research were first given in
+Cheap Cotton by Free Labor, published in 1861. In that pamphlet and in
+many treatises following, finally in an address in Atlanta, in 1880, a
+true forecast or "speculation" or "intellectual examination" will be
+found of the production of the cotton fiber, the potential of the
+future and of the cotton-seed-oil industry, then almost unheard of in
+this country. In 1880 I also entered upon my first "speculation" (not
+in the market) on the lines of a "contemplation" or forecast of the
+effect of agricultural machinery applied to our wheat land, coupled
+with the prospective reduction in the cost of carrying wheat to
+England, upon the condition of the American farmer and the British
+landlord. That forecast of prosperity to our farmers in the supply of
+bread at low cost to our kin beyond the sea has been justified at
+every point and in every detail. I therefore ventured to review Sir
+William Crookes's address, and I am well assured that what Mr. Hyde
+now calls a "somewhat dubious outlook" is subject to no doubt whatever
+as to our ability to continue our full supply for domestic consumption
+and export for the next century.
+
+Let me now repeat again what I have often said: statistics are good
+servants, but very bad masters. I long since ceased to put any great
+reliance upon averages of crops, wages, or products covering wide
+areas and varying conditions, unless I could find out, _first_, the
+personal equation of the man who compiled them; _second_, ascertain
+what he knew himself about the subject of which his statistics or
+figures were the symbols; and, _third_, unless I could verify these
+great averages from one or more typical areas of farm land, or from
+one or more representative factories or workshops, of the conditions
+of which I could myself obtain personal information.
+
+General statistics and averages of farm products and earnings I regard
+with more suspicion than almost any others because of the immense
+variation in conditions.
+
+I have sometimes almost come to the conclusion that so many of the
+figures of the United States census are mere statistical rubbish as to
+throw a doubt on nearly all the schedules. Yet without accurate
+statistics on many points, many of them yet to be secured, the conduct
+of our national affairs must become as uncertain as would be the
+conduct of any great business corporation without a true ledger
+account and a trial balance. Hence the necessity for a permanent
+census bureau and for a careful "speculation" or "intellectual" and
+intelligent examination and "contemplation" or study of the facts
+about our land by which our future welfare must be governed.
+
+A good beginning has been made by the authorities of many States, yet
+more by the body of well-trained men in charge of the Agricultural
+Experiment Station, in whose support too much can not be said. To them
+I appealed when trying to get an adequate conception of our potential
+in wheat.
+
+When we think of the blunders which have been made in very recent
+years, we may well have some suspicion that we may still be very
+ignorant on many points about our own country. Who really knows very
+much about the great middle section of the South, what is called the
+"Land of the Sky," comprising the upland plateaus and mountain
+sections of Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama,
+eastern Tennessee, and Kentucky? Within this area, as large as France
+and twice as large as Great Britain, will be found timber and minerals
+equal to both the countries named, and a potential in agriculture
+equal to either, as yet very sparsely populated.
+
+Yet under a craze for centrifugal expansion we are now in danger of
+trying to develop tropical islands far away, already somewhat densely
+peopled, where white men can not work and live, to our detriment,
+danger, and loss, while we fail to see that if we expand centripetally
+by the occupation and use of the most healthy and productive section
+of our own country, we may add immensely to our prosperity, our
+wealth, to our profit without cost and without militarism. This
+sparsely settled Land of the Sky is greater in area and far greater in
+its potential than the Philippine Islands, Cuba, and Porto Rico
+combined. Verily, it seems as if common sense were a latent and
+sluggish force, often endangered by the noisy and blatant influence of
+the venal politician and the greed of the unscrupulous advocates of
+vassal colonies who now attempt to pervert the power of government to
+their own purposes of private gain.
+
+Witness the blunders of the past:
+
+We nearly gave away Oregon because it was held not to be worth
+retaining.
+
+When the northern boundary of Wisconsin was being determined, it was
+put as far north as it was then supposed profitable farming could ever
+extend, excluding Minnesota, now one of our greatest sources of wheat.
+
+The Great American Desert in my own school atlas covered a large part
+of the most fertile land now under cultivation.
+
+What blunders are we now making for lack of "speculation" or
+"intellectual examination" as to the future of American farming and
+farm lands?
+
+On one point to which Mr. Hyde refers I must cry _peccavi_. He rebukes
+the editor of the Popular Science Monthly for admitting an article in
+which a potential of 400,000,000 bushels of wheat is attributed to the
+State of Idaho. The total depravity of the type-writing machine caused
+the mechanism to spell Montana in the letters I-d-a-h-o. What I
+imputed to Idaho is true of Montana, if the Chief of the Agricultural
+Experiment Stations of Montana is a competent witness, if all its
+arable land were devoted to wheat. It will be observed that I
+mentioned Idaho incidentally (meaning Montana), taking no cognizance
+of the estimate given, because it was at present of no practical
+importance.
+
+I have expressed my distrust of great averages in respect to
+agriculture and farm products.
+
+In illustration of this fallacy, the figures presented by Mr. Hyde
+will now be dealt with. It is held that in 1930, which is the year
+when Sir William Crookes predicts starvation among the bread-eating
+people of the world for lack of wheat (as if good bread could only be
+made from wheat), the population of this country may be computed at
+130,000,000. The requirements of that year for our own consumption Mr.
+Hyde estimates at 700,000,000 bushels of wheat, 1,250,000,000 bushels
+of oats, 3,450,000,000 bushels of corn (maize), and 100,000,000 tons
+of hay; and, although other products are not named by him, we may
+assume a corresponding increase.
+
+Subsequently Mr. Hyde gives the present delusive average yields per
+acre of the whole country, and then throws a doubt on the future
+progress of agricultural science, saying, "Whatever agricultural
+science may be able to do in the next thirty years, up to the present
+time it has only succeeded in arresting that decline in the rate of
+production with which we have been continually threatened." Without
+dealing at present with this want of and true consideration of or
+"speculation" upon the progress made in the last decade under the lead
+of the experiment stations and other beginnings in remedying the
+wasteful and squalid methods that have been so conspicuous in pioneer
+farming, let us take Mr. Hyde's averages and see what demand upon land
+the requirements of 1930 will make, even at the present meager average
+product per acre.
+
+Mr. Hyde apparently computes this prospective product as one that will
+be required for the domestic consumption of 130,000,000 people by
+ratio to our present product. He ignores the fact that our present
+product suffices for 75,000,000, with an excess of live stock,
+provisions, and dairy products exported nearly equal in value to all
+the grain exported, and in excess of the exports of wheat. If we can
+increase proportionally in one class of products, why not in another?
+Whichever pays best will be produced and exported.
+
+ _1897 and 1930 compared.--Data of 1897._
+ ------+------------------------+-----------------+----------------------
+ | Products. |Average per acre.| Area required.
+ ------+------------------------+-----------------+----------------------
+ Maize | 1,902,967,933 bushels. | 23.8 bushels. | 125,150 square miles.
+ Wheat | 530,149,168 " | 13.4 " | 61,660 " "
+ Oats | 698,767,809 " | 27.2 " | 40,200 " "
+ Hay | 60,664,770 tons. | 1.43 " | 66,290 " "
+ | | |----------------------
+ Total in square miles | 293,300 square miles.
+ -------------------------------------------------+----------------------
+
+All other farm crops carry the total to less than 400,000 square miles
+now under the plow, probably not exceeding 360,000.
+
+Prospective demand of 1930, at the same meager average product per
+acre, without progress in agricultural science:
+
+ ------+------------------------+---------------+----------------------
+ | Crop called for. | Per acre. | Area required.
+ ------+------------------------+---------------+----------------------
+ Maize | 3,450,000,000 bushels. | 23.8 bushels. | 226,600 square miles.
+ Wheat | 700,000,000 " | 13.4 " | 81,600 " "
+ Oats | 1,250,000,000 " | 27.2 " | 70,800 " "
+ Hay | 100,000,000 tons. | 1.43 " | 109,400 " "
+ | | |----------------------
+ Total in square miles | 488,400 square miles.
+ -----------------------------------------------+----------------------
+
+Assuming all land under the plow in 1930 in the ratio as above, the
+area of all now in all crops 400,000 square miles--an excessive
+estimate--that year (1930) will call for 667,000 square miles of
+arable land in actual cultivation.
+
+I have been accustomed to consider one half our national domain,
+exclusive of Alaska, good arable land in the absence of any
+"speculation" on that point in the records of the Department of
+Agriculture; but from the returns given by the chiefs of the
+experiment stations and secretaries of agriculture of the States
+hereafter cited, that estimate may be increased probably to two
+thirds, or 2,000,000 square miles of arable land out of a total of
+3,000,000 square miles, omitting Alaska.
+
+Assuming that we possess 2,000,000 square miles of arable land,
+capable at least of producing the present meager average product cited
+above, the conditions of 1930 will be graphically presented on the
+following diagram:
+
+
+ _Prospective Use of Land in the Year 1930 on Present Crop Average._
+
+ [Sidenote: Arable land assumed to be 2,000,000 square miles in the
+ outer lines of the diagram.]
+
+ +----------+----------+----------+--------------+------------+----------+
+ | Oats, | Wheat, | Hay, |Miscellaneous.| Maize, | Wheat |
+ | 70,800 | 81,600 | 109,400 |Roots, cotton,|Indian corn,| for |
+ |sq. miles.|sq. miles.|sq. miles.|tobacco, etc.,| 226,600 | export, |
+ +----------| | |168,600 sq. m.| sq. miles. | 143,000 |
+ | +----------+----------| Excessive. | |sq. miles.|
+ | +--------------+------------+----------+
+ |Arable land unassigned 1,200,000 square miles.|
+ |Deduct for cities, towns, parks, |
+ | and reserves of all kinds 200,000 " " |
+ | --------- |
+ | Reserve for future use 1,000,000 " " |
+ | |
+ | Forest, mountain, arid, etc., not counted, about 1,000,000 square |
+ | miles, not included in these lines or squares. |
+ +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+ No reduction on area cultivated on prospective improvement in the
+ present methods of farming, although it may be assumed that the
+ prospective increase of crop per acre will exert great influence.
+
+If the facts should be in 1930 consistent with Mr. Hyde's
+"speculation" it would therefore appear that our ability to meet the
+domestic demand of 1930 with proportionate export of cattle,
+provisions, and dairy products, and to set apart a little patch of
+land for the export of 1,226,000,000 bushels of wheat raised at the
+rate of only 13.4 bushels per acre from 143,000 square miles of land
+will be met by the cultivation of not exceeding 700,000 square miles
+out of 2,000,000 available.
+
+I should not venture to question the conclusions emanating from the
+Department of Agriculture, or the deductions of so eminent a scientist
+as Sir William Crookes, had I not taken the usual precaution of a
+business man in studying a business question. I went to the men who
+know the subject as well as the figures on which statistics are to be
+compiled.
+
+Being supplied by the Popular Science Monthly with one hundred proofs
+of the first nine and a half pages of the December article in which
+the terms of the problem are stated, I sent those proofs to the chiefs
+of the experiment stations and to the secretaries of agriculture in
+all the States from which any considerable product of wheat is now or
+may be hereafter derived; also to many makers of wheat harvesters; to
+the secretaries of Chambers of Commerce, and to several economic
+students in the wheat-growing States. This preliminary study was
+accompanied by the following circular of inquiry:
+
+
+ BOSTON, MASS., _October 5, 1898_.
+
+ _To the Chiefs of the Agricultural Experiment Stations and others in
+ Authority_:
+
+Calling your attention to the inclosed advance sheets of an article
+which will by and by appear in the Popular Science Monthly, I beg to
+put to you certain questions.
+
+If the matter interests you, will you kindly fill up the blanks below
+and let me have your replies within the present month of October, to
+the end that I may compile them and give a digest of the results? I
+shall state in the article that I am indebted to you and others for
+the information submitted.
+
+Area of the State of....................... square miles.
+
+1. What proportion of this area do you believe to be arable land of
+fair quality, including pasture that might be put under the plow?
+
+ Answer ................... square miles.
+
+2. What proportion is now in forest or mountain sections which may not
+be available for agriculture for a long period?
+
+ Answer ................... square miles.
+
+3. What has been done or may be done by irrigation?
+...........................................................................
+...........................................................................
+............................
+
+4. What proportion of the arable land above measured should you
+consider suitable to the production of wheat under general conditions
+such as are given in the text, say, a stable price of one dollar per
+bushel in London?
+
+ Answer ................... square miles.
+
+5. To what extent, in your judgment, is wheat becoming the cash or
+surplus crop of a varied system of agriculture as distinct from the
+methods which prevail in the opening of new lands of cropping with
+wheat for a term of years?
+
+....................................................................
+
+What further remarks can you add which will enable me to elucidate
+this case, to complete the article and to convey a true impression of
+the facts to English readers?
+
+....................................................................
+....................................................................
+....................................................................
+
+Your assistance in this matter will be gratefully received.
+
+ Respectfully submitted,
+ EDWARD ATKINSON.
+
+To this circular I received twenty-four detailed replies, containing
+statistics mostly very complete; also many suggestive letters, in
+every case giving full support to the general views which I had
+submitted in the proof sheets. It has been impossible for me to give
+individual credit within the limits of a magazine article to the
+gentlemen who have so fully supplied the data. Space will only permit
+me to submit a digest of the more important facts in a table derived
+from these replies:
+
+ -------------+-----------------------------------------+-------------
+ | FROM RETURNS MADE TO MY INQUIRY. |From United
+ |----------------+----------+-------------|States report
+ NAME. | Area of State. | Arable. | Suitable to | in wheat,
+ | | | wheat. | 1897.
+ -------------+----------------+----------+-------------+-------------
+ Minnesota | 84,287 | 66,000 | 50,000 | 7,189
+ South Dakota | 76,000 | 42,500 | 40,000 | 4,187
+ North Dakota | 74,312 | 50,000 | 50,000 | 4,300
+ Illinois | 56,000 | 54,000 | 20,000 | 2,292
+ Missouri | 68,000 | 64,000 | 64,000 | 2,448
+ Wisconsin | 56,000 | 35,000 | 35,000 | 961
+ |----------------+----------+-------------+------------
+ | 414,599 | 311,500 | 259,000 | 21,372
+ |================+==========+=============+===========
+ Texas | 269,694 | 200,000 | 100,000 | 700
+ California | 158,360 | 54,000 | 30,000 | 5,062
+ Montana | 145,310 | 30,000 | 25,000 | 109
+ Idaho | 87,000 | 30,000 | 15,000 | 192
+ |----------------+----------+-------------+------------
+ | 660,364 | 314,000 | 170,000 | 6,063
+ |================+==========+=============+============
+ Total | 1,074,963 | 625,500 | 429,000 | 27,435
+ -------------+----------------+----------+-------------+------------
+
+I do not give the data of the Eastern and Southern States, and I have
+selected only the most complete data of the other States, choosing the
+more conservative where two returns have been made from one State.
+
+The foregoing States produced a little over one third of the wheat
+crop of 1897. They comprise a little over one third the area of the
+land of the United States, excluding Alaska.
+
+The list covers States like Illinois, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, now
+very fully occupied relatively to Texas, Montana, and Idaho, as yet
+but sparsely settled.
+
+Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, Oregon, and
+Washington combined far exceed the above list in wheat production;
+but, as I have no complete data from these States, I can only say that
+the national or census statistics, as far as they go, develop
+corresponding conditions to those above given. The very small product
+of Texas and Montana, even of Idaho, as compared with the claimed
+potential, will attract notice, and perhaps excite incredulity. But
+let it be remembered that in 1880 the Territory of Dakota yielded less
+than 3,000,000 bushels of wheat, while in 1898 the two States of North
+and South Dakota, formerly in one Territory, claim to have produced
+100,000,000 bushels. Perhaps it will then be admitted that the
+potential of Montana, and even of Idaho, may be attained in some
+measure corresponding to the reports from those States; but as yet
+their product is a negligible quantity, as that of Dakota was only
+twenty years since.[9]
+
+Again, let it be remembered that Texas will produce a cotton crop,
+marketed in 1898-'99, above the average of the five ante-war crops of
+the whole country, and nearly equal to the largest crop ever grown in
+the United States before the war. Texas could not only produce the
+present entire cotton crop of the United States but of the world, on
+but a small part of her land which is well suited to cotton. When
+these facts are considered, perhaps the potential of that great State
+in wheat and other grain, in cattle and in sheep, as well as in
+cotton, may begin to be comprehended.
+
+The writer is well aware that this treatment of a great problem is
+very incomplete, but it is the best that the leisure hours of a very
+busy business life would permit. If it discloses the general ignorance
+of our resources, the total inadequacy of many of our official
+statistics, the lack of any real agricultural survey, and the
+necessity for a reorganization and concentration of the scientific
+departments of the Government as well as of a permanent census bureau,
+it will have served a useful purpose.
+
+If it also serves to call attention to the meager average crops and
+the poor quality of our agriculture as a whole down to a very recent
+period, it may suggest even to those to whose minds the statistics of
+the past convey but gloomy and "doubtful views" of the future, that
+the true progress in scientific agriculture could only begin when
+substantially all the fertile land in the possession of the Government
+had either been given away or otherwise distributed. So long as "sod
+crops" and the single-crop system yielded adequate returns to
+unskilled farmers, no true science of agriculture could be expected,
+any more than a large product of wool can be hoped for in States where
+it has been wittily said that "every poor man keeps one cur dog, and
+every d--d poor man keeps two or more."
+
+Finally, if I shall have drawn attention to the very effective work
+which is being done in the agricultural experiment stations by men of
+first-rate ability, I shall have drawn attention to a great fact. This
+work has already led to a complete revolution from the old practice
+of maltreating land, and to the renovation of soils that had been
+partially exhausted. Governor Henry A. Wise, of Virginia, long since
+condemned the old methods of Southern agriculture by telling his
+hearers, "The niggers skinned the land and the white men skinned the
+niggers." We are changing all that by new and progressive methods. I
+hope that in this recognition of the work of the experiment stations I
+shall have made some return for the attention which has been given to
+my inquiry by so many of my correspondents that the space assigned me
+forbids a list of my authorities being given by name.
+
+When the suggestion is made from the Department of Agriculture that
+all that science has yet accomplished has been to stop a tendency to a
+lessened production from the land now under the plow, and when it is
+even suggested that in 1930 the present meager average of crops per
+acre may still exist, it seems to me that little credit is given to
+the good work already accomplished in the short period in which the
+separate Department of Agriculture has been represented in the
+Cabinet, especially in the last five or six years, while the
+suggestion itself shows very little consideration of the great work of
+the experiment stations.
+
+Unless it can be proved that my correspondents and myself have entered
+into a conspiracy to mislead the public in dealing with the potential
+of this country in wheat production, nearly all the deductions from
+the figures of the past must be considered mere statistical rubbish.
+These statistics cover sections and States in which wheat should never
+be grown or attempted in competition with the true wheat soils and
+climate. As well might misplaced iron furnaces, built to boom city
+lots where there are no favorable conditions for the production of
+iron, be included in an average and held up as a standard of our
+potential in iron and steel production.
+
+In my efforts to discover the rule of progress in the arts and
+occupations of the people of this country, it has become plain that in
+ratio to the application of science and invention to every art the
+quantity of product is increased, the number of workmen is relatively
+diminished, the price of the product tends to diminish, while the
+wages or earnings of those who do the work are augmented. I have
+investigated many branches of industry, and find evidence conclusive
+to my own mind that such is the law of industrial development. This
+rule is subject to temporary variations under the restriction of
+statutes. In my own judgment, the so-called protective principle or
+policy of interference with commerce by imposing fines on foreign
+imports has retarded the progress of the specially protected arts, and
+has in some measure obstructed the diversity of manufactures; but the
+opposite policy of absolutely free trade in our domestic traffic over
+a greater area and among a much larger number of people than have
+elsewhere secured their own liberty has been so much more potent in
+its progressive influence as to have lessened the evils of the
+restrictions on foreign trade.
+
+According to my observation, all the efforts to regulate railroad
+charges by State legislation and under the interstate commerce act
+have greatly retarded the progress of the railway, and have deprived
+great States, notably Texas, of any service at all commensurate to the
+demand which might otherwise have been supplied to the mutual benefit
+of the owners of the railways and the inhabitants of the State. The
+most serious retarding influence, especially evil in its effect upon
+farmers, was the useless panic of 1893, caused by the silver
+craze--that is to say, by the effort to enact a force bill by which
+the producers of our great crops would have been compelled to accept
+money of half the purchasing power of that to which their industry had
+been long adjusted. This caused a temporary paralysis of industry, in
+which I think none suffered so much as the farmers of the country.
+
+But admitting these temporary variations, I find the same rule
+governing the products of the farm that governs the mine, the factory,
+and the workshop--namely, a lessening of the number occupied in ratio
+to the product; a great reduction in the cost of labor; an increased
+return in due proportion of the skill and intelligence of the farmer;
+a rapid reduction in the farm mortgages, ending at the present date in
+making the farmers of the grain-growing States the creditors of the
+world, especially those occupied upon wheat.
+
+But in the development of this progress we find the reverse of the
+practice in the factory and the workshop. The most important
+applications of science and invention led first to what might be
+called the manufacture of wheat on an extensive method of making a
+single crop on great areas of land. That phase has about spent its
+force; the great farms are in process of division; the single-crop
+system has about ended; the intensive system of making a larger
+product from a lessened area with alternation and variation in crops
+is rapidly taking the place of former methods.
+
+Therefore, while many branches of manufacturing tend more and more to
+the collective method, the tendency in agriculture is more and more to
+individualism in dealing with the land itself, coupled with collective
+ownership in the more expensive farm machinery, in creameries, cheese
+factories, and the like. We are apparently at a halfway stage in this
+revolution of agriculture. The intelligent and intensive methods of
+breeding cattle and sheep is also rapidly taking the place of the
+semibarbarous conditions of the ranch.
+
+If these points are well taken, the very suggestion that we must
+compute the land which should be under the plow in 1890 in order to
+supply the needs of 130,000,000 people on the basis of the imperfect
+statistics and inadequate data of the past, becomes almost an
+impertinence. It is much more probable that the 400,000 square miles
+which now meet the needs of 75,000,000 people, with an enormous excess
+for export, will in 1930 still suffice for the domestic supply of
+130,000,000 people, with a proportionate export corresponding to the
+present.
+
+If the product of the farms of the West now yielding the largest
+crops, or of the renovated lands of the South now yielding the best
+crops, be taken as the average standard of the near future, as they
+should be, then it may be true in 1930, as it is now, that one fifth
+of the arable land of this country when put under the plow will still
+suffice for all existing demands, the remainder of our great domain
+extending the promise of future abundance and welfare to the yet
+greater numbers who will occupy the land a century hence.
+
+I may add that in the course of a very friendly correspondence with
+Sir William Crookes, while we are still at variance in our estimates
+of the area which may be converted to the production of wheat in this
+country without trenching upon any other product, we are wholly at an
+agreement on a most material point. I quote from one of his letters:
+"Under the present wasteful method of cultivation there will be in a
+limited number of years an insufficient supply of wheat. Apply
+artificial fertilizers judiciously, and the supply may be increased
+indefinitely." I would only venture to add to the judgment of so
+eminent a writer the words "or natural," to the end that the paragraph
+should read, "Apply artificial or natural fertilizers judiciously, and
+the supply can be increased indefinitely."
+
+Many years ago I was asked among others, "What would be the next great
+discovery of science or invention?" To which I replied, "A supply of
+nitrogen at low cost." Has not that discovery been made in the recent
+development of the functions of the bacteria which, living and dying
+upon the leguminous plants, dissociate the nitrogen of the atmosphere
+and convert it through the plant to the renovation of the soil? Is not
+the invention of methods of nitrifying the soil by distributing the
+germs of bacteria one of the most wonderful discoveries of science
+ever yet attained? Can any one yet measure the potential of any given
+area of land in any part of this country in the production of any one
+of its great crops? That there is a limit may be admitted. Can any one
+venture to say that any of our average crops yet approach beyond a
+small fractional measure the true limit of production, whatever it may
+be, either in cotton, maize, wheat, or any other product of the soil?
+
+In this, as in many other developments of the theory of evolution, the
+factor of mental energy, which is the prime factor in all material
+production, may have been or is almost wholly ignored. We are ceasing
+to treat the soil as a mine subject to exhaustion, but we have as yet
+made only a beginning in treating it as an instrument of production
+which will for a long period respond in its increasing product in
+exact ratio to the mental energy which is applied to the cultivation
+of the land.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[9] I have been permitted to review the detailed statements of the
+accounts of one of the great enterprises which I have called the
+manufacture of wheat on a large scale on various large farms,
+separated one from another but under one control, aggregating more
+than twenty thousand acres, in North Dakota. They are managed mainly
+from a long distance through agents and foremen, therefore at a
+relative disadvantage compared to a farmer owning his own land, acting
+as his own foreman, and saving heavily in expense. Such farmers,
+making no charge for their own time, are computed to have a cash
+advantage of one dollar an acre.
+
+A large part of this land has been cropped in wheat for twenty-four
+years, one farm of six thousand acres showing an average in excess of
+eighteen bushels per acre for the term of seventeen years. The details
+of the product of other farms are not given, but this may be
+considered a rule. Of course, this cropping can not be carried on
+indefinitely. The land is now being allowed to rest, and other crops,
+such as maize, oats, barley, millet, and timothy, are to some extent
+being raised in rotation, but not to the extent in which individual
+wheat farms are now passing into rotation, especially in Minnesota.
+
+In this enterprise the manufacture of wheat is the main purpose, but
+under the changed conditions on the small farms in Minnesota wheat is
+becoming rather the cash or excess crop in a rotation of four; at
+present, in North Dakota, wheat constitutes about three fourths the
+total product.
+
+In these accounts of this great farm are included all charges of every
+name and nature except what might be called the rent of land: the
+labor, the harvesting and thrashing, the general expense including the
+foreman and all other charges; the office expenses, the taxes, the
+insurance, and, when summer fallow is introduced, the cost of the
+summer fallow. Suffice it that these figures for 1898--a year of high
+charge for seed and one which yielded a fraction over the average in
+product--prove conclusively an average of all charges of less than
+five dollars an acre for the cost of the product. In different years
+under these conditions the cost of the wheat varies from a little over
+twenty cents to approximately thirty-five cents per bushel. The cost
+of oats, which are cultivated with the wheat mainly for use on the
+farms, ranges from ten to fifteen cents per bushel.
+
+These are facts. The pending question in this discussion is, How much
+land, occupied by owners but not now in use, is there in this section
+of the country on which similar results can be attained, with better
+results by individual farmers who possess mental energy and practical
+skill? The figures given by the chiefs of the agricultural experiment
+stations may rightly be taken in the solution of this question.
+
+
+
+
+THE COMING OF THE CATBIRD.
+
+BY SPENCER TROTTER.
+
+
+In southeastern Pennsylvania there comes a day in February that brings
+with it an indefinable sense of joyousness. A southerly wind wanders
+up the Delaware with a touch of the spring in its air that quickens,
+for the first time, the slumbering life. It is then that those
+mysterious forces in the cells of living things begin their subtle
+work--hidden in the dark, underground storehouses of plants and the
+sluggish tissues of animals buried in their winter sleep. On such a
+day the ground hog ventures from his burrow, some restless bee is
+lured from the hive to wander disconsolate over bare fields, a snake
+crawls from its hole to bask awhile in the sunshine, and one looks
+instinctively for the first breaking of the earth that tells of the
+early crocus and the peeping forth of daffodils. The southerly wind is
+more apt than not to be a telltale, for with all its springtime
+softness it is drawing toward some storm center, near or remote, that
+will inevitably follow with rough weather in its sweep. The country
+folk rightly call such a day a "weather breeder," and even the ground
+hog knows its portent in the very sign of his shadow. Come as it will,
+the day is really a day borrowed in advance from the spring, as though
+to hearten one through all the dreary days that will follow and, in
+starting the growing forces of vegetation, to make ready for the
+season's coming.
+
+With this forerunner of the year come the harbingers of the bird
+migration. With the rise of the temperature to sixty or over, a
+well-marked bird wave from the south spreads over the Delaware Valley.
+On this balmy, springlike day we hear for the first time since
+November the croaking of grackles as a loose flock wings overhead or
+scatters among the tree tops. A few robins may show themselves, and
+the mellow piping of bluebirds lends its sweet influence to the charm
+of such a day. There is a sense of uncertain whereabouts in the
+bluebird's note, a sort of hazy, in-the-air feeling that suggests sky
+space. It does not seem to have the tangible element by which we can
+locate the bird as in the voices of the robin and the song sparrow. It
+is on such a day as this that song sparrows are first heard--cheery
+ditties from the weather-beaten fences and the bare, brown tangle of
+brier patches. The day may close lurid with the frayed streamers of
+lofty cirrus clouds streaking across the sky--the vaporous overflow of
+a coming storm--or a week of the same bright weather may continue with
+the wind all the while blowing softly out of the south, but sooner or
+later the inevitable winter storm must close this foretaste of the
+spring.
+
+A decided wave of rising temperature usually reaches the Delaware
+Valley from the middle to the last of March, maintaining itself longer
+than the February rise, and ushering in a well-marked bird wave. It is
+about this time that the vanguard of the robin migration scatters over
+the country. The grackles or crow blackbirds, which have been more or
+less in evidence since their first appearance in February, begin
+renovating the old nests or laying the foundations of new ones in the
+tops of tall pines. The shrill call of the flicker sounds through the
+woods, and before the end of the month one is sure to hear the
+plaintive song of the field sparrow. This is about the time that the
+spicebush shows its yellow blossoms through the grays and browns of
+the spring underwoods, and the skunk cabbage unfolds its fresh, green
+leafage in rank abundance along the boggy course of woodland rills. A
+week earlier the streaked yellow and purple of its fleshy spathes
+shows here and there in the oozy ground by the side of the folded leaf
+spikes. It is just at this time, too, that one must go to the woods
+for the first spring wild flowers--bloodroot, hepatica, anemones, and
+the yellow dog-tooth violet--if one would get the real freshness of
+spring into his soul. The crows, that all through the winter filed
+away each evening in straggling lines of flight toward the distant
+roost, have broken ranks, and go rambling in small groups through the
+woods and over the fields of green winter wheat. Like the grackles,
+they have thoughts of courtship and the more earnest business of
+family cares. The liquid notes of meadow larks sound clear and sweet
+in the greening fields and pastures, and small flocks of vociferous
+killdeers scatter in wheeling flight over the newly plowed lands. In
+tangle covers the rustle of dead leaves here and there tells of the
+whereabouts of a flock of fox sparrows halting in their northward
+pilgrimage. The pewee is back, inspecting her last year's house under
+the span of some old bridge, and the melancholy voice of the dove is
+borne on the air from the fence rows and cedars along the farther side
+of fields.
+
+After the 1st of April the tide of migration sets in with force, and
+the earlier waves bring several species of summer birds--those that
+come to build and breed in our woods--that rarely if ever make their
+appearance before this time. It is an interesting fact that none of
+the migrants that make their first appearance in April are ever found
+in the Delaware Valley during the winter, though several, if not all,
+of the species that come on the March waves are occasionally met with
+in the winter months. It appears, further, that the winter quarters of
+certain birds which are summer residents with us and some that are
+transient, passing on to more northern breeding grounds, lie not so
+very far to the south. If the last of March has been marked by warm
+weather lapping over into the first days of April, then one may expect
+soon to hear the familiar notes of the chipping sparrow from the
+swelling branches of garden shrubbery and the trees about the lawn,
+and a brown thrasher is sure to be heard volubly proclaiming his
+arrival from some near-by tree top. Among the budding sprigs of
+thickets the elusive chewink breaks into occasional fragments of song,
+and from the red-blossomed maples and the jungle of pussy willows and
+alders that fringe the meadow brook the metallic creaking notes of the
+red-winged blackbirds sound not unpleasingly. This jargon of the
+red-wing has a true vernal ring about it, suggesting the fresh green
+of oozy bogs and the loosening up of sap.
+
+From the middle to the last of April there are several big waves of
+migration that bring many of the summer residents as well as some
+transient species, forerunning the greater waves that are to follow in
+May. On certain warm April days the barn and the bank swallows appear,
+and the chimney swifts are seen scurrying to and fro above the trees
+and house tops. These are genuine signs of the coming summer, for
+swallows and swifts feed only on the minute gnats and other ephemera
+that develop under conditions of warm temperature. Whoever knows of a
+martin box that year after year is visited by its colony has an
+unfailing source of delight at this time in watching the lovely birds.
+The martins are very prompt in their arrival, rarely coming before the
+1st of April nor later than the 10th. We are aware for the first time
+that the house wren has come back by the voluble song that greets us
+some morning from the branches just beyond our window--a song that
+only the lover of his own rooftree can fully appreciate, for the
+wren's chant, more than any other bird song, seems to voice the home
+instinct in a man. By the last week of April the woods are fast
+closing up their vistas in a rich profusion of unfolding leafage. The
+umbrellalike leaves of the May apple are scattered everywhere through
+the woods and fields, forming conspicuous patches of green. During
+this last week of the month a few straggling thrushes make their
+appearance--the hermit thrush with its russet tail, the veery, and the
+wood thrush. The first two are transients, flitting through the
+underwoods or rustling among fallen leaves in search of their insect
+food. To hear the incomparable matins and vespers of the hermit one
+must follow to the bird's breeding range on the wooded slopes of the
+Appalachians or farther into the deep recesses of the Canadian
+forests. The wood thrush breeds with us, and the melody of its notes
+adds a peculiar charm to our groves and woodlands that would leave an
+unfilled blank in the choir if the bird were a transient like the
+hermit or the veery.
+
+From the 1st to the 10th of May a succession of bird waves comes from
+the south of such vast proportions as to the number of individuals and
+variety of species that all the previous migratory waves seem
+insignificant in comparison. It is the flood tide of the migration,
+bringing with it the host of warblers, vireos, orioles, tanagers, and
+thrushes that suddenly make our woods almost tropical in the variety
+of richly colored species and strange bird notes. It would take a
+volume to describe the wood warblers, sylvan nymphs of such bizarre
+color patterns and dainty forms that one is fain to imagine himself in
+the heart of some wondrous forest of a far-away land. Their curious
+dry notes, each different in its kind and expression, yet all of the
+same insectlike quality; their quick, active motions, now twisting
+head downward around the branches, prying into every nook and cranny
+in their eager search for food, or fluttering about the clusters of
+leaves, add to the strange effect. Their names, too, are richly
+stimulative to the color sense--the black-throated green, the
+black-throated blue, the chestnut-sided, the bay-breasted, the black
+and yellow, the cerulean, the Blackburnian, the blue-winged yellow,
+the golden-winged, the blue-yellow-backed or parula warbler, and the
+Maryland yellow-throat are each suggestive of a wealth of coloring.
+Others have names that carry us to southern realms, like the myrtle
+and the palm warblers; and others again tell of curious habits, as the
+worm-eating warbler, the hooded fly-catching warbler, and the black
+and white creeping warbler that scrambles about the tree trunks like a
+true creeper. There is nothing in all the year quite like the May
+woods. Then, if never again, you can step from your dooryard into an
+enchanted forest. The light yellowish effects of new green in the
+feathery masses of the oak catkins and the fresh, unfolding leafage of
+the forest trees are a rich feast to the eyes. Against this wealth of
+green the dogwood spreads its snow-white masses of bloom. In sunlit
+spaces of greenness the scarlet flash of a tanager, the rich blue
+coloring of the indigo bird, newly arrived from its winter quarters in
+South America, and the glimpse of a rose-breasted grosbeak among the
+high tree tops are strangely suggestive of a tropical forest. The ear,
+too, is charmed with a multitude of curious notes. The weird cries of
+the great-crested flycatcher among the topmost branches, and the loud
+chant of the ovenbird with its rising cadence coming from farther
+depths of the wood are two of the most characteristic bird voices of
+the May woodlands. If one would have the famous song of the mocking
+bird in this sylvan carnival he has only to loiter in the nearest
+grove to hear the wonderful performance of the catbird. The catbird is
+the real harbinger of summer. He is familiar throughout the
+countryside, liked or disliked according to the dispositions of folks,
+but when he appears amid the May-day throng every one knows that
+summer has come. As a countryman once said to me: "You can't place any
+dependence on the robin--it may snow the very day he comes; but a
+catbird never makes a mistake--it's summer with him for sure."
+
+The passing on of the great warbler waves to the north and the ending
+of the migration likewise mean the passing of the spring. It is summer
+any time after the 15th of May, or, to be more accurate, after the
+last of the migratory warblers, thrushes, and tanagers have passed
+beyond our woods. To a New-Englander summer will come a little later,
+nearer the true almanac date of June 1st. To a dweller in Virginia the
+last of April is the passing of spring and the advent of summer.
+
+Some ten or more years ago several enthusiastic ornithologists living
+in the neighborhood of Philadelphia began keeping records of the times
+of arrival of the different species of birds, and at the same time
+noted the conditions of temperature in relation to the abundance of
+individuals. After several years of these observations they were able
+to see clearly that these bird waves were directly related to the
+waves of rising temperature marking the advent of warm spells of
+weather. One of the most significant facts deduced from these
+observations was the remarkable regularity in the first appearance of
+certain species. For example, the Baltimore oriole in eight years of
+observation never arrived before the 1st of May, and only twice later
+than the 4th--viz., once on the fifth and once on the 7th. The list on
+the opposite page shows the date of first arrivals extending over a
+period of eight years, from 1885 to 1892.[10]
+
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------+
+ | 1885. | 1886. | 1887. | 1888. |
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------|
+ Flicker | April 10 | Mar. 24 | Mar. 26 | Mar. 30 |
+ Chimney swift | April 22 | April 23 | April 22 | April 20 |
+ Hummingbird | April 29 | May 12 | May 12 | May 14 |
+ Kingbird | May 6 | May 11 | May 7 | May 6 |
+ Crested flycatcher | May 2 | May 12 | May 3 | May 1 |
+ Pewee | April 3 | Mar. 20 | Mar. 21 | Mar. 22 |
+ Wood pewee | May 6 | May 15 | April 30 | May 13 |
+ Red-winged | | | | |
+ blackbird | Mar. 4 | Feb. 19 | Feb. 19 | Feb. 21 |
+ Meadow lark | ....... | Feb. 10 | Mar. 19 | Mar. 21 |
+ Baltimore oriole | May 5 | May 4 | May 2 | May 2 |
+ Purple grackle | Mar. 16 | Mar. 7 | Feb. 19 | Feb. 21 |
+ Chipping sparrow | April 8 | April 9 | April 8 | Mar. 31 |
+ Field sparrow | April 11 | April 7 | April 9 | April 2 |
+ Chewink | April 22 | April 23 | April 27 | April 18 |
+ Indigo bird | May 16 | May 11 | May 7 | May 12 |
+ Scarlet tanager | May 9 | May 12 | May 5 | May 8 |
+ Barn swallow | April 22 | April 19 | April 21 | April 12 |
+ Red-eyed vireo | May 7 | May 11 | May 4 | April 29 |
+ Black-and-white | | | | |
+ warbler | April 30 | May 4 | April 27 | April 21 |
+ Yellow warbler | May 6 | May 4 | May 2 | May 5 |
+ Myrtle warbler | May 2 | April 10 | May 2 | April 25 |
+ Black-throated | | | | |
+ green warbler | May 2 | May 11 | May 5 | April 26 |
+ Ovenbird | April 30 | May 3 | April 29 | April 30 |
+ Maryland | | | | |
+ yellow-throat | April 29 | April 24 | April 28 | April 30 |
+ Chat | May 2 | May 12 | May 5 | May 5 |
+ Redstart | May 2 | May 4 | May 3 | May 1 |
+ Catbird | May 2 | May 4 | May 3 | May 5 |
+ Brown thrasher | April 24 | April 25 | April 28 | April 15 |
+ House wren | May 3 | April 27 | April 24 | April 28 |
+ Wood thrush | May 2 | May 1 | May 1 | May 1 |
+ Veery | ....... | May 11 | April 25 | May 3 |
+ Hermit thrush | April 13 | April 7 | April 9 | April 3 |
+ Robin | Mar. 7 | Mar. 10 | Feb. 28 | Feb. 19 |
+ Bluebird | Mar. 18 | ....... | Feb. 17 | Feb. 21 |
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------+
+
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ | 1889. | 1890. | 1891. | 1892.
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ Flicker | Mar. 28 | Mar. 26 | Mar. 30 | April 2
+ Chimney swift | April 15 | April 22 | April 16 | April 27
+ Hummingbird | ....... | May 7 | May 11 | .......
+ Kingbird | May 6 | May 14 | May 1 | May 4
+ Crested flycatcher | May 8 | May 1 | April 30 | May 3
+ Pewee | Mar. 27 | Mar. 27 | Mar. 31 | April 3
+ Wood pewee | May 12 | May 14 | May 6 | May 17
+ Red-winged | | | |
+ blackbird | Mar. 13 | Mar. 12 | Feb. 25 | Mar. 9
+ Meadow lark | Mar. 14 | Mar. 12 | Feb. 23 | Mar. 17
+ Baltimore oriole | May 7 | May 1 | May 1 | May 3
+ Purple grackle | Mar. 2 | Feb. 13 | Feb. 18 | Mar. 6
+ Chipping sparrow | Mar. 29 | April 8 | April 13 | April 4
+ Field sparrow | Mar. 29 | Mar. 13 | Mar. 15 | Mar. 26
+ Chewink | April 11 | May 1 | April 18 | April 24
+ Indigo bird | May 12 | May 10 | May 8 | May 10
+ Scarlet tanager | May 9 | May 4 | April 28 | May 3
+ Barn swallow | April 22 | April 19 | April 19 | April 24
+ Red-eyed vireo | May 5 | April 30 | May 2 | May 3
+ Black-and-white | | | |
+ warbler | April 20 | April 30 | April 24 | May 1
+ Yellow warbler | May 11 | May 1 | May 8 | May 4
+ Myrtle warbler | April 20 | April 27 | April 18 | April 7
+ Black-throated | | | |
+ green warbler | May 5 | May 2 | April 19 | April 30
+ Ovenbird | May 3 | May 3 | April 29 | April 30
+ Maryland | | | |
+ yellow-throat | May 6 | April 30 | May 1 | May 3
+ Chat | May 11 | May 5 | May 1 | May 3
+ Redstart | May 4 | May 3 | April 29 | April 30
+ Catbird | May 5 | May 5 | May 4 | April 30
+ Brown thrasher | April 22 | April 30 | April 19 | April 30
+ House wren | April 14 | April 30 | April 19 | May 5
+ Wood thrush | May 3 | April 30 | April 23 | May 2
+ Veery | May 6 | May 2 | April 28 | May 4
+ Hermit thrush | April 10 | April 13 | April 12 | April 3
+ Robin | Mar. 7 | Feb. 26 | Feb. 24 | Mar. 9
+ Bluebird | Mar. 8 | Feb. 23 | Feb. 17 | Mar. 9
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+---------
+
+Another fact of great interest which bears on the south-to-north
+movement of migrating birds, and which these observations very clearly
+brought out, was the earlier appearance of individuals of various
+species at points nearer the river, the first arrival of the same
+species at points back from the river being, in many instances,
+several days later. The first report of the arrival of a given species
+usually came from a low, marshy tract of land immediately bordering
+the western shore of the Delaware. The second report came from a
+locality several miles back of the eastern shore of the river, but
+situated in the low plain of the river valley and within tide-water
+limits. The third report came from a place some miles back from the
+river on the uplands, but near the head of a stream emptying into the
+Delaware from the west. The last two places to report arrivals were
+situated farther up the river and some distance back from it. All this
+confirms the general idea that in migrating most, if not all, of the
+various land birds follow river valleys and invade the upland
+districts, lying back from either side, by way of the smaller
+tributaries.
+
+The fact of greatest importance resulting from these observations was
+that relating to temperature. It was found that there was always a
+marked increase in the number of individuals of a given species
+following a warm wave of temperature as marked by a decided rise of
+the thermometer. The following graphic representation, based on the
+abundance from day to day of three common and easily observed
+species--the brown thrasher, chipping sparrow, and flicker--affords an
+interesting illustration of the relative movements of the two waves.
+It will be understood that the numbers in the extreme left-hand column
+refer to the relative abundance of individuals of the three species
+collectively. The inside column refers to temperature. The period of
+observation was twenty days, as shown by the line across the top of
+the figure.[11]
+
+[Illustration: A, migration; B, temperature.]
+
+The advent of spring is marked by the northward progression of the
+isotherm of 42.8° F., which is the initial temperature required to
+awaken the dormant reproductive and germinating activities in animals
+and plants. With the gradual invasion of the United States, from the
+south northward, by temperatures above this, there passes over the
+different regions the ever-old but ever-new panorama of the spring
+with its opening blossoms, its unfolding green, and its waves of
+migrating birds. The restlessness produced by the periodic development
+of the reproductive function under the stimulus of increased
+temperature causes the highly organized bird life to spread out from
+its winter quarters, wherever those may be, and follow the zone of new
+green that steadily widens northward with its increase of food supply
+in the form of myriads of insects. The comparative regularity in the
+recurrence of this phenomenon year after year is attested by the
+observations just noted. Each species has a certain, definite
+physiological relation to temperature, and its migratory movement
+toward the breeding ground is determined by the movement of the
+isotherm of this temperature. Just as warm a spell of weather may
+occur in early April as in the first week of May, but it does not
+represent the permanent summer rise; and the majority of the warblers,
+the catbird, the tanager, the rose-breasted grosbeak, the two species
+of oriole, the vireos, and the kingbird, are rarely if ever seen in
+abundance in the Delaware Valley before the 1st of May. The migratory
+movement of such species is as regular as any other periodic
+phenomenon in Nature.
+
+It is hard to realize the enormous multitude of birds that form a
+so-called "wave." During the whole period of migration there is a
+general northward movement of all the migratory species, but under the
+influence of warm spells of weather this more or less uniform movement
+rises into a vast wavelike sweep of birds. These bird waves, as
+already noted, _follow_ the rise of temperature appearing at any given
+locality about a day or two after the first day of the warm spell.
+Many species of land birds migrate at night--such, for example, as the
+orioles, tanagers, warblers, vireos, wrens, the majority of the
+finches, the woodpeckers, and the thrushes, excepting the robin.
+During the passing of one of the May waves the darkness overhead is
+alive with flying birds. One may stand for hours at a time and hear
+the incessant chirping and twittering of hundreds of birds calling to
+one another through the night as though to keep from getting
+separated. The great mass of individuals are probably guided by these
+call notes.
+
+The usually accepted notion that birds migrate from south to north in
+traveling to their breeding grounds is largely true of shore birds and
+waterfowl, but among many of the species of land birds conditions of
+topography tend to deflect a direct northward movement. The Atlantic
+coast plain, reaching up into southern New Jersey, and the Mississippi
+basin, each offers a broad south-to-north highway for birds leaving
+the Gulf shores of the United States on their northward journey in the
+spring. A great majority of species find in the wilderness of the
+Appalachian highland, from the Catskills to Georgia, breeding grounds
+quite as well adapted to their needs as the forests of Maine and
+Canada. Large numbers of birds, according to their regional relations,
+will constantly turn from the Atlantic coast plain up the numerous
+rivers, which become great highways of migration, leading to the
+highlands. The northward movement has thus a large westerly deflection
+on the Atlantic slope of the middle United States. It is also quite
+certain that many birds winter in favorable localities on the Atlantic
+coast plain much farther north than is generally supposed. This is
+especially true of the holly thickets among the coastwise sand dunes
+of southern New Jersey and the cedar swamps and pine barrens in the
+vicinity of Cape May. Many of the finches, the marsh wrens,
+red-winged blackbirds, meadow larks, thrashers, and myrtle warblers
+are frequently seen in these localities through the winter. I spent
+one first day of February some years ago among the dunes below
+Atlantic City, N. J. At Philadelphia that morning it was bleak winter
+weather, but two hours later we found ourselves in a warm expanse of
+sunlight on the seaward beaches. The balmy air was filled with bird
+notes, and the holly thickets and bay bushes fairly swarmed with
+myrtle warblers. It seems to be a fact that many birds thus make
+comparatively short migratory movements between the seacoast plain and
+the mountains, up and down the river valleys.
+
+The phenomenon of the migrating bird has always appealed in a
+wonderful manner to the human mind. The guiding geographical sense
+that all animals, and wild animals and birds in particular, possess is
+peculiarly attractive to men of civilized society, because they have
+largely lost this same natural instinct of direction, and now look
+upon it in wonderment. Birds have very sure landmarks; their senses
+are keen for noting features of topography. They undoubtedly know the
+Potomac, the Susquehanna, the Delaware, the Hudson, and the
+Connecticut, and never confuse one with another. They know to which
+side the sea lies and that the rivers flow down from a wild, wooded
+region where there are plenty of food and the best possible places to
+raise their young. All these facts get fixed in their brains. The
+bird's brain-cell structure is built on these lines and is only
+waiting to get the impressions of the first migratory experience. They
+keep in with one another, follow their chirpings in the night, learn
+to tell the Hudson from the Delaware, or where this or that stretch of
+woodland lies, just as they learned when first out of the nest how to
+tell good from bad sorts of food, or how to find their way about the
+home woods, and that an owl or a fox was an undesirable acquaintance.
+In the fall migration the young birds follow the older ones in the
+general movement southward, and are often belated, showing that the
+impulse to leave their birthplaces is forced upon them, rather from
+necessity than choice, and is not the well-developed instinct
+impressed by former experience which their elders seem to possess. The
+old birds who have bred and reared these young ones set the example of
+early departure which the birds of the year through inexperience are
+tardy in appreciating. The habit waits upon experience.
+
+Each year, from midwinter, when the first warmth of advancing sunlight
+calls to the sleeping life, on to the first fervid heat of the
+reproductive summer, we have the joyous pageant of the spring. This
+steady waxing of the new light appealed to the pagan mind of western
+Europe with a far deeper sense than the modern mind can appreciate. To
+our rude ancestors it was the goddess Eástre, bountiful in her gift
+of warmth and the magic of reproductive life, that each year came with
+the light to drive away the frost giants. And with the goddess, whom
+we still love to picture as a maiden tripping lightly through the
+budding groves in her wind-blown garments, came the birds. It was the
+cuckoo that brought the summer with "daisies pied and violets blue,"
+and to-day, when its voice is heard for the first time in the year,
+every one knows that summer has come again to the hedgerows of England
+and the lands of the Rhine. So with us across the Atlantic, summer
+comes when the catbird first pours out its babel of sweet notes in
+green woodland ways and the tangled nooks of old gardens.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[10] The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Prepared under
+the direction of the Delaware Valley Ornithological Club. By Witmer
+Stone. Philadelphia, 1894.
+
+[11] Stone. The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
+
+
+
+
+GUESSING, AS INFLUENCED BY NUMBER PREFERENCES.
+
+BY F. B. DRESSLAR.
+
+
+About two years ago a certain progressive clothing company of Los
+Angeles, California, procured a very large squash--so large, indeed,
+as to attract much attention. This they placed uncut in a window of
+their place of business, and advertised that they would give one
+hundred dollars in gold to the one guessing the number of seeds it
+contained. In case two or more persons guessed the correct number, the
+money was to be divided equally among them. The only prerequisite for
+an opportunity to guess was that the one wishing to guess should walk
+inside and register his name, address, and his guess in the notebook
+kept for that purpose.
+
+The result of this offer was that 7,700 people registered guesses, and
+but three of these guessed 811, the number of seeds which the squash
+contained.
+
+It occurred to me that a study of these guesses would reveal some
+interesting number preferences, if any existed, for the conditions
+were unusually favorable for calling forth naïve and spontaneous
+results, there being no way of approximating the number of seeds by
+calculation, and very little or no definite experience upon which to
+rely for guidance. It seemed probable, therefore, that the guesses
+would cover a wide range, and by reason of this furnish evidence of
+whatever number preference might exist. It is undoubtedly safe to
+assume, too, that the guesses made were honest attempts to state as
+nearly as possible best judgments under conditions given; but even if
+some of the guesses were more or less facetiously made, the data would
+be equally valuable for the main purpose in hand.
+
+According to the theory of probability, had there been no preference
+at all for certain digits or certain combinations of digits within
+the limits of the guesses, one figure would occur about as often as
+another in units' or tens' place. It was argued, therefore, that any
+marked or persistent variation from such regularity in such a great
+number of cases would reveal what might be termed an unconscious
+preference for such numbers or digits for these places.
+
+The purpose of this study, then, was to determine whether or not there
+existed in the popular mind, under the conditions offered, any such
+preferences.
+
+After the very arduous and tedious task of collating and classifying
+all the guesses for men and women separately had been done, the
+following facts appeared:
+
+In the first place, marked preference is shown for certain digits both
+for units' and tens' places. This statement is based on a study of the
+6,863 guesses falling below one thousand. Of these, 4,238 were made by
+men and 2,625 were made by women. By tabulations of the digits used in
+units' place by both men and women, the following facts have been
+determined: 800 used 9, while but 374 used 8; 1,070 used 7, and 443
+preferred 6; 881 used 5, and only 295 preferred 4; 862 chose 3, while
+331 used 2; 577 ended with 1, while 1,230 preferred 0 as the last
+figure.
+
+A tabulation of the figures used in tens' place shows, save in the
+case of 2 and 3, where 2 is used oftener than 3, the same curious
+preferences, but in a much less marked degree. To go into detail, 850
+chose 9 for tens' place, while 559 took 8; 907 used 7, while only 637
+selected 6; 748 took 5, while only 536 used 4; 601 used 3, and 634
+chose 2; 728 used 1, as against 872 who used 0.
+
+Were it not that the selections here in the main correspond with the
+preferences shown in units' place, the significance of these figures
+would be much less important; but the evidence here can not wholly be
+ignored when taken in connection with the facts obtained in the
+preferences shown in the case of the figures occupying units' place.
+
+We are enabled, then, as a result of the study of these guesses, to
+say that under the conditions offered, aside from a preference of 0
+over 1 to end the numbers selected, digits representing odd numbers
+are conspicuously preferred to those representing even numbers. How
+far this will hold under other conditions can not now be stated, but
+the facts here observed are of such a nature as to suggest the
+possibility of an habitual tendency in this direction. However,
+further investigations can alone determine whether or not this bias
+for certain numbers is potent in a general way.
+
+The curve on the next page, exhibiting the results noted above, shows
+at a glance the marked and persistent preference for the odd numbers.
+
+It will be noticed that of the digits preferred, 7 surpasses any of
+the others. Not only, then, do we tend to select an odd number for
+units' place when the guess ranges between one and a thousand, but of
+these digits 7 is much preferred. In connection with this fact one
+immediately recalls all he has heard about 7 as a sacred number, and
+its professed significance in the so-called "occult sciences." I think
+one is warranted in saying from an introspective point of view that
+there is a shadow of superstition present in all attempts at pure
+guessing. There appears to be some unexpressed feeling of lucky
+numbers or some mental easement when one unreasoned position is taken
+rather than any other.
+
+[Illustration: CHOICE OF DIGITS IN TENS' AND UNITS' PLACES (MEN AND
+WOMEN).
+
+Vertical distance shows the number of times the figure on the
+horizontal line immediately below was used.]
+
+It is impossible on the evidence furnished by this study to give more
+than hints at the probable reason for the preference here indicated.
+But it is worth while to glance backward to earlier conditions, when
+the scientific attitude toward all the facts of life and mind was far
+more subordinated to supernatural interpretations than it is to-day.
+In this way we may catch a thread which still binds us to habits
+formed in the indefinite past.
+
+The Greeks considered the even numbers as representative of the
+feminine principle, and as belonging and applying to things
+terrestrial. To them the odd numbers were endowed with a masculine
+virtue, which in time was strengthened into supernatural and celestial
+qualities. The same belief was prevalent among the Chinese. With them
+even numbers were connected with earthly things, partaking of the
+feminine principle of Yang. Odd numbers were looked upon as proceeding
+out of the divine and endued with the masculine principle. Thirty was
+called the number of earth, because it was made up by the addition of
+the even numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10. On the other hand, 25, the sum of
+the five odd numbers 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9, was called the number of
+heaven.
+
+It is generally true that, as lower peoples developed the need of
+numbers and the power to use them, certain of these numbers came to be
+surrounded with a superstitious importance and endued with certain
+qualities which led at once to numerical preferences more or less
+dominant in all their thinking connected with numbers.
+
+It would certainly be unjustifiable to conclude from the evidence at
+hand that the preferences shown in the guesses under consideration are
+directly traceable to some such superstition; and yet one can scarcely
+prevent himself from linking them vaguely together. Especially is this
+true when some consideration is given to a probable connecting link as
+shown in our modern superstitious notions. I have found through a
+recent study of these superstitions that where numbers are introduced,
+the odd are used to the almost complete exclusion of the even. For
+example, I have collected and tabulated a series of more than sixty
+different superstitions using odd numbers, and have found but four
+making use of the even. Besides these specific examples there are many
+more which in some form or another express the belief that odd numbers
+have some vital relation with luck both good and bad.
+
+It would be impossible to define precisely or even approximately just
+what sort of a mental state the word "luck" stands for, but one
+element in its composition is a more or less naïve belief in
+supernatural and occult influences which at one time work for and at
+another time against the believer. In its more pronounced forms, the
+belief in luck lifts itself into a sort of a blind dependence upon
+some ministering spirit which interposes between rational causes and
+their effects. In a way one may say that the more or less vague and
+shadowy notions of luck which float in the minds of people to-day are
+but the emaciated and famishing forms of a once all-embracing
+superstition, and that these shadows possess a potency over life and
+action oftentimes beyond our willingness to believe.
+
+There is another interesting and somewhat curious thing to be noticed
+in connection with these guesses. There is a persistent tendency to
+the duplication of digits, or, if one thinks of the numbers as at
+first conceived in terms of language, a tendency to alliteration. For
+example, the numbers 111, 222, 333, 444, 555, 666, 777, 888, and 999
+occur oftener by sixty-seven per cent than any other combination
+possible in the tens thus represented. That is to say, other things
+equal, one would have a right to expect 334 or 332 to occur as often
+as 333. But the fact is, in this particular case, 333 occurred
+forty-eight times, while the other two put together occurred only
+three times. Here, however, we have the combined influence of the
+preference for the odd over the even and the digital sequence. Still,
+if we select 444, we find that this number, made up though it is of
+three digits in general least selected of all, the preference for
+alliterative effect is strong enough to make the number occur 28 times
+to 14 times for both 443 and 445. If we take 777, we find that it was
+used more times than all the other combinations from 770 to 779
+inclusive, put together.
+
+Therefore, under conditions similar to those presented for these
+guesses, one would be safe to expect these duplicative or alliterative
+numbers to occur much oftener than any other single number in the
+series.
+
+It would evidently be unsafe to generalize upon the basis of this
+study, notwithstanding the large number of guesses considered.
+However, it seems to me that the results here obtained at least
+suggest a field of inquiry which promises interesting returns. If it
+be true, as here suggested, that odd numbers are preferred by
+guessers, advantage could be taken of this preference in many ways.
+Furthermore, as I suspect, it may be that this probable preference
+points to a habit of mind which more or less influences results not
+depending strictly on guessing. It has been shown, for example, that
+the length of criminal sentences has been largely affected by
+preferences for 5 or multiples of 5--that is to say, where judges have
+power to fix the length of sentence within certain limits, there is a
+strong probability that they will be influenced in their judgments by
+the habitual use of 5 or its multiples. Here it would seem that
+unconscious preference overrides what one has a right to consider the
+most careful and impartial judgments possible, based upon actual and
+well-digested data.[12]
+
+Another thing is noticeable in these guesses. The consciousness of
+number beyond 1,000 falls off very rapidly. The difference in the
+values of 1,000 and 1,500 seems to have had less weight with the
+guessers than a difference of 50 had at any place below 1,000. And so,
+in a way, 1,000 seems to mark the limit of any sort of definite mental
+measurement. This fact is more and more emphasized as the numbers
+representing the guesses increase until one can see there exists
+absolutely no conception of the value of numbers. For example, many
+guessed 1,000,000, while several guessed more than 10,000,000.
+Guessing means, with many people, no attempt at any sort of reasonable
+measurement, but rather an attempt to express their guess in such a
+way as to afford them the greatest amount of mental relief. And this
+relief can not be wholly accomplished without satisfying number
+preferences. Therefore, guessing is likely to exhibit, in a greater or
+less degree, some habitual lines of preference subject to
+predetermination. It may be that much practical advantage has been
+taken of these facts in games of chance where number selections play
+an important part.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[12] See H. Le Poer. Influence of Number in Criminal Sentences.
+Harper's Weekly, May 14, 1896.
+
+
+
+
+CONCERNING WEASELS.
+
+BY WILLIAM E. CRAM.
+
+
+[Illustration: A Weasel standing on the ground]
+
+Why is it that while popular fancy has attributed all sorts of uncanny
+and supernatural qualities to owls and cats, and that no ghost story
+or tale of horrid murder has been considered quite complete without
+its rat peering from some dark corner, or spider with expanded legs
+suddenly spinning down from among the rafters, no such grewsome
+association has ever attached itself to the weasels, creatures whose
+every habit and characteristic would seem to suggest something of the
+sort? Now, fond as I am of cats, I should never think of denying that
+they are uncanny creatures, to say the least. But, suppose it was the
+custom of our domestic tabbies to vanish abruptly or even gradually on
+occasion, like the Cheshire cat after its interview with Alice, that
+would at least furnish some excuse for the general prejudice against
+them, but would really be no more than some of our commonest weasels
+do whenever it serves their purpose. I remember one summer afternoon I
+was trout-fishing along a little brook that ran between pine-covered
+hills. As I lay stretched on the bank at the foot of a great maple I
+saw a weasel run along in the brush fence some distance away. A few
+seconds later he was standing on the exposed root of the tree hardly a
+yard from my eyes. I lay motionless and examined the beautiful
+creature minutely, till suddenly I found myself staring at the smooth
+greenish-gray root of the maple with no weasel in sight. Judging from
+my own experience, I should say that this is the usual termination of
+any chance observations of either weasels or minks.
+
+Occasionally they may be seen to dart into the bushes or behind some
+log or projecting bank, but much more frequently they vanish with a
+suddenness that defies the keenest eyesight.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel lying on a branch]
+
+In all probability this vanishing is accomplished by extreme rapidity
+of motion, but if this is the case then the creature succeeds in doing
+something utterly impossible to any other warm-blooded animal of its
+size. Mice, squirrels, and some of the smaller birds are all of them
+swift enough at times, but except in the case of the humming bird none
+of them, I believe, succeed in accomplishing the result achieved by
+the weasels. The humming bird, in spite of its small size, leaves us a
+pretty definite impression of the direction it has taken when it darts
+away; but when a mink, half a yard in length and weighing several
+pounds, stands motionless before one with his dark coat conspicuous
+against almost any background, and the next instant is gone without a
+rustle or the tremor of a blade of grass, it leaves one with an
+impression of witchcraft difficult to dispel; and best appreciated
+when one sees it for one's self. Nor is the everyday life of the
+weasel quiet or commonplace; his one object in life apparently is to
+kill, first to appease his hunger, then to satisfy his thirst for warm
+blood, and after that for the mere joy of killing.
+
+[Illustration: A white weasel]
+
+The few opportunities I have had for observing these animals have
+never shown them occupied in any other way, nor can any hint of
+anything different be gained from the various writers on the subject,
+while accounts of their attacking and even killing human beings in a
+kind of blind fury are too numerous and apparently well authenticated
+to be entirely ignored. These attacks are said usually to be made by a
+number of weasels acting in concert, and the motive would appear to be
+revenge for some injury done to one of their number. There seems to be
+something peculiar about the entire family of weasels. The American
+sable or pine marten is said to have strange ways that have puzzled
+naturalists and hunters for years. In the wilderness no amount of
+trapping has any effect on their numbers, nor do they show any
+especial fear of man or his works, occasionally even coming into
+lumber camps at night and being especially fond of old logging roads
+and woods that have been swept by fire; but at the slightest hint of
+approaching civilization they disappear, not gradually, but at once
+and forever, and the woods know them no more. If there is anything in
+the theory of the survival of the fittest, why is it that not one
+marten has discovered that, like other animals of its size, it could
+manage to live comfortably enough in the vicinity of man? The mink and
+otter still follow the course of every brook and river and manage to
+avoid the keen eyes of the duck hunter, while for six months in the
+year their paths are sprinkled with steel traps set either especially
+for them or for the more plebeian muskrat. If a pair of sables could
+be persuaded to take up their quarters in some parts of New England
+they could travel for dozens of miles through dark evergreen woods
+with hollow and decaying trees in abundance, while at present there
+are almost no traps set in a manner that need disturb creatures of
+their habits. Partridges, rabbits, and squirrels, which form their
+principal food, are nearly if not quite as abundant as before the
+country was settled, so that it would certainly not require any very
+decided change of habits to enable them to exist, but evidently the
+root of the matter goes deeper than that, and, like some tribes of
+Indians, it is impossible for them to multiply or flourish except in
+the primeval forest.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel on the ground]
+
+The common weasel or ermine, which is the only kind I have seen
+hereabouts, would seem to have everything on its side in the struggle
+for existence, and when one happens to be killed by some larger
+inhabitant of the woods it must be due entirely to its own
+carelessness. Nevertheless, they do occasionally fall victims to owls
+and foxes, and I once shot a red-tailed hawk that was in the act of
+devouring one. Still, these casualties among weasels are probably few
+and far between. Fortunately, however, they never increase to any
+great extent. Occasionally in the winter the snow for miles will be
+covered with their tracks all made in a single night, and then for
+weeks not a track is to be seen; but usually they prefer to hunt
+alone, each having its beat a mile or more in length, over which it
+travels back and forth throughout the season, passing any given point
+at intervals of two or three days. This habit of keeping to the same
+route instead of wandering at random about the woods is
+characteristic of the family, the length of the route depending to a
+certain extent on the size of the animal. The mink is usually about a
+week in going his rounds, and may cover a dozen miles in that time,
+while the otter is generally gone a fortnight or three weeks. When it
+is possible the ermine prefers to follow the course of old tumble-down
+stone walls, and lays its course accordingly. In favorable districts
+he is able to keep to these for miles together, squeezing into the
+smallest crevices in pursuit of mice or chipmunks. All the weasels
+travel in a similar manner--that is, by a series of leaps or bounds in
+such a way that the hind feet strike exactly in the prints made by the
+fore paws, so that the tracks left in the snow are peculiar and bear a
+strong family resemblance. On soft snow the slender body of the ermine
+leaves its imprint extending from one pair of footprints to the next,
+and as these are from four to six feet apart, or even more, the
+impression left in the snow is like the track of some extremely long
+and slender serpent with pairs of short legs at intervals along its
+body. I have said that the ermine is the only true weasel I have found
+in this vicinity, but this is not strictly true, at least I hope not.
+One winter I repeatedly noticed the tracks of an exceedingly large
+weasel--so very large, in fact, that I was almost forced to believe
+them to be those of a mink. The impression of its body in the snow was
+quite as large as that made by a small mink, but the footprints
+themselves were smaller, and the creature appeared to avoid the water
+in a manner quite at variance with the well-known habits of its more
+amphibious cousin, while, unlike the common weasel, it never followed
+stone walls or fences. I put my entire mind to the capture of the
+little beast, and set dozens of traps, but it was well along in the
+month of March before I succeeded. It proved to be a typical specimen
+of the Western long-tailed weasel, though I can find no account of any
+other having been taken east of the Mississippi. Its entire length was
+about eighteen inches; the tail, which was a little over six, gave the
+effect at first glance of being tipped with gray instead of black, but
+a closer inspection showed that the black hairs were confined to the
+very extremity and were partly concealed by the overlying white ones;
+the rest of the fur was white, with a slight reddish tinge, and much
+longer and coarser than that of an ermine. Since then I have
+occasionally seen similar tracks, but have not succeeded in capturing
+a second specimen. In all probability the least weasel is also to be
+found here if one has the patience to search carefully enough; none,
+however, have come under my observation as yet. All the small weasels
+that I have seen have proved on close inspection to be young ermines
+with thickly furred black-tipped tails; in the least weasel the tail
+is thinly covered with short hair and without any black whatever. Late
+in the autumn or early in the winter the ermine changes from
+reddish-brown to white, sometimes slightly washed with greenish-yellow
+or cream color, and again as brilliantly white as anything in Nature
+or art; the end of the tail, however, remains intensely black, and at
+first thought might be supposed to make the animal conspicuous on the
+white background of snow, but in reality has just the opposite effect.
+Place an ermine on new-fallen snow in such a way that it casts no
+shadow, and you will find that the black point holds your eye in spite
+of yourself, and that at a little distance it is quite impossible to
+follow the outline of the weasel itself. Cover the tail with snow, and
+you can begin to make out the position of the rest of the animal, but
+as long as the tip of the tail is in sight you see that and that only.
+The ptarmigan and northern hare also retain some spot or point of dark
+color when they take on their winter dress, and these dark points
+undoubtedly serve the same purpose as in the case of the ermine.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel catching a bird]
+
+An old hunter, one of the closest observers of Nature I have ever
+known, once told me that female minks hibernated in winter in the same
+manner as bears, though it was his belief that, unlike the bears, they
+never brought forth their young at that season. At first I refused to
+take the slightest stock in what he said; the whole thing appeared so
+absurd and so utterly at variance with the teachings of those
+naturalists who have made the closest possible study of the habits of
+minks. Since then, however, I have kept my eyes open for any hint that
+might have the slightest bearing on the subject, and to my surprise
+have found many things that would seem to point to the correctness of
+the old hunter's theory. To begin with, he said that late in the
+winter he had repeatedly known female minks to make their appearance
+from beneath snow that had lain undisturbed for days or even weeks,
+the tracks apparently beginning where he first observed them, the
+difference in size between the two sexes being sufficient to make it
+easy to distinguish between their tracks at a glance; and, moreover,
+since he first began trapping he had noticed that while the sexes were
+about equally abundant in the autumn, the females always became very
+scarce at the approach of winter and remained so until spring, when
+they suddenly increased in numbers and became much the more abundant
+of the two.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel on a log]
+
+This is also the experience of trappers in general, and may be
+verified by any one who cares to take the trouble to look into the
+matter. Evidently no one has ever discovered a mink in a state of
+hibernation; at any rate, no such case appears ever to have been
+reported; but this does not necessarily prove that it is not a regular
+habit among them.
+
+The cry of the mink is seldom heard, even in places where they are
+fairly abundant, as they have evidently learned that the greatest
+safety lies in silence. It is a peculiarly shrill, rattling,
+whistlelike scream, that can be heard at a considerable distance.
+
+
+
+
+CARE OF THE THROAT AND EAR.
+
+BY W. SCHEPPEGRELL, A. M., M. D.,
+
+PRESIDENT WESTERN OPTHALMOLOGIC AND OTO-LARYNGOLOGIC ASSOCIATION, NEW
+ORLEANS, LA.
+
+
+Hygiene is that branch of medical science which relates to the
+preservation and improvement of the health. As the prevention of
+disease is more important than its cure--in fact, superior to all
+methods for its cure--this is a subject which demands our most earnest
+attention. Hygiene is not limited to the preservation and improvement
+of the health of the individual, but includes that of whole
+communities. As, however, the health of a community depends upon the
+state of the health of the various families composing it, and this
+again of its members, the proper understanding of the hygienic laws by
+each individual is of the utmost importance.
+
+For some reason, however, the subject of hygiene or the prevention of
+disease does not create the enthusiasm caused by methods advocated for
+its cure. A Koch, who publishes to the world a supposed means of
+curing tuberculosis, or a Behring, who introduces the serum therapy of
+diphtheria, arouses an interest which is limited only by the four
+corners of the world. The modest worker in sanitation, however, who
+explains the means of the development of these diseases, and the
+conditions and laws by means of which they may be prevented, is looked
+upon without interest and frequently with disfavor. But in spite of
+these conditions, the laws of hygiene are gradually becoming more
+farspread, and their influence is felt more with each advancing year.
+
+The nose, throat, and ear are so intimately connected with the other
+parts of the body that their health depends to a large extent upon the
+condition of the system in general. The laws of hygiene and their
+application which refer to the body in general are also applicable to
+these parts, and whatever condition benefits the former will have a
+useful influence on the upper respiratory passages, and, inversely,
+any injurious effect will injure the health of these organs.
+
+The physiology of this region is of much importance. Formerly the nose
+was considered principally in its relation to the organ of smell. This
+is a most important function, as it is a constant sentinel over the
+air we breathe and the food we eat. It is a curious circumstance that
+many of the functions that are referred to the organ of taste really
+belong to that of smell. In eating ice cream, for instance, the sense
+of taste simply informs us that it is sweet or otherwise, but the
+flavor is perceived only by the sense of smell. A proof of this is
+that where this function is destroyed, all ability in this direction
+disappears, and the patient thus affected will frequently complain
+that his sense of taste is defective, not realizing that it is the
+sense of smell which performs this act.
+
+The nose, however, has a much more important function to
+perform--viz., in respiration. Strange to say, however, this has only
+recently been realized, and it is even yet not well understood. You
+have all observed that, when you had a severe "cold" which prevented
+nasal breathing, the next morning the mouth and throat were dry and
+parched and frequently inflamed, the voice sometimes hoarse, and there
+was a general feeling of depression. While the progress of the
+inflammatory process may be a factor in this, still the mechanical
+obstruction of the nose from any cause whatsoever will have a similar
+effect. In patients in whom, for various reasons, an artificial
+opening has been made in the trachea, the air of the room has to be
+heated to an almost intolerable point and saturated with moisture, or
+severe bronchial inflammation will soon develop in the patient, simply
+because the nose has not taken an active part in the act of
+respiration. These effects, therefore, clearly demonstrate that the
+nasal passages have an important function to perform in the breathing
+process. Summarized in a few words, it is simply to warm, moisten, and
+clean the air which we inhale.
+
+The healthy nostrils are anatomically and physiologically so formed
+that when the current of air passes through them it will have been
+freed of its mechanical impurities, warmed to within a few degrees of
+the temperature of the body, and moistened to saturation. This has
+been experimentally demonstrated.
+
+The opening of the passage of the ear into the throat has several
+objects, the most important being ventilation and the adjustment of
+the atmospheric equilibrium. This passage leads outward until it
+enters the cavity of the middle ear, which is closed by the drum on
+the outside, thus separating it from the external canal of the ear. We
+know that atmospheric pressure varies at different times and in
+different altitudes. It is much less, for instance, at the top of a
+mountain than at the seaside. The opening into the throat allows the
+air to enter, and adjusts the atmospheric pressure within the ear to
+these various external conditions. Those of you who have ascended
+Lookout Mountain by means of the incline cable car may have noticed
+the adjustment taking place by a peculiar click when different
+altitudes were reached.
+
+So intimately are the nose, throat, and ear connected that it is
+unusual to find one affected to any considerable extent without the
+others being involved. While the rules of hygiene in general are
+applicable to the nose, throat, and ear, there are certain special
+conditions which deserve consideration. One of the most common causes
+of injurious effects to the nose, throat, and ear is the so-called
+"cold." The cold in this connection is, of course, understood to be
+simply the cause, the condition itself being a peculiar inflammation
+of the parts concerned. As cold is so frequently a cause of diseases
+of these parts, it would be well to consider under what circumstances
+it develops and the best mode of prevention.
+
+I have often noticed that persons who suffer most frequently and
+severely from colds usually insist that they exercise the greatest
+care to avoid exposure. They have dressed in the warmest clothing,
+wrapped the neck in the heaviest mufflers, remained in the closest
+rooms, and avoided every draught, and yet they continually "take
+cold." The street urchin, on the other hand, with only two or three
+garments and without shoes, and who lives out of doors, suffers less
+frequently from this affection.
+
+"Colds" have truly been called a product of modern civilization. The
+trouble was rare among the aborigines and is more common among the
+cultured than among the laboring classes. If we make a plant an
+exotic, we must keep it in the conservatory, and even here it is not
+free from danger. On the other hand, if we wish to harden it and make
+it proof against atmospheric and climatic changes, we must prepare it
+by judicious exposure for these conditions. The warm clothing which is
+thought to be a protection against cold is frequently the most fertile
+cause. It relaxes the body, moistens the skin, and the perspiration
+which is induced especially prepares the unresisting body for its
+attacks. This applies especially to warm covering around the neck, to
+which the air has periodic access. Except in unusually severe weather,
+the throat requires no more covering or protection than the face.
+
+The method of having only two systems of underclothing, the heavy to
+be worn until it is quite warm, and _vice versa_, is also a source of
+danger. There should be three changes: one of the lightest texture for
+the warm weather of summer, a medium for spring and fall, and the pure
+wool for winter, which in this climate need not be very heavy.
+Waterproof shoes, rubbers, furs, etc., are not recommended for
+customary use, and should be worn only when absolutely indicated.
+
+The best preventive of recurrent colds is the judicious use of the
+sponge or cold shower bath. The ordinary bath should usually be of a
+temperature not disagreeable to the body, but after the question of
+cleanliness has been attended to, an application, either by means of a
+sponge or shower, of ordinary cold water should be made. This should
+be of short duration, and friction with a coarse towel follow at once.
+When properly conducted, a reaction sets in so that there is no danger
+from this, and the toning effect of the method is of the utmost value
+in the prevention of colds. This applies, of course, only to persons
+in ordinarily good health. Even in these cases there are rare
+occasions in which this method is not advisable, and it may on general
+principles be stated that it should not be used by persons who do not
+react promptly. As stated, however, the application of cold water
+should be only momentary. The daily application of cold water to the
+throat and chest is also a useful practice for strengthening these
+parts.
+
+In addition to these means there are certain injurious conditions that
+it would be well to avoid. One almost universally present in large
+cities is that of dust. The constant inhalation of the small particles
+of sand and of organic impurities of which dust is composed has an
+irritating effect on the delicate lining of the nose and throat, which
+may develop a chronic inflammation, resulting in injury to both the
+throat and ear. This evil, however, can be prevented by the artificial
+watering of our streets.
+
+Excessive tobacco smoking produces injurious effects in the nose and
+throat. Of all forms of smoking, the cigarette is the most injurious,
+and allowing the smoke to pass through the nostrils the most
+dangerous. Occasionally ladies inhale the smoke of a closed room
+where the male members of the household are smoking, and this is
+injurious to a delicate throat.
+
+Loud and excessive talking is sometimes a factor in throat diseases.
+The former is more apt to be exercised in transit in our steam or
+electric cars, and members of the theatrical profession realize this
+so well that they rarely use their voice while traveling. In excessive
+talking, in addition to the mechanical wear and tear of the throat,
+the respiration is usually spasmodic, a combination that is likely to
+lead to evil results. At puberty, when the voices of boys and girls
+are changing, the former sometimes almost an octave and the latter
+usually a note or two, special care should be taken of the voice, and
+singing or vocal exercises should be discontinued until the change has
+been finally established.
+
+The effect of singing on the throat is of much interest, but it is one
+of such an extensive character that it can be only casually referred
+to here. The exercise required in singing improves the healthy throat
+in the same manner that exercise benefits the body in general. The
+diseased throat, however, may be injured by this practice, as no form
+of vocal culture can remedy a mechanical interference in its action.
+The method of singing is also of the utmost importance; an erroneous
+one may not only injure a promising voice, but may also have a bad
+effect on a normal throat. The subject of register requires careful
+consideration. The placing of the voice in the wrong register is
+fruitful of evil; the ambition of the singer to reach a few notes
+higher or lower than her range may also work severe injury to the
+throat.
+
+The throat may be improved or strengthened by any of the forms of
+exercise, especially the out-of-door, which have been advised for the
+health in general. In addition to this, breathing exercises are of
+special value. These consist of taking deep inhalations through the
+nose, holding the breath for a few seconds and then gently expiring
+it, the body in the meanwhile being free from all restraint from tight
+clothing. The practice of this exercise for five minutes mornings and
+evenings will have a remarkable effect in developing the chest and
+throat.
+
+In order to anticipate serious complications, children should be
+taught to allow their mothers to examine their throats freely and
+without resistance. I feel especially the importance of this subject,
+as I have frequently seen children almost sacrificed on account of the
+nervous dread of having their throats examined, or by their inability
+to control themselves. The method is exceedingly simple: the child is
+placed facing a bright window, and the handle of a spoon placed on the
+tongue and so depressed that the posterior part of the throat can be
+distinctly seen. At first this may be difficult, but the child soon
+becomes accustomed to the manipulation and the throat may then be
+examined without difficulty. Another advantage of this procedure is
+that the mother becomes familiar with the normal appearance of the
+throat, and can easily note any change due to disease.
+
+In view of the important function of the nose in warming, cleaning,
+and moistening the inspired air, the greatest care should be taken to
+teach children to breathe through the nostrils. When only a portion of
+the air enters through the mouth, the irritation is not as marked as
+when all the air is inhaled in this manner, but it nevertheless
+develops a condition of chronic irritation which is easily recognized
+by one familiar with its appearance, and which may lead to important
+complications. In many cases, mouth breathing is not due to habit, but
+to some obstruction in the nostrils or throat. These cases form a
+proper subject for the consideration of the physician. After the
+removal of any existing obstruction, children will sometimes, from
+force of habit, continue to breathe through the mouth, but this can
+usually be overcome by attention and firmness on the part of the
+parents.
+
+The prevention of grave throat diseases, such as diphtheria,
+necessarily forms a subject of much interest to the public in general
+and to mothers in particular. The causation of this disease has been
+much cleared up in later years, and we now know that the important
+factor is a bacillus--a small organism of the vegetable kingdom--which
+is the cause of this disease and a necessary material for its
+propagation. Bacteriologic investigations have shown that the
+so-called "membranous croup" is in by far the largest number of cases
+identical with diphtheria, and the same precautions which apply to the
+latter should therefore also be carried out in this disease.
+
+As diphtheria is strictly an infectious disease, and one which must be
+directly or indirectly contracted from a similar case, there is no
+sanitary reason why this dreaded malady in the course of time should
+not be entirely eliminated from the earth. In view of the fact that
+diphtheria is so frequently present in our larger cities, this may
+appear at present a Utopian idea. It is not so many years ago,
+however, when smallpox was almost universal, and yet we now but rarely
+have it in our midst. Not only is this the case, but the health
+authorities are severely criticised when a number of these cases
+exist, as indicating that there has been a lack of watchfulness in
+carrying out certain well-known means of prevention.
+
+While we have at the present time no means of inoculation that will
+permanently protect against infection from diphtheria, still it is not
+of such an infectious character as smallpox, as the cases are usually
+limited to children, and its spread may therefore be more easily
+prevented. Not only should children who have had diphtheria be
+prevented from returning to school until infection is no longer
+possible, but other children of the same household should also be kept
+at home. A few years ago a certain school in this city was rarely
+without a case of diphtheria among its pupils for many months. I am
+convinced that had the principal of the school or the parents insisted
+upon the other children of the infected household remaining at home,
+the spread in this direction would have been arrested and much
+suffering avoided.
+
+When a patient has recovered from diphtheria, thorough disinfection is
+a most important measure. Unfortunately, however, many persons
+consider it a hardship if articles which can not be disinfected are
+destroyed, and many will even use every endeavor to prevent the
+representatives of the Board of Health from carrying out their
+regulations. In this way the germ of the disease remains on the
+premises, and under suitable conditions again finds another victim in
+the household. To illustrate this, I recall an instance some years ago
+in which I was called in consultation to see a most malignant case of
+diphtheria. The little patient fortunately recovered, and the premises
+were thoroughly disinfected, the parents being anxious to avoid any
+repetition of the dreaded malady. Five months later, however, a
+younger child became ill, and was found to have diphtheria. In view of
+the vigorous efforts which had been made to disinfect the house
+thoroughly, and of the fact that the child could not have contracted
+it elsewhere, not having left its home for several weeks, the cause at
+first appeared a mystery. Careful inquiry, however, soon elicited a
+fact which clearly explained the case. The first patient had used a
+mouth-organ just before its illness, and when this was abandoned, the
+toy was carelessly thrown on the top of a bookcase, the nature of the
+child's illness at the time not being known. The second child, just
+before its illness, had accidentally found this toy and used it
+frequently. This experience explains the necessity of disinfection in
+all its details, and also illustrates the tenacious character of the
+germ which produces this disease.
+
+Our knowledge of the specific cause of scarlet fever is not as
+complete as that of diphtheria, but we have much useful information
+which is of importance from a hygienic standpoint. As in diphtheria,
+the specific poison is probably produced in the throat of the patient,
+and may therefore be spread by the dried secretion from the mouth and
+throat. The most common means of contagion, however, is the skin,
+which peels off in the later stage of the disease, infection being
+produced by the inhalation into the nostrils of some of the diseased
+particles.
+
+A predisposing factor which applies alike to diphtheria and all other
+throat affections is the abnormal condition of the nose and throat.
+When these important parts are in an unhealthy condition, where mouth
+breathing exists and other conditions inimical to normal health, the
+patient is more predisposed to all forms of maladies of this region,
+and the attack when developed is more apt to be of a serious
+character. The more ordinary forms of sore throat, such as tonsilitis,
+are frequently due to defects in the sanitary conditions and
+surroundings of the home. While modern sanitary plumbing, when
+properly constructed, adds much to the convenience of the household,
+it is a certain menace to all its members if, through improper
+construction or defective ventilation, decomposing matter collects in
+the waste pipes and vitiates the atmosphere of the rooms. Many
+recurrent cases of tonsilitis are due to this cause. Even the ordinary
+stationary washstands may be a source of danger, especially in the
+bedroom, unless thoroughly ventilated and care exercised that the
+traps are not filled with decomposing matter. A physician of large
+experience in this city is so imbued with the danger of this form of
+plumbing that he condemns it _in toto_. When well constructed and well
+ventilated, however, they can not be the source of danger in the
+household.
+
+Tuberculosis, which is responsible for so enormous a mortality,
+frequently also affects the throat as well as the lungs. Although it
+usually originates within the chest, it sometimes finds its primary
+origin in the throat, and in a large percentage of cases the throat
+affection forms a complication of tuberculosis of the lungs. In spite
+of the numerous remedies which have been advocated for the cure of
+this disease, it must be admitted that our chief reliance is in proper
+nourishment and climatic effects, and that hygiene is the sheet-anchor
+which will eventually rescue us from this terrible foe of the human
+race.
+
+Recent investigations tend to prove more and more that tuberculosis is
+inherited in but rare cases; that inheritance is simply a predisposing
+factor, and that the real cause is infection. As an illustration of
+this, all have seen instances in which there had been apparently no
+cases in a family for ten or fifteen years, when from some cause one
+case develops, and this is soon followed by other cases in the same
+family. Whatever rôle heredity may play in these cases, this simply
+shows that the first case produced the infectious material which found
+a suitable soil in the other members of the family and developed a
+similar disease. The inheritance theory has been the source of much
+injury by causing members of the afflicted family to submit to the
+apparently inevitable instead of instituting measures for its
+prevention. The infectious product in tuberculosis is not the breath,
+as is so frequently believed by the laity, but simply the
+expectoration which comes from the diseased lungs or throat. When this
+is allowed to come in contact with clothing or other material in the
+room, it becomes dry and loads the atmosphere with a dust which
+contains the infectious bacillus, which may cause a similar disease in
+a person predisposed by heredity or sickness to this affection.
+
+The germ of tuberculosis is the seed, and the predisposed person the
+soil, and it requires a combination of both to develop the disease. To
+illustrate the necessity of suitable conditions for the development of
+plants--for it is now almost universally admitted that the germ of
+tuberculosis is a micro-organism which belongs to the vegetable
+kingdom--I remember some years ago, while in North Europe, seeing in a
+hothouse a plant which is here commonly known as the "four o'clock."
+The gardener in charge of the conservatory considered it a remarkable
+plant, but difficult to propagate, and stated that it was absolutely
+impossible to raise it out of doors. In this part of the world,
+however, we know that this plant grows so easily that once established
+in a garden it is difficult to keep it within limits. In both of the
+cases we have the same seed, the difference being only in the soil and
+the conditions favorable for its development. The absence of either
+the seed or the soil will absolutely prevent tuberculosis, and if the
+laws of hygiene are properly carried out, both in destroying the seed
+and in preventing the formation of a suitable soil, favorable effects
+will soon be shown.
+
+Hygiene in regard to patients demands simply that the infectious
+character of the expectoration be destroyed. The vessels for this
+purpose should contain some disinfecting solution, should be cleaned
+regularly, and handkerchiefs, towels, or other material with which the
+expectoration has come in contact should be sterilized by being placed
+for at least half an hour in boiling water. This is necessary not only
+for those in the same room with the patient, but also for the patient,
+as it is quite possible that a former expectoration may produce
+reinfection of the patient himself.
+
+Another method of contracting tuberculosis is by means of animals,
+such as cows, used for food and milking, which are known to be subject
+to this disease. It has been shown in some localities that one cow out
+of every twenty-five was affected with tubercular disease. This
+suggests the importance of having competent veterinarians to examine
+not only the meat which is sold, but also the cows used for milking
+purposes. Where there is the slightest doubt as to the nature of the
+meat or milk, the former should be thoroughly cooked and the latter
+sterilized before using.
+
+In this connection it would be well to refer to the subject of
+spitting in street cars and in public places. While this nuisance is
+the subject of danger to every one in the street cars, especially in
+winter, when the windows are closed and a large amount of impurities
+is inhaled, it is more particularly so to ladies, whose skirts, in
+spite of every care, are soiled by the filthy expectoration, thus
+making them subject not only to the inhalation in the car, but also
+to carrying the infectious material to their homes.
+
+The danger of this condition is not merely speculative. It has been
+bacteriologically demonstrated that the organisms of various
+contagious diseases thus find a lodging place in our cars and public
+places, and experiments on animals, in which the inoculation has
+developed diseases, have shown that these organisms retain their
+vitality in these places and may propagate disease under favorable
+conditions.
+
+A factor in the spread of diseases of the throat and mouth that should
+not be overlooked is kissing. Unfortunately, this matter has usually
+been treated with much levity, and where a sanitarian is bold enough
+to condemn the habit he is frequently made the subject of all forms of
+ridicule in the public press.
+
+The tender lining of the lips, mouth, and throat, and its large blood
+supply, make it peculiarly susceptible to contagion, and I have no
+doubt that the habit of kissing is responsible for many cases of
+infection. Last year I noticed a lady coming from a house from which a
+diphtheria flag was flying, who walked to the corner to take the
+street car, when a nurse with a small child approached. The lady
+without hesitation stooped down and kissed the little child. As it is
+well known that a healthy person may transmit a disease without
+incurring the disease himself, this lady voluntarily risked the danger
+of inflicting this disease upon the innocent child. It is not an
+uncommon thing for nurses to kiss the children under their charge, and
+here in New Orleans even the colored nurses sometimes practice this
+habit, occasionally with the permission of the parents. In fact, a
+fashionable lady on one occasion told me, when I remonstrated with her
+about this, that she feared to hurt the feelings of the old nurse, who
+had been a valuable servant in the family for many years.
+
+How often this habit is productive of evil results is of course only
+speculation. I recall, however, an instance in which two small
+children of one family developed a specific disease which originated
+in the mouth and affected the whole system. Examination proved this to
+have been caused by a nurse, a white woman, who had been in the habit
+of kissing the children. If women will voluntarily incur risks
+by using kissing as a form of salutation in all stages of
+acquaintanceship, I would at least request that the innocent children
+be spared the possible consequences.
+
+The subject of the hygiene of the ear is so intimately connected with
+conditions influencing the nose and throat, which have already been
+explained, that but few words are needed to cover this part of my
+subject. In general, the best care of the ear is to leave it alone.
+Ear scoops are injurious; the ear should be cleaned simply on the
+outside, and nothing, as a rule, should be inserted into the external
+canal. I have seen many cases of abscess and the most severe
+inflammation due to endeavors to clean the ear with the omnipresent
+hairpin and other objects used for this purpose. The use of cotton in
+the ear in general is to be condemned. It produces an artificial
+condition in the outer canal of the ear which reduces its physical
+resistance and makes it more liable to injury from exposure. The ear
+is sometimes injured by the entrance of cold water. This happens
+occasionally during ordinary bathing, but more frequently in outdoor
+bathing and in swimming. In surf bathing, where the water is thrown up
+with considerable force, it is much more liable to enter the external
+orifice of the ear, and severe inflammation may originate from this
+cause.
+
+Salt water has been claimed to be more injurious than fresh, but my
+personal experience leads me to believe that it is more a question of
+temperature than of the quality of the water. Some years ago a large
+reservoir was built by an educational institute near this city, the
+water, which was quite cold even in summer, being supplied by an
+artesian well. The tank was used for bathing purposes, but earache
+soon became so frequent among the boys that the use of the reservoir
+for this purpose had to be entirely abandoned. In ordinary bathing,
+the entrance of water into the ear can easily be avoided. In swimming
+or surf bathing it is advisable to use a pledget of lamb's wool to
+close the opening of the ears. Ordinary cotton soon becomes saturated
+and is of no use in this connection, but the wool, which is slightly
+oily, forms an excellent protection in these cases.
+
+The "running ear" is a diseased condition which should not be tampered
+with by the inexperienced, but which should not be neglected. The old
+idea that the child will outgrow it, or that it is a secretion of the
+head which if interfered with would prove dangerous, has been fruitful
+of many cases of deafness and even more serious complications.
+
+Another condition to which I would call your attention is the
+incipient development of deafness in children. Where the capacity of
+hearing is quickly lowered from the normal to fifty per cent, it is so
+striking that the patient is much distressed and even confused. But
+when this change takes place insidiously from day to day, it is
+frequently not observed by either the patient or those around him
+until it has greatly advanced. Children thus affected hear only with
+difficulty and by straining certain small muscles of the ear, which
+soon become fatigued, and the child becomes listless and inattentive.
+I have seen numerous cases in which children have been severely
+punished for inattention, when this was due to defective hearing.
+Watchfulness and early attention in these cases will frequently
+prevent the more serious forms of deafness.
+
+
+
+
+THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE WEST INDIES.
+
+BY F. L. OSWALD.
+
+
+I.--THE FAUNA OF THE ANTILLES: MAMMALS.
+
+The study of the geographical distribution of plants and animals has
+revealed facts almost as enigmatical as the origin of life itself.
+Water barriers, as broad as that of the Atlantic, have not prevented
+the spontaneous spread of some species, while others limit their
+habitat to narrowly circumscribed though not geographically isolated
+regions.
+
+Tapirs are found both in the Amazon Valley and on the Malay Peninsula;
+the brook trout of southern New Zealand are identical with those of
+the Austrian Alps. Oaks and _Ericacea_ (heather plants) cover northern
+Europe from the mouth of the Seine to the sources of the Ural; then
+suddenly cease, and are not found anywhere in the vast Siberian
+territories, with a north-to-south range rivaling that of all British
+North America.
+
+But still more remarkable is the zoölogical contrast of such
+close-neighborhood countries as Africa and Madagascar, or Central
+America and the West Indian archipelago. The Madagascar virgin woods
+harbor no lions, leopards, hyenas, or baboons, but boast not less than
+thirty-five species of mammals unknown to the African continent, and
+twenty-six found nowhere else in the world.
+
+Of a dozen different kinds of deer, abundant in North America as well
+as in Asia and Europe, not a single species has found its way to the
+West Indies. The fine mountain meadows of Hayti have originated no
+antelopes, no wild sheep or wild goats.
+
+In the Cuban sierras, towering to a height of 8,300 feet, there are no
+hill foxes. There are caverns--subterranean labyrinths with countless
+ramifications, some of them--but no cave bears or badgers, no marmots
+or weasels even, nor one of the numerous weasel-like creatures
+clambering about the rock clefts of Mexico. The magnificent coast
+forests of the Antilles produce wild-growing nuts enough to freight a
+thousand schooners every year, but--almost incredible to say--the
+explorers of sixteen generations have failed to discover a single
+species of squirrels.
+
+The Old-World tribes of our tree-climbing relatives are so totally
+different from those of the American tropics that Humboldt's traveling
+companion, Bonplant, renounced the theory of a unitary center of
+creation (or evolution), and maintained that South America must have
+made a separate though unsuccessful attempt to rise from lemurs to
+manlike apes and men. Of such as they are, Brazil alone has
+forty-eight species of monkeys, and Venezuela at least thirty. How
+shall we account for the fact that not one of the large West Indian
+islands betrays a vestige of an effort in the same direction?
+
+More monkey-inviting forests than those of southern Hayti can not be
+found in the tropics, but not even a marmoset or squirrel-monkey
+accepted the invitation. In an infinite series of centuries not one
+pair of quadrumana availed itself of the chance to cross a sea gap,
+though at several points the mainland approaches western Cuba within
+less than two hundred miles--about half the distance that separates
+southern Asia from Borneo, where fourhanders of all sizes and colors
+compete for the products of the wilderness, and, according to Sir
+Philip Maitland, the "native women avoid the coast jungles for fear of
+meeting Mr. Darwin's grandfather."
+
+The first Spanish explorers of the Antilles were, in fact, so amazed
+at the apparently complete absence of quadrupeds that their only
+explanation was a conjecture that the beasts of the forest must have
+been exterminated by order of some native potentate, perhaps the great
+Kubla Khan, whose possessions they supposed to extend _eastward_ from
+Lake Aral to the Atlantic. The chronicle of Diego Columbus says
+positively that San Domingo and San Juan Bautista (Porto Rico) were
+void of mammals, but afterward modifies that statement by mentioning a
+species of rodent, the _hutia_, or bush rat, that annoyed the
+colonists of Fort Isabel, and caused them to make an appropriation for
+importing a cargo of cats.
+
+Bush rats and moles were, up to the end of the sixteenth century, the
+only known indigenous quadrupeds of the entire West Indian
+archipelago, for the "Carib dogs," which Valverde saw in Jamaica, were
+believed to have been brought from the mainland by a horde of
+man-hunting savages.
+
+But natural history has kept step with the advance of other sciences,
+and the list of undoubtedly aboriginal mammals on the four main
+islands of the Antilles is now known to comprise more than twenty
+species. That at least fifteen of them escaped the attention of the
+Spanish creoles is as strange as the fact that the Castilian cattle
+barons of Upper California did not suspect the existence of precious
+metals, though nearly the whole bonanza region of the San Joaquin
+Valley had been settled before the beginning of the seventeenth
+century. But the conquerors of the Philippines even overlooked a
+variety of elephants that roams the coast jungles of Mindanao.
+
+Eight species of those West Indian _incognito_ mammals, it is true,
+are creatures of a kind which the Spanish zoölogists of Valverde's
+time would probably have classed with birds--bats, namely, including
+the curious _Vespertilio molossus_, or mastiff bat, and several
+varieties of the owl-faced _Chilonycteris_, that takes wing in the
+gloom preceding a thunderstorm, as well as in the morning and evening
+twilight, and flits up and down the coast rivers with screams that
+can be heard as plainly as the screech of a paroquet. The _Vespertilio
+scandens_ of eastern San Domingo has a peculiar habit of flitting from
+tree to tree, and clambering about in quest of insects, almost with
+the agility of a flying squirrel. There are times when the moonlit
+woods near Cape Rafael seem to be all alive with the restless little
+creatures; that keep up a clicking chirp, and every now and then
+gather in swarms to contest a tempting find, or to settle some probate
+court litigation. San Domingo also harbors one species of those
+prototypes of the harpies, the fruit-eating bats. It passes the
+daylight hours in hollow trees, but becomes nervous toward sunset and
+apt to betray its hiding place by an impatient twitter--probably a
+collocution of angry comments on the length of time between meals. The
+moment the twilight deepens into gloom the chatterers flop out to fall
+on the next mango orchard and eat away like mortgage brokers. They do
+not get fat--champion gluttons rarely do--but attain a weight of six
+ounces, and the Haytian darkey would get even with them after a manner
+of their own if their prerogatives were not protected by the intensity
+of their musky odor. The above-mentioned _hutia_ rat appears to have
+immigrated from some part of the world where the shortness of the
+summer justified the accumulation of large reserve stores of food, and
+under the influence of a hereditary hoarding instinct it now passes
+its existence constructing and filling a series of subterranean
+granaries. Besides, the females build nurseries, and all these burrows
+are connected by tunnels that enable their constructors to pass the
+rainy season under shelter. They gather nuts, _belotas_ (a sort of
+sweet acorns), and all kinds of cereals, and with their _penchant_ for
+appropriating roundish wooden objects on general principles would
+probably give a Connecticut nutmeg peddler the benefit of the doubt.
+
+They also pilfer raisins, and a colony of such tithe collectors is a
+formidable nuisance, for the _hutia_ is a giant of its tribe, and
+attains a length of sixteen inches, exclusive of the tail. It is found
+in Cuba, Hayti, Jamaica, Porto Rico, Antigua, Trinidad, the Isle of
+Pines, Martinique, and two or three of the southern Bahama Islands,
+and there may have been a time when it had the archipelago all to
+itself. The Lucayans had a tradition that their ancestors found it on
+their arrival from the mainland, and in some coast regions of eastern
+Cuba it may still be seen basking in the sunlight--
+
+ "Sole sitting on the shore of old romance,"
+
+and wondering if there are any larger mammals on this planet.
+
+Its next West Indian congener is the Jamaica rice rat, and there are
+at least ten species of mice, all clearly distinct from any Old-World
+rodent, though it is barely possible that some of them may have stolen
+a ride on Spanish trading vessels from Central America.
+
+Water-moles burrow in the banks of several Cuban rivers, and two
+genera of aquatic mammals have solved the problem of survival: the
+bayou porpoise and the manatee, both known to the creoles of the early
+colonial era, and vaguely even to the first discoverers, since
+Columbus himself alludes to a "sort of mermaids (_sirenas_) that half
+rose from the water and scanned the boat's crew with curious eyes."
+
+Naturally the manatee is, indeed, by no means a timid creature, but
+bitter experience has changed its habits since the time when the
+down-town sportsmen of Santiago used to start in sailboats for the
+outer estuary and return before night with a week's supply of manatee
+meat. The best remaining hunting grounds are the reed shallows of
+Samana Bay (San Domingo) and the deltas of the Hayti swamp rivers. Old
+specimens are generally as wary as the Prybilof fur seal that dive out
+of sight at the first glimpse of a sail; still, their slit-eyed
+youngsters are taken alive often enough, to be kept as public pets in
+many town ponds, where they learn to come to a whistle and waddle
+ashore for a handful of cabbage leaves.
+
+Fish otters have been caught in the lagoons of Puerto Principe
+(central Cuba) and near Cape Tiburon, on the south coast of San
+Domingo, the traveler Gerstaecker saw a kind of "bushy-tailed
+dormouse, too small to be called a squirrel."
+
+But the last four hundred years have enlarged the list of indigenous
+mammals in more than one sense, and the Chevalier de Saint-Méry should
+not have been criticised for describing the bush dog of Hayti as a
+"_canis Hispaniolanus_." Imported dogs enacted a declaration of
+independence several centuries before the revolt of the Haytian
+slaves, and their descendants have become as thoroughly West Indian as
+the Franks have become French. A continued process of elimination has
+made the survivors climate-proof and self-supporting, and above all
+they have ceased to vary; Nature has accepted their modified type as
+wholly adapted to the exigencies of their present habitat. And if it
+is true that all runaway animals revert in some degree to the
+characteristics of their primeval relatives, the ancestor of the
+domestic dog would appear to have been a bush-tailed, brindle-skinned,
+and black-muzzled brute, intermittently gregarious, and combining the
+burrowing propensity of the fox with the co-operative hunting
+_penchant_ of the wolf.
+
+Fourteen years of bushwhacker warfare have almost wholly exterminated
+the half-wild cattle of the Cuban sierras, but the bush dog has come
+to stay. The yelping of its whelps can be heard in thousands of jungle
+woods and mountain ravines, both of Cuba and Hayti, and no variety of
+thoroughbreds will venture to follow these renegades into the
+penetralia of their strongholds. Sergeant Esterman, who shared the
+potluck of a Cuban insurgent camp in the capacity of a gunsmith,
+estimates the wild-dog population of the province of Santiago alone at
+half a million, and predicts that in years to come their raids will
+almost preclude the possibility of profitable cattle-breeding in
+eastern Cuba.
+
+Still, the _perro pelon_, or "tramp dog," as the creoles call the
+wolfish cur, is perhaps a lesser evil, where its activity has tended
+to check the over-increase of another assisted immigrant. Three
+hundred years ago West Indian sportsmen began to import several breeds
+of Spanish rabbits, and with results not always foreseen by the
+agricultural neighbors of the experimenters. Rabbit meat, at first a
+luxury, soon became an incumbrance of the provision markets, and
+finally unsalable at any price. Every family with a dog or a
+trap-setting boy could have rabbit stew for dinner six times a week,
+and load their peddlers with bundles of rabbit skins.
+
+The burrowing coneys threatened to undermine the agricultural basis of
+support, when it was learned that the planters of the Fort Isabel
+district (Hayti) had checked the evil by forcing their dogs to live on
+raw coney meat. The inexpensiveness of the expedient recommended its
+general adoption, and the rapidly multiplying quadrupeds soon found
+that "there were others." The Spanish hounds, too, could astonish the
+census reporter where their progeny was permitted to survive, and
+truck farmers ceased to complain.
+
+In stress of circumstances the persecuted rodents then took refuge in
+the highlands, where they can still be seen scampering about the
+grassy dells in all directions, and the curs of the coast plain turned
+their attention to _hutia_ venison and the eggs of the chaparral
+pheasant and other gallinaceous birds. On the seacoast they also have
+learned to catch turtles and subdivide them, regardless of
+antivivisection laws. How they can get a business opening through the
+armor of the larger varieties seems a puzzle, but the _canis rutilus_
+of the Sunda Islands overcomes even the dog-resisting ability of the
+giant tortoise, and in Sumatra the bleaching skeletons of the victims
+have often been mistaken for the mementos of a savage battle.
+
+Near Bocanso in southeastern Cuba the woods are alive with capuchin
+monkeys, that seem to have escaped from the wreck of some South
+American trading vessel and found the climate so congenial that they
+proceeded to make themselves at home, like the ring-tailed colonists
+of Fort Sable, in the Florida Everglades. The food supply may not be
+quite as abundant as in the equatorial birthland of their species, but
+that disadvantage is probably more than offset by the absence of
+tree-climbing carnivora.
+
+Millions of runaway hogs roam the coast swamps of all the larger
+Antilles, and continue to multiply like our American pension
+claimants. The hunters of those jungle woods, indeed, must often smile
+to remember the complaint of the early settlers that the pleasure of
+the chase in the West Indian wilderness was modified by the scarcity
+of four-footed game, and in the total number (as distinct from the
+number of species) of wild or half-wild mammals Cuba and Hayti have
+begun to rival the island of Java.
+
+[_To be continued._]
+
+
+
+
+IRON IN THE LIVING BODY.
+
+BY M. A. DASTRE.
+
+
+Iron occurs, in small and almost infinitesimal proportions, in
+numerous organic structures, in which its presence may usually be
+detected by the high color it imparts; and in the animal tissues is an
+important ingredient, though far from being a large one. It is
+essential, however, that the animal tissues, and particularly the
+liquids that circulate through them, should be of nearly even weight,
+else the equilibrium of the body would be too easily disturbed, and
+disaster arising therefrom would be always imminent. Hence the iron is
+always found combined and associated with a large accompaniment of
+other lighter elements which, reducing or neutralizing its superior
+specific gravity, hold it up and keep it afloat. Thus the molecule of
+the red matter of the blood contains, for each atom of iron, 712 atoms
+of carbon, 1,130 of hydrogen, 214 of nitrogen, 245 of oxygen, and 2 of
+sulphur, or 2,303 atoms in all. Existing in compounds of so complex
+composition, iron can be present only in very small proportions to the
+whole. Though an essential element, there is comparatively but little
+of it. The whole body of man does not contain more than one part in
+twenty thousand of it. The blood contains only five ten-thousandths;
+and an organ is rich in it if, like the liver, it contains one and a
+half ten-thousandths. When, then, we seek to represent to ourselves
+the changes undergone by organic iron, we shall have to modify
+materially the ideas we have formed respecting the largeness and the
+littleness of units of measure and as to the meaning of the words
+abundant and rare. We must get rid of the notion that a thousandth or
+even a ten-thousandth is a proportion that may be neglected. The
+humble ten-thousandth, which is usually supposed not to be of much
+consequence, becomes here a matter of value. Chemists working with
+iron in its ordinary compounds may consider that they are doing fairly
+well if they do not lose sight of more than a thousandth of it; but
+such looseness would be fatal in a biological investigation, where
+accuracy is necessary down to the infinitesimal fraction. The balances
+of the biologists must weigh the thousandth of a milligramme, as their
+microscopes measure the thousandth of a millimetre.
+
+The great part performed by iron in organisms, what we may call its
+biological function, appertains to the chemical property it possesses
+of favoring combustion, of being an agent for promoting the oxidation
+of organic matters.
+
+The chemistry of living bodies differs from that of the laboratory in
+a feature that is peculiar to it--that instead of performing its
+reactions directly it uses special agents. It employs intermediaries
+which, while they are not entirely unknown to mineral chemistry, yet
+rarely intervene in it. If it is desired, for example, to add a
+molecule of water to starch to form sugar, the chemist would do it by
+heating the starch with acidulated water. The organism, which is
+performing this process all the time, or after every meal, does it in
+a different way, without special heating and without the acid. A
+soluble ferment, a diastase or enzyme, serves as the oxidizing agent
+to produce the same result. Looking at the beginning and the end, the
+two operations are the same. The special agent gives up none of its
+substance. It withdraws after having accomplished its work, and not a
+trace of it is left. Here, in the mechanism of the action of these
+soluble ferments, resides the mystery, still complete, of vital
+chemistry. It may be conceived that these agents, which leave none of
+their substance behind their operations, which suffer no loss, do not
+have to be represented in considerable quantities, however great the
+need of them may be. They only require time to do their work. The most
+remarkable characteristic of the soluble ferments lies, in fact, here,
+in the magnitude of the action as contrasted with infinitesimal
+proportion of the agent, and the necessity of having time for the
+accomplishment of the operation.
+
+Iron behaves in precisely the same way in the combustion of organic
+substances. These substances are incapable at ordinary temperatures of
+fixing oxygen directly, and will not burn till they are raised to a
+high temperature; but in the presence of iron they are capable of
+burning without extreme heat, and undergo slow combustion. And as iron
+gives up none of its substance in the operation, and acts, as a simple
+intermediary, only to draw oxygen from the inexhaustible atmosphere
+and present it to the organic substance, we see that it need not be
+abundant to perform its office, provided it have time enough. This
+action resembles that of the soluble ferments in that there is no
+mystery about it, and its innermost mechanism is perfectly known.
+
+Iron readily combines with oxygen--too readily, we might say, if we
+regarded only the uses we make of it. It exists as an oxide in Nature;
+and the metallurgy of it has no other object than to revivify burned
+iron, remove the oxygen from it, and extract the metal. Of the two
+oxides of iron, the ferrous, or lower one, is an energetic base,
+readily combining with even the weakest acids, and forming with them
+ferrous or protosalts. Ferric oxide, on the other hand, is a feeble
+base, which combines only slowly with even strong acids to form ferric
+salts or persalts, and not at all with weak acids like carbonic acid
+and those of the tissues of living beings. It is these last, more
+highly oxidized ferric compounds that provide organic substances with
+the oxygen that consumes them, when, as a result of the operation,
+they themselves return to the ferrous state.
+
+Facts of this sort are too nearly universal not to have been observed
+very long ago, but they were not fully understood till about the
+middle of this century. The chemists of the time--Liebig, Dumas, and
+especially Schönbein, Wöhler, Stenhouse, and many others--established
+the fact that ferric oxide provokes at ordinary temperatures a rapid
+action of combustion on a large number of substances: grass, sawdust,
+peat, charcoal, humus, arable land, and animal matter. A very common
+example is the destruction of linen by rust spots; the substance of
+the fiber is slowly burned up by the oxygen yielded by the oxide.
+About the same time, Claude Bernard inquired whether the process took
+place within the tissues, in contact with living matter in the same
+way as we have just seen it did with dead matter--the remains of
+organisms that had long since submitted to the action of physical
+laws--and received an affirmative answer. Injecting a ferric salt into
+the jugular vein of an animal, he found it excreted, deprived of a
+part of its oxygen, as a ferrous salt.
+
+This slow combustion of organic matter, living or dead, accomplished
+in the cold by iron, represents only one of the aspects of its
+biological function. A counterpart to it is necessary in order to
+complete the picture. It is easy to perceive that the phenomenon would
+have no bearing or consequence if it was limited to this first action.
+With the small provision of oxygen in the iron salt used up, and, if
+reduced to the minimum of oxidation, the source of oxygen being
+exhausted, the combustion of organic matter would stop. The oxidation
+obtained would be insignificant, while the oxidation should be
+indefinite and unlimited, and it is really so.
+
+There is a counterpart. The iron salt, which has gone back to the
+minimum of oxidation and become a ferrous salt, can not remain long in
+that state in contact with the air and with other sources of the gas
+to which it is exposed. It has always been known that ferrous
+compounds absorb oxygen from the air and pass into the ferric state;
+we might say that we have seen it done, for the transformation is
+accompanied by a characteristic change of color, by a transition from
+the pale green tint of ferrous bases to the ochery or red color of
+ferric compounds.
+
+We can understand now what should happen when the ferruginous compound
+is placed in contact alternately with organic matter and oxygen. In
+the former phase the iron will yield oxygen to the organic matter; in
+the second phase it will take again from the atmosphere the
+combustible which it has lost, and will be again where it started. The
+same series of operations may be continued a second time and a third
+time, and indefinitely, as long as the alternations of contact with
+organic matter and exposure to atmospheric oxygen are kept up, the
+iron simply performing the part of a broker. The same result will
+occur if atmospheric air and organic matter are constantly together;
+the consumption will continue indefinitely, and the iron will perform
+the part of an intermediary till one of the elements of the process is
+exhausted.
+
+This explanation was necessary to make clear the solution of the
+mystery of slow or cool combustion, the existence of which has been
+known since Lavoisier, without its mechanism being understood. That
+illustrious student gave out the theory that animal heat and the
+energy developed by vital action originated in the chemical reactions
+of the organism, and that, on the other hand, the reactions that
+produce heat consisted of simple combustions, slow combustions, that
+differed only in intensity from that of the burning torch. The
+development of chemistry has shown that this figure was too much
+simplified from the reality, and that most of these phenomena, while
+they are in the end equivalent to a combustion, differ greatly from it
+in mechanism and mode of execution. By this we do not mean to say that
+all the combustions are of this character, and that there do not exist
+in the organism a large number of such as Lavoisier understood, and of
+such as the combustions effected by the intervention of iron furnish
+the type of. Lavoisier's successors, Liebig among them, tried to find
+reactions conformed to this type. Their attempts were unsuccessful,
+but they had the happy result of revealing, if not the real function
+of iron in the blood, at least that of the red matter in which it is
+fixed.
+
+The question of the presence of iron in the coloring matter of the
+blood gave rise to long discussions. Vauquelin denied it. He made the
+mistake of looking for iron in the form of a known compound, in direct
+combination with the blood, while later researches have shown that it
+is found almost exclusively in the red matter that tinges the
+globules, in a complicated combination that escapes the ordinary
+tests; or, according to a usual method of expression, it is
+dissimulated. Liebig also failed to find this combination, and it was
+not till 1864 that Hoppe-Seyler succeeded in obtaining it pure and
+crystallized. But Liebig had already perceived its essential
+properties, and was able to point out approximately its functions as
+early as 1845; yet the single fact that there was no assimilation
+possible between this substance and the salts of iron, cut this
+question off into a kind of negative suspense. Different from these
+compounds, it could not behave like them, and accomplish slow
+combustions of the same type. It is a remarkable fact, and one that
+illustrates well how iron preserves through all its vicissitudes some
+trace of its fundamental property of favoring the action of oxygen on
+substances, that this composition, so special and so different from
+the salts of iron, behaves nearly as they do. While it is not of
+itself an energetic combustible, it is, according to Liebig's
+expression, "a transporter of oxygen"--a luminous view, which the
+future was destined to confirm. Although the transportation is not
+produced by the mechanism supposed by Liebig, but by another, the
+general result is very much the same from the point of view of the
+physiology of the blood. The coloring matter of the blood conveyed by
+the globules fixes oxygen in contact with the pulmonary air, and
+distributes it as it passes through the capillaries upon the tissues.
+The globule of blood brings nothing else and distributes nothing else,
+contrary to the opinion that had been held before. The theory of slow
+combustion effected through iron, while not absolutely contradicted in
+principle, was not entirely confirmed in detail, so far as concerned
+iron, or the more prominently ferruginous tissue.
+
+No search was made for other tissues or organs presenting more
+favorable conditions, for no others were known that had iron in
+themselves. The liver and the spleen were supposed to receive it from
+the blood under the complicated form in which it exists there, or
+under some equivalent form. It was not, therefore, supposed till
+within a very few years that the two conditions were realized in any
+organ that were required to secure a slow combustion by iron--that is,
+combinations resembling ferrous and ferric salts with a weak acid and
+a source of oxygen. The doubt has been resolved by recent studies. The
+liver fulfils the requirement. It contains iron existing under forms
+precisely comparable to the ferrous and ferric compounds, and is
+washed by the blood which carries oxygen in a state of simple solution
+in its plasma and of loose combination in its globules. Thus all the
+conditions necessary for the production of slow combustion are
+gathered here, and we can not doubt that it takes place. A new
+function is therefore assigned to the liver, and it becomes one of the
+great furnaces of the organism.
+
+Compounds of iron are so abundant in the ground and the water that we
+need not be surprised when we find them in various parts of plants,
+and particularly in the green parts. Their habitual presence does not,
+however, authorize the conclusion that this metal is necessary to the
+support and development of vegetable life. Some substances, evidently
+indifferent, foreign, and even injurious, if they exist abundantly in
+a soil, may be drawn into roots through the movement of the sap, and
+fix themselves in various organs. This occurs with copper in certain
+exceptional circumstances when the soil is saturated with its
+compounds, and if such a condition should be found to be repeated over
+a large extent of country, we might be led, by analysis alone of its
+vegetable productions, to the false conclusion that copper was an
+essential or even necessary constituent of them. But the value of the
+part performed by an element can not be determined by analysis alone.
+Direct proofs are necessary for that, methodical and comparative
+experiments in cultivation in mediums artificially deprived or
+furnished with the element the importance of which we wish to
+estimate. This has been done for combinations of iron, and the utility
+of that metal, especially to the higher plants, has been made thereby
+to appear.
+
+If iron is absent from the nutritive medium the plant will wither. If
+we sprout seeds in a solution from which this metal has been carefully
+excluded, the development will follow its regular course as long as
+the plant is in the condition properly called that of germination, or
+while it does not have to draw anything from the soil. The stem rises
+and the first leaves are formed as usual. But all these parts will
+continue pale, and the green matter, the granulation of chlorophyll,
+will not appear. Now, if we add a small quantity of salt of iron to
+the ground in which the roots are planted, or a much-diluted solution
+is sprinkled on the leaves and the stem, the chlorotic plant will
+recover its health and take on its normal coloration. Experiments of
+this sort make well manifest that iron is necessary to green plants,
+and they show, besides, the bearing of its action, and that what is
+most special and most characteristic in the phenomena of vegetable
+life may be traced exactly to the organization of that green matter.
+It was long thought that if iron was necessary for the formation of
+chlorophyll, it was because it had a part in its constitution. We know
+now that this is not so. The metal does nothing but accompany the
+chlorophyll in the granulation in which it is found.
+
+The influence which iron exerts in the development of the lower
+plants, like the muscidenes, was illustrated with great precision in a
+study made about thirty years ago by M. Raulin, who experimented with
+the common mold (_Aspergillus niger_), to determine the coefficient of
+importance of all the elements that have a part in its vegetation.
+When the iron was removed from a medium that had been shown capable of
+giving a maximum crop of that mold, the plants languished, and the
+return fell off immediately to one third. Estimating the quantity of
+metal that produces this effect, it was found that the addition of one
+part of iron was sufficient to determine the production of a weight of
+plant nearly nine hundred times as great. The suppression of the iron
+further caused an irreparable loss, for when it was sought to remedy
+the wilting of the plants by restoring the iron which had been taken
+from the medium--an experiment which had been successful with higher
+plants--the attempt was a failure, and the plants could not be
+prevented from perishing.
+
+These facts are full of interest in themselves, and they further show
+well the necessity or utility of iron in plant life, but they teach us
+no more. They reveal nothing of the mechanism of the action, and if we
+wish to penetrate further in the matter we always have to turn to
+animal physiology.--_Translated for the Popular Science Monthly from
+the Revue des Deux Mondes._
+
+
+
+
+THE MALAY LANGUAGE.
+
+BY R. CLYDE FORD,
+
+PROFESSOR OF GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE, ALBION COLLEGE.
+
+
+A gentleman who had lived for several years among the Indians of the
+Canadian northwest said that he went among them believing they were an
+untutored race. But when they told him of a dozen kinds of berries
+growing in a locality where he knew but two, brought him flowers he
+could not find after careful search, and around their council fires
+showed as deep an insight into the mysteries of life as the _savants_
+of his university, then he concluded they could no longer be called
+untutored.
+
+And why should they be? Is there no culture or civilization outside of
+the enlightenment of Europe or America? And because a civilization
+does not exactly fit the grooves in which most of the world has moved,
+may it not be a real civilization for all that? If such is possible,
+then we vote the Malays a cultured people. Of course, their culture is
+not like our own; it knows no railroads, no telegraphs, boasts of no
+intricate political machinery, has no complicated social despotisms.
+Native princes rule for the most part over peaceful states, and
+politics means no more than the regulation of quiet village life. But
+what need of railroads, when the rivers are avenues of trade and
+communication? Why telegraphs, when the world is bounded by the jungle
+horizon? Or why, in short, severe civil and social enactments, when
+the common _Wahlspruch_ of life is, "Fear disgrace rather than death"?
+Such a civilization, we admit, is a humble one; but it also has the
+advantage of being a happy one. And where contentment dwells, where
+honesty prevails, where the home is a stronghold, there are culture
+and civilization, even though they may not coincide with our own.
+
+The Malays are not barbarians, and their language by its grace and
+adaptability has shown its right to be. To-day it is the mother tongue
+of more than forty millions of people, and the _lingua franca_ of
+Chinamen, Hindus, European, and natives. It is spoken from Madagascar
+to the distant islands of the Pacific, and from the Philippines to
+Australia. With it one can barter in Celebes and sell in Java;
+converse with a sultan in Sumatra or a Spaniard in Manila. Moreover,
+it is soft and melodious, rich in expression, poetical in idiom, and
+simple in structure--a language almost without grammar and yet of
+immense vocabulary, with subtle distinctions and fine gradations of
+thought and meaning; a language that sounds in one's ears long after
+_Tanah Malayu_ and the coral islands and the jungle strand have sunk
+into hazy recollection, just as they once dropped out of sight behind
+one's departing ship.
+
+Malay is written in the Arabic character, which was adopted with
+Mohammedanism, probably in the thirteenth century. Anciently, the
+Malays used a writing of their own, but it is not yet clearly settled
+what it was. There are now thirty-four characters employed, each
+varying in form, according as it is isolated, final, medial, or
+initial. Naturally, the Arabic influence over the language has been a
+marked one; the priest who dictates in the religion of a people is a
+molder and shaper of language. We have only to recall the Catholic
+Church and the influence of the Latin tongue in the mouths of her
+priests to know that this is so. Many Arabic words and phrases have
+been adopted, but more in the language of literature than in that of
+everyday speech. A large number of expressions of court and royalty,
+and terms of law and religion, are Arabic; also the names of months,
+days, and many articles of commerce and trade; nevertheless, the
+language of common speech is still Malay.
+
+Another influence, also, has been felt in the Malay--that of the
+Sanskrit language. The presence of many Sanskrit words has caused some
+very ingenious theories to be constructed in proof that the Malays
+were of Indian origin, and such word fragments the survival of the
+primitive tongue. Such theories, however, have not stood the test of
+philology, and the fact still remains that the language is essentially
+unique, with an origin lost in the darkness of remote antiquity.
+However, Sanskrit influence has been much greater, and has penetrated
+much deeper into the elemental structure of the language than the
+Arabic. In fact, the aboriginal language, before it felt the animating
+spirit of the Aryan tongue, must have been a barren one, the language
+of a primitive man, a fisherman, a hunter, a careless tiller of the
+soil. As Maxwell says in his Manual of the Malay Language, the
+Sanskrit word _hala_ (plow) marks a revolution in Malayan agriculture
+and, one may say further, Malayan civilization. What changed the
+methods of cultivating the soil, changed the people themselves. It is
+probable that this change came through contact with people to whom
+Sanskrit was a vernacular tongue, but whether through conquest by the
+sword or by religion is hard to tell. Perhaps it was by both. At any
+rate, it was deep and strong, and left a lasting impression on the
+language. Sanskrit names fastened on trees, plants, grain, fruits,
+household and agricultural implements, parts of the body, articles of
+commerce, animals, metals and minerals, time and its division and
+measurement, family relationships, abstract conceptions, warfare, and
+fundamental ideas of religion and superstition. Such a conquest must
+have been an early and tremendous one.
+
+Strangely enough, Malay is almost a grammarless tongue. It has no
+proper article, and its substantives may serve equally well as verbs,
+being singular or plural, and entirely genderless. However, adjectives
+and a process of reduplication often indicate number, and gender words
+are added to nouns to make sex allusions plain. Whatever there is of
+declension is prepositional as in English, and possessives are formed
+by putting the adjectives after the noun as in Italian. Nouns are
+primitive and derivative, the derivations being formed by suffixes or
+prefixes, or both, and one's mastery of the language may be gauged by
+the idiomatic way in which he handles these _Anhängsel_. Adjectives
+are uninflected.
+
+The use of the pronouns involves an extensive knowledge of Oriental
+etiquette--some being used by the natives among one another, some
+between Europeans and natives, some employed when an inferior
+addresses a superior and _vice versa_, some used only when the native
+addresses his prince or sovereign; and, last of all, some being
+distinctly literary, and never employed colloquially. Into this maze
+one must go undaunted, and trust to time and patience to smooth out
+difficulties.
+
+Verbs, like nouns, are primitive and derivative, with some few
+auxiliaries and a good many particles which are suffixed or prefixed
+to indicate various states and conditions. These things are apt to be
+confusing, and when the student learns that a verb may be past,
+present, or future without any change in form, he does not know
+whether to congratulate himself or not. Prepositions, too, are many
+and expressive; conjunctions, some colloquial, some pedantic.
+
+We now come to a peculiarity which Malay has in common with other
+Indo-Chinese languages--the "numeral co-efficients," as Maxwell calls
+them, which are always employed with a certain class of objects, just
+as we say "head" of horses, "sail" of ships, etc. They are very many
+as compared with English, and very idiomatic in their use. For
+instance, the Malay says, "Europeans, three _persons_," "cats, four
+_tails_," "ships, five _fruits_," "cocoanuts, three _seeds_," "spears,
+two _stems_," "planks, five _pieces_," "houses, two _ladders_," and so
+on to fifteen or twenty different classes of articles or objects. By
+some this has been regarded as a peculiarity of the languages of
+southeastern Asia; but the same thing may be noticed in the Indian
+languages of our own continent.
+
+As a language Malay is easily learned and has much to repay for so
+doing. It is full of wonders and surprises--among other things is the
+natural home of euphemism, where a spade is called anything but a
+spade. For instance, to die is beautifully expressed in Malay as a
+return to the mercy of Allah. The language is decidedly rich in
+poetical expression and imagery. A neighbor is one whom you permit to
+ascend the ladder of your cottage, and your friend is a sharer of your
+joys and sorrows. Interest is the flower of money, a spring is an eye
+of water, the sun the eye of day, and a policeman all eyes. A walk is
+a stroll to eat the wind, a man drunk is one who rides a green horse,
+and a coward a duck without spurs. A flatterer is one who has sugar
+cane on his lips, a sharper is a man of brains, a fool a brain-lacker.
+
+In his proverbs also the Malay shows a matchless use of metaphor and
+imagery, his words having the softness of the jungle breeze, and at
+the same time the grimness of the jungle shades. Nowhere does the
+nature of his race or the peculiar genius of his language show out
+better than in these terse, pithy sayings which the Malay uses to
+sweeten his speech or lend effectiveness to it. The real Malay is a
+creature of the forest or the sea, whence he draws his livelihood, and
+it is but natural that he should envelop his daily and perhaps
+dangerous life with homely philosophy. He loves the freedom which he
+enjoys; take him away from it and he eats his heart out in
+homesickness. "Though you feed a jungle fowl from a golden plate, it
+will return to the jungle again." In his humble life he has discovered
+that blood, be it good or bad, counts for something, and he thinks of
+the forest lairs; "a kitten and small, but a tiger's cub." He is beset
+with dangers by sea and land; often he is between the devil and the
+deep. "One may escape the tiger, and fall into the jaws of the
+crocodile." He recognizes the inevitable, and draws what consolation
+he can. "When the prow is wrecked the shark gets his fill"--a very
+stoical recognition of ill winds. "For fear of the ghost he hugs the
+corpse," is often the solution of his dilemma. Sometimes he indulges
+in drollery, but is never unphilosophical. "To love one's children,
+one must weep for them now and then; to love one's wife, one must
+leave her now and then." The language is full of such expressions;
+they are the natural products of the speech of a poetical and
+Nature-loving folk. Without attempting a classification we give a few
+of the most characteristic proverbs, drawing largely on a collection
+made in the Malay Peninsula by W. E. Maxwell, at one time British
+resident there:
+
+ Will the crocodile respect the carcass?
+ Follow your heart, death; follow your feelings, destruction.
+ You find grasshoppers where you find a field.
+ Earth does not become grain.
+ Don't grind pepper for a bird on the wing.
+ The flower comes, age comes.
+ When the father is spotted, the son is spotted.
+ The plant sprouts before it climbs.
+ When he can't wring the ear, he pulls the horn.
+ The creel says the basket is poorly made.
+ Ask from one who has,
+ Make vows at a shrine,
+ Sulk with him who loves you.
+ When the house is done the chisel finds fault.
+ As the crow goes back to his nest (no richer, no poorer).
+ Whoever eats chilies burns his mouth.
+ Because of the mouth the body comes to harm.
+ If you are at the river's mouth at nightfall, what's the use of
+ talking of return?
+ A broken thread may be mended, but charcoal never.
+ The pea forgets its pod.
+ As water rolls from a _kladi_ leaf.
+ A shipwrecked vessel may float again, a heart once broken is broken
+ forever.
+ It is a project, and the result with God.
+ He carries a torch in daylight.
+ A slave who does well is never praised; if he does badly, never
+ forgiven.
+ It rains gold afar, but stone at home.
+ What if you sit on a cushion of gold with an uneasy mind!
+ When money leaves, your friend goes.
+ If you dip your hand into the fish tub, go to the bottom.
+ Whoever digs a hole falls into it himself.
+ If your legs are long, have your blanket long.
+ Like a frog under a cocoanut shell, he thinks he sees the sky.
+ If you can't get rattan, bind with roots.
+ The plantain does not bear twice.
+ He sits like a cat, but leaps like a tiger.
+ The tortoise lays a thousand eggs and tells no one; the hen lays a
+ single egg and tells all the world.
+ Those will die of thirst who empty the jar when it thunders in a dry
+ time.
+ Handsome as a princess, poisonous as a snake.
+ Small as an ant, wise as a mouse-deer.
+
+
+
+
+LIFE ON A SOUTH SEA WHALER.[13]
+
+BY FRANK T. BULLEN.
+
+
+Cachalots, or sperm whales, must have been captured on the coasts of
+Europe in a desultory way from a very early date, by the incidental
+allusions to the prime products spermaceti and ambergris which are
+found in so many ancient writers. Shakespeare's reference--"The
+sovereign'st thing on earth was parmaceti for an inward bruise"--will
+be familiar to most people, as well as Milton's mention of the
+delicacies at Satan's feast--"Grisamber steamed"--not to carry
+quotation any further.
+
+But in the year 1690 the brave and hardy fishermen of the northeast
+coasts of North America established that systematic pursuit of the
+cachalot which has thriven so wonderfully ever since, although it must
+be confessed that the last few years have witnessed a serious decline
+in this great branch of trade.
+
+For many years the American colonists completely engrossed this branch
+of the whale fishery, contentedly leaving to Great Britain and the
+continental nations the monopoly of the northern or arctic fisheries,
+while they cruised the stormy, if milder, seas around their own
+shores.
+
+As, however, the number of ships engaged increased, it was inevitable
+that the known grounds should become exhausted, and in 1788, Messrs.
+Enderby's ship, the Emilia, first ventured round Cape Horn, as the
+pioneer of a greater trade than ever. The way once pointed out, other
+ships were not slow to follow, until, in 1819, the British whale ship
+Syren opened up the till then unexplored tract of ocean in the western
+part of the North Pacific, afterward familiarly known as the "Coast of
+Japan." From these teeming waters alone, for many years an average
+annual catch of forty thousand barrels of oil was taken, which, at the
+average price of £8 per barrel, will give some idea of the value of
+the trade generally.
+
+From the crushing blow of the civil war the American sperm-whale
+fishery has never fully recovered. When the writer was in the trade,
+some twenty-two years ago, it was credited with a fleet of between
+three and four hundred sail; now it may be doubted whether the numbers
+reach an eighth of that amount. A rigid conservatism of method hinders
+any revival of the industry, which is practically conducted to-day as
+it was fifty or even a hundred years ago; and it is probable that
+another decade will witness the final extinction of what was once one
+of the most important maritime industries in the world.
+
+In the following pages an attempt has been made--it is believed for
+the first time--to give an account of the cruise of a South Sea whaler
+from the seaman's standpoint. Its aim is to present to the general
+reader a simple account of the methods employed and the dangers met
+with in a calling about which the great mass of the public knows
+absolutely nothing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At the age of eighteen, after a sea experience of six years from the
+time when I dodged about London streets, a ragged Arab, with wits
+sharpened by the constant fight for food, I found myself roaming the
+streets of New Bedford, Massachusetts.
+
+My money was all gone, I was hungry for a ship; and so, when a long,
+keen-looking man with a goatlike beard, and mouth stained with dry
+tobacco juice, hailed me one afternoon at the street corner, I
+answered very promptly, scenting a berth. "Lookin' fer a ship,
+stranger?" said he. "Yes; do you want a hand?" said I anxiously. He
+made a funny little sound something like a pony's whinny, then
+answered: "Wall, I should surmise that I want between fifty and sixty
+hands, ef yew kin lay me onto 'em; but, kem along, every dreep's a
+drop, an' yew seem likely enough." With that he turned and led the way
+until we reached a building, around which was gathered one of the most
+nondescript crowds I had ever seen. There certainly did not appear to
+be a sailor among them--not so much by their rig, though that is not a
+great deal to go by, but by their actions and speech. However, I
+signed and passed on, engaged to go I knew not where, in some ship I
+did not know even the name of, in which I was to receive I did not
+know how much or how little for my labor, nor how long I was going to
+be away.
+
+From the time we signed the articles, we were never left to ourselves.
+Truculent-looking men accompanied us to our several boarding houses,
+paid our debts for us, finally bringing us by boat to a ship lying out
+in the bay. As we passed under her stern, I read the name Cachalot, of
+New Bedford; but as soon as we ranged alongside, I realized that I was
+booked for the sailor's horror--a cruise in a whaler. Badly as I
+wanted to get to sea, I had not bargained for this, and would have run
+some risks to get ashore again; but they took no chances, so we were
+all soon aboard. Before going forward, I took a comprehensive glance
+around, and saw that I was on board of a vessel belonging to a type
+which has almost disappeared off the face of the waters. A more
+perfect contrast to the trim-built English clipper ships that I had
+been accustomed to I could hardly imagine. She was one of a class
+characterized by sailors as "built by the mile, and cut off in lengths
+as you want 'em," bow and stern almost alike, masts standing straight
+as broomsticks, and bowsprit soaring upward at an angle of about
+forty-five degrees. She was as old-fashioned in her rig as in her
+hull. Right in the center of the deck, occupying a space of about ten
+feet by eight, was a square erection of brickwork, upon which my
+wondering gaze rested longest, for I had not the slightest idea what
+it could be. But I was rudely roused from my meditations by the harsh
+voice of one of the officers, who shouted, "Naow then, git below an'
+stow yer dunnage, 'n look lively up agin!" Tumbling down the steep
+ladder, I entered the gloomy den which was to be for so long my home,
+finding it fairly packed with my shipmates. The whole space was
+undivided by partition, but I saw at once that black men and white had
+separated themselves, the blacks taking the port side and the whites
+the starboard. Finding a vacant bunk by the dim glimmer of the ancient
+teapot lamp that hung amidships, giving out as much smoke as light, I
+hurriedly shifted my coat for a "jumper" or blouse, put on an old cap,
+and climbed into the fresh air again. Even _my_ seasoned head was
+feeling bad with the villainous reek of the place. I had hardly
+reached the deck when I was confronted by a negro, the biggest I ever
+saw in my life. He looked me up and down for a moment, then opening
+his ebony features in a wide smile, he said: "Great snakes! why,
+here's a sailor man for sure! Guess thet's so, ain't it, Johnny?" I
+said "yes" very curtly, for I hardly liked his patronizing air; but he
+snapped me up short with "yes, _sir_, when yew speak to me, yew blank
+limejuicer. I'se de fourf mate of dis yar ship, en my name's Mistah
+Jones, 'n yew jest freeze on to dat ar, ef yew want ter lib long 'n
+die happy. See, sonny?" I _saw_, and answered promptly, "I beg your
+pardon, sir, I didn't know." "Ob cawse yew didn't know, dat's all
+right, little Britisher; naow jest skip aloft 'n loose dat
+fore-taupsle." "Ay, ay, sir," I answered cheerily, springing at once
+into the fore-rigging and up the ratlines like a monkey, but not too
+fast to hear him chuckle, "Dat's a smart kiddy, I bet." On deck I
+could see a crowd at the windlass heaving up anchor. I said to myself,
+"They don't waste any time getting this packet away." Evidently they
+were not anxious to test any of the crew's swimming powers. They were
+wise, for had she remained at anchor that night I verily believe some
+of the poor wretches would have tried to escape.
+
+The anchor came aweigh, the sails were sheeted home, and I returned on
+deck to find the ship gathering way for the heads, fairly started on
+her long voyage.
+
+Before nightfall we were fairly out to sea, and the ceremony of
+dividing the crew into watches was gone through. I found myself in the
+chief mate's or "port" watch (they called it "larboard," a term I had
+never heard used before, it having long been obsolete in merchant
+ships), though the huge negro fourth mate seemed none too well pleased
+that I was not under his command, his being the starboard watch under
+the second mate.
+
+I was pounced upon next morning by "Mistah" Jones, the fourth mate,
+whom I heard addressed familiarly as "Goliath" and "Anak" by his
+brother officers, and ordered to assist him in rigging the
+"crow's-nest" at the main royal-mast head. It was a simple affair.
+There were a pair of cross-trees fitted to the mast, upon which was
+secured a tiny platform about a foot wide on each side of the mast,
+while above this foothold a couple of padded hoops like a pair of
+giant spectacles were secured at a little higher than a man's waist.
+When all was fast one could creep up on the platform, through the
+hoop, and, resting his arms upon the latter, stand comfortably and
+gaze around, no matter how vigorously the old barky plunged and kicked
+beneath him. From that lofty eerie I had a comprehensive view of the
+vessel. She was about three hundred and fifty tons and full
+ship-rigged--that is to say, she carried square sails on all three
+masts. Her deck was flush fore and aft, the only obstructions being
+the brick-built "try-works" in the waist, the galley, and cabin
+skylight right aft by the taffrail. Her bulwarks were set thickly
+round with clumsy-looking wooden cranes, from which depended five
+boats. Two more boats were secured bottom up upon a gallows aft, so
+she seemed to be well supplied in that direction.
+
+The weather being fine, with a steady northeast wind blowing, so that
+the sails required no attention, work proceeded steadily all the
+morning. The oars were sorted, examined for flaws, and placed in the
+boats; the whale line, Manilla rope like yellow silk, an inch and a
+half round, was brought on deck, stretched, and coiled down with the
+greatest care into tubs holding, some two hundred fathoms, and others
+one hundred fathoms each. New harpoons were fitted to poles of rough
+but heavy wood, without any attempt at neatness but every attention to
+strength. The shape of these weapons was not, as is generally thought,
+that of an arrow, but rather like an arrow with one huge barb, the
+upper part of which curved out from the shaft. The whole of the barb
+turned on a stout pivot of steel, but was kept in line with the shaft
+by a tiny wooden peg which passed through barb and shaft, being then
+cut off smoothly on both sides. The point of the harpoon had at one
+side a wedge-shaped edge, ground to razor keenness; the other side was
+flat. The shaft, about thirty inches long, was of the best malleable
+iron, so soft that it would tie into a knot and straighten out again
+without fracture. Three harpoons, or "irons" as they were always
+called, were placed in each boat, fitted one above the other in the
+starboard bow, the first for use being always one unused before.
+Opposite to them in the boat were fitted three lances for the purpose
+of _killing_ whales, the harpoons being only the means by which the
+boat was attached to a fish, and quite useless to inflict a fatal
+wound. These lances were slender spears of malleable iron about four
+feet long, with oval or heart-shaped points of fine steel about two
+inches broad, their edges kept keen as a surgeon's lancet. By means of
+a socket at the other end they were attached to neat handles, or
+"lance poles," about as long again, the whole weapon being thus about
+eight feet in length, and furnished with a light line, or "lance
+warp," for the purpose of drawing it back again when it had been
+darted at a whale. The other furniture of a boat comprised five oars
+of varying lengths from sixteen to nine feet, one great steering oar
+of nineteen feet, a mast and two sails of great area for so small a
+craft, spritsail shape; two tubs of whale line containing together
+eighteen hundred feet, a keg of drinking water, and another long,
+narrow one with a few biscuits, a lantern, candles and matches
+therein; a bucket and "piggin" for baling, a small spade, a flag or
+"wheft," a shoulder bomb gun and ammunition, two knives, and two small
+axes. A rudder hung outside by the stern.
+
+With all this gear, although snugly stowed, a boat looked so loaded
+that I could not help wondering how six men would be able to work in
+her; but, like most "deep-water" sailors, I knew very little about
+boating. I was going to learn.
+
+The reports I had always heard of the laziness prevailing on board
+whale ships were now abundantly falsified. From dawn to dark work went
+on without cessation. Everything was rubbed and scrubbed and scoured
+until no speck or soil could be found; indeed, no gentleman's yacht or
+man-of-war is kept more spotlessly clean than was the Cachalot.
+
+On the fourth day after leaving port we were all busy as usual except
+the four men in the "crow's-nests," when a sudden cry of "Porps!
+porps!" brought everything to a standstill. A large school of
+porpoises had just joined us, in their usual clownish fashion, rolling
+and tumbling around the bows as the old barky wallowed along,
+surrounded by a wide ellipse of snowy foam. All work was instantly
+suspended, and active preparations made for securing a few of these
+frolicsome fellows. A "block," or pulley, was bung out at the bowsprit
+end, a whale line passed through it and "bent" (fastened) on to a
+harpoon. Another line with a running "bowline," or slip noose, was
+also passed out to the bowsprit end, being held there by one man in
+readiness. Then one of the harpooners ran out along the back ropes,
+which keep the jib boom down, taking his stand beneath the bowsprit
+with the harpoon ready. Presently he raised his iron and followed the
+track of a rising porpoise with its point until the creature broke
+water. At the same instant the weapon left his grasp, apparently
+without any force behind it; but we on deck, holding the line, soon
+found that our excited hauling lifted a big vibrating body clean out
+of the smother beneath. "'Vast hauling!" shouted the mate, while, as
+the porpoise hung dangling, the harpooner slipped the ready bowline
+over his body, gently closing its grip round the "small" by the broad
+tail. Then we hauled on the noose line, slacking away the harpoon, and
+in a minute had our prize on deck. He was dragged away at once and the
+operation repeated. Again and again we hauled them in, until the fore
+part of the deck was alive with the kicking, writhing sea pigs, at
+least twenty of them. All hands were soon busy skinning the blubber
+from the bodies. Porpoises have no skin--that is, hide--the blubber or
+coating of lard which incases them being covered by a black substance
+as thin as tissue paper. The porpoise hide of the bootmaker is really
+leather, made from the skin of the _Beluga_, or "white whale," which
+is found only in the far north. The cover was removed from the
+"try-works" amidships, revealing two gigantic pots set in a frame of
+brickwork side by side, capable of holding two hundred gallons
+each--such a cooking apparatus as might have graced a Brobdingnagian
+kitchen. Beneath the pots was the very simplest of furnaces, hardly as
+elaborate as the familiar copper hole sacred to washing day. Square
+funnels of sheet iron were loosely fitted to the flues, more as a
+protection against the oil boiling over into the fire than to carry
+away the smoke, of which from the peculiar nature of the fuel there
+was very little. At one side of the try-works was a large wooden
+vessel, or "hopper," to contain the raw blubber; at the other, a
+copper cistern or cooler of about three hundred gallons capacity, into
+which the prepared oil was baled to cool off, preliminary to its being
+poured into the casks. Beneath the furnaces was a space as large as
+the whole area of the try-works, about a foot deep, which, when the
+fires were lighted, was filled with water to prevent the deck from
+burning.
+
+It may be imagined that the blubber from our twenty porpoises made but
+a poor show in one of the pots; nevertheless, we got a barrel of very
+excellent oil from them. The fires were fed with "scrap," or pieces of
+blubber from which the oil had been boiled, some of which had been
+reserved from the previous voyage. They burned with a fierce and
+steady blaze, leaving but a trace of ash. I was then informed by one
+of the harpooners that no other fuel was ever used for boiling blubber
+at any time, there being always amply sufficient for the purpose.
+
+We were now in the haunts of the sperm whale, or "cachalot," a
+brilliant lookout being continually kept for any signs of their
+appearing. One officer and a foremast hand were continually on watch
+during the day in the main crow's-nest, one harpooner and a seaman in
+the fore one. A bounty of ten pounds of tobacco was offered to whoever
+should first report a whale, should it be secured; consequently there
+were no sleepy eyes up there.
+
+At last, one beautiful day, the boats were lowered and manned, and
+away went the greenies on their first practical lesson in the business
+of the voyage. There were two greenies in each boat, they being so
+arranged that whenever one of them "caught a crab," which of course
+was about every other stroke, his failure made little difference to
+the boat's progress. They learned very fast under the terrible
+imprecations and storm of blows from the iron-fisted and iron-hearted
+officers, so that before the day was out the skipper was satisfied of
+our ability to deal with a "fish" should he be lucky enough to "raise"
+one. I was, in virtue of my experience, placed at the after oar in the
+mate's boat, where it was my duty to attend to the "main sheet" when
+the sail was set, where also I had the benefit of the lightest oar
+except the small one used by the harpooner in the bow.
+
+The very next day after our first exhaustive boat drill, a school of
+"blackfish" was reported from aloft, and with great glee the officers
+prepared for what they considered a rattling day's fun.
+
+The blackfish (_Phocæna sp._) is a small toothed whale, not at all
+unlike a miniature cachalot, except that its head is rounded at the
+front, while its jaw is not long and straight, but bowed. It is as
+frolicsome as the porpoise, gamboling about in schools of from twenty
+to fifty or more, as if really delighted to be alive. Its average size
+is from ten to twenty feet long and seven or eight feet in girth;
+weight, from one to three tons. Blubber about three inches thick,
+while the head is almost all oil, so that a good rich specimen will
+make between one and two barrels of oil of medium quality.
+
+We lowered and left the ship, pulling right toward the school, the
+noise they were making in their fun effectually preventing them from
+hearing our approach. It is etiquette to allow the mate's boat first
+place, unless his crew is so weak as to be unable to hold their own;
+but as the mate always has first pick of the men this seldom happens.
+So, as usual, we were first, and soon I heard the order given, "Stand
+up, Louey, and let 'em have it!" Sure enough, here we were right
+among them. Louis let drive, "fastening" a whopper about twenty feet
+long. The injured animal plunged madly forward, accompanied by his
+fellows, while Louis calmly bent another iron to a "short warp," or
+piece of whale line, the loose end of which he made a bowline with
+round the main line which was fast to the "fish." Then he fastened
+another "fish," and the queer sight was seen of these two monsters
+each trying to flee in opposite directions, while the second one
+ranged about alarmingly as his "bridle" ran along the main line.
+Another one was secured in the same way, then the game was indeed
+great. The school had by this time taken the alarm and cleared out,
+but the other boats were all fast to fish, so that didn't matter. Now,
+at the rate our "game" were going, it would evidently be a long while
+before they died, although, being so much smaller than a whale proper,
+a harpoon will often kill them at a stroke. Yet they were now so
+tangled or "snarled erp," as the mate said, that it was no easy matter
+to lance them without great danger of cutting the line. However, we
+hauled up as close to them as we dared, and the harpooner got a good
+blow in, which gave the biggest of the three "Jesse," as he said,
+though why "Jesse" was a stumper. Anyhow, it killed him promptly,
+while almost directly after another one saved further trouble by
+passing in his own checks. But he sank at the same time, drawing the
+first one down with him, so that we were in considerable danger of
+having to cut them adrift or be swamped. The "wheft" was waved thrice
+as an urgent signal to the ship to come to our assistance with all
+speed, but in the meantime our interest lay in the surviving blackfish
+keeping alive. Should _he_ die and, as was most probable, sink, we
+should certainly have to cut and loose the lot, tools included.
+
+We waited in grim silence while the ship came up, so slowly,
+apparently, that she hardly seemed to move, but really at a good pace
+of about four knots an hour, which for her was not at all bad. She got
+alongside of us at last, and we passed up the bight of our line, our
+fish all safe, very much pleased with ourselves, especially when we
+found that the other boats had only five between the three of them.
+
+Chain slings were passed around the carcasses, the end of the "fall,"
+or tackle rope, was taken to the windlass, and we hove away cheerily,
+lifting the monsters right on deck. A mountainous pile they made.
+After dinner all hands turned to again to "flench" the blubber and
+prepare for trying out. This was a heavy job, keeping us busy until it
+was quite dark, the latter part of the work being carried on by the
+light of a "cresset," the flames of which were fed with "scrap," which
+blazed brilliantly, throwing a big glare over all the ship. The last
+of the carcasses was launched overboard by about eight o'clock that
+evening, but not before some vast junks of beef had been cut off and
+hung up in the rigging for our food supply.
+
+"Trying out" went on busily all night, and by nightfall of the next
+day the ship had resumed her normal appearance, and we were a tun and
+a quarter of oil to the good. Blackfish oil is of medium quality, but
+I learned that, according to the rule of "roguery in all trades," it
+was the custom to mix quantities such as we had just obtained with
+better class whale oil, and thus get a much higher price than it was
+really worth.
+
+We had now been eight days out, having had nothing, so far, but steady
+breezes and fine weather. As it was late autumn--the first week in
+October--I rather wondered at this, for even in my brief experience I
+had learned to dread a "fall" voyage across the "Western Ocean."
+
+Gradually the face of the sky changed, and the feel of the air, from
+balmy and genial, became raw and cheerless. The little wave tops broke
+short off and blew backward, apparently against the wind, while the
+old vessel had an uneasy, unnatural motion, caused by a long, new
+swell rolling athwart the existing set of the sea.
+
+We were evidently in for a fair specimen of Western Ocean weather, but
+the clumsy-looking, old-fashioned Cachalot made no more fuss over it
+than one of the long-winged sea birds that floated around, intent only
+upon snapping up any stray scraps that might escape from us. Higher
+rose the wind, heavier rolled the sea, yet never a drop of water did
+we ship, nor did anything about the deck betoken what a heavy gale was
+blowing. During the worst of the weather, and just after the wind had
+shifted back into the northeast, making an uglier cross sea than ever
+get up, along comes an immense four-masted iron ship homeward bound.
+She was staggering under a veritable mountain of canvas, fairly
+burying her bows in the foam at every forward drive, and actually
+wetting the clews of the upper topsails in the smothering masses of
+spray, that every few minutes almost hid her hull from sight.
+
+It was a splendid picture; but--for the time--I felt glad I was not on
+board of her. In a very few minutes she was out of our ken, followed
+by the admiration of all. Then came, from the other direction, a huge
+steamship, taking no more notice of the gale than as if it were calm.
+Straight through the sea she rushed, dividing the mighty rollers to
+the heart, and often bestriding three seas at once, the center one
+spreading its many tons of foaming water fore and aft, so that from
+every orifice spouted the seething brine. Compared with these
+greyhounds of the wave, we resembled nothing so much as some old
+lightship bobbing serenely around, as if part and parcel of the
+mid-Atlantic.
+
+The gale gradually blew itself out, leaving behind only a long and
+very heavy swell to denote the deep-reaching disturbance that the
+ocean had endured. And now we were within the range of the sargasso
+weed, that mysterious _fucus_ that makes the ocean look like some vast
+hayfield, and keeps the sea from rising, no matter how high the wind.
+It fell a dead calm, and the harpooners amused themselves by dredging
+up great masses of the weed, and turning out the many strange
+creatures abiding therein.
+
+We were all gathered about the fo'lk'sle scuttle one evening, a few
+days after the gale referred to above, and the question of
+whale-fishing came up for discussion. Until that time, strange as it
+may seem, no word of this, the central idea of all our minds, had been
+mooted. Every man seemed to shun the subject, although we were in
+daily expectation of being called upon to take an active part in
+whale-fighting. Once the ice was broken, nearly all had something to
+say about it, and very nearly as many addle-headed opinions were
+ventilated as at a Colney Hatch debating society. For we none of us
+_knew_ anything about it. It was Saturday evening, and while at home
+people were looking forward to a day's respite from work and care, I
+felt that the coming day, though never taken much notice of on board,
+was big with the probabilities of strife such as I at least had at
+present no idea of--so firmly was I possessed by the prevailing
+feeling.
+
+The night was very quiet. A gentle breeze was blowing, and the sky was
+of the usual "trade" character--that is, a dome of dark blue fringed
+at the horizon with peaceful cumulus clouds, almost motionless. I
+turned in at 4 A. M. from the middle watch and, as usual, slept like a
+babe. Suddenly I started wide awake, a long, mournful sound sending a
+thrill to my very heart. As I listened breathlessly, other sounds of
+the same character but in different tones joined in, human voices
+monotonously intoning in long-drawn-out expirations the single word
+"bl-o-o-o-ow." Then came a hurricane of noise overhead, and
+adjurations in no gentle language to the sleepers to "tumble up lively
+there, no skulking, sperm whales." At last, then, fulfilling all the
+presentiments of yesterday, the long-dreaded moment had arrived.
+Happily, there was no time for hesitation; in less than two minutes we
+were all on deck, and hurrying to our respective boats. The skipper
+was in the main crow's-nest with his binoculars. Presently he shouted:
+"Naow then, Mr. Count, lower away soon's y'like. Small pod o' cows,
+an' one 'r two bulls layin' off to west'ard of 'em." Down went the
+boats into the water quietly enough; we all scrambled in and shoved
+off. A stroke or two of the oars were given to get clear of the ship
+and one another, then oars were shipped and up went the sails. As I
+took my allotted place at the main-sheet, and the beautiful craft
+started off like some big bird, Mr. Count leaned forward, saying
+impressively to me: "Y'r a smart youngster, an' I've kinder took
+t'yer; but don't ye look ahead an' get gallied, 'r I'll knock ye
+stiff wi' th' tiller; y'hear me? N' don't ye dare to make thet sheet
+fast, 'r ye'll die so sudden y' won't know whar y'r hurted." I said as
+cheerfully as I could, "All right, sir," trying to look unconcerned,
+telling myself not to be a coward, and all sorts of things; but the
+cold truth is that I was scared almost to death, because I didn't know
+what was coming. However, I did the best thing under the
+circumstances, obeyed orders and looked steadily astern, or up into
+the bronzed impassive face of my chief, who towered above me, scanning
+with eagle eyes the sea ahead. The other boats were coming flying
+along behind us, spreading wider apart as they came, while in the bows
+of each stood the harpooner with his right hand on his first iron,
+which lay ready, pointing over the bow in a raised fork of wood called
+the "crutch."
+
+All of a sudden, at a motion of the chief's hand, the peak of our
+mainsail was dropped, and the boat swung up into the wind, laying
+"hove to," almost stationary. The centerboard was lowered to stop her
+drifting to leeward, although I can not say it made much difference
+that ever I saw. _Now_, what's the matter? I thought, when to my
+amazement the chief addressing me said, "Wonder why we've hauled up,
+don't ye?" "Yes, sir, I do," said I. "Wall," said he, "the fish hev
+sounded, an' 'ef we run over 'em, we've seen the last ov 'em. So we
+wait awhile till they rise agin, 'n then we'll prob'ly git thar' 'r
+thareabouts before they sound agin." With this explanation I had to be
+content, although if it be no clearer to my readers than it then was
+to me, I shall have to explain myself more fully later on. Silently we
+lay, rocking lazily upon the gentle swell, no other word being spoken
+by any one. At last Louis, the harpooner, gently breathed "Blo-o-o-w";
+and there, sure enough, not half a mile away on the lee beam, was a
+little bushy cloud of steam apparently rising from the sea. At almost
+the same time as we kept away all the other boats did likewise, and
+just then, catching sight of the ship, the reason for this apparently
+concerted action was explained. At the mainmast head of the ship was a
+square blue flag, and the ensign at the peak was being dipped. These
+were signals well understood and promptly acted upon by those in
+charge of the boats, who were thus guided from a point of view at
+least one hundred feet above the sea.
+
+"Stand up, Louey," the mate murmured softly. I only just stopped
+myself in time from turning my head to see why the order was given.
+Suddenly there was a bump, at the same moment the mate yelled, "Give't
+to him, Louey, give't to him!" and to me, "Haul that main sheet, naow
+haul, why don't ye?" I hauled it flat aft, and the boat shot up into
+the wind, rubbing sides as she did so with what to my troubled sight
+seemed an enormous mass of black India rubber floating. As we
+_crawled_ up into the wind, the whale went into convulsions befitting
+his size and energy. He raised a gigantic tail on high, thrashing the
+water with deafening blows, rolling at the same time from side to side
+until the surrounding sea was white with froth. I felt in an agony
+lest we should be crushed under one of those fearful strokes, for Mr.
+Count appeared to be oblivious of possible danger, although we seemed
+to be now drifting back on to the writhing leviathan. In the agitated
+condition of the sea it was a task of no ordinary difficulty to unship
+the tall mast, which was of course the first thing to be done. After a
+desperate struggle, and a narrow escape from falling overboard of one
+of the men, we got the long "stick," with the sail bundled around it,
+down and "fleeted" aft, where it was secured by the simple means of
+sticking the "heel" under the after thwart, two thirds of the mast
+extending out over the stern. Meanwhile, we had certainly been in a
+position of the greatest danger, our immunity from damage being
+unquestionably due to anything but precaution taken to avoid it.
+
+By the time the oars were handled, and the mate had exchanged places
+with the harpooner, our friend the enemy had "sounded"--that is, he
+had gone below for a change of scene, marveling, no doubt, what
+strange thing had befallen him. Agreeably to the accounts which I,
+like most boys, had read of the whale-fishery, I looked for the
+rushing of the line round the loggerhead (a stout wooden post built
+into the boat aft), to raise a cloud of smoke with occasional bursts
+of flame; so, as it began to slowly surge round the post, I timidly
+asked the harpooner whether I should throw any water on it. "Wot for?"
+growled he, as he took a couple more turns with it. Not knowing "what
+for," and hardly liking to quote my authorities here, I said no more,
+but waited events. "Hold him up, Louey, hold him up, cain't ye?"
+shouted the mate, and to my horror, down went the nose of the boat
+almost under water, while at the mate's order everybody scrambled aft
+into the elevated stern sheets.
+
+The line sang quite a tune as it was grudgingly allowed to surge round
+the loggerhead, filling one with admiration at the strength shown by
+such a small rope. This sort of thing went on for about twenty
+minutes, in which time we quite emptied the large tub and began on the
+small one.
+
+Suddenly our boat fell backward from her "slantindicular" position
+with a jerk, and the mate immediately shouted, "Haul line, there! look
+lively, now! you--so on, etcetera, etcetera" (he seemed to invent new
+epithets on every occasion). The line came in hand over hand, and was
+coiled in a wide heap in the stern sheets, for, silky as it was, it
+could not be expected in its wet state to lie very close. As it came
+flying in, the mate kept a close gaze upon the water immediately
+beneath us, apparently for the first glimpse of our antagonist. When
+the whale broke water, however, he was some distance off, and
+apparently as quiet as a lamb. Now, had Mr. Count been a prudent or
+less ambitious man, our task would doubtless have been an easy one, or
+comparatively so; but, being a little over-grasping, he got us all
+into serious trouble. We were hauling up to our whale in order to
+lance it, and the mate was standing, lance in hand, only waiting to
+get near enough, when up comes a large whale right alongside of our
+boat, so close, indeed, that I might have poked my finger in his
+little eye, if I had chosen. The sight of that whale at liberty, and
+calmly taking stock of us like that, was too much for the mate. He
+lifted his lance and hurled it at the visitor, in whose broad flank it
+sank, like a knife into butter, right up to the pole-hitches. The
+recipient disappeared like a flash, but before one had time to think,
+there was an awful crash beneath us, and the mate shot up into the air
+like a bomb from a mortar. He came down in a sitting posture on the
+mast thwart; but as he fell, the whole framework of the boat collapsed
+like a derelict umbrella. Louis quietly chopped the line and severed
+our connection with the other whale, while in accordance with our
+instructions we drew each man his oar across the boat and lashed it
+firmly down with a piece of line spliced to each thwart for the
+purpose. This simple operation took but a minute, but before it was
+completed we were all up to our necks in the sea--still in the boat,
+it is true, and therefore not in such danger of drowning as if we were
+quite adrift; but, considering that the boat was reduced to a mere
+bundle of loose planks, I, at any rate, was none too comfortable. Now,
+had he known it, was the whale's golden opportunity; but he, poor
+wretch, had had quite enough of our company, and cleared off without
+any delay, wondering, no doubt, what fortunate accident had rid him of
+our very unpleasant attentions.
+
+I was assured that we were all as safe as if we were on board the
+ship, to which I answered nothing; but, like Jack's parrot, I did some
+powerful thinking. Every little wave that came along swept clean over
+our heads, sometimes coming so suddenly as to cut a breath in half. If
+the wind should increase--but no--I wouldn't face the possibility of
+such a disagreeable thing. I was cool enough now in a double sense,
+for, although we were in the tropics, we soon got thoroughly chilled.
+
+Help came at last, and we were hauled alongside. Long exposure had
+weakened us to such an extent that it was necessary to hoist us on
+board, especially the mate, whose "sudden stop," when he returned to
+us after his little aërial excursion, had shaken his sturdy frame
+considerably, a state of body which the subsequent soaking had by no
+means improved. In my innocence I imagined that we should be
+commiserated for our misfortunes by Captain Slocum, and certainly be
+relieved from further duties until we were a little recovered from the
+rough treatment we had just undergone. But I never made a greater
+mistake. The skipper cursed us all (except the mate, whose sole fault
+the accident undoubtedly was) with a fluency and vigor that was, to
+put it mildly, discouraging.
+
+A couple of slings were passed around the boat, by means of which she
+was carefully hoisted on board, a mere dilapidated bundle of sticks
+and raffle of gear. She was at once removed aft out of the way, the
+business of cutting in the whale claiming precedence over everything
+else just then. The preliminary proceedings consisted of rigging the
+"cutting stage." This was composed of two stout planks a foot wide and
+ten feet long, the inner ends of which were suspended by strong ropes
+over the ship's side about four feet from the water, while the outer
+extremities were upheld by tackles from the main rigging, and a small
+crane abreast the try-works.
+
+These planks were about thirty feet apart, their two outer ends being
+connected by a massive plank which was securely bolted to them. A
+handrail about as high as a man's waist, supported by light iron
+stanchions, ran the full length of this plank on the side nearest the
+ship, the whole fabric forming an admirable standing place whence the
+officers might, standing in comparative comfort, cut and carve at the
+great mass below to their hearts' content.
+
+So far the prize had been simply held alongside by the whale line,
+which at death had been "rove" through a hole cut in the solid gristle
+of the tail; but now it became necessary to secure the carcass to the
+ship in some more permanent fashion. Therefore, a massive chain like a
+small ship's cable was brought forward, and in a very ingenious way,
+by means of a tiny buoy and a hand lead, passed round the body, one
+end brought through a ring in the other, and hauled upon until it
+fitted tight round the "small" or part of the whale next the broad
+spread of the tail. The free end of the fluke chain was then passed in
+through a mooring pipe forward, firmly secured to a massive bitt at
+the heel of the bowsprit (the fluke-chain bitt), and all was ready.
+
+The first thing to be done was to cut the whale's head off. This
+operation, involving the greatest amount of labor in the whole of the
+cutting in, was taken in hand by the first and second mates, who,
+armed with twelve-foot spades, took their station upon the stage,
+leaned over the handrail to steady themselves, and plunged their
+weapons vigorously down through the massive neck of the animal--if
+neck it could be said to have--following a well-defined crease in the
+blubber. At the same time the other officers passed a heavy chain
+sling around the long, narrow lower jaw, hooking one of the big
+cutting tackles into it, the "fall" of which was then taken to the
+windlass and hove tight, turning the whale on her back. A deep cut
+was then made on both sides of the rising jaw, the windlass was kept
+going, and gradually the whole of the throat was raised high enough
+for a hole to be cut through its mass, into which the strap of the
+second cutting tackle was inserted and secured by passing a huge
+toggle of oak through its eye. The second tackle was then hove taut,
+and the jaw, with a large piece of blubber attached, was cut off from
+the body with a boarding knife, a tool not unlike a cutlass blade set
+into a three-foot-long wooden handle.
+
+Upon being severed the whole piece swung easily inboard and was
+lowered on deck. The fast tackle was now hove upon while the third
+mate on the stage cut down diagonally into the blubber on the body,
+which the purchase ripped off in a broad strip or "blanket" about five
+feet wide and a foot thick. Meanwhile the other two officers carved
+away vigorously at the head, varying their labors by cutting a hole
+right through the snout. This, when completed, received a heavy chain
+for the purpose of securing the head. When the blubber had been about
+half stripped off the body, a halt was called in order that the work
+of cutting off the head might be finished, for it was a task of
+incredible difficulty. It was accomplished at last, and the mass
+floated astern by a stout rope, after which the windlass pawls
+clattered merrily, the "blankets" rose in quick succession, and were
+cut off and lowered into the square of the main hatch or "blubber
+room." A short time sufficed to strip off the whole of the body
+blubber, and when at last the tail was reached, the backbone was cut
+through, the huge mass of flesh floating away to feed the innumerable
+scavengers of the sea. No sooner was the last of the blubber lowered
+into the hold than the hatches were put on and the head hauled up
+alongside. Both tackles were secured to it and all hands took to the
+windlass levers. This was a small cow whale of about thirty
+barrels--that is, yielding that amount of oil--so it was just possible
+to lift the entire head on board; but as it weighed as much as three
+full-grown elephants, it was indeed a heavy lift for even our united
+forces, trying our tackle to the utmost. The weather was very fine,
+and the ship rolled but little; even then, the strain upon the mast
+was terrific, and right glad was I when at last the immense cube of
+fat, flesh, and bone was eased inboard and gently lowered on deck.
+
+As soon as it was secured the work of dividing it began. From the
+snout a triangular mass was cut, which was more than half pure
+spermaceti. This substance was contained in spongy cells held together
+by layers of dense white fiber, exceedingly tough and elastic, and
+called by the whalers "white horse." The whole mass, or "junk," as it
+is called, was hauled away to the ship's side and firmly lashed to the
+bulwarks for the time being, so that it might not "take charge" of the
+deck during the rest of the operations.
+
+The upper part of the head was now slit open lengthwise, disclosing an
+oblong cistern or "case" full of liquid spermaceti, clear as water.
+This was baled out with buckets into a tank, concreting as it cooled
+into a waxlike substance, bland and tasteless. There being now nothing
+more remaining about the skull of any value, the lashings were loosed,
+and the first leeward roll sent the great mass plunging overboard with
+a mighty splash. It sank like a stone, eagerly followed by a few small
+sharks that were hovering near.
+
+As may be imagined, much oil was running about the deck, for so
+saturated was every part of the creature with it that it really gushed
+like water during the cutting-up process. None of it was allowed to
+run to waste, though, for the scupper holes which drain the deck were
+all carefully plugged, and as soon as the "junk" had been dissected
+all the oil was carefully "squeegeed" up and poured into the try-pots.
+
+Two men were now told off as "blubber-room men," whose duty it became
+to go below and, squeezing themselves in as best they could between
+the greasy mass of fat, cut it up into "horse-pieces" about eighteen
+inches long and six inches square. Doing this, they became perfectly
+saturated with oil, as if they had taken a bath in a tank of it; for
+as the vessel rolled it was impossible to maintain a footing, and
+every fall was upon blubber running with oil. A machine of wonderful
+construction had been erected on deck in a kind of shallow trough
+about six feet long by four feet wide and a foot deep. At some remote
+period of time it had no doubt been looked upon as a triumph of
+ingenuity, a patent mincing machine. Its action was somewhat like that
+of a chaff-cutter, except that the knife was not attached to the
+wheel, and only rose and fell, since it was not required to cut right
+through the "horse-pieces" with which it was fed. It will be readily
+understood that, in order to get the oil quickly out of the blubber,
+it needs to be sliced as thin as possible, but for convenience in
+handling the refuse (which is the only fuel used) it is not chopped up
+in small pieces, but every "horse-piece" is very deeply scored as it
+were, leaving a thin strip to hold the slices together. This, then,
+was the order of work: Two harpooners attended the try-pots,
+replenishing them with minced blubber from the hopper at the port
+side, and baling out the sufficiently boiled oil into the great
+cooling tank on the starboard. One officer superintended the mincing,
+another exercised a general supervision over all. So we toiled watch
+and watch, six hours on and six off, the work never ceasing for an
+instant night or day. Though the work was hard and dirty, and the
+discomfort of being so continually wet through with oil great, there
+was only one thing dangerous about the whole business. That was the
+job of filling and shifting the huge casks of oil. Some of these were
+of enormous size, containing three hundred and fifty gallons when
+full, and the work of moving them about the greasy deck of a rolling
+ship was attended with a terrible amount of risk. For only four men at
+most could get fair hold of a cask, and when she took it into her
+silly old hull to start rolling, just as we had got one halfway across
+the deck, with nothing to grip your feet, and the knowledge that one
+stumbling man would mean a sudden slide of the ton and a half weight,
+and a little heap of mangled corpses somewhere in the lee
+scuppers--well, one always wanted to be very thankful when the
+lashings were safely passed.
+
+The whale being a small one, as before noted, the whole business was
+over within three days, and the decks scrubbed and rescrubbed until
+they had quite regained their normal whiteness. The oil was poured by
+means of a funnel and long canvas hose into the casks stowed in the
+ground tier at the bottom of the ship, and the gear, all carefully
+cleaned and neatly "stopped up," stowed snugly away below again.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[13] From The Cruise of the Cachalot. By Frank T. Bullen.
+(Illustrated.) New York: D. Appleton and Company. Pp. 379.
+
+
+
+
+SKETCH OF MANLY MILES.
+
+
+To Dr. Manly Miles belongs the distinction of having been the first
+professor of practical agriculture in the United States, as he was
+appointed to that then newly instituted position in the Michigan
+Agricultural College in 1865.
+
+Professor Miles was born in Homer, Cortland County, New York, July 20,
+1826, the son of Manly Miles, a soldier of the Revolution; while his
+mother, Mary Cushman, was a lineal descendant of Miles Standish and
+Thomas Cushman, whose father, Joshua Cushman, joining the Mayflower
+colony at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1621, left him there with
+Governor Bradford when he returned to England.
+
+When Manly, the son, was eleven years old, the family removed to
+Flint, Michigan, where he employed his time in farm work and the
+acquisition of knowledge, and later in teaching. He had a
+common-school education, and improved all the time he could spare from
+his regular occupations in reading and study. It is recorded of him in
+those days that he was always successful in whatever he undertook. In
+illustration of the skill and thoroughness with which he performed his
+tasks, his sister relates an incident of his sowing plaster for the
+first time, when his father expressed pleasure at his having
+distributed the lime so evenly and so well. It appears that he did not
+spare himself in doing the work, for so completely was he covered that
+he is said to have looked like a plaster cast, "with only his bright
+eyes shining through." A thrashing machine was brought on to the
+farm, and Manly and his brother went round thrashing for the
+neighbors. Industrious in study as well as in work, the boy never
+neglected his more prosaic duties to gratify his thirst for knowledge.
+He studied geometry while following the plow, drawing the problems on
+a shingle, which he tacked to the plow-beam. Whenever he was missed
+and inquiry was made about him, the answer invariably was, "Somewhere
+with a book." He was most interested in the natural sciences,
+particularly in chemistry in its applications to agriculture, and in
+comparative physiology and anatomy, and was a diligent student and
+collector of mollusks.
+
+Choosing the profession of medicine, Mr. Miles was graduated M. D.
+from Rush Medical College, Chicago, in 1850, and practiced till 1859.
+In the meantime he became greatly interested in the subject of a
+geographical survey of the State, for which an act was passed and
+approved in 1858. In the organization of the survey, in 1859, he was
+appointed Assistant State Geologist in the department of zoölogy; and
+in the next year was appointed professor of zoölogy and animal
+physiology in the State Agricultural College at Lansing.
+
+In his work as zoölogist to the State Geological Survey, in 1859,
+1860, and 1861, he displayed rare qualities as a naturalist, so that
+Mr. Walter R. Barrows, in recording his death in the bulletin of the
+Michigan Ornithological Club, expresses regret that many of the years
+he afterward devoted to the development of experimental agriculture
+"were not spent in unraveling some of the important biological
+problems which the State afforded, which his skill and perseverance
+would surely have solved." He was a "born collector," Mr. Barrows
+adds, "as the phrase is, and his keen eyes, tireless industry, and
+mathematical precision led to the accumulation of thousands of
+valuable specimens and more valuable observations."
+
+Mr. Bryant Walker, of Detroit, who knew Professor Miles well in later
+years, and had opportunity to review his zoölogical work, regards the
+part he took during this service in developing the knowledge of the
+fauna of the State as having been very prominent. "The catalogues he
+published in the report for 1860 have been the basis for all work
+since that time." He kept in correspondence with the most eminent
+American naturalists of the period, including Cope, Prime, Lea, W. G.
+Binney, Baird, and Agassiz, and supplied them with large quantities of
+valuable material. From the many letters written by these naturalists
+which are in the possession of his friends, we take, as illustrating
+the character of the service he rendered and of the trust they reposed
+in him, even previous to his going on the survey, one from Agassiz, of
+February 4, 1856:
+
+"DEAR SIR: As you have already furnished me with invaluable materials
+for the natural history of the fishes of your State, I am emboldened
+to ask another favor of you. I am preparing a map of the Geographical
+Distribution of the Turtles of North America, and would be greatly
+indebted to you for any information respecting the range of those
+found in your State, as far as you have noticed them, even if you
+should know them only by their common names, my object being simply to
+ascertain how far they extend over different parts of the country. If
+you could add specimens of them, to identify them with precision, it
+would be, of course, so much the better; but as I am almost ready for
+the press, I could not for this paper await the return of spring, but
+would thank you for what you could furnish me now. I am particularly
+interested in ascertaining how far north the different species
+inhabiting this continent extend." On the back of this letter was Dr.
+Miles's indorsement that a box had been sent.
+
+A number of letters from Professor Baird, of 1860 and 1861, relate to
+the identification of specimens collected by Dr. Miles, and to the
+fishes of Michigan, and contain inquiries about gulls and eggs. Dr.
+Miles likewise supplied Cope with a considerable amount of material
+concerning Michigan reptiles and fishes.
+
+While mollusks were the favorite object of Dr. Miles's investigations,
+he also made studies and valuable collections of birds, mammals,
+reptiles, and fishes; and he seems, Mr. Barrows says, "to have
+possessed, in a high degree, that strong characteristic of a true
+naturalist, a full appreciation of the value of good specimens. Many
+of his specimens are now preserved at the Agricultural College, and
+among his shells are many which are of more than ordinary value from
+having served as types of new species, or as specimens from type
+localities, or as part or all of the material which has helped to
+clear up mistakes and misconceptions about species and their
+distribution." Mr. Walker speaks of his having done a great work in
+conchology. His catalogue, which contained a list of one hundred and
+sixty-one species, was by far the most complete published up to that
+time. "He described two new species--_Planorbis truncatus_ and _Unio
+leprosus_. The former is one of the few species which are, so far as
+known, peculiar to Michigan, and is a very beautiful and distinct
+form; while the latter, although now considered as synonymous with
+another species, has peculiarities which in the then slight knowledge
+of the variability of the species was a justification of his position.
+He was also the discoverer of two other forms which were named after
+him by one of our most eminent conchologists--viz., _Campeloma
+Milesii_ (Lea) and _Guiobasis Milesii_ (Lea)." Mr. Walker believes
+that "in general, it can be truthfully stated that Dr. Miles did more
+to develop the general natural history of that State (Michigan) than
+any other man either before or since he completed his work as State
+Geologist."
+
+As professor of zoölogy and animal physiology, Dr. Miles is described
+by one of his students, who afterward became a professor in the
+college and then its president, as having been thoroughly interested
+in the subjects he taught, and shown that interest in his work and in
+his treatment of his students. He labored as faithfully and
+industriously with the class of five to which President Clute belonged
+as if it "had numbered as many score." He supplemented the meager
+equipment of his department from his more extensive private apparatus
+and collections, which were freely used for class work; and, when
+there was need, he had the skill to prepare new pieces of apparatus.
+"He was on the alert for every chance for illustration which occasion
+offered: an animal slaughtered for the tables gave him an opportunity
+to lecture on its viscera; a walk over the drift-covered fields found
+many specimens of rock which he taught us to distinguish; the mud and
+the sand banks along the river showed how in the periods of the dim
+past were formed fossil footprints and ripples; the woods and swamps
+and lakes gave many useful living specimens, some of which became the
+material for the improvised dissecting room; the crayon in his hand
+produced on board or paper the chart of geologic ages, the table of
+classification, or the drawing of the part of an animal under
+discussion."
+
+Prof. R. C. Kedzie came to the college a little later, in 1863, when
+Dr. Miles had been for two years a professor, and found him then the
+authority "for professors and students alike on beasts, birds, and
+reptiles, on the stones of the field, and insects of the air,"
+thorough, scholarly, and enthusiastic, and therefore very popular with
+his classes.
+
+The projection of agricultural colleges under the Agricultural College
+Land Grant Act of 1862 stimulated a demand for teachers of scientific
+agriculture, and it was found that they were rare. Of old school
+students of science there was no lack--able men, as President Clute
+well says, who were familiar with their little laboratories and with
+the old theories and methods, but who did not possess the new vision
+of evolution and the conservation of energy, men of the study rather
+than the field, and least of all men of the orchard and stock farm;
+and they knew nothing of the practical application of chemistry to
+fertilization and the raising of crops and the composition of feed
+stuffs, of physiology to stock-breeding, and of geology and physics to
+the study of the soils.
+
+With a thorough knowledge of science and familiarity with practical
+agriculture Professor Miles had an inclination to enter this field,
+and this inclination was encouraged by President Abbott and some of
+the members of the Board of Agriculture. He had filled the
+professorship of zoölogy and animal physiology with complete success,
+and had he consulted his most cherished tastes alone he would have
+remained there, but he gradually suffered himself to be called to
+another field. The duties of "acting superintendent of the farm" were
+attached to his chair in 1864. In 1865 he became professor of animal
+physiology and practical agriculture and superintendent of the farm;
+in 1869 he ceased to teach physiology, and gave his whole time to the
+agricultural branch of his work; and in 1875 the work of the
+superintendent of the farm was consigned to other hands, and he
+confined himself to the professorship proper of practical agriculture.
+
+The farm and its appurtenances, with fields cumbered with stumps and
+undrained, with inadequate and poorly constructed buildings, with
+inferior live stock, and everything primitive, were in poor condition
+for the teaching or the successful practice of agriculture. Professor
+Miles's first business was to set these things in order. Year by year
+something was done to remove evils or improve existing features in
+some of the departments of the life and management of the premises,
+till the concern in a certain measure approached the superintendent's
+ideal--as being a laboratory for teaching agriculture, conducting
+experiments, and training men, rather than a money-making
+establishment.
+
+In this new field, Professor Kedzie says, Professor Miles was even
+more popular than before with students, and created an enthusiasm for
+operations and labors of the farm which had been regarded before as a
+disagreeable drudgery. The students "were never happier than when
+detailed for a day's work with Dr. Miles in laying out some difficult
+ditch or surveying some field. One reason why he was so popular was
+that he was not afraid of soiling his hands. His favorite uniform for
+field work was a pair of brown overalls. The late Judge Tenney came to
+a gang of students at work on a troublesome ditch and inquired where
+he could find Dr. Miles. 'That man in overalls down in the quicksands
+of the ditch is Dr. Miles'; the professor of practical agriculture was
+in touch with the soil."
+
+Prof. Byron D. Halsted, of the New Jersey Agricultural College
+Experiment Station, who was an agricultural pupil of Dr. Miles in
+Lansing, characterizes him as having been a full man who knew his
+subjects deeply and fondly. "In those days I am safe in writing that
+he represented the forefront of advanced agriculture in America. He
+was in close touch with such men as Lawes and Gilbert, Rothamstead,
+England, the famous field-crop experimenters of the world, and as for
+his knowledge of breeds of live stock and their origin, Miles's
+Stock-Breeding is a classic work. Dr. Miles, in short, was a close
+student, a born investigator, hating an error, but using it as a
+stepping-stone toward truth. He did American farming a lasting
+service, and his deeds live after him."
+
+While loved by his students, most of whom have been successful and
+many have gained eminence as agricultural professors or workers in
+experiment stations, and while receiving sympathy and support from
+President Abbott, Dr. Miles was not appreciated by the politicians, or
+by all of the Board of Agriculture, or even by the public at large.
+Unkind and captious criticisms were made of his work, and it was found
+fault with on economical grounds, as if its prime purpose had been to
+make money. He therefore resigned his position in 1875, and accepted
+the professorship of agriculture in the Illinois State University.
+Thence he removed to the Houghton Farm of Lawson Valentine, near
+Mountainville, N. Y., where he occupied himself with scientific
+experimental investigation. He was afterward professor of agriculture
+in the Massachusetts Agricultural College, at Amherst. In announcing
+this appointment to the students, Dr. Chadbourne, then president of
+the institution, and himself a most successful teacher, stated that he
+considered Dr. Miles as the ablest man in the United States for that
+position. In 1886, shortly after Dr. Chadbourne's death, Dr. Miles
+returned to his old home in Lansing, Michigan, where he spent the rest
+of his life in study, research, and the writing of books and articles
+for scientific publications.
+
+During these later years of his life he took up again with what had
+been his favorite pursuit in earlier days, but with which he had not
+occupied himself for thirty years--the study of mollusks--with the
+enthusiasm of a young man, Mr. Walker says, who being interested in
+the same study, was in constant correspondence with him at this time;
+"and as far as his strength permitted labored with all the acumen and
+attention to details which were so characteristic of him. I was
+particularly struck with his familiarity with the present drift of
+scientific investigation and thought, and his thorough appreciation of
+modern methods of work. He was greatly interested in the work I was
+carrying on with reference to the geographical distribution of the
+mollusca, and, as would naturally be supposed from his own work in
+heredity in connection with our domestic animals, took great pleasure
+in discussing the relations of the species as they are now found and
+their possible lines of descent. He was a careful and accurate
+observer of Nature, and if he had not drifted into other lines of work
+would undoubtedly have made his mark as a great naturalist. As it is,
+his name will always have an honored place in the scientific history
+of Michigan."
+
+When Professor Miles began to teach in the Michigan Agricultural
+College, the "new education" was new indeed, and the textbook method
+still held sway. But the improved methods were gradually taking the
+place of the old ones, and Professor Miles was one of the first to
+co-operate in them, and he did it with effect. He used text-books,
+"but his living word," President Clute says, "supplemented the book;
+and the animal from the farm under his knife and ours, the shells
+which he led us to find under the rotten logs and along the rivers and
+lakes, the insects he taught us to collect and classify, the minerals
+and fossils he had collected on the geological survey of Michigan, all
+were used to instruct and inspire his students, to cultivate in them
+the scientific spirit and method."
+
+Among the more important books by Professor Miles are Stock-Breeding,
+which had a wide circulation and has been much used as a class-book;
+Experiments with Indian Corn, giving the results of some important
+work which he did at Houghton Farm; Silos and Ensilage, which helped
+much in diffusing knowledge of the silo in the times when it had to
+fight for recognition; and Land Drainage. Of his papers, he published
+in the Popular Science Monthly articles on Scientific Farming at
+Rothamstead; Ensilage and Fermentation; Lines of Progress in
+Agriculture; Progress in Agricultural Science; and How Plants and
+Animals Grow. To the American Association for the Advancement of
+Science he contributed papers on Energy as a Factor in Rural Economy;
+Heredity of Acquired Characters (also to the American Naturalist);
+Surface Tension of Water and Evaporation; Energy as a Factor in
+Nutrition; and Limits of Biological Experiments (also to the American
+Naturalist). Other articles in the American Naturalist were on Animal
+Mechanics and the Relative Efficiency of Animals as Machines. In the
+Proceedings of the American Educational Association is an address by
+him on Instruction in Manual Arts in Connection with Scientific
+Studies. The records of the U and I Club, of Lansing, of which he was
+a valued member for ten years, contain papers on a variety of
+scientific subjects which were read before it, and were highly
+appreciated. This list does not contain all of Professor Miles's
+contributions to the literature of science, for throughout his life he
+was a frequent contributor to the agricultural and scientific press,
+and a frequent speaker before associations and institutes, "where his
+lectures were able and practical."
+
+No special record is made of the work of Professor Miles in the
+American Agriculturist, but the correspondence of Professor Thurber
+with him furnishes ample proof that he was one of the most trusted
+advisers in the editorial conduct of that journal. The familiar tone
+of Professor Thurber's letters, and the undoubting assurance with
+which he asked for information and aid on various subjects, well
+demonstrate how well the editor knew whom he could rely upon in an
+emergency.
+
+In all his work the great desire of Professor Miles was to find and
+present the truth. His merits were recognized by many scientific
+societies. He was made a corresponding member of the Buffalo Society
+of Natural Sciences in 1862; a corresponding member of the
+Entomological Society of Philadelphia in January, 1863; a
+correspondent of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia in
+1864; a member of the American Association for the Advancement of
+Science in 1880, and a Fellow of the same body in 1890; and held
+memberships or other relations with other societies; and he received
+the degree of D. V. S. from Columbia Veterinary College, New York, in
+March, 1880.
+
+His students and friends speak in terms of high admiration of the
+genial qualities of Professor Miles as a companion. The resolutions of
+the U and I Club of Lansing describe him as an easy and graceful
+talker, a cheerful dispenser of his learning to others. "To spend an
+hour in his 'den,' and watch his delicate experiments with 'films,'"
+says President Clute, "and see the light in his eyes as he talked of
+them, was a delight." "He was particularly fond of boys," says
+another, "and never seemed happier than when in the company of boys or
+young men who were trying to study and to inform themselves, and if he
+could in any way assist them he was only too glad to do so"; and he
+liked pets and children. Incidents are related showing that he had a
+wonderful accuracy in noting and recollecting the minutest details
+that came under his observation--a power that he was able to bring to
+bear instantly when its exercise was called for.
+
+Dr. Miles kept up his habits of reading and study to the last days of
+his life; but all public work was made difficult to him in later years
+by an increasing deafness. He was tireless in investigation, patient,
+and always cheerful and looking for the bright side; and when one
+inquired of him concerning his health, his usual answer was that he
+was "all right," or, if he could not say that, that he would be "all
+right to-morrow."
+
+No sketch of Dr. Miles is complete without a word of tribute to his
+high personal character, his life pure and noble in every
+relationship, his unswerving devotion to truth, and the unfaltering
+loyalty to his friends, which make his memory a benediction and an
+inspiration to all who knew him well.
+
+He was married in 1851 to Miss Mary E. Dodge, who remained his devoted
+companion until his death, which occurred February 15, 1898.
+
+
+
+
+Editor's Table.
+
+
+_SCIENCE AND CULTURE._
+
+We do not know from whom the philosopher Locke quotes the saying,
+"_Non vitæ sed scholæ discimus_," but he translates it well, "We learn
+not to live, but to dispute." The adage has reference to the old
+systems of education which had for their aim neither the discovery of
+truth nor the perfecting of the human faculties in any broad sense,
+but the fitting of the individual to take his place in a world of
+conventional ideas and discuss conventional topics upon conventional
+lines. In other words, the preparation was for school, not for life,
+the whole subsequent career of the individual being regarded simply as
+a prolongation of the intellectual influences and discipline of the
+school. That system, which was ecclesiastical in its origin, has now,
+save for strictly ecclesiastical purposes, passed away. We consider
+life as the end of school and not school as the end of life.
+
+It may be questioned, however, whether we have as yet thoroughly
+adapted our educational methods to this change of standpoint. Do we as
+yet take a sufficiently broad view of life? If we conceive life
+narrowly as essentially a business struggle, and adapt our procedure
+to that conception, the results will show very little relation to the
+larger and truer conception according to which life means development
+of faculty, activity of function, and a harmonious adjustment of
+relations between man and man. If, again, we make too much of
+knowledge that has only a conventional value, having little or no
+bearing on the understanding of things or the accomplishment of useful
+work, we are so far falling into the old error of "learning for
+school." The address by Sir Archibald Geikie, which we published last
+month, gives a useful caution against undervaluing "the older
+learning." The older learning can certainly be made an effective
+instrument for the cultivation of taste, of sympathy, and of
+intellectual accuracy along certain lines. It tends further, we
+believe, to promote a certain intellectual self-respect, which is a
+valuable quality. In the study of language and literature the human
+mind surveys, as it were, its own peculiar possessions, and thus
+acquires a sense of proprietorship which a study of the external world
+can hardly give. Still, it is well to cultivate a consciousness of the
+essentially limited and arbitrary nature of such knowledge. It is
+important, we may admit, to have a good text of such an author as
+Chaucer; but the minutiæ into which critics of his text enter can not
+be said to possess any broad human interest. Whether he wrote this
+word or that word, adopted this spelling or that, can not be a
+question on which much depends; and could one know the exact truth on
+a thousand such points, he would not really be much the wiser. Among
+Chaucer scholars he could speak with a good deal of confidence; but
+the knowledge of these details would not really help to round out any
+useful _system_ of knowledge, nor could any single fact possess the
+illuminating power which sometimes belongs to some single and, at
+first sight, unimportant fact in the realm of natural knowledge.
+
+This is not said with any intention of disparaging the culture that
+comes of literary study. It is a culture that tends to brighten human
+intercourse and to sweeten a man's own thoughts. It is a culture
+eminently favorable to flexibility of mind and quick insight into
+human character. So far it is a culture "for life"; but too often it
+tends to become a culture "for school"--that is to say, when things
+are learned simply to meet conventional demands and conform to the
+fashion of the time.
+
+A true and sufficient culture can never, as we conceive, be founded on
+literature and language alone. No mind can be truly liberalized
+without imbibing and assimilating the fundamental principles of
+science. There is darkness in the mind that believes that anything can
+come out of nothing and which has never obtained a glimpse of the
+exactness with which Nature solves her equations. In the region of
+mechanics alone there are a thousand beautiful and varied
+illustrations of the unfailing constancy of natural laws. It is a
+liberal education to trace the operation of one law under numberless
+disguises, and thus arrive at an ineradicable conviction that the same
+law must be reckoned with always and everywhere. The persistence of
+force, the laws of the composition and resolution of forces, the laws
+of falling bodies and projectiles, the conservation of energy, the
+laws of heat, to mention only a few heads of elementary scientific
+study, are capable, if properly unfolded and illustrated, of producing
+in any mind open to large thoughts a sense of harmony and a trust in
+the underlying reason of things, which are constitutive elements of
+the very highest culture. Only, care must be taken to approach these
+studies in a right spirit. There is a way of regarding the laws of
+Nature which tends to vulgarize rather than refine the mind. If we
+approach Nature merely as something to be exploited, we get no culture
+from the study of it; but if we approach it as the great men of old
+did, and feel that in learning its laws we are grasping the thoughts
+which went to the building of the universe, and, by so doing, are
+affirming our own high calling as intelligent beings, then every
+moment given to the study of Nature means intellectual, moral, and
+spiritual gain. When we look into literature there is much to charm,
+much to delight and satisfy; and doubtless, in relation to what any
+one man can accomplish, the field is infinite; but still we know we
+are looking into the limited. On the other hand, when we are face to
+face with Nature, we know we are looking into the infinite, and that,
+however many veils we may take away, there is still "veil after veil
+behind."
+
+It is needless to say that there are thousands of minds in the world
+possessed of good native power, but laboring under serious disability
+for the want of that culture which science alone can bestow. Some of
+these are sick with morbid longings for unattainable knowledge, and
+openly or secretly rebellious at the limitations of a Nature whose
+powers they have never even begun to explore. To such persons anything
+like an adequate insight into the harmony amid diversity of Nature's
+laws would come with all the force of a revelation, and would, we may
+well believe, clear their minds of the feverish fancies which have
+made them so restless and dissatisfied; but, alas! it is rarely that
+such enlightenment comes to those who have not in youth imbibed a
+portion of the scientific spirit. In this class are to be found the
+victims of spiritualism, of the Keeley motor, and even of that
+grotesque satire, the success of which we remember almost with fear
+and trembling, the "sympsychograph." Still, to all such we would say:
+
+ "Come forth into the light of things;
+ Let Nature be your teacher."
+
+The "Nature" which we require to teach us for the peace and
+tranquillity of our souls is the Nature of everyday phenomena, the
+Nature that forms the clouds and rounds the raindrops, that springs in
+the grass and pulses in the tides, that glances in the sunbeam and
+breathes in the flower, that works witchery in the crystal and breaks
+into glory in the sunset. The mind that knows what can be known of
+these things has feasted full of wonder and beauty, and makes no
+greedy demand for higher grace or mightier miracle.
+
+Then again there are those who for want of a little elementary
+scientific knowledge, and particularly for want of an assured
+conviction that Nature gives nothing for nothing, are continually
+attempting the impossible in the way of projected inventions. They
+catch at a phrase and think it must represent a fact; they fall
+victims to a verbal mythology of their own manufacture. If there was
+much hope of their learning anything of value through disappointment,
+they might be left to the teaching of experience, costly as the
+lessons of that master are. But they do not learn: their hopes are
+blasted, their fortunes, if they had any, are wrecked, but their
+infatuations survive. Where is the inventor of a perpetual motion who
+ever ceased to have confidence in his peculiar contrivance? The thing
+may be as motionless as a tombstone, save when urged by external force
+into a momentary lumbering activity; but all the same, it only needs,
+its misguided author thinks, a little doctoring, a trifling change
+here or there, to make it tear round like mad. And so with other
+inventors of the impossible: they take counsel not with Nature, but
+with their own wholly incorrect notions of what the operations of
+Nature are. The least power of truly analyzing a natural phenomenon,
+and separating the factors that produce it, would show them the
+falsity of their ideas; but that power they do not possess.
+
+We can not, then, plead too strongly for the teaching of science, not
+with a view to results in money, but with a view to the improvement of
+the mind and heart of the learner, or, in other words, as a source of
+culture. Literature introduces us to the world of human thought and
+action, to the kingdom of man; and science shows us how the thought
+and powers of man can be indefinitely enlarged by an ever increasing
+acquaintance with the laws of the universe. Literature alone leaves
+the mind without any firm grasp of the reality of things, and science
+alone tends to produce a hard, prosaic, and sometimes antisocial
+temper. Each helps to bring out the best possible results of the
+other; and it is only by their joint action that human faculties and
+human character can ever be brought to their perfection.
+
+
+_SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST._
+
+It is singular what a propensity some writers have to misunderstand
+and misrepresent the views of Mr. Herbert Spencer, even upon points in
+regard to which he has made every possible effort to avoid occasion
+for misapprehension. The term "survival of the fittest" is one which
+Mr. Spencer himself introduced as being, perhaps, a little less open
+to misunderstanding than the Darwinian expression "natural selection."
+The latter seemed to imply purposive action, and Mr. Spencer thought
+that this implication would be less prominent if the phrase were
+changed to "survival of the fittest." From the very first, however, he
+recognized that the difference between the two terms in this respect
+was, if we may so express it, purely quantitative; and he took care to
+make it clear that by "the fittest" he did not in the least intend to
+signify any form of ideal or subjective fitness, but simply a superior
+degree of adaptation, as a matter of actual fact, to environing
+conditions. The conditions at any given moment are as they are, and
+the "fitness" of any particular organism is such a correspondence with
+those conditions as permits and favors its perpetuation. The
+conditions do not create fitness; they merely eliminate unfitness; nor
+does Mr. Spencer conceive any agency as producing _ab extra_ the
+fitness which enables an organism or a number of organisms to survive.
+He differs, however, from what is perhaps the dominant school of
+biology to-day, in holding that the higher forms of organic life are,
+as he expresses it, "directly equilibrated" with their surroundings
+through the inheritance of physical features resulting from effort and
+habit.
+
+To whatever cause it may be attributed, few writers whose intellectual
+activity has extended over so long a term of years as Mr. Spencer's
+have been so consistent in their utterances at different stages as he.
+The "Synthetic Philosophy" is the realization of a scheme of thought
+no less wonderful in its coherence and solidity than in its compass,
+the author having planted himself from the first at a point of view
+which gave him a clear command of his entire field. To say that no
+other system of thought equally comprehensive and equally coherent
+exists in the world to-day would be to make a statement which few
+competent and dispassionate authorities would deny. Notwithstanding
+this, there are writers not a few, particularly of the class "who
+write with ease," who, as we said at the outset, have a propensity for
+misunderstanding Mr. Spencer, and who consequently accuse him of
+inconsistencies and self-contradictions for which nothing that he has
+ever said affords any warrant. One of these gentlemen is the Duke of
+Argyll, who has lately offered the world another superfluous book
+under the title of Organic Evolution Cross-examined. The duke
+particularly concerns himself with Mr. Spencer's teaching in regard to
+the "survival of the fittest," and Mr. Spencer, in the columns of
+Nature, replies to him in a brief but sufficient manner. It is safe to
+say that Mr. Spencer's philosophy will show Cyclopean remains
+generations after the name of his ducal critic shall have passed
+forever into the mists of oblivion; and the "survival of the fittest"
+will thus be illustrated in a sense in which Mr. Spencer himself never
+used the words.
+
+
+
+
+Scientific Literature.
+
+
+SPECIAL BOOKS.
+
+The study of the methods through which the topographical features and
+rock forms of particular districts have been worked out, as presented
+in numerous popular monographs, is a fascinating one; and we can
+hardly doubt that many persons who would never otherwise have thought
+of it have been made interested in geology by some of these masterly
+picturesque descriptions of regions with which they were superficially
+familiar. Other treatises on the origin of surface features, dealing
+with the subject more fundamentally, but likewise of limited scope,
+are not wanting. Yet, as Prof. _James Geikie_ well says, there is no
+English work to which readers not skilled in geology can turn for a
+general account of the whole subject. Professor Geikie has therefore
+prepared his elaborate book on _Earth Sculpture_[14] to supply this
+want, to furnish an introductory treatise for those persons who may be
+desirous of acquiring some broad knowledge of the results arrived at
+by geologists as to the development of land forms generally. A vast
+number of geological questions are involved in the exhaustive
+treatment of the subject. All the forces with which geologists become
+acquainted in the study of the earth, and their operation, come into
+consideration. The effects of these forces assume aspects that vary
+according to the nature of the material on which they operate, and
+they are again modified according to the peculiar combinations of
+forces at work. The subject is therefore not the easy one it may be
+supposed at first sight to be, and the reader who peruses Professor
+Geikie's work with the intention of mastering it will find he has some
+studying to do. Yet Professor Geikie is clear, and it is only because
+he has gone deeper than the others that he may be harder. The first
+point he insists upon is that in the fashioning of the earth's surface
+no hard-and-fast line separates past and present. The work has been
+going on for a long time, and is still in progress, under a law of
+evolution as true for the crust of the globe as for the plants and
+animals. In setting out upon our inquiry we must in the first place
+know something about rocks and the mode of their arrangement, of the
+structure or architecture of the earth's crust. This leads to the
+distinction between the igneous and the subaqueous, the volcanic,
+plutonic, and metamorphic, and the derivative rocks on which epigene
+agencies have performed their shaping work. These rocks have been
+modified in various ways, and the surface appearance of the earth has
+been affected by forces operating from the interior, and by external
+factors, the work of which is called denudation. The agents of
+denudation are described--air, water, heat, frost, chemical action,
+plants, and animals--often so closely associated in their operations
+that their individual shares in the final result can hardly be
+determined. The various influences of these factors as exerted upon
+different forms of geological structure and different sorts of rocks
+are then taken up and described as applied to land forms in regions of
+horizontal, or gently inclined, and of highly folded and disturbed
+strata, and in regions affected by normal faults or vertical
+displacements. Land forms due directly or indirectly to igneous action
+and the influence of rock character on the determination of land forms
+are subjects of special chapters. Glacial action is one of the most
+important factors in modifying the forms of northern lands, and is
+treated with considerable fullness. Æolian action--of the air and
+wind--has peculiar and important effects in arid regions, and
+underground water in limestone districts, and these receive attention.
+Then come basins--those due to crustal deformation, crater lakes,
+river lakes, glacial basins, and others, and coast lines. Finally, a
+classification is given of these land forms as plains or plateaus of
+accumulation and of erosion, original or tectonic and subsequent or
+relict hills and mountains, original or tectonic and subsequent or
+erosion valleys, basins, and coast lines, and the conclusions are
+reached that we do not know, except as a matter of probability,
+whether we have still visible any original wrinkles of the earth's
+crust; and that some of the estimates of the time it has taken to
+produce the changes of which we witness the results have been very
+much exaggerated.
+
+The curious conclusions obtained by Dr. _Le Bon_ in his psychological
+investigations,[15] delivered to us in startling language, are said to
+be the fruit of extensive travel and of the personal measurement of
+thousands of skulls. His memoir on cervical researches, published in
+1879, upholds the theory that the volume of the skull varies with the
+intelligence. This theory has perhaps suffered a permanent
+adumbration. Facts seem to prove that the bony structure of the skull,
+or even its cranial capacity, gives no positive indication of
+intellect.
+
+In the present volume the theme of discussion is the soul of races.
+Anthropological classification is set aside and mankind is divided
+into four groups according to mental characteristics: the primitive,
+inferior, average, and superior races--the standard of judgment being
+the degree of their aptitude for dominating reflex impulses. It is
+perhaps worthy of note that while the Frenchman belongs to a superior
+race, the Semitic peoples are placed in the class below, or the
+average sort. For the primitive varieties it is not necessary to
+observe a South Sea islander, the lower strata of Europeans furnishing
+numerous examples. When greater differentiation is reached, the word
+"race" is used in a historical sense. It requires, however, more
+complete fusion than some nations exhibit to earn this title; for,
+although there are Germans and Americans, "it is not clear as yet that
+there are Italians." The race having been once evolved, acquires
+wondrous potentialities with Dr. Le Bon. He compares it to the
+totality of cells constituting a living organism, asserts that its
+mental constitution is as unvarying as its anatomical structure, that
+it is a permanent being independent of time and founded alone by its
+dead. It is a short step to endow this entity with a soul consisting
+of common sentiments, interests, and beliefs--what in brief, robbed of
+hyperbole, we should call national character. He states that the
+notion of a country is not possible until a national soul is formed.
+This, in time, like germ-plasm, becomes so stable that assimilation
+with foreign elements is impossible. Like natural species, it has
+secondary characteristics that may be modified, but its fundamental
+character is like the fin of the fish or the beak of the bird. The
+acquisition of this soul marks the apogee of the greatness of a
+people. Psychological species, however, are not eternal, but may decay
+if the functioning of their organs is troubled profoundly.
+
+The soul of the race is best expressed in its art, not in its history
+or institutions, and, as it can not bequeath its soul, so it can not
+impress its civilization or art upon an alien race. It was on account
+of this incompatibility of soul that Grecian art failed to be
+implanted in India. The unaltering constituent of the soul corresponds
+to character, while intellectual qualities are variable. By character
+is meant perseverance, energy, power of self-control, also morality.
+The latter is hereditary respect for the rules on which a society is
+based. This definition would make polygamy a moral notion for Mormons.
+The knowledge of character "can be acquired neither in laboratories
+nor in books, but only in the course of long travel." Whence it is
+learned that different races can not have mutual comprehension.
+Luckily for the student who is unable to travel, the same phenomenon
+may be observed in the gulf that separates the civilized man and
+woman. Although highly educated, "they might converse with each other
+for centuries without understanding one another." These differences
+between races and individuals demonstrate the falsity of the notion of
+equality. Indeed, through _science_ "man has learned that to be slaves
+is the natural condition of all human beings." Naturally he becomes
+dispirited, anarchy seizes upon the uneducated and sullen indifference
+the more cultivated. "Like a ship that has lost its compass, the
+modern man wanders haphazard through the spaces formerly peopled by
+the gods and rendered a desert by science." In France morality is
+gradually dying out, while the United States is threatened by a
+gigantic civil war. What to do is problematical, since we are informed
+"that people have never derived much advantage from too great a desire
+to reason and think," and what is most harmful to a people is to
+attain too high a degree of intelligence and culture, the groundwork
+of the soul beginning to decline when this level is reached. The
+remedy suggested to us is "the organization of a very severe military
+service and the permanent menace of disastrous wars." But if we fail
+to see the improving tendency of this advice, it is probably because
+we are like historians, "simple-minded," while Dr. Le Bon is much too
+complex for our understanding. According to his own theory, there is
+no hope that we may comprehend him, since the outpourings of a soul of
+the Latin race can not be transferred by a simple bridge of
+translation to the apprehension of an Anglo-Saxon mind, separated, as
+he would term it, by "the dead weight of thousands of generations."
+
+
+GENERAL NOTICES.
+
+In preparing the new edition of his _Text-Book of Mineralogy_[16]
+first published in 1877, Prof. _E. S. Dana_ has found it necessary to
+rewrite the whole as well as to add much new matter and many new
+illustrations. The work being designed chiefly for use in class or
+private instruction, the choice of topics discussed, the order and
+fullness of treatment, and the method of presentation have been
+determined by that object. The different types of crystal forms are
+described under the thirty-two groups now accepted, classed according
+to their symmetry. In the chapters on physical and chemical
+mineralogy, the plan of the former edition is retained of presenting
+somewhat fully the elementary principles of the science on which the
+mineral characters depend, and the author has tried to give the
+student the means of becoming practically familiar with the modern
+means of investigation. Especial attention is given to the optical
+qualities of crystals as revealed by the microscope; and frequent
+references are introduced to important papers on the different
+subjects discussed. The descriptive part of the volume is essentially
+an abridgment of the sixth edition of Dana's System of Mineralogy,
+published in 1892, to which the student is referred for fuller and
+supplementary information. A full topical index is furnished in
+addition to the usual index of species.
+
+The title, _The Story of the Railroad_,[17] carries with it the
+suggestion of an eventful history. The West, in the author's view,
+begins with the Missouri River. The story of its railroad is the story
+of the line, now very multiple, that leads to the Pacific Ocean. The
+beginning of white men's travels in these routes is traced by the
+editor to the Spanish adventurers of the sixteenth century, who made
+miserable journeys in search of gold or visionary objects, through
+regions now traversed by some of the more southern lines. Then came
+trappers; next costly and painfully undertaken Government expeditions
+into the then regions of the unknown, the stories of which were the
+boyhood delight of men now living. The period of practical traversing
+of the continent began with the raging of the California gold fever,
+when the journey of many weeks was tiresomely made with ox teams, in
+the face of actual perils of the desert, starvation, thirst, and the
+Indians. After California became important, stage and express lines
+were put on; but still, at the time Mr. Warman takes up the story,
+less than sixty years ago, the idea of building a railroad to the
+Pacific was regarded as too visionary to be entertained, and Asa
+Whitney sacrificed a fortune trying to induce somebody to take it up.
+The first dreams were for a short route to the Orient. Eventually the
+idea was developed that the American West might be worth going after,
+and then the idea of a railroad to it began to assume practical form.
+Young Engineer Dodge, afterward Major General, began surveys before
+the civil war; after it General Sherman gave the scheme a great
+impulse, and the Union Pacific Railroad was built--when and how are
+graphically and dramatically told in Mr. Warman's book. Next came the
+Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé, and other transcontinental lines, the
+histories of all of which are related in similar style, with stories
+of adventures, perils encountered, and lively incidents, including the
+war between two of the lines for the possession of the Arkansas Cañon;
+financial mishaps, and political scandal. Then came the settlement of
+the plains, road-making in Mexico, and the opening of Oklahoma, all of
+which were made possible by the railroads, and have in turn
+contributed to support them. The beginnings and growth of the express
+business are described, and the later lines that have penetrated the
+plains are mentioned.
+
+Prof. _William Benjamin Smith's_ treatise on the _Infinitesimal
+Analysis_[18] has been written, the author says, on what appeared, in
+the light of ten years' experience in teaching the calculus, to be
+lines of least resistance. The aim has been, within a prescribed
+expense of time and energy, to penetrate as far as possible into the
+subject, and in as many directions, so that the student shall attain
+as wide knowledge of the matter, as full comprehension of the methods,
+and as clear consciousness of the spirit and power of this analysis as
+the nature of the case would admit. The author has accordingly often
+followed what seemed to be natural suggestions and impulses toward
+near-lying extensions or generalizations, and has even allowed them to
+direct the course of the discussion. In accordance with the plan and
+purpose of the book as given, "Weierstressian rigor" has been excluded
+from many investigations, and the postponement has been compelled of
+some important discussions, which were considered too subtle for an
+early age of study. Real difficulties, however, have not been
+knowingly disguised, and pains have been taken on occasion to warn the
+reader that the treatment given is only provisional, and must await
+further precision or delimitation. Where the subject has been found
+too large for the compass of the intended work, or too abstruse or
+difficult for the contemplated students, the treatment has been
+compressed or curtailed. The book is, in fact, written for such as
+feel a genuine interest in the subject; and the illustrations and
+exercises have been chosen with frequent reference to practical or
+theoretic importance or to historic interest.
+
+Mr. _George Jacob Holyoake_ has written with much enthusiasm the
+_Jubilee History of the Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society_.[19]
+Many schemes have been started on lines similar to those of this one,
+but very few besides it have grown from the very beginning, and,
+having become to all appearance a permanent institution, can look back
+upon a career of fifty years with complete satisfaction. The society
+began in times of public distress. The ground was prepared for it by
+the "Redemption" Society, which was founded at Leeds in 1845, by
+admirers of Robert Owen, after the experiment at Queenswood had
+failed. It practiced a kind of co-operation and had some distinguished
+friends to wish it well. Among the speakers at its meetings was Dr.
+Frederic Hollick, still living, now a resident of New York city. The
+co-operative society was started as a means of getting cheaper flour
+for its members. On February 25, 1847, an appeal headed "Holbeck
+Anti-Corn Mill Association" was issued to the working classes of Leeds
+and vicinity by the "working people of Messrs. Benyon & Co.'s mill,"
+Holbeck, inviting combination and subscriptions for establishing a
+mill to be the property of the subscribers and their successors, "in
+order to supply them with flour and flour only." Meetings were held,
+an organization was effected, and the mill was started. The history of
+the society and how it grew, how "flour only" was stricken from its
+scheme and other things were added and it branched out, how
+co-operative stores were established, how it gained the confidence of
+the public and the respect of rivals in business, its successes and
+its mistakes, its triumphs and failures, are told by Mr. Holyoake,
+year by year, in a detail in which everything is set down and nothing
+covered up. In 1897 the cooperative society had productive departments
+of flour, bakery, bespoke clothing, boot and shoe factory, brush
+factory, cabinet making, building, millinery, and dressmaking,
+employing 541 hands and turning over £26,949; 80 large stores for the
+sale of these and various other kinds of goods in Leeds and vicinity;
+drapery branches and boot and shoe stores; 43 butchering branches; and
+37,000 subscribing purchasers. Its capital stood at £447,000; and its
+sales for the year amounted to £1,042,616.
+
+D. Appleton and Company have added to their Home Reading Series _The
+Earth and Sky_, a primer of Astronomy for Young Readers, by Prof.
+_Edward S. Holden_. It is intended to be the first of a series of
+three or more volumes, all treating of astronomy in one form or
+another, and suited for reading in the school. The treatment is based
+on the principle that "it is not so simple as it appears to fix in the
+child's mind the fundamental fact that it is Nature which is true, and
+the book or the engraving which is a true copy of it. 'It says' is the
+snare of children as well as of their more sophisticated elders. The
+vital point to be insisted on is a constant reference from words to
+things." The volume is written as a conversation with a young lad. He
+is first shown how he may know for himself that the earth is not flat,
+though it certainly appears to be so. The next step is to show him
+that he may know that the earth is in fact round, and that it is a
+globe of immense size. Its situation in space is next considered, and
+the child's mind is led to some formal conclusions respecting space
+itself. It is then directed to the sun, to the moon and its changes,
+to the stars and their motions, to the revolution of the earth, etc.
+
+In 1887 _E. S. Holden_ published through the Regents of the University
+of California a list of recorded earthquakes on the Pacific coast, it
+being the first systematic publication of the sort. The purpose of it
+was to bring to light all the general facts about the various shocks,
+and enable studies to be made of particular earthquake phenomena. It
+was necessary at the Lick Observatory to keep a register of the times
+of occurrence of all shocks on account of their possible effects on
+the instruments. With this was associated in 1888, when the
+observatory began its active work, the collection of reports of shocks
+felt elsewhere on the Pacific coast. Mr. Holden now reprints this
+pamphlet through the Smithsonian Institution in _A Catalogue of
+Earthquakes felt on the Pacific Coast, 1769 to 1897_, with many
+corrections and additions, including a complete account of the
+earthquake observations at Mount Hamilton from 1887 to 1897, and an
+abstract of the great amount of information that has been collected
+regarding other Pacific coast earthquakes during the same interval.
+
+The _Psychologie als Erfahrungs-Wissenschaft_ of _Hans Cornelius_ is
+not intended for a complete account and review of the facts of
+psychical life, but rather to present the fundamentals of a purely
+empirical theory, excluding all metaphysical views. Such an account
+should not start from any arbitrary abstractions or hypotheses, but
+simply from actually ascertained, directly perceived psychical
+experiences. On the other hand, an empirical definition should be
+required for all the terms that are used in a comprehensive
+description of the experience; and no term should be used without the
+psychical manifestation described by it being pointed out. After an
+introduction in which the method and place of psychology, subjective
+and objective, physiological and genetic, are referred to, the
+elementary facts of consciousness are discussed. The coherency of
+knowledge is treated of in the next chapter, and in the third,
+Psychical Analysis and the conception of unobserved consciousness; and
+the succeeding chapters are devoted to Sensation, Memory, and Fancy;
+The Objective World, Truth and Error, and Feeling and Will. (Published
+at Leipsic, Germany: B. G. Teubner.)
+
+An extremely interesting book is given us in the publications of the
+Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Society of studies by _George
+W._ and _Elizabeth Peckham_, of the _Instincts and Habits of the
+Solitary Wasps_. These insects are familiar enough to us all, as we
+meet them or see their nests of one or a few cells every day, and then
+think no more of them. But Mr. and Mrs. Peckham, following them to
+their haunts and keeping company with them, have found them
+manifesting remarkable instincts and exercising curious customs, which
+they describe in the style of persons who are in love with their work.
+The opportunity for the studies was given in two gardens, one on the
+top of a hill and the other lower down, with an island in a lake close
+by and acres of woodland all about, offering a rich variety of nesting
+places. There are more than a thousand species of these solitary wasps
+in the United States, to only about fifty of the social ones, and they
+live without knowledge of their progenitors and without relations with
+others of their kind.
+
+The eighth volume of the report of the _Iowa Geological Survey_
+comprises the accounts of surveys completed during 1897 in six
+counties, making up the whole number of twenty-six counties in which
+the areal work has been completed. This does not, however, represent
+the whole extent of the operations of the survey, for some work has
+been done in nearly every county in the State, and in many counties it
+will require but little additional work to make a complete report. In
+addition to the areal work, too, special studies of coal, clay,
+artesian waters, gypsum, lead, zinc, etc., have engaged attention. A
+growing public appreciation of the work of the survey as illustrated
+in the demand for the volumes of the reports and for special papers,
+is recognized by the State Geologist, Mr. _Samuel Calvin_; and an
+increasing use of the reports as works for reference and for general
+study in high schools and other educational institutions is observed.
+The survey is now collecting statistics of production of various
+minerals mined in the State.
+
+One of the features most likely to attract attention in the _Annual
+Report of the State Geologist_ of New Jersey for 1897 is the paper of
+Mr. C. C. Vermeule on the Drainage of the Hackensack and Newark Tide
+Marshes. In it a scheme is unfolded for the reclamation and diking of
+the flats, under which an ample navigable waterway shall be developed,
+and the cities which now stop at their edges may be extended and built
+up to the very banks of the new harbor, made a highway for ocean
+sailing vessels. An interesting paper is published by Lewis Woolman on
+Artesian and Bored and other Wells, in which many important wells are
+described with reference to the geological strata they penetrate.
+Other papers relate to iron mining and brick and clay industries,
+mineral statistics, and statistics of clays, bricks, and terra cotta.
+The field reports describe progress in the surveys of the surface
+geology, the Newark system, and the upper Cretaceous formations.
+
+On the basis of a reconnoissance made by him for Alexander Agassiz,
+Mr. _Robert T. Hill_ has published through the Bulletin of the Museum
+of Comparative Zoölogy at Harvard University, a paper on _The
+Geological History of the Isthmus of Panama and Portions of Costa
+Rica_. He finds that there is considerable evidence that a land
+barrier in the tropical region separated the two oceans as far back as
+Jurassic time, and continued through the Cretaceous period. The
+geological structure of the Isthmus and Central American regions, so
+far as investigated, when considered aside from the paleontology,
+presents no evidence by which the former existence of a free
+communication of oceanic waters across the present tropical barriers
+can be established. The paleontological evidence indicates the
+ephemeral existence of a passage at the close of the Eocene period.
+All lines of inquiry give evidence that no communication has existed
+between the two oceans since the close of the Oligocene.
+
+The _Twenty-second Annual Report of the Department of Geology and
+Natural Resources_ of Indiana, _W. S. Blatchley_, State Geologist,
+embraces, in part, the results of the work of the several departments
+of the survey during 1897. These appear in the form of papers of
+economic importance on the petroleum, stone, and clay resources of the
+State, natural gases and illuminating oils, a description of the
+curious geological and topographical region of Lake and Porter
+Counties, and an extended paper on the Birds of Indiana, with specific
+descriptions. A large proportion of the energies of the department
+were employed during the year in gathering data for a detailed report
+on the coal area of the State, which is now in course of preparation.
+
+The _Report of the United States Commissioner of Education_ for
+1896-'97 records an increase in the enrollment of schools and colleges
+of 257,586, the whole number of pupils being 14,712,077 in public
+institutions and schools, and 1,513,016 in private. The increase is
+confined to the public institutions, the private ones having suffered
+from "hard times." Among the numerous papers published in the volume
+containing the report are those on Education in Great Britain and
+Ireland, France, Denmark, Norway, Central Europe, and Greece;
+Commercial Education in Europe; the Teaching of Civics in France,
+Switzerland, and England; Sunday Schools, including accounts of the
+several denominational systems; the Legal Rights of Children; and
+sketches of Horace Mann and Henry Barnard and their work in furthering
+education.
+
+Mr. _David T. Day's_ report on the _Mineral Resources of the United
+States_ for 1896 appears as Part V of the Eighteenth Annual Report of
+the United States Geological Survey, in two volumes of fourteen
+hundred pages in all; the first of which is devoted to Metallic
+Products and Coal, and the second to Nonmetallic Products except Coal.
+The report covers the calendar year 1896, and shows only a slight
+increase in total values over 1895. Of some substances, however--gold,
+copper, aluminum, and petroleum being the most important ones--the
+value was the greatest ever attained. Of other substances, including
+lead, bituminous coal, building stones, mineral waters, salt, and
+pyrites, the product was increased in amount, but the value was less.
+A paper, by Mr. George F. Becker, on the Witwatersrand Banket, records
+observations made by him in the Transvaal gold fields.
+
+_A Geological Reconnoissance of the Coal Fields of the Indian
+Territory_, published in the Contributions to Biology of the Hopkins
+Seaside Laboratory of Leland Stanford Junior University, by _Noah
+Fields Drake_, is based upon a six months' examination made by the
+author during the spring, summer, and fall of 1896, of the larger part
+of the coal measures and adjacent formations of Indian and Oklahoma
+Territories. The best maps that could then be had being exceedingly
+inaccurate, sketch maps were made of areas that were especially
+important. On account of features of particular geological interest,
+nearly all the area south and east of the Canadian River and the
+bordering areas of the Boone chert and limestones were sketched and
+studied rather closely.
+
+The _American Catholic Historical Society_ at Philadelphia publishes
+in its _Quarterly Records_ much that, while it must be of deep
+interest to historical students holding the Roman Catholic faith,
+possesses, perhaps, a strong though more general interest to all
+students of American history; for the men of that faith have had no
+small part in the colonization and development of this country. The
+number for June, 1898, contains a portrait and a bibliographical
+sketch of the Rev. Peter Henry Lemke, O. S. B., of Pennsylvania,
+Kansas, and Elizabeth, N. J.; a poem on the Launch of the American
+Frigate United States, whose commander was a Catholic; articles on the
+Sir John James Fund, and Catholic Chronicles of Lancaster, Pa., and
+Extracts from the Diary of the Rev. Patrick Kenny.
+
+A memoir on _A Determination of the Ratio ([Greek: chi]) of the
+Specific Heats at Constant Pressure and at Constant Volume for Air,
+Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide, and Hydrogen_ gives the result of a series of
+investigations by Drs. _O. Lummer_ and _E. Pringshein_, of
+Charlottenburg, Germany, made with the aid of a grant from the
+Hodgkins Fund of the Smithsonian Institution. Besides being of
+exceptional importance in thermodynamics, the specific heat ratio is
+of interest as affording a clew to the character of the molecule. In
+the present investigation coincident results on the gases examined
+appear to have been reached for the first time. (Published by the
+Smithsonian Institution.)
+
+From the greater lightness of the air and the higher velocity of its
+currents, it is evident that the materials it may carry and deposit
+will be somewhat different in composition and structure from those
+which are laid down in water. They are as a rule finer, they exhibit a
+different bedding, and are more capriciously placed. Mr. _Johan August
+Udden_ has made a careful study of the subject, the results of which
+he publishes under the title of _The Mechanical Composition of Wind
+Deposits_, as the first number of the Augustana Library Series, at the
+Lutheran Augustana Book Concern, Rock Island, Ill.
+
+The _History Reader for Elementary Schools_ (The Macmillan Company, 60
+cents), prepared by _L. L. W. Wilson_ and arranged with special
+reference to holidays, contains readings for each month of the school
+year, classified according to different periods and phases of American
+history generally, so chosen that some important topic of the group
+shall bear a relation to the month in which it is to be read. The
+groups concern the Indians, the Discovery of America, Thanksgiving,
+Other Settlements (than those of Virginia and the Pilgrims), Dr.
+Franklin, Lincoln and Washington, the Revolution, Arbor Day, and Brave
+Sea Captains, etc., closing with articles in reference to Flag Day.
+The insertion of an article on the War with Spain seems premature.
+Public sentiment is not yet at rest on the subject.
+
+
+PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.
+
+Agricultural Experiment Stations. Bulletins and Reports. Cornell
+University: No. 160. Hints on Rural School Grounds. By L. H. Bailey.
+Pp. 20; No. 161. Annual Flowers. By G. N. Lanman and L. H. Bailey. Pp.
+32; No. 162. The Period of Gestation in Cows. By H. H. Wing. Pp.
+120.--Delaware College: No. 43 (abridged edition). The European and
+Japanese Chestnuts in the United States. By G. H. Powell. Pp.
+16.--Michigan: Nos. 164 and 165. Methods and Results of Tillage, and
+Draft of Farm Implements. By M. W. Fulton. Pp. 24; Elementary Science
+Bulletin, No. 5. Branches of Sugar Maple and Beech as seen in Winter.
+By W. J. Beal. Pp. 4; do., No. 6. Potatoes, Rutabagas, and Onions. By
+W. J. Beal. Pp. 6.--New Jersey: No. 133. Peach Growing in New Jersey.
+By A. T. Jordan. Pp. 16; No. 134. Fermentation and Germ Life. By
+Julius Nelson. Pp. 24.--North Dakota: No. 15. Some Chemical Problems
+Investigated. Pp. 28.--Ohio: Newspaper Bulletin 188. Sugar Beets and
+Sorghum in Ohio. Pp. 2.
+
+Aston, W. G. A History of Japanese Literature. New York: D. Appleton
+and Company. Pp. 408. $1.50.
+
+Berry, Arthur. A Short History of Astronomy. New York: Charles
+Scribner's Sons. Pp. 440. $1.50.
+
+Brush and Pencil. An Illustrated Magazine of the Arts and Crafts.
+Monthly. Chicago: Arts and Crafts Company. Pp. 64. 25 cents. $2.50 a
+year.
+
+Bulletins, Reports, etc. Colgate University, Department of Geology and
+Natural History: Announcement. Pp. 16.--Field Columbian Museum,
+Chicago: Annual Report of the Board of Directors for 1897-'98. Pp. 90,
+with plates.--Financial Reform Association: 1848 to 1898. Fifty Years'
+Retrospect. London. Pp. 54, with plates; Financial Reform Almanac for
+1899. London. Pp. 316. 1 shilling.--New York State Library:
+Legislative Bulletin for 1898. Pp. 132. 25 cents.--New York
+University: Catalogue and Announcements for 1898-'99. Pp.
+358.--Perkins Institution and Massachusetts School for the Blind:
+Sixty-seventh Annual Report of the Trustees, to August 31, 1898. Pp.
+305.--United States Department of Labor: Bulletin No. 20, January,
+1899. Edited by Carroll D. Wright and Oren W. Weaver. Pp. 170.
+
+Byrd, Mary E. Laboratory Manual in Astronomy. Boston: Ginn & Co. Pp.
+273.
+
+Cajori, Florian. A History of Physics in its Elementary Branches,
+including the Evolution of Physical Laboratories. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 323. $1.60.
+
+Callie, J. W. S. John Smith's Reply to "Merrie England, Defense of the
+Liberal Programme." London: John Heywood. Pp. 88. Sixpence.
+
+Chapman, Frank H., Editor. Bird Lore. February, 1898, Vol. I, No. 1.
+Bimonthly. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 32. 20 cents. $1 a
+year.
+
+Davenport, Charles B. Experimental Morphology. Part II. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 509. $2.
+
+Evans, A. H. Birds (The Cambridge Natural History, edited by S. F.
+Harmer and A. E. Shipley, Vol. IX). New York: The Macmillan Company.
+Pp. 635. $3.50.
+
+Egbert, Seneca. A Manual of Hygiene and Sanitation. Philadelphia: Lea
+Brothers & Co. Pp. 368.
+
+Foulke, William Dudley. Slav or Saxon: a Study of the Growth and
+Tendencies of Russian Civilization. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. Pp.
+141. $1.
+
+Huntington, Elon. The Earth's Rotation and its Interior Heat. Pp. 33.
+
+Janes, Lewis G. Our Nation's Peril. Social Ideas and Social Progress.
+Pp. 31. 25 cents.
+
+McLellan, J. A., and Ames, A. F. The Public School Mental Arithmetic.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 138. 25 cents. Boston: James H.
+West & Co.
+
+Maltbie, Milo Ray. Municipal Functions. A Study of the Development,
+Scope, and Tendency of Municipal Socialism. (Municipal Affairs,
+December, 1898.) New York: Reform Club, Committee of Municipal
+Administration. Pp. 230. 75 cents.
+
+Mason, Hon. William E. Speech in the United States Senate on the
+Government of Foreign Peoples. Pp. 26.
+
+Patten, Simon N. The Development of English Thought. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 415. $3.
+
+Pittsburg Press Almanac, The, for 1899. Quarterly. St. Louis: The
+Press Publishing Company. Pp. 536.
+
+Récéjac, E. Essay on the Basis of the Mystic Knowledge. Translated by
+Sera Carr Upton. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Pp. 287. $2.50.
+
+Reprints. Caldwell, Otis W. The Life History of Lemna Minor. Pp.
+32.--Calkins, G. N. Some Hydroids from Puget Sound. Pp. 24, with six
+plates.--Cope, Edward D. Vertebrate Remains from the Port Kennedy Bone
+Deposit. Pp. 75, with plates.--Fitz, G. W. Play as a Factor in
+Development. Pp. 7; The Hygiene of Instruction in Elementary Schools.
+Pp. 7.--Howard, William Lee. Double Personality; Lenten Hysteria. Pp.
+8.--Howe, R. H., Jr. North American Wood Frogs.--Hunt, Charles
+Wallace. The Engineer: His Work, his Ethics, his Pleasures.
+(President's Address, American Society of Mechanical Engineers.)
+Pp. 15.--Hunter, S. J. The Coccidæ of Kansas. Pp. 15, with
+plates.--Krauss, W. C. The Stigmata of Degeneration. Pp. 360.--Lichty,
+D. Thalassic Submersion a Means of Disposal of the Dead. Pp.
+12.--McDonald, Arthur. Emile Zola. Pp. 16.--Phillips, W. B. Iron
+Making in Alabama. Montgomery. Pp. 380.--Saunders, De Alten.
+Phycological Memoirs. Pp. 20, with plates.--Schlicht, Paul J. A New
+Process of Combustion. Pp. 32.--Stevens, F. L. The Effect of Aqueous
+Solutions upon the Germination of Fungus Spores. Pp. 30.--Stock, H. H.
+The International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pennsylvania. Pp.
+12.--Urn, The. Modern Thought on Modern Cremation. United States
+Cremation Company. Pp. 40.--Veeder, M. A. The Relative Importance of
+Flies and Water Supply in Spreading Disease. Pp. 8.
+
+Robinson, Albert Gardner. The Porto Rico of To-day. New York: Charles
+Scribner's Sons. Pp. 240, with maps. $1.50.
+
+Salazar, A. E. Kalkules de Kañerius de Agua (Calculations of Water
+Conduits). Santiago de Chile. Pp. 246.
+
+Schnabel, Dr. Carl. Handbook of Metallurgy. Translated by Henry Louis.
+2 vols. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 876 and 732. $10.
+
+Seligman, E. R. A. The Shifting and Incidence of Taxation. Second
+edition. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 337. $3.
+
+Semon, Richard. In the Australian Bush and on the Coast of the Coral
+Sea. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 552. $6.50.
+
+Spencer, Baldwin, and Gillen, F. J. The Native Tribes of Central
+Australia. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 671, with plates.
+$6.50.
+
+Technology Review, The. A Quarterly Magazine relating to the
+Massachusetts Institute of Technology. January, 1899. Pp. 143. 35
+cents.
+
+United States National Museum. Annual Report for the Year ending June
+30, 1896. (Smithsonian Institution.) Washington. Pp. 1107, with
+plates.
+
+Weir, James. The Dawn of Reason. Mental Traits in the Lower Animals.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 234. $1.25.
+
+Westcott, Edward N. David Harum. New York: D. Appleton and Company.
+Pp. 392. $1.50.
+
+Whipple, G. C. The Microscopy of Drinking Water. New York: John Wiley
+& Sons. Pp. 300, with nineteen plates. $3.50.
+
+Wilkinson, F. The Story of the Cotton Plant. (Library of Useful
+Stories.) New York: D. Appleton and Company. Pp. 191. 40 cents.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[14] Earth Sculpture, or the Origin of Land Forms. By James Geikie.
+New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. Pp. 397. Price, $2.
+
+[15] The Psychology of Peoples. By Gustave Le Bon. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 236. Price, $1.50.
+
+[16] A Text-Book of Mineralogy, with an Extended Treatise on
+Crystallography and Physical Mineralogy. By Edmund Salisbury Dana. New
+edition, entirely rewritten and enlarged. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
+Pp. 593. $4.
+
+[17] The Story of the Railroad. By Cy Warman. New York: D. Appleton
+and Company (Story of the West Series). Pp. 280. Price, $1.50.
+
+[18] Infinitesimal Analysis. By William Benjamin Smith. Vol. I.
+Elementary; Real Variables. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 352.
+$3.25.
+
+[19] The Jubilee History of the Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society
+from 1847 to 1897. Traced Year by Year. By George Jacob Holyoake.
+Leeds (Eng.) Central Co-operative Office. Pp. 260.
+
+
+
+
+Fragments of Science.
+
+
+=The Nernst Electric Lamp.=--Prof. Walter Nernst, of the University of
+Göttingen, has recently devised an electric lamp which promises to be
+an important addition to our present methods of lighting. The part of
+the lamp which emits the light consists of a small rod of highly
+refractory material, said to be chiefly thoria, which is supported
+between two platinum electrodes. The rod is practically a nonconductor
+when cold, but by heating it (in the smaller sizes a match is
+sufficient) its conductivity is so raised that a current will pass
+through it; after the current is once started the heat produced by the
+resistance of the rod is sufficient to keep up its conductivity, and
+the latter is raised to a state of intense incandescence, and gives
+out a brilliant white light. As the preliminary heating by means of a
+match or other flame would in some cases be an inconvenience,
+Professor Nernst has devised a lamp which, by means of a platinum
+resistance attachment, can be started by simply turning a switch. The
+life of the rods is about five hundred hours. The lamps are said to
+work equally well with either alternating or direct currents, and
+there is no vacuum necessary. If this lamp proves a success as a
+commercial apparatus, it will be but another example of how slight a
+matter may make all the difference between success and failure. There
+have been numerous experimenters trying for the last ten years, and in
+fact ever since the appearance of the arc lamp, to utilize in an
+electric lamp the great light-giving power of the refractory earths in
+a state of incandescence; but, owing to their high resistance at
+ordinary temperatures, no results were obtained until Professor Nernst
+thought of heating his thoria rod, and this simple procedure seems to
+have solved the whole difficulty. It is claimed that the Nernst lamp
+is a much more economical transformer of electricity into light than
+the present incandescent electric lamps. An apparatus called a kaolin
+candle, which has been suggested as an anticipation of Professor
+Nernst's lamp, was constructed by Paul Jablochkoff in 1877 or 1878. It
+consisted of a strip of kaolin, along which ran a "match" of some
+conducting material. The current was passed through this "match" until
+the kaolin strip became heated sufficiently to become a conductor
+itself. The lamp did not, however, prove a commercial success.
+
+=Laws of Climatic Evolution.=--The problem of the laws of climatic
+evolution was characterized by Dr. Marsden Manson, in a paper read at
+the British Association, as one of the grandest and most far-reaching
+problems in geological physics, since it embraces principles and laws
+applicable to other planets than ours. After presenting a formulation
+of those laws, the author pointed out that in consequence of their
+working, a hot spheroid rotating in space and revolving about a
+central sun, and holding fluids of similar properties to water and air
+within the sphere of its control, must pass through a series of
+uniform climates at sea level, gradually decreasing in temperature and
+terminating in an ice age, and that this age must be succeeded by a
+series of zonal climates gradually increasing in temperature and
+extent. The conclusions thus reached were that in the case of the
+earth zonal distribution of climates was inaugurated at the
+culmination of the ice age, and is gradually increasing in temperature
+and extent by the trapping of the solar energy in the lower
+atmosphere, and that the rise has a moderate limit; that the ice age
+was unique and due to the physical properties of water and air, and to
+the difference in specific heat of land and water; and that prior to
+the ice age local formation of glaciers could occur at any latitude
+and period. Dr. Manson then observed that Jupiter was apparently in a
+condition through which the earth has already passed, and Mars was in
+one toward which the climatic evolution of the earth was tending.
+
+=Poisonous Plants.=--Statistics in regard to poisonous plants are
+lacking on account of a general ignorance of the subject, and it is
+therefore impossible to form even an approximate estimate of the
+damage done by them. Besides the criminal uses that may be made of
+them, there are some other problems connected with them that are of
+general public interest. The common law of England holds those who
+possess and cultivate such plants responsible for damages accruing
+from them; and a New York court has awarded damages in a case of
+injury from poison ivy growing in a cemetery. In order to obtain
+information on the subject, the botanical division of the Department
+of Agriculture arranged to receive notices through the clipping
+bureaus of the cases of poisoning recorded in the newspapers. Thus
+through the persons named in the articles or through the local
+postmaster it was put in correspondence with the physician in the
+case, who furnished the authentic facts. A large number of correct and
+valuable data were thus secured. It is proved by these facts that all
+poisonous plants are not equally injurious to all persons nor to all
+forms of life. Thus poison ivy has no apparent external effect upon
+animals, and a few of them eat its leaves with impunity; and it acts
+upon the skin of the majority of persons with varying intensity--on
+some hardly at all, while others are extremely sensitive to it. A
+similar variability is found in the effects of poisonous plants taken
+internally. In some cases often regarded as of that kind, death is
+attributable not to any poison which the plant contains, but to
+immoderate or incautious eating, or to mechanical injury such as is
+produced in horses by the hairs of crimson clover, or to the effect of
+parasitic growths, such as ergot on rye. Excluding all which operate
+in these ways, there are, however, a large number of really poisonous
+plants, the properties of which are comparatively unknown. It is
+concerning these that information has been sought by the botanical
+division. Its report contains descriptions of about forty plants, with
+figures, belonging to seventeen families.
+
+=The United States Biological Survey.=--The Biological Survey of the
+United States Department of Agriculture aims to define and map the
+agricultural belts of the country in order to ascertain what products
+of the soil can and what can not be grown successfully in each, to
+guide the farmer in the intelligent introduction of foreign crops, and
+to point out his friends and his enemies among the native birds and
+animals. For information on these subjects so important to him the
+farmer has had to rely on his own experiments or those of his
+neighbors, often carried on at enormous cost to persons little able to
+bear it. The Survey and its predecessor, the division of ornithology
+and mammology, have had small parties in the field traversing the
+public domain for the purpose of studying the geographic distribution
+of our native land animals and plants and mapping the boundaries of
+the areas they inhabit. It was early learned that North America is
+divisible into seven transcontinental belts or life zones and a much
+larger number of minor areas or _faunas_, each characterized by
+particular associations of animals and plants. The inference was
+natural and has been verified that these same zones and areas, up to
+the northern limit of profitable agriculture, are adapted to the needs
+of particular kinds or varieties of cultivated crops. The Survey is
+engaged in tracing as precisely as possible the actual boundaries of
+these belts and areas, and in finding out and designating the
+varieties of crops best adapted to each. In this undertaking it aims
+to point out such exotic products as, from their importance in other
+lands, are likely to prove of value if introduced on fit soils and
+under proper climatic conditions. The importance of this work will be
+realized when it is recollected that all the climatic life zones of
+the world, except the hottest tropical, are represented in our
+country. The colored maps prepared by the Survey furnish the best
+guide the farmer can have for judging what crops will be best adapted
+for his particular region; and in connection with the work of the
+entomologist, show the belts along which noxious insects are likely to
+spread. The report of the Survey, prepared under the direction of its
+chief, C. Hart Merriam, though full of valuable information not before
+presented consecutively, is preliminary and only touches the edge of a
+subject which is susceptible of copious elaboration, and is destined
+to be worked up with immense profit.
+
+=A Neolithic Lake Dwelling.=--A crannog, or lake dwelling, discovered
+in the summer of 1898 on the banks of the Clyde, has received much
+attention from English archæologists because of its unique situation
+on a tidal stream, and of its being apparently neolithic or far more
+ancient than any other crannog yet examined, in all others the relics
+being of the bronze age. Careful excavations have been made in it and
+are still in progress, and the refuse mound of the former settlement
+has been sifted, with results that have made it plain that there were
+design and execution in the building, and that it was occupied and
+inhabited for a long period. Positive evidence of fire is afforded in
+the shape of numerous firestones and calcined embers, and indications
+of the condition of life at the period are given by the implements,
+ornaments, and tools recovered. The crannog is about sixteen hundred
+yards east of the Castle Rock of Dumbarton, and about fifty yards from
+the river at low tide, but is submerged when the tide is in to a depth
+of from three to twelve feet, and is one hundred and eighty-four feet
+in circuit. The piles in the outer circle are of oak, which below the
+mud surface is still quite fresh. The transverse beams and pavement
+inside are of wood of the consistence of cheese--willow, alder, and
+oak--while the smaller branches are of fir, birch, and hazel, with
+bracken, moss, and chips. The stones in the outer circle and along the
+causeway leading to the dwelling place seem to have been set in a
+methodical order, most of the bowlders being about a lift for a man.
+The refuse mound extends for about twelve feet outside for the
+greater part of the circuit, and here most of the bone and flint
+implements have been discovered. The largest article found in the site
+was a very fine canoe, thirty-seven feet long and forty inches beam,
+dug out of a single oak tree, which lay in what has proved to have
+been a dock. A curious ladder was also found here, the rungs of which
+were cut out of the solid wood, and which has somewhat the general
+appearance of a post of a post-and-rail fence. The exploration of the
+site is much interfered with by the rising of the tide, which covers
+the crannog for a considerable time every day. All the relics
+found--consisting chiefly of objects of bone, staghorn, jet, chert,
+and cannel coal, with some querns, the canoe, ladder, etc.--have been
+placed in the museum at Glasgow.
+
+=Portland Cement.=--The following facts are taken from an address
+delivered before the Franklin Institute by Mr. Robert W. Lesley: "It
+was not until the end of the last century that the true principles of
+hydraulic cement were discovered by Smeaton, who, in the construction
+of the Eddystone Lighthouse, made a number of experiments with the
+English limestones, and laid down, as a result, the principle that a
+limestone yielding from fifteen to twenty-five per cent of residue
+when dissolved in hydrochloric acid will set under water. These
+limestones he denominated hydraulic limestones, and from the principle
+so laid down by him come the two great definitions of what we now know
+as cement, namely, the natural and artificial cements of commerce. The
+natural variety, such as the Rosendale, Lehigh, and Cumberland
+cements, was first made by Joseph Parker in 1796, who discovered what
+he called 'Roman cement,' based upon the calcination at low
+temperatures of the nodules found in the septaria geological formation
+in England. This was practically the first cement of commerce, and
+gave excellent results. Joseph Aspdin, a bricklayer or plasterer, took
+out a patent in England in 1824 on a high-grade artificial cement,
+and, at great personal deprivation, succeeded in manufacturing it on a
+commercial scale by combining English chalks with clay from the river
+beds, drying the mixed paste, and after calcining at high heat the
+material thus produced, grinding it to powder. This cement, which was
+the first Portland cement in the market, obtained its name from its
+resemblance when it became stone to the celebrated Portland stone, one
+of the leading building materials in England. The rocks used in the
+manufacture of Portland cement are very similar to those from which
+natural cement is made. The various layers in the natural rock may
+vary in size or stratification, so that the lime, alumina, and silica
+may not be in position to combine under heat, or there may be too much
+of one ingredient, or not enough of the others in close proximity to
+each other. In making Portland cement, these rocks, properly
+proportioned, are accordingly ground to an impalpable powder, the
+natural rock being broken down and the laminæ distributed in many
+small grains. This powder is then mixed with water, and is made into a
+new stone in the shape of the brick, or block, in which all the small
+grains formerly composing the laminæ of the original rock are
+distributed and brought into a close mechanical juxtaposition to each
+other. The new rock thus made is put into kilns with layers of coke,
+and is then calcined at temperatures from 1,600° to 1,800°. The
+clinker, as it comes from the kiln, is then crushed and ground to an
+impalpable powder, which is the Portland cement of commerce. Portland
+cement may be made from other materials, such as chalk and clay,
+limestone and clay, cement rock and limestone, and marls and clays. In
+every case the principle is the same, the breaking down and the
+redistributing of the materials so that the fine particles may be in
+close mechanical union when subjected to the heat of the kiln."
+
+=The French Nontoxic Matches.=--It is believed, by Frenchmen at least,
+that the problem long sought, of finding a composition for a match
+head in which all the advantages of white phosphorus shall be
+preserved while its deleterious qualities are eliminated or greatly
+reduced, has been solved in the new matches which the French
+Government has placed upon the market. These matches are marked S. C.,
+by the initials of the inventors, MM. Sévène and Cahen, are made in
+the factories at Trélazé, Begles, and Samtines, and have been well
+received by the public. In preparing the composition, the chlorate of
+potash of the old flashing and safety matches has been retained, and
+the sesquisulphide of phosphorus is used instead of the white or red
+phosphorus of the old matches. The latter substance, besides the
+indispensable qualities of fixity and resistance to atmospheric
+influences, has the two important properties of inflaming at 95° C.,
+much nearer the igniting point of white phosphorus (60° C.) than of
+red (260° C.), and being therefore easier to light; and of having a
+low latent or specific heat. With these properties embodied in the
+inflammable composition of the head, the new match is expected to be
+comparatively free from accidental explosions during manufacture and
+export, to take fire by friction, and to burn steadily and regularly.
+The expectation has so far been fulfilled. The phosphorus compound has
+a special odor, in which the sulphur characteristic predominates, but,
+not boiling under 380° C., does not become offensive in the shops; and
+the match heads made with it do not emit the phosphorescence which is
+often exhibited by matches made with white phosphorus. It is only
+feebly toxic by direct absorption, experiments on guinea pigs
+indicating that it is only about one tenth as much so as white
+phosphorus.
+
+=Trees as Land Formers.=--John Gifford, in a paper presented to the
+Franklin Institute on Forestry in Relation to Physical Geography and
+Engineering, mentions as illustrating the way forests counteract
+certain destructive forces, the mangrove tree as "the great land
+former which, supplementing the work of the coral polyp, has added to
+the warm seashore regions of the globe immense areas of land." The
+trees grow in salt water several feet deep, where their labyrinth of
+roots and branches collect and hold sediment and flotage. Thus the
+shore line advances. The seeds, germinating on the plant, the
+plantlets fall into the water, float away till their roots touch the
+bottom, and there form the nucleus of new islands and life. The forest
+constantly improves the soil, provided the latter is not removed or
+allowed to burn. The roots of trees penetrate to its deeper layers and
+absorb great quantities of mineral matters, a large percentage of
+which goes to the leaves, and is ultimately deposited on the surface.
+"The surface soil is both enriched by these mineral substances and
+protected by a mulch of humus in varying stages of decomposition. As
+the lower layers rot, new layers of leaves and twigs are being
+constantly deposited, so that the forest soil, in the course of time,
+fairly reeks with nourishing plant food, which seeps out more or less
+to enrich neighboring soils." The forest is also a soil former. "Even
+the most tender rootlet, because of its acidity, is able to dissolve
+its way through certain kinds of rock. This, together with the acids
+formed in the decomposition of humus, is a potent and speedy agent in
+the production of soil. The roots of many species of trees have no
+difficulty whatever in penetrating limestone and in disintegrating
+rocks of the granitic series. As the rock crumbles, solid inorganic
+materials are released, which enrich neighboring soils, especially
+those of the valleys in regions where the forest is relegated to the
+mountain sides and top, as should be the case in all mountainous
+regions. In view of the destruction caused by mankind, it is a
+consoling fact that Nature, although slowly, is gradually improving
+her waste lands. If not interrupted, the barest rock and the fallowest
+field, under conditions which may be called unfavorable, will become,
+in course of time, forest-clad and fertile. The most important
+function of the forest in relation to the soil, however, is in holding
+it in place and protecting it from the erosive action of wind and
+rain."
+
+=The Atlantic Slope.=--The Atlantic slope of the United States is
+described in the New Jersey State Geological Survey's report on the
+Physical Geography of the State as "a fairly distinct geographical
+province. Its eastern boundary is the sea; its western boundary on the
+north is the divide between the drainage flowing southeast to the sea
+and that flowing northeast to the St. Lawrence. Farther south its
+western limit is the divide between the streams flowing east to the
+Atlantic and those flowing west to the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers."
+The line between it and the geographical province next west follows
+the watershed of the Appalachian system of mountains. It is divided,
+according to elevations, into several subprovinces, all of which
+elongate in a direction roughly parallel to the shore. Next to the
+coast there is usually a belt of lowland, few or many miles wide,
+called the _Coastal Plain_. Inland from the Coastal Plain is an
+intermediate height, between the Coastal Plain to the east and the
+mountains to the west, known in the South as the _Piedmont Plateau_.
+The mountainous part of the slope constitutes the third province,
+known as the _Appalachian Zone_. The Atlantic slope may be divided
+into two sections--a northern and a southern--in which the Coastal
+Plain is narrow and wide respectively. These two sections meet in New
+Jersey, where the division runs from the Raritan River, just below New
+Brunswick, to Trenton. South of this line the Coastal Plain expands,
+and all considerable elevations recede correspondingly from the shore.
+These three subprovinces are especially well shown in the southern
+section of the Atlantic slope. They are less well developed in the
+northern section, and even where the topography is comparable the
+underlying rock structure is different. In New Jersey a fourth belt,
+the Triassic formation, is interposed between the Coastal Plain and
+the Highlands corresponding to the Piedmont Plateau. North of New
+Jersey the Coastal Plain has little development, though Long Island
+and some small areas farther east and northeast are to be looked upon
+as parts of it.
+
+=American Fresh-water Pearls.=--The facts cited by Mr. George F. Kunz
+in his paper, published in the Report of the United States Fish
+Commission, on the Fresh-water Pearls and Pearl Fisheries of the
+United States, give considerable importance to this feature of our
+natural history. The mound explorations attest that fresh-water pearls
+were gathered and used by the prehistoric peoples of the country "to
+an extent that is astonishing. On the hearths of some of these mounds
+in Ohio the pearls have been found, not by hundreds, but by thousands
+and even by bushels--now, of course, damaged and half decomposed by
+centuries of burial and by the heat of superficial fires." The
+narratives of the early Spanish explorers make several mentions of
+pearls in the possession of the Indians. For a considerable period
+after the first explorations, however, American pearls attracted but
+little attention, and "for some two centuries the Unios [or
+'fresh-water mussels'] lived and multiplied in the rivers and streams,
+unmolested by either the native tribes that had used them for food, or
+by the pioneers of the new race that had not yet learned of their
+hidden treasures." Within recent years the gathering of Unio pearls
+has attained such importance as to start economical problems
+warranting and even demanding careful and detailed inquiry. The first
+really important discovery of Unio pearls was made near Paterson, N.
+J., in 1857, in the form of the "queen pearl" of fine luster, weighing
+ninety-three grains, which was sold to Eugénie, wife of Napoleon III,
+for twenty-five hundred dollars, and is now worth four times that
+amount. As a result the Unios at Notch Brook, where it was found, were
+gathered by the million and destroyed. Within a year fully fifteen
+thousand dollars' worth of pearls were sent to the New York market.
+Then the shipments gradually fell off. Some of the best American
+pearls that were next found were at Waynesville, Ohio, where Mr.
+Israel H. Harris formed an exceedingly fine collection. It contained
+more than two thousand specimens, weighing more than as many grains.
+Among them were one button-shaped on the back and weighing
+thirty-eight grains, several almost transparent pink ones, and one
+showing where the pearl had grown almost entirely through the Unio. In
+1889 a number of magnificently colored pearls were found at different
+places in the creeks and rivers of Wisconsin, of which more than ten
+thousand dollars' worth were sent to New York within three months.
+These discoveries led to immense activity in pearl hunting through all
+the streams of the region, and in three or four seasons the shells
+were nearly exhausted. The pearl fisheries of this State have produced
+at least two hundred and fifty thousand dollars' worth of pearls since
+1889. Another outbreak of the "pearl mania" occurred in Arkansas in
+1897, and extended into the Indian Territory, Missouri, Georgia, and
+other States.
+
+=Distribution of Cereals in the United States.=--To inquiries made
+preparatory to drawing up a report on the Distribution of Cereals in
+North America (Department of Agriculture, Biological Survey), Mr. C.
+S. Plumb received one thousand and thirty-three answers, eight
+hundred and ninety-seven of which came from the United States and the
+rest from the Canadian provinces. These reports showed that in many
+localities, particularly in the East and South, but little attention
+is paid to keeping varieties pure, and many farmers use mixed,
+unknown, or local varieties of ordinary merit for seed. In New England
+but little grain is grown from sowing, owing to the cheapness of
+Western grain, and wheat is rarely reported. Oats are now mostly sown
+from Western seed, and the resulting crop is mown for hay, while most
+of the corn is cut for green fodder or silage. On certain fine
+lowlands--as, for example, in the Connecticut Valley--oats, and more
+especially corn, are often grown for grain. While reports on most of
+the cereals were rendered from the lower austral zone, or the region
+south of the Appalachians and the old Missouri Compromise line, this
+region, except where it merges with the upper austral or the one north
+of it, is apparently outside the area of profitable cultivation of
+wheat and oats. In Louisiana and most of the other parts of the lower
+austral, except in northern Texas and Oklahoma, wheat is almost an
+unknown crop. The warm, moist climatic conditions here favor the
+development of fungous diseases to such a degree that the plants are
+usually ruined or greatly injured at an early stage of growth. In
+Florida, as a rule, cereals are rarely cultivated except on the
+uplands at the northern end of the State. In a general way, corn and
+wheat are most successfully grown in the upper austral zone, or
+central States, while oats are best and most productive in the
+transition zone (or northern and Lake States and the Dakotas), or
+along the border of the upper austral and transition. The gradual
+acclimation of varieties of cereals, through years of selection and
+cultivation, has gone so far, however, that some varieties are now
+much better adapted to one zone than to another.
+
+=Spanish Silkworm Gut.=--The business of manufacturing silkworm gut in
+Spain is a considerable industry. The method of preparation is thus
+described in the Journal of the Society of Arts: After the silkworm
+grub has eaten enough mulberry leaves, and before it begins to spin,
+which is during the months of May and June, it is thrown into vinegar
+for several hours. The insect is killed and the substance which the
+grub, if alive, would have spun into a cocoon is drawn out from the
+dead worm into a much thicker and shorter silken thread, in which
+operation considerable dexterity and experience are required. Two
+thick threads from each grub are placed for about four hours in clear
+cold water, after which they are put for ten or fifteen minutes in a
+solution of some caustic. This loosens a fine outer skin on the
+threads, which is removed by the hands, the workman holding the
+threads in his teeth. The silk is then hung up to dry in a shady
+place, the sun rendering it brittle. In some parts of the country
+these silk guts are bleached with sulphur vapor, which makes them
+beautifully glossy and snow-white, while those naturally dried have a
+yellowish tint. The quality of the gut is decided according to the
+healthy condition of the worm, round indicating a good quality and
+flat an inferior one.
+
+=The Nests of Burrowing Bees.=--Prof. John B. Smith, having explained
+to his section of the American Association a method which has been
+successfully applied, of taking casts in plaster of Paris of the homes
+of burrowing insects, with their branchings, to the depth of six feet,
+described some of the results of its application. Bees, of the genus
+_Calletes_, dig vertically to the depth of eighteen inches or more,
+then burrow horizontally from two to five inches farther, and
+construct a thin, parchmentlike cell of saliva, in which the egg is
+deposited, with pollen and honey for the food of the larva. They then
+start a new horizontal burrow a little distance from the first, and
+perhaps a third, but no more. The vertical tubes are then filled up,
+so that when the bees come to life they must burrow from six to
+twenty-four inches before they can reach the surface. Another genus
+makes a twisted burrow; another makes a vertical burrow that may be
+six feet deep. About a foot below the surface it sends off a lateral
+branch, and in this it excavates a chamber from one to two and a half
+inches in diameter. Tubes are sent down from this chamber, as many
+perhaps as from six to twenty together, and these are lined with clay
+to make them water-tight. This bee, when it begins its burrow, makes
+an oblique gallery from four to six inches long before it starts in
+the vertical direction, and all the dirt is carried through this
+oblique gallery. Then the insect continues the tube vertically upward
+to just below the surface, and makes a small concealed opening to it
+here, taking care to pile no sand near it. This is the regular
+entrance to the burrow.
+
+
+MINOR PARAGRAPHS.
+
+In a report of an inspection of three French match factories,
+published as a British Parliamentary paper, Dr. T. Oliver records as
+his impressions and deductions that while until recently the match
+makers suffered severely from phosphorus poisoning, there is now
+apparently a reduction in the severe forms of the illness; that this
+reduction is attributable to greater care in the selection of the work
+people, to raising the age of admission into the factory, to medical
+examination on entrance, subsequent close supervision, and repeated
+dental examination; to personal cleanliness on the part of the
+workers; to early suspension on the appearance of symptoms of ill
+health; and to improved methods of manufacture. The French Government
+is furthering by all possible means new methods of manufacture in the
+hope of finding a safer one; and a match free from white phosphorus
+and still capable of striking anywhere is already manufactured.
+
+A mechanical and engineering section is to be organized in the
+Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, to be devoted to the consideration
+of subjects bearing upon the mechanic arts and the engineering
+problems connected therewith. The growth of the various departments of
+this institution--which has been fitly termed a "democratic learned
+society," from the close affiliation in it of the men of the
+professions and the men of the workshops--by natural accretion, and
+the steadily growing demands for the extension of its educational work
+during the past decade, have increased the costs for maintenance and
+administration and have been the cause of a deficit in nearly every
+year. A movement is now on foot, approved by the board of managers,
+and directed by a special committee, to secure for it an endowment,
+toward which a number of subscriptions ranging from two hundred and
+fifty to twenty-five hundred dollars have already been received.
+
+The earthquake which took place in Assam, June 12, 1897, was described
+by Mr. R. D. Oldham in the British Association as having been the most
+violent of which there is any record. The shock was sensible over an
+area of 1,750,000 square miles, and if it had occurred in England, not
+a house would have been left standing between Manchester and London.
+Landslips on an unprecedented scale were produced, a number of lakes
+were formed, and mountain peaks were moved vertically and
+horizontally. Monuments of solid stone and forest trees were broken
+across. Bridges were overthrown, displaced, and in some places thrust
+bodily up to a height of about twenty feet, and the rails on the
+railroads were twisted and bent. Earth fissures were formed over an
+area larger than the United Kingdom, and sand rents, from which sand
+and water were forced in solid streams to a height of three or four
+feet above the ground, were opened "in incalculable numbers." The loss
+of life was comparatively small, as the earthquake occurred about five
+o'clock in the afternoon, and the damage done was reduced by the fact
+that there were no large cities within the area of greatest violence;
+but in extent and capacity of destruction, as distinguished from
+destruction actually accomplished, this earthquake surpassed any of
+which there was historical mention, not even excepting the great
+earthquake of Lisbon in 1755.
+
+The first section of the electric railway up the Jungfrau, which is
+intended to reach the top of the mountain, was opened about the first
+of October, 1898. The line starts from the Little Scheidegg station of
+the existing Wengern Alp Railway, 6,770 feet above the sea, and
+ascends the mountain masses from the north side, passing the Eiger
+Glacier, Eiger Wand, Eismeer, and Jungfraujoch stations, to Lift,
+13,430 feet, whence the ascent is completed by elevator to the summit,
+13,670 feet. The road starts on a gradient of ten per cent, which is
+increased to twenty per cent about halfway to the Eiger Glacier
+station, and to twenty-five per cent, the steepest, after passing that
+station. There are about 85 yards in tunnel on the section now opened,
+but beyond the Eiger Glacier the road will not touch the surface
+except at the stations. About 250 yards of the long tunnel have been
+excavated so far. The stations beyond Eiger Wand will be built within
+the rock, and will be furnished with restaurants and beds. At the
+Eiger Wand and Eismeer stations passengers will contemplate the view
+through windows or balconies from the inside; but at the Jungfraujoch
+station tourists will be able to go out and take sledges for the great
+Aletsch Glacier. The cars will accommodate forty passengers each, and
+the company expects to complete the railroad by 1904.
+
+Alexander A. Lawes, civil engineer, of Sydney, Australia, suggests a
+plan of mechanical flight on beating wings as presenting advantages
+that transcend all other schemes. He believes that the amount of power
+required to operate wings and the difficulty in applying it are
+exaggerated beyond all measure. The wings or sustainers of the bird in
+flight, he urges, are held in the outstretched position without any
+exertion on its part; and many birds, like the albatross, sustain
+themselves for days at a stretch. "This constitutes its aërial
+support, and is analogous to the support derived by other animals from
+land and water." The sole work done by the bird is propulsion and
+elevation by the beating action of the wings. Mr. Adams's machine,
+which he does not say he has tried, is built in conformity to this
+principle, and its sails are modeled as nearly as possible in form and
+as to action with those of the bird. The aid of an air cylinder is
+further called in, through which a pressure is exerted balancing the
+wings. The wings are moved by treadles, and the author's picture of
+the aëronaut looks like a man riding an aërial bicycle.
+
+Carborundum, a substance highly extolled by its manufacturers
+as an abrasive, is composed of carbon and silicon in atomic
+proportions--thirty parts by weight of carbon and seventy of silicon.
+It is represented as being next to the diamond in hardness and as
+cutting emery and corundum with ease, but as not as tough as the
+diamond. It is a little more than one and a fifth times the weight of
+sand, is infusible at the highest attainable heat, but is decomposed
+in the electric arc, and is insoluble in any of the ordinary solvents,
+water, oils, and acids, even hydrofluoric acid having no effect upon
+it. Pure carborundum is white. In the commercial manufacture the
+crystals are produced in many colors and shades, partly as the result
+of impurities and partly by surface oxidation. The prevailing colors
+are green, black, and blue. The color has no effect upon the hardness.
+Crude carborundum, as taken from the furnace, usually consists of
+large masses or aggregations of crystals, which are frequently very
+beautifully colored and of adamantine luster.
+
+A peculiarity of Old English literary usage is pointed out by Prof.
+Dr. L. Kellner, of Vienna, as illustrated in a sentence like "the mob
+is ignorant, and they are often cruel." This is considered a bad
+solecism in modern English, but in Old and Middle English
+constructions of exactly the same kind are so often met with that it
+is impossible to account for them as slips and mistakes. They may be
+brought under several heads, as, Number (the same collective noun used
+as a singular and a plural); Case (the same verb or adjective
+governing the genitive and accusative, the genitive and dative, or the
+dative and accusative); Pronoun ("thou" and "ye" used in addressing
+the same person); Tense (past and perfect, or past and historical
+present used in the same breath); Mood (indicative and subjunctive
+used in the same clause). Finite verb and infinitive dependent on the
+same verb; simple and prepositional infinitives dependent on the same
+verb; infinitive and verbal noun used side by side; different
+prepositions dependent on the same verb, like Caxton's "He was eaten
+by bears and of lions"; direct and indirect speech alternating in the
+same clause. These facts, which are met with as late as 1611 (Bible,
+authorized version), point to the conclusion that what to us appears
+as a grammatical inconsistency was once considered a welcome break in
+the monotony of construction.
+
+Mr. Fischer Sigwart is quoted in the _Revue Scientifique_ as having
+studied the life of frogs for thirty years, and found that they are
+night wanderers, keeping comparatively quiet during the day and
+seeking their prey after dark. In the fall they leave their hunting
+grounds in the fields and woods and take refuge near swamps and ponds,
+passing the winter in the banks of rivers or the mud in the bottoms of
+ponds, whence they come out in the spring, when the process of
+reproduction begins. The frog is not sexually mature till it is four
+or five years old. The coupling process lasts from three to thirty
+days. Between its spring wakening and spawning the frog eats nothing
+except, perhaps, its own skin, which it moults periodically. After
+spawning, frogs leave the water and go to the fields and woods. They
+can be fed, when kept captive, upon insects and earthworms.
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+A relation has been discovered by Professor Dolbear and Carl A. and
+Edward A. Bessey between the chirping of crickets and the temperature,
+the chirps increasing as frequently as the temperature rises. The
+Besseys relate, in The American Naturalist, that when, one cool
+evening, a cricket was caught and brought into a warm room, it began
+in a few minutes to chirp nearly twice as rapidly as the out-of-door
+crickets, and that its rate very nearly conformed to the observed rate
+maintained other evenings out of doors under the same temperature
+conditions.
+
+C. Drieberg, of Colombo, Ceylon, records, in Nature, a rainfall at
+Nedunkeni, in the northern province of Ceylon, December 15 and 16,
+1897, of 31.76 inches in twenty-four hours. The highest previous
+records, as cited by him, are at Joyeuse, France, 31.17 inches in
+twenty-two hours; Genoa, 30 inches in twenty-six hours; on the hills
+above Bombay, 24 inches in one night; and on the Khasia Hills, India,
+30 inches in each of five successive days. The average annual rainfall
+at Nedunkeni has been 64.70 inches, but in 1897 the total amount was
+121.85 inches. The greatest annual rainfall is on the Khasia Hills,
+India, with 600 inches. The wettest station in Ceylon is Padupola, in
+the central province, with 230.85 inches as the mean of twenty-six
+years, but in 1897 the amount was 243.07 inches.
+
+The Korean postage stamps are printed in the United States. As
+explained in the United States consular reports, they are of four
+denominations, and all alike except in color and denomination. Of the
+inscriptions, the characters on the top are ancient Chinese, and those
+at the bottom, having the same meaning, are Korean; the characters on
+the right are Korean and those on the left are Chinese, both giving
+the denominations, with the English translation just below the center
+of the stamp. The plum blossom in each corner is the royal flower of
+the present Ye dynasty, which has been in existence more than five
+hundred years, and the figures at the corners of the center piece
+represent the four spirits that stand at the corners of the earth and
+support it on their shoulders. The national emblem in the center is an
+ancient Chinese phallic device.
+
+A paragraph in _La Nature_ calls to mind that the year 1898 was the
+"jubilee" of the sea serpent, the first mention of a sight of the
+monster--whether fabulous or not is still undecided--having been made
+by the captain and officers of the British ship Dædalus in 1848. They
+said they saw it between the Cape of Good Hope and St. Helena, and
+that it was about six hundred feet long. Since then views of sea
+serpents have been reported nearly every year, but none has ever been
+caught or seen so near or for so long a time as to be positively
+identified. There are several creatures of the deep which, seen for an
+instant, might be mistaken with the aid of an excited imagination for
+a marine serpent; and it is not wholly impossible that some
+descendants of the gigantic saurians of old may still be living in the
+ocean undetected by science.
+
+The results of a study of the winter food of the chickadee by Clarence
+M. Weed, of the New Hampshire College Agricultural Experiment Station,
+shows that more than half of it consists of insects, a very large
+proportion of which are taken in the form of eggs. Vegetation of
+various sorts made up a little less than a quarter of the food; but
+two thirds of this consisted of buds and bud scales that were
+accidentally introduced along with plant-lice eggs. These eggs made up
+more than one fifth of the entire food, and formed the most remarkable
+element of the bill of fare. The destruction of these eggs of plant
+lice is probably the most important service which the chickadee
+renders during its winter residence. Insect eggs of many other kinds
+were found in the food, among them those of the tent caterpillar and
+the fall cankerworm, and the larvæ of several kinds of moths,
+including those of the common apple worm.
+
+The Merchants' Association of San Francisco has been trying the
+experiment of sprinkling a street with sea water, and finds that such
+water binds the dirt together between the paving stones, so that when
+it is dry no loose dust is formed to be raised by the wind; that sea
+water does not dry so quickly as fresh water, so that it has been
+claimed when salt water has been used that one load of it is equal to
+three loads of fresh water. The salt water which is deposited on the
+street absorbs moisture from the air during the night, whereby the
+street is thoroughly moist during the early morning, and has the
+appearance of having been freshly sprinkled.
+
+The Tarahumare people, who live in the most inaccessible part of
+northern Mexico, were described by Dr. Krauss in the British
+Association as ignorant and primitive, and many still living in caves.
+What villages they have are at altitudes of about eight thousand feet
+above the sea level. They are a small and wiry people, with great
+powers of endurance. Their only food is _pinoli_, or maize, parched
+and ground. They have a peculiar drink, called _teshuin_, also
+produced from maize and manufactured with considerable ceremony, which
+tastes like a mixture of sour milk and turpentine. Their language is
+limited to about three hundred words. Their imperfect knowledge of
+numbers renders them unable to count beyond ten. Their religion seems
+to be a distorted and imperfect conception of Christian traditions,
+mixed with some of their own ideas and superstitions.
+
+The directory of the School of Anthropology of Paris, which consists
+chiefly of the professors in the institution, has chosen Dr. Capitan,
+professor of pathological anthropology, to succeed M. Gabriel de
+Mortillet, deceased, as professor of prehistoric anthropology. Dr.
+Capitan's former chair is suppressed.
+
+The highest cog-wheel railroad in Europe and probably in the world is
+the one from Zermatt, Switzerland, to the summit of the Görner Grat,
+upward of eleven thousand five hundred feet above the sea. It is
+between five and six miles long, and rises nearly fifty-two hundred
+feet, with a maximum grade of twenty per cent. There are two
+intermediate stations, at the Riffel Alp and the Riffelberg, and the
+ascent is made in ninety minutes. The height of this road will be
+surpassed by that of the one now being erected up the Jungfrau.
+
+Extraordinary advantages are claimed by Mrs. Theodore R. MacClure, of
+the State Board of Health, for Michigan as a summer and health-resort
+State. The State has more than sixteen hundred miles of lake line, the
+greater part of which is or can be utilized for summer-resort
+purposes; there are in its limits 5,173 inland lakes varying in size
+and having a total area of 712,864 square acres of water. The many
+rivers running through the State furnish on their banks delightful
+places for camping and for recreation.
+
+An action of bacteria on photographic plates was described by Prof. P.
+P. Frankland at the last meeting of the British Association. Ordinary
+bacterial cultures in gelatin and agar-agar are found to be capable of
+affecting the photographic film even at a distance of half an inch,
+while, when they are placed in contact with the film, definite
+pictures of the bacterial growths can be obtained. The action does not
+take place through glass, and therefore, as in the case of Dr. W. J.
+Russell's observations with some other substances, it is considered
+probably due to the evolution of volatile chemical materials which
+react with the sensitive film. Many varieties of bacteria exert the
+action, but to a different degree. Bacterial growths which are
+luminous in the dark are much more active than the non-luminous
+bacteria hitherto tried.
+
+Telephonic communication, it is said, has been established between a
+number of farms in Australia by means of wire fences. A correspondent
+of the Australian Agriculturist from a station near Colmar represents
+that it is easy to converse with a station eight miles distant by
+means of instruments connected on the wire fences, and that the same
+kind of communication has been established over a distance of eight
+miles. Several stations are connected in this way.
+
+We have to record the deaths of F. A. Obach, electrical engineer, at
+Grätz, Austria, December 27th, aged forty-six years. He was author of
+numerous papers on subjects of electrical science in English and
+German publications, and of lectures on the chemistry of India rubber
+and gutta percha; Dr. Reinhold Ehret, seismologist and author of books
+on earthquakes and seismometers, who died from an Alpine accident in
+the Susten Pass; Dr. Joseph Coats, professor of pathology at the
+University of Glasgow, and author of a manual of pathology, a work on
+tuberculosis, etc.; Thomas Hincks, F. R. S., author of books on marine
+zoölogy, February 2d; Major J. Hotchkiss, president in 1895 of the
+Geological Section of the American Association and author of papers on
+economic geology and engineering; Wilbur Wilson Thoburn, professor of
+biomechanics at Leland Stanford Junior University; Dr. Giuseppe
+Gibelli, professor of botany in the University of Turin; Dr. G.
+Wolffhüzel, professor of hygiene in the University of Göttingen; Dr.
+Dareste de Chavannes, author of researches in animal teratology, and
+formerly president of the French Society of Anthropology; Dr. Rupert
+Böck, professor of mechanics in the Technical Institute of Vienna;
+William Colenso, F. R. S., of New Zealand, naturalist and author of
+investigations of Maori antiquities and myths; Dr. Lench, assistant in
+the observatory at Zürich, Switzerland; Dr. Franz Lang, rector and
+teacher of natural history in the cantonal schools of Soleure,
+Switzerland, and one of the presidents of the Swiss Natural History
+Society, aged seventy-eight years; Dr. William Rutherford, professor
+of physiology in the University of Edinburgh, and author of several
+books in that science, February 21st, in his sixtieth year; and Sir
+Douglas Galton, president of the British Association in 1895 and an
+authority and author on sanitation, March 10th, in his seventy seventh
+year.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+ARTICLES MARKED WITH AN ASTERISK ARE ILLUSTRATED.
+
+
+ Academy della Crusca, The. (Frag.), 572
+
+ Adulteration of Butter with Glucose. (Frag.), 570
+
+ Allen, Grant. The Season of the Year, 230
+
+ America, Middle. Was it Peopled from Asia? E. S. Morse, 1
+
+ Animals' Bites. (Frag.), 430
+
+ Anthropology. Decorated Skulls and the Power ascribed to them
+ (Frag.), 570
+
+ " Estrays from Civilization. (Frag.), 573
+
+ " Huichol Indians of Jalisco. (Frag.), 574
+
+ " Lessons of. (Table), 411
+
+ " Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments. E. S. Morse*, 712
+
+ " Superstitions, Aboriginal, about Bones. (Frag.), 572
+
+ " Superstition and Crime. E. P. Evans, 206
+
+ Archæology. Earliest Writing in France. G. de Mortillet, 546
+
+ " Lake Dwelling, A Neolithic, 856
+
+ " Stone Age in Egypt. J. de Morgan, 202
+
+ Architectural Forms in Nature. S. Dellenbaugh*, 63
+
+ Astronomical Photographs, A Library of. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Astronomy. Bombardment, The Great. C. F. Holder*, 506
+
+ Atkinson, E. Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States, 145
+
+ " " The Wheat Problem again, 759
+
+ Atlantic Slope, The. (Frag.), 858
+
+
+ Bactrian Camel for the Klondike. (Frag.), 136
+
+ Barr, M. W. Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare*, 746
+
+ Bede, Chair of the Venerable. (Frag.), 283
+
+ Bees, Burrowing, The Nests of. (Frag.), 860
+
+ Bering Sea Controversy and the Scientific Expert. G. A. Clark, 654
+
+ Biological Survey, The United States. (Frag.), 856
+
+ Blackford, Charles Minor, Jr. Soils and Fertilizers, 392
+
+ Blake, I. W. Our Florida Alligator*, 330
+
+ Bombardment, The Great. C. F. Holder*, 506
+
+ Books Noticed 126, 274, 415, 559, 704, 845
+ Agriculture. Michigan Board, Thirty-fifth Annual Report of, 423.
+ Alexander, A. Theories of the Will in the History of
+ Philosophy, 566.
+ Andrews, C. M. The Historical Development of Modern Europe, 126.
+ Anthropology. Indians of Northern British Columbia, Facial Paintings
+ of. F. Boas, 710.
+ Archæology, Introduction to the Study of North American. C.
+ Thomas, 420.
+ Arthur and Trembly. Living Plants and their Properties, 564.
+ Astronomy, A Text-Book of Geodetic. J. F. Hayford, 129.
+ -- Corona and Coronet. M. L. Todd, 418.
+ -- Earth and Sky, The. E. S. Holden, 850.
+ -- Tides, The. G. H. Darwin, 705.
+ Bailey, L. H. Evolution of our Native Fruits, 704.
+ Baldwin, J. M. The Story of the Mind, 565.
+ Barnes, C. R. Form and Function of Plant Life, 277.
+ Barra, Eduardo de la. Literature arcaica, 280.
+ Beauchamp, W. M. Polished-Stone Articles used by New York Aborigines
+ before and during European Occupation, 279.
+ Beddard, F. E. Elementary Zoölogy, 706.
+ Béker, G. A. Rrimas, 280.
+ Binet, Alfred. L'Année Psychologique, 129.
+ Björling, P. R. Mechanical Engineer's Pocketbook, 132.
+ Boas, Franz. Facial Paintings of the Indians of Northern British
+ Columbia, 710.
+ Bolton, H. C. Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals
+ (1665-1895), 566.
+ Botany. Familiar Life in Field and Forest. F. S. Mathews, 418.
+ -- Fossil Plants. A. C. Seward, 127.
+ -- Fruits, The Evolution of our Native. L. H. Bailey, 704.
+ -- Function and Forms of Plant Life. C. R. Barnes, 277.
+ -- Les Végétaux et les Milieux Cosmiques, 132.
+ -- Living Plants and their Properties. Arthur and Trembly, 564.
+ -- Practical Plant Physiology, 128.
+ Brain Weight, Indexes of. McCurdy and Mohyliansky, 709.
+ Brush, George J. Manual of Determinative Mineralogy, 707.
+ Butler, Amos W. The Birds of Indiana, 422.
+ Carus-Wilson, C. A. Electro-Dynamics, 277.
+ Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals (1665-1895). H. C.
+ Bolton, 566.
+ Chemical Analysis, Manual of. G. S. Newth, 708.
+ Chemistry. Inorganic according to the Periodic Law. Venable and
+ Howe, 567.
+ -- Qualitative Analysis. E. A. Congdon, 567.
+ -- Short Manual of Analytical. John Muter, 419.
+ Clark, William J. Commercial Cuba, 564.
+ Conant, F. S. Biographical Pamphlet, 132.
+ Congdon, E. A. Brief Course in Qualitative Analysis, 567.
+ Cornelius, Hans. Psychologie als Erfahrungs-wissenschaft, 850.
+ Costantin, M. J. Les Végétaux et les Milieux Cosmiques, 132.
+ Creighton, J. E. An Introductory Logic, 706.
+ Crook, J. W. History of German Wage Theories, 708.
+ Cuba, Commercial. William J. Clark, 564.
+ Dana, E. S. Text-Book of Mineralogy, 848.
+ Dana, James D. Revised Text-Book of Geology, 418.
+ Darwin, George Howard. The Tides, 705.
+ Davis, H. S. Star Catalogues, 280.
+ Day, D. T. Mineral Resources of the United States, 852.
+ Detmer, W. Practical Plant Physiology, 128.
+ Drey, Sylvan. A Theory of Life, 280.
+ Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast. E. S. Holden, 850.
+ Economics. Commercial Cuba. William J. Clark, 564.
+ -- German Wage Theories, History of. J. W. Crook, 708.
+ -- Public Administration in Massachusetts. R. H. Whitten, 422.
+ Education. Greek Prose. H. C. Pearson, 708.
+ -- Handbook of Nature Study for Elementary Schools, 130.
+ -- Harold's Rambles. J. W. Troeger, 567.
+ -- On a Farm. N. L. Helm, 423.
+ -- United States Commissioner's Report for 1896-'97, 852.
+ Electricity. Electro-Dynamics. C. A. Carus-Wilson, 277.
+ -- Industrial. A. G. Elliott, 132.
+ -- The Discharge of, through Gases. J. J. Thomson, 565.
+ -- The Storage Battery. A. Treadwell, 421.
+ Elliott, A. G. Industrial Electricity, 132.
+ Engineering. Mechanical Engineer's Pocketbook, 132.
+ Ethnology. Explorations in Honduras. G. B. Gordon, 133.
+ Forestry. American Woods. R. B. Hough, 276.
+ -- Conditions in Wisconsin. F. Noth, 709.
+ Geikie, James. Earth Sculpture, 845.
+ Geography. Natural Advanced. Redway and Hinman, 421.
+ -- Philippine Islands and their People. D. C. Worcester, 415.
+ -- Physical, of New Jersey. R. D. Salisbury, 422.
+ Geological Bulletin, Part II, Vol. III, of the University of
+ Upsala, 280.
+ Geological Survey of Kansas. Vol. IV. S. W. Williston, 709.
+ Geology. Earth Sculpture. James Geikie, 845.
+ -- Indiana, Twenty-second Annual Report of Department of, 852.
+ -- Indian Territory, Reconnaissance of Coal Fields of. N. F.
+ Drake, 852.
+ -- Iowa Survey. Eighth volume, 851.
+ -- Mineralogy, Manual of Determinative, 707.
+ -- Mineralogy, Text-Book of. E. S. Dana, 848.
+ -- Mineral Resources of the United States. D. T. Day, 852.
+ -- New Jersey State Report for 1897, 851.
+ -- Panama, Geological History of the Isthmus of. R. T. Hill, 851.
+ -- Text-Book of. J. D. Dana, 418.
+ Giddings, Franklin H. Elements of Sociology, 559.
+ Goldman, Henry. The Arithmetician, 279.
+ Goode, G. B. Report of United States National Museum for 1895, 710.
+ Gordon, G. B. Ethnological Explorations in Honduras, 133.
+ Groos, Karl. The Play of Animals, 274.
+ Harris, Edith D. Story of Rob Roy, 709.
+ Hayford, J. P. Text-Book of Geodetic Astronomy, 129.
+ Helm, Nellie Lathrop. On a Farm, 423.
+ Hill, R. T. Geological History of the Isthmus of Panama, 851.
+ History. Commune, The. Lissagaray. Translated by E. M. Aveling, 423.
+ -- Europe, The Historical Development of Modern. C. M. Andrews, 126.
+ -- Napoleon III and his Court. Imbert de Saint-Amand, 422.
+ -- Reader for Elementary Schools. L. L. W. Wilson, 853.
+ -- Spanish Literature. J. Fitzmaurice-Kelly, 275.
+ Hoffman, F. S. The Sphere of Science, 128.
+ Holden, E. S. Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast, 1769-1897, 850.
+ -- The Earth and Sky, 850.
+ Holyoake, G. J. Jubilee History of the Leeds Co-operative
+ Society, 849.
+ Hough, R. B. American Woods, 276.
+ Iowa State University Bulletin, Vol. IV, No. 3, 279.
+ James, William. Human Immortality, 708.
+ Jayne, Horace. The Mammalian Anatomy of the Cat, 278.
+ Jordan, D. S. Lest we Forget, 568.
+ Keyser, L. S. News from the Birds, 567.
+ Lambert, R. A. Differential and Integral Calculus, 421.
+ Lange, D. Handbook of Nature Study for Elementary Schools, 130.
+ Lantern Land, In. (Monthly.) Allen and Carleton, 708.
+ Le Bon, Gustave. The Psychology of Peoples, 847.
+ Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society, Jubilee History of. G. J.
+ Holyoake, 849.
+ Library Bulletin, No. 9, New York State, 133.
+ Lissagaray. History of the Commune. Translated by E. M.
+ Aveling, 423.
+ Logic, An Introductory. J. E. Creighton, 706.
+ Lyte, E. O. Elementary English, 279.
+ McConachie, L. G. Congressional Committees, 131.
+ Mathematics. Differential and Integral Calculus. R. A. Lambert, 421.
+ -- Infinitesimal Analysis. William B. Smith, 849.
+ -- Lectures on the Geometry of Position. T. R. Reye. Translated.
+ Mathews, F. Schuyler. Familiar Life in Field and Forest, 418.
+ Maurice-Kelly, James Fitz. History of Spanish Literature, 275.
+ Meteorology. Wind Deposits, Mechanical Composition of. J. A.
+ Udden, 853.
+ Mills, Wesley. Nature and Development of Animal Intelligence, 562.
+ Mivart, St. George. The Groundwork of Science, 563.
+ Music, A Short Course in. Ripley and Tupper, 133.
+ Muter, John. Manual of Analytical Chemistry, 419.
+ Natural History. Animal Intelligence, Nature and Development of.
+ Wesley Mills, 562.
+ -- Birds, News from the. L. S. Keyser, 567.
+ -- Birds of Indiana, 422.
+ -- Four-footed Americans and their Kin. M. O. Wright, 563.
+ -- Solitary Wasps, Habits of. G. W. and E. P. Peckham, 851.
+ -- Taxidermy, The Art of. John Rowley, 420.
+ -- Wild Animals I have Known. E. S. Thompson, 417.
+ Newth, G. S. Manual of Chemical Analysis, 708.
+ Ornithology. How to Name the Birds. H. E. Parkhurst, 131.
+ Overton, Frank. Physiology, Applied, 277.
+ -- Physiology for Advanced Grades, 566.
+ Paleontology. Fossil Plants. A. C. Seward, 127.
+ Parkhurst, H. E. How to Name the Birds, 131.
+ Pearson, H. C. Greek Prose, 708.
+ Peckham, G. W. and E. P. Habits of the Solitary Wasps, 851.
+ Philosophy. Immortality, Human. William James, 708.
+ Physiology, Applied. Frank Overton, 277.
+ -- Applied, for Advanced Grades. F. Overton, 566.
+ Psychology. Child, The Study of the. A. R. Taylor, 564.
+ -- L'Année Psychologique, 129.
+ -- Mind, The Story of the. J. M. Baldwin, 565.
+ -- of Peoples. G. Le Bon, 847.
+ -- Play of Animals, The. Karl Groos, 274.
+ -- Psychologie als Erfahrungs-wissenschaft. Hans Cornelius, 850.
+ -- Will, Theories of the, in the History of Philosophy. A.
+ Alexander, 566.
+ Quinn, D. A. Stenotypy. Second edition, 279.
+ Redway, J. W., and Hinman K. Natural Advanced Geography, 421.
+ Reye, Theodor R. Lectures on the Geometry of Position.
+ Translated, 419.
+ Rice, W., and Eastman Barrett. Under the Stars, and Other
+ Verses, 134.
+ Richter, J. P. F. Selections from the Works of, 279.
+ Ripley, F. H., and Tupper, T. A Short Course in Music, 133.
+ Rollin, H. J. Yetta Ségal, 278.
+ Rowley, John. The Art of Taxidermy, 420.
+ Saint-Amand, Imbert de. Napoleon III and his Court, 422.
+ Salisbury, Rollin D. Physical Geography of New Jersey, 422.
+ Science, Groundwork of, The. St. George Mivart, 563.
+ -- Sphere of. F. S. Hoffman, 128.
+ Seward, A. C. Fossil Plants, 127.
+ Smith, William B. Infinitesimal Analysis, 849.
+ Sociology. Congressional Committees. L. G. McConachie, 131.
+ -- Currency Problems of the United States in 1897-'98. A. B.
+ Stickney, 133.
+ -- Elements of. F. H. Giddings, 559.
+ -- The State. W. Wilson, 130.
+ -- Workers, The. W. A. Wyckoff, 707.
+ Stickney, A. B. Currency Problem of the United States in
+ 1897-'98, 133.
+ Still, A. Alternating Currents and the Theory of Transformers, 133.
+ Story of the Railroad, The. Cy Warman, 848.
+ Taylor, A. R. The Study of the Child, 564.
+ Thomas, C. Introduction to North American Archæology, 129.
+ Thompson, Ernest Seton. Wild Animals I have Known, 417.
+ Thomson, J. J. The Discharge of Electricity through Gases, 565.
+ Todd, Mabel L. Corona and Coronet, 418.
+ Treadwell, Augustus. The Storage Battery, 421.
+ Troeger, John W. Harold's Rambles, 567.
+ Udden, J. A. Mechanical Composition of Wind Deposits, 853.
+ United States National Museum, Report of, for 1895, 710.
+ Venable and Howe. Inorganic Chemistry according to the Periodic
+ Law, 567.
+ Waring, George E., Jr. Street-Cleaning Methods in European
+ Cities, 131.
+ Warman, Cy. Story of the Railroad, 848.
+ Whitten, Robert H. Public Administration in Massachusetts, 422.
+ Wilson, L. L. W. History Reader, for Elementary Schools, 853.
+ Wilson, Woodrow. The State, 130.
+ Winter, H. L. Notes on Criminal Anthropology, 280.
+ Worcester, Dean C. The Philippine Islands and their People, 415.
+ Wright, Mabel Osgood. Four-footed Americans and their Kin, 563.
+ Wyckoff, W. A. The Workers, 707.
+ Zoölogy, Elementary. E. E. Beddard, 706.
+
+ Botany. English Names for Plants. (Frag.), 428
+
+ " Forest Planting on the Plains. (Frag.), 718
+
+ " Light and Vegetation. D. T. MacDougall, 193
+
+ " Plant Characters, Changes in. (Frag.), 286
+
+ " Poisonous Plants. (Frag.), 855
+
+ " Seeds, Dispersal of. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Boyer, M. J. Sketch of Clémence Royer. (With Portrait), 690
+
+ Brain Weights and Intellectual Capacity. J. Simms, 243
+
+ Brooks, William Keith. Mivart's Groundwork of Science, 450
+
+ Bullen, Frank T. Life on a South Sea Whaler, 818
+
+
+ Canada, The Interior of. (Frag.), 141
+
+ Catbird, The Coming of the. S. Trotter, 772
+
+ Causses of Southern France, The. (Frag.), 138
+
+ Cereals in the United States. Distribution of. (Frag.), 859
+
+ Clarke, F. W. Sketch. (With Portrait), 110
+
+ Clark, George A. The Scientific Expert and the Bering Sea
+ Controversy, 654
+
+ Climatic Evolution, Laws of. (Frag.), 855
+
+ Collier, J. The Evolution of Colonies, 52, 289, 577
+
+ Colonies, The Evolution of. J. Collier, 52, 289, 577
+
+ Commensals. (Frag.), 716
+
+ Cooking Schools in Philadelphia. (Frag.), 428
+
+ Cordillera Region of Canada. (Frag.), 283
+
+ Cram, W. E. Concerning Weasels*, 786
+
+ Criminology. California Penal System. C. H. Shinn*, 644
+
+ Cuba, The Climate of. (Frag.), 426
+
+ Curious Habit, Origin of a. (Frag.), 286
+
+
+ Dastre, M. Iron in the Living Body, 807
+
+ Dawson, E. R. The Torrents of Switzerland, 46
+
+ Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap. T. A. Jaggar*, 475
+
+ Decorated Skulls and the Power ascribed to them. (Frag.), 570
+
+ Dellenbaugh, F. S. Architectural Forms in Nature*, 63
+
+ Dodge, C. R. Possible Fiber Industries of the United States*, 15
+
+ Dorsey, George A. Up the Skeena River*, 181
+
+ D Q, The New Planet. (Frag.), 426
+
+ Dream and Reality. M. C. Melinand, 96
+
+ " " " (Table), 103
+
+ Dreams, The Stuff of. Havelock Ellis, 721
+
+ Dresslar, F. B. Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences, 781
+
+ Dutch Charity, A Practical. J. H. Gore, 103
+
+
+ Earliest Writing in France, The. G. de Mortillet, 542
+
+ Earthquakes, Modern Studies of. George Geraland, 362
+
+ Economics. Cereals, Distribution of, in the United States, 859
+
+ " Conquest, The Spirit of. J. Novicow, 518
+
+ " Gold, Marvelous Increase in Production of. A. E.
+ Outerbridge, Jr., 635
+
+ " Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States. E.
+ Atkinson, 145
+
+ " Wheat Problem, The. E. Atkinson, 759
+
+ Education and Evolution. (Smith.) (Corr.), 554
+
+ " and Evolution. (Table), 269
+
+ " German School Journeys. (Frag.), 573
+
+ " History of Scientific Instruction. J. N. Lockyer, 372, 529
+
+ " Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School. L. L. W.
+ Wilson, 313
+
+ " Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools. L. G. Oakley, 176
+
+ " Science and Culture. (Table), 842
+
+ " Science in. Sir A. Geikie, 672
+
+ " Series Method, The. A Comparison. Charlotte Taylor, 537
+
+ " Should Children under Ten learn to Read and Write? G. T. W.
+ Patrick, 382
+
+ " The Goal of. (Table), 118
+
+ Electricity. The Nernst Electric Lamp. (Frag.), 854
+
+ Ellis, Havelock. The Stuff that Dreams are made of, 721
+
+ Emerson and Evolution. (Alexander.) (Corr.), 555
+
+ " " " (Table), 558
+
+ Estrays from Civilization. (Frag.), 573
+
+ Ethnology. Was Middle America Peopled from Asia? E. S. Morse, 1
+
+ Evans, E. P. Superstition and Crime, 206
+
+ Evolution and Education. (Smith.) (Corr.), 554
+
+ " and Education. (Table), 269
+
+ " Extra Organic Factors of. (Frag.), 427
+
+ " of Pleasure Gardens. (Frag.), 717
+
+ " Social. What is it? Herbert Spencer, 35
+
+ " Survival of the Fittest. (Table), 844
+
+
+ Fads and Frauds. (Table), 701
+
+ Fiber Industries of the United States. C. R. Dodge*, 15
+
+ Florida Alligator, Our. I. W. Blake*, 330
+
+ Ford, R. Clyde. The Malay Language, 813
+
+ Forest Planting on the Plains. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Fossils as Criterions of Geological Ages. (Frag.), 427
+
+ Foundation, A Borrowed. (Table), 273
+
+ French Science, Two Gifts to. M. H. de Parville*, 81
+
+
+ Galax and its Affinities. (Frag.), 571
+
+ Geikie, Sir A. Science in Education, 672
+
+ Geography. Atlantic Slope, The. (Frag.), 858
+
+ " West Indies, Physical, of. F. L. Oswald, 802
+
+ Geological Romance, A. J. A. Udden*, 222
+
+ Geology. Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap. T. A. Jaggar*, 475
+
+ " Glacial, in America. D. S. Martin, 356
+
+ " Siamese Geological Theory, A. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Geraland, George. Modern Studies of Earthquakes, 362
+
+ German School Journeys. (Frag.), 573
+
+ Glacial Geology in America. D. S. Martin, 356
+
+ Glaciation and Carbonic Acid. (Frag.), 135
+
+ Gold, Marvelous Increase in Production of. A. E. Outerbridge, Jr., 635
+
+ Gore, J. H. A Practical Dutch Charity, 103
+
+ Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences. F. B. Dresslar, 781
+
+
+ Hanging an Elephant. (Frag.), 286
+
+ Herrings at Dinner. (Frag.), 574
+
+ Hitchcock, Charles H., Sketch of*, 260
+
+ Holder, C. F. The Great Bombardment*, 506
+
+ Huichol Indians of Jalisco. (Frag.), 574
+
+ Huxley Lecture, The. (Frag.), 425
+
+ Hygiene. Rebreathed Air as a Poison. (Frag.), 714
+
+ " Throat and Ear, Care of the. W. Scheppegrell, 791
+
+
+ Ide, Mrs. G. E. Shall we Teach our Daughters the Value of Money?, 686
+
+ Indian Idea of the "Midmost Self." (Frag.), 136
+
+ Ireland, W. Alleyn. The Labor Problem in the Tropics, 481
+
+ Iron in the Living Body. M. Dastre, 807
+
+ Iztaccihuatl (the White Lady Mountain). (Frag.), 569
+
+
+ Jaggar, T. A. Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap*, 475
+
+ Jastrow, Joseph. The Mind's Eye*, 289
+
+ Jordan, D. S. True Tales of Birds and Beasts, 352
+
+
+ Kekulé, Friedrich August. Sketch. (With Portrait), 401
+
+
+ Labor Problem in the Tropics. W. A. Ireland, 481
+
+ Lake Dwelling, A Neolithic. (Frag.), 856
+
+ Light and Vegetation. D. T. MacDougall, 193
+
+ Lockyer, J. N. A Short History of Scientific Instruction, 372, 529
+
+
+ MacDougall. Light and Vegetation, 193
+
+ Malay Language. R. C. Ford, 813
+
+ Martel, M. E. A. Speleology, or Cave Exploration, 255
+
+ Martin, D. S. Glacial Geology in America, 356
+
+ Melinand, M. C. Dream and Reality, 96
+
+ Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. M. W. Barr*, 746
+
+ Meteorology, Climatic Evolution, Laws of, 855
+
+ " Sahara, Winds of. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Miles, Manly, Sketch of. (With Portrait), 834
+
+ Mind's Eye, The. Joseph Jastrow*, 289
+
+ Missouri Botanical Garden, Additions to. (Frag.), 135
+
+ Molecular Asymmetry and Life. (Frag.), 139
+
+ Mongoose in Jamaica, The. C. W. Willis*, 86
+
+ Moon and the Weather, The. G. J. Varney. (Corr.), 118
+
+ Morgan, J. de. Stone Age in Egypt, 202
+
+ Morse, E. S. Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments.* (Frag.), 712
+
+ " " Was Middle America Peopled from Asia?, 1
+
+ Mortillet, Gabriel de, Sketch of. (With Portrait), 546
+
+ " " " The Earliest Writing in France, 542
+
+
+ Names, Technical and Popular. (Frag.), 285
+
+ Naples Aquarium, The. (School for the Study of Life under the Sea.) E.
+ H. Patterson, 668
+
+ Natural History. Catbird, The Coming of the. S. Trotter, 772
+
+ " " Commensals. (Frag.), 716
+
+ " " Herrings at Dinner. (Frag.), 574
+
+ " " Origin of a Curious Habit. (Frag.), 286
+
+ " " School for the Study of Life under the Sea. E. H.
+ Patterson, 668
+
+ " " Scorpion, My Pet. Norman Robinson*, 605
+
+ " " Weasels. W. E. Cram*, 786
+
+ Natural Selection and Fortuitous Variation. (Frag.), 141
+
+ Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School. L. L. W. Wilson, 313
+
+ Nernst Electric Lamp, The. (Frag.), 854
+
+ Neufeld, Dr. (Frag.), 140
+
+ Nicaragua and its Ferns. (Frag.), 137
+
+ Nontoxic Matches, The French. (Frag.), 857
+
+ Novicow, J. The Spirit of Conquest, 518
+
+
+ Oakley, Isabella G. Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools, 176
+
+ Observation, The Science of. C. L. Whittle*, 456
+
+ Ocean Currents, Drift of. (Frag.), 716
+
+ Oswald, F. L. Physical Geography of the West Indies, 802
+
+ Outerbridge, A. E., Jr. Marvelous Increase in Production of Gold, 635
+
+
+ Parville, M. H. de. Two Gifts to French Science*, 81
+
+ Patrick, G. T. W. Should Children under Ten learn to Read and
+ Write?, 382
+
+ Patterson, Eleanor H. A School for the Study of Life under the
+ Sea, 668
+
+ Pearls, American Fresh-Water. (Frag.), 859
+
+ Pedigree Photographs. (Frag.), 428
+
+ Physics. Utilization of Wave Power. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Physiology. Iron in the Living Body. M. Dastre, 807
+
+ Plant Characters, Changes in. (Frag.), 286
+
+ Plant Names, English. (Frag.), 428
+
+ Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools. Isabella G. Oakley, 163
+
+ Pleasure Gardens, Evolution of. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Plumandon, J. R. The Cause of Rain, 89
+
+ Poisonous Plants. (Frag.), 855
+
+ Portland Cement. (Frag.), 856
+
+ Potteries, Doulton. (Frag.), 430
+
+ Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments. E. S. Morse*, 712
+
+ Psychology. Dreams. Havelock Ellis, 721
+
+ " Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences. F. B.
+ Dresslar, 781
+
+ Pulpit, A Voice from the. (Table), 409
+
+
+ Rabies Bacillus, The. (Frag.), 284
+
+ Racial Geography of Europe. W. Z. Ripley, 163, 338, 614
+
+ Rain, The Cause of. J. R. Plumandon, 89
+
+ Rebreathed Air as a Poison. (Frag.), 714
+
+ Ripley, W. Z. Racial Geography of Europe, 163, 338, 614
+
+ Robinson, Norman. My Pet Scorpion*, 605
+
+ Royer, Clémence, Sketch of. (With Portrait.) M. J. Boyer, 690
+
+ Russell's Photographic Researches. (Frag.), 139
+
+
+ Saghalin, The Island of. (Frag.), 285
+
+ St. Kildans, The. (Frag.), 284
+
+ Scheppegrell, W. Care of the Throat and Ear, 791
+
+ Science, A Doubtful Appendix to. (Table), 120
+
+ " and Culture. (Table), 842
+
+ " Christian. The New Superstition. (Table), 557
+
+ " Education in. (Words of a Master.) (Table), 699
+
+ " Mivart's Groundwork of. W. K. Brooks, 450
+
+ " The Advance of. (Table), 415
+
+ Scientific Instruction, A Short History of. J. N. Lockyer, 372, 529
+
+ Scorpion, My Pet. Norman Robinson*, 605
+
+ Seasons of the Year, The. Grant Allen, 230
+
+ Seeds, Dispersal of. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Series Method, The. A Comparison. Charlotte Taylor, 537
+
+ Shinn, Charles Howard. The California Penal System*, 644
+
+ Siamese Geological Theory, A. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Silkworm Gut, Spanish. (Frag.), 860
+
+ Simms, Joseph. Brain Weights and Intellectual Capacity, 243
+
+ Skeena River, Up the. George A. Dorsey*, 181
+
+ Smell, The Physics of. (Frag.), 283
+
+ Smith, Franklin. Politics as a Form of Civil War, 588
+
+ Smith, Stephen. Vegetation a Remedy for the Summer Heat of
+ Cities*, 433
+
+ Social Decadence, An Example of. (Table), 412
+
+ Sociology. California Penal System. C. H. Shinn*, 644
+
+ " Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. M. W. Barr*, 746
+
+ " Politics as a Form of Civil War. F. Smith, 588
+
+ " The Foundation of. (Giddings.) (Corr.), 553
+
+ Soils and Fertilizers. C. M. Blackford, Jr., 392
+
+ South Sea Whaler, Life on a. F. T. Bullen, 818
+
+ Spain's Decadence, The Cause of. (Table), 122
+
+ Speleology, or Cave Exploration. M. E. A. Martel, 255
+
+ Spencer, Herbert. What is Social Evolution?, 35
+
+ Spirit of Conquest, The. J. Novicow, 518
+
+ Stone Age in Egypt, The. J. de Morgan, 202
+
+ Submarine Telegraphy, Early. (Frag.), 569
+
+ Superstition and Crime. E. P. Evans, 206
+
+ " Aboriginal, about Bones. (Frag.), 572
+
+ " The New. (Table), 557
+
+ Survival of the Fittest. (Table), 844
+
+ Switzerland, The Torrents of. E. B. Dawson, 46
+
+
+ Taxation, Principles of. Hon. D. A. Wells, 319, 490, 736
+
+ Taylor, Charlotte. The Series Method, 537
+
+ Throat and Ear, Care of the. W. Scheppegrell, 791
+
+ Toes in Walking, The. (Frag.), 429
+
+ Trade Hunting, Scientific. (Frag.), 140
+
+ Trait, A, Common to us all. (Frag.), 429
+
+ Travel. Up the Skeena River. George A. Dorsey, 181
+
+ Tree Planting in Arid Regions. (Frag.), 282
+
+ Trees as Land Formers. (Frag.), 858
+
+ Trotter, Spencer. The Coming of the Catbird, 772
+
+ True Tales of Birds and Beasts. D. S. Jordan, 352
+
+
+ Udden, J. A. A Geological Romance*, 222
+
+
+ Varney, G. J. The Moon and the Weather. (Corr.), 118
+
+ Vegetation a Remedy against the Summer Heat of Cities. Dr. S.
+ Smith, 433
+
+
+ War, The "Hell" of. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Wave Length and other Measurements. (Frag.), 137
+
+ Wave Power, The Utilization of. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Weasels, Concerning. W. E. Cram*, 786
+
+ Weir, J., Jr. The Herds of the Yellow Ant*, 75
+
+ Wells, David Ames, Death of. (Table), 271
+
+ " " " Principles of Taxation, 319, 490, 736
+
+ West Indies, Physical Geography of. F. L. Oswald, 802
+
+ Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States. E. Atkinson, 145
+
+ Wheat Problem, The, again. E. Atkinson, 759
+
+ White Lady Mountain, The. (Frag.), 569
+
+ Whittle, C. L. The Science of Observation*, 456
+
+ Willis, C. W. The Mongoose in Jamaica*, 86
+
+ Wilson, L. L. W. Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School, 313
+
+ Winds of the Sahara. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Words of a Master. (Table), 699
+
+
+ Yellow Ant, The Herds of the. J. Weir, Jr.*, 75
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+
+Words surrounded by _ are italicized.
+
+Words surrounded by = are bold.
+
+Obvious printer's errors have been repaired, other inconsistent
+spellings have been kept, including inconsistent use of hyphen (e.g.
+"co-operative" and "cooperative") and capitalisation (e.g.
+"Fresh-Water" and "Fresh-water").
+
+Captions added to captionless illustrations.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Appletons' Popular Science Monthly,
+April 1899, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE, APRIL 1899 ***
+
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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY, April 1899, Vol. LIV, No. 6, edited by WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS
+ </title>
+ <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg"/>
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+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Appletons' Popular Science Monthly, April
+1899, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Appletons' Popular Science Monthly, April 1899
+ Volume LIV, No. 6, April 1899
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: William Jay Youmans
+
+Release Date: December 30, 2013 [EBook #44544]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE, APRIL 1899 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Judith Wirawan, Greg Bergquist, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by Biodiversity Heritage Library.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p class="center">
+Established by Edward L. Youmans</p>
+
+<h1>APPLETONS'<br/>
+POPULAR SCIENCE<br/>
+MONTHLY</h1>
+
+<p class="center space-above spaced">EDITED BY<br/>
+<big>WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS</big></p>
+
+<p class="center space-above spaced">VOL. LIV<br/>
+
+NOVEMBER, 1898, TO APRIL, 1899</p>
+
+<p class="center space-above">NEW YORK<br/>
+D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br/>
+1899
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1899,<br/>
+By</span> D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.<br/>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Vol. LIV.</span><span class="smcap rspace lspace">Established by Edward L. Youmans.</span><span class="smcap">No. 6.</span><br/>
+</p>
+
+<p class="center space-above"><big>APPLETONS'
+POPULAR SCIENCE
+MONTHLY.</big></p>
+
+<p class="center">APRIL, 1899.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>EDITED BY WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center">CONTENTS.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="CONTENTS">
+<tr><td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><span class="smcap lowercase">PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">I.</td><td align="left">The Stuff that Dreams are made of. By <span class="smcap">Havelock Ellis</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_721">721</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">II.</td><td align="left">The Best Methods of Taxation. By the Late Hon. <span class="smcap">David A. Wells</span>. Part I</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_736">736</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">III.</td><td align="left">Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. By <span class="smcap">Martin W. Barr</span>, M. D. (Illustrated.)</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_746">746</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">IV.</td><td align="left">The Wheat Problem again. By <span class="smcap">Edward Atkinson</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_759">759</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">V.</td><td align="left">The Coming of the Catbird. By <span class="smcap">Spencer Trotter</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_772">772</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VI.</td><td align="left">Guessing, as Influenced by Number Preferences. By <span class="smcap">F. B. Dresslar</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_781">781</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VII.</td><td align="left">Concerning Weasels. By <span class="smcap">William E. Cram</span>. (Illustrated.)</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_786">786</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VIII.</td><td align="left">Care of the Throat and Ear. By <span class="smcap">W. Scheppegrell</span>, M. D.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_791">791</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">IX.</td><td align="left">The Physical Geography of the West Indies. I. The Mammals of the Antilles. By Dr. <span class="smcap">F. L. Oswald</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_802">802</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">X.</td><td align="left">Iron in the Living Body. By <span class="smcap">M. A. Dastre</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_807">807</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XI.</td><td align="left">The Malay Language. By Prof. <span class="smcap">R. Clyde Ford</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_813">813</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XII.</td><td align="left">Life on a South Sea Whaler. By <span class="smcap">Frank T. Bullen</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_818">818</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIII.</td><td align="left">Sketch of Manly Miles. (With Portrait.)</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_834">834</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIV.</td><td align="left">Editor's Table: Science and Culture.&mdash;Survival of the Fittest</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_842">842</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XV.</td><td align="left">Scientific Literature</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_845">845</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVI.</td><td align="left">Fragments of Science</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_854">854</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVII.</td><td align="left">Index to Vol. LIV</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_865">865</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center space-above">
+NEW YORK:<br/>
+D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,<br/>
+72 FIFTH AVENUE.<br/>
+<br/>
+<span class="smcap rspace">Single Number, 50 Cents.</span><span class="smcap lspace">Yearly Subscription, $5.00.</span><br/>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center"><small><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1898, by</span> D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.<br/>
+Entered at the Post Office at New York, and admitted for transmission through the mails at second-class rates.</small><br/>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_721" id="Page_721">[Pg 721]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/illo_005_manly.jpg" width="400" height="514" alt="MANLY MILES." />
+<span class="caption">MANLY MILES.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[Pg 433]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><big>APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE
+MONTHLY.</big></p>
+
+<p class="center space-above">FEBRUARY, 1899.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>THE STUFF THAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By HAVELOCK ELLIS.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>In our dreams we are taken back into an earlier world. It is a
+world much more like that of the savage, the child, the criminal,
+the madman, than is the world of our respectable civilized waking
+life. That is, in large part, it must be confessed, the charm of
+dreams. It is also the reason of their scientific value. Through
+our dreams we may realize our relation to stages of evolution we
+have long left behind, and by the self-vivisection of our sleeping life
+we may learn to know something regarding the mind of primitive
+man and the source of some of his beliefs, thus throwing light on the
+facts we obtain by ethnographic research.</p>
+
+<p>This aspect of dreams has not always been kept steadily in sight,
+though it can no longer be said that the study of dreams is neglected.
+From one point of view or another&mdash;not only by the religious
+sect which, it appears, constitutes a "Dream Church" in Denmark,
+but by such carefully inquisitive investigators as those who have been
+trained under the inspiring influence of Prof. Stanley Hall&mdash;dreaming
+is seriously studied. I need not, therefore, apologize for the fact
+that I have during many years taken note from time to time and
+recorded the details and circumstances of vivid dreams when I
+could study their mechanism immediately on awakening, and that I
+have occupied myself, not with the singularities and marvels of dreaming&mdash;of
+which, indeed, I know little or nothing&mdash;but with their
+simplest and most general laws and tendencies. A few of these laws
+and tendencies I wish to set forth and illustrate. The interest of such
+a task is twofold. It not only reveals to us an archaic world of vast
+emotions and imperfect thoughts, but by helping us to attain a clear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_722" id="Page_722">[Pg 722]</a></span>
+knowledge of the ordinary dream processes, it enables us in advance
+to deal with many of the extraordinary phenomena of dreaming, sometimes
+presented to us by wonder-loving people as awesomely mysterious,
+if not indeed supernatural. The careful analysis of mere ordinary
+dreams frequently gives us the key to these abnormal dreams.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the chief and most frequent tendency in the mechanism
+of dreaming is that by which isolated impressions from waking life
+flow together in dreams to be welded into a whole. There is then
+produced, in the strictest sense, a confusion. For instance, a lady,
+who in the course of the day has admired a fine baby and bought a
+big fish for dinner, dreams with horror and surprise of finding a
+fully developed baby in a large codfish. The confusion may be more
+remote, embodying abstract ideas and without reference to recent
+impressions. Thus I dreamed that my wife was expounding to me a
+theory by which the substitution of slates for tiles in roofing had
+been accompanied by, and intimately associated with, the growing
+diminution of crime in England. Amid my wife's rather contemptuous
+opposition, I opposed this theory, pointing out the picturesqueness
+of tiles, their cheapness, greater comfort both in winter and summer,
+but at the same time it occurred to me as a peculiar coincidence
+that tiles should have a sanguinary tinge suggestive of criminal bloodthirstiness.
+I need scarcely say that this bizarre theory had never
+suggested itself to my waking thoughts. There was, however, a real
+connecting link in the confusion&mdash;the redness&mdash;and it is a noteworthy
+point, of great significance in the interpretation of dreams, that that
+link, although clearly active from the first, remained subconscious
+until the end of the dream, when it presented itself as an entirely
+novel coincidence.</p>
+
+<p>The best simile for the mechanism of the most usual type of
+dream phenomena is the magic lantern. Our dreams are like dissolving
+views in which the dissolving process is carried on swiftly
+or slowly, but always uninterruptedly, so that, at any moment, two
+(often indeed more) incongruous pictures are presented to consciousness
+which strives to make one whole of them, and sometimes succeeds
+and is sometimes baffled. Or we may say that the problem presented
+to dreaming consciousness resembles that experiment in which psychologists
+pronounce three wholly unconnected words, and require
+the subject to combine them at once in a connected sentence. It is
+unnecessary to add that such analogies fail to indicate the subtle complexity
+of the apparatus which is at work in the manufacture of
+dreams.</p>
+
+<p>It is the presence of the strife I have just referred to between
+apparently irreconcilable groups of images, in the effort of overcoming
+the critical skepticism of sleeping consciousness&mdash;a feeble skepticism,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_723" id="Page_723">[Pg 723]</a></span>
+it may be, but, as many people do not seem to recognize, a real
+skepticism&mdash;that the impressive emotional effects of dreams are often
+displayed. It sometimes happens that two irreconcilable groups of
+impressions reach sleeping consciousness, one flowing from a recent
+stratum of memories, the other from an older stratum. A typical
+form of this phenomenon often occurs in our dreams of dead friends.
+Professor Sully remarks that in dreams of the dead "awareness of the
+fact of death wholly disappears, or reduces itself to a vague feeling
+of something delightfully wonderful in the restored presence."
+That, however, as I have elsewhere shown,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> is not the typical process
+in dreaming of the dead; although in the later dreams of those who
+often see their dead friends during sleep, the process is abbreviated,
+and the friend's presence is accepted without a struggle&mdash;a very interesting
+point, for it tends to show that in dreams, as in the hypnotic
+state, the recollection of previous similar states of consciousness persists,
+and the illusion is strengthened by repetition.</p>
+
+<p>In typical dreams of a dead friend there is a struggle between
+that stream of recent memories which represents him as dead and
+that older stream which represents him as living. These two streams
+are inevitably caused by the fact of death, which sets up a barrier between
+them and renders one set of memories incongruous with the
+other set. In dreams we are not able to arrange our memories chronologically,
+but we are perpetually reasoning and striving to be logical.
+Consequently the two conflicting streams of memories break against
+each other in restless conflict, and sleeping consciousness endeavors
+to propound some theory which will reconcile them. The most frequent
+theories are, as I have found, either that the news of the friend's
+death was altogether false, or that he had been buried alive by mistake,
+or else that having really died his soul has returned to earth for
+a brief space. The mental and emotional conflict which such dreams
+involve renders them very vivid. They make a profound impression
+even after awakening, and for some sensitive persons are too sacred to
+speak of. Even so cautious and skeptical a thinker as Renan, when,
+after the death of his beloved sister Henriette, he dreamed more than
+once that she had been buried alive, and that he heard her voice calling
+to him from her grave, had to still his horrible suspicions by the
+consideration that she had been tended by experienced doctors. On
+less well-balanced minds, and more especially in primitive stages of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_724" id="Page_724">[Pg 724]</a></span>
+civilization, we can scarcely doubt that such dreams, resting as they
+do on the foundation of consciousness, have had a powerful influence
+in persuading man that death is but a transient fact, and that
+the soul is independent of the body. I do not wish to assert that they
+suffice to originate the belief.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>While dreams are thus often formed by the molding together of
+more or less congruous images by a feeble but still intelligent sleeping
+activity, another factor is to be found in the involuntary wavering
+and perpetually mere meaningless change of dream imagery.
+Such concentration as is possible during sleep always reveals a shifting,
+oscillating, uncertain movement of the vision before us. We are, as
+it were, reading a sign-post in the dusk, or making guesses at the names
+of the stations as our express train flashes by the painted letters.
+Any one who has ever been subject to the hypnagogic imagery sometimes
+seen in the half-waking state, or who has ever taken mescal,
+knows that it is absolutely impossible to fix an image. It is this
+factor in dreams which causes them so often to baffle our analysis. In
+addition to the mere, as it were, mechanical flowing together of
+images and ideas, and the more or less intelligent molding of them
+into a whole, there is thus a failure of sleeping attention to fix definitely
+the final result&mdash;a failure which itself may evidently serve to
+carry on the dream process by suggesting new images and combinations.
+I dreamed once that I was with a doctor in his surgery, and
+saw in his hand a note from a patient saying that doctors were fools
+and did him no good, but he had lately taken some <i>selvdrolla</i>, recommended
+by a friend, and it had done him more good than anything,
+so please send him some more. I saw the note clearly, not, indeed,
+being conscious of reading it word by word, but only of its meaning
+as I looked at it; the one word I actually seemed to see, letter by letter,
+was the name of the drug, and that changed and fluctuated beneath
+my vision as I gazed at it, the final impression being <i>selvdrolla</i>. The
+doctor took from a shelf a bottle containing a bright yellow oleaginous
+fluid, and poured a little out, remarking that it had lately come into
+favor, especially in uric-acid disorders, but was extremely expensive.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_725" id="Page_725">[Pg 725]</a></span>
+I expressed my surprise, having never before heard of it. Then,
+again to my surprise, he poured rather copiously from the bottle on
+to a plate of food, saying, in explanation, that it was pleasant to
+take and not dangerous. This was a vivid morning dream, and on
+awakening I had no difficulty in detecting the source of its various
+minor details, especially a note received on the previous evening and
+containing a dubious figure, the precise nature of which I had used
+my pocket lens to determine. But what was <i>selvdrolla</i>, the most
+vivid element of the dream? I sought vainly among my recent memories,
+and had almost renounced the search when I recalled a large
+bottle of salad oil seen on the supper table the previous evening; not,
+indeed, resembling the dream bottle, but containing a precisely similar
+fluid. <i>Selvdrolla</i> was evidently a corruption of "salad oil." I
+select this dream to illustrate the uncertainty of dream consciousness,
+because it also illustrates at the same time the element of certainty in
+dream <i>subconsciousness</i>. Throughout my dream I remained, consciously,
+in entire ignorance as to the real nature of <i>selvdrolla</i>, yet
+a latent element in consciousness was all the time presenting it to
+me in ever-clearer imagery.</p>
+
+<p>While the confusions of dreaming are usually the union of unconnected
+streams of imagery which have, as it were, come from
+widely remote parts of the memory system to strike together at the
+narrow focus of shaping consciousness, in some rarer cases the fused
+images are really suggested by analogy and are not accidental.
+Maury records successions of dream imagery strung together by verbal
+resemblances; I have found such dreams rare, but other forms of
+association fairly common. Thus I once dreamed that I was with a
+dentist who was about to extract a tooth from a patient. Before
+applying the forceps he remarked to me (at the same time setting
+fire to a perfumed cloth at the end of something like a broomstick
+in order to dissipate the unpleasant odor) that it was the largest
+tooth he had ever seen. When extracted I found that it was indeed
+enormous, in the shape of a caldron, with walls an inch
+thick. Taking from my pocket a tape measure (such as I always
+carry in waking life) I founds the diameter to be not less than
+twenty-five inches; the interior was like roughly hewn rock, and
+there were sea-weeds and lichenlike growths within. The size of
+the tooth seemed to me large, but not extraordinarily so. It is well
+known that pain in the teeth, or the dentist's manipulations, cause
+those organs to seem of extravagant extent; in dreams this tendency
+rules unchecked; thus a friend once dreamed that mice were playing
+about in a cavity in her tooth. But for the dream first quoted
+there was no known dental origin; it arose solely or chiefly from a
+walk during the previous afternoon among the rocks of the Cornish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_726" id="Page_726">[Pg 726]</a></span>
+coast at low tide, and the fantastic analogy, which had not occurred to
+waking consciousness, suggested itself during sleep.</p>
+
+<p>The following dream illustrates an association of quite a different
+order: I imagined I was sitting at a window, at the top of a
+house, writing. As I looked up from my table I saw, with all the
+emotions naturally accompanying such a sight, a woman in her night
+dress appear at a lofty window some distance off and throw herself
+down. I went on writing, however, and found that in the course of
+my literary employment&mdash;I am not clear as to its precise nature&mdash;the
+very next thing I had to do was to describe exactly such a scene as
+I had just witnessed. I was extremely puzzled at such an extraordinary
+coincidence: it seemed to me wholly inexplicable. Such dreams,
+reduplicating the imagery in a new sensory medium, are fairly common,
+with me at all events, though I can not easily explain them.
+The association is not so much of analogy as of sensory media, in this
+case the visual image becoming a verbal motor image. In other cases
+a scene is first seen as in reality, and then in a picture. It is interesting
+to observe the profound astonishment with which sleeping
+consciousness apperceives such simple reduplication.</p>
+
+<p>It sometimes happens that the confused imagery of dreams includes
+elements drawn from forgotten memories&mdash;that is to say, that
+sleeping consciousness can draw on faint impressions of the past which
+waking consciousness is unable to reach. This is a very important
+type of dream because of its bearing on the explanation of certain
+dream phenomena which we are sometimes asked to bow down before
+as supernatural. I may illustrate what I mean by the following
+very instructive case. I woke up recalling the chief items of a rather
+vivid dream: I had imagined myself in a large old house, where the
+furniture, though of good quality, was ancient, and the chairs threatened
+to give way as one sat on them. The place belonged to one Sir
+Peter Bryan, a hale old gentleman who was accompanied by his son
+and grandson. There was a question of my buying the place from
+him, and I was very complimentary to the old gentleman's appearance
+of youthfulness, absurdly affecting not to know which was the
+grandfather and which the grandson. On awaking I said to myself
+that here was a purely imaginative dream, quite unsuggested by any
+definite experiences. But when I began to recall the trifling incidents
+of the previous day I realized that that was far from being the
+case. So far from the dream having been a pure effort of imagination
+I found that every minute item could be traced to some separate
+source. The name of Sir Peter Bryan alone completely baffled me;
+I could not even recall that I had at that time ever heard of any one
+called Bryan. I abandoned the search and made my notes of the
+dream and its sources. I had scarcely done so when I chanced to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_727" id="Page_727">[Pg 727]</a></span>
+take up a volume of biographies which I had glanced through carelessly
+the day before. I found that it contained, among others, the
+lives of Lord <i>Peter</i>borough and George <i>Bryan</i> Brummel. I had
+certainly seen those names the day before; yet before I took up the
+book once again it would have been impossible for me to recall the
+exact name of Beau Brummel, and I should have been inclined to say
+that I had never even heard the name of Bryan. I repeat that I
+regard this as, psychologically, a most instructive dream. It rarely
+happens (though I could give one or two more examples from the
+experience of friends) that we can so clearly and definitely demonstrate
+the presence of a forgotten memory in a dream; in the case
+of old memories it is usually impossible. It so happened that the forgotten
+memory which in this case re-emerged to sleeping consciousness
+was a fact of no consequence to myself or any one else. But
+if it had been the whereabouts of a lost deed or a large sum of money,
+and I had been able to declare, as in this case, that the impression
+received in my dream had never to my knowledge existed in waking
+consciousness, and yet were to declare my faith that the dream probably
+had a simple and natural explanation, on every hand I should
+be sarcastically told that there is no credulity to match the credulity
+of the skeptic.</p>
+
+<p>The profound emotions of waking life, the questions and problems
+on which we spread our chief voluntary mental energy, are not
+those which usually present themselves at once to dream consciousness.
+It is, so far as the immediate past is concerned, mostly the
+trifling, the incidental, the "forgotten" impressions of daily life
+which reappear in our dreams. The psychic activities that are awake
+most intensely are those that sleep most profoundly. If we preserve
+the common image of the "stream of consciousness," we might say
+that the grave facts of life sink too deeply into the flood to reappear
+at once in the calm of repose, while the mere light and buoyant
+trifles of life, flung carelessly in during the day, at once rise to the
+surface, to dance and mingle and evolve in ways that this familiar
+image of "the stream of consciousness" will not further help us to
+picture.</p>
+
+<p>So far I have been discussing only one of the great groups into
+which dreams may be divided. Most investigators of dreams agree
+that there are two such groups, the one having its basis in memories,
+the other founded on actual physical sensations experienced at the
+moment of dreaming and interpreted by sleeping consciousness. Various
+names have been given to these two groups; Sully, for instance,
+terms them central and peripheral. Perhaps the best names, however,
+are those adopted by Miss Calkins, who calls the first group
+representative, the second group presentative.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_728" id="Page_728">[Pg 728]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All writers on dreaming have brought forward presentative
+dreams, and there can be no doubt that impressions received during
+sleep from any of the external senses may serve as a basis for dreams.
+I need only record one example to illustrate this main and most obvious
+group of presentative dreams. I dreamed that I was listening to
+a performance of Haydn's Creation, the chief orchestral part of the
+performance seeming to consist chiefly of the very realistic representation
+of the song of birds, though I could not identify the note
+of any particular bird. Then followed solos by male singers, whom
+I saw, especially one who attracted my attention by singing at the
+close in a scarcely audible voice. On awakening the source of the
+dream was not immediately obvious, but I soon realized that it was
+the song of a canary in another room. I had never heard Haydn's
+Creation, except in fragments, nor thought of it at any recent period;
+its reputation as regards the realistic representation of natural sounds
+had evidently caused it to be put forward by sleeping consciousness
+as a plausible explanation of the sounds heard, and the visual centers
+had accepted the theory.</p>
+
+<p>It is a familiar fact that internal sensations also form a frequent
+basis of dreams. All the internal organs, when disturbed or distended
+or excited, may induce dreams, and especially that aggravated
+kind of dreaming which we call nightmare. This fact is so
+well known that such dreams are usually dismissed without further
+analysis. It is a mistake, however, so to dismiss them, for it seems
+probable that it is precisely here that we may find the most instructive
+field of dream psychology. On account of the profoundly emotional
+effect of such dreams they are very interesting to study, but this very
+element of emotion renders them somewhat obscure objects of study.
+I do not venture to offer with absolute certainty one or two novel suggestions
+which dream experiences have led me to regard as probable.</p>
+
+<p>Dreams of flying have so often been recorded&mdash;from the time of
+St. Jerome, who mentions that he was subject to them&mdash;that they
+may fairly be considered to constitute one of the commonest forms
+of dreaming. All my life, it seems to me, I have at intervals had
+such dreams in which I imagined myself rhythmically bounding into
+the air and supported on the air. These dreams, in my case at all
+events, are not generally remembered immediately on awakening
+(seeming to indicate that they depend on a cause which does not usually
+come into action at the end of sleep), but they leave behind them
+a vague but profound sense of belief in their reality and reasonableness.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
+Several writers have attempted to explain this familiar phenomenon.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_729" id="Page_729">[Pg 729]</a></span>
+Gowers considers that a spontaneous contraction of the
+stapedius muscle of the ear during sleep causes a sensation of falling.
+Stanley Hall, who has himself from childhood had dreams of
+flying, boldly argues that we have here "some faint reminiscent atavistic
+echo from the primeval sea"; and that such dreams are really
+survivals&mdash;psychic vestigial remains&mdash;taking us back to the far past,
+in which man's ancestors needed no feet to swim or float. Such a
+theory may accord with the profound conviction of reality that accompanies
+such dreams, though this may be more simply accounted
+for, even by mere repetition, as with dreams of the dead; but it is
+rather a hazardous theory, and it seems to me infinitely more probable
+that such dreams are a misinterpretation of actual internal sensations.</p>
+
+<p>My own explanation was immediately suggested by the following
+dream. I dreamed that I was watching a girl acrobat, in appropriate
+costume, who was rhythmically rising to a great height in the
+air and then falling, without touching the floor, though each time she
+approached quite close to it. At last she ceased, exhausted and perspiring,
+and had to be led away. Her movements were not controlled
+by mechanism, and apparently I did not regard mechanism as necessary.
+It was a vivid dream, and I awoke with a distinct sensation of
+oppression in the chest. In trying to account for this dream, which
+was not founded on any memory, it occurred to me that probably I
+had here the key to a great group of dreams. The rhythmic rising
+and falling of the acrobat was simply the objectivation of the rhythmic
+rising and falling of my own respiratory muscles under the influence
+of some slight and unknown physical oppression, and this oppression
+was further translated into a condition of perspiring exhaustion
+in the girl, just as it is recorded that a man with heart disease
+dreamed habitually of sweating and panting horses climbing
+up hill. We may recall also the curious sensation as of the body being
+transformed into a vast bellows which is often the last sensation felt
+before the unconsciousness produced by nitrous oxide gas. When we
+are lying down there is a real rhythmic rising and falling of the chest
+and abdomen, centering in the diaphragm, a series of oscillations
+which at both extremes are only limited by the air. Moreover, in this
+position we have to recognize that the whole internal organism&mdash;the
+circulatory, nervous, and other systems&mdash;are differently balanced from
+what they are in the upright position, and that a disturbance of internal
+equilibrium always accompanies falling. Further, it is possible
+that the misinterpretation is confirmed to sleeping consciousness
+by sensations from without, by the absence of the tactile pressure produced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_730" id="Page_730">[Pg 730]</a></span>
+by boots on the foot, or the contact of the ground with the
+soles; we are at once conscious of movement and conscious that the
+soles of the feet are in contact only with the air. Thus in normal
+sleep the conditions may be said to be always favorable for producing
+dreams of flying or of floating in the air, and any slight thoracic
+disturbance, even in healthy persons, arising from lungs, heart, or
+stomach, and serving to bring these conditions to sleeping consciousness,
+may determine such a dream.</p>
+
+<p>There is another common class of dreams which, it seems fairly
+evident to me, must also find their psychological explanation chiefly
+in the visceral sensations&mdash;I mean dreams of murder. Many psychologists
+have referred with profound concern to the facility and
+prevalence of murder in dreams, sometimes as a proof of the innate
+wickedness of human nature made manifest in the unconstraint of
+sleep, sometimes as evidence of an atavistic return to the modes of
+feeling of our ancestors, the thin veneer of civilization being removed
+during sleep. Maudsley and Mme. de Manac&eacute;&iuml;ne, for example, find
+evidence in such dreams of a return to primitive modes of feeling.
+It may well be that there is some element of truth in this view, but
+even if so we still have to account for the production of such dreams.
+For this we must, in part at least, fall back upon the logical outcome
+of dream confusions, owing to which, for instance, a lady who has
+carved a duck at dinner may a few hours later wake up exhausted by
+the imaginary effort of cutting off her husband's head. But I think
+we may find evidence that the dream of murder is often a falsely
+logical deduction from abnormal visceral and especially digestive sensations.</p>
+
+<p>I may illustrate such dreams by the following example: A lady
+dreamed that her husband called her aside and said: "Now, do not
+scream or make a fuss; I am going to tell you something. I have to
+kill a man. It is necessary, to put him out of his agony." He then
+took her into his study and showed her a young man lying on the
+floor with a wound in his breast, and covered with blood. "But how
+will you do it?" she asked. "Never mind," he replied, "leave that
+to me." He took something up and leaned over the man. She
+turned aside and heard a horrible gurgling sound. Then all was
+over. "Now," he said, "we must get rid of the body. I want you
+to send for So-and-so's cart, and tell him I wish to drive it." The cart
+came. "You must help me to make the body into a parcel," he said
+to his wife; "give me plenty of brown paper." They made it into
+a parcel, and with terrible difficulty and effort the wife assisted her
+husband to get the body down stairs and lift it into the cart. At
+every stage, however, she presented to him the difficulties of the
+situation. But he carelessly answered all objections, said he would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_731" id="Page_731">[Pg 731]</a></span>
+take the body up to the moor, among the stones, remove the brown
+paper, and people would think the murdered man had killed himself.
+He drove off and soon returned with the empty cart. "What's this
+blood in my cart?" asked the man to whom it belonged, looking
+inside. "Oh, that's only paint," replied the husband. But the
+dreamer had all along been full of apprehension lest the deed should
+be discovered, and the last thing she could recall, before waking in
+terror, was looking out of the window at a large crowd which surrounded
+the house with shouts of "Murder!" and threats.</p>
+
+<p>This tragedy, with its almost Elizabethan air, was built up out of
+a few commonplace impressions received during the previous day,
+none of which impressions contained any suggestion of murder. The
+tragic element appears to have been altogether due to the psychic influences
+of indigestion arising from a supper of pheasant. To account
+for our oppression during sleep, sleeping consciousness assumes
+moral causes which alone appear to it of sufficient gravity to be the
+adequate cause of the immense emotions we are experiencing. Even
+in our waking and fully conscious states we are inclined to give the
+preference to moral over physical causes, quite irrespective of the
+justice of our preferences; in our sleeping states this tendency is
+exaggerated, and the reign of purely moral causes is not disturbed by
+even a suggestion of mere physical causation.</p>
+
+<p>There is certainly no profounder emotional excitement during
+sleep than that which arises from a disturbed or distended stomach,
+and is reflected by the pneumogastric to the accelerated heart and
+the impeded respiration.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> We are thereby thrown into a state of uninhibited
+emotional agitation, a state of agony and terror such as we
+rarely or never attain during waking life. Sleeping consciousness,
+blindfolded and blundering, a prey to these massive waves from below,
+and fumbling about desperately for some explanation, jumps at
+the idea that only the attempt to escape some terrible danger or the
+guilty consciousness of some awful crime can account for this immense
+emotional uproar. Thus the dream is suffused by a conviction which
+the continued emotion serves to support. We do not&mdash;it seems most
+simple and reasonable to conclude&mdash;experience terror because we
+think we have committed a crime, but we think we have committed
+a crime because we experience terror. And the fact that in such
+dreams we are far more concerned with escape from the results of
+crime than with any agony of remorse is not, as some have thought,
+due to our innate indifference to crime, but simply to the fact that
+our emotional state suggests to us active escape from danger rather
+than the more passive grief of remorse. Thus our dreams bear witness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_732" id="Page_732">[Pg 732]</a></span>
+to the fact that our intelligence is often but a tool in the hands
+of our emotions.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
+
+<p>I have had frequent occasion to refer to the objectivation of subjective
+sensations as a phenomenon of dreaming. It is, indeed, so
+frequent and so important a phenomenon that it needs some further
+reference. In hysteria (which by some of the most recent authorities,
+like Sollier, is regarded as a species of somnambulism), in "demon-possession,"
+and many other abnormal phenomena it is well known
+that there is, as it were, a doubling of personality; the <i>ego</i> is split up
+into two or more parts, each of which may act as a separate personality.
+The literature of morbid psychology is full of extraordinary and
+varied cases exhibiting this splitting up of personality. But it is
+usually forgotten that in dreams the doubling of personality is a
+normal and constant phenomenon in all healthy people. In dreaming
+we can divide our body between ourselves and another person.
+Thus a medical friend dreamed that in conversation with a lady
+patient he found his hand resting on her knee and was unable to remove
+it; awakening in horror from this unprofessional situation he
+found his own hand firmly clasped between his knees; the hand had
+remained his own, the knee had become another person's, the hand
+being claimed, rather than the knee, on account of its greater tactile
+sensibility. Again, we sometimes objectify our own physical discomforts
+felt during sleep in the emotions of some other person, or
+even in some external situations. And, possibly, every dream in
+which there is any dramatic element is an instance of the same splitting
+up of personality; in our dreams we may experience shame or
+confusion from the rebuke or the arguments of other persons, but the
+persons who administer the rebuke or apply the argument are still
+ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>When we consider that this dream process, with its perpetual
+dramatization of our own personality, has been going on as long as
+man has been man&mdash;and probably much longer, for it is evident that
+animals dream&mdash;it is impossible to overestimate its immense influence
+on human belief. Men's primitive conceptions of religion, of morals,
+of many of the mightiest phenomena of life, especially the more exceptional
+phenomena, have certainly been influenced by this constant
+dream experience. It is the universal primitive explanation of abnormal
+psychic and even physical phenomena that some other person
+or spirit is working within the subject of the abnormal experience.
+Certainly dreaming is not the sole source of such conceptions, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_733" id="Page_733">[Pg 733]</a></span>
+they could scarcely have been found convincing, and possibly could
+not ever have arisen, among races who were wholly devoid of dream
+experiences. A large part of all progress in psychological knowledge,
+and, indeed, a large part of civilization itself, lies in realizing
+that the apparently objective is really subjective, that the angels and
+demons and geniuses of all sorts that seemed at first to take possession
+of the feeble and vacant individuality are themselves but modes of
+action of marvelously rich and varied personalities. But in our
+dreams we are brought back into the magic circle of early culture,
+and we shrink and shudder in the presence of imaginative phantoms
+that are built up of our own thoughts and emotions, and are really our
+own flesh.</p>
+
+<p>There is one other general characteristic of dreams that is worth
+noting, because its significance is not usually recognized. In dreams
+we are always reasoning. It is sometimes imagined that reason is in
+abeyance during sleep. So far from this being the case, we may
+almost be said to reason much more during sleep than when we are
+awake. That our reasoning is bad, even preposterous, that it constantly
+ignores the most elementary facts of waking life, scarcely
+affects the question. All dreaming is a process of reasoning. That
+artful confusion of ideas and images which at the outset I referred
+to as the most constant feature of dream mechanism is nothing but
+a process of reasoning, a perpetual effort to argue out harmoniously
+the absurdly limited and incongruous data present to sleeping consciousness.
+Binet, grounding his conclusions on hypnotic experiments,
+has very justly determined that reasoning is the fundamental
+part of all thinking, the very texture of thought. It is founded on
+perception itself, which already contains all the elements of the ancient
+syllogism. For in all perception, as he shows, there is a succession
+of three images, of which the first fuses with the second, which
+in its turn suggests the third. Now this establishment of new associations,
+this construction of images, which, as we may easily convince
+ourselves, is precisely what takes place in dreaming, is reasoning itself.</p>
+
+<p>Reasoning is a synthesis of images suggested by resemblance and
+contiguity, indeed a sort of logical vision, more intense even than
+actual vision, since it produces hallucinations. To reasoning all
+forms of mental activity may finally be reduced; mind, as Wundt
+has said, is a thing that reasons. When we apply these general
+statements to dreaming, we may see that the whole phenomenon of
+dreaming is really the same process of image-formation, based on
+resemblance and contiguity, which is at the basis of reasoning. Every
+dream is the outcome of this strenuous, wide-ranging instinct to reason.
+The supposed "imaginative faculty," regarded as so highly
+active during sleep, is simply the inevitable play of this automatic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_734" id="Page_734">[Pg 734]</a></span>
+logic. The characteristic of the reasoning of dreams is that it is
+unusually bad, and this badness is due chiefly to the absence of memory
+elements that would be present to waking consciousness, and to
+the absence of sensory elements to check the false reasoning which
+without them appears to us conclusive. That is to say&mdash;to fall back
+on the excellent generalization which Parish has elaborately applied
+to all forms of hallucination&mdash;there is a process of dissociation by
+which ordinary channels of association are temporarily blocked and
+the conditions prepared for the formation of the hallucination. It
+is, as Parish has argued, in sleep and in those sleep-resembling states
+called hypnagogic that a condition of dissociation leading to hallucination
+is most apt to occur.</p>
+
+<p>The following dream illustrates the part played by dissociation:
+A lady dreamed that an acquaintance wished to send a small sum
+of money to a person in Ireland. She rashly offered to take it over to
+Ireland. On arriving home she began to repent of her promise, as
+the weather was extremely wild and cold. She began, however, to
+make preparations for dressing warmly, and went to consult an Irish
+friend, who said she would have to be floated over to Ireland tightly
+jammed in a crab basket. On returning home she fully discussed
+the matter with her husband, who thought it would be folly to undertake
+such a journey, and she finally relinquished it, with great relief.
+In this dream&mdash;the elements of which could all be accounted for&mdash;the
+association between sending money and postal orders which would
+at once occur to waking consciousness was closed; consciousness was a
+prey to such suggestions as reached it, but on the basis of these suggestions
+it reasoned and concluded quite sagaciously. The phenomena
+of dreaming furnish a delightful illustration of the fact that
+reasoning, in its rough form, is only the crudest and most elementary
+form of intellectual operation, and that the finer forms of thinking
+only become possible when we hold in check this tendency to reason.
+"All the thinking in the world," as Goethe puts it, "will not lead
+us to thought."</p>
+
+<p>It is in such characteristics as these&mdash;at once primitive, childlike,
+and insane&mdash;that we may find the charm of dreaming. In our sleeping
+emotional life we are much more like ourselves than we are in
+our sleeping intellectual life. It is a mistake to imagine that our
+moral and &aelig;sthetic instincts are abolished in dreams; they are often
+weakened, but by no means abolished. Such a result is natural when
+we remember that our emotions and instincts are both more primitive
+and less under the dominion of the external senses than are our ideas.
+Yet in both respects we are removed a stage backward in our dreams.
+The emotional intensity, the absurd logic, the tendency to personification&mdash;nearly
+all the points I have referred to as characterizing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_735" id="Page_735">[Pg 735]</a></span>
+our dreams&mdash;are the characteristics of the child, the savage, and the
+madman. Time and space are annihilated, gravity is suspended, and
+we are joyfully borne up in the air, as it were, in the arms of angels;
+we are brought into a deeper communion with Nature, and in his
+dreams a man will listen to the arguments of his dog with as little
+surprise as Balaam heard the reproaches of his ass. The unexpected
+limitations of our dream world, the exclusion of so many elements
+which are present even unconsciously in waking life, imparts a splendid
+freedom and ease to the intellectual operations of the sleeping
+mind, and an extravagant romance, a poignant tragedy, to our emotions.
+"He has never known happiness," said Lamb, speaking out of
+his own experience, "who has never been mad." And there are many
+who taste in dreams a happiness they never know when awake. In
+the waking moments of our complex civilized life we are ever in a
+state of suspense which makes all great conclusions impossible; the
+multiplicity of the facts of life, always present to consciousness, restrains
+the free play of logic (except for that happy dreamer, the
+mathematician) and surrounds most of our pains and nearly all our
+pleasures with infinite qualifications; we are tied down to a sober
+tameness. In our dreams the fetters of civilization are loosened, and
+we know the fearful joy of freedom.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time it is these characteristics which make dreams
+a fit subject of serious study. It was not until the present century
+that the psychological importance of the study of insanity was recognized.
+So recent is the study of savage mind that the workers who
+have laid its foundation are yet all living. The systematic investigation
+of children only began yesterday. To-day our dreams begin
+to seem to us an allied subject of study, inasmuch as they reveal within
+ourselves a means of entering sympathetically into ideas and emotional
+attitudes belonging to narrow or ill-adjusted states of consciousness
+which otherwise we are now unable to experience. And they
+have this further value, that they show us how many abnormal phenomena&mdash;possession,
+double consciousness, unconscious memory, and
+so forth&mdash;which have often led the ignorant and unwary to many
+strange conclusions, really have a simple explanation in the healthy
+normal experience of all of us during sleep. Here, also, it is true
+that we ourselves and our beliefs are to some extent "such stuff as
+dreams are made of."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>The harmonious and equitable evolution of man, says President Dabney,
+of the University of Tennessee, "does not mean that every man must
+be educated just like his fellow. The harmony is within each individual.
+That community is most highly educated in which each individual has
+attained the maximum of his possibilities in the direction of his peculiar
+talents and opportunities."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_736" id="Page_736">[Pg 736]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>THE BEST METHODS OF TAXATION.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By the Late Hon. DAVID A. WELLS.</span></p>
+
+
+<h3>PART I.</h3>
+
+<p>This historical survey of tax experience among peoples widely differing
+in their economic condition and social relations, and this
+examination of the scope and practice of taxation, with especial reference
+to the tax systems of the United States as defined and interpreted
+by judicial authority, prepare the way for a discussion of the
+best methods of taxation for a country situated as is the United States.
+General as are the theoretical principles underlying taxation, the application
+of these principles to existing conditions must be modified
+to meet the long usage and inherited prejudice of the people, and
+the form of production or manner of distributing wealth. This holds
+true in the face of appearances so opposed to it as to defy definition
+and acceptance. No less promising field for an income tax can be
+pictured than British India, and few more promising fields than
+France. Yet India has borne such a tax for years, while France will
+not permit a true tax on income to be adopted as a part of its revenue
+system. In the latter country the plea is made that the upper and
+middle classes already pay under other forms of taxation more
+than their due proportion of the public burdens, and an additional
+and necessarily discriminating duty laid upon them will
+only make this inequality the greater. Class interest may thus oppose
+its veto to a change that promises to reduce the burdens of one
+class of taxpayers at the expense of another; or may even oppose a
+change that offers the chance of collecting a larger revenue with less
+real difficulty and sacrifice on the part of the taxed. No opposition
+can set aside even temporarily the great rules that clearly define a
+tax from tribute, a legal and beneficial taking by the state of a certain
+part of the public wealth from a demand that involves waste or
+mischievous expenditure, for which the state or people derive no advantage
+commensurate with the cost, or from which individuals obtain
+a gain not defensible in justice, and at the expense of only one
+part of the community.</p>
+
+<p>After so many centuries of experiment, in which hardly a possible
+source of state revenue has escaped attention, some knowledge
+of the great principles of taxation might have been evolved. Unfortunately,
+the experience of one nation is not accepted as containing
+lessons applicable to the needs or conditions of another, and one generation
+rarely appeals to history save to defend its own experiments.
+Ignorance, half knowledge, which is quite as dangerous, and interest
+guide or influence legislation, and those who predict failure or danger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_737" id="Page_737">[Pg 737]</a></span>
+are regarded as theorists, and denounced as unpractical. Nowhere
+is the tendency to move independent of enlightened knowledge more
+evident than in the United States. At every appearance of the tax
+question, State and national legislatures are overwhelmed with
+measures that have been tried in the past, and after a thorough test
+condemned beyond any hope of defense.</p>
+
+<p>Yet history shows the gradual disappearance of certain forms of
+taxation which enjoyed great popularity for a time, and accomplished
+the end of their creation in a crude and often cruel manner. Looking
+over long periods of time, it is seen that some advances have been
+made, rather from a change in the economic condition of the people
+than from a true appreciation of the principles in question. The
+development of popular liberty has been an essential factor, and the
+alterations in tax methods require a close analysis of the causes leading
+to the rise and dominance of political and constitutional principle.
+While it is true that a popular uprising against fiscal exactions usually
+marked the limit of endurance of an oppressive system, it is also true
+that the same uprisings marked the completion of one stage of political
+development, and the readiness or even the need of entering upon
+a new stage. In one sense the progress of a people toward civilization
+in its highest meaning may be illustrated by its fiscal machinery
+and methods of obtaining its revenue from the people.
+It will be of interest to glance at some of these passing phases
+which have generally come down to a late day, and are still
+to be found in activity in some of the most advanced states of
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The practice of farming out the revenues of a state or any part
+of it has become nearly obsolete, and where it does exist is the mark of
+a fiscal machinery as yet not fully developed. The opportunities and
+temptation which the contract system offered for oppressing the taxpayers
+were apparent long before the state was in a position to assert
+its ability to make its own collections. In France the <i>fermiers g&eacute;n&eacute;raux</i>
+were a political factor, standing between the king and his
+people, regarded as necessary to the former and as oppressors of the
+latter. Their unpopularity, in part justified by their conduct, was
+a not unimportant item in the arraignment of royalty by the people.
+Wherever introduced, the farming of taxes proved in the long run
+as unwise politically as it was unprofitable financially; and the only
+reasonable defense for adopting it was the want of strength in the
+state to command its own revenue&mdash;a want as likely to arise from
+the dishonesty of its agents as from a political weakness. In early
+times the most universal manner of supplying the treasury of the state,
+the farming of taxes has become so rare as to be classed as a curiosity.
+Italy still employs this machinery to collect her taxes on tobacco, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_738" id="Page_738">[Pg 738]</a></span>
+Spain from necessity has mortgaged her taxes to the bank, with the
+task of collecting them.</p>
+
+<p>Of the same general character are the state lotteries, of which
+some few and quite important instances may still be found in action.
+Of the immorality of these instruments there can be little doubt, and
+there is quite as unanimous an opinion as to their inefficiency as fiscal
+instruments. Yet it is only within very recent years that state lotteries
+have been discarded even in the most advanced countries. The
+machinery of lotteries has often been modified, but, no matter how
+altered in details, they all have appealed to the love of games of
+chance. Adam Smith asserted that the "absurd presumption" of
+men in their own good fortune is even more universal than the overweening
+conceit which the greater part of men have in their own
+abilities.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> Yet another assertion of the same writer is as true: "The
+world neither ever saw, nor ever will see, a perfectly fair lottery, or
+one in which the whole gain compensated the whole loss." Where
+the state undertakes it, there is a profit generally assured to the
+state, but that profit is by no means certain, and can not make good the
+demoralization introduced among the people. State lotteries are still
+a part of the revenue system in Italy and Austria (proper), where the
+receipts are important, but show a decided tendency to diminish;
+Hungary and Denmark, where they are of little moment; and in
+Spain, where they are retained because of the general incapacity of
+the administration to reach other and more profitable sources of
+revenue. The experience of the State of Louisiana in connection with
+a State lottery is too recent to require examination. It is not probable
+that once abandoned such an instrument for obtaining money from
+the people will be revived, save as a last resort.</p>
+
+<p>The state monopoly in the manufacture and sale of an article for
+fiscal purposes holds a place in European countries of high importance,
+and is met elsewhere under conditions not so favorable to its
+maintenance. As an example of the latter may be cited the colonial
+policy of the Dutch in their possessions in the East. After the termination
+of the trading companies, the Government undertook the
+entire control of the colonies, and sought to make them a source of
+revenue. The natives were to be taxed, but, having little of their own
+to be taxed, and practicing no occupation that could of its own volition
+become a profitable source of revenue, the state undertook to
+organize industry, and, by creating an opportunity for employing the
+labor of the natives, to receive the profits of production for its own
+uses. The native chiefs were made "masters of industry" and collectors
+of the revenue; and a certain part of the labor of the natives,
+one day in every five, was decreed to the state. In order to derive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_739" id="Page_739">[Pg 739]</a></span>
+a profit, this labor must be bestowed in cultivating some product as
+find a market in international trade. Hence arose the importance
+of the sugar, coffee, tobacco, and spice crops of these Dutch islands,
+and for many years a handsome profit to the treasury was obtained
+from the management and sales of product. With the great fall in
+prices of sugar and coffee throughout the world, and the narrowing
+of the market for cane sugar, the Government obtained a less income
+each year, and has found it of advantage to relax the conditions surrounding
+cultivation, and to throw the management of the plantations
+more and more into private hands. To such an extent has this
+transition been effected that the state can no longer be considered as
+controlling a monopoly in product or sales, and is content with a revenue
+from other sources, one that does not even cover the expenses incurred
+in the colonial system. This experiment differs widely from
+those industries undertaken with the aid or encouragement of the
+state to be found in India. It was not with a fiscal object that they
+were established, and not infrequently the state sacrifices revenue by
+releasing them from tax burdens they would ordinarily endure. As
+one of the few remaining instances of the direct participation of a
+state in the production of products intended for foreign markets, yet
+undertaken and maintained for fiscal reasons, the history of the Dutch
+colonies in the East is instructive.</p>
+
+<p>In Prussia the working of certain mines is in the hands of the
+state, and was originally looked upon as an important contribution to
+the income of the state. As in the Dutch experience, the changes in
+production throughout the world have greatly reduced the returns
+and made the income variable; yet there is little disposition to dispose
+of these possessions. "The danger of mineral supplies being worked in
+a reckless and extravagant manner without regard to the welfare of
+future generations, and the dread of combinations by the producers of
+such commodities as tin, copper, and salt, with the aim of raising
+prices, have both tended to hinder the alienation of state mines."<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
+
+<p>The more common form of state monopoly is that which occupies
+a middle position, established for reasons of public safety or utility
+as well as of revenue. The salt monopoly enforced in Prussia was only
+abolished in 1867, and is still maintained in every canton of Switzerland.
+The strongest plea in its defense has been the guarantee by
+the state of the purity of the article sold, and this phase of the question
+has superseded the revenue aspect. Few articles of prime necessity,
+like salt, are subject to monopolies imposed by the state, and by
+a process of elimination it is only articles of luxury or voluntary consumption
+that are regarded as fit objects of monopoly for the benefit
+of the state.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_740" id="Page_740">[Pg 740]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A tax imposed upon an article at a certain stage of its production
+or manufacture may enforce the expediency or necessity of a state
+monopoly. Where the supervision of the state agents must be so
+close as to interfere with the conduct of the industry, the state intervenes
+and itself controls the manufacture and sale. Tobacco has long
+been subject to this fiscal <i>r&eacute;gime</i>, and, proving so productive of revenue,
+there is little to be said against a monopoly by the state of its
+manufacture and sale.</p>
+
+<p>In Italy the tobacco monopoly is conceded to a company, but its
+return of net revenue to the state is nearly as large as the revenue derived
+from the taxes on real property (about thirty-eight million dollars
+a year). Prussia imposes a charge on the home-grown tobacco by a tax
+on the land devoted to its culture, but the return is very small, and
+Bismarck wished to introduce a true tobacco monopoly, modeled
+on that of France. But the conditions were opposed to his scheme,
+for the use of tobacco is general throughout the empire, and a proposition
+to increase its price by taxation or modify its free manufacture
+and distribution excited a widespread opposition. France maintains
+a full monopoly, and finds it too profitable to be lightly set aside
+unless some equally profitable source of revenue is discovered to make
+good the loss its abolition would involve.</p>
+
+<p>While historical support is given to the maintenance of a monopoly
+as in France, it is not probable that the system will find imitators in
+other states, however tempting the returns obtained might seem.
+Great Britain has by her insular position solved the problem in another
+way. By interdicting the domestic cultivation of tobacco, all
+that is consumed must be imported, and a customs duty offers a ready
+instrument for making the plant, in whatever form it enters, contribute
+its dues to the exchequer. In Russia, as in the United States,
+where tobacco is a domestic product, the tax is imposed upon its
+manufacture, and this method requires supervision but no monopoly
+of the state.</p>
+
+<p>The tobacco <i>r&eacute;gime</i> is defended almost entirely on fiscal grounds,
+and as a monopoly, an extreme measure, has proved its value as an
+instrument of taxation. Other reasons, of a moral character, are
+urged to induce the state to monopolize the manufacture and sale of
+distilled spirits. Both France and Germany have considered this
+question, and, in spite of confident predictions of a large profit, have
+decided not to undertake it. Russia, on the other hand, has taken
+it up quite as much on social as on revenue grounds, and is gradually
+securing a monopoly of the trade in spirits. The initial cost
+of the undertaking is large, and, as the system has not yet been perfected,
+it is too early to give a judgment on its availability as a financial
+instrument.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_741" id="Page_741">[Pg 741]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The transit dues, once commonly used by different countries, have
+been generally abandoned, and in China must they be sought for in
+their original forms of vexatious and unprofitable force. They arose
+from a desire to derive some benefit from a commerce permitted
+grudgingly, and rarely attaining any high results. The same end was
+sought by duties on exports, much employed when the country was
+supposed to be drained of its wealth by what was sent out of it. The
+conditions necessary for a successful duty on exports are not often
+found, and only in a few countries are they now existent. In Italy,
+South America, and Asia, exports of certain natural products are
+taxed, and, as in the case of Brazil, yield a notable revenue. In
+view of the rapid advancement of production in new countries and
+of inventions in the old, whereby many natural monopolies have been
+destroyed and competition made more general, such duties prove to be
+more obstructive to trade than productive of revenue, and are rapidly
+being abandoned. In spite of a formal prohibition of export duties
+in the Constitution of the United States, they are sometimes suggested
+in all seriousness.</p>
+
+<p>In thus clearing the path of what may be called dead or dying
+methods of recent tax systems, the advantages enjoyed by the United
+States in their freedom from such survivals become more evident.
+The practice of farming taxes never gained a foothold in any part of
+the country. Lotteries have been occasional, and with two exceptions
+have been conducted on a limited scale&mdash;that of Louisiana is
+well known; an earlier instance is less known. During the Revolution
+one of the means resorted to by the Continental Congress for
+income was a lottery, but the attempt proved disastrous to all concerned,
+and was finally abandoned even more thoroughly than was
+the continental currency. State monopolies of production and sale
+of any commodity have never met with favor, and stand condemned
+in the desire for individual initiative. As sources of revenue, the
+public lands, state control of the post office, and of such municipal
+undertakings as the water and, in a very few cases, the gas
+supply, has been employed, and in place of profit the mere cost of
+management is sought. More than any country of continental Europe,
+the United States has depended upon taxes, pure and simple,
+unsupported or modified by state domains, state mines, state manufactures,
+or state monopolies. Even Great Britain in her local
+taxation is bound and hampered by precedent, and pursues a system
+that is notoriously confused, costly, and vexatious. Long usage and
+the erection of independent and conflicting authorities on principles
+other than fiscal have imposed upon the local agents the duty of
+assessing and collecting county and borough taxes which are as indefensible
+in theory as they are difficult in practice.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_742" id="Page_742">[Pg 742]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>From this weight of tradition and precedent the United States has
+been almost entirely free, and it was possible to construct out of small
+beginnings systems of Federal and State taxation at least reasonable
+and consistent, producing an increasing revenue with the rapid development
+of wealth and the larger number of taxable objects; and
+so elastic as to adapt themselves to such changes as are inevitable in any
+progressive movement of commerce or industry. That no such system
+has resulted after a century of national life, and an even longer
+term of local (colonial and State) activities, these papers have tended
+to show. That the time is at hand when the problem of a thorough
+reform of both State and Federal taxation must be met, current facts
+prove beyond any doubt. If I have aided in a proper comprehension
+of these problems, and, by collecting certain experiences in taxation
+among other peoples and in different stages of civilization, contributed
+toward a proper solution, the end of this work will have been
+attained. It is not possible to introduce a complete change of policy
+at once; it is not only feasible but necessary to indicate the direction
+this change should take, and the ends to be secured in making them.
+And first as to Federal taxation:</p>
+
+<p>In a democracy like that of the United States, the continuance
+of a mixed system of direct and indirect taxes is a foregone conclusion.
+Not that there is an absence of change or modification in the
+details of this double system, or in the application or distribution of a
+particular impost or duty. To deny such modification is to deny any
+movement in the body politic, or any progress in the industrial and
+commercial economy of the people. There is a steady and continuous
+movement in every direction, and the mere effort to escape taxation
+results in a new adjustment of related facts. This development
+has, partly through necessity and partly through a rising consciousness
+of what a tax implies, been tending from indirect to direct
+taxes. Ever restive under a rigid supervision by the state of private
+concerns, there has been a wholesome opposition to inquisitorial taxes.
+But this opposition has been carried too far, and is due more to the
+ignorant and at times brutal disregard by the agents selected for enforcing
+the law than to an appreciation of the injustice of the tax.
+Whether in customs or excise, the same blunders of management
+have been committed, and created a spirit in the people that is injurious
+to their best interests. On the one hand, private enterprises have
+been unduly favored by the removal of foreign competition, a favor
+that is now disappearing through the remarkable development of
+domestic competition. Thus taxes have been extensively used for
+other purposes than to obtain revenue, and for private ends. On
+the other hand, there has been created the feeling that taxation is
+a proper instrument for effecting a more equal distribution of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_743" id="Page_743">[Pg 743]</a></span>
+wealth among the people, and readily becomes an instrument of
+oppression.</p>
+
+<p>The almost absolute dependence of the Federal Government upon
+the customs duties for revenue through a great part of its existence was
+a striking fact. The simplicity of collection and the comparatively
+moderate scale of duties, although considered high at the time of
+imposition, gave this branch of the possible sources of revenue a magnified
+importance. The development of the country was slow, and
+at times greatly hampered by the tariff policy; but until about 1857
+no other source of income was needed to meet the expenditures of
+the Government in a time of peace.</p>
+
+<p>In recent years this has all changed, and not for the better. The
+immense development in manufactures and financial ability accomplished
+since 1860 has made a tariff for protection an anachronism.
+The political features of customs legislation have been pushed so far
+as almost to overshadow the fiscal qualities. The wave of protectionism
+that followed the abrogation of the commercial treaties of Europe
+about 1880 has resulted in tariffs framed with the desire to injure the
+commerce of other states rather than to meet the needs of a treasury.
+In the United States this policy has been carried beyond that of Europe,
+and the tariff now in existence is more protective than any
+hitherto enforced, short of absolute prohibition of imports.</p>
+
+<p>In more respects than one the tariff law of 1897 was an extreme
+application of the protective policy. Each year the United States has
+demonstrated its ability not only to meet the industrial competition
+of the world on an equal footing, but to engage with it aggressively
+and with complete success. It is not necessary to give the figures of
+exports of manufactures to establish this fact; it is now beyond question.
+To frame a measure of extreme protection was, therefore, to
+overlook the most striking phase of the industrial situation existing in
+the United States. With an ability to manufacture cheaply and on
+a grand scale, and with a capacity to supply the demands of a market
+larger than any home market, there was no foreign competition to
+encounter, and the higher rates of duties meant nothing, either for
+protection or for revenue. In carrying further into action a tariff
+framed more for protection than for revenue, a twofold error was
+committed. The provisions were so complicated as to make the application
+difficult, and in applying these provisions inquisitorial and
+vexatious regulations were necessary to assure even a reasonable fulfillment
+of the requirements. In former tariff laws a general description
+carried a large class of articles, and a uniform duty, usually <i>ad
+valorem</i>, was collected. But under the demand for a more scientific
+tariff, these general classes were broken up into a number of enumerated
+articles, each one carrying a specific or mixed duty, and an omnium<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_744" id="Page_744">[Pg 744]</a></span>
+or basket clause at the end to catch any article that could not be included
+in any enumeration. This desire to fix specific rates upon
+each imported commodity has been applied more generally in the
+law of 1897 than in any previous tariff act. An examination of the
+imports of manufactures of textile fibers will illustrate this increase
+of complexity without any increase of revenue. Indeed, these classifications
+and rates, being suggested by interested parties, have for
+their object a reduction of imports, and as a rule a reduction in revenue
+from them follows.</p>
+
+<p>The second objection to the increasing complexity of the tariff
+laws is to be found in the petty annoyances imposed upon importers
+and others in enforcing the not always consistent provisions of the
+law. These vexations are made all the more telling by the fact that
+the administration of the law is apt to be in the hands of those who are
+openly hostile to foreign importations, and therefore regard the importer
+in an unfriendly spirit. The power given to the customs
+agents is enormous, and it is not remarkable that it is abused. The
+demand for samples, the appraisement of articles, the classification
+of new or compound commodities, all offer room for controversy,
+which is not always decided by an appeal to the courts of justice.
+In special instances, where a section of the law has been framed in
+behalf of a special interest, the attempt to enforce it becomes petty
+tyranny of the most intolerable kind.</p>
+
+<p>In operation the law soon exhibited its failure as a revenue measure.
+Although duties were generally increased, the more important
+articles taxed yielded a smaller revenue than under lower rates.
+The aggregate collections under the bill did not meet the expectations
+of its sponsors, and for two reasons: first, because the higher duties
+discouraged imports; and secondly, the demand for imported articles
+was steadily decreasing under the expanding ability of home manufactures
+to meet the needs of the market. No measure short of a
+direct encouragement to importations can change this situation, or
+prevent the further shrinkage in the use of foreign manufactures.
+It follows that the tariff, unless radically altered, can no longer be depended
+on for a return sufficient to defray one half of the rapidly
+increasing expenditures of the national Government. By refusing
+to impose moderate duties on articles of general consumption, revenue
+is sacrificed; by insisting upon imposing protective duties where little
+revenue can be had, the tariff is converted into a political weapon.
+Its dangerous qualities are strengthened by turning these duties
+against the products of certain countries, a policy specially fit to invite
+reprisals.</p>
+
+<p>Even the framers of this latest tariff entertained the belief that
+some provision should be made for breaking its full effect. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_745" id="Page_745">[Pg 745]</a></span>
+familiar scheme for reciprocity treaties, under which moderate concessions
+in some of the duties could be made, was retained; but France
+was the only power that could have an object in seriously entertaining
+the proposition to enter into a negotiation. No real reduction
+in duties could be given to Germany or any other country, and it
+has become a recognized fact that Germany does not hesitate to seize
+an opportunity to exclude the products of the United States, and on
+the same grounds as support the high duties in the American tariff.
+The system of drawbacks has ceased to be of much moment in our
+customs policy, and in the export interest in canned goods finds its
+chief exercise. Nor does a privilege to manufacture in bond affect
+more than one article of importance&mdash;ores of lead containing silver.
+No matter how it is regarded, the tariff of 1897 was not framed for
+revenue, and in experience has not proved sufficiently productive to
+meet its share of the expenditures of Government. The animus of
+its sponsors in attaining the immediate political object sacrificed the
+more important and permanent object of revenue.</p>
+
+<p>Were the true object of customs duties&mdash;revenue&mdash;to be kept in
+view in tariff legislation, it would be a simple matter to devise a
+measure that would be satisfactory and highly productive of revenue.
+In the fifteen hundred or more articles enumerated in the tariff
+schedules, more than fourteen hundred are nonproductive, or yield so
+small a return as to have in the aggregate no appreciable effect on
+the total receipts. The number left after so large an exclusion can
+be still further reduced without reducing the revenue one tenth;
+and it is from a small number of articles, hardly twenty-five, that the
+great part of the customs revenue is obtained. By reducing the rates
+of duties on these to a point of highest revenue efficiency, at which the
+import is not interfered with and yet not encouraged, a higher return
+could be had than from the existing complicated, overloaded,
+and political compilation of duties, usually imposed for any reason
+other than what they will bring into the treasury.</p>
+
+<p>When, therefore, the best methods of Federal taxation are
+broached, the reform of the tariff stands first in importance. It is
+necessary to bring it more into line with the industrial conditions of
+to-day, which call for foreign markets rather than a domestic or
+closed market; and for a liberal commercial policy in place of one that
+regards the products of other countries, whether imported in the
+crude or manufactured forms, as constituting a menace to American
+labor and American interests. It calls for a systematic and intelligent
+revision, which shall throw out such duties as are no longer of
+service even for protection, and to reduce those that are hostile to the
+products of other countries and bear in themselves the seeds of reprisals
+in the future. Now that the United States is going into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_746" id="Page_746">[Pg 746]</a></span>
+great markets with its manufactures, and obtaining a foothold against
+all competitors, the invitation to retaliation holds a danger far greater
+to its own interests than any that can be inflicted on other peoples.
+The greater the advances made the more readily will recourse be had
+to reprisals and hostile legislation; and in support of every act appeal
+may be had to examples set by the United States.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h2>MENTAL DEFECTIVES AND THE SOCIAL WELFARE.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By MARTIN W. BARR, M. D.</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap lowercase">CHIEF PHYSICIAN, PENNSYLVANIA TRAINING SCHOOL FOR FEEBLE-MINDED CHILDREN, ELWYN, PA.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>Periods of extraordinary efflorescence or fruitage are followed
+by exhaustion and sterility not infrequently demanding the free
+use of the pruning knife; and, just as we remark how frequent is
+idiocy the offspring of genius, so do we find the same seeming paradox,
+of mental defect in rank and increasing growth the product of this
+most wonderful nineteenth century.</p>
+
+<p>True, science has contributed to numbers by revealing as mental
+defectives the many "misunderstood," "the backward," "the feebly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_747" id="Page_747">[Pg 747]</a></span>
+gifted," as well as by showing what was once esteemed moral perversion
+to be moral imbecility; but a truth to which science also
+attests is, that unstable nerve centers uniting and reacting through
+successive generations, producing various forms of neuroses, evidenced
+in insanity, moral and mental imbecility, idiocy and epilepsy, do
+show the influence of a highly nervous age.</p>
+
+<p>Our last census reports, although necessarily uncertain and unreliable,
+yet show ninety thousand mental defectives, not including
+the insane. Unrecognized and unacknowledged cases swell the number
+easily to one hundred thousand within our present borders&mdash;how
+many we are going to annex remains to be seen; but this is an enemy
+that attacks not our frontiers but our hearthstones. We have
+reached that point when we must conquer it, lest it should conquer
+us, and the means to this end may be summed up in three words&mdash;separation,
+asexualization, and permanent sequestration. "Diseases
+desperate grown by desperate appliances are relieved, or not at all,"
+and we must recognize that heroic measures now are as essential to
+the welfare of the unfortunate as to society, which will then naturally
+adjust itself to new conditions. Viewing the separation and massing
+of these irresponsibles&mdash;innocent victims of ignorance, debauchery,
+or selfish lust&mdash;men will come to realize that a greater crime than
+taking is the giving of such life; and so a greater reverence for
+the sacredness of marriage, a deeper sense of the great responsibilities
+of parenthood, will do more to avert this evil than the most stringent
+marriage laws. That the present demands some restraint upon the
+ignorant and the indifferent there can be no doubt, and laws preventing
+the marriage of defectives and of their immediate descendants
+would go far to stem the tide of harmful heredity.</p>
+
+<p>But what to do with those now in our midst is the vital question!
+They must be provided for in a way that shall insure safety to society,
+economy to the State, and protection and happiness to the individual.
+The answer found in the experience of half a century is, briefly,
+asylums for the helpless&mdash;training schools and colonies for those capable
+of becoming helpful. These in very name and nature being
+widely separate, just as separate as titles and names indicate, should
+be their working systems. Work among the feeble-minded, a philanthropic
+movement directed first toward the idiot, soon found a limit
+in dealing with a subject not trainable and but slightly if at all improvable.
+Thence, diverging and broadening as idiocy became better
+understood and imbecility in various phases became recognized, it
+found its true province in strengthening and encouraging feeble intellects,
+arousing and stimulating indolent and weak wills, and in
+training and directing into healthful channels the abnormal energy
+of those destitute of the moral sense. How wide the divergence can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_748" id="Page_748">[Pg 748]</a><br /><a name="Page_749" id="Page_749">[Pg 749]</a></span>
+readily be seen, as also how entirely incompatible with union must
+be work further apart in reality than is the training of an imbecile
+and a normal child.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 748px;">
+<img src="images/illo_033_excitable.jpg" width="748" height="384" alt="Excitable Idiot. Practically unimprovable. - Apathetic Idiot. Practically unimprovable. - Idio-Imbecile. But slight hope of improvement." />
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" width="100%" summary="illo caption">
+<tr><td><span class="smcap"><b>Excitable Idiot.</b></span><br />Practically unimprovable.</td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>Apathetic Idiot.</b></span><br />Practically unimprovable.</td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>Idio-Imbecile.</b></span><br />But slight hope of improvement.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>For the idiot, who not only can not be trained, but who in many
+cases is unimprovable even in the simplest matters of self-help, nothing
+is needed but that care and attention found in every well-regulated
+nursery of delicate children, the <i>sine qua non</i> being regular hours,
+simple nourishing food, frequent baths, and tender mothering. As
+many are paralyzed, blind, lame, or epileptic, it is desirable that the
+dormitories, well ventilated, be on the same floor with the living rooms
+and of easy access to bathrooms and playgrounds. Covered and
+carefully guarded porches should afford the much-needed fresh air
+and outdoor life in all weathers. These, with cheerful, sunny playrooms,
+provided with simple toys and furnished with bright decorations
+varying with the season, will contribute the maximum of pleasure
+for this life of perpetual infancy. Low vitality, general poverty of
+the whole physical make-up, the prevalence of phthisis and epilepsy
+and kindred diseases require the daily inspection of a physician, while
+the comfort and well-being of the whole, both workers and children,
+are insured by a capable and sympathetic house mother.</p>
+
+<p>The character of attendants is of the first importance, as these are
+they who live with the children; it should combine that firmness, tenderness,
+and balance that constitute an even temperament, capable
+of recognizing and meeting an occasion without loss of self-control.
+The duties involve not only the care of the idiots, but the training and
+direction of idio-imbeciles as aids, and this dealing with natures often
+wholly animal, requires a certain refinement and dignity of character&mdash;at
+least an entire absence of coarseness&mdash;while a knowledge of the
+simpler manual arts, and if possible of drawing and music, will do
+much to soften and brighten these darkened natures. As these qualities
+are valuable as well as rare, the remuneration should be in proportion;
+certainly sufficient to induce permanency and to compensate
+for such isolation. A life of constant wear and tear demands also
+regular periods of rest, and the corps therefore should be sufficiently
+large to give relief hours daily as well as vacations.</p>
+
+<p>The idio-imbecile, but one remove from his weaker brother, to
+whose wants he may be trained to minister, finds here his fitting place,
+and the domestic service of these asylums may be largely drawn
+from this class and also from that of the low-grade imbecile. Working
+as an aid, never alone, always under direction, he finds in a
+monotonous round of the simplest daily avocations his life happiness,
+his only safety from lapsing into idiocy, and therefore his true home.</p>
+
+<p>The relief to the home, the actual benefit to the State in this
+housing and care of the idiot and idio-imbecile can never be fully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_750" id="Page_750">[Pg 750]</a></span>
+estimated. It is reckoned, however, in a general way that for every
+idiot sequestrated the energies of two if not four normal persons are
+returned to society.</p>
+
+<p>Imbecility, mental or moral, congenital or accidental, is either an
+inherent defect or an irrecoverable loss, an incurable disease for which
+hospitals can do nothing, nor can reformatories form again that which
+never has been formed. Could language be made clear enough to
+enable the public mind to grasp this fact, the work of training schools,
+the only hope of the imbecile, would then be simplified, and people
+might be willing to accept what they can give, in the only way in
+which it can be given, to be of any permanent value. As it is, the
+few charlatans who profess to train and in a few years send out an
+imbecile ready to take a high-school or college course not only deceive
+those from whom they may gather a few thousands, but their representations,
+coupled with that of a sensational press, effectually impede
+the progress of a work which must eventually find its true place
+in the system of public education.</p>
+
+<p>Influenced by these misrepresentations, parents come with profound
+idiots and high hopes of a course of training (here is one of the
+misfortunes of an idiot asylum within a training school), and simply
+refuse to accept a negative to their expectations. Again&mdash;to waifs and
+strays, high-grade imbeciles, developing after years of labored training
+proficiency in music, drawing, or some one of the industrial arts,
+friends will suddenly crop up and, dazzled by what seems phenomenal
+genius, seek to withdraw them just as they become useful to the community.
+Little do they know of the weak will, indolent nature,
+and utter lack of "go," that forbid competition with normal labor
+and must forever be subject to the will of another; still less of the weak
+physical build that is kept intact only by watchful care, and which
+would succumb to any undue hardship. So much for the difficulties
+that beset the work. Now as to the work itself.</p>
+
+<p>As this must vary according to the status of the individual, a
+careful study and a correct diagnosis are of primary importance in
+order that the work may be fitted to the child, not the child to the
+work. The plan pursued is as follows: A thorough examination&mdash;physical,
+mental, and moral&mdash;is first made by the chief physician in
+connection with papers properly filled out giving personal and family
+history. He is then sent to the hospital for a fortnight to insure
+immunity from disease. There, while perfectly free and unrestrained
+among his fellows, he is under constant observation of the nurses;
+these observations, carefully noted, are returned to the chief physician,
+who turns both over to the principal of schools, designating the
+grade in which he is to enter for probation. Here under different
+environment he is again tested for some weeks and finally placed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_751" id="Page_751">[Pg 751]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 748px;">
+<img src="images/illo_036_high.jpg" width="748" height="394" alt="High-grade Imbecile. - High-grade Imbecile. Very improvable&mdash;can read, write, draw, etc. - Low-grade Imbecile. Only slightly improvable." />
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" width="100%" summary="illo caption">
+<tr><td><span class="smcap"><b>High-grade Imbecile.</b></span></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>High-grade Imbecile.</b></span><br />Very improvable&mdash;can read, write, draw, etc.</td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>Low-grade Imbecile.</b></span><br />Only slightly improvable.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_752" id="Page_752">[Pg 752]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is hard for the uninitiated to understand that the grade, be it
+high, middle, or low, is not associated with promotion and advancement
+as in schools for normal children. On the contrary, it signifies
+the quality and status of the individual, his limitations, his
+possibilities, and consequently determines almost unfailingly the training
+for his life work; not by any hard-and-fast lines, but by a general
+mapping out of means which experience has proved will best insure
+his development, because best suited to his needs. Every latitude is
+allowed and, as the comfort of both the teacher and the entire class
+depends upon each going to his own place, there is easy and natural
+transference according to the necessity indicated by either progress
+or retrogression; but the varied occupations in each grade give ample
+scope for indulgence of individual proclivity in the means of development,
+and it is found that the original diagnosis, based upon experience,
+rarely errs.</p>
+
+<p>The motto of the schools&mdash;"We learn by doing; the working
+hand makes strong the working brain"&mdash;shows manual training to be
+the basis of the scheme of development, varied for each grade to suit
+the intelligence. Thus classified, various occupations are arranged
+and presented with the double intent of securing all-round development,
+and of giving at the same time opportunity for choice according
+to individual bent, the child being gradually permitted to devote
+himself more exclusively to that in which he shows a tendency to
+excel, and to gain a certain automatic ease in what shall prove the
+initial of a life employment. A knowledge of writing and of numbers
+is acquired incidentally as a necessary part of these occupations
+in daily practice, and arithmetic, taught with objects, is chiefly counting,
+separating into fractional parts, and practical measurements.
+Books are used rather as a convenient means of attracting and holding
+attention while inducing habits of consecutive thinking than for
+a knowledge of facts to be memorized. Those who can learn to read
+gain naturally a means of self-entertainment, of self-instruction,
+hence a certain amount of culture, so long as protected in an institution
+from indiscriminate and pernicious literature.</p>
+
+<p>The low-grade imbecile, but a slight degree removed from the idio-imbecile,
+is, like him, totally incapable of grasping artificial signs or
+symbols. He can therefore never learn to read or write; figures have
+no meaning for him, nor numbers, beyond the very simplest counting
+acquired in the daily repetition of some simple task such as knitting,
+netting, braiding rope, straw, or knotting twine. The excitation of
+interest in these, which will also give hand and arm power, the arousing
+of the sluggish, indolent will, through the stimulus of pleasurable
+emotions, the physical development by means of the various drills and
+the moral influence of refined, orderly surroundings&mdash;these, together<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_753" id="Page_753">[Pg 753]</a><br /><a name="Page_754" id="Page_754">[Pg 754]</a></span>
+with some practical work of house, garden, or farm, which forms part
+of the daily routine, are all that school life can do for him.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 748px;">
+<img src="images/illo_038_moral.jpg" width="748" height="430" alt="Moral Imbecile of High Grade. - Moral Imbecile of Middle Grade. - Moral Imbecile, Low Grade." />
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" width="100%" summary="illo caption">
+<tr><td><span class="smcap"><b>Moral Imbecile<br />of High Grade.</b></span></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>Moral Imbecile<br />of Middle Grade.</b></span></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap"><b>Moral Imbecile,<br />Low Grade.</b></span></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>From this preparation he passes to the industrial department,
+where he receives training in that occupation which the school has
+indicated for him, becoming in his limited way a useful and contented
+member of a community which should be his life home. As
+both of these types develop either extreme docility or perversity&mdash;the
+one quiet, gentle, obedient, following any suggestion even of a comrade's
+stronger will; the other obstinate, indolent, often brutal and
+cruel&mdash;the necessity for constant guardianship is therefore self-evident.</p>
+
+<p>When we consider that the training of a high-grade imbecile takes
+four times the period commonly allotted to a normal child, some idea
+of the vital energy expended on the training of the lower grades may
+be found in the following example:</p>
+
+<p>I find in our museum of educational work a little ball which I
+am inclined to regard the most valuable thing in the whole collection.
+The boy who made it was a low-grade imbecile. His hand against every
+man, he fancied every man's against him. Always under strict custodial
+care, that he might harm neither himself nor others, he would
+vent his spleen in tearing his clothing. His teacher, a woman of
+rare patience and devotedness, sat beside him one day, tearing strips
+of old linen and laying them in order. "See, Willie, let us make
+some pretty strips and lay them so." His wonder grew apace at seeing
+her doing what he had been reproved for doing; at once he responded,
+and a new bond of sympathy was established between them.
+She was playing his game&mdash;the only one, poor little lad, that he was
+capable of&mdash;and he joined in.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, we will draw out the pretty threads and lay them in rows."
+For weeks the boy found quiet pastime in this occupation, and the
+violent nature grew quieter in proportion. One day the teacher said,
+"Let us tie these threads together and make a long string." It took
+him months and months to learn to tie those knots, but meanwhile
+his attendants were having breathing space. "Now we will wind
+this into a pretty ball, and I will cover all you make for the boys to
+play with"; and a new occupation was added to his meager list.</p>
+
+<p>The next link in this chain of development was a lesson in knitting.
+Again, through months of patient teaching, it was at last accomplished,
+and the boy to the day of his death found his life happiness
+in knitting caps for the children, in place of tearing both them
+and their clothing. You see the teacher was wise enough to utilize the
+natural activities of the child and divert evil propensities into healthful
+channels. Had she brought knitting and bright yarn or anything
+foreign to him first, it would in truth have been fitting new cloth to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_755" id="Page_755">[Pg 755]</a></span>
+old garments and the rent would have been widened: his obstinacy
+would have been aroused, and he would have continued to tear to
+the end of the chapter.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_040_high.jpg" width="600" height="459" alt="High-grade Imbeciles" />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">High-grade Imbeciles (Feebly Gifted) at Sloyd Work.</span></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The imbecile of middle grade receives that fuller presentation of
+work suited to fuller capacity. Some time is devoted to the three
+"Rs," as it is found that attention may be aroused and concentrated in
+the phonetic drills, more especially if associated with pictures, and
+the drawing of the objects named free-hand; thus eye, ear, and hand
+are encouraged to work simultaneously. Those who accomplish
+finally the reading of short simple stories not only enjoy evenings in
+the library, but may be enabled to glean suggestions for the various
+handicrafts for which they are being trained. This effort at quick
+observation and original thinking is further carried forward in the
+ambidextrous movements of free-hand drawing, designing, and
+sketching from life&mdash;finding ready and practical application in the
+daily use of tools. The value of the rule and the try-square is tested
+in the manufacture of the various useful articles in both paper and
+wood included under the head of sloyd, and "a boy can not learn to
+take a straight shaving off a plank," says Ruskin, "or to drive a fine
+curve without faltering, or to lay a brick level in the mortar, without
+learning a multitude of other matters which life of man could never
+teach him."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_756" id="Page_756">[Pg 756]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Equally useful to the girl in the workroom as to the boy in the
+shop is this training of a ready eye, this quick intuition of balance and
+proportion, this practice of obedience of hand and arm to brain, until
+it becomes automatic. To both, therefore, the value of such preparation
+will be incalculable. It is noticeable that boys of this grade
+turn out as good workers in the ordinary crafts of shoemaking, carpentering,
+and house painting as those of higher grade who, although
+capable of grasping more intelligently the details of work, yet do not
+bring to it that energy and perseverance of one who finds in it "this
+one thing I do." With the imbecile of high grade, able to accomplish
+studies equal to about the first intermediate of the public schools, there
+is a diffusion of interest; the intelligence broadens rather than deepens
+during the school period in natural response to environment. With
+greater grasp of numerical values and of letters he attains proficiency
+impossible to the lower grades in drawing, in music, in printing, and
+in cabinet work. Other industries will probably be provided for him
+as the demand increases, for it must be remembered that this is a
+class whose needs have been the last to be recognized in a work begun,
+as I have before said, for the idiot. Regarded as queer, unlike
+other children&mdash;unable to keep up&mdash;he has, after an unsuccessful trial
+at school, been kept at home, in some cases an aid, in others a tyrant,
+to those relatives charged with his care.</p>
+
+<p>Changed conditions of both family and school, fortunately for
+him, combine to render this no longer possible, as absence of proper
+training is always certain to result in deterioration. The pressure
+upon the primary schools in the struggle for higher education leaves
+no time to contend with dull, backward children. In the family the
+care-takers grow fewer in proportion as the home-makers become
+home-winners, and so these feeble ones are a burden instead of an
+aid in the ordinary household offices.</p>
+
+<p>The next hope is a training school where, with false hopes fostered
+by ignorance and sensationalism, they are entered, and after a
+few years, a time all too short for any lasting benefit, a sentimentality
+equally stupid withdraws them from that guardianship absolutely
+essential, with just that little knowledge which will render them
+more dangerous to society, because less recognizable&mdash;an evil element
+perpetuating an evil growth. Under both conditions these unfortunates
+have suffered from that lack of constant care and supervision
+which should be theirs from the cradle to the grave.</p>
+
+<p>The separation of backward children in the schools and the placing
+of them in special classes for special training is the first step in
+the right direction. Here, after sufficient time for observation and
+diagnosing by teacher and physician, the defectives so adjudged will
+naturally drift to the training schools for the feeble-minded; these,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_757" id="Page_757">[Pg 757]</a></span>
+if relieved of the odium as well as the care of their helpless population,
+will then be encouraged to arrange for this brighter class of
+defectives industries which will provide not only for development and
+happiness, but will largely aid in maintenance. The recognition of
+the necessity for this weeding out of the schools, having place first
+on the Continent, next in England, and later in our own country,
+marks an era in the national as well as in the special schools. Both
+will be benefited largely, and formal expression of this, found in the
+addition to our National Educational Association of a department
+representing the training of all classes of defectives, is one of the most
+encouraging signs of the times.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_042_middle.jpg" width="600" height="473" alt="Middle-grade Imbeciles." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Middle-grade Imbeciles.</span></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The same experience which dictates the separation of the idiot
+from the imbecile, the backward from the normal child, urges also
+that a permanent sequestration would tend alike to the safety and
+happiness of the normal and abnormal classes. The experiment made
+of preparing and sending out into the world these irresponsibles has
+proved, to say the least, not encouraging, and the advisability of their
+permanent detention has become self-evident.</p>
+
+<p>The heads of training schools here are a unit in urging that provision
+be made for those who have reached the limit of school progress.
+That experience has reached a similar conclusion in England is testified<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_758" id="Page_758">[Pg 758]</a></span>
+in the munificent gift lately made to the Royal Albert Asylum,
+and by the opinion of its superintendent, Dr. T. Telford-Smith, thus
+clearly expressed:</p>
+
+<p>"It is yearly more noticeable that the public mind is coming
+gradually but surely to recognize the threefold value of the work of
+such institutions as the Royal Albert Asylum. The educational
+and the custodial aspects early
+aroused the sympathies of the
+charitable; but the preventive aspect
+is another which must force
+itself upon all who thoughtfully
+consider the subject. The far-reaching
+and inexorable law of
+heredity is written large for those
+who study the imbecile."</p>
+
+<p>The following paragraph,
+from a daily paper, shows that, in
+America at least, public opinion
+and the acts of the legislature
+have become ripe for action:</p>
+
+<p>"The State of Connecticut is
+about to try a curious experiment
+in social legislation, having passed
+a law forbidding any man or
+woman, imbecile or feeble-minded,
+to marry under forty-five
+years of age, the penalty being
+imprisonment for not less than
+three years; and persons aiding
+and abetting are also liable. The
+hope of the legislature is to keep
+down d&eacute;generate families."</p>
+
+<p>That this experiment is wise
+and justifiable who can doubt?</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 290px;">
+<img src="images/illo_043_low.jpg" width="290" height="600" alt="Low-grade Imbeciles. No. 1, obstinate,
+perverse, indolent; No. 2, gentle and
+obedient." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Low-grade Imbeciles.</span><br />
+No. 1, obstinate, perverse, indolent;<br />
+No. 2, gentle and obedient.</span></div>
+
+<p>To glance at another and
+sadder, but not less real, side of
+the same question, can any one doubt but that the adolescent and adult
+female imbecile needs lifelong care and protection? Surely the noble
+gift to the asylum by Sir Thomas Storey of a home for forty such cases
+is a wise, far-seeing, and statesmanlike act.</p>
+
+<p>It is greatly to be hoped that this noble example may be speedily
+emulated on both sides of the sea, and that each State may shortly
+possess, in addition to its training school, its own colony farm with all
+the industries of a village, drawing its workers from the well-directed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_759" id="Page_759">[Pg 759]</a></span>
+energies of a carefully guarded community. Cottages, each with its
+house mother, would insure that sense of home, and that affectionate
+and sympathetic oversight so essential to this society composed of
+those who are always children, while measures, which science has
+already pointed out and experience proved as advisable, might, if protected
+by wise legislation, permit less vigilance on the part of care-takers
+and consequent happiness because of greater freedom to its
+members.</p>
+
+<p>It is a happy coincidence that Massachusetts, the pioneer State in
+the work among the feeble-minded, should in its fifty-first year celebrate
+the beginning of its second half century by the inauguration of
+this most eventful step in the onward progress of the work. The
+training school at Waltham has lately purchased sixteen hundred and
+sixty acres of land for the establishment of a colony which is to have
+natural and healthful growth from the fostering care of the parent
+institution.</p>
+
+<p>As these colonies increase, drawing from society a pernicious element
+and transforming it under watchful care into healthful growth,
+may not in time the national Government, finding these homes of
+prevention a more excellent way than prison houses of cure for ill, be
+induced to provide a national colony for this race more to be commiserated
+because of a childhood more hopeless than that of the two
+others in our midst on whom so much has been expended?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>THE WHEAT PROBLEM AGAIN.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By EDWARD ATKINSON.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>In a recent article in the North American Review, Mr. John Hyde,
+the statistician of the United States Department of Agriculture,
+a gentleman of very high authority and repute, presents this problem
+in such terms as to throw a doubt upon the validity of any forecast
+of the potential increase in the product of wheat, or, in fact, of any
+crop in this country. Without referring to myself by name, he yet
+makes it very plain that he does not attach any value to my recent
+forecast of wheat production printed in the Popular Science Monthly
+for December, 1898.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, he rightly says that since Tyndall's address to
+the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1874 no
+treatise presented to that association has excited so general an interest
+or provoked so much unfavorable criticism as Sir William Crookes's
+recent utterances on the subject of the approaching scarcity in the
+supply of wheat.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_760" id="Page_760">[Pg 760]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hyde disclaims any intention to give his own views, but yet
+no one can read his treatise without noting a substantial agreement
+with Sir William Crookes, perhaps almost unconsciously to himself.
+In his closing paragraph he says: "To discuss the extent to which
+under conceivable conditions the United States may, <i>notwithstanding
+the somewhat dubious outlook</i>, still continue to contribute to the food
+supply of other nations, would be little more than speculation."</p>
+
+<p>The Italics are my own.</p>
+
+<p>I venture to point out that the use of the word "speculation" is
+an example of many instances. Like a dog, one may give a word a
+bad name, yet it may be a good dog and a very good word when
+rightly used. In the true and very innocent meaning of the word
+"speculation" we find exactly what the public has a right to expect
+and even to demand from the Department of Agriculture. In Webster's
+Dictionary I find that, when used in such a connection as this
+problem of the potential of this country in farm productions, the word
+"speculation" stands for "a mental view of anything in its various
+aspects and relations; contemplation; intellectual examination."</p>
+
+<p>If any "mental view" has yet been taken in the Department of
+Agriculture of the proportion of the land of this country which may
+be termed "arable," I have yet to find the record. If any "contemplation"
+has been devoted to the proportions of this arable land
+which may be devoted to different crops in each section, I have been
+remiss in not securing the reports. If any "mental view" has been
+taken of the relative area now devoted to each principal crop, and
+that which may be so devoted hereafter in order to meet the prospective
+demand upon the land, either for the supply of our own population
+or of other nations, where is the record? If there is no such
+"speculation" now of record, is it not time that a true agricultural
+survey corresponding to our geologic and geodetic surveys should be
+entered upon? I have reason to believe that such surveys have been
+made by many European states in which all the arable land in some
+kingdoms is classified, listed, and so recorded that any one wishing to
+know the best place for any special product can get the information
+by reference to the proper department of the Government.</p>
+
+<p>I have had occasion to make several studies of this kind. In order
+to inform myself on the potential of the South in the production
+of cotton, I undertook a study of the physical geography and climatology
+of the cotton States and of other cotton-producing countries
+nearly forty years ago. The results of this research were first given in
+Cheap Cotton by Free Labor, published in 1861. In that pamphlet
+and in many treatises following, finally in an address in Atlanta, in
+1880, a true forecast or "speculation" or "intellectual examination"
+will be found of the production of the cotton fiber, the potential<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_761" id="Page_761">[Pg 761]</a></span>
+of the future and of the cotton-seed-oil industry, then almost unheard
+of in this country. In 1880 I also entered upon my first "speculation"
+(not in the market) on the lines of a "contemplation" or
+forecast of the effect of agricultural machinery applied to our wheat
+land, coupled with the prospective reduction in the cost of carrying
+wheat to England, upon the condition of the American farmer and
+the British landlord. That forecast of prosperity to our farmers in
+the supply of bread at low cost to our kin beyond the sea has been
+justified at every point and in every detail. I therefore ventured to
+review Sir William Crookes's address, and I am well assured that what
+Mr. Hyde now calls a "somewhat dubious outlook" is subject to no
+doubt whatever as to our ability to continue our full supply for domestic
+consumption and export for the next century.</p>
+
+<p>Let me now repeat again what I have often said: statistics are
+good servants, but very bad masters. I long since ceased to put any
+great reliance upon averages of crops, wages, or products covering
+wide areas and varying conditions, unless I could find out, <i>first</i>, the
+personal equation of the man who compiled them; <i>second</i>, ascertain
+what he knew himself about the subject of which his statistics or
+figures were the symbols; and, <i>third</i>, unless I could verify these great
+averages from one or more typical areas of farm land, or from one or
+more representative factories or workshops, of the conditions of which
+I could myself obtain personal information.</p>
+
+<p>General statistics and averages of farm products and earnings I
+regard with more suspicion than almost any others because of the immense
+variation in conditions.</p>
+
+<p>I have sometimes almost come to the conclusion that so many of
+the figures of the United States census are mere statistical rubbish as
+to throw a doubt on nearly all the schedules. Yet without accurate
+statistics on many points, many of them yet to be secured, the conduct
+of our national affairs must become as uncertain as would be the
+conduct of any great business corporation without a true ledger account
+and a trial balance. Hence the necessity for a permanent
+census bureau and for a careful "speculation" or "intellectual" and
+intelligent examination and "contemplation" or study of the facts
+about our land by which our future welfare must be governed.</p>
+
+<p>A good beginning has been made by the authorities of many
+States, yet more by the body of well-trained men in charge of the
+Agricultural Experiment Station, in whose support too much can
+not be said. To them I appealed when trying to get an adequate conception
+of our potential in wheat.</p>
+
+<p>When we think of the blunders which have been made in very
+recent years, we may well have some suspicion that we may still be
+very ignorant on many points about our own country. Who really<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_762" id="Page_762">[Pg 762]</a></span>
+knows very much about the great middle section of the South, what
+is called the "Land of the Sky," comprising the upland plateaus and
+mountain sections of Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia,
+Alabama, eastern Tennessee, and Kentucky? Within this area, as
+large as France and twice as large as Great Britain, will be found
+timber and minerals equal to both the countries named, and a potential
+in agriculture equal to either, as yet very sparsely populated.</p>
+
+<p>Yet under a craze for centrifugal expansion we are now in danger
+of trying to develop tropical islands far away, already somewhat
+densely peopled, where white men can not work and live, to our detriment,
+danger, and loss, while we fail to see that if we expand centripetally
+by the occupation and use of the most healthy and productive
+section of our own country, we may add immensely to our prosperity,
+our wealth, to our profit without cost and without militarism.
+This sparsely settled Land of the Sky is greater in area and far greater
+in its potential than the Philippine Islands, Cuba, and Porto Rico
+combined. Verily, it seems as if common sense were a latent and
+sluggish force, often endangered by the noisy and blatant influence of
+the venal politician and the greed of the unscrupulous advocates of
+vassal colonies who now attempt to pervert the power of government
+to their own purposes of private gain.</p>
+
+<p>Witness the blunders of the past:</p>
+
+<p>We nearly gave away Oregon because it was held not to be worth
+retaining.</p>
+
+<p>When the northern boundary of Wisconsin was being determined,
+it was put as far north as it was then supposed profitable farming could
+ever extend, excluding Minnesota, now one of our greatest sources of
+wheat.</p>
+
+<p>The Great American Desert in my own school atlas covered a
+large part of the most fertile land now under cultivation.</p>
+
+<p>What blunders are we now making for lack of "speculation"
+or "intellectual examination" as to the future of American farming
+and farm lands?</p>
+
+<p>On one point to which Mr. Hyde refers I must cry <i>peccavi</i>. He
+rebukes the editor of the Popular Science Monthly for admitting an
+article in which a potential of 400,000,000 bushels of wheat is attributed
+to the State of Idaho. The total depravity of the type-writing
+machine caused the mechanism to spell Montana in the letters
+I-d-a-h-o. What I imputed to Idaho is true of Montana, if the Chief
+of the Agricultural Experiment Stations of Montana is a competent
+witness, if all its arable land were devoted to wheat. It will be
+observed that I mentioned Idaho incidentally (meaning Montana),
+taking no cognizance of the estimate given, because it was at present
+of no practical importance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_763" id="Page_763">[Pg 763]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I have expressed my distrust of great averages in respect to agriculture
+and farm products.</p>
+
+<p>In illustration of this fallacy, the figures presented by Mr. Hyde
+will now be dealt with. It is held that in 1930, which is the year
+when Sir William Crookes predicts starvation among the bread-eating
+people of the world for lack of wheat (as if good bread could
+only be made from wheat), the population of this country may be
+computed at 130,000,000. The requirements of that year for our
+own consumption Mr. Hyde estimates at 700,000,000 bushels of
+wheat, 1,250,000,000 bushels of oats, 3,450,000,000 bushels of corn
+(maize), and 100,000,000 tons of hay; and, although other products
+are not named by him, we may assume a corresponding increase.</p>
+
+<p>Subsequently Mr. Hyde gives the present delusive average yields
+per acre of the whole country, and then throws a doubt on the future
+progress of agricultural science, saying, "Whatever agricultural science
+may be able to do in the next thirty years, up to the present time
+it has only succeeded in arresting that decline in the rate of production
+with which we have been continually threatened." Without
+dealing at present with this want of and true consideration of or
+"speculation" upon the progress made in the last decade under the
+lead of the experiment stations and other beginnings in remedying
+the wasteful and squalid methods that have been so conspicuous in
+pioneer farming, let us take Mr. Hyde's averages and see what demand
+upon land the requirements of 1930 will make, even at the present
+meager average product per acre.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hyde apparently computes this prospective product as one
+that will be required for the domestic consumption of 130,000,000
+people by ratio to our present product. He ignores the fact that our
+present product suffices for 75,000,000, with an excess of live stock,
+provisions, and dairy products exported nearly equal in value to all
+the grain exported, and in excess of the exports of wheat. If we can
+increase proportionally in one class of products, why not in another?
+Whichever pays best will be produced and exported.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>1897 and 1930 compared.&mdash;Data of 1897.</i></p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Crop production">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>Products.</td>
+ <td>Average per acre.</td>
+ <td>Area required.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Maize</td>
+ <td align="right">1,902,967,933 bushels.</td>
+ <td align="right">23.8 &nbsp; bushels.</td>
+ <td align="right">125,150 square miles.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wheat</td>
+ <td align="right">530,149,168<span class="h">bus</span>"<span class="h">hels</span></td>
+ <td align="right">13.4&nbsp;<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">61,660<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Oats</td>
+ <td align="right">698,767,809<span class="h">bus</span>"<span class="h">hels</span></td>
+ <td align="right">27.2&nbsp;<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">40,200<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Hay</td>
+ <td align="right">60,664,770 <span style="margin-right: 1.5em;">tons.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">1.43<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">66,290<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Total in square miles</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">293,300 square miles.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>All other farm crops carry the total to less than 400,000 square
+miles now under the plow, probably not exceeding 360,000.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_764" id="Page_764">[Pg 764]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Prospective demand of 1930, at the same meager average product
+per acre, without progress in agricultural science:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Crop production">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>Crop called for.</td>
+ <td>Per acre.</td>
+ <td>Area required.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Maize</td>
+ <td align="right">3,450,000,000 bushels.</td>
+ <td align="right">23.8 &nbsp; bushels.</td>
+ <td align="right">226,600 square miles.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wheat</td>
+ <td align="right">700,000,000<span class="h">bus</span>"<span class="h">hels</span></td>
+ <td align="right">13.4&nbsp;<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">81,600<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Oats</td>
+ <td align="right">1,250,000,000<span class="h">bus</span>"<span class="h">hels</span></td>
+ <td align="right">27.2&nbsp;<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">70,800<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Hay</td>
+ <td align="right">100,000,000 <span style="margin-right: 1.5em;">tons.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">1.43<span class="h">bush</span>"<span class="h">els.</span></td>
+ <td align="right">109,400<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2">Total in square miles</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">488,400 square miles.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>Assuming all land under the plow in 1930 in the ratio as above,
+the area of all now in all crops 400,000 square miles&mdash;an excessive
+estimate&mdash;that year (1930) will call for 667,000 square miles of
+arable land in actual cultivation.</p>
+
+<p>I have been accustomed to consider one half our national domain,
+exclusive of Alaska, good arable land in the absence of any "speculation"
+on that point in the records of the Department of Agriculture;
+but from the returns given by the chiefs of the experiment stations
+and secretaries of agriculture of the States hereafter cited, that estimate
+may be increased probably to two thirds, or 2,000,000 square
+miles of arable land out of a total of 3,000,000 square miles, omitting
+Alaska.</p>
+
+<p>Assuming that we possess 2,000,000 square miles of arable land,
+capable at least of producing the present meager average product
+cited above, the conditions of 1930 will be graphically presented on
+the following diagram:</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>Prospective Use of Land in the Year 1930 on Present Crop Average.</i><br />
+(Arable land assumed to be 2,000,000 square miles in the outer lines of the diagram)</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="prospective use of land">
+<tr><td class="center bor_bottop_yes bor_side_yes">Oats,<br /> 70,800<br /> sq. miles.</td>
+ <td rowspan="2" class="center bor_top_yes bor_side_yes">Wheat,<br />81,600<br /> sq.miles.</td>
+ <td rowspan="2" class="center bor_top_yes bor_side_yes">Hay,<br /> 109,400<br /> sq. miles.</td>
+ <td rowspan="3" class="center bor_top_yes bor_side_yes">Miscellaneous.<br /> Roots, cotton,<br /> tobacco, etc.,<br /> 168,600 sq. m.<br /> Excessive.</td>
+ <td rowspan="3" class="center bor_top_yes bor_side_yes">Maize,<br /> Indian corn,<br /> 226,600<br /> sq. miles.</td>
+ <td rowspan="3" class="center bor_top_yes bor_side_yes">Wheat<br /> for<br /> export,<br /> 143,000<br /> sq. miles.<br /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bor_left_yes">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bor_left_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bor_top_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bor_top_yes">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="3" class="bor_left_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bor_top_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bor_top_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bor_top_yes bor_right_yes">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="4" class="bor_left_yes" align="left">Arable land unassigned</td>
+ <td colspan="2" class="bor_right_yes" align="right">1,200,000 square miles.</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="4" class="bor_left_yes" align="left">Deduct for cities, towns, parks, and reserves of all kinds</td>
+ <td colspan="2" class="bor_right_yes" align="right">200,000<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="4" class="bor_left_yes">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td colspan="2" class="bor_right_yes" align="left">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="4" class="bor_left_yes">Reserve for future use</td>
+ <td colspan="2" class="bor_right_yes" align="right">1,000,000<span class="h">squ</span>"<span class="h">re m</span>"<span class="h">iles</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="6" class="bor_bottom_yes bor_side_yes" align="left">Forest, mountain, arid, etc., not counted, about 1,000,000 square miles,<br />
+ not included in these lines or squares.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>No reduction on area cultivated on prospective improvement in the present methods of
+farming, although it may be assumed that the prospective increase of crop per acre will
+exert great influence.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>If the facts should be in 1930 consistent with Mr. Hyde's "speculation"
+it would therefore appear that our ability to meet the domestic
+demand of 1930 with proportionate export of cattle, provisions,
+and dairy products, and to set apart a little patch of land for the
+export of 1,226,000,000 bushels of wheat raised at the rate of only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_765" id="Page_765">[Pg 765]</a></span>
+13.4 bushels per acre from 143,000 square miles of land will be met
+by the cultivation of not exceeding 700,000 square miles out of
+2,000,000 available.</p>
+
+<p>I should not venture to question the conclusions emanating from
+the Department of Agriculture, or the deductions of so eminent a
+scientist as Sir William Crookes, had I not taken the usual precaution
+of a business man in studying a business question. I went to
+the men who know the subject as well as the figures on which statistics
+are to be compiled.</p>
+
+<p>Being supplied by the Popular Science Monthly with one hundred
+proofs of the first nine and a half pages of the December article in
+which the terms of the problem are stated, I sent those proofs to the
+chiefs of the experiment stations and to the secretaries of agriculture
+in all the States from which any considerable product of wheat
+is now or may be hereafter derived; also to many makers of wheat
+harvesters; to the secretaries of Chambers of Commerce, and to several
+economic students in the wheat-growing States. This preliminary
+study was accompanied by the following circular of inquiry:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><span class="smcap">Boston, Mass.</span>, <i>October 5, 1898</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>To the Chiefs of the Agricultural Experiment Stations and others in
+Authority</i>:</p>
+
+<p>Calling your attention to the inclosed advance sheets of an article
+which will by and by appear in the Popular Science Monthly, I beg
+to put to you certain questions.</p>
+
+<p>If the matter interests you, will you kindly fill up the blanks below
+and let me have your replies within the present month of October,
+to the end that I may compile them and give a digest of the results?
+I shall state in the article that I am indebted to you and others for the
+information submitted.</p>
+
+<p>Area of the State of....................... square miles.</p>
+
+<p>1. What proportion of this area do you believe to be arable land
+of fair quality, including pasture that might be put under the plow?</p>
+
+<p class="right">Answer ................... square miles.</p>
+
+<p>2. What proportion is now in forest or mountain sections which
+may not be available for agriculture for a long period?</p>
+
+<p class="right">Answer ................... square miles.</p>
+
+<p>3. What has been done or may be done by irrigation?</p>
+
+<p class="right">....................................................................
+....................................................................
+....................................................................</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_766" id="Page_766">[Pg 766]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>4. What proportion of the arable land above measured should you
+consider suitable to the production of wheat under general conditions
+such as are given in the text, say, a stable price of one dollar per bushel
+in London?</p>
+
+<p class="right">Answer ................... square miles.</p>
+
+<p>5. To what extent, in your judgment, is wheat becoming the cash
+or surplus crop of a varied system of agriculture as distinct from the
+methods which prevail in the opening of new lands of cropping with
+wheat for a term of years?</p>
+
+<p class="right">....................................................................
+....................................................................
+....................................................................</p>
+
+<p>What further remarks can you add which will enable me to elucidate
+this case, to complete the article and to convey a true impression
+of the facts to English readers?</p>
+
+<p class="right">....................................................................
+....................................................................
+....................................................................</p>
+
+<p>Your assistance in this matter will be gratefully received.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span style="margin-right: 3em;">Respectfully submitted,</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">Edward Atkinson</span>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>To this circular I received twenty-four detailed replies, containing
+statistics mostly very complete; also many suggestive letters, in every
+case giving full support to the general views which I had submitted
+in the proof sheets. It has been impossible for me to give individual
+credit within the limits of a magazine article to the gentlemen who
+have so fully supplied the data. Space will only permit me to submit
+a digest of the more important facts in a table derived from these
+replies:</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="agricultural data from survey">
+<tr><td rowspan="2">Name.</td><td colspan="3"><span class="smcap lowercase">FROM RETURNS MADE TO MY INQUIRY.</span></td><td rowspan="2">From United<br />States report<br />in wheat,<br />1897.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Area of State.</td><td>Arable.</td><td>Suitable to<br />wheat</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Minnesota</td><td align="right">84,287</td><td align="right">66,000</td><td align="right">50,000</td><td align="right">7,189</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">South Dakota</td><td align="right">76,000</td><td align="right">42,500</td><td align="right">40,000</td><td align="right">4,187</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">North Dakota</td><td align="right">74,312</td><td align="right">50,000</td><td align="right">50,000</td><td align="right">4,300</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Illinois</td><td align="right">56,000</td><td align="right">54,000</td><td align="right">20,000</td><td align="right">2,292</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Missouri</td><td align="right">68,000</td><td align="right">64,000</td><td align="right">64,000</td><td align="right">2,448</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wisconsin</td><td align="right">56,000</td><td align="right">35,000</td><td align="right">35,000</td><td align="right">961</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">414,599</td><td align="right">311,500</td><td align="right">259,000</td><td align="right">21,372</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">===========</td><td align="right">=========</td><td align="right">=========</td><td align="right">=========</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Texas</td><td align="right">269,694</td><td align="right">200,000</td><td align="right">100,000</td><td align="right">700</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">California</td><td align="right">158,360</td><td align="right">54,000</td><td align="right">30,000</td><td align="right">5,062</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Montana</td><td align="right">145,310</td><td align="right">30,000</td><td align="right">25,000</td><td align="right">109</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Idaho</td><td align="right">87,000</td><td align="right">30,000</td><td align="right">15,000</td><td align="right">192</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td><td>&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">660,364</td><td align="right">314,000</td><td align="right">170,000</td><td align="right">6,063</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">===========</td><td align="right">=========</td><td align="right">=========</td><td align="right">=========</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">1,074,963</td><td align="right">625,500</td><td align="right">429,000</td><td align="right">27,435</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_767" id="Page_767">[Pg 767]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I do not give the data of the Eastern and Southern States, and I
+have selected only the most complete data of the other States, choosing
+the more conservative where two returns have been made from one
+State.</p>
+
+<p>The foregoing States produced a little over one third of the wheat
+crop of 1897. They comprise a little over one third the area of the
+land of the United States, excluding Alaska.</p>
+
+<p>The list covers States like Illinois, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, now
+very fully occupied relatively to Texas, Montana, and Idaho, as yet
+but sparsely settled.</p>
+
+<p>Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, Oregon, and
+Washington combined far exceed the above list in wheat production;
+but, as I have no complete data from these States, I can only say that
+the national or census statistics, as far as they go, develop corresponding
+conditions to those above given. The very small product of
+Texas and Montana, even of Idaho, as compared with the claimed
+potential, will attract notice, and perhaps excite incredulity. But
+let it be remembered that in 1880 the Territory of Dakota yielded
+less than 3,000,000 bushels of wheat, while in 1898 the two States
+of North and South Dakota, formerly in one Territory, claim to have
+produced 100,000,000 bushels. Perhaps it will then be admitted
+that the potential of Montana, and even of Idaho, may be attained in
+some measure corresponding to the reports from those States; but as
+yet their product is a negligible quantity, as that of Dakota was only
+twenty years since.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_768" id="Page_768">[Pg 768]</a></span></p>
+<p>Again, let it be remembered that Texas will produce a cotton crop,
+marketed in 1898-'99, above the average of the five ante-war crops of
+the whole country, and nearly equal to the largest crop ever grown
+in the United States before the war. Texas could not only produce
+the present entire cotton crop of the United States but of
+the world, on but a small part of her land which is well suited to
+cotton. When these facts are considered, perhaps the potential of
+that great State in wheat and other grain, in cattle and in sheep, as
+well as in cotton, may begin to be comprehended.</p>
+
+<p>The writer is well aware that this treatment of a great problem
+is very incomplete, but it is the best that the leisure hours of a very
+busy business life would permit. If it discloses the general ignorance
+of our resources, the total inadequacy of many of our official statistics,
+the lack of any real agricultural survey, and the necessity for a reorganization
+and concentration of the scientific departments of the Government
+as well as of a permanent census bureau, it will have served a
+useful purpose.</p>
+
+<p>If it also serves to call attention to the meager average crops and
+the poor quality of our agriculture as a whole down to a very recent
+period, it may suggest even to those to whose minds the statistics of
+the past convey but gloomy and "doubtful views" of the future, that
+the true progress in scientific agriculture could only begin when substantially
+all the fertile land in the possession of the Government had
+either been given away or otherwise distributed. So long as "sod
+crops" and the single-crop system yielded adequate returns to unskilled
+farmers, no true science of agriculture could be expected, any
+more than a large product of wool can be hoped for in States where
+it has been wittily said that "every poor man keeps one cur dog, and
+every d&mdash;d poor man keeps two or more."</p>
+
+<p>Finally, if I shall have drawn attention to the very effective
+work which is being done in the agricultural experiment stations
+by men of first-rate ability, I shall have drawn attention to a great
+fact. This work has already led to a complete revolution from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_769" id="Page_769">[Pg 769]</a></span>
+old practice of maltreating land, and to the renovation of soils that
+had been partially exhausted. Governor Henry A. Wise, of Virginia,
+long since condemned the old methods of Southern agriculture by telling
+his hearers, "The niggers skinned the land and the white men
+skinned the niggers." We are changing all that by new and progressive
+methods. I hope that in this recognition of the work of the
+experiment stations I shall have made some return for the attention
+which has been given to my inquiry by so many of my correspondents
+that the space assigned me forbids a list of my authorities being given
+by name.</p>
+
+<p>When the suggestion is made from the Department of Agriculture
+that all that science has yet accomplished has been to stop a tendency
+to a lessened production from the land now under the plow, and
+when it is even suggested that in 1930 the present meager average of
+crops per acre may still exist, it seems to me that little credit is given
+to the good work already accomplished in the short period in which
+the separate Department of Agriculture has been represented in the
+Cabinet, especially in the last five or six years, while the suggestion
+itself shows very little consideration of the great work of the experiment
+stations.</p>
+
+<p>Unless it can be proved that my correspondents and myself have
+entered into a conspiracy to mislead the public in dealing with the
+potential of this country in wheat production, nearly all the deductions
+from the figures of the past must be considered mere statistical rubbish.
+These statistics cover sections and States in which wheat should never
+be grown or attempted in competition with the true wheat soils and
+climate. As well might misplaced iron furnaces, built to boom city
+lots where there are no favorable conditions for the production of
+iron, be included in an average and held up as a standard of our potential
+in iron and steel production.</p>
+
+<p>In my efforts to discover the rule of progress in the arts and occupations
+of the people of this country, it has become plain that in
+ratio to the application of science and invention to every art the quantity
+of product is increased, the number of workmen is relatively
+diminished, the price of the product tends to diminish, while the
+wages or earnings of those who do the work are augmented.
+I have investigated many branches of industry, and find evidence
+conclusive to my own mind that such is the law of industrial development.
+This rule is subject to temporary variations under the
+restriction of statutes. In my own judgment, the so-called protective
+principle or policy of interference with commerce by imposing
+fines on foreign imports has retarded the progress of the specially
+protected arts, and has in some measure obstructed the diversity
+of manufactures; but the opposite policy of absolutely free trade in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_770" id="Page_770">[Pg 770]</a></span>
+our domestic traffic over a greater area and among a much larger
+number of people than have elsewhere secured their own liberty has
+been so much more potent in its progressive influence as to have lessened
+the evils of the restrictions on foreign trade.</p>
+
+<p>According to my observation, all the efforts to regulate railroad
+charges by State legislation and under the interstate commerce act
+have greatly retarded the progress of the railway, and have deprived
+great States, notably Texas, of any service at all commensurate to the
+demand which might otherwise have been supplied to the mutual
+benefit of the owners of the railways and the inhabitants of the State.
+The most serious retarding influence, especially evil in its effect upon
+farmers, was the useless panic of 1893, caused by the silver craze&mdash;that
+is to say, by the effort to enact a force bill by which the producers
+of our great crops would have been compelled to accept money
+of half the purchasing power of that to which their industry had been
+long adjusted. This caused a temporary paralysis of industry, in
+which I think none suffered so much as the farmers of the country.</p>
+
+<p>But admitting these temporary variations, I find the same rule
+governing the products of the farm that governs the mine, the factory,
+and the workshop&mdash;namely, a lessening of the number occupied in
+ratio to the product; a great reduction in the cost of labor; an increased
+return in due proportion of the skill and intelligence of the
+farmer; a rapid reduction in the farm mortgages, ending at the present
+date in making the farmers of the grain-growing States the creditors
+of the world, especially those occupied upon wheat.</p>
+
+<p>But in the development of this progress we find the reverse of
+the practice in the factory and the workshop. The most important
+applications of science and invention led first to what might be called
+the manufacture of wheat on an extensive method of making a single
+crop on great areas of land. That phase has about spent its force; the
+great farms are in process of division; the single-crop system has about
+ended; the intensive system of making a larger product from a lessened
+area with alternation and variation in crops is rapidly taking the
+place of former methods.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, while many branches of manufacturing tend more and
+more to the collective method, the tendency in agriculture is more
+and more to individualism in dealing with the land itself, coupled
+with collective ownership in the more expensive farm machinery, in
+creameries, cheese factories, and the like. We are apparently at a
+halfway stage in this revolution of agriculture. The intelligent and
+intensive methods of breeding cattle and sheep is also rapidly taking
+the place of the semibarbarous conditions of the ranch.</p>
+
+<p>If these points are well taken, the very suggestion that we must
+compute the land which should be under the plow in 1890 in order to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_771" id="Page_771">[Pg 771]</a></span>
+supply the needs of 130,000,000 people on the basis of the imperfect
+statistics and inadequate data of the past, becomes almost an impertinence.
+It is much more probable that the 400,000 square miles which
+now meet the needs of 75,000,000 people, with an enormous excess
+for export, will in 1930 still suffice for the domestic supply of
+130,000,000 people, with a proportionate export corresponding to the
+present.</p>
+
+<p>If the product of the farms of the West now yielding the largest
+crops, or of the renovated lands of the South now yielding the best
+crops, be taken as the average standard of the near future, as they
+should be, then it may be true in 1930, as it is now, that one fifth of
+the arable land of this country when put under the plow will still
+suffice for all existing demands, the remainder of our great domain
+extending the promise of future abundance and welfare to the yet
+greater numbers who will occupy the land a century hence.</p>
+
+<p>I may add that in the course of a very friendly correspondence
+with Sir William Crookes, while we are still at variance in our estimates
+of the area which may be converted to the production of wheat
+in this country without trenching upon any other product, we are
+wholly at an agreement on a most material point. I quote from one
+of his letters: "Under the present wasteful method of cultivation
+there will be in a limited number of years an insufficient supply of
+wheat. Apply artificial fertilizers judiciously, and the supply may
+be increased indefinitely." I would only venture to add to the judgment
+of so eminent a writer the words "or natural," to the end that
+the paragraph should read, "Apply artificial or natural fertilizers
+judiciously, and the supply can be increased indefinitely."</p>
+
+<p>Many years ago I was asked among others, "What would be the
+next great discovery of science or invention?" To which I replied,
+"A supply of nitrogen at low cost." Has not that discovery been
+made in the recent development of the functions of the bacteria which,
+living and dying upon the leguminous plants, dissociate the nitrogen
+of the atmosphere and convert it through the plant to the renovation
+of the soil? Is not the invention of methods of nitrifying the soil by
+distributing the germs of bacteria one of the most wonderful discoveries
+of science ever yet attained? Can any one yet measure the
+potential of any given area of land in any part of this country in the
+production of any one of its great crops? That there is a limit may
+be admitted. Can any one venture to say that any of our average
+crops yet approach beyond a small fractional measure the true limit
+of production, whatever it may be, either in cotton, maize, wheat, or
+any other product of the soil?</p>
+
+<p>In this, as in many other developments of the theory of evolution,
+the factor of mental energy, which is the prime factor in all material<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_772" id="Page_772">[Pg 772]</a></span>
+production, may have been or is almost wholly ignored. We are
+ceasing to treat the soil as a mine subject to exhaustion, but we have
+as yet made only a beginning in treating it as an instrument of production
+which will for a long period respond in its increasing product
+in exact ratio to the mental energy which is applied to the cultivation
+of the land.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>THE COMING OF THE CATBIRD.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SPENCER TROTTER.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>In southeastern Pennsylvania there comes a day in February that
+brings with it an indefinable sense of joyousness. A southerly
+wind wanders up the Delaware with a touch of the spring in its air
+that quickens, for the first time, the slumbering life. It is then that
+those mysterious forces in the cells of living things begin their subtle
+work&mdash;hidden in the dark, underground storehouses of plants and the
+sluggish tissues of animals buried in their winter sleep. On such
+a day the ground hog ventures from his burrow, some restless bee is
+lured from the hive to wander disconsolate over bare fields, a snake
+crawls from its hole to bask awhile in the sunshine, and one looks
+instinctively for the first breaking of the earth that tells of the early
+crocus and the peeping forth of daffodils. The southerly wind is
+more apt than not to be a telltale, for with all its springtime softness
+it is drawing toward some storm center, near or remote, that will inevitably
+follow with rough weather in its sweep. The country folk
+rightly call such a day a "weather breeder," and even the ground hog
+knows its portent in the very sign of his shadow. Come as it will,
+the day is really a day borrowed in advance from the spring, as though
+to hearten one through all the dreary days that will follow and, in
+starting the growing forces of vegetation, to make ready for the season's
+coming.</p>
+
+<p>With this forerunner of the year come the harbingers of the bird
+migration. With the rise of the temperature to sixty or over, a well-marked
+bird wave from the south spreads over the Delaware Valley.
+On this balmy, springlike day we hear for the first time since November
+the croaking of grackles as a loose flock wings overhead or
+scatters among the tree tops. A few robins may show themselves,
+and the mellow piping of bluebirds lends its sweet influence to
+the charm of such a day. There is a sense of uncertain whereabouts
+in the bluebird's note, a sort of hazy, in-the-air feeling that suggests
+sky space. It does not seem to have the tangible element by which
+we can locate the bird as in the voices of the robin and the song sparrow.
+It is on such a day as this that song sparrows are first heard&mdash;cheery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_773" id="Page_773">[Pg 773]</a></span>
+ditties from the weather-beaten fences and the bare, brown
+tangle of brier patches. The day may close lurid with the frayed
+streamers of lofty cirrus clouds streaking across the sky&mdash;the vaporous
+overflow of a coming storm&mdash;or a week of the same bright weather
+may continue with the wind all the while blowing softly out of the
+south, but sooner or later the inevitable winter storm must close
+this foretaste of the spring.</p>
+
+<p>A decided wave of rising temperature usually reaches the Delaware
+Valley from the middle to the last of March, maintaining itself
+longer than the February rise, and ushering in a well-marked bird
+wave. It is about this time that the vanguard of the robin migration
+scatters over the country. The grackles or crow blackbirds, which
+have been more or less in evidence since their first appearance in February,
+begin renovating the old nests or laying the foundations of new
+ones in the tops of tall pines. The shrill call of the flicker sounds
+through the woods, and before the end of the month one is sure to
+hear the plaintive song of the field sparrow. This is about the time
+that the spicebush shows its yellow blossoms through the grays and
+browns of the spring underwoods, and the skunk cabbage unfolds its
+fresh, green leafage in rank abundance along the boggy course of
+woodland rills. A week earlier the streaked yellow and purple of its
+fleshy spathes shows here and there in the oozy ground by the side
+of the folded leaf spikes. It is just at this time, too, that one must
+go to the woods for the first spring wild flowers&mdash;bloodroot, hepatica,
+anemones, and the yellow dog-tooth violet&mdash;if one would get the real
+freshness of spring into his soul. The crows, that all through the
+winter filed away each evening in straggling lines of flight toward
+the distant roost, have broken ranks, and go rambling in small groups
+through the woods and over the fields of green winter wheat. Like
+the grackles, they have thoughts of courtship and the more earnest
+business of family cares. The liquid notes of meadow larks sound
+clear and sweet in the greening fields and pastures, and small flocks
+of vociferous killdeers scatter in wheeling flight over the newly
+plowed lands. In tangle covers the rustle of dead leaves here and
+there tells of the whereabouts of a flock of fox sparrows halting in
+their northward pilgrimage. The pewee is back, inspecting her last
+year's house under the span of some old bridge, and the melancholy
+voice of the dove is borne on the air from the fence rows and cedars
+along the farther side of fields.</p>
+
+<p>After the 1st of April the tide of migration sets in with force,
+and the earlier waves bring several species of summer birds&mdash;those
+that come to build and breed in our woods&mdash;that rarely if ever make
+their appearance before this time. It is an interesting fact that none
+of the migrants that make their first appearance in April are ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_774" id="Page_774">[Pg 774]</a></span>
+found in the Delaware Valley during the winter, though several, if
+not all, of the species that come on the March waves are occasionally
+met with in the winter months. It appears, further, that the winter
+quarters of certain birds which are summer residents with us and some
+that are transient, passing on to more northern breeding grounds, lie
+not so very far to the south. If the last of March has been marked
+by warm weather lapping over into the first days of April, then one
+may expect soon to hear the familiar notes of the chipping sparrow
+from the swelling branches of garden shrubbery and the trees about
+the lawn, and a brown thrasher is sure to be heard volubly proclaiming
+his arrival from some near-by tree top. Among the budding
+sprigs of thickets the elusive chewink breaks into occasional fragments
+of song, and from the red-blossomed maples and the jungle of
+pussy willows and alders that fringe the meadow brook the metallic
+creaking notes of the red-winged blackbirds sound not unpleasingly.
+This jargon of the red-wing has a true vernal ring about it, suggesting
+the fresh green of oozy bogs and the loosening up of sap.</p>
+
+<p>From the middle to the last of April there are several big waves
+of migration that bring many of the summer residents as well as some
+transient species, forerunning the greater waves that are to follow in
+May. On certain warm April days the barn and the bank swallows
+appear, and the chimney swifts are seen scurrying to and fro above
+the trees and house tops. These are genuine signs of the coming
+summer, for swallows and swifts feed only on the minute gnats and
+other ephemera that develop under conditions of warm temperature.
+Whoever knows of a martin box that year after year is visited by its
+colony has an unfailing source of delight at this time in watching the
+lovely birds. The martins are very prompt in their arrival, rarely
+coming before the 1st of April nor later than the 10th. We are
+aware for the first time that the house wren has come back by the
+voluble song that greets us some morning from the branches just
+beyond our window&mdash;a song that only the lover of his own rooftree
+can fully appreciate, for the wren's chant, more than any other bird
+song, seems to voice the home instinct in a man. By the last week
+of April the woods are fast closing up their vistas in a rich profusion
+of unfolding leafage. The umbrellalike leaves of the May apple are
+scattered everywhere through the woods and fields, forming conspicuous
+patches of green. During this last week of the month a few
+straggling thrushes make their appearance&mdash;the hermit thrush with
+its russet tail, the veery, and the wood thrush. The first two are transients,
+flitting through the underwoods or rustling among fallen leaves
+in search of their insect food. To hear the incomparable matins and
+vespers of the hermit one must follow to the bird's breeding range on
+the wooded slopes of the Appalachians or farther into the deep recesses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_775" id="Page_775">[Pg 775]</a></span>
+of the Canadian forests. The wood thrush breeds with us,
+and the melody of its notes adds a peculiar charm to our groves and
+woodlands that would leave an unfilled blank in the choir if the bird
+were a transient like the hermit or the veery.</p>
+
+<p>From the 1st to the 10th of May a succession of bird waves
+comes from the south of such vast proportions as to the number of
+individuals and variety of species that all the previous migratory
+waves seem insignificant in comparison. It is the flood tide of the
+migration, bringing with it the host of warblers, vireos, orioles,
+tanagers, and thrushes that suddenly make our woods almost tropical
+in the variety of richly colored species and strange bird notes. It
+would take a volume to describe the wood warblers, sylvan nymphs
+of such bizarre color patterns and dainty forms that one is fain to
+imagine himself in the heart of some wondrous forest of a far-away
+land. Their curious dry notes, each different in its kind and expression,
+yet all of the same insectlike quality; their quick, active
+motions, now twisting head downward around the branches, prying
+into every nook and cranny in their eager search for food, or fluttering
+about the clusters of leaves, add to the strange effect. Their
+names, too, are richly stimulative to the color sense&mdash;the black-throated
+green, the black-throated blue, the chestnut-sided, the bay-breasted,
+the black and yellow, the cerulean, the Blackburnian, the
+blue-winged yellow, the golden-winged, the blue-yellow-backed or
+parula warbler, and the Maryland yellow-throat are each suggestive
+of a wealth of coloring. Others have names that carry us to southern
+realms, like the myrtle and the palm warblers; and others again tell
+of curious habits, as the worm-eating warbler, the hooded fly-catching
+warbler, and the black and white creeping warbler that scrambles
+about the tree trunks like a true creeper. There is nothing in all the
+year quite like the May woods. Then, if never again, you can step
+from your dooryard into an enchanted forest. The light yellowish
+effects of new green in the feathery masses of the oak catkins and
+the fresh, unfolding leafage of the forest trees are a rich feast to the
+eyes. Against this wealth of green the dogwood spreads its snow-white
+masses of bloom. In sunlit spaces of greenness the scarlet flash
+of a tanager, the rich blue coloring of the indigo bird, newly arrived
+from its winter quarters in South America, and the glimpse of a
+rose-breasted grosbeak among the high tree tops are strangely suggestive
+of a tropical forest. The ear, too, is charmed with a multitude
+of curious notes. The weird cries of the great-crested flycatcher
+among the topmost branches, and the loud chant of the ovenbird
+with its rising cadence coming from farther depths of the wood are
+two of the most characteristic bird voices of the May woodlands. If
+one would have the famous song of the mocking bird in this sylvan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_776" id="Page_776">[Pg 776]</a></span>
+carnival he has only to loiter in the nearest grove to hear the wonderful
+performance of the catbird. The catbird is the real harbinger
+of summer. He is familiar throughout the countryside, liked or
+disliked according to the dispositions of folks, but when he appears
+amid the May-day throng every one knows that summer has come.
+As a countryman once said to me: "You can't place any dependence
+on the robin&mdash;it may snow the very day he comes; but a catbird never
+makes a mistake&mdash;it's summer with him for sure."</p>
+
+<p>The passing on of the great warbler waves to the north and the
+ending of the migration likewise mean the passing of the spring. It
+is summer any time after the 15th of May, or, to be more accurate,
+after the last of the migratory warblers, thrushes, and tanagers have
+passed beyond our woods. To a New-Englander summer will come
+a little later, nearer the true almanac date of June 1st. To a dweller
+in Virginia the last of April is the passing of spring and the advent
+of summer.</p>
+
+<p>Some ten or more years ago several enthusiastic ornithologists living
+in the neighborhood of Philadelphia began keeping records of the
+times of arrival of the different species of birds, and at the same time
+noted the conditions of temperature in relation to the abundance of
+individuals. After several years of these observations they were able
+to see clearly that these bird waves were directly related to the waves
+of rising temperature marking the advent of warm spells of weather.
+One of the most significant facts deduced from these observations was
+the remarkable regularity in the first appearance of certain species.
+For example, the Baltimore oriole in eight years of observation never
+arrived before the 1st of May, and only twice later than the 4th&mdash;viz.,
+once on the fifth and once on the 7th. The list on the opposite page
+shows the date of first arrivals extending over a period of eight years,
+from 1885 to 1892.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Arrival of Birds">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td>1885.</td><td>1886.</td><td>1887.</td><td>1888.</td><td>1889.</td><td>1890.</td><td>1891.</td><td>1892.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Flicker</td><td align="left"> April 10</td><td align="left">Mar. 24</td><td align="left"> Mar. 26</td><td align="left"> Mar. 30</td><td align="left"> Mar. 28</td><td align="left"> Mar. 26</td><td align="left"> Mar. 30</td><td align="left"> April 2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Chimney swift</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 23</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 20</td><td align="left"> April 15</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 16</td><td align="left"> April 27</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Hummingbird</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 14</td><td align="left"> .......</td><td align="left"> May 7</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> .......</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Kingbird</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 7</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 14</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Crested flycatcher</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 8</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Pewee</td><td align="left"> April 3</td><td align="left"> Mar. 20</td><td align="left"> Mar. 21</td><td align="left"> Mar. 22</td><td align="left"> Mar. 27</td><td align="left"> Mar. 27</td><td align="left"> Mar. 31</td><td align="left"> April 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wood pewee</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 15</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 13</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 14</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 17</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Red-winged blackbird</td><td align="left"> Mar. 4</td><td align="left">Feb. 19</td><td align="left">Feb. 19</td><td align="left"> Feb. 21</td><td align="left">Mar. 13</td><td align="left"> Mar. 12</td><td align="left"> Feb. 25</td><td align="left"> Mar. 9</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Meadow lark</td><td align="left"> .......</td><td align="left"> Feb. 10</td><td align="left"> Mar. 19</td><td align="left"> Mar. 21</td><td align="left">Mar. 14</td><td align="left"> Mar. 12</td><td align="left"> Feb. 23</td><td align="left"> Mar. 17</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Baltimore oriole</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 7</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Purple grackle</td><td align="left"> Mar. 16</td><td align="left"> Mar. 7</td><td align="left"> Feb. 19</td><td align="left"> Feb. 21</td><td align="left"> Mar. 2</td><td align="left"> Feb. 13</td><td align="left"> Feb. 18</td><td align="left"> Mar. 6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Chipping sparrow</td><td align="left"> April 8</td><td align="left"> April 9</td><td align="left"> April 8</td><td align="left"> Mar. 31</td><td align="left"> Mar. 29</td><td align="left"> April 8</td><td align="left"> April 13</td><td align="left"> April 4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Field sparrow</td><td align="left"> April 11</td><td align="left"> April 7</td><td align="left"> April 9</td><td align="left"> April 2</td><td align="left"> Mar. 29</td><td align="left"> Mar. 13</td><td align="left"> Mar. 15</td><td align="left"> Mar. 26</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Chewink</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 23</td><td align="left"> April 27</td><td align="left"> April 18</td><td align="left"> April 11</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> April 18</td><td align="left"> April 24</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Indigo bird</td><td align="left"> May 16</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 7</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 10</td><td align="left"> May 8</td><td align="left"> May 10</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Scarlet tanager</td><td align="left"> May 9</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 8</td><td align="left"> May 9</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> April 28</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Barn swallow</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> April 21</td><td align="left"> April 12</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> April 24</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Red-eyed vireo</td><td align="left"> May 7</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Black-and-white warbler</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> April 27</td><td align="left"> April 21</td><td align="left"> April 20</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> April 24</td><td align="left"> May 1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Yellow warbler</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 8</td><td align="left"> May 4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Myrtle warbler</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> April 10</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> April 25</td><td align="left"> April 20</td><td align="left"> April 27</td><td align="left"> April 18</td><td align="left"> April 7</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Black-throated green warbler</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> April 26</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> April 30</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ovenbird</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> April 30</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Maryland yellow-throat</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> April 24</td><td align="left"> April 28</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Chat</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 12</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Redstart</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> April 29</td><td align="left"> April 30</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Catbird</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 5</td><td align="left"> May 4</td><td align="left"> April 30</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Brown thrasher</td><td align="left"> April 24</td><td align="left"> April 25</td><td align="left"> April 28</td><td align="left"> April 15</td><td align="left"> April 22</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> April 30</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">House wren</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> April 27</td><td align="left"> April 24</td><td align="left"> April 28</td><td align="left"> April 14</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> April 19</td><td align="left"> May 5</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wood thrush</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 1</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> April 30</td><td align="left"> April 23</td><td align="left"> May 2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Veery</td><td align="left"> .......</td><td align="left"> May 11</td><td align="left"> April 25</td><td align="left"> May 3</td><td align="left"> May 6</td><td align="left"> May 2</td><td align="left"> April 28</td><td align="left"> May 4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Hermit thrush</td><td align="left"> April 13</td><td align="left"> April 7</td><td align="left"> April 9</td><td align="left"> April 3</td><td align="left"> April 10</td><td align="left"> April 13</td><td align="left"> April 12</td><td align="left"> April 3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Robin</td><td align="left"> Mar. 7</td><td align="left"> Mar. 10</td><td align="left"> Feb. 28</td><td align="left"> Feb. 19</td><td align="left"> Mar. 7</td><td align="left"> Feb. 26</td><td align="left"> Feb. 24</td><td align="left"> Mar. 9</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Bluebird</td><td align="left"> Mar. 18</td><td align="left"> .......</td><td align="left"> Feb. 17</td><td align="left"> Feb. 21</td><td align="left"> Mar. 8</td><td align="left"> Feb. 23</td><td align="left"> Feb. 17</td><td align="left"> Mar. 9</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p>Another fact of great interest which bears on the south-to-north
+movement of migrating birds, and which these observations very
+clearly brought out, was the earlier appearance of individuals of various
+species at points nearer the river, the first arrival of the same
+species at points back from the river being, in many instances, several
+days later. The first report of the arrival of a given species usually
+came from a low, marshy tract of land immediately bordering the
+western shore of the Delaware. The second report came from a
+locality several miles back of the eastern shore of the river, but situated
+in the low plain of the river valley and within tide-water limits.
+The third report came from a place some miles back from the river
+on the uplands, but near the head of a stream emptying into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_777" id="Page_777">[Pg 777]</a></span>
+Delaware from the west. The last two places to report arrivals were
+situated farther up the river and some distance back from it. All
+this confirms the general idea that in migrating most, if not all, of
+the various land birds follow river valleys and invade the upland
+districts, lying back from either side, by way of the smaller tributaries.</p>
+
+<p>The fact of greatest importance resulting from these observations
+was that relating to temperature. It was found that there was always
+a marked increase in the number of individuals of a given species following
+a warm wave of temperature as marked by a decided rise of
+the thermometer. The following graphic representation, based on
+the abundance from day to day of three common and easily observed
+species&mdash;the brown thrasher, chipping sparrow, and flicker&mdash;affords
+an interesting illustration of the relative movements of the two waves.
+It will be understood that the numbers in the extreme left-hand
+column refer to the relative abundance of individuals of the three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_778" id="Page_778">[Pg 778]</a></span>
+species collectively. The inside column refers to temperature. The
+period of observation was twenty days, as shown by the line across the
+top of the figure.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_063_a.jpg" width="600" height="461" alt="A graph of A, migration; B, temperature." />
+<span class="caption">A, migration; B, temperature.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The advent of spring is marked by the northward progression of
+the isotherm of 42.8&deg; F., which is the initial temperature required to
+awaken the dormant reproductive and germinating activities in animals
+and plants. With the gradual invasion of the United States,
+from the south northward, by temperatures above this, there passes
+over the different regions the ever-old but ever-new panorama of the
+spring with its opening blossoms, its unfolding green, and its waves
+of migrating birds. The restlessness produced by the periodic development
+of the reproductive function under the stimulus of increased
+temperature causes the highly organized bird life to spread out from
+its winter quarters, wherever those may be, and follow the zone of
+new green that steadily widens northward with its increase of food
+supply in the form of myriads of insects. The comparative regularity
+in the recurrence of this phenomenon year after year is attested by
+the observations just noted. Each species has a certain, definite
+physiological relation to temperature, and its migratory movement
+toward the breeding ground is determined by the movement of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_779" id="Page_779">[Pg 779]</a></span>
+isotherm of this temperature. Just as warm a spell of weather may
+occur in early April as in the first week of May, but it does not represent
+the permanent summer rise; and the majority of the warblers,
+the catbird, the tanager, the rose-breasted grosbeak, the two species of
+oriole, the vireos, and the kingbird, are rarely if ever seen in abundance
+in the Delaware Valley before the 1st of May. The migratory
+movement of such species is as regular as any other periodic phenomenon
+in Nature.</p>
+
+<p>It is hard to realize the enormous multitude of birds that form a
+so-called "wave." During the whole period of migration there is
+a general northward movement of all the migratory species, but under
+the influence of warm spells of weather this more or less uniform
+movement rises into a vast wavelike sweep of birds. These bird
+waves, as already noted, <i>follow</i> the rise of temperature appearing at
+any given locality about a day or two after the first day of the warm
+spell. Many species of land birds migrate at night&mdash;such, for example,
+as the orioles, tanagers, warblers, vireos, wrens, the majority
+of the finches, the woodpeckers, and the thrushes, excepting the robin.
+During the passing of one of the May waves the darkness overhead is
+alive with flying birds. One may stand for hours at a time and hear
+the incessant chirping and twittering of hundreds of birds calling to
+one another through the night as though to keep from getting separated.
+The great mass of individuals are probably guided by these
+call notes.</p>
+
+<p>The usually accepted notion that birds migrate from south to
+north in traveling to their breeding grounds is largely true of shore
+birds and waterfowl, but among many of the species of land birds
+conditions of topography tend to deflect a direct northward movement.
+The Atlantic coast plain, reaching up into southern New
+Jersey, and the Mississippi basin, each offers a broad south-to-north
+highway for birds leaving the Gulf shores of the United States on
+their northward journey in the spring. A great majority of species
+find in the wilderness of the Appalachian highland, from the Catskills
+to Georgia, breeding grounds quite as well adapted to their needs as
+the forests of Maine and Canada. Large numbers of birds, according
+to their regional relations, will constantly turn from the Atlantic
+coast plain up the numerous rivers, which become great highways of
+migration, leading to the highlands. The northward movement has
+thus a large westerly deflection on the Atlantic slope of the middle
+United States. It is also quite certain that many birds winter in
+favorable localities on the Atlantic coast plain much farther north
+than is generally supposed. This is especially true of the holly thickets
+among the coastwise sand dunes of southern New Jersey and the
+cedar swamps and pine barrens in the vicinity of Cape May. Many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_780" id="Page_780">[Pg 780]</a></span>
+of the finches, the marsh wrens, red-winged blackbirds, meadow larks,
+thrashers, and myrtle warblers are frequently seen in these localities
+through the winter. I spent one first day of February some years ago
+among the dunes below Atlantic City, N. J. At Philadelphia
+that morning it was bleak winter weather, but two hours later we
+found ourselves in a warm expanse of sunlight on the seaward beaches.
+The balmy air was filled with bird notes, and the holly thickets and
+bay bushes fairly swarmed with myrtle warblers. It seems to be a
+fact that many birds thus make comparatively short migratory movements
+between the seacoast plain and the mountains, up and down the
+river valleys.</p>
+
+<p>The phenomenon of the migrating bird has always appealed in a
+wonderful manner to the human mind. The guiding geographical
+sense that all animals, and wild animals and birds in particular, possess
+is peculiarly attractive to men of civilized society, because they have
+largely lost this same natural instinct of direction, and now look
+upon it in wonderment. Birds have very sure landmarks; their senses
+are keen for noting features of topography. They undoubtedly know
+the Potomac, the Susquehanna, the Delaware, the Hudson, and the
+Connecticut, and never confuse one with another. They know to
+which side the sea lies and that the rivers flow down from a wild,
+wooded region where there are plenty of food and the best possible
+places to raise their young. All these facts get fixed in their brains.
+The bird's brain-cell structure is built on these lines and is only waiting
+to get the impressions of the first migratory experience. They keep
+in with one another, follow their chirpings in the night, learn to
+tell the Hudson from the Delaware, or where this or that stretch of
+woodland lies, just as they learned when first out of the nest how to
+tell good from bad sorts of food, or how to find their way about the
+home woods, and that an owl or a fox was an undesirable acquaintance.
+In the fall migration the young birds follow the older ones in the
+general movement southward, and are often belated, showing that
+the impulse to leave their birthplaces is forced upon them, rather
+from necessity than choice, and is not the well-developed instinct impressed
+by former experience which their elders seem to possess. The
+old birds who have bred and reared these young ones set the example
+of early departure which the birds of the year through inexperience
+are tardy in appreciating. The habit waits upon experience.</p>
+
+<p>Each year, from midwinter, when the first warmth of advancing
+sunlight calls to the sleeping life, on to the first fervid heat of the
+reproductive summer, we have the joyous pageant of the spring.
+This steady waxing of the new light appealed to the pagan mind of
+western Europe with a far deeper sense than the modern mind can
+appreciate. To our rude ancestors it was the goddess E&aacute;stre, bountiful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_781" id="Page_781">[Pg 781]</a></span>
+in her gift of warmth and the magic of reproductive life, that each
+year came with the light to drive away the frost giants. And with
+the goddess, whom we still love to picture as a maiden tripping lightly
+through the budding groves in her wind-blown garments, came the
+birds. It was the cuckoo that brought the summer with "daisies
+pied and violets blue," and to-day, when its voice is heard for the
+first time in the year, every one knows that summer has come again
+to the hedgerows of England and the lands of the Rhine. So with
+us across the Atlantic, summer comes when the catbird first pours out
+its babel of sweet notes in green woodland ways and the tangled nooks
+of old gardens.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>GUESSING, AS INFLUENCED BY NUMBER PREFERENCES.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By F. B. DRESSLAR.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>About two years ago a certain progressive clothing company of
+Los Angeles, California, procured a very large squash&mdash;so
+large, indeed, as to attract much attention. This they placed uncut
+in a window of their place of business, and advertised that they would
+give one hundred dollars in gold to the one guessing the number of
+seeds it contained. In case two or more persons guessed the correct
+number, the money was to be divided equally among them. The
+only prerequisite for an opportunity to guess was that the one wishing
+to guess should walk inside and register his name, address, and his
+guess in the notebook kept for that purpose.</p>
+
+<p>The result of this offer was that 7,700 people registered guesses,
+and but three of these guessed 811, the number of seeds which the
+squash contained.</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to me that a study of these guesses would reveal some
+interesting number preferences, if any existed, for the conditions were
+unusually favorable for calling forth na&iuml;ve and spontaneous results,
+there being no way of approximating the number of seeds by calculation,
+and very little or no definite experience upon which to rely for
+guidance. It seemed probable, therefore, that the guesses would
+cover a wide range, and by reason of this furnish evidence of whatever
+number preference might exist. It is undoubtedly safe to
+assume, too, that the guesses made were honest attempts to state as
+nearly as possible best judgments under conditions given; but even
+if some of the guesses were more or less facetiously made, the data
+would be equally valuable for the main purpose in hand.</p>
+
+<p>According to the theory of probability, had there been no preference
+at all for certain digits or certain combinations of digits within<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_782" id="Page_782">[Pg 782]</a></span>
+the limits of the guesses, one figure would occur about as often as another
+in units' or tens' place. It was argued, therefore, that any
+marked or persistent variation from such regularity in such a great
+number of cases would reveal what might be termed an unconscious
+preference for such numbers or digits for these places.</p>
+
+<p>The purpose of this study, then, was to determine whether or not
+there existed in the popular mind, under the conditions offered, any
+such preferences.</p>
+
+<p>After the very arduous and tedious task of collating and classifying
+all the guesses for men and women separately had been done, the
+following facts appeared:</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, marked preference is shown for certain digits
+both for units' and tens' places. This statement is based on a study of
+the 6,863 guesses falling below one thousand. Of these, 4,238 were
+made by men and 2,625 were made by women. By tabulations of
+the digits used in units' place by both men and women, the following
+facts have been determined: 800 used 9, while but 374 used 8; 1,070
+used 7, and 443 preferred 6; 881 used 5, and only 295 preferred 4;
+862 chose 3, while 331 used 2; 577 ended with 1, while 1,230 preferred
+0 as the last figure.</p>
+
+<p>A tabulation of the figures used in tens' place shows, save in the
+case of 2 and 3, where 2 is used oftener than 3, the same curious
+preferences, but in a much less marked degree. To go into detail,
+850 chose 9 for tens' place, while 559 took 8; 907 used 7, while
+only 637 selected 6; 748 took 5, while only 536 used 4; 601 used
+3, and 634 chose 2; 728 used 1, as against 872 who used 0.</p>
+
+<p>Were it not that the selections here in the main correspond with
+the preferences shown in units' place, the significance of these figures
+would be much less important; but the evidence here can not
+wholly be ignored when taken in connection with the facts obtained
+in the preferences shown in the case of the figures occupying
+units' place.</p>
+
+<p>We are enabled, then, as a result of the study of these guesses,
+to say that under the conditions offered, aside from a preference of
+0 over 1 to end the numbers selected, digits representing odd numbers
+are conspicuously preferred to those representing even numbers.
+How far this will hold under other conditions can not now be stated,
+but the facts here observed are of such a nature as to suggest the possibility
+of an habitual tendency in this direction. However, further
+investigations can alone determine whether or not this bias for certain
+numbers is potent in a general way.</p>
+
+<p>The curve on the next page, exhibiting the results noted above,
+shows at a glance the marked and persistent preference for the odd
+numbers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_783" id="Page_783">[Pg 783]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It will be noticed that of the digits preferred, 7 surpasses any
+of the others. Not only, then, do we tend to select an odd number
+for units' place when the guess ranges between one and a thousand,
+but of these digits 7 is much preferred. In connection with this fact
+one immediately recalls all he has heard about 7 as a sacred number,
+and its professed significance in the so-called "occult sciences." I
+think one is warranted in saying from an introspective point of view
+that there is a shadow of superstition present in all attempts at pure
+guessing. There appears to be some unexpressed feeling of lucky
+numbers or some mental easement when one unreasoned position is
+taken rather than any other.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_068.jpg" width="600" height="399" alt="Choice of Digits in Tens' and Units' Places (Men and Women)" />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Choice of Digits in Tens' and Units' Places (Men and Women).</span><br />
+<br />Vertical distance shows the number of times the figure on the horizontal line immediately
+below was used.</span></div>
+
+<p>It is impossible on the evidence furnished by this study to give
+more than hints at the probable reason for the preference here indicated.
+But it is worth while to glance backward to earlier conditions,
+when the scientific attitude toward all the facts of life and mind
+was far more subordinated to supernatural interpretations than it
+is to-day. In this way we may catch a thread which still binds us
+to habits formed in the indefinite past.</p>
+
+<p>The Greeks considered the even numbers as representative of the
+feminine principle, and as belonging and applying to things terrestrial.
+To them the odd numbers were endowed with a masculine
+virtue, which in time was strengthened into supernatural and celestial
+qualities. The same belief was prevalent among the Chinese. With<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_784" id="Page_784">[Pg 784]</a></span>
+them even numbers were connected with earthly things, partaking
+of the feminine principle of Yang. Odd numbers were looked upon
+as proceeding out of the divine and endued with the masculine principle.
+Thirty was called the number of earth, because it was made
+up by the addition of the even numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10. On the
+other hand, 25, the sum of the five odd numbers 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9, was
+called the number of heaven.</p>
+
+<p>It is generally true that, as lower peoples developed the need of
+numbers and the power to use them, certain of these numbers came
+to be surrounded with a superstitious importance and endued with
+certain qualities which led at once to numerical preferences more or
+less dominant in all their thinking connected with numbers.</p>
+
+<p>It would certainly be unjustifiable to conclude from the evidence
+at hand that the preferences shown in the guesses under consideration
+are directly traceable to some such superstition; and yet one can
+scarcely prevent himself from linking them vaguely together.
+Especially is this true when some consideration is given to a probable
+connecting link as shown in our modern superstitious notions. I
+have found through a recent study of these superstitions that where
+numbers are introduced, the odd are used to the almost complete exclusion
+of the even. For example, I have collected and tabulated
+a series of more than sixty different superstitions using odd numbers,
+and have found but four making use of the even. Besides these specific
+examples there are many more which in some form or another
+express the belief that odd numbers have some vital relation with
+luck both good and bad.</p>
+
+<p>It would be impossible to define precisely or even approximately
+just what sort of a mental state the word "luck" stands for, but one
+element in its composition is a more or less na&iuml;ve belief in supernatural
+and occult influences which at one time work for and at
+another time against the believer. In its more pronounced forms,
+the belief in luck lifts itself into a sort of a blind dependence upon
+some ministering spirit which interposes between rational causes and
+their effects. In a way one may say that the more or less vague and
+shadowy notions of luck which float in the minds of people to-day are
+but the emaciated and famishing forms of a once all-embracing superstition,
+and that these shadows possess a potency over life and action
+oftentimes beyond our willingness to believe.</p>
+
+<p>There is another interesting and somewhat curious thing to be
+noticed in connection with these guesses. There is a persistent tendency
+to the duplication of digits, or, if one thinks of the numbers as
+at first conceived in terms of language, a tendency to alliteration.
+For example, the numbers 111, 222, 333, 444, 555, 666, 777, 888,
+and 999 occur oftener by sixty-seven per cent than any other combination<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_785" id="Page_785">[Pg 785]</a></span>
+possible in the tens thus represented. That is to say, other
+things equal, one would have a right to expect 334 or 332 to occur
+as often as 333. But the fact is, in this particular case, 333 occurred
+forty-eight times, while the other two put together occurred only
+three times. Here, however, we have the combined influence of the
+preference for the odd over the even and the digital sequence. Still,
+if we select 444, we find that this number, made up though it is of three
+digits in general least selected of all, the preference for alliterative
+effect is strong enough to make the number occur 28 times to 14
+times for both 443 and 445. If we take 777, we find that it was used
+more times than all the other combinations from 770 to 779 inclusive,
+put together.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, under conditions similar to those presented for these
+guesses, one would be safe to expect these duplicative or alliterative
+numbers to occur much oftener than any other single number in the
+series.</p>
+
+<p>It would evidently be unsafe to generalize upon the basis of this
+study, notwithstanding the large number of guesses considered.
+However, it seems to me that the results here obtained at least suggest
+a field of inquiry which promises interesting returns. If it be
+true, as here suggested, that odd numbers are preferred by guessers,
+advantage could be taken of this preference in many ways. Furthermore,
+as I suspect, it may be that this probable preference points to
+a habit of mind which more or less influences results not depending
+strictly on guessing. It has been shown, for example, that the length
+of criminal sentences has been largely affected by preferences for 5
+or multiples of 5&mdash;that is to say, where judges have power to fix the
+length of sentence within certain limits, there is a strong probability
+that they will be influenced in their judgments by the habitual use
+of 5 or its multiples. Here it would seem that unconscious preference
+overrides what one has a right to consider the most careful and
+impartial judgments possible, based upon actual and well-digested
+data.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
+
+<p>Another thing is noticeable in these guesses. The consciousness
+of number beyond 1,000 falls off very rapidly. The difference in
+the values of 1,000 and 1,500 seems to have had less weight with the
+guessers than a difference of 50 had at any place below 1,000. And
+so, in a way, 1,000 seems to mark the limit of any sort of definite
+mental measurement. This fact is more and more emphasized as the
+numbers representing the guesses increase until one can see there
+exists absolutely no conception of the value of numbers. For example,
+many guessed 1,000,000, while several guessed more than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_786" id="Page_786">[Pg 786]</a></span>
+10,000,000. Guessing means, with many people, no attempt at any
+sort of reasonable measurement, but rather an attempt to express their
+guess in such a way as to afford them the greatest amount of mental
+relief. And this relief can not be wholly accomplished without satisfying
+number preferences. Therefore, guessing is likely to exhibit,
+in a greater or less degree, some habitual lines of preference subject
+to predetermination. It may be that much practical advantage has
+been taken of these facts in games of chance where number selections
+play an important part.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>CONCERNING WEASELS.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> WILLIAM E. CRAM.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_071.jpg" width="600" height="437" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Why is it that while popular fancy has attributed all sorts of
+uncanny and supernatural qualities to owls and cats, and that
+no ghost story or tale of horrid murder has been considered quite
+complete without its rat peering from some dark corner, or spider
+with expanded legs suddenly spinning down from among the rafters,
+no such grewsome association has ever attached itself to the weasels,
+creatures whose every habit and characteristic would seem to suggest
+something of the sort? Now, fond as I am of cats, I should never
+think of denying that they are uncanny creatures, to say the least.
+But, suppose it was the custom of our domestic tabbies to vanish abruptly
+or even gradually on occasion, like the Cheshire cat after its
+interview with Alice,
+that would at least
+furnish some excuse
+for the general prejudice
+against them, but
+would really be no
+more than some of our
+commonest weasels do
+whenever it serves
+their purpose. I remember
+one summer
+afternoon I was trout-fishing
+along a little
+brook that ran between pine-covered hills. As I lay stretched on the
+bank at the foot of a great maple I saw a weasel run along in the
+brush fence some distance away. A few seconds later he was standing
+on the exposed root of the tree hardly a yard from my eyes. I
+lay motionless and examined the beautiful creature minutely, till suddenly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_787" id="Page_787">[Pg 787]</a></span>
+I found myself staring at the smooth greenish-gray root of
+the maple with no weasel in sight. Judging from my own experience,
+I should say that this is the usual termination of any chance
+observations of either weasels or minks.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally they may be seen to dart into the bushes or behind
+some log or projecting bank, but much more frequently they vanish
+with a suddenness that defies the keenest eyesight.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_072.jpg" width="600" height="366" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>In all probability this vanishing is accomplished by extreme rapidity
+of motion, but if this is the case then the creature succeeds in doing
+something utterly impossible to any other warm-blooded animal of
+its size. Mice, squirrels, and some of the smaller birds are all of them
+swift enough at times, but except in the case of the humming bird
+none of them, I believe, succeed in accomplishing the result achieved
+by the weasels. The humming bird, in spite of its small size, leaves
+us a pretty definite impression of the direction it has taken when it
+darts away; but when a
+mink, half a yard in length
+and weighing several
+pounds, stands motionless
+before one with his dark
+coat conspicuous against almost
+any background, and
+the next instant is gone
+without a rustle or the
+tremor of a blade of grassA weasel, it
+leaves one with an impression of witchcraft difficult to dispel; and
+best appreciated when one sees it for one's self. Nor is the everyday
+life of the weasel quiet or commonplace; his one object in life apparently
+is to kill, first to appease his hunger, then to satisfy his thirst for
+warm blood, and after that for the mere joy of killing.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_073.jpg" width="600" height="392" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The few opportunities I have had for observing these animals
+have never shown them occupied in any other way, nor can any hint
+of anything different be gained from the various writers on the subject,
+while accounts of their attacking and even killing human beings
+in a kind of blind fury are too numerous and apparently well
+authenticated to be entirely ignored. These attacks are said usually
+to be made by a number of weasels acting in concert, and the motive
+would appear to be revenge for some injury done to one of their number.
+There seems to be something peculiar about the entire family
+of weasels. The American sable or pine marten is said to have strange
+ways that have puzzled naturalists and hunters for years. In the
+wilderness no amount of trapping has any effect on their numbers,
+nor do they show any especial fear of man or his works, occasionally
+even coming into lumber camps at night and being especially fond of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_788" id="Page_788">[Pg 788]</a></span>
+old logging roads and woods that have been swept by fire; but at the
+slightest hint of approaching civilization they disappear, not gradually,
+but at once and forever, and the woods know them no more. If there
+is anything in the theory of the survival of the fittest, why is it that not
+one marten has discovered that, like other animals of its size, it could
+manage to live comfortably enough in the vicinity of man? The
+mink and otter still follow the course of every brook and river
+and manage to avoid the keen eyes of the duck hunter, while for
+six months in the
+year their paths
+are sprinkled with
+steel traps set
+either especially
+for them or for
+the more plebeian
+muskrat. If a
+pair of sables
+could be persuaded
+to take up
+their quarters in
+some parts of New
+England they could travel for dozens of miles through dark evergreen
+woods with hollow and decaying trees in abundance, while at present
+there are almost no traps set in a manner that need disturb creatures of
+their habits. Partridges, rabbits, and squirrels, which form their principal
+food, are nearly if not quite as abundant as before the country was
+settled, so that it would certainly not require any very decided change
+of habits to enable them to exist, but evidently the root of the matter
+goes deeper than that, and, like some tribes of Indians, it is impossible
+for them to multiply or flourish except in the primeval forest.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_074.jpg" width="600" height="277" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The common weasel or ermine, which is the only kind I have seen
+hereabouts, would seem to have everything on its side in the struggle
+for existence, and when one happens to be killed by some larger inhabitant
+of the woods it must be due entirely to its own carelessness.
+Nevertheless, they do occasionally fall victims to owls and foxes, and
+I once shot a red-tailed hawk that was in the act of devouring one.
+Still, these casualties among weasels are probably few and far between.
+Fortunately, however, they never increase to any great extent.
+Occasionally in the winter the snow for miles will be covered
+with their tracks all made in a single night, and then for weeks not a
+track is to be seen; but usually they prefer to hunt alone, each having
+its beat a mile or more in length, over which it travels back and forth
+throughout the season, passing any given point at intervals of two
+or three days. This habit of keeping to the same route instead of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_789" id="Page_789">[Pg 789]</a></span>
+wandering at random about the woods is characteristic of the family,
+the length of the route depending to a certain extent on the size of
+the animal. The mink is usually about a week in going his rounds,
+and may cover a dozen miles in that time, while the otter is generally
+gone a fortnight or three weeks. When it is possible the ermine prefers
+to follow the course of old tumble-down stone walls, and lays its
+course accordingly. In favorable districts he is able to keep to these
+for miles together, squeezing into the smallest crevices in pursuit of
+mice or chipmunks. All the weasels travel in a similar manner&mdash;that
+is, by a series of leaps or bounds in such a way that the hind feet
+strike exactly in the prints made by the fore paws, so that the tracks
+left in the snow are peculiar and bear a strong family resemblance.
+On soft snow the slender body of the ermine leaves its imprint extending
+from one pair of footprints to the next, and as these are from
+four to six feet apart, or even more, the impression left in the snow
+is like the track of some extremely long and slender serpent with pairs
+of short legs at intervals along its body. I have said that the ermine
+is the only true weasel I have found in this vicinity, but this is not
+strictly true, at least I hope not. One winter I repeatedly noticed
+the tracks of an exceedingly large weasel&mdash;so very large, in fact, that
+I was almost forced to believe them to be those of a mink. The impression
+of its body in the snow was quite as large as that made by a small
+mink, but the footprints themselves were smaller, and the creature
+appeared to avoid the water in a manner quite at variance with the
+well-known habits of its more amphibious cousin, while, unlike the
+common weasel, it never followed stone walls or fences. I put my
+entire mind to the capture of the little beast, and set dozens of traps,
+but it was well along in the month of March before I succeeded. It
+proved to be a typical specimen of the Western long-tailed weasel,
+though I can find no account of
+any other having been taken east
+of the Mississippi. Its entire
+length was about eighteen inches;
+the tail, which was a little over
+six, gave the effect at first glance
+of being tipped with gray instead
+of black, but a closer inspection showed that the black hairs were
+confined to the very extremity and were partly concealed by the
+overlying white ones; the rest of the fur was white, with a slight
+reddish tinge, and much longer and coarser than that of an ermine.
+Since then I have occasionally seen similar tracks, but have
+not succeeded in capturing a second specimen. In all probability
+the least weasel is also to be found here if one has the
+patience to search carefully enough; none, however, have come under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_790" id="Page_790">[Pg 790]</a></span>
+my observation as yet. All the small weasels that I have seen have
+proved on close inspection to be young ermines with thickly furred
+black-tipped tails; in the least weasel the tail is thinly covered with
+short hair and without any black whatever. Late in the autumn
+or early in the winter the ermine changes from reddish-brown to
+white, sometimes slightly washed with greenish-yellow or cream color,
+and again as brilliantly white as anything in Nature or art; the end
+of the tail, however, remains intensely black, and at first thought
+might be supposed to make the animal conspicuous on the white background
+of snow, but in reality has just the opposite effect. Place
+an ermine on new-fallen snow in such a way that it casts no shadow,
+and you will find that the black point holds your eye in spite of yourself,
+and that at a little distance it is quite impossible to follow the
+outline of the weasel itself. Cover the tail with snow, and you can
+begin to make out the position of the rest of the animal, but as long
+as the tip of the tail is in sight you see that and that only. The ptarmigan
+and northern hare also retain some spot or point of dark color
+when they take on their winter
+dress, and these dark
+points undoubtedly serve the
+same purpose as in the case of
+the ermine.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_075.jpg" width="600" height="237" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>An old hunter, one of the
+closest observers of Nature I
+have ever known, once told
+me that female minks hibernated
+in winter in the same
+manner as bears, though it
+was his belief that, unlike
+the bears, they never brought
+forth their young at that season. At first I refused to take the
+slightest stock in what he said; the whole thing appeared so
+absurd and so utterly at variance with the teachings of those
+naturalists who have made the closest possible study of the habits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_791" id="Page_791">[Pg 791]</a></span>
+of minks. Since then, however, I have kept my eyes open for
+any hint that might have the slightest bearing on the subject, and
+to my surprise have found many things that would seem to point to
+the correctness of the old hunter's theory. To begin with, he said
+that late in the winter he had repeatedly known female minks to
+make their appearance from beneath snow that had lain undisturbed
+for days or even weeks, the tracks apparently beginning where he
+first observed them, the difference in size between the two sexes being
+sufficient to make it easy to distinguish between their tracks at a
+glance; and, moreover, since he first began trapping he had noticed
+that while the sexes were about equally abundant in the autumn, the
+females always became very scarce at the approach of winter and
+remained so until spring, when they suddenly increased in numbers
+and became much the more abundant of the two.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illo_075a.jpg" width="600" height="480" alt="A weasel" />
+</div>
+
+<p>This is also the experience of trappers in general, and may be
+verified by any one who cares to take the trouble to look into the
+matter. Evidently no one has ever discovered a mink in a state of
+hibernation; at any rate, no such case appears ever to have been reported;
+but this does not necessarily prove that it is not a regular habit
+among them.</p>
+
+<p>The cry of the mink is seldom heard, even in places where they
+are fairly abundant, as they have evidently learned that the greatest
+safety lies in silence. It is a peculiarly shrill, rattling, whistlelike
+scream, that can be heard at a considerable distance.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>CARE OF THE THROAT AND EAR.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> W. SCHEPPEGRELL, A. M., M. D.,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap lowercase">PRESIDENT WESTERN OPTHALMOLOGIC AND OTO-LARYNGOLOGIC ASSOCIATION, NEW ORLEANS, LA.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>Hygiene is that branch of medical science which relates to
+the preservation and improvement of the health. As the prevention
+of disease is more important than its cure&mdash;in fact, superior
+to all methods for its cure&mdash;this is a subject which demands our most
+earnest attention. Hygiene is not limited to the preservation and improvement
+of the health of the individual, but includes that of whole
+communities. As, however, the health of a community depends upon
+the state of the health of the various families composing it, and this
+again of its members, the proper understanding of the hygienic laws
+by each individual is of the utmost importance.</p>
+
+<p>For some reason, however, the subject of hygiene or the prevention
+of disease does not create the enthusiasm caused by methods advocated
+for its cure. A Koch, who publishes to the world a supposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_792" id="Page_792">[Pg 792]</a></span>
+means of curing tuberculosis, or a Behring, who introduces the
+serum therapy of diphtheria, arouses an interest which is limited
+only by the four corners of the world. The modest worker in sanitation,
+however, who explains the means of the development of these
+diseases, and the conditions and laws by means of which they may be
+prevented, is looked upon without interest and frequently with disfavor.
+But in spite of these conditions, the laws of hygiene are gradually
+becoming more farspread, and their influence is felt more with
+each advancing year.</p>
+
+<p>The nose, throat, and ear are so intimately connected with the
+other parts of the body that their health depends to a large extent
+upon the condition of the system in general. The laws of hygiene and
+their application which refer to the body in general are also applicable
+to these parts, and whatever condition benefits the former will
+have a useful influence on the upper respiratory passages, and, inversely,
+any injurious effect will injure the health of these organs.</p>
+
+<p>The physiology of this region is of much importance. Formerly
+the nose was considered principally in its relation to the organ of
+smell. This is a most important function, as it is a constant sentinel
+over the air we breathe and the food we eat. It is a curious
+circumstance that many of the functions that are referred to the
+organ of taste really belong to that of smell. In eating ice cream,
+for instance, the sense of taste simply informs us that it is sweet
+or otherwise, but the flavor is perceived only by the sense of
+smell. A proof of this is that where this function is destroyed, all
+ability in this direction disappears, and the patient thus affected will
+frequently complain that his sense of taste is defective, not realizing
+that it is the sense of smell which performs this act.</p>
+
+<p>The nose, however, has a much more important function to perform&mdash;viz.,
+in respiration. Strange to say, however, this has only
+recently been realized, and it is even yet not well understood. You
+have all observed that, when you had a severe "cold" which prevented
+nasal breathing, the next morning the mouth and throat
+were dry and parched and frequently inflamed, the voice sometimes
+hoarse, and there was a general feeling of depression. While the
+progress of the inflammatory process may be a factor in this, still the
+mechanical obstruction of the nose from any cause whatsoever will
+have a similar effect. In patients in whom, for various reasons,
+an artificial opening has been made in the trachea, the air of the room
+has to be heated to an almost intolerable point and saturated with
+moisture, or severe bronchial inflammation will soon develop in the
+patient, simply because the nose has not taken an active part in the act
+of respiration. These effects, therefore, clearly demonstrate that the
+nasal passages have an important function to perform in the breathing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_793" id="Page_793">[Pg 793]</a></span>
+process. Summarized in a few words, it is simply to warm, moisten,
+and clean the air which we inhale.</p>
+
+<p>The healthy nostrils are anatomically and physiologically so
+formed that when the current of air passes through them it will have
+been freed of its mechanical impurities, warmed to within a few degrees
+of the temperature of the body, and moistened to saturation.
+This has been experimentally demonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>The opening of the passage of the ear into the throat has several
+objects, the most important being ventilation and the adjustment of
+the atmospheric equilibrium. This passage leads outward until it
+enters the cavity of the middle ear, which is closed by the drum on
+the outside, thus separating it from the external canal of the ear. We
+know that atmospheric pressure varies at different times and in different
+altitudes. It is much less, for instance, at the top of a mountain
+than at the seaside. The opening into the throat allows the air
+to enter, and adjusts the atmospheric pressure within the ear to these
+various external conditions. Those of you who have ascended Lookout
+Mountain by means of the incline cable car may have noticed the
+adjustment taking place by a peculiar click when different altitudes
+were reached.</p>
+
+<p>So intimately are the nose, throat, and ear connected that it is
+unusual to find one affected to any considerable extent without the
+others being involved. While the rules of hygiene in general are
+applicable to the nose, throat, and ear, there are certain special conditions
+which deserve consideration. One of the most common causes
+of injurious effects to the nose, throat, and ear is the so-called "cold."
+The cold in this connection is, of course, understood to be simply the
+cause, the condition itself being a peculiar inflammation of the parts
+concerned. As cold is so frequently a cause of diseases of these parts,
+it would be well to consider under what circumstances it develops and
+the best mode of prevention.</p>
+
+<p>I have often noticed that persons who suffer most frequently and
+severely from colds usually insist that they exercise the greatest care
+to avoid exposure. They have dressed in the warmest clothing,
+wrapped the neck in the heaviest mufflers, remained in the closest
+rooms, and avoided every draught, and yet they continually "take
+cold." The street urchin, on the other hand, with only two or three
+garments and without shoes, and who lives out of doors, suffers less
+frequently from this affection.</p>
+
+<p>"Colds" have truly been called a product of modern civilization.
+The trouble was rare among the aborigines and is more common
+among the cultured than among the laboring classes. If we make a
+plant an exotic, we must keep it in the conservatory, and even here it is
+not free from danger. On the other hand, if we wish to harden it and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_794" id="Page_794">[Pg 794]</a></span>
+make it proof against atmospheric and climatic changes, we must prepare
+it by judicious exposure for these conditions. The warm clothing
+which is thought to be a protection against cold is frequently the
+most fertile cause. It relaxes the body, moistens the skin, and the
+perspiration which is induced especially prepares the unresisting body
+for its attacks. This applies especially to warm covering around the
+neck, to which the air has periodic access. Except in unusually
+severe weather, the throat requires no more covering or protection
+than the face.</p>
+
+<p>The method of having only two systems of underclothing, the
+heavy to be worn until it is quite warm, and <i>vice versa</i>, is also a
+source of danger. There should be three changes: one of the lightest
+texture for the warm weather of summer, a medium for spring and
+fall, and the pure wool for winter, which in this climate need not be
+very heavy. Waterproof shoes, rubbers, furs, etc., are not recommended
+for customary use, and should be worn only when absolutely
+indicated.</p>
+
+<p>The best preventive of recurrent colds is the judicious use of the
+sponge or cold shower bath. The ordinary bath should usually be of
+a temperature not disagreeable to the body, but after the question of
+cleanliness has been attended to, an application, either by means of a
+sponge or shower, of ordinary cold water should be made. This
+should be of short duration, and friction with a coarse towel follow
+at once. When properly conducted, a reaction sets in so that
+there is no danger from this, and the toning effect of the method is
+of the utmost value in the prevention of colds. This applies, of
+course, only to persons in ordinarily good health. Even in these
+cases there are rare occasions in which this method is not advisable,
+and it may on general principles be stated that it should not be used
+by persons who do not react promptly. As stated, however, the application
+of cold water should be only momentary. The daily application
+of cold water to the throat and chest is also a useful practice
+for strengthening these parts.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to these means there are certain injurious conditions
+that it would be well to avoid. One almost universally present in
+large cities is that of dust. The constant inhalation of the small particles
+of sand and of organic impurities of which dust is composed has
+an irritating effect on the delicate lining of the nose and throat, which
+may develop a chronic inflammation, resulting in injury to both the
+throat and ear. This evil, however, can be prevented by the artificial
+watering of our streets.</p>
+
+<p>Excessive tobacco smoking produces injurious effects in the nose
+and throat. Of all forms of smoking, the cigarette is the most injurious,
+and allowing the smoke to pass through the nostrils the most dangerous.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_795" id="Page_795">[Pg 795]</a></span>
+Occasionally ladies inhale the smoke of a closed room where
+the male members of the household are smoking, and this is injurious
+to a delicate throat.</p>
+
+<p>Loud and excessive talking is sometimes a factor in throat diseases.
+The former is more apt to be exercised in transit in our steam
+or electric cars, and members of the theatrical profession realize this
+so well that they rarely use their voice while traveling. In excessive
+talking, in addition to the mechanical wear and tear of the throat,
+the respiration is usually spasmodic, a combination that is likely to
+lead to evil results. At puberty, when the voices of boys and girls are
+changing, the former sometimes almost an octave and the latter usually
+a note or two, special care should be taken of the voice, and singing
+or vocal exercises should be discontinued until the change has been
+finally established.</p>
+
+<p>The effect of singing on the throat is of much interest, but it is
+one of such an extensive character that it can be only casually referred
+to here. The exercise required in singing improves the healthy
+throat in the same manner that exercise benefits the body in general.
+The diseased throat, however, may be injured by this practice, as no
+form of vocal culture can remedy a mechanical interference in its
+action. The method of singing is also of the utmost importance; an
+erroneous one may not only injure a promising voice, but may also
+have a bad effect on a normal throat. The subject of register requires
+careful consideration. The placing of the voice in the wrong register
+is fruitful of evil; the ambition of the singer to reach a few notes
+higher or lower than her range may also work severe injury to the
+throat.</p>
+
+<p>The throat may be improved or strengthened by any of the forms
+of exercise, especially the out-of-door, which have been advised for the
+health in general. In addition to this, breathing exercises are of
+special value. These consist of taking deep inhalations through the
+nose, holding the breath for a few seconds and then gently expiring
+it, the body in the meanwhile being free from all restraint from tight
+clothing. The practice of this exercise for five minutes mornings and
+evenings will have a remarkable effect in developing the chest and
+throat.</p>
+
+<p>In order to anticipate serious complications, children should be
+taught to allow their mothers to examine their throats freely and
+without resistance. I feel especially the importance of this subject,
+as I have frequently seen children almost sacrificed on account of
+the nervous dread of having their throats examined, or by their inability
+to control themselves. The method is exceedingly simple: the
+child is placed facing a bright window, and the handle of a spoon
+placed on the tongue and so depressed that the posterior part of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_796" id="Page_796">[Pg 796]</a></span>
+throat can be distinctly seen. At first this may be difficult, but the
+child soon becomes accustomed to the manipulation and the throat
+may then be examined without difficulty. Another advantage of this
+procedure is that the mother becomes familiar with the normal appearance
+of the throat, and can easily note any change due to disease.</p>
+
+<p>In view of the important function of the nose in warming, cleaning,
+and moistening the inspired air, the greatest care should be taken
+to teach children to breathe through the nostrils. When only a portion
+of the air enters through the mouth, the irritation is not as
+marked as when all the air is inhaled in this manner, but it nevertheless
+develops a condition of chronic irritation which is easily recognized
+by one familiar with its appearance, and which may lead to important
+complications. In many cases, mouth breathing is not due to habit,
+but to some obstruction in the nostrils or throat. These cases form a
+proper subject for the consideration of the physician. After the removal
+of any existing obstruction, children will sometimes, from force
+of habit, continue to breathe through the mouth, but this can usually
+be overcome by attention and firmness on the part of the parents.</p>
+
+<p>The prevention of grave throat diseases, such as diphtheria, necessarily
+forms a subject of much interest to the public in general and to
+mothers in particular. The causation of this disease has been much
+cleared up in later years, and we now know that the important factor is
+a bacillus&mdash;a small organism of the vegetable kingdom&mdash;which is the
+cause of this disease and a necessary material for its propagation.
+Bacteriologic investigations have shown that the so-called "membranous
+croup" is in by far the largest number of cases identical with
+diphtheria, and the same precautions which apply to the latter should
+therefore also be carried out in this disease.</p>
+
+<p>As diphtheria is strictly an infectious disease, and one which must
+be directly or indirectly contracted from a similar case, there is no
+sanitary reason why this dreaded malady in the course of time should
+not be entirely eliminated from the earth. In view of the fact that
+diphtheria is so frequently present in our larger cities, this may appear
+at present a Utopian idea. It is not so many years ago, however,
+when smallpox was almost universal, and yet we now but rarely have
+it in our midst. Not only is this the case, but the health authorities
+are severely criticised when a number of these cases exist, as indicating
+that there has been a lack of watchfulness in carrying out certain well-known
+means of prevention.</p>
+
+<p>While we have at the present time no means of inoculation that
+will permanently protect against infection from diphtheria, still it
+is not of such an infectious character as smallpox, as the cases are
+usually limited to children, and its spread may therefore be more
+easily prevented. Not only should children who have had diphtheria<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_797" id="Page_797">[Pg 797]</a></span>
+be prevented from returning to school until infection is no longer
+possible, but other children of the same household should also be kept
+at home. A few years ago a certain school in this city was rarely
+without a case of diphtheria among its pupils for many months. I
+am convinced that had the principal of the school or the parents insisted
+upon the other children of the infected household remaining
+at home, the spread in this direction would have been arrested and
+much suffering avoided.</p>
+
+<p>When a patient has recovered from diphtheria, thorough disinfection
+is a most important measure. Unfortunately, however,
+many persons consider it a hardship if articles which can not be disinfected
+are destroyed, and many will even use every endeavor to
+prevent the representatives of the Board of Health from carrying out
+their regulations. In this way the germ of the disease remains on the
+premises, and under suitable conditions again finds another victim
+in the household. To illustrate this, I recall an instance some years
+ago in which I was called in consultation to see a most malignant case
+of diphtheria. The little patient fortunately recovered, and the
+premises were thoroughly disinfected, the parents being anxious to
+avoid any repetition of the dreaded malady. Five months later, however,
+a younger child became ill, and was found to have diphtheria.
+In view of the vigorous efforts which had been made to disinfect the
+house thoroughly, and of the fact that the child could not have contracted
+it elsewhere, not having left its home for several weeks, the
+cause at first appeared a mystery. Careful inquiry, however, soon
+elicited a fact which clearly explained the case. The first patient
+had used a mouth-organ just before its illness, and when this was
+abandoned, the toy was carelessly thrown on the top of a bookcase,
+the nature of the child's illness at the time not being known. The
+second child, just before its illness, had accidentally found this toy
+and used it frequently. This experience explains the necessity of
+disinfection in all its details, and also illustrates the tenacious character
+of the germ which produces this disease.</p>
+
+<p>Our knowledge of the specific cause of scarlet fever is not as complete
+as that of diphtheria, but we have much useful information
+which is of importance from a hygienic standpoint. As in diphtheria,
+the specific poison is probably produced in the throat of the
+patient, and may therefore be spread by the dried secretion from
+the mouth and throat. The most common means of contagion, however,
+is the skin, which peels off in the later stage of the disease,
+infection being produced by the inhalation into the nostrils of some
+of the diseased particles.</p>
+
+<p>A predisposing factor which applies alike to diphtheria and all
+other throat affections is the abnormal condition of the nose and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_798" id="Page_798">[Pg 798]</a></span>
+throat. When these important parts are in an unhealthy condition,
+where mouth breathing exists and other conditions inimical to normal
+health, the patient is more predisposed to all forms of maladies of this
+region, and the attack when developed is more apt to be of a serious
+character. The more ordinary forms of sore throat, such as tonsilitis,
+are frequently due to defects in the sanitary conditions and surroundings
+of the home. While modern sanitary plumbing, when properly
+constructed, adds much to the convenience of the household, it is a certain
+menace to all its members if, through improper construction or defective
+ventilation, decomposing matter collects in the waste pipes
+and vitiates the atmosphere of the rooms. Many recurrent cases of
+tonsilitis are due to this cause. Even the ordinary stationary washstands
+may be a source of danger, especially in the bedroom, unless
+thoroughly ventilated and care exercised that the traps are not filled
+with decomposing matter. A physician of large experience in this
+city is so imbued with the danger of this form of plumbing that he
+condemns it <i>in toto</i>. When well constructed and well ventilated,
+however, they can not be the source of danger in the household.</p>
+
+<p>Tuberculosis, which is responsible for so enormous a mortality,
+frequently also affects the throat as well as the lungs. Although it
+usually originates within the chest, it sometimes finds its primary
+origin in the throat, and in a large percentage of cases the throat affection
+forms a complication of tuberculosis of the lungs. In spite of the
+numerous remedies which have been advocated for the cure of this
+disease, it must be admitted that our chief reliance is in proper nourishment
+and climatic effects, and that hygiene is the sheet-anchor which
+will eventually rescue us from this terrible foe of the human race.</p>
+
+<p>Recent investigations tend to prove more and more that tuberculosis
+is inherited in but rare cases; that inheritance is simply a predisposing
+factor, and that the real cause is infection. As an illustration
+of this, all have seen instances in which there had been
+apparently no cases in a family for ten or fifteen years, when from
+some cause one case develops, and this is soon followed by other cases
+in the same family. Whatever r&ocirc;le heredity may play in these cases,
+this simply shows that the first case produced the infectious material
+which found a suitable soil in the other members of the family and
+developed a similar disease. The inheritance theory has been the
+source of much injury by causing members of the afflicted family to
+submit to the apparently inevitable instead of instituting measures
+for its prevention. The infectious product in tuberculosis is not the
+breath, as is so frequently believed by the laity, but simply the expectoration
+which comes from the diseased lungs or throat. When
+this is allowed to come in contact with clothing or other material in
+the room, it becomes dry and loads the atmosphere with a dust which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_799" id="Page_799">[Pg 799]</a></span>
+contains the infectious bacillus, which may cause a similar disease in
+a person predisposed by heredity or sickness to this affection.</p>
+
+<p>The germ of tuberculosis is the seed, and the predisposed person
+the soil, and it requires a combination of both to develop the disease.
+To illustrate the necessity of suitable conditions for the development
+of plants&mdash;for it is now almost universally admitted that the germ of
+tuberculosis is a micro-organism which belongs to the vegetable
+kingdom&mdash;I remember some years ago, while in North Europe, seeing
+in a hothouse a plant which is here commonly known as the "four
+o'clock." The gardener in charge of the conservatory considered it
+a remarkable plant, but difficult to propagate, and stated that it was
+absolutely impossible to raise it out of doors. In this part of the
+world, however, we know that this plant grows so easily that once
+established in a garden it is difficult to keep it within limits. In both
+of the cases we have the same seed, the difference being only in the
+soil and the conditions favorable for its development. The absence
+of either the seed or the soil will absolutely prevent tuberculosis,
+and if the laws of hygiene are properly carried out, both in destroying
+the seed and in preventing the formation of a suitable soil, favorable
+effects will soon be shown.</p>
+
+<p>Hygiene in regard to patients demands simply that the infectious
+character of the expectoration be destroyed. The vessels for this
+purpose should contain some disinfecting solution, should be cleaned
+regularly, and handkerchiefs, towels, or other material with which
+the expectoration has come in contact should be sterilized by being
+placed for at least half an hour in boiling water. This is necessary
+not only for those in the same room with the patient, but also for the
+patient, as it is quite possible that a former expectoration may produce
+reinfection of the patient himself.</p>
+
+<p>Another method of contracting tuberculosis is by means of animals,
+such as cows, used for food and milking, which are known to
+be subject to this disease. It has been shown in some localities that
+one cow out of every twenty-five was affected with tubercular disease.
+This suggests the importance of having competent veterinarians to
+examine not only the meat which is sold, but also the cows used for
+milking purposes. Where there is the slightest doubt as to the nature
+of the meat or milk, the former should be thoroughly cooked and the
+latter sterilized before using.</p>
+
+<p>In this connection it would be well to refer to the subject of spitting
+in street cars and in public places. While this nuisance is the
+subject of danger to every one in the street cars, especially in winter,
+when the windows are closed and a large amount of impurities is inhaled,
+it is more particularly so to ladies, whose skirts, in spite of
+every care, are soiled by the filthy expectoration, thus making them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_800" id="Page_800">[Pg 800]</a></span>
+subject not only to the inhalation in the car, but also to carrying the
+infectious material to their homes.</p>
+
+<p>The danger of this condition is not merely speculative. It has
+been bacteriologically demonstrated that the organisms of various
+contagious diseases thus find a lodging place in our cars and public
+places, and experiments on animals, in which the inoculation has developed
+diseases, have shown that these organisms retain their vitality
+in these places and may propagate disease under favorable conditions.</p>
+
+<p>A factor in the spread of diseases of the throat and mouth that
+should not be overlooked is kissing. Unfortunately, this matter has
+usually been treated with much levity, and where a sanitarian is bold
+enough to condemn the habit he is frequently made the subject of
+all forms of ridicule in the public press.</p>
+
+<p>The tender lining of the lips, mouth, and throat, and its large
+blood supply, make it peculiarly susceptible to contagion, and I have
+no doubt that the habit of kissing is responsible for many cases of infection.
+Last year I noticed a lady coming from a house from which
+a diphtheria flag was flying, who walked to the corner to take the
+street car, when a nurse with a small child approached. The lady
+without hesitation stooped down and kissed the little child. As it is
+well known that a healthy person may transmit a disease without incurring
+the disease himself, this lady voluntarily risked the danger
+of inflicting this disease upon the innocent child. It is not an uncommon
+thing for nurses to kiss the children under their charge,
+and here in New Orleans even the colored nurses sometimes practice
+this habit, occasionally with the permission of the parents. In fact,
+a fashionable lady on one occasion told me, when I remonstrated with
+her about this, that she feared to hurt the feelings of the old nurse,
+who had been a valuable servant in the family for many years.</p>
+
+<p>How often this habit is productive of evil results is of course
+only speculation. I recall, however, an instance in which two small
+children of one family developed a specific disease which originated
+in the mouth and affected the whole system. Examination proved
+this to have been caused by a nurse, a white woman, who had been
+in the habit of kissing the children. If women will voluntarily incur
+risks by using kissing as a form of salutation in all stages of acquaintanceship,
+I would at least request that the innocent children be spared
+the possible consequences.</p>
+
+<p>The subject of the hygiene of the ear is so intimately connected
+with conditions influencing the nose and throat, which have already
+been explained, that but few words are needed to cover this part of
+my subject. In general, the best care of the ear is to leave it alone.
+Ear scoops are injurious; the ear should be cleaned simply on the
+outside, and nothing, as a rule, should be inserted into the external<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_801" id="Page_801">[Pg 801]</a></span>
+canal. I have seen many cases of abscess and the most severe inflammation
+due to endeavors to clean the ear with the omnipresent hairpin
+and other objects used for this purpose. The use of cotton in the
+ear in general is to be condemned. It produces an artificial condition
+in the outer canal of the ear which reduces its physical resistance
+and makes it more liable to injury from exposure. The ear
+is sometimes injured by the entrance of cold water. This happens
+occasionally during ordinary bathing, but more frequently in outdoor
+bathing and in swimming. In surf bathing, where the water
+is thrown up with considerable force, it is much more liable to
+enter the external orifice of the ear, and severe inflammation may
+originate from this cause.</p>
+
+<p>Salt water has been claimed to be more injurious than fresh, but
+my personal experience leads me to believe that it is more a question
+of temperature than of the quality of the water. Some years ago a
+large reservoir was built by an educational institute near this city, the
+water, which was quite cold even in summer, being supplied by an
+artesian well. The tank was used for bathing purposes, but earache
+soon became so frequent among the boys that the use of the reservoir
+for this purpose had to be entirely abandoned. In ordinary bathing,
+the entrance of water into the ear can easily be avoided. In swimming
+or surf bathing it is advisable to use a pledget of lamb's wool
+to close the opening of the ears. Ordinary cotton soon becomes
+saturated and is of no use in this connection, but the wool, which is
+slightly oily, forms an excellent protection in these cases.</p>
+
+<p>The "running ear" is a diseased condition which should not be
+tampered with by the inexperienced, but which should not be neglected.
+The old idea that the child will outgrow it, or that it is a
+secretion of the head which if interfered with would prove dangerous,
+has been fruitful of many cases of deafness and even more serious
+complications.</p>
+
+<p>Another condition to which I would call your attention is the incipient
+development of deafness in children. Where the capacity
+of hearing is quickly lowered from the normal to fifty per cent, it is
+so striking that the patient is much distressed and even confused.
+But when this change takes place insidiously from day to day, it is
+frequently not observed by either the patient or those around him
+until it has greatly advanced. Children thus affected hear only with
+difficulty and by straining certain small muscles of the ear, which
+soon become fatigued, and the child becomes listless and inattentive.
+I have seen numerous cases in which children have been severely punished
+for inattention, when this was due to defective hearing. Watchfulness
+and early attention in these cases will frequently prevent the
+more serious forms of deafness.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_802" id="Page_802">[Pg 802]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE WEST INDIES.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> F. L. OSWALD.</p>
+
+
+<h3>I.&mdash;THE FAUNA OF THE ANTILLES: MAMMALS.</h3>
+
+<p>The study of the geographical distribution of plants and animals
+has revealed facts almost as enigmatical as the origin of life itself.
+Water barriers, as broad as that of the Atlantic, have not prevented
+the spontaneous spread of some species, while others limit their
+habitat to narrowly circumscribed though not geographically isolated
+regions.</p>
+
+<p>Tapirs are found both in the Amazon Valley and on the Malay
+Peninsula; the brook trout of southern New Zealand are identical
+with those of the Austrian Alps. Oaks and <i>Ericacea</i> (heather plants)
+cover northern Europe from the mouth of the Seine to the sources of
+the Ural; then suddenly cease, and are not found anywhere in the
+vast Siberian territories, with a north-to-south range rivaling that of
+all British North America.</p>
+
+<p>But still more remarkable is the zo&ouml;logical contrast of such close-neighborhood
+countries as Africa and Madagascar, or Central America
+and the West Indian archipelago. The Madagascar virgin woods
+harbor no lions, leopards, hyenas, or baboons, but boast not less than
+thirty-five species of mammals unknown to the African continent,
+and twenty-six found nowhere else in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Of a dozen different kinds of deer, abundant in North America
+as well as in Asia and Europe, not a single species has found its way
+to the West Indies. The fine mountain meadows of Hayti have
+originated no antelopes, no wild sheep or wild goats.</p>
+
+<p>In the Cuban sierras, towering to a height of 8,300 feet, there
+are no hill foxes. There are caverns&mdash;subterranean labyrinths with
+countless ramifications, some of them&mdash;but no cave bears or badgers,
+no marmots or weasels even, nor one of the numerous weasel-like creatures
+clambering about the rock clefts of Mexico. The magnificent
+coast forests of the Antilles produce wild-growing nuts enough to
+freight a thousand schooners every year, but&mdash;almost incredible to
+say&mdash;the explorers of sixteen generations have failed to discover a
+single species of squirrels.</p>
+
+<p>The Old-World tribes of our tree-climbing relatives are so totally
+different from those of the American tropics that Humboldt's traveling
+companion, Bonplant, renounced the theory of a unitary center
+of creation (or evolution), and maintained that South America must
+have made a separate though unsuccessful attempt to rise from
+lemurs to manlike apes and men. Of such as they are, Brazil alone
+has forty-eight species of monkeys, and Venezuela at least thirty.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_803" id="Page_803">[Pg 803]</a></span>
+How shall we account for the fact that not one of the large West
+Indian islands betrays a vestige of an effort in the same direction?</p>
+
+<p>More monkey-inviting forests than those of southern Hayti can
+not be found in the tropics, but not even a marmoset or squirrel-monkey
+accepted the invitation. In an infinite series of centuries
+not one pair of quadrumana availed itself of the chance to cross a
+sea gap, though at several points the mainland approaches western
+Cuba within less than two hundred miles&mdash;about half the distance
+that separates southern Asia from Borneo, where fourhanders of all
+sizes and colors compete for the products of the wilderness, and, according
+to Sir Philip Maitland, the "native women avoid the coast
+jungles for fear of meeting Mr. Darwin's grandfather."</p>
+
+<p>The first Spanish explorers of the Antilles were, in fact, so amazed
+at the apparently complete absence of quadrupeds that their only
+explanation was a conjecture that the beasts of the forest must have
+been exterminated by order of some native potentate, perhaps the
+great Kubla Khan, whose possessions they supposed to extend <i>eastward</i>
+from Lake Aral to the Atlantic. The chronicle of Diego Columbus
+says positively that San Domingo and San Juan Bautista
+(Porto Rico) were void of mammals, but afterward modifies that statement
+by mentioning a species of rodent, the <i>hutia</i>, or bush rat, that
+annoyed the colonists of Fort Isabel, and caused them to make an
+appropriation for importing a cargo of cats.</p>
+
+<p>Bush rats and moles were, up to the end of the sixteenth century,
+the only known indigenous quadrupeds of the entire West Indian
+archipelago, for the "Carib dogs," which Valverde saw in Jamaica,
+were believed to have been brought from the mainland by a horde of
+man-hunting savages.</p>
+
+<p>But natural history has kept step with the advance of other sciences,
+and the list of undoubtedly aboriginal mammals on the four
+main islands of the Antilles is now known to comprise more than
+twenty species. That at least fifteen of them escaped the attention
+of the Spanish creoles is as strange as the fact that the Castilian cattle
+barons of Upper California did not suspect the existence of precious
+metals, though nearly the whole bonanza region of the San Joaquin
+Valley had been settled before the beginning of the seventeenth century.
+But the conquerors of the Philippines even overlooked a
+variety of elephants that roams the coast jungles of Mindanao.</p>
+
+<p>Eight species of those West Indian <i>incognito</i> mammals, it is true,
+are creatures of a kind which the Spanish zo&ouml;logists of Valverde's
+time would probably have classed with birds&mdash;bats, namely, including
+the curious <i>Vespertilio molossus</i>, or mastiff bat, and several
+varieties of the owl-faced <i>Chilonycteris</i>, that takes wing in the gloom
+preceding a thunderstorm, as well as in the morning and evening twilight,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_804" id="Page_804">[Pg 804]</a></span>
+and flits up and down the coast rivers with screams that can
+be heard as plainly as the screech of a paroquet. The <i>Vespertilio
+scandens</i> of eastern San Domingo has a peculiar habit of flitting from
+tree to tree, and clambering about in quest of insects, almost with
+the agility of a flying squirrel. There are times when the moonlit
+woods near Cape Rafael seem to be all alive with the restless little
+creatures; that keep up a clicking chirp, and every now and then
+gather in swarms to contest a tempting find, or to settle some probate
+court litigation. San Domingo also harbors one species of those prototypes
+of the harpies, the fruit-eating bats. It passes the daylight
+hours in hollow trees, but becomes nervous toward sunset and apt
+to betray its hiding place by an impatient twitter&mdash;probably a collocution
+of angry comments on the length of time between meals.
+The moment the twilight deepens into gloom the chatterers flop out
+to fall on the next mango orchard and eat away like mortgage brokers.
+They do not get fat&mdash;champion gluttons rarely do&mdash;but attain a
+weight of six ounces, and the Haytian darkey would get even with
+them after a manner of their own if their prerogatives were not
+protected by the intensity of their musky odor. The above-mentioned
+<i>hutia</i> rat appears to have immigrated from some part of the world
+where the shortness of the summer justified the accumulation of large
+reserve stores of food, and under the influence of a hereditary hoarding
+instinct it now passes its existence constructing and filling a series
+of subterranean granaries. Besides, the females build nurseries, and
+all these burrows are connected by tunnels that enable their constructors
+to pass the rainy season under shelter. They gather nuts,
+<i>belotas</i> (a sort of sweet acorns), and all kinds of cereals, and with their
+<i>penchant</i> for appropriating roundish wooden objects on general principles
+would probably give a Connecticut nutmeg peddler the benefit
+of the doubt.</p>
+
+<p>They also pilfer raisins, and a colony of such tithe collectors is a
+formidable nuisance, for the <i>hutia</i> is a giant of its tribe, and attains a
+length of sixteen inches, exclusive of the tail. It is found in Cuba,
+Hayti, Jamaica, Porto Rico, Antigua, Trinidad, the Isle of Pines,
+Martinique, and two or three of the southern Bahama Islands, and
+there may have been a time when it had the archipelago all to itself.
+The Lucayans had a tradition that their ancestors found it on their
+arrival from the mainland, and in some coast regions of eastern Cuba
+it may still be seen basking in the sunlight&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Sole sitting on the shore of old romance,"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and wondering if there are any larger mammals on this planet.</p>
+
+<p>Its next West Indian congener is the Jamaica rice rat, and there
+are at least ten species of mice, all clearly distinct from any Old-World<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_805" id="Page_805">[Pg 805]</a></span>
+rodent, though it is barely possible that some of them may have
+stolen a ride on Spanish trading vessels from Central America.</p>
+
+<p>Water-moles burrow in the banks of several Cuban rivers, and two
+genera of aquatic mammals have solved the problem of survival: the
+bayou porpoise and the manatee, both known to the creoles of the
+early colonial era, and vaguely even to the first discoverers, since
+Columbus himself alludes to a "sort of mermaids (<i>sirenas</i>) that half
+rose from the water and scanned the boat's crew with curious eyes."</p>
+
+<p>Naturally the manatee is, indeed, by no means a timid creature,
+but bitter experience has changed its habits since the time when the
+down-town sportsmen of Santiago used to start in sailboats for the
+outer estuary and return before night with a week's supply of manatee
+meat. The best remaining hunting grounds are the reed shallows
+of Samana Bay (San Domingo) and the deltas of the Hayti swamp
+rivers. Old specimens are generally as wary as the Prybilof fur seal
+that dive out of sight at the first glimpse of a sail; still, their slit-eyed
+youngsters are taken alive often enough, to be kept as public pets in
+many town ponds, where they learn to come to a whistle and waddle
+ashore for a handful of cabbage leaves.</p>
+
+<p>Fish otters have been caught in the lagoons of Puerto Principe
+(central Cuba) and near Cape Tiburon, on the south coast of San
+Domingo, the traveler Gerstaecker saw a kind of "bushy-tailed dormouse,
+too small to be called a squirrel."</p>
+
+<p>But the last four hundred years have enlarged the list of indigenous
+mammals in more than one sense, and the Chevalier de Saint-M&eacute;ry
+should not have been criticised for describing the bush dog of
+Hayti as a "<i>canis Hispaniolanus</i>." Imported dogs enacted a declaration
+of independence several centuries before the revolt of the
+Haytian slaves, and their descendants have become as thoroughly
+West Indian as the Franks have become French. A continued process
+of elimination has made the survivors climate-proof and self-supporting,
+and above all they have ceased to vary; Nature has accepted their
+modified type as wholly adapted to the exigencies of their present
+habitat. And if it is true that all runaway animals revert in some degree
+to the characteristics of their primeval relatives, the ancestor of
+the domestic dog would appear to have been a bush-tailed, brindle-skinned,
+and black-muzzled brute, intermittently gregarious, and
+combining the burrowing propensity of the fox with the co-operative
+hunting <i>penchant</i> of the wolf.</p>
+
+<p>Fourteen years of bushwhacker warfare have almost wholly exterminated
+the half-wild cattle of the Cuban sierras, but the bush dog
+has come to stay. The yelping of its whelps can be heard in thousands
+of jungle woods and mountain ravines, both of Cuba and
+Hayti, and no variety of thoroughbreds will venture to follow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_806" id="Page_806">[Pg 806]</a></span>
+these renegades into the penetralia of their strongholds. Sergeant
+Esterman, who shared the potluck of a Cuban insurgent camp in the
+capacity of a gunsmith, estimates the wild-dog population of the province
+of Santiago alone at half a million, and predicts that in years to
+come their raids will almost preclude the possibility of profitable cattle-breeding
+in eastern Cuba.</p>
+
+<p>Still, the <i>perro pelon</i>, or "tramp dog," as the creoles call the
+wolfish cur, is perhaps a lesser evil, where its activity has tended to
+check the over-increase of another assisted immigrant. Three hundred
+years ago West Indian sportsmen began to import several breeds
+of Spanish rabbits, and with results not always foreseen by the agricultural
+neighbors of the experimenters. Rabbit meat, at first a
+luxury, soon became an incumbrance of the provision markets, and
+finally unsalable at any price. Every family with a dog or a trap-setting
+boy could have rabbit stew for dinner six times a week, and
+load their peddlers with bundles of rabbit skins.</p>
+
+<p>The burrowing coneys threatened to undermine the agricultural
+basis of support, when it was learned that the planters of the Fort
+Isabel district (Hayti) had checked the evil by forcing their
+dogs to live on raw coney meat. The inexpensiveness of the expedient
+recommended its general adoption, and the rapidly multiplying
+quadrupeds soon found that "there were others." The Spanish
+hounds, too, could astonish the census reporter where their progeny
+was permitted to survive, and truck farmers ceased to complain.</p>
+
+<p>In stress of circumstances the persecuted rodents then took refuge
+in the highlands, where they can still be seen scampering about the
+grassy dells in all directions, and the curs of the coast plain turned their
+attention to <i>hutia</i> venison and the eggs of the chaparral pheasant and
+other gallinaceous birds. On the seacoast they also have learned to
+catch turtles and subdivide them, regardless of antivivisection laws.
+How they can get a business opening through the armor of the larger
+varieties seems a puzzle, but the <i>canis rutilus</i> of the Sunda Islands
+overcomes even the dog-resisting ability of the giant tortoise, and in
+Sumatra the bleaching skeletons of the victims have often been mistaken
+for the mementos of a savage battle.</p>
+
+<p>Near Bocanso in southeastern Cuba the woods are alive with capuchin
+monkeys, that seem to have escaped from the wreck of some
+South American trading vessel and found the climate so congenial
+that they proceeded to make themselves at home, like the ring-tailed
+colonists of Fort Sable, in the Florida Everglades. The food supply
+may not be quite as abundant as in the equatorial birthland of their
+species, but that disadvantage is probably more than offset by the
+absence of tree-climbing carnivora.</p>
+
+<p>Millions of runaway hogs roam the coast swamps of all the larger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_807" id="Page_807">[Pg 807]</a></span>
+Antilles, and continue to multiply like our American pension claimants.
+The hunters of those jungle woods, indeed, must often smile
+to remember the complaint of the early settlers that the pleasure of
+the chase in the West Indian wilderness was modified by the scarcity
+of four-footed game, and in the total number (as distinct from the
+number of species) of wild or half-wild mammals Cuba and Hayti
+have begun to rival the island of Java.</p>
+
+<p class="center">[<i>To be continued.</i>]</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h2>IRON IN THE LIVING BODY.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> M. A. DASTRE.</p>
+
+
+<p>Iron occurs, in small and almost infinitesimal proportions, in
+numerous organic structures, in which its presence may usually
+be detected by the high color it imparts; and in the animal tissues
+is an important ingredient, though far from being a large one. It
+is essential, however, that the animal tissues, and particularly the
+liquids that circulate through them, should be of nearly even weight,
+else the equilibrium of the body would be too easily disturbed, and
+disaster arising therefrom would be always imminent. Hence the
+iron is always found combined and associated with a large accompaniment
+of other lighter elements which, reducing or neutralizing its superior
+specific gravity, hold it up and keep it afloat. Thus the molecule
+of the red matter of the blood contains, for each atom of iron, 712
+atoms of carbon, 1,130 of hydrogen, 214 of nitrogen, 245 of oxygen,
+and 2 of sulphur, or 2,303 atoms in all. Existing in compounds of
+so complex composition, iron can be present only in very small proportions
+to the whole. Though an essential element, there is comparatively
+but little of it. The whole body of man does not contain more
+than one part in twenty thousand of it. The blood contains only five
+ten-thousandths; and an organ is rich in it if, like the liver, it contains
+one and a half ten-thousandths. When, then, we seek to represent
+to ourselves the changes undergone by organic iron, we shall
+have to modify materially the ideas we have formed respecting the
+largeness and the littleness of units of measure and as to the meaning
+of the words abundant and rare. We must get rid of the notion that
+a thousandth or even a ten-thousandth is a proportion that may be
+neglected. The humble ten-thousandth, which is usually supposed
+not to be of much consequence, becomes here a matter of value.
+Chemists working with iron in its ordinary compounds may consider
+that they are doing fairly well if they do not lose sight of more than
+a thousandth of it; but such looseness would be fatal in a biological<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_808" id="Page_808">[Pg 808]</a></span>
+investigation, where accuracy is necessary down to the infinitesimal
+fraction. The balances of the biologists must weigh the thousandth
+of a milligramme, as their microscopes measure the thousandth of a
+millimetre.</p>
+
+<p>The great part performed by iron in organisms, what we may
+call its biological function, appertains to the chemical property it
+possesses of favoring combustion, of being an agent for promoting
+the oxidation of organic matters.</p>
+
+<p>The chemistry of living bodies differs from that of the laboratory
+in a feature that is peculiar to it&mdash;that instead of performing its reactions
+directly it uses special agents. It employs intermediaries
+which, while they are not entirely unknown to mineral chemistry,
+yet rarely intervene in it. If it is desired, for example, to add a
+molecule of water to starch to form sugar, the chemist would do it
+by heating the starch with acidulated water. The organism, which
+is performing this process all the time, or after every meal, does it in
+a different way, without special heating and without the acid. A
+soluble ferment, a diastase or enzyme, serves as the oxidizing agent
+to produce the same result. Looking at the beginning and the end,
+the two operations are the same. The special agent gives up none of
+its substance. It withdraws after having accomplished its work, and
+not a trace of it is left. Here, in the mechanism of the action of these
+soluble ferments, resides the mystery, still complete, of vital chemistry.
+It may be conceived that these agents, which leave none of
+their substance behind their operations, which suffer no loss, do not
+have to be represented in considerable quantities, however great
+the need of them may be. They only require time to do their work.
+The most remarkable characteristic of the soluble ferments lies, in
+fact, here, in the magnitude of the action as contrasted with infinitesimal
+proportion of the agent, and the necessity of having time
+for the accomplishment of the operation.</p>
+
+<p>Iron behaves in precisely the same way in the combustion of
+organic substances. These substances are incapable at ordinary temperatures
+of fixing oxygen directly, and will not burn till they are
+raised to a high temperature; but in the presence of iron they are
+capable of burning without extreme heat, and undergo slow combustion.
+And as iron gives up none of its substance in the operation,
+and acts, as a simple intermediary, only to draw oxygen from the
+inexhaustible atmosphere and present it to the organic substance, we
+see that it need not be abundant to perform its office, provided it
+have time enough. This action resembles that of the soluble ferments
+in that there is no mystery about it, and its innermost mechanism
+is perfectly known.</p>
+
+<p>Iron readily combines with oxygen&mdash;too readily, we might say,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_809" id="Page_809">[Pg 809]</a></span>
+if we regarded only the uses we make of it. It exists as an oxide in
+Nature; and the metallurgy of it has no other object than to revivify
+burned iron, remove the oxygen from it, and extract the metal.
+Of the two oxides of iron, the ferrous, or lower one, is an energetic
+base, readily combining with even the weakest acids, and forming
+with them ferrous or protosalts. Ferric oxide, on the other hand, is
+a feeble base, which combines only slowly with even strong acids
+to form ferric salts or persalts, and not at all with weak acids like
+carbonic acid and those of the tissues of living beings. It is these
+last, more highly oxidized ferric compounds that provide organic
+substances with the oxygen that consumes them, when, as a result of
+the operation, they themselves return to the ferrous state.</p>
+
+<p>Facts of this sort are too nearly universal not to have been observed
+very long ago, but they were not fully understood till about
+the middle of this century. The chemists of the time&mdash;Liebig,
+Dumas, and especially Sch&ouml;nbein, W&ouml;hler, Stenhouse, and many
+others&mdash;established the fact that ferric oxide provokes at ordinary
+temperatures a rapid action of combustion on a large number of substances:
+grass, sawdust, peat, charcoal, humus, arable land, and animal
+matter. A very common example is the destruction of linen by
+rust spots; the substance of the fiber is slowly burned up by the
+oxygen yielded by the oxide. About the same time, Claude Bernard
+inquired whether the process took place within the tissues, in
+contact with living matter in the same way as we have just seen it
+did with dead matter&mdash;the remains of organisms that had long since
+submitted to the action of physical laws&mdash;and received an affirmative
+answer. Injecting a ferric salt into the jugular vein of an animal, he
+found it excreted, deprived of a part of its oxygen, as a ferrous salt.</p>
+
+<p>This slow combustion of organic matter, living or dead, accomplished
+in the cold by iron, represents only one of the aspects of its
+biological function. A counterpart to it is necessary in order to
+complete the picture. It is easy to perceive that the phenomenon
+would have no bearing or consequence if it was limited to this first
+action. With the small provision of oxygen in the iron salt used up,
+and, if reduced to the minimum of oxidation, the source of oxygen being
+exhausted, the combustion of organic matter would stop. The
+oxidation obtained would be insignificant, while the oxidation should
+be indefinite and unlimited, and it is really so.</p>
+
+<p>There is a counterpart. The iron salt, which has gone back to
+the minimum of oxidation and become a ferrous salt, can not remain
+long in that state in contact with the air and with other sources of the
+gas to which it is exposed. It has always been known that ferrous
+compounds absorb oxygen from the air and pass into the ferric state;
+we might say that we have seen it done, for the transformation is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_810" id="Page_810">[Pg 810]</a></span>
+accompanied by a characteristic change of color, by a transition from
+the pale green tint of ferrous bases to the ochery or red color of
+ferric compounds.</p>
+
+<p>We can understand now what should happen when the ferruginous
+compound is placed in contact alternately with organic matter
+and oxygen. In the former phase the iron will yield oxygen to the
+organic matter; in the second phase it will take again from the
+atmosphere the combustible which it has lost, and will be again where
+it started. The same series of operations may be continued a second
+time and a third time, and indefinitely, as long as the alternations of
+contact with organic matter and exposure to atmospheric oxygen
+are kept up, the iron simply performing the part of a broker. The
+same result will occur if atmospheric air and organic matter are constantly
+together; the consumption will continue indefinitely, and the
+iron will perform the part of an intermediary till one of the elements
+of the process is exhausted.</p>
+
+<p>This explanation was necessary to make clear the solution of the
+mystery of slow or cool combustion, the existence of which has been
+known since Lavoisier, without its mechanism being understood.
+That illustrious student gave out the theory that animal heat and
+the energy developed by vital action originated in the chemical reactions
+of the organism, and that, on the other hand, the reactions that
+produce heat consisted of simple combustions, slow combustions, that
+differed only in intensity from that of the burning torch. The development
+of chemistry has shown that this figure was too much simplified
+from the reality, and that most of these phenomena, while they
+are in the end equivalent to a combustion, differ greatly from it in
+mechanism and mode of execution. By this we do not mean to say
+that all the combustions are of this character, and that there do not
+exist in the organism a large number of such as Lavoisier understood,
+and of such as the combustions effected by the intervention of iron
+furnish the type of. Lavoisier's successors, Liebig among them, tried
+to find reactions conformed to this type. Their attempts were unsuccessful,
+but they had the happy result of revealing, if not the
+real function of iron in the blood, at least that of the red matter in
+which it is fixed.</p>
+
+<p>The question of the presence of iron in the coloring matter of
+the blood gave rise to long discussions. Vauquelin denied it. He
+made the mistake of looking for iron in the form of a known compound,
+in direct combination with the blood, while later researches
+have shown that it is found almost exclusively in the red matter that
+tinges the globules, in a complicated combination that escapes the
+ordinary tests; or, according to a usual method of expression, it is
+dissimulated. Liebig also failed to find this combination, and it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_811" id="Page_811">[Pg 811]</a></span>
+not till 1864 that Hoppe-Seyler succeeded in obtaining it pure and
+crystallized. But Liebig had already perceived its essential properties,
+and was able to point out approximately its functions as early as
+1845; yet the single fact that there was no assimilation possible between
+this substance and the salts of iron, cut this question off into
+a kind of negative suspense. Different from these compounds, it
+could not behave like them, and accomplish slow combustions of the
+same type. It is a remarkable fact, and one that illustrates well how
+iron preserves through all its vicissitudes some trace of its fundamental
+property of favoring the action of oxygen on substances,
+that this composition, so special and so different from the salts of
+iron, behaves nearly as they do. While it is not of itself an energetic
+combustible, it is, according to Liebig's expression, "a transporter
+of oxygen"&mdash;a luminous view, which the future was destined
+to confirm. Although the transportation is not produced by the
+mechanism supposed by Liebig, but by another, the general result
+is very much the same from the point of view of the physiology of
+the blood. The coloring matter of the blood conveyed by the globules
+fixes oxygen in contact with the pulmonary air, and distributes
+it as it passes through the capillaries upon the tissues. The globule
+of blood brings nothing else and distributes nothing else, contrary
+to the opinion that had been held before. The theory of slow combustion
+effected through iron, while not absolutely contradicted in
+principle, was not entirely confirmed in detail, so far as concerned
+iron, or the more prominently ferruginous tissue.</p>
+
+<p>No search was made for other tissues or organs presenting more
+favorable conditions, for no others were known that had iron in
+themselves. The liver and the spleen were supposed to receive it
+from the blood under the complicated form in which it exists there,
+or under some equivalent form. It was not, therefore, supposed till
+within a very few years that the two conditions were realized in any
+organ that were required to secure a slow combustion by iron&mdash;that
+is, combinations resembling ferrous and ferric salts with a weak
+acid and a source of oxygen. The doubt has been resolved by
+recent studies. The liver fulfils the requirement. It contains iron
+existing under forms precisely comparable to the ferrous and ferric
+compounds, and is washed by the blood which carries oxygen in a
+state of simple solution in its plasma and of loose combination in its
+globules. Thus all the conditions necessary for the production of
+slow combustion are gathered here, and we can not doubt that it takes
+place. A new function is therefore assigned to the liver, and it becomes
+one of the great furnaces of the organism.</p>
+
+<p>Compounds of iron are so abundant in the ground and the water
+that we need not be surprised when we find them in various parts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_812" id="Page_812">[Pg 812]</a></span>
+of plants, and particularly in the green parts. Their habitual presence
+does not, however, authorize the conclusion that this metal is
+necessary to the support and development of vegetable life. Some
+substances, evidently indifferent, foreign, and even injurious, if they
+exist abundantly in a soil, may be drawn into roots through the
+movement of the sap, and fix themselves in various organs. This
+occurs with copper in certain exceptional circumstances when the
+soil is saturated with its compounds, and if such a condition should be
+found to be repeated over a large extent of country, we might be
+led, by analysis alone of its vegetable productions, to the false conclusion
+that copper was an essential or even necessary constituent of
+them. But the value of the part performed by an element can not be
+determined by analysis alone. Direct proofs are necessary for that,
+methodical and comparative experiments in cultivation in mediums
+artificially deprived or furnished with the element the importance of
+which we wish to estimate. This has been done for combinations
+of iron, and the utility of that metal, especially to the higher plants,
+has been made thereby to appear.</p>
+
+<p>If iron is absent from the nutritive medium the plant will wither.
+If we sprout seeds in a solution from which this metal has been carefully
+excluded, the development will follow its regular course as long
+as the plant is in the condition properly called that of germination,
+or while it does not have to draw anything from the soil. The stem
+rises and the first leaves are formed as usual. But all these parts
+will continue pale, and the green matter, the granulation of chlorophyll,
+will not appear. Now, if we add a small quantity of salt of iron
+to the ground in which the roots are planted, or a much-diluted solution
+is sprinkled on the leaves and the stem, the chlorotic plant will
+recover its health and take on its normal coloration. Experiments of
+this sort make well manifest that iron is necessary to green plants,
+and they show, besides, the bearing of its action, and that what is
+most special and most characteristic in the phenomena of vegetable
+life may be traced exactly to the organization of that green matter.
+It was long thought that if iron was necessary for the formation of
+chlorophyll, it was because it had a part in its constitution. We
+know now that this is not so. The metal does nothing but accompany
+the chlorophyll in the granulation in which it is found.</p>
+
+<p>The influence which iron exerts in the development of the lower
+plants, like the muscidenes, was illustrated with great precision in a
+study made about thirty years ago by M. Raulin, who experimented
+with the common mold (<i>Aspergillus niger</i>), to determine the coefficient
+of importance of all the elements that have a part in its vegetation.
+When the iron was removed from a medium that had been
+shown capable of giving a maximum crop of that mold, the plants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_813" id="Page_813">[Pg 813]</a></span>
+languished, and the return fell off immediately to one third. Estimating
+the quantity of metal that produces this effect, it was found
+that the addition of one part of iron was sufficient to determine the
+production of a weight of plant nearly nine hundred times as great.
+The suppression of the iron further caused an irreparable loss, for
+when it was sought to remedy the wilting of the plants by restoring
+the iron which had been taken from the medium&mdash;an experiment
+which had been successful with higher plants&mdash;the attempt was a
+failure, and the plants could not be prevented from perishing.</p>
+
+<p>These facts are full of interest in themselves, and they further
+show well the necessity or utility of iron in plant life, but they
+teach us no more. They reveal nothing of the mechanism of the
+action, and if we wish to penetrate further in the matter we always
+have to turn to animal physiology.&mdash;<i>Translated for the Popular
+Science Monthly from the Revue des Deux Mondes.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>THE MALAY LANGUAGE.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> R. CLYDE FORD,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap lowercase">PROFESSOR OF GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE, ALBION COLLEGE.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>A gentleman who had lived for several years among the
+Indians of the Canadian northwest said that he went among
+them believing they were an untutored race. But when they told
+him of a dozen kinds of berries growing in a locality where he knew
+but two, brought him flowers he could not find after careful search,
+and around their council fires showed as deep an insight into the
+mysteries of life as the <i>savants</i> of his university, then he concluded
+they could no longer be called untutored.</p>
+
+<p>And why should they be? Is there no culture or civilization
+outside of the enlightenment of Europe or America? And because
+a civilization does not exactly fit the grooves in which most of the
+world has moved, may it not be a real civilization for all that? If
+such is possible, then we vote the Malays a cultured people. Of
+course, their culture is not like our own; it knows no railroads, no telegraphs,
+boasts of no intricate political machinery, has no complicated
+social despotisms. Native princes rule for the most part over peaceful
+states, and politics means no more than the regulation of quiet village
+life. But what need of railroads, when the rivers are avenues of trade
+and communication? Why telegraphs, when the world is bounded by
+the jungle horizon? Or why, in short, severe civil and social enactments,
+when the common <i>Wahlspruch</i> of life is, "Fear disgrace rather
+than death"? Such a civilization, we admit, is a humble one; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_814" id="Page_814">[Pg 814]</a></span>
+it also has the advantage of being a happy one. And where contentment
+dwells, where honesty prevails, where the home is a stronghold,
+there are culture and civilization, even though they may not coincide
+with our own.</p>
+
+<p>The Malays are not barbarians, and their language by its grace
+and adaptability has shown its right to be. To-day it is the mother
+tongue of more than forty millions of people, and the <i>lingua franca</i>
+of Chinamen, Hindus, European, and natives. It is spoken from
+Madagascar to the distant islands of the Pacific, and from the Philippines
+to Australia. With it one can barter in Celebes and sell in
+Java; converse with a sultan in Sumatra or a Spaniard in Manila.
+Moreover, it is soft and melodious, rich in expression, poetical in
+idiom, and simple in structure&mdash;a language almost without grammar
+and yet of immense vocabulary, with subtle distinctions and fine
+gradations of thought and meaning; a language that sounds in one's
+ears long after <i>Tanah Malayu</i> and the coral islands and the jungle
+strand have sunk into hazy recollection, just as they once dropped out
+of sight behind one's departing ship.</p>
+
+<p>Malay is written in the Arabic character, which was adopted with
+Mohammedanism, probably in the thirteenth century. Anciently,
+the Malays used a writing of their own, but it is not yet clearly settled
+what it was. There are now thirty-four characters employed, each
+varying in form, according as it is isolated, final, medial, or initial.
+Naturally, the Arabic influence over the language has been a marked
+one; the priest who dictates in the religion of a people is a molder
+and shaper of language. We have only to recall the Catholic Church
+and the influence of the Latin tongue in the mouths of her priests to
+know that this is so. Many Arabic words and phrases have been
+adopted, but more in the language of literature than in that of everyday
+speech. A large number of expressions of court and royalty, and
+terms of law and religion, are Arabic; also the names of months, days,
+and many articles of commerce and trade; nevertheless, the language
+of common speech is still Malay.</p>
+
+<p>Another influence, also, has been felt in the Malay&mdash;that of the
+Sanskrit language. The presence of many Sanskrit words has caused
+some very ingenious theories to be constructed in proof that the Malays
+were of Indian origin, and such word fragments the survival of the
+primitive tongue. Such theories, however, have not stood the test of
+philology, and the fact still remains that the language is essentially
+unique, with an origin lost in the darkness of remote antiquity. However,
+Sanskrit influence has been much greater, and has penetrated
+much deeper into the elemental structure of the language than the
+Arabic. In fact, the aboriginal language, before it felt the animating
+spirit of the Aryan tongue, must have been a barren one, the language<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_815" id="Page_815">[Pg 815]</a></span>
+of a primitive man, a fisherman, a hunter, a careless tiller of the soil.
+As Maxwell says in his Manual of the Malay Language, the Sanskrit
+word <i>hala</i> (plow) marks a revolution in Malayan agriculture and,
+one may say further, Malayan civilization. What changed the
+methods of cultivating the soil, changed the people themselves. It
+is probable that this change came through contact with people to
+whom Sanskrit was a vernacular tongue, but whether through conquest
+by the sword or by religion is hard to tell. Perhaps it was by both.
+At any rate, it was deep and strong, and left a lasting impression on
+the language. Sanskrit names fastened on trees, plants, grain, fruits,
+household and agricultural implements, parts of the body, articles of
+commerce, animals, metals and minerals, time and its division and
+measurement, family relationships, abstract conceptions, warfare, and
+fundamental ideas of religion and superstition. Such a conquest
+must have been an early and tremendous one.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, Malay is almost a grammarless tongue. It has
+no proper article, and its substantives may serve equally well as
+verbs, being singular or plural, and entirely genderless. However,
+adjectives and a process of reduplication often indicate number, and
+gender words are added to nouns to make sex allusions plain. Whatever
+there is of declension is prepositional as in English, and possessives
+are formed by putting the adjectives after the noun as in Italian.
+Nouns are primitive and derivative, the derivations being formed by
+suffixes or prefixes, or both, and one's mastery of the language may be
+gauged by the idiomatic way in which he handles these <i>Anh&auml;ngsel</i>.
+Adjectives are uninflected.</p>
+
+<p>The use of the pronouns involves an extensive knowledge of Oriental
+etiquette&mdash;some being used by the natives among one another,
+some between Europeans and natives, some employed when an inferior
+addresses a superior and <i>vice versa</i>, some used only when the
+native addresses his prince or sovereign; and, last of all, some being
+distinctly literary, and never employed colloquially. Into this maze
+one must go undaunted, and trust to time and patience to smooth out
+difficulties.</p>
+
+<p>Verbs, like nouns, are primitive and derivative, with some few
+auxiliaries and a good many particles which are suffixed or prefixed
+to indicate various states and conditions. These things are apt to be
+confusing, and when the student learns that a verb may be past,
+present, or future without any change in form, he does not know
+whether to congratulate himself or not. Prepositions, too, are many
+and expressive; conjunctions, some colloquial, some pedantic.</p>
+
+<p>We now come to a peculiarity which Malay has in common with
+other Indo-Chinese languages&mdash;the "numeral co-efficients," as Maxwell
+calls them, which are always employed with a certain class of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_816" id="Page_816">[Pg 816]</a></span>
+objects, just as we say "head" of horses, "sail" of ships, etc. They
+are very many as compared with English, and very idiomatic in their
+use. For instance, the Malay says, "Europeans, three <i>persons</i>,"
+"cats, four <i>tails</i>," "ships, five <i>fruits</i>," "cocoanuts, three <i>seeds</i>,"
+"spears, two <i>stems</i>," "planks, five <i>pieces</i>," "houses, two <i>ladders</i>,"
+and so on to fifteen or twenty different classes of articles or objects.
+By some this has been regarded as a peculiarity of the languages of
+southeastern Asia; but the same thing may be noticed in the Indian
+languages of our own continent.</p>
+
+<p>As a language Malay is easily learned and has much to repay for
+so doing. It is full of wonders and surprises&mdash;among other things is
+the natural home of euphemism, where a spade is called anything
+but a spade. For instance, to die is beautifully expressed in Malay as
+a return to the mercy of Allah. The language is decidedly rich in
+poetical expression and imagery. A neighbor is one whom you permit
+to ascend the ladder of your cottage, and your friend is a sharer
+of your joys and sorrows. Interest is the flower of money, a spring
+is an eye of water, the sun the eye of day, and a policeman all eyes.
+A walk is a stroll to eat the wind, a man drunk is one who rides a
+green horse, and a coward a duck without spurs. A flatterer is one
+who has sugar cane on his lips, a sharper is a man of brains, a fool a
+brain-lacker.</p>
+
+<p>In his proverbs also the Malay shows a matchless use of metaphor
+and imagery, his words having the softness of the jungle breeze, and
+at the same time the grimness of the jungle shades. Nowhere does
+the nature of his race or the peculiar genius of his language show
+out better than in these terse, pithy sayings which the Malay uses to
+sweeten his speech or lend effectiveness to it. The real Malay is a
+creature of the forest or the sea, whence he draws his livelihood, and
+it is but natural that he should envelop his daily and perhaps dangerous
+life with homely philosophy. He loves the freedom which
+he enjoys; take him away from it and he eats his heart out in homesickness.
+"Though you feed a jungle fowl from a golden plate, it
+will return to the jungle again." In his humble life he has discovered
+that blood, be it good or bad, counts for something, and he thinks of
+the forest lairs; "a kitten and small, but a tiger's cub." He is beset
+with dangers by sea and land; often he is between the devil and the
+deep. "One may escape the tiger, and fall into the jaws of the
+crocodile." He recognizes the inevitable, and draws what consolation
+he can. "When the prow is wrecked the shark gets his fill"&mdash;a
+very stoical recognition of ill winds. "For fear of the ghost he
+hugs the corpse," is often the solution of his dilemma. Sometimes
+he indulges in drollery, but is never unphilosophical. "To love one's
+children, one must weep for them now and then; to love one's wife,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_817" id="Page_817">[Pg 817]</a></span>
+one must leave her now and then." The language is full of such
+expressions; they are the natural products of the speech of a poetical
+and Nature-loving folk. Without attempting a classification we give
+a few of the most characteristic proverbs, drawing largely on a collection
+made in the Malay Peninsula by W. E. Maxwell, at one time
+British resident there:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+Will the crocodile respect the carcass?<br />
+Follow your heart, death; follow your feelings, destruction.<br />
+You find grasshoppers where you find a field.<br />
+Earth does not become grain.<br />
+Don't grind pepper for a bird on the wing.<br />
+The flower comes, age comes.<br />
+When the father is spotted, the son is spotted.<br />
+The plant sprouts before it climbs.<br />
+When he can't wring the ear, he pulls the horn.<br />
+The creel says the basket is poorly made.<br />
+Ask from one who has,<br />
+Make vows at a shrine,<br />
+Sulk with him who loves you.<br />
+When the house is done the chisel finds fault.<br />
+As the crow goes back to his nest (no richer, no poorer).<br />
+Whoever eats chilies burns his mouth.<br />
+Because of the mouth the body comes to harm.<br />
+If you are at the river's mouth at nightfall, what's the use of talking of return?<br />
+A broken thread may be mended, but charcoal never.<br />
+The pea forgets its pod.<br />
+As water rolls from a <i>kladi</i> leaf.<br />
+A shipwrecked vessel may float again, a heart once broken is broken forever.<br />
+It is a project, and the result with God.<br />
+He carries a torch in daylight.<br />
+A slave who does well is never praised; if he does badly, never forgiven.<br />
+It rains gold afar, but stone at home.<br />
+What if you sit on a cushion of gold with an uneasy mind!<br />
+When money leaves, your friend goes.<br />
+If you dip your hand into the fish tub, go to the bottom.<br />
+Whoever digs a hole falls into it himself.<br />
+If your legs are long, have your blanket long.<br />
+Like a frog under a cocoanut shell, he thinks he sees the sky.<br />
+If you can't get rattan, bind with roots.<br />
+The plantain does not bear twice.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_818" id="Page_818">[Pg 818]</a></span>He sits like a cat, but leaps like a tiger.<br />
+The tortoise lays a thousand eggs and tells no one; the hen lays a single egg and tells all the world.<br />
+Those will die of thirst who empty the jar when it thunders in a dry time.<br />
+Handsome as a princess, poisonous as a snake.<br />
+Small as an ant, wise as a mouse-deer.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<h2>LIFE ON A SOUTH SEA WHALER.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> FRANK T. BULLEN.</p>
+
+
+<p>Cachalots, or sperm whales, must have been captured on the
+coasts of Europe in a desultory way from a very early date, by
+the incidental allusions to the prime products spermaceti and ambergris
+which are found in so many ancient writers. Shakespeare's
+reference&mdash;"The sovereign'st thing on earth was parmaceti for an inward
+bruise"&mdash;will be familiar to most people, as well as Milton's
+mention of the delicacies at Satan's feast&mdash;"Grisamber steamed"&mdash;not
+to carry quotation any further.</p>
+
+<p>But in the year 1690 the brave and hardy fishermen of the northeast
+coasts of North America established that systematic pursuit of
+the cachalot which has thriven so wonderfully ever since, although it
+must be confessed that the last few years have witnessed a serious
+decline in this great branch of trade.</p>
+
+<p>For many years the American colonists completely engrossed this
+branch of the whale fishery, contentedly leaving to Great Britain and
+the continental nations the monopoly of the northern or arctic fisheries,
+while they cruised the stormy, if milder, seas around their own
+shores.</p>
+
+<p>As, however, the number of ships engaged increased, it was inevitable
+that the known grounds should become exhausted, and in
+1788, Messrs. Enderby's ship, the Emilia, first ventured round Cape
+Horn, as the pioneer of a greater trade than ever. The way once
+pointed out, other ships were not slow to follow, until, in 1819, the
+British whale ship Syren opened up the till then unexplored tract
+of ocean in the western part of the North Pacific, afterward familiarly
+known as the "Coast of Japan." From these teeming waters alone,
+for many years an average annual catch of forty thousand barrels of oil
+was taken, which, at the average price of &pound;8 per barrel, will give some
+idea of the value of the trade generally.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_819" id="Page_819">[Pg 819]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>From the crushing blow of the civil war the American sperm-whale
+fishery has never fully recovered. When the writer was in
+the trade, some twenty-two years ago, it was credited with a fleet of
+between three and four hundred sail; now it may be doubted whether
+the numbers reach an eighth of that amount. A rigid conservatism of
+method hinders any revival of the industry, which is practically conducted
+to-day as it was fifty or even a hundred years ago; and
+it is probable that another decade will witness the final extinction
+of what was once one of the most important maritime industries in
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>In the following pages an attempt has been made&mdash;it is believed
+for the first time&mdash;to give an account of the cruise of a South Sea
+whaler from the seaman's standpoint. Its aim is to present to the
+general reader a simple account of the methods employed and the
+dangers met with in a calling about which the great mass of the
+public knows absolutely nothing.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>At the age of eighteen, after a sea experience of six years from the
+time when I dodged about London streets, a ragged Arab, with wits
+sharpened by the constant fight for food, I found myself roaming the
+streets of New Bedford, Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p>My money was all gone, I was hungry for a ship; and so, when a
+long, keen-looking man with a goatlike beard, and mouth stained with
+dry tobacco juice, hailed me one afternoon at the street corner, I
+answered very promptly, scenting a berth. "Lookin' fer a ship,
+stranger?" said he. "Yes; do you want a hand?" said I anxiously.
+He made a funny little sound something like a pony's whinny, then
+answered: "Wall, I should surmise that I want between fifty and sixty
+hands, ef yew kin lay me onto 'em; but, kem along, every dreep's a
+drop, an' yew seem likely enough." With that he turned and led
+the way until we reached a building, around which was gathered one
+of the most nondescript crowds I had ever seen. There certainly did
+not appear to be a sailor among them&mdash;not so much by their rig,
+though that is not a great deal to go by, but by their actions and speech.
+However, I signed and passed on, engaged to go I knew not where,
+in some ship I did not know even the name of, in which I was to receive
+I did not know how much or how little for my labor, nor how
+long I was going to be away.</p>
+
+<p>From the time we signed the articles, we were never left to ourselves.
+Truculent-looking men accompanied us to our several boarding
+houses, paid our debts for us, finally bringing us by boat to a ship
+lying out in the bay. As we passed under her stern, I read the name
+Cachalot, of New Bedford; but as soon as we ranged alongside, I
+realized that I was booked for the sailor's horror&mdash;a cruise in a whaler.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_820" id="Page_820">[Pg 820]</a></span>
+Badly as I wanted to get to sea, I had not bargained for this, and
+would have run some risks to get ashore again; but they took no
+chances, so we were all soon aboard. Before going forward, I took a
+comprehensive glance around, and saw that I was on board of a vessel
+belonging to a type which has almost disappeared off the face of the
+waters. A more perfect contrast to the trim-built English clipper
+ships that I had been accustomed to I could hardly imagine. She was
+one of a class characterized by sailors as "built by the mile, and cut
+off in lengths as you want 'em," bow and stern almost alike, masts
+standing straight as broomsticks, and bowsprit soaring upward at an
+angle of about forty-five degrees. She was as old-fashioned in her
+rig as in her hull. Right in the center of the deck, occupying a space
+of about ten feet by eight, was a square erection of brickwork, upon
+which my wondering gaze rested longest, for I had not the slightest
+idea what it could be. But I was rudely roused from my meditations
+by the harsh voice of one of the officers, who shouted, "Naow then,
+git below an' stow yer dunnage, 'n look lively up agin!" Tumbling
+down the steep ladder, I entered the gloomy den which was to be
+for so long my home, finding it fairly packed with my shipmates.
+The whole space was undivided by partition, but I saw at once that
+black men and white had separated themselves, the blacks taking the
+port side and the whites the starboard. Finding a vacant bunk by the
+dim glimmer of the ancient teapot lamp that hung amidships, giving
+out as much smoke as light, I hurriedly shifted my coat for a
+"jumper" or blouse, put on an old cap, and climbed into the fresh
+air again. Even <i>my</i> seasoned head was feeling bad with the villainous
+reek of the place. I had hardly reached the deck when I was
+confronted by a negro, the biggest I ever saw in my life. He looked
+me up and down for a moment, then opening his ebony features in
+a wide smile, he said: "Great snakes! why, here's a sailor man for
+sure! Guess thet's so, ain't it, Johnny?" I said "yes" very curtly,
+for I hardly liked his patronizing air; but he snapped me up short with
+"yes, <i>sir</i>, when yew speak to me, yew blank limejuicer. I'se de
+fourf mate of dis yar ship, en my name's Mistah Jones, 'n yew jest
+freeze on to dat ar, ef yew want ter lib long 'n die happy. See,
+sonny?" I <i>saw</i>, and answered promptly, "I beg your pardon, sir, I
+didn't know." "Ob cawse yew didn't know, dat's all right, little
+Britisher; naow jest skip aloft 'n loose dat fore-taupsle." "Ay, ay,
+sir," I answered cheerily, springing at once into the fore-rigging and
+up the ratlines like a monkey, but not too fast to hear him chuckle,
+"Dat's a smart kiddy, I bet." On deck I could see a crowd at the
+windlass heaving up anchor. I said to myself, "They don't waste
+any time getting this packet away." Evidently they were not anxious
+to test any of the crew's swimming powers. They were wise, for had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_821" id="Page_821">[Pg 821]</a></span>
+she remained at anchor that night I verily believe some of the poor
+wretches would have tried to escape.</p>
+
+<p>The anchor came aweigh, the sails were sheeted home, and I returned
+on deck to find the ship gathering way for the heads, fairly
+started on her long voyage.</p>
+
+<p>Before nightfall we were fairly out to sea, and the ceremony of
+dividing the crew into watches was gone through. I found myself
+in the chief mate's or "port" watch (they called it "larboard," a
+term I had never heard used before, it having long been obsolete in
+merchant ships), though the huge negro fourth mate seemed none too
+well pleased that I was not under his command, his being the starboard
+watch under the second mate.</p>
+
+<p>I was pounced upon next morning by "Mistah" Jones, the fourth
+mate, whom I heard addressed familiarly as "Goliath" and "Anak"
+by his brother officers, and ordered to assist him in rigging the "crow's-nest"
+at the main royal-mast head. It was a simple affair. There
+were a pair of cross-trees fitted to the mast, upon which was secured a
+tiny platform about a foot wide on each side of the mast, while above
+this foothold a couple of padded hoops like a pair of giant spectacles
+were secured at a little higher than a man's waist. When all was
+fast one could creep up on the platform, through the hoop, and, resting
+his arms upon the latter, stand comfortably and gaze around, no
+matter how vigorously the old barky plunged and kicked beneath him.
+From that lofty eerie I had a comprehensive view of the vessel. She
+was about three hundred and fifty tons and full ship-rigged&mdash;that is to
+say, she carried square sails on all three masts. Her deck was flush fore
+and aft, the only obstructions being the brick-built "try-works" in
+the waist, the galley, and cabin skylight right aft by the taffrail. Her
+bulwarks were set thickly round with clumsy-looking wooden cranes,
+from which depended five boats. Two more boats were secured bottom
+up upon a gallows aft, so she seemed to be well supplied in that
+direction.</p>
+
+<p>The weather being fine, with a steady northeast wind blowing, so
+that the sails required no attention, work proceeded steadily all the
+morning. The oars were sorted, examined for flaws, and placed in the
+boats; the whale line, Manilla rope like yellow silk, an inch and a half
+round, was brought on deck, stretched, and coiled down with the greatest
+care into tubs holding, some two hundred fathoms, and others one
+hundred fathoms each. New harpoons were fitted to poles of rough
+but heavy wood, without any attempt at neatness but every attention
+to strength. The shape of these weapons was not, as is generally
+thought, that of an arrow, but rather like an arrow with one huge barb,
+the upper part of which curved out from the shaft. The whole of
+the barb turned on a stout pivot of steel, but was kept in line with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_822" id="Page_822">[Pg 822]</a></span>
+the shaft by a tiny wooden peg which passed through barb and shaft,
+being then cut off smoothly on both sides. The point of the harpoon
+had at one side a wedge-shaped edge, ground to razor keenness; the
+other side was flat. The shaft, about thirty inches long, was of the
+best malleable iron, so soft that it would tie into a knot and straighten
+out again without fracture. Three harpoons, or "irons" as they
+were always called, were placed in each boat, fitted one above the other
+in the starboard bow, the first for use being always one unused before.
+Opposite to them in the boat were fitted three lances for the purpose of
+<i>killing</i> whales, the harpoons being only the means by which the boat
+was attached to a fish, and quite useless to inflict a fatal wound. These
+lances were slender spears of malleable iron about four feet long, with
+oval or heart-shaped points of fine steel about two inches broad, their
+edges kept keen as a surgeon's lancet. By means of a socket at the
+other end they were attached to neat handles, or "lance poles," about
+as long again, the whole weapon being thus about eight feet in length,
+and furnished with a light line, or "lance warp," for the purpose of
+drawing it back again when it had been darted at a whale. The
+other furniture of a boat comprised five oars of varying lengths
+from sixteen to nine feet, one great steering oar of nineteen feet, a
+mast and two sails of great area for so small a craft, spritsail shape; two
+tubs of whale line containing together eighteen hundred feet, a keg of
+drinking water, and another long, narrow one with a few biscuits, a lantern,
+candles and matches therein; a bucket and "piggin" for baling,
+a small spade, a flag or "wheft," a shoulder bomb gun and ammunition,
+two knives, and two small axes. A rudder hung outside by the
+stern.</p>
+
+<p>With all this gear, although snugly stowed, a boat looked so loaded
+that I could not help wondering how six men would be able to work
+in her; but, like most "deep-water" sailors, I knew very little about
+boating. I was going to learn.</p>
+
+<p>The reports I had always heard of the laziness prevailing on board
+whale ships were now abundantly falsified. From dawn to dark work
+went on without cessation. Everything was rubbed and scrubbed
+and scoured until no speck or soil could be found; indeed, no gentleman's
+yacht or man-of-war is kept more spotlessly clean than was the
+Cachalot.</p>
+
+<p>On the fourth day after leaving port we were all busy as usual
+except the four men in the "crow's-nests," when a sudden cry of
+"Porps! porps!" brought everything to a standstill. A large school
+of porpoises had just joined us, in their usual clownish fashion, rolling
+and tumbling around the bows as the old barky wallowed along, surrounded
+by a wide ellipse of snowy foam. All work was instantly
+suspended, and active preparations made for securing a few of these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_823" id="Page_823">[Pg 823]</a></span>
+frolicsome fellows. A "block," or pulley, was bung out at the bowsprit
+end, a whale line passed through it and "bent" (fastened) on to
+a harpoon. Another line with a running "bowline," or slip noose,
+was also passed out to the bowsprit end, being held there by one man
+in readiness. Then one of the harpooners ran out along the back
+ropes, which keep the jib boom down, taking his stand beneath the
+bowsprit with the harpoon ready. Presently he raised his iron and
+followed the track of a rising porpoise with its point until the creature
+broke water. At the same instant the weapon left his grasp, apparently
+without any force behind it; but we on deck, holding the line,
+soon found that our excited hauling lifted a big vibrating body clean
+out of the smother beneath. "'Vast hauling!" shouted the mate,
+while, as the porpoise hung dangling, the harpooner slipped the ready
+bowline over his body, gently closing its grip round the "small" by
+the broad tail. Then we hauled on the noose line, slacking away the
+harpoon, and in a minute had our prize on deck. He was dragged
+away at once and the operation repeated. Again and again we hauled
+them in, until the fore part of the deck was alive with the kicking,
+writhing sea pigs, at least twenty of them. All hands were soon busy
+skinning the blubber from the bodies. Porpoises have no skin&mdash;that
+is, hide&mdash;the blubber or coating of lard which incases them being covered
+by a black substance as thin as tissue paper. The porpoise hide of
+the bootmaker is really leather, made from the skin of the <i>Beluga</i>, or
+"white whale," which is found only in the far north. The cover was
+removed from the "try-works" amidships, revealing two gigantic pots
+set in a frame of brickwork side by side, capable of holding two hundred
+gallons each&mdash;such a cooking apparatus as might have graced a
+Brobdingnagian kitchen. Beneath the pots was the very simplest of
+furnaces, hardly as elaborate as the familiar copper hole sacred to
+washing day. Square funnels of sheet iron were loosely fitted to the
+flues, more as a protection against the oil boiling over into the fire than
+to carry away the smoke, of which from the peculiar nature of the
+fuel there was very little. At one side of the try-works was a large
+wooden vessel, or "hopper," to contain the raw blubber; at the other,
+a copper cistern or cooler of about three hundred gallons capacity, into
+which the prepared oil was baled to cool off, preliminary to its being
+poured into the casks. Beneath the furnaces was a space as large as
+the whole area of the try-works, about a foot deep, which, when the
+fires were lighted, was filled with water to prevent the deck from
+burning.</p>
+
+<p>It may be imagined that the blubber from our twenty porpoises
+made but a poor show in one of the pots; nevertheless, we got a barrel
+of very excellent oil from them. The fires were fed with "scrap," or
+pieces of blubber from which the oil had been boiled, some of which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_824" id="Page_824">[Pg 824]</a></span>
+had been reserved from the previous voyage. They burned with a
+fierce and steady blaze, leaving but a trace of ash. I was then informed
+by one of the harpooners that no other fuel was ever used for
+boiling blubber at any time, there being always amply sufficient for
+the purpose.</p>
+
+<p>We were now in the haunts of the sperm whale, or "cachalot,"
+a brilliant lookout being continually kept for any signs of their appearing.
+One officer and a foremast hand were continually on watch
+during the day in the main crow's-nest, one harpooner and a seaman in
+the fore one. A bounty of ten pounds of tobacco was offered to whoever
+should first report a whale, should it be secured; consequently
+there were no sleepy eyes up there.</p>
+
+<p>At last, one beautiful day, the boats were lowered and manned,
+and away went the greenies on their first practical lesson in the business
+of the voyage. There were two greenies in each boat, they being
+so arranged that whenever one of them "caught a crab," which of
+course was about every other stroke, his failure made little difference
+to the boat's progress. They learned very fast under the terrible imprecations
+and storm of blows from the iron-fisted and iron-hearted
+officers, so that before the day was out the skipper was satisfied of our
+ability to deal with a "fish" should he be lucky enough to "raise"
+one. I was, in virtue of my experience, placed at the after oar in the
+mate's boat, where it was my duty to attend to the "main sheet" when
+the sail was set, where also I had the benefit of the lightest oar except
+the small one used by the harpooner in the bow.</p>
+
+<p>The very next day after our first exhaustive boat drill, a school
+of "blackfish" was reported from aloft, and with great glee the
+officers prepared for what they considered a rattling day's fun.</p>
+
+<p>The blackfish (<i>Phoc&aelig;na sp.</i>) is a small toothed whale, not at all
+unlike a miniature cachalot, except that its head is rounded at the
+front, while its jaw is not long and straight, but bowed. It is as
+frolicsome as the porpoise, gamboling about in schools of from twenty
+to fifty or more, as if really delighted to be alive. Its average size
+is from ten to twenty feet long and seven or eight feet in girth; weight,
+from one to three tons. Blubber about three inches thick, while the
+head is almost all oil, so that a good rich specimen will make between
+one and two barrels of oil of medium quality.</p>
+
+<p>We lowered and left the ship, pulling right toward the school, the
+noise they were making in their fun effectually preventing them from
+hearing our approach. It is etiquette to allow the mate's boat first
+place, unless his crew is so weak as to be unable to hold their own;
+but as the mate always has first pick of the men this seldom happens.
+So, as usual, we were first, and soon I heard the order given, "Stand
+up, Louey, and let 'em have it!" Sure enough, here we were right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_825" id="Page_825">[Pg 825]</a></span>
+among them. Louis let drive, "fastening" a whopper about twenty
+feet long. The injured animal plunged madly forward, accompanied
+by his fellows, while Louis calmly bent another iron to a "short warp,"
+or piece of whale line, the loose end of which he made a bowline with
+round the main line which was fast to the "fish." Then he fastened
+another "fish," and the queer sight was seen of these two monsters
+each trying to flee in opposite directions, while the second one ranged
+about alarmingly as his "bridle" ran along the main line. Another
+one was secured in the same way, then the game was indeed great.
+The school had by this time taken the alarm and cleared out, but the
+other boats were all fast to fish, so that didn't matter. Now, at the
+rate our "game" were going, it would evidently be a long while before
+they died, although, being so much smaller than a whale proper,
+a harpoon will often kill them at a stroke. Yet they were now so
+tangled or "snarled erp," as the mate said, that it was no easy matter
+to lance them without great danger of cutting the line. However,
+we hauled up as close to them as we dared, and the harpooner got a
+good blow in, which gave the biggest of the three "Jesse," as he
+said, though why "Jesse" was a stumper. Anyhow, it killed him
+promptly, while almost directly after another one saved further trouble
+by passing in his own checks. But he sank at the same time, drawing
+the first one down with him, so that we were in considerable danger of
+having to cut them adrift or be swamped. The "wheft" was waved
+thrice as an urgent signal to the ship to come to our assistance with
+all speed, but in the meantime our interest lay in the surviving blackfish
+keeping alive. Should <i>he</i> die and, as was most probable, sink,
+we should certainly have to cut and loose the lot, tools included.</p>
+
+<p>We waited in grim silence while the ship came up, so slowly,
+apparently, that she hardly seemed to move, but really at a good pace
+of about four knots an hour, which for her was not at all bad. She
+got alongside of us at last, and we passed up the bight of our line, our
+fish all safe, very much pleased with ourselves, especially when we
+found that the other boats had only five between the three of them.</p>
+
+<p>Chain slings were passed around the carcasses, the end of the "fall,"
+or tackle rope, was taken to the windlass, and we hove away cheerily,
+lifting the monsters right on deck. A mountainous pile they made.
+After dinner all hands turned to again to "flench" the blubber and
+prepare for trying out. This was a heavy job, keeping us busy until
+it was quite dark, the latter part of the work being carried on by the
+light of a "cresset," the flames of which were fed with "scrap," which
+blazed brilliantly, throwing a big glare over all the ship. The last of
+the carcasses was launched overboard by about eight o'clock that evening,
+but not before some vast junks of beef had been cut off and hung
+up in the rigging for our food supply.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_826" id="Page_826">[Pg 826]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Trying out" went on busily all night, and by nightfall of the
+next day the ship had resumed her normal appearance, and we were a
+tun and a quarter of oil to the good. Blackfish oil is of medium
+quality, but I learned that, according to the rule of "roguery in all
+trades," it was the custom to mix quantities such as we had just obtained
+with better class whale oil, and thus get a much higher price
+than it was really worth.</p>
+
+<p>We had now been eight days out, having had nothing, so far, but
+steady breezes and fine weather. As it was late autumn&mdash;the first
+week in October&mdash;I rather wondered at this, for even in my brief experience
+I had learned to dread a "fall" voyage across the "Western
+Ocean."</p>
+
+<p>Gradually the face of the sky changed, and the feel of the air, from
+balmy and genial, became raw and cheerless. The little wave tops
+broke short off and blew backward, apparently against the wind, while
+the old vessel had an uneasy, unnatural motion, caused by a long, new
+swell rolling athwart the existing set of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>We were evidently in for a fair specimen of Western Ocean
+weather, but the clumsy-looking, old-fashioned Cachalot made no
+more fuss over it than one of the long-winged sea birds that floated
+around, intent only upon snapping up any stray scraps that might
+escape from us. Higher rose the wind, heavier rolled the sea, yet
+never a drop of water did we ship, nor did anything about the deck
+betoken what a heavy gale was blowing. During the worst of the
+weather, and just after the wind had shifted back into the northeast,
+making an uglier cross sea than ever get up, along comes an immense
+four-masted iron ship homeward bound. She was staggering under a
+veritable mountain of canvas, fairly burying her bows in the foam at
+every forward drive, and actually wetting the clews of the upper topsails
+in the smothering masses of spray, that every few minutes almost
+hid her hull from sight.</p>
+
+<p>It was a splendid picture; but&mdash;for the time&mdash;I felt glad I was not
+on board of her. In a very few minutes she was out of our ken, followed
+by the admiration of all. Then came, from the other direction,
+a huge steamship, taking no more notice of the gale than as if it were
+calm. Straight through the sea she rushed, dividing the mighty rollers
+to the heart, and often bestriding three seas at once, the center
+one spreading its many tons of foaming water fore and aft, so that from
+every orifice spouted the seething brine. Compared with these greyhounds
+of the wave, we resembled nothing so much as some old lightship
+bobbing serenely around, as if part and parcel of the mid-Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>The gale gradually blew itself out, leaving behind only a long
+and very heavy swell to denote the deep-reaching disturbance that the
+ocean had endured. And now we were within the range of the sargasso<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_827" id="Page_827">[Pg 827]</a></span>
+weed, that mysterious <i>fucus</i> that makes the ocean look like some vast
+hayfield, and keeps the sea from rising, no matter how high the wind.
+It fell a dead calm, and the harpooners amused themselves by dredging
+up great masses of the weed, and turning out the many strange creatures
+abiding therein.</p>
+
+<p>We were all gathered about the fo'lk'sle scuttle one evening,
+a few days after the gale referred to above, and the question of
+whale-fishing came up for discussion. Until that time, strange as
+it may seem, no word of this, the central idea of all our minds, had
+been mooted. Every man seemed to shun the subject, although we
+were in daily expectation of being called upon to take an active part in
+whale-fighting. Once the ice was broken, nearly all had something
+to say about it, and very nearly as many addle-headed opinions were
+ventilated as at a Colney Hatch debating society. For we none of us
+<i>knew</i> anything about it. It was Saturday evening, and while at
+home people were looking forward to a day's respite from work and
+care, I felt that the coming day, though never taken much notice of
+on board, was big with the probabilities of strife such as I at least
+had at present no idea of&mdash;so firmly was I possessed by the prevailing
+feeling.</p>
+
+<p>The night was very quiet. A gentle breeze was blowing, and the
+sky was of the usual "trade" character&mdash;that is, a dome of dark blue
+fringed at the horizon with peaceful cumulus clouds, almost motionless.
+I turned in at 4 <span class="smcap lowercase">A. M.</span> from the middle watch and, as usual,
+slept like a babe. Suddenly I started wide awake, a long, mournful
+sound sending a thrill to my very heart. As I listened breathlessly,
+other sounds of the same character but in different tones joined in,
+human voices monotonously intoning in long-drawn-out expirations
+the single word "bl-o-o-o-ow." Then came a hurricane of noise overhead,
+and adjurations in no gentle language to the sleepers to "tumble
+up lively there, no skulking, sperm whales." At last, then, fulfilling
+all the presentiments of yesterday, the long-dreaded moment had
+arrived. Happily, there was no time for hesitation; in less than two
+minutes we were all on deck, and hurrying to our respective boats.
+The skipper was in the main crow's-nest with his binoculars. Presently
+he shouted: "Naow then, Mr. Count, lower away soon's y'like.
+Small pod o' cows, an' one 'r two bulls layin' off to west'ard of 'em."
+Down went the boats into the water quietly enough; we all scrambled
+in and shoved off. A stroke or two of the oars were given to get
+clear of the ship and one another, then oars were shipped and up went
+the sails. As I took my allotted place at the main-sheet, and the beautiful
+craft started off like some big bird, Mr. Count leaned forward,
+saying impressively to me: "Y'r a smart youngster, an' I've kinder
+took t'yer; but don't ye look ahead an' get gallied, 'r I'll knock ye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_828" id="Page_828">[Pg 828]</a></span>
+stiff wi' th' tiller; y'hear me? N' don't ye dare to make thet sheet
+fast, 'r ye'll die so sudden y' won't know whar y'r hurted." I said
+as cheerfully as I could, "All right, sir," trying to look unconcerned,
+telling myself not to be a coward, and all sorts of things; but the cold
+truth is that I was scared almost to death, because I didn't know what
+was coming. However, I did the best thing under the circumstances,
+obeyed orders and looked steadily astern, or up into the bronzed impassive
+face of my chief, who towered above me, scanning with eagle
+eyes the sea ahead. The other boats were coming flying along behind
+us, spreading wider apart as they came, while in the bows of each
+stood the harpooner with his right hand on his first iron, which lay
+ready, pointing over the bow in a raised fork of wood called the
+"crutch."</p>
+
+<p>All of a sudden, at a motion of the chief's hand, the peak of our
+mainsail was dropped, and the boat swung up into the wind, laying
+"hove to," almost stationary. The centerboard was lowered to stop
+her drifting to leeward, although I can not say it made much difference
+that ever I saw. <i>Now</i>, what's the matter? I thought, when to
+my amazement the chief addressing me said, "Wonder why we've
+hauled up, don't ye?" "Yes, sir, I do," said I. "Wall," said he,
+"the fish hev sounded, an' 'ef we run over 'em, we've seen the last ov
+'em. So we wait awhile till they rise agin, 'n then we'll prob'ly git
+thar' 'r thareabouts before they sound agin." With this explanation I
+had to be content, although if it be no clearer to my readers than it
+then was to me, I shall have to explain myself more fully later on.
+Silently we lay, rocking lazily upon the gentle swell, no other word
+being spoken by any one. At last Louis, the harpooner, gently
+breathed "Blo-o-o-w"; and there, sure enough, not half a mile away
+on the lee beam, was a little bushy cloud of steam apparently rising
+from the sea. At almost the same time as we kept away all the other
+boats did likewise, and just then, catching sight of the ship, the
+reason for this apparently concerted action was explained. At the
+mainmast head of the ship was a square blue flag, and the ensign at
+the peak was being dipped. These were signals well understood and
+promptly acted upon by those in charge of the boats, who were thus
+guided from a point of view at least one hundred feet above the sea.</p>
+
+<p>"Stand up, Louey," the mate murmured softly. I only just
+stopped myself in time from turning my head to see why the order
+was given. Suddenly there was a bump, at the same moment the
+mate yelled, "Give't to him, Louey, give't to him!" and to me, "Haul
+that main sheet, naow haul, why don't ye?" I hauled it flat aft, and
+the boat shot up into the wind, rubbing sides as she did so with what
+to my troubled sight seemed an enormous mass of black India rubber
+floating. As we <i>crawled</i> up into the wind, the whale went into convulsions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_829" id="Page_829">[Pg 829]</a></span>
+befitting his size and energy. He raised a gigantic tail on
+high, thrashing the water with deafening blows, rolling at the same
+time from side to side until the surrounding sea was white with froth.
+I felt in an agony lest we should be crushed under one of those fearful
+strokes, for Mr. Count appeared to be oblivious of possible danger,
+although we seemed to be now drifting back on to the writhing leviathan.
+In the agitated condition of the sea it was a task of no ordinary
+difficulty to unship the tall mast, which was of course the first thing
+to be done. After a desperate struggle, and a narrow escape from
+falling overboard of one of the men, we got the long "stick," with the
+sail bundled around it, down and "fleeted" aft, where it was secured
+by the simple means of sticking the "heel" under the after thwart,
+two thirds of the mast extending out over the stern. Meanwhile, we
+had certainly been in a position of the greatest danger, our immunity
+from damage being unquestionably due to anything but precaution
+taken to avoid it.</p>
+
+<p>By the time the oars were handled, and the mate had exchanged
+places with the harpooner, our friend the enemy had "sounded"&mdash;that
+is, he had gone below for a change of scene, marveling, no doubt,
+what strange thing had befallen him. Agreeably to the accounts
+which I, like most boys, had read of the whale-fishery, I looked for
+the rushing of the line round the loggerhead (a stout wooden post
+built into the boat aft), to raise a cloud of smoke with occasional bursts
+of flame; so, as it began to slowly surge round the post, I timidly asked
+the harpooner whether I should throw any water on it. "Wot for?"
+growled he, as he took a couple more turns with it. Not knowing
+"what for," and hardly liking to quote my authorities here, I said no
+more, but waited events. "Hold him up, Louey, hold him up, cain't
+ye?" shouted the mate, and to my horror, down went the nose of
+the boat almost under water, while at the mate's order everybody
+scrambled aft into the elevated stern sheets.</p>
+
+<p>The line sang quite a tune as it was grudgingly allowed to surge
+round the loggerhead, filling one with admiration at the strength
+shown by such a small rope. This sort of thing went on for about
+twenty minutes, in which time we quite emptied the large tub and
+began on the small one.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly our boat fell backward from her "slantindicular" position
+with a jerk, and the mate immediately shouted, "Haul line, there!
+look lively, now! you&mdash;so on, etcetera, etcetera" (he seemed to invent
+new epithets on every occasion). The line came in hand over hand,
+and was coiled in a wide heap in the stern sheets, for, silky as it was, it
+could not be expected in its wet state to lie very close. As it came
+flying in, the mate kept a close gaze upon the water immediately beneath
+us, apparently for the first glimpse of our antagonist. When<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_830" id="Page_830">[Pg 830]</a></span>
+the whale broke water, however, he was some distance off, and apparently
+as quiet as a lamb. Now, had Mr. Count been a prudent or less
+ambitious man, our task would doubtless have been an easy one, or
+comparatively so; but, being a little over-grasping, he got us all into
+serious trouble. We were hauling up to our whale in order to lance
+it, and the mate was standing, lance in hand, only waiting to get
+near enough, when up comes a large whale right alongside of our boat,
+so close, indeed, that I might have poked my finger in his little eye,
+if I had chosen. The sight of that whale at liberty, and calmly taking
+stock of us like that, was too much for the mate. He lifted his
+lance and hurled it at the visitor, in whose broad flank it sank, like
+a knife into butter, right up to the pole-hitches. The recipient disappeared
+like a flash, but before one had time to think, there was an
+awful crash beneath us, and the mate shot up into the air like a bomb
+from a mortar. He came down in a sitting posture on the mast
+thwart; but as he fell, the whole framework of the boat collapsed like
+a derelict umbrella. Louis quietly chopped the line and severed our
+connection with the other whale, while in accordance with our instructions
+we drew each man his oar across the boat and lashed it firmly
+down with a piece of line spliced to each thwart for the purpose. This
+simple operation took but a minute, but before it was completed we
+were all up to our necks in the sea&mdash;still in the boat, it is true, and
+therefore not in such danger of drowning as if we were quite adrift;
+but, considering that the boat was reduced to a mere bundle of loose
+planks, I, at any rate, was none too comfortable. Now, had he known
+it, was the whale's golden opportunity; but he, poor wretch, had had
+quite enough of our company, and cleared off without any delay, wondering,
+no doubt, what fortunate accident had rid him of our very
+unpleasant attentions.</p>
+
+<p>I was assured that we were all as safe as if we were on board the
+ship, to which I answered nothing; but, like Jack's parrot, I did some
+powerful thinking. Every little wave that came along swept clean
+over our heads, sometimes coming so suddenly as to cut a breath in
+half. If the wind should increase&mdash;but no&mdash;I wouldn't face the
+possibility of such a disagreeable thing. I was cool enough now in
+a double sense, for, although we were in the tropics, we soon got thoroughly
+chilled.</p>
+
+<p>Help came at last, and we were hauled alongside. Long exposure
+had weakened us to such an extent that it was necessary to hoist us on
+board, especially the mate, whose "sudden stop," when he returned to
+us after his little a&euml;rial excursion, had shaken his sturdy frame considerably,
+a state of body which the subsequent soaking had by no
+means improved. In my innocence I imagined that we should be
+commiserated for our misfortunes by Captain Slocum, and certainly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_831" id="Page_831">[Pg 831]</a></span>
+be relieved from further duties until we were a little recovered from
+the rough treatment we had just undergone. But I never made a
+greater mistake. The skipper cursed us all (except the mate, whose
+sole fault the accident undoubtedly was) with a fluency and vigor
+that was, to put it mildly, discouraging.</p>
+
+<p>A couple of slings were passed around the boat, by means of which
+she was carefully hoisted on board, a mere dilapidated bundle of sticks
+and raffle of gear. She was at once removed aft out of the way, the business
+of cutting in the whale claiming precedence over everything else
+just then. The preliminary proceedings consisted of rigging the "cutting
+stage." This was composed of two stout planks a foot wide and ten
+feet long, the inner ends of which were suspended by strong ropes over
+the ship's side about four feet from the water, while the outer extremities
+were upheld by tackles from the main rigging, and a small
+crane abreast the try-works.</p>
+
+<p>These planks were about thirty feet apart, their two outer ends
+being connected by a massive plank which was securely bolted to
+them. A handrail about as high as a man's waist, supported by light
+iron stanchions, ran the full length of this plank on the side nearest
+the ship, the whole fabric forming an admirable standing place
+whence the officers might, standing in comparative comfort, cut and
+carve at the great mass below to their hearts' content.</p>
+
+<p>So far the prize had been simply held alongside by the whale line,
+which at death had been "rove" through a hole cut in the solid gristle
+of the tail; but now it became necessary to secure the carcass to the
+ship in some more permanent fashion. Therefore, a massive chain
+like a small ship's cable was brought forward, and in a very ingenious
+way, by means of a tiny buoy and a hand lead, passed round the body,
+one end brought through a ring in the other, and hauled upon until
+it fitted tight round the "small" or part of the whale next the broad
+spread of the tail. The free end of the fluke chain was then passed
+in through a mooring pipe forward, firmly secured to a massive bitt
+at the heel of the bowsprit (the fluke-chain bitt), and all was ready.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing to be done was to cut the whale's head off. This
+operation, involving the greatest amount of labor in the whole of the
+cutting in, was taken in hand by the first and second mates, who,
+armed with twelve-foot spades, took their station upon the stage,
+leaned over the handrail to steady themselves, and plunged their
+weapons vigorously down through the massive neck of the animal&mdash;if
+neck it could be said to have&mdash;following a well-defined crease in the
+blubber. At the same time the other officers passed a heavy chain
+sling around the long, narrow lower jaw, hooking one of the big cutting
+tackles into it, the "fall" of which was then taken to the windlass
+and hove tight, turning the whale on her back. A deep cut was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_832" id="Page_832">[Pg 832]</a></span>
+then made on both sides of the rising jaw, the windlass was kept going,
+and gradually the whole of the throat was raised high enough for a
+hole to be cut through its mass, into which the strap of the second cutting
+tackle was inserted and secured by passing a huge toggle of oak
+through its eye. The second tackle was then hove taut, and the jaw,
+with a large piece of blubber attached, was cut off from the body with
+a boarding knife, a tool not unlike a cutlass blade set into a three-foot-long
+wooden handle.</p>
+
+<p>Upon being severed the whole piece swung easily inboard and was
+lowered on deck. The fast tackle was now hove upon while the third
+mate on the stage cut down diagonally into the blubber on the body,
+which the purchase ripped off in a broad strip or "blanket" about
+five feet wide and a foot thick. Meanwhile the other two officers
+carved away vigorously at the head, varying their labors by cutting
+a hole right through the snout. This, when completed, received a
+heavy chain for the purpose of securing the head. When the blubber
+had been about half stripped off the body, a halt was called in order
+that the work of cutting off the head might be finished, for it was a
+task of incredible difficulty. It was accomplished at last, and the
+mass floated astern by a stout rope, after which the windlass pawls
+clattered merrily, the "blankets" rose in quick succession, and were
+cut off and lowered into the square of the main hatch or "blubber
+room." A short time sufficed to strip off the whole of the body
+blubber, and when at last the tail was reached, the backbone was cut
+through, the huge mass of flesh floating away to feed the innumerable
+scavengers of the sea. No sooner was the last of the blubber lowered
+into the hold than the hatches were put on and the head hauled up
+alongside. Both tackles were secured to it and all hands took to the
+windlass levers. This was a small cow whale of about thirty barrels&mdash;that
+is, yielding that amount of oil&mdash;so it was just possible to lift the
+entire head on board; but as it weighed as much as three full-grown
+elephants, it was indeed a heavy lift for even our united forces, trying
+our tackle to the utmost. The weather was very fine, and the ship
+rolled but little; even then, the strain upon the mast was terrific, and
+right glad was I when at last the immense cube of fat, flesh, and bone
+was eased inboard and gently lowered on deck.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as it was secured the work of dividing it began. From
+the snout a triangular mass was cut, which was more than half pure
+spermaceti. This substance was contained in spongy cells held together
+by layers of dense white fiber, exceedingly tough and elastic,
+and called by the whalers "white horse." The whole mass, or
+"junk," as it is called, was hauled away to the ship's side and firmly
+lashed to the bulwarks for the time being, so that it might not "take
+charge" of the deck during the rest of the operations.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_833" id="Page_833">[Pg 833]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The upper part of the head was now slit open lengthwise, disclosing
+an oblong cistern or "case" full of liquid spermaceti, clear as water.
+This was baled out with buckets into a tank, concreting as it cooled
+into a waxlike substance, bland and tasteless. There being now nothing
+more remaining about the skull of any value, the lashings were
+loosed, and the first leeward roll sent the great mass plunging overboard
+with a mighty splash. It sank like a stone, eagerly followed by
+a few small sharks that were hovering near.</p>
+
+<p>As may be imagined, much oil was running about the deck, for
+so saturated was every part of the creature with it that it really gushed
+like water during the cutting-up process. None of it was allowed to
+run to waste, though, for the scupper holes which drain the deck were
+all carefully plugged, and as soon as the "junk" had been dissected all
+the oil was carefully "squeegeed" up and poured into the try-pots.</p>
+
+<p>Two men were now told off as "blubber-room men," whose duty it
+became to go below and, squeezing themselves in as best they could
+between the greasy mass of fat, cut it up into "horse-pieces" about
+eighteen inches long and six inches square. Doing this, they became
+perfectly saturated with oil, as if they had taken a bath in a tank of it;
+for as the vessel rolled it was impossible to maintain a footing, and
+every fall was upon blubber running with oil. A machine of wonderful
+construction had been erected on deck in a kind of shallow trough
+about six feet long by four feet wide and a foot deep. At some remote
+period of time it had no doubt been looked upon as a triumph of
+ingenuity, a patent mincing machine. Its action was somewhat like
+that of a chaff-cutter, except that the knife was not attached to the
+wheel, and only rose and fell, since it was not required to cut right
+through the "horse-pieces" with which it was fed. It will be readily
+understood that, in order to get the oil quickly out of the blubber, it
+needs to be sliced as thin as possible, but for convenience in handling
+the refuse (which is the only fuel used) it is not chopped up in small
+pieces, but every "horse-piece" is very deeply scored as it were, leaving
+a thin strip to hold the slices together. This, then, was the order
+of work: Two harpooners attended the try-pots, replenishing them
+with minced blubber from the hopper at the port side, and baling out
+the sufficiently boiled oil into the great cooling tank on the starboard.
+One officer superintended the mincing, another exercised a
+general supervision over all. So we toiled watch and watch, six hours
+on and six off, the work never ceasing for an instant night or day.
+Though the work was hard and dirty, and the discomfort of being so
+continually wet through with oil great, there was only one thing dangerous
+about the whole business. That was the job of filling and
+shifting the huge casks of oil. Some of these were of enormous size,
+containing three hundred and fifty gallons when full, and the work<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_834" id="Page_834">[Pg 834]</a></span>
+of moving them about the greasy deck of a rolling ship was attended
+with a terrible amount of risk. For only four men at most could get
+fair hold of a cask, and when she took it into her silly old hull to
+start rolling, just as we had got one halfway across the deck, with
+nothing to grip your feet, and the knowledge that one stumbling man
+would mean a sudden slide of the ton and a half weight, and a little
+heap of mangled corpses somewhere in the lee scuppers&mdash;well, one
+always wanted to be very thankful when the lashings were safely
+passed.</p>
+
+<p>The whale being a small one, as before noted, the whole business
+was over within three days, and the decks scrubbed and rescrubbed
+until they had quite regained their normal whiteness. The oil was
+poured by means of a funnel and long canvas hose into the casks
+stowed in the ground tier at the bottom of the ship, and the gear, all
+carefully cleaned and neatly "stopped up," stowed snugly away below
+again.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>SKETCH OF MANLY MILES.</h2>
+
+
+<p>To Dr. Manly Miles belongs the distinction of having been the
+first professor of practical agriculture in the United States, as
+he was appointed to that then newly instituted position in the Michigan
+Agricultural College in 1865.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Miles was born in Homer, Cortland County, New
+York, July 20, 1826, the son of Manly Miles, a soldier of the Revolution;
+while his mother, Mary Cushman, was a lineal descendant of
+Miles Standish and Thomas Cushman, whose father, Joshua Cushman,
+joining the Mayflower colony at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in
+1621, left him there with Governor Bradford when he returned to
+England.</p>
+
+<p>When Manly, the son, was eleven years old, the family removed
+to Flint, Michigan, where he employed his time in farm work
+and the acquisition of knowledge, and later in teaching. He had
+a common-school education, and improved all the time he could spare
+from his regular occupations in reading and study. It is recorded of
+him in those days that he was always successful in whatever he undertook.
+In illustration of the skill and thoroughness with which he
+performed his tasks, his sister relates an incident of his sowing plaster
+for the first time, when his father expressed pleasure at his having
+distributed the lime so evenly and so well. It appears that he did
+not spare himself in doing the work, for so completely was he
+covered that he is said to have looked like a plaster cast, "with only
+his bright eyes shining through." A thrashing machine was brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_835" id="Page_835">[Pg 835]</a></span>
+on to the farm, and Manly and his brother went round thrashing for
+the neighbors. Industrious in study as well as in work, the boy
+never neglected his more prosaic duties to gratify his thirst for knowledge.
+He studied geometry while following the plow, drawing the
+problems on a shingle, which he tacked to the plow-beam. Whenever
+he was missed and inquiry was made about him, the answer invariably
+was, "Somewhere with a book." He was most interested
+in the natural sciences, particularly in chemistry in its applications
+to agriculture, and in comparative physiology and anatomy, and was
+a diligent student and collector of mollusks.</p>
+
+<p>Choosing the profession of medicine, Mr. Miles was graduated
+M. D. from Rush Medical College, Chicago, in 1850, and practiced
+till 1859. In the meantime he became greatly interested in the subject
+of a geographical survey of the State, for which an act was
+passed and approved in 1858. In the organization of the survey,
+in 1859, he was appointed Assistant State Geologist in the department
+of zo&ouml;logy; and in the next year was appointed professor of
+zo&ouml;logy and animal physiology in the State Agricultural College
+at Lansing.</p>
+
+<p>In his work as zo&ouml;logist to the State Geological Survey, in 1859,
+1860, and 1861, he displayed rare qualities as a naturalist, so that
+Mr. Walter R. Barrows, in recording his death in the bulletin of
+the Michigan Ornithological Club, expresses regret that many of
+the years he afterward devoted to the development of experimental
+agriculture "were not spent in unraveling some of the important
+biological problems which the State afforded, which his skill and
+perseverance would surely have solved." He was a "born collector,"
+Mr. Barrows adds, "as the phrase is, and his keen eyes,
+tireless industry, and mathematical precision led to the accumulation
+of thousands of valuable specimens and more valuable observations."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bryant Walker, of Detroit, who knew Professor Miles well in
+later years, and had opportunity to review his zo&ouml;logical work, regards
+the part he took during this service in developing the knowledge
+of the fauna of the State as having been very prominent.
+"The catalogues he published in the report for 1860 have
+been the basis for all work since that time." He kept in correspondence
+with the most eminent American naturalists of the period, including
+Cope, Prime, Lea, W. G. Binney, Baird, and Agassiz, and
+supplied them with large quantities of valuable material. From the
+many letters written by these naturalists which are in the possession
+of his friends, we take, as illustrating the character of the service
+he rendered and of the trust they reposed in him, even previous to his
+going on the survey, one from Agassiz, of February 4, 1856:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_836" id="Page_836">[Pg 836]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>: As you have already furnished me with invaluable
+materials for the natural history of the fishes of your State, I am
+emboldened to ask another favor of you. I am preparing a map of
+the Geographical Distribution of the Turtles of North America, and
+would be greatly indebted to you for any information respecting the
+range of those found in your State, as far as you have noticed them,
+even if you should know them only by their common names, my
+object being simply to ascertain how far they extend over different
+parts of the country. If you could add specimens of them, to identify
+them with precision, it would be, of course, so much the better;
+but as I am almost ready for the press, I could not for this paper
+await the return of spring, but would thank you for what you could
+furnish me now. I am particularly interested in ascertaining how
+far north the different species inhabiting this continent extend." On
+the back of this letter was Dr. Miles's indorsement that a box had
+been sent.</p>
+
+<p>A number of letters from Professor Baird, of 1860 and 1861,
+relate to the identification of specimens collected by Dr. Miles, and
+to the fishes of Michigan, and contain inquiries about gulls and eggs.
+Dr. Miles likewise supplied Cope with a considerable amount of material
+concerning Michigan reptiles and fishes.</p>
+
+<p>While mollusks were the favorite object of Dr. Miles's investigations,
+he also made studies and valuable collections of birds, mammals,
+reptiles, and fishes; and he seems, Mr. Barrows says, "to have
+possessed, in a high degree, that strong characteristic of a true
+naturalist, a full appreciation of the value of good specimens.
+Many of his specimens are now preserved at the Agricultural
+College, and among his shells are many which are of more than
+ordinary value from having served as types of new species, or as
+specimens from type localities, or as part or all of the material
+which has helped to clear up mistakes and misconceptions about
+species and their distribution." Mr. Walker speaks of his having
+done a great work in conchology. His catalogue, which contained
+a list of one hundred and sixty-one species, was by far the most
+complete published up to that time. "He described two new
+species&mdash;<i>Planorbis truncatus</i> and <i>Unio leprosus</i>. The former is one
+of the few species which are, so far as known, peculiar to Michigan, and
+is a very beautiful and distinct form; while the latter, although now
+considered as synonymous with another species, has peculiarities
+which in the then slight knowledge of the variability of the species
+was a justification of his position. He was also the discoverer of two
+other forms which were named after him by one of our most eminent
+conchologists&mdash;viz., <i>Campeloma Milesii</i> (Lea) and <i>Guiobasis Milesii</i>
+(Lea)." Mr. Walker believes that "in general, it can be truthfully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_837" id="Page_837">[Pg 837]</a></span>
+stated that Dr. Miles did more to develop the general natural
+history of that State (Michigan) than any other man either before or
+since he completed his work as State Geologist."</p>
+
+<p>As professor of zo&ouml;logy and animal physiology, Dr. Miles is described
+by one of his students, who afterward became a professor in
+the college and then its president, as having been thoroughly interested
+in the subjects he taught, and shown that interest in his work
+and in his treatment of his students. He labored as faithfully and
+industriously with the class of five to which President Clute belonged
+as if it "had numbered as many score." He supplemented the
+meager equipment of his department from his more extensive private
+apparatus and collections, which were freely used for class work;
+and, when there was need, he had the skill to prepare new pieces of
+apparatus. "He was on the alert for every chance for illustration
+which occasion offered: an animal slaughtered for the tables gave
+him an opportunity to lecture on its viscera; a walk over the drift-covered
+fields found many specimens of rock which he taught us to
+distinguish; the mud and the sand banks along the river showed how
+in the periods of the dim past were formed fossil footprints and
+ripples; the woods and swamps and lakes gave many useful living
+specimens, some of which became the material for the improvised dissecting
+room; the crayon in his hand produced on board or paper
+the chart of geologic ages, the table of classification, or the drawing
+of the part of an animal under discussion."</p>
+
+<p>Prof. R. C. Kedzie came to the college a little later, in 1863, when
+Dr. Miles had been for two years a professor, and found him then
+the authority "for professors and students alike on beasts, birds, and
+reptiles, on the stones of the field, and insects of the air," thorough,
+scholarly, and enthusiastic, and therefore very popular with his
+classes.</p>
+
+<p>The projection of agricultural colleges under the Agricultural
+College Land Grant Act of 1862 stimulated a demand for teachers
+of scientific agriculture, and it was found that they were rare. Of
+old school students of science there was no lack&mdash;able men, as President
+Clute well says, who were familiar with their little laboratories
+and with the old theories and methods, but who did not possess the
+new vision of evolution and the conservation of energy, men of
+the study rather than the field, and least of all men of the orchard
+and stock farm; and they knew nothing of the practical application
+of chemistry to fertilization and the raising of crops and the composition
+of feed stuffs, of physiology to stock-breeding, and of geology and
+physics to the study of the soils.</p>
+
+<p>With a thorough knowledge of science and familiarity with practical
+agriculture Professor Miles had an inclination to enter this field,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_838" id="Page_838">[Pg 838]</a></span>
+and this inclination was encouraged by President Abbott and some of
+the members of the Board of Agriculture. He had filled the professorship
+of zo&ouml;logy and animal physiology with complete success, and
+had he consulted his most cherished tastes alone he would have
+remained there, but he gradually suffered himself to be called to
+another field. The duties of "acting superintendent of the farm"
+were attached to his chair in 1864. In 1865 he became professor
+of animal physiology and practical agriculture and superintendent
+of the farm; in 1869 he ceased to teach physiology, and gave his
+whole time to the agricultural branch of his work; and in 1875 the
+work of the superintendent of the farm was consigned to other hands,
+and he confined himself to the professorship proper of practical agriculture.</p>
+
+<p>The farm and its appurtenances, with fields cumbered with
+stumps and undrained, with inadequate and poorly constructed buildings,
+with inferior live stock, and everything primitive, were in poor
+condition for the teaching or the successful practice of agriculture.
+Professor Miles's first business was to set these things in order. Year
+by year something was done to remove evils or improve existing features
+in some of the departments of the life and management of the
+premises, till the concern in a certain measure approached the superintendent's
+ideal&mdash;as being a laboratory for teaching agriculture, conducting
+experiments, and training men, rather than a money-making
+establishment.</p>
+
+<p>In this new field, Professor Kedzie says, Professor Miles was even
+more popular than before with students, and created an enthusiasm
+for operations and labors of the farm which had been regarded
+before as a disagreeable drudgery. The students "were never happier
+than when detailed for a day's work with Dr. Miles in laying
+out some difficult ditch or surveying some field. One reason why he
+was so popular was that he was not afraid of soiling his hands. His
+favorite uniform for field work was a pair of brown overalls. The
+late Judge Tenney came to a gang of students at work on a troublesome
+ditch and inquired where he could find Dr. Miles. 'That man
+in overalls down in the quicksands of the ditch is Dr. Miles'; the
+professor of practical agriculture was in touch with the soil."</p>
+
+<p>Prof. Byron D. Halsted, of the New Jersey Agricultural College
+Experiment Station, who was an agricultural pupil of Dr. Miles in
+Lansing, characterizes him as having been a full man who knew his
+subjects deeply and fondly. "In those days I am safe in writing
+that he represented the forefront of advanced agriculture in America.
+He was in close touch with such men as Lawes and Gilbert, Rothamstead,
+England, the famous field-crop experimenters of the world, and
+as for his knowledge of breeds of live stock and their origin, Miles's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_839" id="Page_839">[Pg 839]</a></span>
+Stock-Breeding is a classic work. Dr. Miles, in short, was a close
+student, a born investigator, hating an error, but using it as a stepping-stone
+toward truth. He did American farming a lasting service, and
+his deeds live after him."</p>
+
+<p>While loved by his students, most of whom have been successful
+and many have gained eminence as agricultural professors or workers
+in experiment stations, and while receiving sympathy and support
+from President Abbott, Dr. Miles was not appreciated by the
+politicians, or by all of the Board of Agriculture, or even by the
+public at large. Unkind and captious criticisms were made of his
+work, and it was found fault with on economical grounds, as if its
+prime purpose had been to make money. He therefore resigned his
+position in 1875, and accepted the professorship of agriculture in
+the Illinois State University. Thence he removed to the Houghton
+Farm of Lawson Valentine, near Mountainville, N. Y., where he
+occupied himself with scientific experimental investigation. He was
+afterward professor of agriculture in the Massachusetts Agricultural
+College, at Amherst. In announcing this appointment to the
+students, Dr. Chadbourne, then president of the institution, and himself
+a most successful teacher, stated that he considered Dr. Miles as
+the ablest man in the United States for that position. In 1886,
+shortly after Dr. Chadbourne's death, Dr. Miles returned to his old
+home in Lansing, Michigan, where he spent the rest of his life in
+study, research, and the writing of books and articles for scientific
+publications.</p>
+
+<p>During these later years of his life he took up again with what
+had been his favorite pursuit in earlier days, but with which he had
+not occupied himself for thirty years&mdash;the study of mollusks&mdash;with
+the enthusiasm of a young man, Mr. Walker says, who being interested
+in the same study, was in constant correspondence with him at
+this time; "and as far as his strength permitted labored with all the
+acumen and attention to details which were so characteristic of him.
+I was particularly struck with his familiarity with the present drift
+of scientific investigation and thought, and his thorough appreciation
+of modern methods of work. He was greatly interested in the work
+I was carrying on with reference to the geographical distribution of
+the mollusca, and, as would naturally be supposed from his own work
+in heredity in connection with our domestic animals, took great pleasure
+in discussing the relations of the species as they are now found
+and their possible lines of descent. He was a careful and accurate
+observer of Nature, and if he had not drifted into other lines of work
+would undoubtedly have made his mark as a great naturalist. As
+it is, his name will always have an honored place in the scientific
+history of Michigan."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_840" id="Page_840">[Pg 840]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When Professor Miles began to teach in the Michigan Agricultural
+College, the "new education" was new indeed, and the textbook
+method still held sway. But the improved methods were gradually
+taking the place of the old ones, and Professor Miles was one of
+the first to co-operate in them, and he did it with effect. He used
+text-books, "but his living word," President Clute says, "supplemented
+the book; and the animal from the farm under his knife and
+ours, the shells which he led us to find under the rotten logs and
+along the rivers and lakes, the insects he taught us to collect and
+classify, the minerals and fossils he had collected on the geological
+survey of Michigan, all were used to instruct and inspire his students,
+to cultivate in them the scientific spirit and method."</p>
+
+<p>Among the more important books by Professor Miles are Stock-Breeding,
+which had a wide circulation and has been much used as
+a class-book; Experiments with Indian Corn, giving the results of
+some important work which he did at Houghton Farm; Silos and
+Ensilage, which helped much in diffusing knowledge of the silo in
+the times when it had to fight for recognition; and Land Drainage.
+Of his papers, he published in the Popular Science Monthly articles
+on Scientific Farming at Rothamstead; Ensilage and Fermentation;
+Lines of Progress in Agriculture; Progress in Agricultural Science;
+and How Plants and Animals Grow. To the American Association
+for the Advancement of Science he contributed papers on Energy
+as a Factor in Rural Economy; Heredity of Acquired Characters
+(also to the American Naturalist); Surface Tension of Water and
+Evaporation; Energy as a Factor in Nutrition; and Limits of Biological
+Experiments (also to the American Naturalist). Other articles
+in the American Naturalist were on Animal Mechanics and the
+Relative Efficiency of Animals as Machines. In the Proceedings of
+the American Educational Association is an address by him on Instruction
+in Manual Arts in Connection with Scientific Studies. The
+records of the U and I Club, of Lansing, of which he was a valued
+member for ten years, contain papers on a variety of scientific subjects
+which were read before it, and were highly appreciated. This
+list does not contain all of Professor Miles's contributions to the literature
+of science, for throughout his life he was a frequent contributor
+to the agricultural and scientific press, and a frequent speaker before
+associations and institutes, "where his lectures were able and practical."</p>
+
+<p>No special record is made of the work of Professor Miles in the
+American Agriculturist, but the correspondence of Professor Thurber
+with him furnishes ample proof that he was one of the most
+trusted advisers in the editorial conduct of that journal. The familiar
+tone of Professor Thurber's letters, and the undoubting assurance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_841" id="Page_841">[Pg 841]</a></span>
+with which he asked for information and aid on various subjects,
+well demonstrate how well the editor knew whom he could
+rely upon in an emergency.</p>
+
+<p>In all his work the great desire of Professor Miles was to find and
+present the truth. His merits were recognized by many scientific
+societies. He was made a corresponding member of the Buffalo
+Society of Natural Sciences in 1862; a corresponding member of the
+Entomological Society of Philadelphia in January, 1863; a correspondent
+of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia in
+1864; a member of the American Association for the Advancement of
+Science in 1880, and a Fellow of the same body in 1890; and held
+memberships or other relations with other societies; and he received
+the degree of D. V. S. from Columbia Veterinary College, New York,
+in March, 1880.</p>
+
+<p>His students and friends speak in terms of high admiration of
+the genial qualities of Professor Miles as a companion. The resolutions
+of the U and I Club of Lansing describe him as an easy and
+graceful talker, a cheerful dispenser of his learning to others. "To
+spend an hour in his 'den,' and watch his delicate experiments with
+'films,'" says President Clute, "and see the light in his eyes as he
+talked of them, was a delight." "He was particularly fond of boys,"
+says another, "and never seemed happier than when in the company
+of boys or young men who were trying to study and to inform themselves,
+and if he could in any way assist them he was only too glad
+to do so"; and he liked pets and children. Incidents are related
+showing that he had a wonderful accuracy in noting and recollecting
+the minutest details that came under his observation&mdash;a power
+that he was able to bring to bear instantly when its exercise was
+called for.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Miles kept up his habits of reading and study to the last days
+of his life; but all public work was made difficult to him in later years
+by an increasing deafness. He was tireless in investigation, patient,
+and always cheerful and looking for the bright side; and when one inquired
+of him concerning his health, his usual answer was that he
+was "all right," or, if he could not say that, that he would be "all
+right to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>No sketch of Dr. Miles is complete without a word of tribute to
+his high personal character, his life pure and noble in every relationship,
+his unswerving devotion to truth, and the unfaltering loyalty to
+his friends, which make his memory a benediction and an inspiration
+to all who knew him well.</p>
+
+<p>He was married in 1851 to Miss Mary E. Dodge, who remained
+his devoted companion until his death, which occurred February 15,
+1898.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_842" id="Page_842">[Pg 842]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>Editor's Table.</h2>
+
+
+<h3><i>SCIENCE AND CULTURE.</i></h3>
+
+<p>We do not know from whom the
+philosopher Locke quotes the
+saying, "<i>Non vit&aelig; sed schol&aelig; discimus</i>,"
+but he translates it well,
+"We learn not to live, but to dispute."
+The adage has reference to
+the old systems of education which
+had for their aim neither the discovery
+of truth nor the perfecting of
+the human faculties in any broad
+sense, but the fitting of the individual
+to take his place in a world of
+conventional ideas and discuss conventional
+topics upon conventional
+lines. In other words, the preparation
+was for school, not for life, the
+whole subsequent career of the individual
+being regarded simply as a
+prolongation of the intellectual influences
+and discipline of the school.
+That system, which was ecclesiastical
+in its origin, has now, save for
+strictly ecclesiastical purposes, passed
+away. We consider life as the end
+of school and not school as the end
+of life.</p>
+
+<p>It may be questioned, however,
+whether we have as yet thoroughly
+adapted our educational methods to
+this change of standpoint. Do we as
+yet take a sufficiently broad view of
+life? If we conceive life narrowly as
+essentially a business struggle, and
+adapt our procedure to that conception,
+the results will show very little
+relation to the larger and truer
+conception according to which life
+means development of faculty, activity
+of function, and a harmonious
+adjustment of relations between man
+and man. If, again, we make too
+much of knowledge that has only a
+conventional value, having little or
+no bearing on the understanding of
+things or the accomplishment of
+useful work, we are so far falling
+into the old error of "learning for
+school." The address by Sir Archibald
+Geikie, which we published last
+month, gives a useful caution against
+undervaluing "the older learning."
+The older learning can certainly be
+made an effective instrument for the
+cultivation of taste, of sympathy, and
+of intellectual accuracy along certain
+lines. It tends further, we believe,
+to promote a certain intellectual self-respect,
+which is a valuable quality.
+In the study of language and literature
+the human mind surveys, as it
+were, its own peculiar possessions,
+and thus acquires a sense of proprietorship
+which a study of the external
+world can hardly give. Still, it
+is well to cultivate a consciousness of
+the essentially limited and arbitrary
+nature of such knowledge. It is important,
+we may admit, to have a
+good text of such an author as
+Chaucer; but the minuti&aelig; into which
+critics of his text enter can not be
+said to possess any broad human interest.
+Whether he wrote this word
+or that word, adopted this spelling
+or that, can not be a question on
+which much depends; and could one
+know the exact truth on a thousand
+such points, he would not really be
+much the wiser. Among Chaucer
+scholars he could speak with a good
+deal of confidence; but the knowledge
+of these details would not really
+help to round out any useful <i>system</i>
+of knowledge, nor could any single
+fact possess the illuminating power
+which sometimes belongs to some
+single and, at first sight, unimportant
+fact in the realm of natural
+knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>This is not said with any intention
+of disparaging the culture that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_843" id="Page_843">[Pg 843]</a></span>
+comes of literary study. It is a culture
+that tends to brighten human
+intercourse and to sweeten a man's
+own thoughts. It is a culture eminently
+favorable to flexibility of
+mind and quick insight into human
+character. So far it is a culture "for
+life"; but too often it tends to become
+a culture "for school"&mdash;that is
+to say, when things are learned simply
+to meet conventional demands
+and conform to the fashion of the
+time.</p>
+
+<p>A true and sufficient culture can
+never, as we conceive, be founded on
+literature and language alone. No
+mind can be truly liberalized without
+imbibing and assimilating the
+fundamental principles of science.
+There is darkness in the mind that
+believes that anything can come out
+of nothing and which has never obtained
+a glimpse of the exactness
+with which Nature solves her equations.
+In the region of mechanics
+alone there are a thousand beautiful
+and varied illustrations of the unfailing
+constancy of natural laws.
+It is a liberal education to trace the
+operation of one law under numberless
+disguises, and thus arrive at an
+ineradicable conviction that the same
+law must be reckoned with always
+and everywhere. The persistence of
+force, the laws of the composition
+and resolution of forces, the laws of
+falling bodies and projectiles, the
+conservation of energy, the laws of
+heat, to mention only a few heads of
+elementary scientific study, are capable,
+if properly unfolded and illustrated,
+of producing in any mind
+open to large thoughts a sense of
+harmony and a trust in the underlying
+reason of things, which are constitutive
+elements of the very highest
+culture. Only, care must be taken
+to approach these studies in a right
+spirit. There is a way of regarding
+the laws of Nature which tends to
+vulgarize rather than refine the
+mind. If we approach Nature merely
+as something to be exploited, we
+get no culture from the study of it;
+but if we approach it as the great
+men of old did, and feel that in
+learning its laws we are grasping
+the thoughts which went to the
+building of the universe, and, by so
+doing, are affirming our own high
+calling as intelligent beings, then
+every moment given to the study
+of Nature means intellectual, moral,
+and spiritual gain. When we look
+into literature there is much to
+charm, much to delight and satisfy;
+and doubtless, in relation to what
+any one man can accomplish, the
+field is infinite; but still we know
+we are looking into the limited. On
+the other hand, when we are face to
+face with Nature, we know we are
+looking into the infinite, and that,
+however many veils we may take
+away, there is still "veil after veil
+behind."</p>
+
+<p>It is needless to say that there are
+thousands of minds in the world
+possessed of good native power, but
+laboring under serious disability for
+the want of that culture which science
+alone can bestow. Some of
+these are sick with morbid longings
+for unattainable knowledge, and
+openly or secretly rebellious at the
+limitations of a Nature whose powers
+they have never even begun to
+explore. To such persons anything
+like an adequate insight into the
+harmony amid diversity of Nature's
+laws would come with all the force
+of a revelation, and would, we may
+well believe, clear their minds of the
+feverish fancies which have made
+them so restless and dissatisfied; but,
+alas! it is rarely that such enlightenment
+comes to those who have not
+in youth imbibed a portion of the
+scientific spirit. In this class are to
+be found the victims of spiritualism,
+of the Keeley motor, and even of
+that grotesque satire, the success of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_844" id="Page_844">[Pg 844]</a></span>
+which we remember almost with
+fear and trembling, the "sympsychograph."
+Still, to all such we would
+say:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Come forth into the light of things;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let Nature be your teacher."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The "Nature" which we require to
+teach us for the peace and tranquillity
+of our souls is the Nature of everyday
+phenomena, the Nature that
+forms the clouds and rounds the
+raindrops, that springs in the grass
+and pulses in the tides, that glances
+in the sunbeam and breathes in the
+flower, that works witchery in the
+crystal and breaks into glory in
+the sunset. The mind that knows
+what can be known of these things
+has feasted full of wonder and
+beauty, and makes no greedy demand
+for higher grace or mightier
+miracle.</p>
+
+<p>Then again there are those who
+for want of a little elementary scientific
+knowledge, and particularly
+for want of an assured conviction that
+Nature gives nothing for nothing, are
+continually attempting the impossible
+in the way of projected inventions.
+They catch at a phrase and
+think it must represent a fact; they
+fall victims to a verbal mythology
+of their own manufacture. If there
+was much hope of their learning
+anything of value through disappointment,
+they might be left to the
+teaching of experience, costly as the
+lessons of that master are. But
+they do not learn: their hopes are
+blasted, their fortunes, if they had
+any, are wrecked, but their infatuations
+survive. Where is the inventor
+of a perpetual motion who ever
+ceased to have confidence in his peculiar
+contrivance? The thing may
+be as motionless as a tombstone, save
+when urged by external force into a
+momentary lumbering activity; but
+all the same, it only needs, its misguided
+author thinks, a little doctoring,
+a trifling change here or there,
+to make it tear round like mad.
+And so with other inventors of the
+impossible: they take counsel not
+with Nature, but with their own
+wholly incorrect notions of what the
+operations of Nature are. The least
+power of truly analyzing a natural
+phenomenon, and separating the factors
+that produce it, would show them
+the falsity of their ideas; but that
+power they do not possess.</p>
+
+<p>We can not, then, plead too strongly
+for the teaching of science, not
+with a view to results in money, but
+with a view to the improvement of
+the mind and heart of the learner, or,
+in other words, as a source of culture.
+Literature introduces us to the world
+of human thought and action, to the
+kingdom of man; and science shows
+us how the thought and powers of
+man can be indefinitely enlarged by
+an ever increasing acquaintance with
+the laws of the universe. Literature
+alone leaves the mind without any
+firm grasp of the reality of things,
+and science alone tends to produce
+a hard, prosaic, and sometimes antisocial
+temper. Each helps to bring
+out the best possible results of the
+other; and it is only by their joint
+action that human faculties and human
+character can ever be brought
+to their perfection.</p>
+
+
+<h3><i>SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST.</i></h3>
+
+<p>It is singular what a propensity
+some writers have to misunderstand
+and misrepresent the views of Mr.
+Herbert Spencer, even upon points in
+regard to which he has made every
+possible effort to avoid occasion for
+misapprehension. The term "survival
+of the fittest" is one which Mr.
+Spencer himself introduced as being,
+perhaps, a little less open to misunderstanding
+than the Darwinian expression
+"natural selection." The
+latter seemed to imply purposive action,
+and Mr. Spencer thought that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_845" id="Page_845">[Pg 845]</a></span>
+this implication would be less prominent
+if the phrase were changed to
+"survival of the fittest." From the
+very first, however, he recognized
+that the difference between the two
+terms in this respect was, if we may
+so express it, purely quantitative;
+and he took care to make it clear
+that by "the fittest" he did not in
+the least intend to signify any form
+of ideal or subjective fitness, but simply
+a superior degree of adaptation,
+as a matter of actual fact, to environing
+conditions. The conditions at
+any given moment are as they are,
+and the "fitness" of any particular
+organism is such a correspondence
+with those conditions as permits and
+favors its perpetuation. The conditions
+do not create fitness; they
+merely eliminate unfitness; nor does
+Mr. Spencer conceive any agency
+as producing <i>ab extra</i> the fitness
+which enables an organism or a
+number of organisms to survive.
+He differs, however, from what is
+perhaps the dominant school of biology
+to-day, in holding that the higher
+forms of organic life are, as he expresses
+it, "directly equilibrated"
+with their surroundings through the
+inheritance of physical features resulting
+from effort and habit.</p>
+
+<p>To whatever cause it may be attributed,
+few writers whose intellectual
+activity has extended over so
+long a term of years as Mr. Spencer's
+have been so consistent in their utterances
+at different stages as he.
+The "Synthetic Philosophy" is the
+realization of a scheme of thought
+no less wonderful in its coherence
+and solidity than in its compass, the
+author having planted himself from
+the first at a point of view which
+gave him a clear command of his
+entire field. To say that no other
+system of thought equally comprehensive
+and equally coherent exists
+in the world to-day would be to
+make a statement which few competent
+and dispassionate authorities
+would deny. Notwithstanding this,
+there are writers not a few, particularly
+of the class "who write with
+ease," who, as we said at the outset,
+have a propensity for misunderstanding
+Mr. Spencer, and who consequently
+accuse him of inconsistencies
+and self-contradictions for which
+nothing that he has ever said affords
+any warrant. One of these gentlemen
+is the Duke of Argyll, who has
+lately offered the world another
+superfluous book under the title of
+Organic Evolution Cross-examined.
+The duke particularly concerns himself
+with Mr. Spencer's teaching in
+regard to the "survival of the fittest,"
+and Mr. Spencer, in the columns
+of Nature, replies to him in a
+brief but sufficient manner. It is
+safe to say that Mr. Spencer's philosophy
+will show Cyclopean remains
+generations after the name of his
+ducal critic shall have passed forever
+into the mists of oblivion; and the
+"survival of the fittest" will thus be
+illustrated in a sense in which Mr.
+Spencer himself never used the words.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>Scientific Literature.</h2>
+
+
+<h3>SPECIAL BOOKS.</h3>
+
+<p>The study of the methods through which the topographical features
+and rock forms of particular districts have been worked out, as presented
+in numerous popular monographs, is a fascinating one; and we can hardly
+doubt that many persons who would never otherwise have thought of it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_846" id="Page_846">[Pg 846]</a></span>
+have been made interested in geology by some of these masterly picturesque
+descriptions of regions with which they were superficially familiar. Other
+treatises on the origin of surface features, dealing with the subject more
+fundamentally, but likewise of limited scope, are not wanting. Yet, as
+Prof. <i>James Geikie</i> well says, there is no English work to which readers
+not skilled in geology can turn for a general account of the whole subject.
+Professor Geikie has therefore prepared his elaborate book on <i>Earth Sculpture</i><a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>
+to supply this want, to furnish an introductory treatise for those
+persons who may be desirous of acquiring some broad knowledge of the results
+arrived at by geologists as to the development of land forms generally.
+A vast number of geological questions are involved in the exhaustive
+treatment of the subject. All the forces with which geologists become
+acquainted in the study of the earth, and their operation, come into consideration.
+The effects of these forces assume aspects that vary according
+to the nature of the material on which they operate, and they are again
+modified according to the peculiar combinations of forces at work. The
+subject is therefore not the easy one it may be supposed at first sight to
+be, and the reader who peruses Professor Geikie's work with the intention
+of mastering it will find he has some studying to do. Yet Professor
+Geikie is clear, and it is only because he has gone deeper than the others
+that he may be harder. The first point he insists upon is that in the fashioning
+of the earth's surface no hard-and-fast line separates past and present.
+The work has been going on for a long time, and is still in progress,
+under a law of evolution as true for the crust of the globe as for the plants
+and animals. In setting out upon our inquiry we must in the first place
+know something about rocks and the mode of their arrangement, of the
+structure or architecture of the earth's crust. This leads to the distinction
+between the igneous and the subaqueous, the volcanic, plutonic, and metamorphic,
+and the derivative rocks on which epigene agencies have performed
+their shaping work. These rocks have been modified in various
+ways, and the surface appearance of the earth has been affected by forces
+operating from the interior, and by external factors, the work of which is
+called denudation. The agents of denudation are described&mdash;air, water,
+heat, frost, chemical action, plants, and animals&mdash;often so closely associated
+in their operations that their individual shares in the final result can hardly
+be determined. The various influences of these factors as exerted upon
+different forms of geological structure and different sorts of rocks are then
+taken up and described as applied to land forms in regions of horizontal,
+or gently inclined, and of highly folded and disturbed strata, and in regions
+affected by normal faults or vertical displacements. Land forms
+due directly or indirectly to igneous action and the influence of rock character
+on the determination of land forms are subjects of special chapters.
+Glacial action is one of the most important factors in modifying the forms
+of northern lands, and is treated with considerable fullness. &AElig;olian action&mdash;of
+the air and wind&mdash;has peculiar and important effects in arid regions,
+and underground water in limestone districts, and these receive attention.
+Then come basins&mdash;those due to crustal deformation, crater lakes, river
+lakes, glacial basins, and others, and coast lines. Finally, a classification
+is given of these land forms as plains or plateaus of accumulation and of
+erosion, original or tectonic and subsequent or relict hills and mountains,
+original or tectonic and subsequent or erosion valleys, basins, and coast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_847" id="Page_847">[Pg 847]</a></span>
+lines, and the conclusions are reached that we do not know, except as a
+matter of probability, whether we have still visible any original wrinkles
+of the earth's crust; and that some of the estimates of the time it has taken
+to produce the changes of which we witness the results have been very
+much exaggerated.</p>
+
+<p>The curious conclusions obtained by Dr. <i>Le Bon</i> in his psychological
+investigations,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> delivered to us in startling language, are said to be the
+fruit of extensive travel and of the personal measurement of thousands
+of skulls. His memoir on cervical researches, published in 1879, upholds
+the theory that the volume of the skull varies with the intelligence. This
+theory has perhaps suffered a permanent adumbration. Facts seem to prove
+that the bony structure of the skull, or even its cranial capacity, gives no
+positive indication of intellect.</p>
+
+<p>In the present volume the theme of discussion is the soul of races.
+Anthropological classification is set aside and mankind is divided into
+four groups according to mental characteristics: the primitive, inferior,
+average, and superior races&mdash;the standard of judgment being the degree
+of their aptitude for dominating reflex impulses. It is perhaps worthy
+of note that while the Frenchman belongs to a superior race, the Semitic
+peoples are placed in the class below, or the average sort. For the primitive
+varieties it is not necessary to observe a South Sea islander, the
+lower strata of Europeans furnishing numerous examples. When greater
+differentiation is reached, the word "race" is used in a historical sense. It
+requires, however, more complete fusion than some nations exhibit to earn
+this title; for, although there are Germans and Americans, "it is not
+clear as yet that there are Italians." The race having been once evolved,
+acquires wondrous potentialities with Dr. Le Bon. He compares it to
+the totality of cells constituting a living organism, asserts that its mental
+constitution is as unvarying as its anatomical structure, that it is a permanent
+being independent of time and founded alone by its dead. It is
+a short step to endow this entity with a soul consisting of common sentiments,
+interests, and beliefs&mdash;what in brief, robbed of hyperbole, we should
+call national character. He states that the notion of a country is not
+possible until a national soul is formed. This, in time, like germ-plasm,
+becomes so stable that assimilation with foreign elements is impossible.
+Like natural species, it has secondary characteristics that may be modified,
+but its fundamental character is like the fin of the fish or the beak of the
+bird. The acquisition of this soul marks the apogee of the greatness of
+a people. Psychological species, however, are not eternal, but may decay
+if the functioning of their organs is troubled profoundly.</p>
+
+<p>The soul of the race is best expressed in its art, not in its history or
+institutions, and, as it can not bequeath its soul, so it can not impress its
+civilization or art upon an alien race. It was on account of this incompatibility
+of soul that Grecian art failed to be implanted in India. The
+unaltering constituent of the soul corresponds to character, while intellectual
+qualities are variable. By character is meant perseverance, energy,
+power of self-control, also morality. The latter is hereditary respect for
+the rules on which a society is based. This definition would make polygamy
+a moral notion for Mormons. The knowledge of character "can be
+acquired neither in laboratories nor in books, but only in the course of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_848" id="Page_848">[Pg 848]</a></span>
+long travel." Whence it is learned that different races can not have mutual
+comprehension. Luckily for the student who is unable to travel, the same
+phenomenon may be observed in the gulf that separates the civilized man
+and woman. Although highly educated, "they might converse with each
+other for centuries without understanding one another." These differences
+between races and individuals demonstrate the falsity of the notion
+of equality. Indeed, through <i>science</i> "man has learned that to be slaves
+is the natural condition of all human beings." Naturally he becomes dispirited,
+anarchy seizes upon the uneducated and sullen indifference the
+more cultivated. "Like a ship that has lost its compass, the modern
+man wanders haphazard through the spaces formerly peopled by the gods
+and rendered a desert by science." In France morality is gradually dying
+out, while the United States is threatened by a gigantic civil war. What
+to do is problematical, since we are informed "that people have never derived
+much advantage from too great a desire to reason and think," and
+what is most harmful to a people is to attain too high a degree of intelligence
+and culture, the groundwork of the soul beginning to decline when
+this level is reached. The remedy suggested to us is "the organization
+of a very severe military service and the permanent menace of disastrous
+wars." But if we fail to see the improving tendency of this advice, it is
+probably because we are like historians, "simple-minded," while Dr. Le
+Bon is much too complex for our understanding. According to his own
+theory, there is no hope that we may comprehend him, since the outpourings
+of a soul of the Latin race can not be transferred by a simple bridge
+of translation to the apprehension of an Anglo-Saxon mind, separated, as
+he would term it, by "the dead weight of thousands of generations."</p>
+
+
+<h3>GENERAL NOTICES.</h3>
+
+<p>In preparing the new edition of his <i>Text-Book
+of Mineralogy</i><a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> first published in 1877,
+Prof. <i>E. S. Dana</i> has found it necessary to
+rewrite the whole as well as to add much
+new matter and many new illustrations. The
+work being designed chiefly for use in class
+or private instruction, the choice of topics
+discussed, the order and fullness of treatment,
+and the method of presentation have
+been determined by that object. The different
+types of crystal forms are described
+under the thirty-two groups now accepted,
+classed according to their symmetry. In the
+chapters on physical and chemical mineralogy,
+the plan of the former edition is retained
+of presenting somewhat fully the elementary
+principles of the science on which the mineral
+characters depend, and the author has
+tried to give the student the means of becoming
+practically familiar with the modern
+means of investigation. Especial attention
+is given to the optical qualities of crystals as
+revealed by the microscope; and frequent
+references are introduced to important papers
+on the different subjects discussed. The
+descriptive part of the volume is essentially
+an abridgment of the sixth edition of Dana's
+System of Mineralogy, published in 1892,
+to which the student is referred for fuller
+and supplementary information. A full
+topical index is furnished in addition to the
+usual index of species.</p>
+
+<p>The title, <i>The Story of the Railroad</i>,<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>
+carries with it the suggestion of an eventful
+history. The West, in the author's view, begins
+with the Missouri River. The story of
+its railroad is the story of the line, now very
+multiple, that leads to the Pacific Ocean.
+The beginning of white men's travels in
+these routes is traced by the editor to the
+Spanish adventurers of the sixteenth century,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_849" id="Page_849">[Pg 849]</a></span>
+who made miserable journeys in search of
+gold or visionary objects, through regions
+now traversed by some of the more southern
+lines. Then came trappers; next costly and
+painfully undertaken Government expeditions
+into the then regions of the unknown, the
+stories of which were the boyhood delight
+of men now living. The period of practical
+traversing of the continent began with the
+raging of the California gold fever, when
+the journey of many weeks was tiresomely
+made with ox teams, in the face of actual
+perils of the desert, starvation, thirst, and
+the Indians. After California became important,
+stage and express lines were put on;
+but still, at the time Mr. Warman takes up
+the story, less than sixty years ago, the idea
+of building a railroad to the Pacific was regarded
+as too visionary to be entertained,
+and Asa Whitney sacrificed a fortune trying
+to induce somebody to take it up. The first
+dreams were for a short route to the Orient.
+Eventually the idea was developed that the
+American West might be worth going after,
+and then the idea of a railroad to it began to
+assume practical form. Young Engineer
+Dodge, afterward Major General, began surveys
+before the civil war; after it General
+Sherman gave the scheme a great impulse, and
+the Union Pacific Railroad was built&mdash;when
+and how are graphically and dramatically told
+in Mr. Warman's book. Next came the Atchison,
+Topeka, and Santa F&eacute;, and other transcontinental
+lines, the histories of all of which are
+related in similar style, with stories of adventures,
+perils encountered, and lively incidents,
+including the war between two of the
+lines for the possession of the Arkansas
+Ca&ntilde;on; financial mishaps, and political scandal.
+Then came the settlement of the
+plains, road-making in Mexico, and the opening
+of Oklahoma, all of which were made
+possible by the railroads, and have in turn
+contributed to support them. The beginnings
+and growth of the express business are described,
+and the later lines that have penetrated
+the plains are mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>Prof. <i>William Benjamin Smith's</i> treatise
+on the <i>Infinitesimal Analysis</i><a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> has been
+written, the author says, on what appeared,
+in the light of ten years' experience in teaching
+the calculus, to be lines of least resistance.
+The aim has been, within a prescribed
+expense of time and energy, to penetrate as
+far as possible into the subject, and in as
+many directions, so that the student shall attain
+as wide knowledge of the matter, as full
+comprehension of the methods, and as clear
+consciousness of the spirit and power of this
+analysis as the nature of the case would admit.
+The author has accordingly often followed
+what seemed to be natural suggestions
+and impulses toward near-lying extensions
+or generalizations, and has even allowed them
+to direct the course of the discussion. In
+accordance with the plan and purpose of the
+book as given, "Weierstressian rigor" has
+been excluded from many investigations, and
+the postponement has been compelled of
+some important discussions, which were considered
+too subtle for an early age of study.
+Real difficulties, however, have not been
+knowingly disguised, and pains have been
+taken on occasion to warn the reader that
+the treatment given is only provisional, and
+must await further precision or delimitation.
+Where the subject has been found too large
+for the compass of the intended work, or too
+abstruse or difficult for the contemplated
+students, the treatment has been compressed
+or curtailed. The book is, in fact, written
+for such as feel a genuine interest in the
+subject; and the illustrations and exercises
+have been chosen with frequent reference to
+practical or theoretic importance or to historic
+interest.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. <i>George Jacob Holyoake</i> has written
+with much enthusiasm the <i>Jubilee History
+of the Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society</i>.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>
+Many schemes have been started on lines
+similar to those of this one, but very few
+besides it have grown from the very beginning,
+and, having become to all appearance a
+permanent institution, can look back upon
+a career of fifty years with complete satisfaction.
+The society began in times of public
+distress. The ground was prepared for it
+by the "Redemption" Society, which was
+founded at Leeds in 1845, by admirers of
+Robert Owen, after the experiment at Queenswood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_850" id="Page_850">[Pg 850]</a></span>
+had failed. It practiced a kind of
+co-operation and had some distinguished
+friends to wish it well. Among the speakers
+at its meetings was Dr. Frederic Hollick,
+still living, now a resident of New York city.
+The co-operative society was started as a
+means of getting cheaper flour for its members.
+On February 25, 1847, an appeal
+headed "Holbeck Anti-Corn Mill Association"
+was issued to the working classes of
+Leeds and vicinity by the "working people
+of Messrs. Benyon &amp; Co.'s mill," Holbeck,
+inviting combination and subscriptions for
+establishing a mill to be the property of the
+subscribers and their successors, "in order to
+supply them with flour and flour only."
+Meetings were held, an organization was
+effected, and the mill was started. The history
+of the society and how it grew, how
+"flour only" was stricken from its scheme
+and other things were added and it branched
+out, how co-operative stores were established,
+how it gained the confidence of the public
+and the respect of rivals in business, its successes
+and its mistakes, its triumphs and
+failures, are told by Mr. Holyoake, year by
+year, in a detail in which everything is set
+down and nothing covered up. In 1897 the
+cooperative society had productive departments
+of flour, bakery, bespoke clothing,
+boot and shoe factory, brush factory, cabinet
+making, building, millinery, and dressmaking,
+employing 541 hands and turning over &pound;26,949;
+80 large stores for the sale of these
+and various other kinds of goods in Leeds
+and vicinity; drapery branches and boot and
+shoe stores; 43 butchering branches; and
+37,000 subscribing purchasers. Its capital
+stood at &pound;447,000; and its sales for the
+year amounted to &pound;1,042,616.</p>
+
+<p>D. Appleton and Company have added to
+their Home Reading Series <i>The Earth and
+Sky</i>, a primer of Astronomy for Young Readers,
+by Prof. <i>Edward S. Holden</i>. It is intended
+to be the first of a series of three or more
+volumes, all treating of astronomy in one
+form or another, and suited for reading in
+the school. The treatment is based on the
+principle that "it is not so simple as it appears
+to fix in the child's mind the fundamental
+fact that it is Nature which is true,
+and the book or the engraving which is a
+true copy of it. 'It says' is the snare of
+children as well as of their more sophisticated
+elders. The vital point to be insisted on is
+a constant reference from words to things."
+The volume is written as a conversation with
+a young lad. He is first shown how he may
+know for himself that the earth is not flat,
+though it certainly appears to be so. The
+next step is to show him that he may know
+that the earth is in fact round, and that it is
+a globe of immense size. Its situation in
+space is next considered, and the child's
+mind is led to some formal conclusions respecting
+space itself. It is then directed to
+the sun, to the moon and its changes, to the
+stars and their motions, to the revolution of
+the earth, etc.</p>
+
+<p>In 1887 <i>E. S. Holden</i> published through
+the Regents of the University of California
+a list of recorded earthquakes on the Pacific
+coast, it being the first systematic publication
+of the sort. The purpose of it was to
+bring to light all the general facts about the
+various shocks, and enable studies to be
+made of particular earthquake phenomena.
+It was necessary at the Lick Observatory to
+keep a register of the times of occurrence of
+all shocks on account of their possible effects
+on the instruments. With this was associated
+in 1888, when the observatory began
+its active work, the collection of reports of
+shocks felt elsewhere on the Pacific coast.
+Mr. Holden now reprints this pamphlet
+through the Smithsonian Institution in <i>A
+Catalogue of Earthquakes felt on the Pacific
+Coast, 1769 to 1897</i>, with many corrections
+and additions, including a complete account
+of the earthquake observations at Mount
+Hamilton from 1887 to 1897, and an abstract
+of the great amount of information that has
+been collected regarding other Pacific coast
+earthquakes during the same interval.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Psychologie als Erfahrungs-Wissenschaft</i>
+of <i>Hans Cornelius</i> is not intended for
+a complete account and review of the facts
+of psychical life, but rather to present the
+fundamentals of a purely empirical theory,
+excluding all metaphysical views. Such an
+account should not start from any arbitrary
+abstractions or hypotheses, but simply from
+actually ascertained, directly perceived psychical
+experiences. On the other hand, an
+empirical definition should be required for
+all the terms that are used in a comprehensive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_851" id="Page_851">[Pg 851]</a></span>
+description of the experience; and no
+term should be used without the psychical
+manifestation described by it being pointed
+out. After an introduction in which the
+method and place of psychology, subjective
+and objective, physiological and genetic, are
+referred to, the elementary facts of consciousness
+are discussed. The coherency of
+knowledge is treated of in the next chapter,
+and in the third, Psychical Analysis and
+the conception of unobserved consciousness;
+and the succeeding chapters are devoted to
+Sensation, Memory, and Fancy; The Objective
+World, Truth and Error, and Feeling
+and Will. (Published at Leipsic, Germany:
+B. G. Teubner.)</p>
+
+<p>An extremely interesting book is given
+us in the publications of the Wisconsin Geological
+and Natural History Society of studies
+by <i>George W.</i> and <i>Elizabeth Peckham</i>, of the
+<i>Instincts and Habits of the Solitary Wasps</i>.
+These insects are familiar enough to us all,
+as we meet them or see their nests of one or
+a few cells every day, and then think no
+more of them. But Mr. and Mrs. Peckham,
+following them to their haunts and keeping
+company with them, have found them manifesting
+remarkable instincts and exercising
+curious customs, which they describe in the
+style of persons who are in love with their
+work. The opportunity for the studies was
+given in two gardens, one on the top of a hill
+and the other lower down, with an island in
+a lake close by and acres of woodland all
+about, offering a rich variety of nesting places.
+There are more than a thousand species of
+these solitary wasps in the United States, to
+only about fifty of the social ones, and they
+live without knowledge of their progenitors
+and without relations with others of their
+kind.</p>
+
+<p>The eighth volume of the report of the
+<i>Iowa Geological Survey</i> comprises the accounts
+of surveys completed during 1897 in
+six counties, making up the whole number
+of twenty-six counties in which the areal
+work has been completed. This does not,
+however, represent the whole extent of the
+operations of the survey, for some work has
+been done in nearly every county in the
+State, and in many counties it will require
+but little additional work to make a complete
+report. In addition to the areal work, too,
+special studies of coal, clay, artesian waters,
+gypsum, lead, zinc, etc., have engaged attention.
+A growing public appreciation of the
+work of the survey as illustrated in the demand
+for the volumes of the reports and for
+special papers, is recognized by the State
+Geologist, Mr. <i>Samuel Calvin</i>; and an increasing
+use of the reports as works for reference
+and for general study in high schools
+and other educational institutions is observed.
+The survey is now collecting statistics of production
+of various minerals mined in the
+State.</p>
+
+<p>One of the features most likely to attract
+attention in the <i>Annual Report of the State
+Geologist</i> of New Jersey for 1897 is the
+paper of Mr. C. C. Vermeule on the Drainage
+of the Hackensack and Newark Tide
+Marshes. In it a scheme is unfolded for
+the reclamation and diking of the flats, under
+which an ample navigable waterway
+shall be developed, and the cities which now
+stop at their edges may be extended and
+built up to the very banks of the new harbor,
+made a highway for ocean sailing vessels.
+An interesting paper is published by
+Lewis Woolman on Artesian and Bored and
+other Wells, in which many important wells
+are described with reference to the geological
+strata they penetrate. Other papers relate
+to iron mining and brick and clay industries,
+mineral statistics, and statistics of
+clays, bricks, and terra cotta. The field reports
+describe progress in the surveys of the
+surface geology, the Newark system, and the
+upper Cretaceous formations.</p>
+
+<p>On the basis of a reconnoissance made by
+him for Alexander Agassiz, Mr. <i>Robert T.
+Hill</i> has published through the Bulletin of
+the Museum of Comparative Zo&ouml;logy at Harvard
+University, a paper on <i>The Geological
+History of the Isthmus of Panama and Portions
+of Costa Rica</i>. He finds that there is
+considerable evidence that a land barrier in
+the tropical region separated the two oceans
+as far back as Jurassic time, and continued
+through the Cretaceous period. The geological
+structure of the Isthmus and Central
+American regions, so far as investigated,
+when considered aside from the paleontology,
+presents no evidence by which the former existence
+of a free communication of oceanic
+waters across the present tropical barriers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_852" id="Page_852">[Pg 852]</a></span>
+can be established. The paleontological evidence
+indicates the ephemeral existence of
+a passage at the close of the Eocene period.
+All lines of inquiry give evidence that
+no communication has existed between the
+two oceans since the close of the Oligocene.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Twenty-second Annual Report of the
+Department of Geology and Natural Resources</i>
+of Indiana, <i>W. S. Blatchley</i>, State
+Geologist, embraces, in part, the results of
+the work of the several departments of the
+survey during 1897. These appear in the
+form of papers of economic importance on
+the petroleum, stone, and clay resources of
+the State, natural gases and illuminating oils,
+a description of the curious geological and
+topographical region of Lake and Porter
+Counties, and an extended paper on the
+Birds of Indiana, with specific descriptions.
+A large proportion of the energies of the department
+were employed during the year in
+gathering data for a detailed report on the
+coal area of the State, which is now in course
+of preparation.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Report of the United States Commissioner
+of Education</i> for 1896-'97 records an
+increase in the enrollment of schools and
+colleges of 257,586, the whole number of
+pupils being 14,712,077 in public institutions
+and schools, and 1,513,016 in private.
+The increase is confined to the public institutions,
+the private ones having suffered from
+"hard times." Among the numerous papers
+published in the volume containing the report
+are those on Education in Great Britain
+and Ireland, France, Denmark, Norway, Central
+Europe, and Greece; Commercial Education
+in Europe; the Teaching of Civics in
+France, Switzerland, and England; Sunday
+Schools, including accounts of the several denominational
+systems; the Legal Rights of
+Children; and sketches of Horace Mann and
+Henry Barnard and their work in furthering
+education.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. <i>David T. Day's</i> report on the <i>Mineral
+Resources of the United States</i> for 1896
+appears as Part V of the Eighteenth Annual
+Report of the United States Geological Survey,
+in two volumes of fourteen hundred
+pages in all; the first of which is devoted to
+Metallic Products and Coal, and the second
+to Nonmetallic Products except Coal. The
+report covers the calendar year 1896, and
+shows only a slight increase in total values
+over 1895. Of some substances, however&mdash;gold,
+copper, aluminum, and petroleum being
+the most important ones&mdash;the value was
+the greatest ever attained. Of other substances,
+including lead, bituminous coal,
+building stones, mineral waters, salt, and
+pyrites, the product was increased in amount,
+but the value was less. A paper, by Mr.
+George F. Becker, on the Witwatersrand
+Banket, records observations made by him
+in the Transvaal gold fields.</p>
+
+<p><i>A Geological Reconnoissance of the Coal
+Fields of the Indian Territory</i>, published
+in the Contributions to Biology of the Hopkins
+Seaside Laboratory of Leland Stanford
+Junior University, by <i>Noah Fields
+Drake</i>, is based upon a six months' examination
+made by the author during the spring,
+summer, and fall of 1896, of the larger part of
+the coal measures and adjacent formations
+of Indian and Oklahoma Territories. The
+best maps that could then be had being exceedingly
+inaccurate, sketch maps were made
+of areas that were especially important. On
+account of features of particular geological
+interest, nearly all the area south and east of
+the Canadian River and the bordering areas
+of the Boone chert and limestones were
+sketched and studied rather closely.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>American Catholic Historical Society</i>
+at Philadelphia publishes in its <i>Quarterly
+Records</i> much that, while it must be of
+deep interest to historical students holding
+the Roman Catholic faith, possesses, perhaps,
+a strong though more general interest
+to all students of American history; for the
+men of that faith have had no small part in
+the colonization and development of this
+country. The number for June, 1898, contains
+a portrait and a bibliographical sketch
+of the Rev. Peter Henry Lemke, O. S. B., of
+Pennsylvania, Kansas, and Elizabeth, N. J.;
+a poem on the Launch of the American
+Frigate United States, whose commander
+was a Catholic; articles on the Sir John
+James Fund, and Catholic Chronicles of
+Lancaster, Pa., and Extracts from the Diary
+of the Rev. Patrick Kenny.</p>
+
+<p>A memoir on <i>A Determination of the
+Ratio (&#967;) of the Specific Heats at Constant
+Pressure and at Constant Volume for Air,
+Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide, and Hydrogen</i> gives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_853" id="Page_853">[Pg 853]</a></span>
+the result of a series of investigations by Drs.
+<i>O. Lummer</i> and <i>E. Pringshein</i>, of Charlottenburg,
+Germany, made with the aid of a
+grant from the Hodgkins Fund of the Smithsonian
+Institution. Besides being of exceptional
+importance in thermodynamics, the
+specific heat ratio is of interest as affording
+a clew to the character of the molecule. In
+the present investigation coincident results
+on the gases examined appear to have been
+reached for the first time. (Published by the
+Smithsonian Institution.)</p>
+
+<p>From the greater lightness of the air and
+the higher velocity of its currents, it is evident
+that the materials it may carry and deposit
+will be somewhat different in composition
+and structure from those which are laid
+down in water. They are as a rule finer, they
+exhibit a different bedding, and are more
+capriciously placed. Mr. <i>Johan August Udden</i>
+has made a careful study of the subject,
+the results of which he publishes under the
+title of <i>The Mechanical Composition of Wind
+Deposits</i>, as the first number of the Augustana
+Library Series, at the Lutheran Augustana
+Book Concern, Rock Island, Ill.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>History Reader for Elementary
+Schools</i> (The Macmillan Company, 60 cents),
+prepared by <i>L. L. W. Wilson</i> and arranged
+with special reference to holidays, contains
+readings for each month of the school year,
+classified according to different periods and
+phases of American history generally, so
+chosen that some important topic of the
+group shall bear a relation to the month in
+which it is to be read. The groups concern
+the Indians, the Discovery of America,
+Thanksgiving, Other Settlements (than those
+of Virginia and the Pilgrims), Dr. Franklin,
+Lincoln and Washington, the Revolution,
+Arbor Day, and Brave Sea Captains, etc.,
+closing with articles in reference to Flag
+Day. The insertion of an article on the
+War with Spain seems premature. Public
+sentiment is not yet at rest on the subject.</p>
+
+
+<h3>PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.</h3>
+
+<p>Agricultural Experiment Stations. Bulletins
+and Reports. Cornell University:
+No. 160. Hints on Rural School Grounds.
+By L. H. Bailey. Pp. 20; No. 161. Annual
+Flowers. By G. N. Lanman and L. H.
+Bailey. Pp. 32; No. 162. The Period of
+Gestation in Cows. By H. H. Wing. Pp.
+120.&mdash;Delaware College: No. 43 (abridged
+edition). The European and Japanese
+Chestnuts in the United States. By G. H.
+Powell. Pp. 16.&mdash;Michigan: Nos. 164 and
+165. Methods and Results of Tillage, and
+Draft of Farm Implements. By M. W.
+Fulton. Pp. 24; Elementary Science Bulletin,
+No. 5. Branches of Sugar Maple and
+Beech as seen in Winter. By W. J. Beal.
+Pp. 4; do., No. 6. Potatoes, Rutabagas,
+and Onions. By W. J. Beal. Pp. 6.&mdash;New
+Jersey: No. 133. Peach Growing in New
+Jersey. By A. T. Jordan. Pp. 16; No. 134.
+Fermentation and Germ Life. By Julius
+Nelson. Pp. 24.&mdash;North Dakota: No. 15.
+Some Chemical Problems Investigated.
+Pp. 28.&mdash;Ohio: Newspaper Bulletin 188.
+Sugar Beets and Sorghum in Ohio. Pp. 2.</p>
+
+<p>Aston, W. G. A History of Japanese
+Literature. New York: D. Appleton and
+Company. Pp. 408. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>Berry, Arthur. A Short History of Astronomy.
+New York: Charles Scribner's
+Sons. Pp. 440. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>Brush and Pencil. An Illustrated
+Magazine of the Arts and Crafts. Monthly.
+Chicago: Arts and Crafts Company.
+Pp. 64. 25 cents. $2.50 a year.</p>
+
+<p>Bulletins, Reports, etc. Colgate University,
+Department of Geology and Natural
+History: Announcement. Pp. 16.&mdash;Field
+Columbian Museum, Chicago: Annual
+Report of the Board of Directors for
+1897-'98. Pp. 90, with plates.&mdash;Financial
+Reform Association: 1848 to 1898. Fifty
+Years' Retrospect. London. Pp. 54, with
+plates; Financial Reform Almanac for
+1899. London. Pp. 316. 1 shilling.&mdash;New
+York State Library: Legislative Bulletin
+for 1898. Pp. 132. 25 cents.&mdash;New York
+University: Catalogue and Announcements
+for 1898-'99. Pp. 358.&mdash;Perkins Institution
+and Massachusetts School for the
+Blind: Sixty-seventh Annual Report of
+the Trustees, to August 31, 1898. Pp. 305.&mdash;United
+States Department of Labor: Bulletin
+No. 20, January, 1899. Edited by
+Carroll D. Wright and Oren W. Weaver.
+Pp. 170.</p>
+
+<p>Byrd, Mary E. Laboratory Manual in
+Astronomy. Boston: Ginn &amp; Co. Pp. 273.</p>
+
+<p>Cajori, Florian. A History of Physics
+in its Elementary Branches, including the
+Evolution of Physical Laboratories. New
+York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 323.
+$1.60.</p>
+
+<p>Callie, J. W. S. John Smith's Reply to
+"Merrie England, Defense of the Liberal
+Programme." London: John Heywood.
+Pp. 88. Sixpence.</p>
+
+<p>Chapman, Frank H., Editor. Bird Lore.
+February, 1898, Vol. I, No. 1. Bimonthly.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp.
+32. 20 cents. $1 a year.</p>
+
+<p>Davenport, Charles B. Experimental
+Morphology. Part II. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 509. $2.</p>
+
+<p>Evans, A. H. Birds (The Cambridge
+Natural History, edited by S. F. Harmer
+and A. E. Shipley, Vol. IX). New York:
+The Macmillan Company. Pp. 635. $3.50.</p>
+
+<p>Egbert, Seneca. A Manual of Hygiene
+and Sanitation. Philadelphia: Lea Brothers
+&amp; Co. Pp. 368.</p>
+
+<p>Foulke, William Dudley. Slav or Saxon:
+a Study of the Growth and Tendencies of
+Russian Civilization. New York: G. P.
+Putnam's Sons. Pp. 141. $1.</p>
+
+<p>Huntington, Elon. The Earth's Rotation
+and its Interior Heat. Pp. 33.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_854" id="Page_854">[Pg 854]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Janes, Lewis G. Our Nation's Peril.
+Social Ideas and Social Progress. Pp. 31.
+25 cents.</p>
+
+<p>McLellan, J. A., and Ames, A. F. The
+Public School Mental Arithmetic. New
+York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 138.
+25 cents. Boston: James H. West &amp; Co.</p>
+
+<p>Maltbie, Milo Ray. Municipal Functions.
+A Study of the Development, Scope,
+and Tendency of Municipal Socialism.
+(Municipal Affairs, December, 1898.) New
+York: Reform Club, Committee of Municipal
+Administration. Pp. 230. 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>Mason, Hon. William E. Speech in the
+United States Senate on the Government
+of Foreign Peoples. Pp. 26.</p>
+
+<p>Patten, Simon N. The Development of
+English Thought. New York: The Macmillan
+Company. Pp. 415. $3.</p>
+
+<p>Pittsburg Press Almanac, The, for 1899.
+Quarterly. St. Louis: The Press Publishing
+Company. Pp. 536.</p>
+
+<p>R&eacute;c&eacute;jac, E. Essay on the Basis of the
+Mystic Knowledge. Translated by Sera
+Carr Upton. New York: Charles Scribner's
+Sons. Pp. 287. $2.50.</p>
+
+<p>Reprints. Caldwell, Otis W. The Life
+History of Lemna Minor. Pp. 32.&mdash;Calkins,
+G. N. Some Hydroids from Puget
+Sound. Pp. 24, with six plates.&mdash;Cope,
+Edward D. Vertebrate Remains from the
+Port Kennedy Bone Deposit. Pp. 75, with
+plates.&mdash;Fitz, G. W. Play as a Factor in
+Development. Pp. 7; The Hygiene of Instruction
+in Elementary Schools. Pp. 7.&mdash;Howard,
+William Lee. Double Personality;
+Lenten Hysteria. Pp. 8.&mdash;Howe, R. H.,
+Jr. North American Wood Frogs.&mdash;Hunt,
+Charles Wallace. The Engineer: His
+Work, his Ethics, his Pleasures. (President's
+Address, American Society of Mechanical
+Engineers.) Pp. 15.&mdash;Hunter, S.
+J. The Coccid&aelig; of Kansas. Pp. 15, with
+plates.&mdash;Krauss, W. C. The Stigmata of
+Degeneration. Pp. 360.&mdash;Lichty, D. Thalassic
+Submersion a Means of Disposal of
+the Dead. Pp. 12.&mdash;McDonald, Arthur.
+Emile Zola. Pp. 16.&mdash;Phillips, W. B. Iron
+Making in Alabama. Montgomery. Pp.
+380.&mdash;Saunders, De Alten. Phycological
+Memoirs. Pp. 20, with plates.&mdash;Schlicht,
+Paul J. A New Process of Combustion.
+Pp. 32.&mdash;Stevens, F. L. The Effect of
+Aqueous Solutions upon the Germination
+of Fungus Spores. Pp. 30.&mdash;Stock, H. H.
+The International Correspondence Schools,
+Scranton, Pennsylvania. Pp. 12.&mdash;Urn,
+The. Modern Thought on Modern Cremation.
+United States Cremation Company.
+Pp. 40.&mdash;Veeder, M. A. The Relative Importance
+of Flies and Water Supply in
+Spreading Disease. Pp. 8.</p>
+
+<p>Robinson, Albert Gardner. The Porto
+Rico of To-day. New York: Charles Scribner's
+Sons. Pp. 240, with maps. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>Salazar, A. E. Kalkules de Ka&ntilde;erius
+de Agua (Calculations of Water Conduits).
+Santiago de Chile. Pp. 246.</p>
+
+<p>Schnabel, Dr. Carl. Handbook of Metallurgy.
+Translated by Henry Louis. 2
+vols. New York: The Macmillan Company.
+Pp. 876 and 732. $10.</p>
+
+<p>Seligman, E. R. A. The Shifting and
+Incidence of Taxation. Second edition.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp.
+337. $3.</p>
+
+<p>Semon, Richard. In the Australian
+Bush and on the Coast of the Coral Sea.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp.
+552. $6.50.</p>
+
+<p>Spencer, Baldwin, and Gillen, F. J.
+The Native Tribes of Central Australia.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp.
+671, with plates. $6.50.</p>
+
+<p>Technology Review, The. A Quarterly
+Magazine relating to the Massachusetts
+Institute of Technology. January, 1899.
+Pp. 143. 35 cents.</p>
+
+<p>United States National Museum. Annual
+Report for the Year ending June 30,
+1896. (Smithsonian Institution.) Washington.
+Pp. 1107, with plates.</p>
+
+<p>Weir, James. The Dawn of Reason.
+Mental Traits in the Lower Animals. New
+York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 234.
+$1.25.</p>
+
+<p>Westcott, Edward N. David Harum.
+New York: D. Appleton and Company.
+Pp. 392. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>Whipple, G. C. The Microscopy of
+Drinking Water. New York: John Wiley
+&amp; Sons. Pp. 300, with nineteen plates.
+$3.50.</p>
+
+<p>Wilkinson, F. The Story of the Cotton
+Plant. (Library of Useful Stories.) New
+York: D. Appleton and Company. Pp. 191.
+40 cents.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>Fragments of Science.</h2>
+
+
+<p><b>The Nernst Electric Lamp.</b>&mdash;Prof. Walter
+Nernst, of the University of G&ouml;ttingen,
+has recently devised an electric lamp which
+promises to be an important addition to our
+present methods of lighting. The part of
+the lamp which emits the light consists of a
+small rod of highly refractory material, said
+to be chiefly thoria, which is supported between
+two platinum electrodes. The rod is
+practically a nonconductor when cold, but by
+heating it (in the smaller sizes a match is
+sufficient) its conductivity is so raised that a
+current will pass through it; after the current
+is once started the heat produced by the
+resistance of the rod is sufficient to keep up
+its conductivity, and the latter is raised to a
+state of intense incandescence, and gives out
+a brilliant white light. As the preliminary
+heating by means of a match or other flame
+would in some cases be an inconvenience,
+Professor Nernst has devised a lamp which,
+by means of a platinum resistance attachment,
+can be started by simply turning a switch.
+The life of the rods is about five hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_855" id="Page_855">[Pg 855]</a></span>
+hours. The lamps are said to work equally
+well with either alternating or direct currents,
+and there is no vacuum necessary. If
+this lamp proves a success as a commercial
+apparatus, it will be but another example of
+how slight a matter may make all the difference
+between success and failure. There
+have been numerous experimenters trying
+for the last ten years, and in fact ever since
+the appearance of the arc lamp, to utilize in
+an electric lamp the great light-giving power
+of the refractory earths in a state of incandescence;
+but, owing to their high resistance
+at ordinary temperatures, no results were obtained
+until Professor Nernst thought of heating
+his thoria rod, and this simple procedure
+seems to have solved the whole difficulty.
+It is claimed that the Nernst lamp is a much
+more economical transformer of electricity
+into light than the present incandescent
+electric lamps. An apparatus called a kaolin
+candle, which has been suggested as an anticipation
+of Professor Nernst's lamp, was
+constructed by Paul Jablochkoff in 1877 or
+1878. It consisted of a strip of kaolin,
+along which ran a "match" of some conducting
+material. The current was passed
+through this "match" until the kaolin strip
+became heated sufficiently to become a conductor
+itself. The lamp did not, however,
+prove a commercial success.</p>
+
+<p><b>Laws of Climatic Evolution.</b>&mdash;The problem
+of the laws of climatic evolution was
+characterized by Dr. Marsden Manson, in a
+paper read at the British Association, as one
+of the grandest and most far-reaching problems
+in geological physics, since it embraces
+principles and laws applicable to other planets
+than ours. After presenting a formulation
+of those laws, the author pointed out
+that in consequence of their working, a hot
+spheroid rotating in space and revolving
+about a central sun, and holding fluids of
+similar properties to water and air within the
+sphere of its control, must pass through a
+series of uniform climates at sea level, gradually
+decreasing in temperature and terminating
+in an ice age, and that this age must be
+succeeded by a series of zonal climates gradually
+increasing in temperature and extent.
+The conclusions thus reached were that in
+the case of the earth zonal distribution of
+climates was inaugurated at the culmination
+of the ice age, and is gradually increasing in
+temperature and extent by the trapping of
+the solar energy in the lower atmosphere,
+and that the rise has a moderate limit; that
+the ice age was unique and due to the physical
+properties of water and air, and to the
+difference in specific heat of land and water;
+and that prior to the ice age local formation
+of glaciers could occur at any latitude and
+period. Dr. Manson then observed that Jupiter
+was apparently in a condition through
+which the earth has already passed, and
+Mars was in one toward which the climatic
+evolution of the earth was tending.</p>
+
+<p><b>Poisonous Plants.</b>&mdash;Statistics in regard
+to poisonous plants are lacking on account
+of a general ignorance of the subject, and it
+is therefore impossible to form even an approximate
+estimate of the damage done by
+them. Besides the criminal uses that may be
+made of them, there are some other problems
+connected with them that are of general
+public interest. The common law of England
+holds those who possess and cultivate
+such plants responsible for damages accruing
+from them; and a New York court has
+awarded damages in a case of injury from
+poison ivy growing in a cemetery. In order
+to obtain information on the subject, the botanical
+division of the Department of Agriculture
+arranged to receive notices through
+the clipping bureaus of the cases of poisoning
+recorded in the newspapers. Thus
+through the persons named in the articles or
+through the local postmaster it was put in
+correspondence with the physician in the
+case, who furnished the authentic facts. A
+large number of correct and valuable data
+were thus secured. It is proved by these
+facts that all poisonous plants are not
+equally injurious to all persons nor to all
+forms of life. Thus poison ivy has no apparent
+external effect upon animals, and a
+few of them eat its leaves with impunity;
+and it acts upon the skin of the majority of
+persons with varying intensity&mdash;on some
+hardly at all, while others are extremely sensitive
+to it. A similar variability is found in
+the effects of poisonous plants taken internally.
+In some cases often regarded as of
+that kind, death is attributable not to any
+poison which the plant contains, but to immoderate
+or incautious eating, or to mechanical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_856" id="Page_856">[Pg 856]</a></span>
+injury such as is produced in horses by
+the hairs of crimson clover, or to the effect
+of parasitic growths, such as ergot on rye.
+Excluding all which operate in these ways,
+there are, however, a large number of really
+poisonous plants, the properties of which are
+comparatively unknown. It is concerning
+these that information has been sought by
+the botanical division. Its report contains
+descriptions of about forty plants, with figures,
+belonging to seventeen families.</p>
+
+<p><b>The United States Biological Survey.</b>&mdash;The
+Biological Survey of the United States
+Department of Agriculture aims to define
+and map the agricultural belts of the country
+in order to ascertain what products of
+the soil can and what can not be grown successfully
+in each, to guide the farmer in the
+intelligent introduction of foreign crops, and
+to point out his friends and his enemies
+among the native birds and animals. For
+information on these subjects so important
+to him the farmer has had to rely on his own
+experiments or those of his neighbors, often
+carried on at enormous cost to persons little
+able to bear it. The Survey and its predecessor,
+the division of ornithology and mammology,
+have had small parties in the field
+traversing the public domain for the purpose
+of studying the geographic distribution of
+our native land animals and plants and mapping
+the boundaries of the areas they inhabit.
+It was early learned that North
+America is divisible into seven transcontinental
+belts or life zones and a much larger
+number of minor areas or <i>faunas</i>, each characterized
+by particular associations of animals
+and plants. The inference was natural
+and has been verified that these same zones
+and areas, up to the northern limit of profitable
+agriculture, are adapted to the needs of
+particular kinds or varieties of cultivated
+crops. The Survey is engaged in tracing as
+precisely as possible the actual boundaries
+of these belts and areas, and in finding out
+and designating the varieties of crops best
+adapted to each. In this undertaking it
+aims to point out such exotic products as,
+from their importance in other lands, are
+likely to prove of value if introduced on fit
+soils and under proper climatic conditions.
+The importance of this work will be realized
+when it is recollected that all the climatic
+life zones of the world, except the hottest
+tropical, are represented in our country.
+The colored maps prepared by the Survey
+furnish the best guide the farmer can have
+for judging what crops will be best adapted
+for his particular region; and in connection
+with the work of the entomologist, show the
+belts along which noxious insects are likely
+to spread. The report of the Survey, prepared
+under the direction of its chief, C.
+Hart Merriam, though full of valuable information
+not before presented consecutively,
+is preliminary and only touches the edge of a
+subject which is susceptible of copious elaboration,
+and is destined to be worked up with
+immense profit.</p>
+
+<p><b>A Neolithic Lake Dwelling.</b>&mdash;A crannog,
+or lake dwelling, discovered in the summer
+of 1898 on the banks of the Clyde, has received
+much attention from English arch&aelig;ologists
+because of its unique situation on a
+tidal stream, and of its being apparently
+neolithic or far more ancient than any other
+crannog yet examined, in all others the relics
+being of the bronze age. Careful excavations
+have been made in it and are still in progress,
+and the refuse mound of the former settlement
+has been sifted, with results that have
+made it plain that there were design and
+execution in the building, and that it was
+occupied and inhabited for a long period.
+Positive evidence of fire is afforded in the
+shape of numerous firestones and calcined
+embers, and indications of the condition of
+life at the period are given by the implements,
+ornaments, and tools recovered. The crannog
+is about sixteen hundred yards east of
+the Castle Rock of Dumbarton, and about
+fifty yards from the river at low tide, but is
+submerged when the tide is in to a depth of
+from three to twelve feet, and is one hundred
+and eighty-four feet in circuit. The
+piles in the outer circle are of oak, which
+below the mud surface is still quite fresh.
+The transverse beams and pavement inside
+are of wood of the consistence of cheese&mdash;willow,
+alder, and oak&mdash;while the smaller
+branches are of fir, birch, and hazel, with
+bracken, moss, and chips. The stones in the
+outer circle and along the causeway leading
+to the dwelling place seem to have been set
+in a methodical order, most of the bowlders
+being about a lift for a man. The refuse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_857" id="Page_857">[Pg 857]</a></span>
+mound extends for about twelve feet outside
+for the greater part of the circuit, and here
+most of the bone and flint implements have
+been discovered. The largest article found in
+the site was a very fine canoe, thirty-seven
+feet long and forty inches beam, dug out of a
+single oak tree, which lay in what has proved
+to have been a dock. A curious ladder was
+also found here, the rungs of which were cut
+out of the solid wood, and which has somewhat
+the general appearance of a post of a
+post-and-rail fence. The exploration of the
+site is much interfered with by the rising of
+the tide, which covers the crannog for a considerable
+time every day. All the relics
+found&mdash;consisting chiefly of objects of bone,
+staghorn, jet, chert, and cannel coal, with
+some querns, the canoe, ladder, etc.&mdash;have
+been placed in the museum at Glasgow.</p>
+
+<p><b>Portland Cement.</b>&mdash;The following facts
+are taken from an address delivered before
+the Franklin Institute by Mr. Robert W.
+Lesley: "It was not until the end of the last
+century that the true principles of hydraulic
+cement were discovered by Smeaton, who, in
+the construction of the Eddystone Lighthouse,
+made a number of experiments with
+the English limestones, and laid down, as a
+result, the principle that a limestone yielding
+from fifteen to twenty-five per cent of residue
+when dissolved in hydrochloric acid will
+set under water. These limestones he denominated
+hydraulic limestones, and from
+the principle so laid down by him come the
+two great definitions of what we now know
+as cement, namely, the natural and artificial
+cements of commerce. The natural variety,
+such as the Rosendale, Lehigh, and Cumberland
+cements, was first made by Joseph Parker
+in 1796, who discovered what he called
+'Roman cement,' based upon the calcination
+at low temperatures of the nodules found in
+the septaria geological formation in England.
+This was practically the first cement of commerce,
+and gave excellent results. Joseph
+Aspdin, a bricklayer or plasterer, took out a
+patent in England in 1824 on a high-grade artificial
+cement, and, at great personal deprivation,
+succeeded in manufacturing it on a commercial
+scale by combining English chalks
+with clay from the river beds, drying the
+mixed paste, and after calcining at high heat
+the material thus produced, grinding it to powder.
+This cement, which was the first Portland
+cement in the market, obtained its name
+from its resemblance when it became stone
+to the celebrated Portland stone, one of the
+leading building materials in England. The
+rocks used in the manufacture of Portland
+cement are very similar to those from which
+natural cement is made. The various layers
+in the natural rock may vary in size or stratification,
+so that the lime, alumina, and silica
+may not be in position to combine under
+heat, or there may be too much of one ingredient,
+or not enough of the others in close
+proximity to each other. In making Portland
+cement, these rocks, properly proportioned,
+are accordingly ground to an impalpable
+powder, the natural rock being broken
+down and the lamin&aelig; distributed in many
+small grains. This powder is then mixed
+with water, and is made into a new stone
+in the shape of the brick, or block, in
+which all the small grains formerly composing
+the lamin&aelig; of the original rock
+are distributed and brought into a close
+mechanical juxtaposition to each other.
+The new rock thus made is put into kilns
+with layers of coke, and is then calcined at
+temperatures from 1,600&deg; to 1,800&deg;. The
+clinker, as it comes from the kiln, is then
+crushed and ground to an impalpable powder,
+which is the Portland cement of commerce.
+Portland cement may be made from
+other materials, such as chalk and clay, limestone
+and clay, cement rock and limestone,
+and marls and clays. In every case the principle
+is the same, the breaking down and the
+redistributing of the materials so that the fine
+particles may be in close mechanical union
+when subjected to the heat of the kiln."</p>
+
+<p><b>The French Nontoxic Matches.</b>&mdash;It is
+believed, by Frenchmen at least, that the
+problem long sought, of finding a composition
+for a match head in which all the advantages
+of white phosphorus shall be preserved while
+its deleterious qualities are eliminated or
+greatly reduced, has been solved in the new
+matches which the French Government has
+placed upon the market. These matches are
+marked S. C., by the initials of the inventors,
+MM. S&eacute;v&egrave;ne and Cahen, are made in the factories
+at Tr&eacute;laz&eacute;, Begles, and Samtines, and
+have been well received by the public. In preparing
+the composition, the chlorate of potash<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_858" id="Page_858">[Pg 858]</a></span>
+of the old flashing and safety matches
+has been retained, and the sesquisulphide
+of phosphorus is used instead of the white
+or red phosphorus of the old matches. The
+latter substance, besides the indispensable
+qualities of fixity and resistance to atmospheric
+influences, has the two important properties
+of inflaming at 95&deg; C., much nearer the
+igniting point of white phosphorus (60&deg; C.)
+than of red (260&deg; C.), and being therefore
+easier to light; and of having a low latent
+or specific heat. With these properties embodied
+in the inflammable composition of the
+head, the new match is expected to be comparatively
+free from accidental explosions
+during manufacture and export, to take fire
+by friction, and to burn steadily and regularly.
+The expectation has so far been fulfilled.
+The phosphorus compound has a
+special odor, in which the sulphur characteristic
+predominates, but, not boiling under
+380&deg; C., does not become offensive in the
+shops; and the match heads made with it
+do not emit the phosphorescence which is
+often exhibited by matches made with white
+phosphorus. It is only feebly toxic by direct
+absorption, experiments on guinea pigs
+indicating that it is only about one tenth as
+much so as white phosphorus.</p>
+
+<p><b>Trees as Land Formers.</b>&mdash;John Gifford,
+in a paper presented to the Franklin Institute
+on Forestry in Relation to Physical Geography
+and Engineering, mentions as illustrating
+the way forests counteract certain destructive
+forces, the mangrove tree as "the great
+land former which, supplementing the work
+of the coral polyp, has added to the warm
+seashore regions of the globe immense areas
+of land." The trees grow in salt water several
+feet deep, where their labyrinth of roots
+and branches collect and hold sediment and
+flotage. Thus the shore line advances. The
+seeds, germinating on the plant, the plantlets
+fall into the water, float away till their roots
+touch the bottom, and there form the nucleus
+of new islands and life. The forest constantly
+improves the soil, provided the latter
+is not removed or allowed to burn. The
+roots of trees penetrate to its deeper layers
+and absorb great quantities of mineral matters,
+a large percentage of which goes to the
+leaves, and is ultimately deposited on the
+surface. "The surface soil is both enriched
+by these mineral substances and protected
+by a mulch of humus in varying stages of
+decomposition. As the lower layers rot, new
+layers of leaves and twigs are being constantly
+deposited, so that the forest soil, in
+the course of time, fairly reeks with nourishing
+plant food, which seeps out more or less
+to enrich neighboring soils." The forest is
+also a soil former. "Even the most tender
+rootlet, because of its acidity, is able to dissolve
+its way through certain kinds of rock.
+This, together with the acids formed in the
+decomposition of humus, is a potent and
+speedy agent in the production of soil. The
+roots of many species of trees have no difficulty
+whatever in penetrating limestone and
+in disintegrating rocks of the granitic series.
+As the rock crumbles, solid inorganic materials
+are released, which enrich neighboring
+soils, especially those of the valleys in regions
+where the forest is relegated to the mountain
+sides and top, as should be the case in all
+mountainous regions. In view of the destruction
+caused by mankind, it is a consoling
+fact that Nature, although slowly, is gradually
+improving her waste lands. If not interrupted,
+the barest rock and the fallowest
+field, under conditions which may be called
+unfavorable, will become, in course of time,
+forest-clad and fertile. The most important
+function of the forest in relation to the soil,
+however, is in holding it in place and protecting
+it from the erosive action of wind
+and rain."</p>
+
+<p><b>The Atlantic Slope.</b>&mdash;The Atlantic slope
+of the United States is described in the New
+Jersey State Geological Survey's report on
+the Physical Geography of the State as "a
+fairly distinct geographical province. Its
+eastern boundary is the sea; its western
+boundary on the north is the divide between
+the drainage flowing southeast to the sea and
+that flowing northeast to the St. Lawrence.
+Farther south its western limit is the divide
+between the streams flowing east to the Atlantic
+and those flowing west to the Ohio and
+Mississippi Rivers." The line between it and
+the geographical province next west follows
+the watershed of the Appalachian system of
+mountains. It is divided, according to elevations,
+into several subprovinces, all of
+which elongate in a direction roughly parallel
+to the shore. Next to the coast there is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_859" id="Page_859">[Pg 859]</a></span>
+usually a belt of lowland, few or many miles
+wide, called the <i>Coastal Plain</i>. Inland from
+the Coastal Plain is an intermediate height,
+between the Coastal Plain to the east and
+the mountains to the west, known in the
+South as the <i>Piedmont Plateau</i>. The mountainous
+part of the slope constitutes the
+third province, known as the <i>Appalachian
+Zone</i>. The Atlantic slope may be divided
+into two sections&mdash;a northern and a southern&mdash;in
+which the Coastal Plain is narrow and
+wide respectively. These two sections meet
+in New Jersey, where the division runs from
+the Raritan River, just below New Brunswick,
+to Trenton. South of this line the
+Coastal Plain expands, and all considerable
+elevations recede correspondingly from the
+shore. These three subprovinces are especially
+well shown in the southern section of
+the Atlantic slope. They are less well developed
+in the northern section, and even
+where the topography is comparable the underlying
+rock structure is different. In New
+Jersey a fourth belt, the Triassic formation,
+is interposed between the Coastal Plain and
+the Highlands corresponding to the Piedmont
+Plateau. North of New Jersey the
+Coastal Plain has little development, though
+Long Island and some small areas farther
+east and northeast are to be looked upon as
+parts of it.</p>
+
+<p><b>American Fresh-water Pearls.</b>&mdash;The facts
+cited by Mr. George F. Kunz in his paper,
+published in the Report of the United States
+Fish Commission, on the Fresh-water Pearls
+and Pearl Fisheries of the United States, give
+considerable importance to this feature of
+our natural history. The mound explorations
+attest that fresh-water pearls were
+gathered and used by the prehistoric peoples
+of the country "to an extent that is astonishing.
+On the hearths of some of these
+mounds in Ohio the pearls have been found,
+not by hundreds, but by thousands and even
+by bushels&mdash;now, of course, damaged and
+half decomposed by centuries of burial and
+by the heat of superficial fires." The narratives
+of the early Spanish explorers make
+several mentions of pearls in the possession
+of the Indians. For a considerable period
+after the first explorations, however, American
+pearls attracted but little attention, and
+"for some two centuries the Unios [or 'fresh-water
+mussels'] lived and multiplied in the
+rivers and streams, unmolested by either the
+native tribes that had used them for food,
+or by the pioneers of the new race that had
+not yet learned of their hidden treasures."
+Within recent years the gathering of Unio
+pearls has attained such importance as to
+start economical problems warranting and
+even demanding careful and detailed inquiry.
+The first really important discovery of Unio
+pearls was made near Paterson, N. J., in 1857,
+in the form of the "queen pearl" of fine
+luster, weighing ninety-three grains, which
+was sold to Eug&eacute;nie, wife of Napoleon III,
+for twenty-five hundred dollars, and is now
+worth four times that amount. As a result
+the Unios at Notch Brook, where it was
+found, were gathered by the million and destroyed.
+Within a year fully fifteen thousand
+dollars' worth of pearls were sent to
+the New York market. Then the shipments
+gradually fell off. Some of the best American
+pearls that were next found were at
+Waynesville, Ohio, where Mr. Israel H. Harris
+formed an exceedingly fine collection. It
+contained more than two thousand specimens,
+weighing more than as many grains.
+Among them were one button-shaped on the
+back and weighing thirty-eight grains, several
+almost transparent pink ones, and one
+showing where the pearl had grown almost
+entirely through the Unio. In 1889 a number
+of magnificently colored pearls were
+found at different places in the creeks and
+rivers of Wisconsin, of which more than ten
+thousand dollars' worth were sent to New
+York within three months. These discoveries
+led to immense activity in pearl hunting
+through all the streams of the region, and in
+three or four seasons the shells were nearly
+exhausted. The pearl fisheries of this State
+have produced at least two hundred and fifty
+thousand dollars' worth of pearls since 1889.
+Another outbreak of the "pearl mania"
+occurred in Arkansas in 1897, and extended
+into the Indian Territory, Missouri, Georgia,
+and other States.</p>
+
+<p><b>Distribution of Cereals in the United
+States.</b>&mdash;To inquiries made preparatory to
+drawing up a report on the Distribution of
+Cereals in North America (Department of
+Agriculture, Biological Survey), Mr. C. S.
+Plumb received one thousand and thirty-three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_860" id="Page_860">[Pg 860]</a></span>
+answers, eight hundred and ninety-seven of
+which came from the United States and the
+rest from the Canadian provinces. These
+reports showed that in many localities, particularly
+in the East and South, but little attention
+is paid to keeping varieties pure, and
+many farmers use mixed, unknown, or local
+varieties of ordinary merit for seed. In
+New England but little grain is grown from
+sowing, owing to the cheapness of Western
+grain, and wheat is rarely reported. Oats
+are now mostly sown from Western seed, and
+the resulting crop is mown for hay, while
+most of the corn is cut for green fodder or
+silage. On certain fine lowlands&mdash;as, for example,
+in the Connecticut Valley&mdash;oats, and
+more especially corn, are often grown for
+grain. While reports on most of the cereals
+were rendered from the lower austral zone,
+or the region south of the Appalachians and
+the old Missouri Compromise line, this region,
+except where it merges with the upper austral
+or the one north of it, is apparently outside
+the area of profitable cultivation of
+wheat and oats. In Louisiana and most of
+the other parts of the lower austral, except
+in northern Texas and Oklahoma, wheat is
+almost an unknown crop. The warm, moist
+climatic conditions here favor the development
+of fungous diseases to such a degree
+that the plants are usually ruined or greatly
+injured at an early stage of growth. In
+Florida, as a rule, cereals are rarely cultivated
+except on the uplands at the northern
+end of the State. In a general way, corn
+and wheat are most successfully grown in
+the upper austral zone, or central States,
+while oats are best and most productive in
+the transition zone (or northern and Lake
+States and the Dakotas), or along the border
+of the upper austral and transition. The
+gradual acclimation of varieties of cereals,
+through years of selection and cultivation,
+has gone so far, however, that some varieties
+are now much better adapted to one zone
+than to another.</p>
+
+<p><b>Spanish Silkworm Gut.</b>&mdash;The business
+of manufacturing silkworm gut in Spain is
+a considerable industry. The method of
+preparation is thus described in the Journal
+of the Society of Arts: After the silkworm
+grub has eaten enough mulberry leaves, and
+before it begins to spin, which is during the
+months of May and June, it is thrown into
+vinegar for several hours. The insect is
+killed and the substance which the grub, if
+alive, would have spun into a cocoon is
+drawn out from the dead worm into a much
+thicker and shorter silken thread, in which
+operation considerable dexterity and experience
+are required. Two thick threads from
+each grub are placed for about four hours in
+clear cold water, after which they are put
+for ten or fifteen minutes in a solution of
+some caustic. This loosens a fine outer
+skin on the threads, which is removed by
+the hands, the workman holding the threads
+in his teeth. The silk is then hung up to
+dry in a shady place, the sun rendering it
+brittle. In some parts of the country these
+silk guts are bleached with sulphur vapor,
+which makes them beautifully glossy and
+snow-white, while those naturally dried have
+a yellowish tint. The quality of the gut is
+decided according to the healthy condition of
+the worm, round indicating a good quality
+and flat an inferior one.</p>
+
+<p><b>The Nests of Burrowing Bees.</b>&mdash;Prof.
+John B. Smith, having explained to his section
+of the American Association a method
+which has been successfully applied, of taking
+casts in plaster of Paris of the homes of
+burrowing insects, with their branchings, to
+the depth of six feet, described some of the
+results of its application. Bees, of the genus
+<i>Calletes</i>, dig vertically to the depth of eighteen
+inches or more, then burrow horizontally
+from two to five inches farther, and
+construct a thin, parchmentlike cell of saliva,
+in which the egg is deposited, with pollen
+and honey for the food of the larva.
+They then start a new horizontal burrow a
+little distance from the first, and perhaps a
+third, but no more. The vertical tubes are
+then filled up, so that when the bees come
+to life they must burrow from six to twenty-four
+inches before they can reach the surface.
+Another genus makes a twisted burrow;
+another makes a vertical burrow that
+may be six feet deep. About a foot below
+the surface it sends off a lateral branch,
+and in this it excavates a chamber from
+one to two and a half inches in diameter.
+Tubes are sent down from this chamber, as
+many perhaps as from six to twenty together,
+and these are lined with clay to make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_861" id="Page_861">[Pg 861]</a></span>
+them water-tight. This bee, when it begins
+its burrow, makes an oblique gallery from
+four to six inches long before it starts in the
+vertical direction, and all the dirt is carried
+through this oblique gallery. Then the insect
+continues the tube vertically upward to
+just below the surface, and makes a small
+concealed opening to it here, taking care to
+pile no sand near it. This is the regular entrance
+to the burrow.</p>
+
+
+<h3>MINOR PARAGRAPHS.</h3>
+
+<p>In a report of an inspection of three
+French match factories, published as a British
+Parliamentary paper, Dr. T. Oliver records
+as his impressions and deductions that
+while until recently the match makers suffered
+severely from phosphorus poisoning,
+there is now apparently a reduction in the
+severe forms of the illness; that this reduction
+is attributable to greater care in the selection
+of the work people, to raising the
+age of admission into the factory, to medical
+examination on entrance, subsequent close
+supervision, and repeated dental examination;
+to personal cleanliness on the part of
+the workers; to early suspension on the appearance
+of symptoms of ill health; and to
+improved methods of manufacture. The
+French Government is furthering by all possible
+means new methods of manufacture in
+the hope of finding a safer one; and a match
+free from white phosphorus and still capable
+of striking anywhere is already manufactured.</p>
+
+<p>A mechanical and engineering section
+is to be organized in the Franklin Institute,
+Philadelphia, to be devoted to the consideration
+of subjects bearing upon the mechanic
+arts and the engineering problems connected
+therewith. The growth of the various departments
+of this institution&mdash;which has
+been fitly termed a "democratic learned society,"
+from the close affiliation in it of the
+men of the professions and the men of the
+workshops&mdash;by natural accretion, and the
+steadily growing demands for the extension
+of its educational work during the past decade,
+have increased the costs for maintenance
+and administration and have been the
+cause of a deficit in nearly every year. A
+movement is now on foot, approved by the
+board of managers, and directed by a special
+committee, to secure for it an endowment,
+toward which a number of subscriptions
+ranging from two hundred and fifty to
+twenty-five hundred dollars have already
+been received.</p>
+
+<p>The earthquake which took place in
+Assam, June 12, 1897, was described by Mr.
+R. D. Oldham in the British Association as
+having been the most violent of which there
+is any record. The shock was sensible over
+an area of 1,750,000 square miles, and if it
+had occurred in England, not a house would
+have been left standing between Manchester
+and London. Landslips on an unprecedented
+scale were produced, a number of lakes were
+formed, and mountain peaks were moved
+vertically and horizontally. Monuments of
+solid stone and forest trees were broken
+across. Bridges were overthrown, displaced,
+and in some places thrust bodily up to a
+height of about twenty feet, and the rails on
+the railroads were twisted and bent. Earth
+fissures were formed over an area larger than
+the United Kingdom, and sand rents, from
+which sand and water were forced in solid
+streams to a height of three or four feet
+above the ground, were opened "in incalculable
+numbers." The loss of life was comparatively
+small, as the earthquake occurred
+about five o'clock in the afternoon, and the
+damage done was reduced by the fact that
+there were no large cities within the area of
+greatest violence; but in extent and capacity
+of destruction, as distinguished from destruction
+actually accomplished, this earthquake
+surpassed any of which there was historical
+mention, not even excepting the great earthquake
+of Lisbon in 1755.</p>
+
+<p>The first section of the electric railway
+up the Jungfrau, which is intended to reach
+the top of the mountain, was opened about the
+first of October, 1898. The line starts from
+the Little Scheidegg station of the existing
+Wengern Alp Railway, 6,770 feet above the
+sea, and ascends the mountain masses from
+the north side, passing the Eiger Glacier,
+Eiger Wand, Eismeer, and Jungfraujoch stations,
+to Lift, 13,430 feet, whence the ascent
+is completed by elevator to the summit, 13,670
+feet. The road starts on a gradient of
+ten per cent, which is increased to twenty per<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_862" id="Page_862">[Pg 862]</a></span>
+cent about halfway to the Eiger Glacier station,
+and to twenty-five per cent, the steepest,
+after passing that station. There are about 85
+yards in tunnel on the section now opened,
+but beyond the Eiger Glacier the road will
+not touch the surface except at the stations.
+About 250 yards of the long tunnel have
+been excavated so far. The stations beyond
+Eiger Wand will be built within the
+rock, and will be furnished with restaurants
+and beds. At the Eiger Wand and Eismeer
+stations passengers will contemplate the view
+through windows or balconies from the inside;
+but at the Jungfraujoch station tourists
+will be able to go out and take sledges
+for the great Aletsch Glacier. The cars will
+accommodate forty passengers each, and the
+company expects to complete the railroad by
+1904.</p>
+
+<p>Alexander A. Lawes, civil engineer, of
+Sydney, Australia, suggests a plan of mechanical
+flight on beating wings as presenting
+advantages that transcend all other
+schemes. He believes that the amount of
+power required to operate wings and the
+difficulty in applying it are exaggerated beyond
+all measure. The wings or sustainers
+of the bird in flight, he urges, are held in the
+outstretched position without any exertion on
+its part; and many birds, like the albatross,
+sustain themselves for days at a stretch.
+"This constitutes its a&euml;rial support, and is
+analogous to the support derived by other
+animals from land and water." The sole
+work done by the bird is propulsion and elevation
+by the beating action of the wings.
+Mr. Adams's machine, which he does not say
+he has tried, is built in conformity to this
+principle, and its sails are modeled as nearly
+as possible in form and as to action with
+those of the bird. The aid of an air cylinder
+is further called in, through which a
+pressure is exerted balancing the wings. The
+wings are moved by treadles, and the author's
+picture of the a&euml;ronaut looks like a man riding
+an a&euml;rial bicycle.</p>
+
+<p>Carborundum, a substance highly extolled
+by its manufacturers as an abrasive, is composed
+of carbon and silicon in atomic proportions&mdash;thirty
+parts by weight of carbon
+and seventy of silicon. It is represented
+as being next to the diamond in hardness
+and as cutting emery and corundum with
+ease, but as not as tough as the diamond.
+It is a little more than one and a fifth
+times the weight of sand, is infusible at the
+highest attainable heat, but is decomposed
+in the electric arc, and is insoluble in any of
+the ordinary solvents, water, oils, and acids,
+even hydrofluoric acid having no effect upon
+it. Pure carborundum is white. In the
+commercial manufacture the crystals are produced
+in many colors and shades, partly as
+the result of impurities and partly by surface
+oxidation. The prevailing colors are green,
+black, and blue. The color has no effect
+upon the hardness. Crude carborundum, as
+taken from the furnace, usually consists of
+large masses or aggregations of crystals,
+which are frequently very beautifully colored
+and of adamantine luster.</p>
+
+<p>A peculiarity of Old English literary
+usage is pointed out by Prof. Dr. L. Kellner,
+of Vienna, as illustrated in a sentence
+like "the mob is ignorant, and they are often
+cruel." This is considered a bad solecism in
+modern English, but in Old and Middle English
+constructions of exactly the same kind
+are so often met with that it is impossible to
+account for them as slips and mistakes.
+They may be brought under several heads,
+as, Number (the same collective noun used
+as a singular and a plural); Case (the same
+verb or adjective governing the genitive and
+accusative, the genitive and dative, or the
+dative and accusative); Pronoun ("thou"
+and "ye" used in addressing the same person);
+Tense (past and perfect, or past and
+historical present used in the same breath);
+Mood (indicative and subjunctive used in the
+same clause). Finite verb and infinitive dependent
+on the same verb; simple and prepositional
+infinitives dependent on the same
+verb; infinitive and verbal noun used side by
+side; different prepositions dependent on the
+same verb, like Caxton's "He was eaten by
+bears and of lions"; direct and indirect
+speech alternating in the same clause. These
+facts, which are met with as late as 1611
+(Bible, authorized version), point to the
+conclusion that what to us appears as a
+grammatical inconsistency was once considered
+a welcome break in the monotony of
+construction.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fischer Sigwart is quoted in the
+<i>Revue Scientifique</i> as having studied the life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_863" id="Page_863">[Pg 863]</a></span>
+of frogs for thirty years, and found that they
+are night wanderers, keeping comparatively
+quiet during the day and seeking their prey
+after dark. In the fall they leave their hunting
+grounds in the fields and woods and take
+refuge near swamps and ponds, passing the
+winter in the banks of rivers or the mud in
+the bottoms of ponds, whence they come out
+in the spring, when the process of reproduction
+begins. The frog is not sexually mature
+till it is four or five years old. The coupling
+process lasts from three to thirty days. Between
+its spring wakening and spawning the
+frog eats nothing except, perhaps, its own
+skin, which it moults periodically. After
+spawning, frogs leave the water and go to
+the fields and woods. They can be fed, when
+kept captive, upon insects and earthworms.</p>
+
+
+<h3>NOTES.</h3>
+
+<p>A relation has been discovered by Professor
+Dolbear and Carl A. and Edward A.
+Bessey between the chirping of crickets and
+the temperature, the chirps increasing as frequently
+as the temperature rises. The Besseys
+relate, in The American Naturalist, that
+when, one cool evening, a cricket was caught
+and brought into a warm room, it began in
+a few minutes to chirp nearly twice as rapidly
+as the out-of-door crickets, and that its
+rate very nearly conformed to the observed
+rate maintained other evenings out of doors
+under the same temperature conditions.</p>
+
+<p>C. Drieberg, of Colombo, Ceylon, records,
+in Nature, a rainfall at Nedunkeni, in the
+northern province of Ceylon, December 15
+and 16, 1897, of 31.76 inches in twenty-four
+hours. The highest previous records, as
+cited by him, are at Joyeuse, France, 31.17
+inches in twenty-two hours; Genoa, 30
+inches in twenty-six hours; on the hills
+above Bombay, 24 inches in one night; and
+on the Khasia Hills, India, 30 inches in each
+of five successive days. The average annual
+rainfall at Nedunkeni has been 64.70 inches,
+but in 1897 the total amount was 121.85
+inches. The greatest annual rainfall is on
+the Khasia Hills, India, with 600 inches.
+The wettest station in Ceylon is Padupola,
+in the central province, with 230.85 inches
+as the mean of twenty-six years, but in 1897
+the amount was 243.07 inches.</p>
+
+<p>The Korean postage stamps are printed
+in the United States. As explained in the
+United States consular reports, they are of
+four denominations, and all alike except in
+color and denomination. Of the inscriptions,
+the characters on the top are ancient
+Chinese, and those at the bottom, having the
+same meaning, are Korean; the characters
+on the right are Korean and those on the
+left are Chinese, both giving the denominations,
+with the English translation just below
+the center of the stamp. The plum blossom
+in each corner is the royal flower of the present
+Ye dynasty, which has been in existence
+more than five hundred years, and the figures
+at the corners of the center piece represent
+the four spirits that stand at the corners
+of the earth and support it on their shoulders.
+The national emblem in the center is an ancient
+Chinese phallic device.</p>
+
+<p>A paragraph in <i>La Nature</i> calls to mind
+that the year 1898 was the "jubilee" of the
+sea serpent, the first mention of a sight of
+the monster&mdash;whether fabulous or not is
+still undecided&mdash;having been made by the
+captain and officers of the British ship D&aelig;dalus
+in 1848. They said they saw it between
+the Cape of Good Hope and St. Helena,
+and that it was about six hundred feet
+long. Since then views of sea serpents have
+been reported nearly every year, but none
+has ever been caught or seen so near or for
+so long a time as to be positively identified.
+There are several creatures of the deep which,
+seen for an instant, might be mistaken with
+the aid of an excited imagination for a marine
+serpent; and it is not wholly impossible
+that some descendants of the gigantic saurians
+of old may still be living in the ocean
+undetected by science.</p>
+
+<p>The results of a study of the winter food
+of the chickadee by Clarence M. Weed, of
+the New Hampshire College Agricultural Experiment
+Station, shows that more than half
+of it consists of insects, a very large proportion
+of which are taken in the form of eggs.
+Vegetation of various sorts made up a little
+less than a quarter of the food; but two
+thirds of this consisted of buds and bud
+scales that were accidentally introduced
+along with plant-lice eggs. These eggs
+made up more than one fifth of the entire
+food, and formed the most remarkable element
+of the bill of fare. The destruction
+of these eggs of plant lice is probably the
+most important service which the chickadee
+renders during its winter residence. Insect
+eggs of many other kinds were found in the
+food, among them those of the tent caterpillar
+and the fall cankerworm, and the larv&aelig;
+of several kinds of moths, including those of
+the common apple worm.</p>
+
+<p>The Merchants' Association of San Francisco
+has been trying the experiment of
+sprinkling a street with sea water, and finds
+that such water binds the dirt together between
+the paving stones, so that when it is
+dry no loose dust is formed to be raised by
+the wind; that sea water does not dry so
+quickly as fresh water, so that it has been
+claimed when salt water has been used that
+one load of it is equal to three loads of fresh
+water. The salt water which is deposited on
+the street absorbs moisture from the air during
+the night, whereby the street is thoroughly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_864" id="Page_864">[Pg 864]</a></span>
+moist during the early morning, and
+has the appearance of having been freshly
+sprinkled.</p>
+
+<p>The Tarahumare people, who live in the
+most inaccessible part of northern Mexico,
+were described by Dr. Krauss in the British
+Association as ignorant and primitive, and
+many still living in caves. What villages
+they have are at altitudes of about eight
+thousand feet above the sea level. They are
+a small and wiry people, with great powers
+of endurance. Their only food is <i>pinoli</i>, or
+maize, parched and ground. They have a
+peculiar drink, called <i>teshuin</i>, also produced
+from maize and manufactured with considerable
+ceremony, which tastes like a mixture
+of sour milk and turpentine. Their language
+is limited to about three hundred words.
+Their imperfect knowledge of numbers renders
+them unable to count beyond ten. Their
+religion seems to be a distorted and imperfect
+conception of Christian traditions, mixed
+with some of their own ideas and superstitions.</p>
+
+<p>The directory of the School of Anthropology
+of Paris, which consists chiefly of the
+professors in the institution, has chosen Dr.
+Capitan, professor of pathological anthropology,
+to succeed M. Gabriel de Mortillet, deceased,
+as professor of prehistoric anthropology.
+Dr. Capitan's former chair is suppressed.</p>
+
+<p>The highest cog-wheel railroad in Europe
+and probably in the world is the one from Zermatt,
+Switzerland, to the summit of the G&ouml;rner
+Grat, upward of eleven thousand five hundred
+feet above the sea. It is between five and
+six miles long, and rises nearly fifty-two hundred
+feet, with a maximum grade of twenty
+per cent. There are two intermediate stations,
+at the Riffel Alp and the Riffelberg,
+and the ascent is made in ninety minutes.
+The height of this road will be surpassed by
+that of the one now being erected up the
+Jungfrau.</p>
+
+<p>Extraordinary advantages are claimed
+by Mrs. Theodore R. MacClure, of the State
+Board of Health, for Michigan as a summer
+and health-resort State. The State has more
+than sixteen hundred miles of lake line, the
+greater part of which is or can be utilized
+for summer-resort purposes; there are in its
+limits 5,173 inland lakes varying in size and
+having a total area of 712,864 square acres
+of water. The many rivers running through
+the State furnish on their banks delightful
+places for camping and for recreation.</p>
+
+<p>An action of bacteria on photographic
+plates was described by Prof. P. P. Frankland
+at the last meeting of the British Association.
+Ordinary bacterial cultures in gelatin
+and agar-agar are found to be capable
+of affecting the photographic film even at a
+distance of half an inch, while, when they
+are placed in contact with the film, definite
+pictures of the bacterial growths can be obtained.
+The action does not take place
+through glass, and therefore, as in the case
+of Dr. W. J. Russell's observations with
+some other substances, it is considered probably
+due to the evolution of volatile chemical
+materials which react with the sensitive film.
+Many varieties of bacteria exert the action,
+but to a different degree. Bacterial growths
+which are luminous in the dark are much
+more active than the non-luminous bacteria
+hitherto tried.</p>
+
+<p>Telephonic communication, it is said, has
+been established between a number of farms
+in Australia by means of wire fences. A
+correspondent of the Australian Agriculturist
+from a station near Colmar represents
+that it is easy to converse with a station
+eight miles distant by means of instruments
+connected on the wire fences, and that the
+same kind of communication has been established
+over a distance of eight miles. Several
+stations are connected in this way.</p>
+
+<p>We have to record the deaths of F. A.
+Obach, electrical engineer, at Gr&auml;tz, Austria,
+December 27th, aged forty-six years. He
+was author of numerous papers on subjects
+of electrical science in English and German
+publications, and of lectures on the chemistry
+of India rubber and gutta percha; Dr.
+Reinhold Ehret, seismologist and author of
+books on earthquakes and seismometers, who
+died from an Alpine accident in the Susten
+Pass; Dr. Joseph Coats, professor of pathology
+at the University of Glasgow, and
+author of a manual of pathology, a work on
+tuberculosis, etc.; Thomas Hincks, F. R. S.,
+author of books on marine zo&ouml;logy, February
+2d; Major J. Hotchkiss, president in 1895 of
+the Geological Section of the American Association
+and author of papers on economic
+geology and engineering; Wilbur Wilson Thoburn,
+professor of biomechanics at Leland
+Stanford Junior University; Dr. Giuseppe
+Gibelli, professor of botany in the University
+of Turin; Dr. G. Wolffh&uuml;zel, professor of
+hygiene in the University of G&ouml;ttingen; Dr.
+Dareste de Chavannes, author of researches
+in animal teratology, and formerly president
+of the French Society of Anthropology; Dr.
+Rupert B&ouml;ck, professor of mechanics in
+the Technical Institute of Vienna; William
+Colenso, F. R. S., of New Zealand, naturalist
+and author of investigations of Maori antiquities
+and myths; Dr. Lench, assistant in
+the observatory at Z&uuml;rich, Switzerland; Dr.
+Franz Lang, rector and teacher of natural
+history in the cantonal schools of Soleure,
+Switzerland, and one of the presidents of the
+Swiss Natural History Society, aged seventy-eight
+years; Dr. William Rutherford, professor
+of physiology in the University of
+Edinburgh, and author of several books in
+that science, February 21st, in his sixtieth
+year; and Sir Douglas Galton, president of
+the British Association in 1895 and an authority
+and author on sanitation, March 10th,
+in his seventy seventh year.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_865" id="Page_865">[Pg 865]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>INDEX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap lowercase">ARTICLES MARKED WITH AN ASTERISK ARE ILLUSTRATED.</span></p>
+
+
+<div>
+Academy della Crusca, The. (Frag.), 572<br />
+<br />
+Adulteration of Butter with Glucose. (Frag.), 570<br />
+<br />
+Allen, Grant. The Season of the Year, 230<br />
+<br />
+America, Middle. Was it Peopled from Asia? E. S. Morse, 1<br />
+<br />
+Animals' Bites. (Frag.), 430<br />
+<br />
+Anthropology. Decorated Skulls and the Power ascribed to them (Frag.), 570<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Estrays from Civilization. (Frag.), 573<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Huichol Indians of Jalisco. (Frag.), 574<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Lessons of. (Table), 411<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments. E. S. Morse*, 712<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Superstitions, Aboriginal, about Bones. (Frag.), 572<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Anthro</span>"<span class="h">pology.</span>Superstition and Crime. E. P. Evans, 206<br />
+<br />
+Arch&aelig;ology. Earliest Writing in France. G. de Mortillet, 546<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Arch&aelig;</span>"<span class="h">ology.</span>Lake Dwelling, A Neolithic, <a href="#Page_856">856</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Arch&aelig;</span>"<span class="h">ology.</span>Stone Age in Egypt. J. de Morgan, 202<br />
+<br />
+Architectural Forms in Nature. S. Dellenbaugh*, 63<br />
+<br />
+Astronomical Photographs, A Library of. (Frag.), 717<br />
+<br />
+Astronomy. Bombardment, The Great. C. F. Holder*, 506<br />
+<br />
+Atkinson, E. Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States, 145<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Atki</span>"<span class="h">nson,</span>" The Wheat Problem again, <a href="#Page_759">759</a><br />
+<br />
+Atlantic Slope, The. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_858">858</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Bactrian Camel for the Klondike. (Frag.), 136<br />
+<br />
+Barr, M. W. Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare*, <a href="#Page_746">746</a><br />
+<br />
+Bede, Chair of the Venerable. (Frag.), 283<br />
+<br />
+Bees, Burrowing, The Nests of. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_860">860</a><br />
+<br />
+Bering Sea Controversy and the Scientific Expert. G. A. Clark, 654<br />
+<br />
+Biological Survey, The United States. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_856">856</a><br />
+<br />
+Blackford, Charles Minor, Jr. Soils and Fertilizers, 392<br />
+<br />
+Blake, I. W. Our Florida Alligator*, 330<br />
+<br />
+Bombardment, The Great. C. F. Holder*, 506<br />
+<br />
+Books Noticed, 126, 274, 415, 559, 704, <a href="#Page_845">845</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Agriculture. Michigan Board, Thirty-fifth Annual Report of, 423.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Alexander, A. Theories of the Will in the History of Philosophy, 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Andrews, C. M. The Historical Development of Modern Europe, 126.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Anthropology. Indians of Northern British Columbia, Facial Paintings of. F. Boas, 710.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Arch&aelig;ology, Introduction to the Study of North American. C. Thomas, 420.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Arthur and Trembly. Living Plants and their Properties, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Astronomy, A Text-Book of Geodetic. J. F. Hayford, 129.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Corona and Coronet. M. L. Todd, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Earth and Sky, The. E. S. Holden, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_866" id="Page_866">[Pg 866]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Tides, The. G. H. Darwin, 705.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bailey, L. H. Evolution of our Native Fruits, 704.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Baldwin, J. M. The Story of the Mind, 565.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Barnes, C. R. Form and Function of Plant Life, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Barra, Eduardo de la. Literature arcaica, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Beauchamp, W. M. Polished-Stone Articles used by New York Aborigines before and during European Occupation, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Beddard, F. E. Elementary Zo&ouml;logy, 706.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">B&eacute;ker, G. A. Rrimas, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Binet, Alfred. L'Ann&eacute;e Psychologique, 129.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bj&ouml;rling, P. R. Mechanical Engineer's Pocketbook, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Boas, Franz. Facial Paintings of the Indians of Northern British Columbia, 710.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bolton, H. C. Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals (1665-1895), 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Botany. Familiar Life in Field and Forest. F. S. Mathews, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Fossil Plants. A. C. Seward, 127.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Fruits, The Evolution of our Native. L. H. Bailey, 704.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Function and Forms of Plant Life. C. R. Barnes, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Les V&eacute;g&eacute;taux et les Milieux Cosmiques, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Living Plants and their Properties. Arthur and Trembly, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Practical Plant Physiology, 128.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Brain Weight, Indexes of. McCurdy and Mohyliansky, 709.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Brush, George J. Manual of Determinative Mineralogy, 707.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Butler, Amos W. The Birds of Indiana, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Carus-Wilson, C. A. Electro-Dynamics, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals (1665-1895). H. C. Bolton, 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chemical Analysis, Manual of. G. S. Newth, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chemistry. Inorganic according to the Periodic Law. Venable and Howe, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Qualitative Analysis. E. A. Congdon, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Short Manual of Analytical. John Muter, 419.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Clark, William J. Commercial Cuba, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Conant, F. S. Biographical Pamphlet, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Congdon, E. A. Brief Course in Qualitative Analysis, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cornelius, Hans. Psychologie als Erfahrungs-wissenschaft, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Costantin, M. J. Les V&eacute;g&eacute;taux et les Milieux Cosmiques, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Creighton, J. E. An Introductory Logic, 706.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Crook, J. W. History of German Wage Theories, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cuba, Commercial. William J. Clark, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dana, E. S. Text-Book of Mineralogy, <a href="#Page_848">848</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dana, James D. Revised Text-Book of Geology, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Darwin, George Howard. The Tides, 705.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Davis, H. S. Star Catalogues, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Day, D. T. Mineral Resources of the United States, <a href="#Page_852">852</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Detmer, W. Practical Plant Physiology, 128.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Drey, Sylvan. A Theory of Life, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast. E. S. Holden, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Economics. Commercial Cuba. William J. Clark, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; German Wage Theories, History of. J. W. Crook, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Public Administration in Massachusetts. R. H. Whitten, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Education. Greek Prose. H. C. Pearson, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Handbook of Nature Study for Elementary Schools, 130.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Harold's Rambles. J. W. Troeger, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; On a Farm. N. L. Helm, 423.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; United States Commissioner's Report for 1896-'97, <a href="#Page_852">852</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Electricity. Electro-Dynamics. C. A. Carus-Wilson, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Industrial. A. G. Elliott, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; The Discharge of, through Gases. J. J. Thomson, 565.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; The Storage Battery. A. Treadwell, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Elliott, A. G. Industrial Electricity, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Engineering. Mechanical Engineer's Pocketbook, 132.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ethnology. Explorations in Honduras. G. B. Gordon, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Forestry. American Woods. R. B. Hough, 276.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Conditions in Wisconsin. F. Noth, 709.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Geikie, James. Earth Sculpture, <a href="#Page_845">845</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Geography. Natural Advanced. Redway and Hinman, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Philippine Islands and their People. D. C. Worcester, 415.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Physical, of New Jersey. R. D. Salisbury, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Geological Bulletin, Part II, Vol. III, of the University of Upsala, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Geological Survey of Kansas. Vol. IV. S. W. Williston, 709.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Geology. Earth Sculpture. James Geikie, <a href="#Page_845">845</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Indiana, Twenty-second Annual Report of Department of, <a href="#Page_852">852</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Indian Territory, Reconnaissance of Coal Fields of. N. F. Drake, <a href="#Page_852">852</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Iowa Survey. Eighth volume, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Mineralogy, Manual of Determinative, 707.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Mineralogy, Text-Book of. E. S. Dana, <a href="#Page_848">848</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Mineral Resources of the United States. D. T. Day, <a href="#Page_852">852</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; New Jersey State Report for 1897, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Panama, Geological History of the Isthmus of. R. T. Hill, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_867" id="Page_867">[Pg 867]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Text-Book of. J. D. Dana, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Giddings, Franklin H. Elements of Sociology, 559.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Goldman, Henry. The Arithmetician, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Goode, G. B. Report of United States National Museum for 1895, 710.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Gordon, G. B. Ethnological Explorations in Honduras, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Groos, Karl. The Play of Animals, 274.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Harris, Edith D. Story of Rob Roy, 709.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hayford, J. P. Text-Book of Geodetic Astronomy, 129.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Helm, Nellie Lathrop. On a Farm, 423.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hill, R. T. Geological History of the Isthmus of Panama, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">History. Commune, The. Lissagaray. Translated by E. M. Aveling, 423.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Europe, The Historical Development of Modern. C. M. Andrews, 126.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Napoleon III and his Court. Imbert de Saint-Amand, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Reader for Elementary Schools. L. L. W. Wilson, <a href="#Page_853">853</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Spanish Literature. J. Fitzmaurice-Kelly, 275.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hoffman, F. S. The Sphere of Science, 128.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Holden, E. S. Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast, 1769-1897, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; The Earth and Sky, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Holyoake, G. J. Jubilee History of the Leeds Co-operative Society, <a href="#Page_849">849</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hough, R. B. American Woods, 276.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Iowa State University Bulletin, Vol. IV, No. 3, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">James, William. Human Immortality, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Jayne, Horace. The Mammalian Anatomy of the Cat, 278.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Jordan, D. S. Lest we Forget, 568.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Keyser, L. S. News from the Birds, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lambert, R. A. Differential and Integral Calculus, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lange, D. Handbook of Nature Study for Elementary Schools, 130.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lantern Land, In. (Monthly.) Allen and Carleton, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Le Bon, Gustave. The Psychology of Peoples, <a href="#Page_847">847</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society, Jubilee History of. G. J. Holyoake, <a href="#Page_849">849</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Library Bulletin, No. 9, New York State, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lissagaray. History of the Commune. Translated by E. M. Aveling, 423.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Logic, An Introductory. J. E. Creighton, 706.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lyte, E. O. Elementary English, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">McConachie, L. G. Congressional Committees, 131.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mathematics. Differential and Integral Calculus. R. A. Lambert, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Infinitesimal Analysis. William B. Smith, <a href="#Page_849">849</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Lectures on the Geometry of Position. T. R. Reye. Translated.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mathews, F. Schuyler. Familiar Life in Field and Forest, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Maurice-Kelly, James Fitz. History of Spanish Literature, 275.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Meteorology. Wind Deposits, Mechanical Composition of. J. A. Udden, <a href="#Page_853">853</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mills, Wesley. Nature and Development of Animal Intelligence, 562.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mivart, St. George. The Groundwork of Science, 563.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Music, A Short Course in. Ripley and Tupper, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Muter, John. Manual of Analytical Chemistry, 419.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Natural History. Animal Intelligence, Nature and Development of. Wesley Mills, 562.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Birds, News from the. L. S. Keyser, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Birds of Indiana, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Four-footed Americans and their Kin. M. O. Wright, 563.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Solitary Wasps, Habits of. G. W. and E. P. Peckham, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Taxidermy, The Art of. John Rowley, 420.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Wild Animals I have Known. E. S. Thompson, 417.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Newth, G. S. Manual of Chemical Analysis, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ornithology. How to Name the Birds. H. E. Parkhurst, 131.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Overton, Frank. Physiology, Applied, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Physiology for Advanced Grades, 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Paleontology. Fossil Plants. A. C. Seward, 127.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Parkhurst, H. E. How to Name the Birds, 131.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pearson, H. C. Greek Prose, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Peckham, G. W. and E. P. Habits of the Solitary Wasps, <a href="#Page_851">851</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Philosophy. Immortality, Human. William James, 708.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Physiology, Applied. Frank Overton, 277.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Applied, for Advanced Grades. F. Overton, 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Psychology. Child, The Study of the. A. R. Taylor, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; L'Ann&eacute;e Psychologique, 129.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Mind, The Story of the. J. M. Baldwin, 565.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; of Peoples. G. Le Bon, <a href="#Page_847">847</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Play of Animals, The. Karl Groos, 274.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Psychologie als Erfahrungs-wissenschaft. Hans Cornelius, <a href="#Page_850">850</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Will, Theories of the, in the History of Philosophy. A. Alexander, 566.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Quinn, D. A. Stenotypy. Second edition, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Redway, J. W., and Hinman K. Natural Advanced Geography, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reye, Theodor R. Lectures on the Geometry of Position. Translated, 419.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rice, W., and Eastman Barrett. Under the Stars, and Other Verses, 134.</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_868" id="Page_868">[Pg 868]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Richter, J. P. F. Selections from the Works of, 279.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ripley, F. H., and Tupper, T. A Short Course in Music, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rollin, H. J. Yetta S&eacute;gal, 278.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rowley, John. The Art of Taxidermy, 420.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Saint-Amand, Imbert de. Napoleon III and his Court, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Salisbury, Rollin D. Physical Geography of New Jersey, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Science, Groundwork of, The. St. George Mivart, 563.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Sphere of. F. S. Hoffman, 128.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Seward, A. C. Fossil Plants, 127.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Smith, William B. Infinitesimal Analysis, <a href="#Page_849">849</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sociology. Congressional Committees. L. G. McConachie, 131.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Currency Problems of the United States in 1897-'98. A. B. Stickney, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Elements of. F. H. Giddings, 559.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; The State. W. Wilson, 130.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&mdash; Workers, The. W. A. Wyckoff, 707.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Stickney, A. B. Currency Problem of the United States in 1897-'98, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Still, A. Alternating Currents and the Theory of Transformers, 133.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Story of the Railroad, The. Cy Warman, <a href="#Page_848">848</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Taylor, A. R. The Study of the Child, 564.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thomas, C. Introduction to North American Arch&aelig;ology, 129.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thompson, Ernest Seton. Wild Animals I have Known, 417.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thomson, J. J. The Discharge of Electricity through Gases, 565.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Todd, Mabel L. Corona and Coronet, 418.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treadwell, Augustus. The Storage Battery, 421.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Troeger, John W. Harold's Rambles, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Udden, J. A. Mechanical Composition of Wind Deposits, <a href="#Page_853">853</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">United States National Museum, Report of, for 1895, 710.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Venable and Howe. Inorganic Chemistry according to the Periodic Law, 567.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Waring, George E., Jr. Street-Cleaning Methods in European Cities, 131.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Warman, Cy. Story of the Railroad, <a href="#Page_848">848</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Whitten, Robert H. Public Administration in Massachusetts, 422.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilson, L. L. W. History Reader, for Elementary Schools, <a href="#Page_853">853</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilson, Woodrow. The State, 130.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Winter, H. L. Notes on Criminal Anthropology, 280.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Worcester, Dean C. The Philippine Islands and their People, 415.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wright, Mabel Osgood. Four-footed Americans and their Kin, 563.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wyckoff, W. A. The Workers, 707.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Zo&ouml;logy, Elementary. E. E. Beddard, 706.</span><br />
+<br />
+Botany. English Names for Plants. (Frag.), 428<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Bot</span>"<span class="h">any.</span>Forest Planting on the Plains. (Frag.), 718<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Bot</span>"<span class="h">any.</span>Light and Vegetation. D. T. MacDougall, 193<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Bot</span>"<span class="h">any.</span>Plant Characters, Changes in. (Frag.), 286<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Bot</span>"<span class="h">any.</span>Poisonous Plants. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_855">855</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Bot</span>"<span class="h">any.</span>Seeds, Dispersal of. (Frag.), 715<br />
+<br />
+Boyer, M. J. Sketch of Cl&eacute;mence Royer. (With Portrait), 690<br />
+<br />
+Brain Weights and Intellectual Capacity. J. Simms, 243<br />
+<br />
+Brooks, William Keith. Mivart's Groundwork of Science, 450<br />
+<br />
+Bullen, Frank T. Life on a South Sea Whaler, <a href="#Page_818">818</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Canada, The Interior of. (Frag.), 141<br />
+<br />
+Catbird, The Coming of the. S. Trotter, <a href="#Page_772">772</a><br />
+<br />
+Causses of Southern France, The. (Frag.), 138<br />
+<br />
+Cereals in the United States. Distribution of. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_859">859</a><br />
+<br />
+Clarke, F. W. Sketch. (With Portrait), 110<br />
+<br />
+Clark, George A. The Scientific Expert and the Bering Sea Controversy, 654<br />
+<br />
+Climatic Evolution, Laws of. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_855">855</a><br />
+<br />
+Collier, J. The Evolution of Colonies, 52, 289, 577<br />
+<br />
+Colonies, The Evolution of. J. Collier, 52, 289, 577<br />
+<br />
+Commensals. (Frag.), 716<br />
+<br />
+Cooking Schools in Philadelphia. (Frag.), 428<br />
+<br />
+Cordillera Region of Canada. (Frag.), 283<br />
+<br />
+Cram, W. E. Concerning Weasels*, <a href="#Page_786">786</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_869" id="Page_869">[Pg 869]</a></span>Criminology. California Penal System. C. H. Shinn*, 644<br />
+<br />
+Cuba, The Climate of. (Frag.), 426<br />
+<br />
+Curious Habit, Origin of a. (Frag.), 286<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Dastre, M. Iron in the Living Body, <a href="#Page_807">807</a><br />
+<br />
+Dawson, E. R. The Torrents of Switzerland, 46<br />
+<br />
+Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap. T. A. Jaggar*, 475<br />
+<br />
+Decorated Skulls and the Power ascribed to them. (Frag.), 570<br />
+<br />
+Dellenbaugh, F. S. Architectural Forms in Nature*, 63<br />
+<br />
+Dodge, C. R. Possible Fiber Industries of the United States*, 15<br />
+<br />
+Dorsey, George A. Up the Skeena River*, 181<br />
+<br />
+D Q, The New Planet. (Frag.), 426<br />
+<br />
+Dream and Reality. M. C. Melinand, 96<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Dr</span>"<span class="h">eam </span>"<span class="h"> Rea</span>"<span class="h">lity. </span>(Table), 103<br />
+<br />
+Dreams, The Stuff of. Havelock Ellis, <a href="#Page_721">721</a><br />
+<br />
+Dresslar, F. B. Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences, <a href="#Page_781">781</a><br />
+<br />
+Dutch Charity, A Practical. J. H. Gore, 103<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Earliest Writing in France, The. G. de Mortillet, 542<br />
+<br />
+Earthquakes, Modern Studies of. George Geraland, 362<br />
+<br />
+Economics. Cereals, Distribution of, in the United States, <a href="#Page_859">859</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Econo</span>"<span class="h">mics.</span>Conquest, The Spirit of. J. Novicow, 518<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Econo</span>"<span class="h">mics.</span>Gold, Marvelous Increase in Production of. A. E. Outerbridge, Jr., 635<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Econo</span>"<span class="h">mics.</span>Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States. E. Atkinson, 145<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Econo</span>"<span class="h">mics.</span>Wheat Problem, The. E. Atkinson, <a href="#Page_759">759</a><br />
+<br />
+Education and Evolution. (Smith.) (Corr.), 554<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>and Evolution. (Table), 269<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>German School Journeys. (Frag.), 573<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>History of Scientific Instruction. J. N. Lockyer, 372, 529<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School. L. L. W. Wilson, 313<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools. L. G. Oakley, 176<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Science and Culture. (Table), <a href="#Page_842">842</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Science in. Sir A. Geikie, 672<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Series Method, The. A Comparison. Charlotte Taylor, 537<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>Should Children under Ten learn to Read and Write? G. T. W. Patrick, 382<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Educ</span>"<span class="h">ation</span>The Goal of. (Table), 118<br />
+<br />
+Electricity. The Nernst Electric Lamp. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_854">854</a><br />
+<br />
+Ellis, Havelock. The Stuff that Dreams are made of, <a href="#Page_721">721</a><br />
+<br />
+Emerson and Evolution. (Alexander.) (Corr.), 555<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Eme</span>"<span class="h">rson </span>"<span class="h"> Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution. </span>(Table), 558<br />
+<br />
+Estrays from Civilization. (Frag.), 573<br />
+<br />
+Ethnology. Was Middle America Peopled from Asia? E. S. Morse, 1<br />
+<br />
+Evans, E. P. Superstition and Crime, 206<br />
+<br />
+Evolution and Education. (Smith.) (Corr.), 554<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution</span>and Education. (Table), 269<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution</span>Extra Organic Factors of. (Frag.), 427<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution</span>of Pleasure Gardens. (Frag.), 717<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution</span>Social. What is it? Herbert Spencer, 35<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_870" id="Page_870">[Pg 870]</a></span><span class="h">Evol</span>"<span class="h">ution</span>Survival of the Fittest. (Table), <a href="#Page_844">844</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Fads and Frauds. (Table), 701<br />
+<br />
+Fiber Industries of the United States. C. R. Dodge*, 15<br />
+<br />
+Florida Alligator, Our. I. W. Blake*, 330<br />
+<br />
+Ford, R. Clyde. The Malay Language, <a href="#Page_813">813</a><br />
+<br />
+Forest Planting on the Plains. (Frag.), 718<br />
+<br />
+Fossils as Criterions of Geological Ages. (Frag.), 427<br />
+<br />
+Foundation, A Borrowed. (Table), 273<br />
+<br />
+French Science, Two Gifts to. M. H. de Parville*, 81<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Galax and its Affinities. (Frag.), 571<br />
+<br />
+Geikie, Sir A. Science in Education, 672<br />
+<br />
+Geography. Atlantic Slope, The. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_858">858</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Geogr</span>"<span class="h">aphy.</span>West Indies, Physical, of. F. L. Oswald, <a href="#Page_802">802</a><br />
+<br />
+Geological Romance, A. J. A. Udden*, 222<br />
+<br />
+Geology. Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap. T. A. Jaggar*, 475<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Geol</span>"<span class="h">ogy.</span>Glacial, in America. D. S. Martin, 356<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Geol</span>"<span class="h">ogy.</span>Siamese Geological Theory, A. (Frag.), 718<br />
+<br />
+Geraland, George. Modern Studies of Earthquakes, 362<br />
+<br />
+German School Journeys. (Frag.), 573<br />
+<br />
+Glacial Geology in America. D. S. Martin, 356<br />
+<br />
+Glaciation and Carbonic Acid. (Frag.), 135<br />
+<br />
+Gold, Marvelous Increase in Production of. A. E. Outerbridge, Jr., 635<br />
+<br />
+Gore, J. H. A Practical Dutch Charity, 103<br />
+<br />
+Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences. F. B. Dresslar, <a href="#Page_781">781</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Hanging an Elephant. (Frag.), 286<br />
+<br />
+Herrings at Dinner. (Frag.), 574<br />
+<br />
+Hitchcock, Charles H., Sketch of*, 260<br />
+<br />
+Holder, C. F. The Great Bombardment*, 506<br />
+<br />
+Huichol Indians of Jalisco. (Frag.), 574<br />
+<br />
+Huxley Lecture, The. (Frag.), 425<br />
+<br />
+Hygiene. Rebreathed Air as a Poison. (Frag.), 714<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Hygi</span>"<span class="h">ene.</span>Throat and Ear, Care of the. W. Scheppegrell, <a href="#Page_791">791</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Ide, Mrs. G. E. Shall we Teach our Daughters the Value of Money?, 686<br />
+<br />
+Indian Idea of the "Midmost Self." (Frag.), 136<br />
+<br />
+Ireland, W. Alleyn. The Labor Problem in the Tropics, 481<br />
+<br />
+Iron in the Living Body. M. Dastre, <a href="#Page_807">807</a><br />
+<br />
+Iztaccihuatl (the White Lady Mountain). (Frag.), 569<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Jaggar, T. A. Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap*, 475<br />
+<br />
+Jastrow, Joseph. The Mind's Eye*, 289<br />
+<br />
+Jordan, D. S. True Tales of Birds and Beasts, 352<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Kekul&eacute;, Friedrich August. Sketch. (With Portrait), 401<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Labor Problem in the Tropics. W. A. Ireland, 481<br />
+<br />
+Lake Dwelling, A Neolithic. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_856">856</a><br />
+<br />
+Light and Vegetation. D. T. MacDougall, 193<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_871" id="Page_871">[Pg 871]</a></span>Lockyer, J. N. A Short History of Scientific Instruction, 372, 529<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+MacDougall. Light and Vegetation, 193<br />
+<br />
+Malay Language. R. C. Ford, <a href="#Page_813">813</a><br />
+<br />
+Martel, M. E. A. Speleology, or Cave Exploration, 255<br />
+<br />
+Martin, D. S. Glacial Geology in America, 356<br />
+<br />
+Melinand, M. C. Dream and Reality, 96<br />
+<br />
+Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. M. W. Barr*, <a href="#Page_746">746</a><br />
+<br />
+Meteorology, Climatic Evolution, Laws of, <a href="#Page_855">855</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Meteor</span>"<span class="h">ology,</span>Sahara, Winds of. (Frag.), 717<br />
+<br />
+Miles, Manly, Sketch of. (With Portrait), <a href="#Page_834">834</a><br />
+<br />
+Mind's Eye, The. Joseph Jastrow*, 289<br />
+<br />
+Missouri Botanical Garden, Additions to. (Frag.), 135<br />
+<br />
+Molecular Asymmetry and Life. (Frag.), 139<br />
+<br />
+Mongoose in Jamaica, The. C. W. Willis*, 86<br />
+<br />
+Moon and the Weather, The. G. J. Varney. (Corr.), 118<br />
+<br />
+Morgan, J. de. Stone Age in Egypt, 202<br />
+<br />
+Morse, E. S. Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments.* (Frag.), 712<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Mo</span>"<span class="h">rse E</span>"<span class="h">. S.</span>Was Middle America Peopled from Asia?, 1<br />
+<br />
+Mortillet, Gabriel de, Sketch of. (With Portrait), 546<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Mor</span>"<span class="h">tillet, G</span>"<span class="h">abriel</span>" The Earliest Writing in France, 542<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Names, Technical and Popular. (Frag.), 285<br />
+<br />
+Naples Aquarium, The. (School for the Study of Life under the Sea.) E. H. Patterson, 668<br />
+<br />
+Natural History. Catbird, The Coming of the. S. Trotter, <a href="#Page_772">772</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>Commensals. (Frag.), 716<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>Herrings at Dinner. (Frag.), 574<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>Origin of a Curious Habit. (Frag.), 286<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>School for the Study of Life under the Sea. E. H. Patterson, 668<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>Scorpion, My Pet. Norman Robinson*, 605<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Nat</span>"<span class="h">ural h</span>"<span class="h">istory</span>Weasels. W. E. Cram*, <a href="#Page_786">786</a><br />
+<br />
+Natural Selection and Fortuitous Variation. (Frag.), 141<br />
+<br />
+Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School. L. L. W. Wilson, 313<br />
+<br />
+Nernst Electric Lamp, The. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_854">854</a><br />
+<br />
+Neufeld, Dr. (Frag.), 140<br />
+<br />
+Nicaragua and its Ferns. (Frag.), 137<br />
+<br />
+Nontoxic Matches, The French. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_857">857</a><br />
+<br />
+Novicow, J. The Spirit of Conquest, 518<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Oakley, Isabella G. Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools, 176<br />
+<br />
+Observation, The Science of. C. L. Whittle*, 456<br />
+<br />
+Ocean Currents, Drift of. (Frag.), 716<br />
+<br />
+Oswald, F. L. Physical Geography of the West Indies, <a href="#Page_802">802</a><br />
+<br />
+Outerbridge, A. E., Jr. Marvelous Increase in Production of Gold, 635<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Parville, M. H. de. Two Gifts to French Science*, 81<br />
+<br />
+Patrick, G. T. W. Should Children under Ten learn to Read and Write?, 382<br />
+<br />
+Patterson, Eleanor H. A School for the Study of Life under the Sea, 668<br />
+<br />
+Pearls, American Fresh-Water. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_859">859</a><br />
+<br />
+Pedigree Photographs. (Frag.), 428<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_872" id="Page_872">[Pg 872]</a></span>Physics. Utilization of Wave Power. (Frag.), 715<br />
+<br />
+Physiology. Iron in the Living Body. M. Dastre, <a href="#Page_807">807</a><br />
+<br />
+Plant Characters, Changes in. (Frag.), 286<br />
+<br />
+Plant Names, English. (Frag.), 428<br />
+<br />
+Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools. Isabella G. Oakley, 163<br />
+<br />
+Pleasure Gardens, Evolution of. (Frag.), 717<br />
+<br />
+Plumandon, J. R. The Cause of Rain, 89<br />
+<br />
+Poisonous Plants. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_855">855</a><br />
+<br />
+Portland Cement. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_856">856</a><br />
+<br />
+Potteries, Doulton. (Frag.), 430<br />
+<br />
+Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments. E. S. Morse*, 712<br />
+<br />
+Psychology. Dreams. Havelock Ellis, <a href="#Page_721">721</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Psych</span>"<span class="h">ology.</span>Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences. F. B. Dresslar, <a href="#Page_781">781</a><br />
+<br />
+Pulpit, A Voice from the. (Table), 409<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Rabies Bacillus, The. (Frag.), 284<br />
+<br />
+Racial Geography of Europe. W. Z. Ripley, 163, 338, 614<br />
+<br />
+Rain, The Cause of. J. R. Plumandon, 89<br />
+<br />
+Rebreathed Air as a Poison. (Frag.), 714<br />
+<br />
+Ripley, W. Z. Racial Geography of Europe, 163, 338, 614<br />
+<br />
+Robinson, Norman. My Pet Scorpion*, 605<br />
+<br />
+Royer, Cl&eacute;mence, Sketch of. (With Portrait.) M. J. Boyer, 690<br />
+<br />
+Russell's Photographic Researches. (Frag.), 139<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Saghalin, The Island of. (Frag.), 285<br />
+<br />
+St. Kildans, The. (Frag.), 284<br />
+<br />
+Scheppegrell, W. Care of the Throat and Ear, <a href="#Page_791">791</a><br />
+<br />
+Science, A Doubtful Appendix to. (Table), 120<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Sci</span>"<span class="h">ence,</span>and Culture. (Table), <a href="#Page_842">842</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Sci</span>"<span class="h">ence,</span>Christian. The New Superstition. (Table), 557<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Sci</span>"<span class="h">ence,</span>Education in. (Words of a Master.) (Table), 699<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Sci</span>"<span class="h">ence,</span>Mivart's Groundwork of. W. K. Brooks, 450<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Sci</span>"<span class="h">ence,</span>The Advance of. (Table), 415<br />
+<br />
+Scientific Instruction, A Short History of. J. N. Lockyer, 372, 529<br />
+<br />
+Scorpion, My Pet. Norman Robinson*, 605<br />
+<br />
+Seasons of the Year, The. Grant Allen, 230<br />
+<br />
+Seeds, Dispersal of. (Frag.), 715<br />
+<br />
+Series Method, The. A Comparison. Charlotte Taylor, 537<br />
+<br />
+Shinn, Charles Howard. The California Penal System*, 644<br />
+<br />
+Siamese Geological Theory, A. (Frag.), 718<br />
+<br />
+Silkworm Gut, Spanish. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_860">860</a><br />
+<br />
+Simms, Joseph. Brain Weights and Intellectual Capacity, 243<br />
+<br />
+Skeena River, Up the. George A. Dorsey*, 181<br />
+<br />
+Smell, The Physics of. (Frag.), 283<br />
+<br />
+Smith, Franklin. Politics as a Form of Civil War, 588<br />
+<br />
+Smith, Stephen. Vegetation a Remedy for the Summer Heat of Cities*, 433<br />
+<br />
+Social Decadence, An Example of. (Table), 412<br />
+<br />
+Sociology. California Penal System. C. H. Shinn*, 644<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Socio</span>"<span class="h">logy.</span>Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. M. W. Barr*, <a href="#Page_746">746</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Socio</span>"<span class="h">logy.</span>Politics as a Form of Civil War. F. Smith, 588<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_873" id="Page_873">[Pg 873]</a></span><span class="h">Socio</span>"<span class="h">logy.</span>The Foundation of. (Giddings.) (Corr.), 553<br />
+<br />
+Soils and Fertilizers. C. M. Blackford, Jr., 392<br />
+<br />
+South Sea Whaler, Life on a. F. T. Bullen, <a href="#Page_818">818</a><br />
+<br />
+Spain's Decadence, The Cause of. (Table), 122<br />
+<br />
+Speleology, or Cave Exploration. M. E. A. Martel, 255<br />
+<br />
+Spencer, Herbert. What is Social Evolution?, 35<br />
+<br />
+Spirit of Conquest, The. J. Novicow, 518<br />
+<br />
+Stone Age in Egypt, The. J. de Morgan, 202<br />
+<br />
+Submarine Telegraphy, Early. (Frag.), 569<br />
+<br />
+Superstition and Crime. E. P. Evans, 206<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Supers</span>"<span class="h">tition</span>Aboriginal, about Bones. (Frag.), 572<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">Supers</span>"<span class="h">tition</span>The New. (Table), 557<br />
+<br />
+Survival of the Fittest. (Table), <a href="#Page_844">844</a><br />
+<br />
+Switzerland, The Torrents of. E. B. Dawson, 46<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Taxation, Principles of. Hon. D. A. Wells, 319, 490, <a href="#Page_736">736</a><br />
+<br />
+Taylor, Charlotte. The Series Method, 537<br />
+<br />
+Throat and Ear, Care of the. W. Scheppegrell, <a href="#Page_791">791</a><br />
+<br />
+Toes in Walking, The. (Frag.), 429<br />
+<br />
+Trade Hunting, Scientific. (Frag.), 140<br />
+<br />
+Trait, A, Common to us all. (Frag.), 429<br />
+<br />
+Travel. Up the Skeena River. George A. Dorsey, 181<br />
+<br />
+Tree Planting in Arid Regions. (Frag.), 282<br />
+<br />
+Trees as Land Formers. (Frag.), <a href="#Page_858">858</a><br />
+<br />
+Trotter, Spencer. The Coming of the Catbird, <a href="#Page_772">772</a><br />
+<br />
+True Tales of Birds and Beasts. D. S. Jordan, 352<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Udden, J. A. A Geological Romance*, 222<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Varney, G. J. The Moon and the Weather. (Corr.), 118<br />
+<br />
+Vegetation a Remedy against the Summer Heat of Cities. Dr. S. Smith, 433<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+War, The "Hell" of. (Frag.), 718<br />
+<br />
+Wave Length and other Measurements. (Frag.), 137<br />
+<br />
+Wave Power, The Utilization of. (Frag.), 715<br />
+<br />
+Weasels, Concerning. W. E. Cram*, <a href="#Page_786">786</a><br />
+<br />
+Weir, J., Jr. The Herds of the Yellow Ant*, 75<br />
+<br />
+Wells, David Ames, Death of. (Table), 271<br />
+<br />
+<span class="h">We</span>"<span class="h">lls da</span>"<span class="h">vid a</span>"<span class="h">mes</span>Principles of Taxation, 319, 490, <a href="#Page_736">736</a><br />
+<br />
+West Indies, Physical Geography of. F. L. Oswald, <a href="#Page_802">802</a><br />
+<br />
+Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States. E. Atkinson, 145<br />
+<br />
+Wheat Problem, The, again. E. Atkinson, <a href="#Page_759">759</a><br />
+<br />
+White Lady Mountain, The. (Frag.), 569<br />
+<br />
+Whittle, C. L. The Science of Observation*, 456<br />
+<br />
+Willis, C. W. The Mongoose in Jamaica*, 86<br />
+<br />
+Wilson, L. L. W. Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School, 313<br />
+<br />
+Winds of the Sahara. (Frag.), 717<br />
+<br />
+Words of a Master. (Table), 699<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Yellow Ant, The Herds of the. J. Weir, Jr.*, 75<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><big>THE END.</big></p>
+
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> On Dreaming of the Dead. Psychological Review, September, 1895. In this paper I
+reported several cases showing the nature and evolution of dreams concerning dead friends.
+I have since received evidence from various friends and correspondents, scientific and unscientific,
+of both sexes, confirming my belief in a frequency of this type of dream. Professor
+Binet (L'Ann&eacute;e Psychologique, 1896) has also furnished a case in support of my view, and
+is seeking for further evidence.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> In Japan stories of the returning of the dead are very common. Lafcadio Hearn
+gives one as told by a Japanese which closely resembles the type of dream I am discussing.
+"A lover resolves to commit suicide on the grave of his sweetheart. He found her tomb
+and knelt before it and prayed and wept, and whispered to her that which he was about to
+do. And suddenly he heard her voice cry to him 'Anata!' and felt her hand upon his
+hand; and he turned and saw her kneeling beside him, smiling and beautiful as he remembered
+her, only a little pale. Then his heart leaped so that he could not speak for the
+wonder and the doubt and the joy of that moment. But she said: 'Do not doubt; it is
+really I. I am not dead. It was all a mistake. I was buried because my parents thought
+me dead&mdash;buried too soon. Yet you see I am not dead, not a ghost. It is I; do not
+doubt it!'"</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Many saints (Saint Ida, of Louvain, for example) claimed the power of rising into the
+air, and one asks one's self whether this faith may not be based on dream experiences mistranslated
+by a disordered brain. M. Raffaelli, the eminent French painter, who is subject
+to these sleeping experiences of floating on the air, confesses that they are so convincing
+that he has jumped out of bed on awaking and attempted to repeat the experience. "I
+need not tell you," he adds, "that I have never been able to succeed."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Other pains and discomforts&mdash;toothache, for instance&mdash;may, however, give rise to
+dreams of murder.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> It may be added that they also present evidence&mdash;to which attention has not, I
+believe, been previously called&mdash;in support of the James-Lange or physiological theory of
+emotion, according to which the element of bodily change in emotion is the cause and not
+the result of the emotion.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Wealth of Nations, vol. i, p. 112 (Rogers's edition).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Bastable. Public Finance, p. 181.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> "The old protectionist, with the stock arguments about the influence of the tariff upon
+wages and all the rest of it, is beginning to die out. He told us all he had to say about the
+'pauper labor' of Europe, by which he often meant the best educated and most skillful
+artisans of the world. We got tired of hearing about how the importer paid the tax, how
+it was Europe and England in particular that was all the time squeezing our lives out, till
+nearly all of us, being of English ancestry ourselves, wondered whether we, even, could be
+so good as we hoped we were, if we had sprung from something so essentially perverted
+and bad. We were told, too, that American tourists who went to Europe and spent money
+there which they ought to have squandered at home were not friends of their country, and
+that they did us a particularly hostile act when they brought clothing, statuary, or diamond
+rings back with them from foreign parts. A season of high prices was a real heaven, and
+wars and fires were good things because they destroyed property that would have to be
+replaced, and this would create that demand which, reacting on supply, would increase
+prices. To say that an article was cheap was to say that the political party in power was
+no longer worthy of public confidence. It was related that each government could make
+its people so rich, and the idea was thought to have been traced down from Henry C. Carey,
+that the rest of the world could be safely disregarded altogether.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Seriously, who believes any of this stuff nowadays? The protectionist is not reckoning
+with such popular impotency and stupidity. He believes in his fellow-man, and wants to
+give him a helping hand. He does not care what effect it has on England or Ireland. He
+is not sure that a protective tariff in and of itself will increase the wages of the workmen.
+He is even inclined to think that less wages and profits would do well enough for every
+man, if it were cheaper to live and there were not such extravagant demands upon every
+person from all sides&mdash;this without being a socialist. He is certain that 'a cheap coat'
+does not necessarily make 'a cheap man,' but the cheaper the coat the better it will be for
+the wearer. That is what we are all trying to do, improve our processes, increase our
+effective working power, which means, if you please, to make things cheaper."&mdash;<i>The Manufacturer</i>
+(organ of the Manufacturers' Club of Philadelphia).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> I have been permitted to review the detailed statements of the accounts of one of the
+great enterprises which I have called the manufacture of wheat on a large scale on various
+large farms, separated one from another but under one control, aggregating more than
+twenty thousand acres, in North Dakota. They are managed mainly from a long distance
+through agents and foremen, therefore at a relative disadvantage compared to a farmer
+owning his own land, acting as his own foreman, and saving heavily in expense. Such
+farmers, making no charge for their own time, are computed to have a cash advantage of
+one dollar an acre.
+</p>
+<p>
+A large part of this land has been cropped in wheat for twenty-four years, one farm of
+six thousand acres showing an average in excess of eighteen bushels per acre for the term
+of seventeen years. The details of the product of other farms are not given, but this may
+be considered a rule. Of course, this cropping can not be carried on indefinitely. The land
+is now being allowed to rest, and other crops, such as maize, oats, barley, millet, and timothy,
+are to some extent being raised in rotation, but not to the extent in which individual wheat
+farms are now passing into rotation, especially in Minnesota.
+</p>
+<p>
+In this enterprise the manufacture of wheat is the main purpose, but under the changed
+conditions on the small farms in Minnesota wheat is becoming rather the cash or excess
+crop in a rotation of four; at present, in North Dakota, wheat constitutes about three
+fourths the total product.
+</p>
+<p>
+In these accounts of this great farm are included all charges of every name and nature
+except what might be called the rent of land: the labor, the harvesting and thrashing, the
+general expense including the foreman and all other charges; the office expenses, the taxes,
+the insurance, and, when summer fallow is introduced, the cost of the summer fallow. Suffice
+it that these figures for 1898&mdash;a year of high charge for seed and one which yielded a fraction
+over the average in product&mdash;prove conclusively an average of all charges of less than five
+dollars an acre for the cost of the product. In different years under these conditions the
+cost of the wheat varies from a little over twenty cents to approximately thirty-five cents
+per bushel. The cost of oats, which are cultivated with the wheat mainly for use on the
+farms, ranges from ten to fifteen cents per bushel.
+</p>
+<p>
+These are facts. The pending question in this discussion is, How much land, occupied
+by owners but not now in use, is there in this section of the country on which similar
+results can be attained, with better results by individual farmers who possess mental energy
+and practical skill? The figures given by the chiefs of the agricultural experiment stations
+may rightly be taken in the solution of this question.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Prepared under the direction of
+the Delaware Valley Ornithological Club. By Witmer Stone. Philadelphia, 1894.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Stone. The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> See H. Le Poer. Influence of Number in Criminal Sentences. Harper's Weekly,
+May 14, 1896.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> From The Cruise of the Cachalot. By Frank T. Bullen. (Illustrated.) New York: D.
+Appleton and Company. Pp. 379.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Earth Sculpture, or the Origin of Land Forms. By James Geikie. New York: G. P. Putnam's
+Sons. Pp. 397. Price, $2.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> The Psychology of Peoples. By Gustave Le Bon. New York: The Macmillan Company.
+Pp. 236. Price, $1.50.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> A Text-Book of Mineralogy, with an Extended
+Treatise on Crystallography and Physical
+Mineralogy. By Edmund Salisbury Dana. New
+edition, entirely rewritten and enlarged. New
+York: John Wiley &amp; Sons. Pp. 593. $4.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> The Story of the Railroad. By Cy Warman.
+New York: D. Appleton and Company (Story of
+the West Series). Pp. 280. Price, $1.50.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Infinitesimal Analysis. By William Benjamin
+Smith. Vol. I. Elementary; Real Variables.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 352.
+$3.25.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> The Jubilee History of the Leeds Industrial
+Co-operative Society from 1847 to 1897. Traced
+Year by Year. By George Jacob Holyoake. Leeds
+(Eng.) Central Co-operative Office. Pp. 260.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<h2>Transcriber's Notes:</h2>
+
+
+<p>Obvious printer's errors have been repaired, other inconsistent
+spellings have been kept, including inconsistent use of hyphen (e.g.
+"co-operative" and "cooperative") and capitalisation (e.g. "Fresh-Water"
+and "Fresh-water").</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Appletons' Popular Science Monthly,
+April 1899, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE, APRIL 1899 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 44544-h.htm or 44544-h.zip *****
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,8609 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Appletons' Popular Science Monthly, April
+1899, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Appletons' Popular Science Monthly, April 1899
+ Volume LIV, No. 6, April 1899
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: William Jay Youmans
+
+Release Date: December 30, 2013 [EBook #44544]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE, APRIL 1899 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Judith Wirawan, Greg Bergquist, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by Biodiversity Heritage Library.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Established by Edward L. Youmans
+
+ APPLETONS'
+ POPULAR SCIENCE
+ MONTHLY
+
+ EDITED BY
+ WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS
+
+ VOL. LIV
+
+ NOVEMBER, 1898, TO APRIL, 1899
+
+ NEW YORK
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
+ 1899
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1899,
+ BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.
+
+
+
+
+VOL. LIV. ESTABLISHED BY EDWARD L. YOUMANS. NO. 6.
+
+APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.
+
+APRIL, 1899.
+
+_EDITED BY WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ I. The Stuff that Dreams are made of. By HAVELOCK ELLIS 721
+
+ II. The Best Methods of Taxation. By the Late Hon. DAVID A.
+ WELLS. Part I 736
+
+ III. Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. By MARTIN W.
+ BARR, M. D. (Illustrated.) 746
+
+ IV. The Wheat Problem again. By EDWARD ATKINSON 759
+
+ V. The Coming of the Catbird. By SPENCER TROTTER 772
+
+ VI. Guessing, as Influenced by Number Preferences. By F. B.
+ DRESSLAR 781
+
+ VII. Concerning Weasels. By WILLIAM E. CRAM. (Illustrated.) 786
+
+ VIII. Care of the Throat and Ear. By W. SCHEPPEGRELL, M. D. 791
+
+ IX. The Physical Geography of the West Indies. I. The Mammals
+ of the Antilles. By Dr. F. L. OSWALD 802
+
+ X. Iron in the Living Body. By M. A. DASTRE 807
+
+ XI. The Malay Language. By Prof. R. CLYDE FORD 813
+
+ XII. Life on a South Sea Whaler. By FRANK T. BULLEN 818
+
+ XIII. Sketch of Manly Miles. (With Portrait.) 834
+
+ XIV. Editor's Table: Science and Culture.--Survival of the
+ Fittest 842
+
+ XV. Scientific Literature 845
+
+ XVI. Fragments of Science 854
+
+ XVII. Index to Vol. LIV 865
+
+
+
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,
+ 72 FIFTH AVENUE.
+
+ SINGLE NUMBER, 50 CENTS. YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION, $5.00.
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1899, BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.
+
+ Entered at the Post Office at New York, and admitted for
+ transmission through the mails at second-class rates.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MANLY MILES.]
+
+
+
+
+APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.
+
+APRIL, 1899.
+
+
+
+
+THE STUFF THAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF.
+
+BY HAVELOCK ELLIS.
+
+
+In our dreams we are taken back into an earlier world. It is a world
+much more like that of the savage, the child, the criminal, the
+madman, than is the world of our respectable civilized waking life.
+That is, in large part, it must be confessed, the charm of dreams. It
+is also the reason of their scientific value. Through our dreams we
+may realize our relation to stages of evolution we have long left
+behind, and by the self-vivisection of our sleeping life we may learn
+to know something regarding the mind of primitive man and the source
+of some of his beliefs, thus throwing light on the facts we obtain by
+ethnographic research.
+
+This aspect of dreams has not always been kept steadily in sight,
+though it can no longer be said that the study of dreams is neglected.
+From one point of view or another--not only by the religious sect
+which, it appears, constitutes a "Dream Church" in Denmark, but by
+such carefully inquisitive investigators as those who have been
+trained under the inspiring influence of Prof. Stanley Hall--dreaming
+is seriously studied. I need not, therefore, apologize for the fact
+that I have during many years taken note from time to time and
+recorded the details and circumstances of vivid dreams when I could
+study their mechanism immediately on awakening, and that I have
+occupied myself, not with the singularities and marvels of
+dreaming--of which, indeed, I know little or nothing--but with their
+simplest and most general laws and tendencies. A few of these laws and
+tendencies I wish to set forth and illustrate. The interest of such a
+task is twofold. It not only reveals to us an archaic world of vast
+emotions and imperfect thoughts, but by helping us to attain a clear
+knowledge of the ordinary dream processes, it enables us in advance to
+deal with many of the extraordinary phenomena of dreaming, sometimes
+presented to us by wonder-loving people as awesomely mysterious, if
+not indeed supernatural. The careful analysis of mere ordinary dreams
+frequently gives us the key to these abnormal dreams.
+
+Perhaps the chief and most frequent tendency in the mechanism of
+dreaming is that by which isolated impressions from waking life flow
+together in dreams to be welded into a whole. There is then produced,
+in the strictest sense, a confusion. For instance, a lady, who in the
+course of the day has admired a fine baby and bought a big fish for
+dinner, dreams with horror and surprise of finding a fully developed
+baby in a large codfish. The confusion may be more remote, embodying
+abstract ideas and without reference to recent impressions. Thus I
+dreamed that my wife was expounding to me a theory by which the
+substitution of slates for tiles in roofing had been accompanied by,
+and intimately associated with, the growing diminution of crime in
+England. Amid my wife's rather contemptuous opposition, I opposed this
+theory, pointing out the picturesqueness of tiles, their cheapness,
+greater comfort both in winter and summer, but at the same time it
+occurred to me as a peculiar coincidence that tiles should have a
+sanguinary tinge suggestive of criminal bloodthirstiness. I need
+scarcely say that this bizarre theory had never suggested itself to my
+waking thoughts. There was, however, a real connecting link in the
+confusion--the redness--and it is a noteworthy point, of great
+significance in the interpretation of dreams, that that link, although
+clearly active from the first, remained subconscious until the end of
+the dream, when it presented itself as an entirely novel coincidence.
+
+The best simile for the mechanism of the most usual type of dream
+phenomena is the magic lantern. Our dreams are like dissolving views
+in which the dissolving process is carried on swiftly or slowly, but
+always uninterruptedly, so that, at any moment, two (often indeed
+more) incongruous pictures are presented to consciousness which
+strives to make one whole of them, and sometimes succeeds and is
+sometimes baffled. Or we may say that the problem presented to
+dreaming consciousness resembles that experiment in which
+psychologists pronounce three wholly unconnected words, and require
+the subject to combine them at once in a connected sentence. It is
+unnecessary to add that such analogies fail to indicate the subtle
+complexity of the apparatus which is at work in the manufacture of
+dreams.
+
+It is the presence of the strife I have just referred to between
+apparently irreconcilable groups of images, in the effort of
+overcoming the critical skepticism of sleeping consciousness--a feeble
+skepticism, it may be, but, as many people do not seem to recognize,
+a real skepticism--that the impressive emotional effects of dreams are
+often displayed. It sometimes happens that two irreconcilable groups
+of impressions reach sleeping consciousness, one flowing from a recent
+stratum of memories, the other from an older stratum. A typical form
+of this phenomenon often occurs in our dreams of dead friends.
+Professor Sully remarks that in dreams of the dead "awareness of the
+fact of death wholly disappears, or reduces itself to a vague feeling
+of something delightfully wonderful in the restored presence." That,
+however, as I have elsewhere shown,[1] is not the typical process in
+dreaming of the dead; although in the later dreams of those who often
+see their dead friends during sleep, the process is abbreviated, and
+the friend's presence is accepted without a struggle--a very
+interesting point, for it tends to show that in dreams, as in the
+hypnotic state, the recollection of previous similar states of
+consciousness persists, and the illusion is strengthened by
+repetition.
+
+In typical dreams of a dead friend there is a struggle between that
+stream of recent memories which represents him as dead and that older
+stream which represents him as living. These two streams are
+inevitably caused by the fact of death, which sets up a barrier
+between them and renders one set of memories incongruous with the
+other set. In dreams we are not able to arrange our memories
+chronologically, but we are perpetually reasoning and striving to be
+logical. Consequently the two conflicting streams of memories break
+against each other in restless conflict, and sleeping consciousness
+endeavors to propound some theory which will reconcile them. The most
+frequent theories are, as I have found, either that the news of the
+friend's death was altogether false, or that he had been buried alive
+by mistake, or else that having really died his soul has returned to
+earth for a brief space. The mental and emotional conflict which such
+dreams involve renders them very vivid. They make a profound
+impression even after awakening, and for some sensitive persons are
+too sacred to speak of. Even so cautious and skeptical a thinker as
+Renan, when, after the death of his beloved sister Henriette, he
+dreamed more than once that she had been buried alive, and that he
+heard her voice calling to him from her grave, had to still his
+horrible suspicions by the consideration that she had been tended by
+experienced doctors. On less well-balanced minds, and more especially
+in primitive stages of civilization, we can scarcely doubt that such
+dreams, resting as they do on the foundation of consciousness, have
+had a powerful influence in persuading man that death is but a
+transient fact, and that the soul is independent of the body. I do not
+wish to assert that they suffice to originate the belief.[2]
+
+While dreams are thus often formed by the molding together of more or
+less congruous images by a feeble but still intelligent sleeping
+activity, another factor is to be found in the involuntary wavering
+and perpetually mere meaningless change of dream imagery. Such
+concentration as is possible during sleep always reveals a shifting,
+oscillating, uncertain movement of the vision before us. We are, as it
+were, reading a sign-post in the dusk, or making guesses at the names
+of the stations as our express train flashes by the painted letters.
+Any one who has ever been subject to the hypnagogic imagery sometimes
+seen in the half-waking state, or who has ever taken mescal, knows
+that it is absolutely impossible to fix an image. It is this factor in
+dreams which causes them so often to baffle our analysis. In addition
+to the mere, as it were, mechanical flowing together of images and
+ideas, and the more or less intelligent molding of them into a whole,
+there is thus a failure of sleeping attention to fix definitely the
+final result--a failure which itself may evidently serve to carry on
+the dream process by suggesting new images and combinations. I dreamed
+once that I was with a doctor in his surgery, and saw in his hand a
+note from a patient saying that doctors were fools and did him no
+good, but he had lately taken some _selvdrolla_, recommended by a
+friend, and it had done him more good than anything, so please send
+him some more. I saw the note clearly, not, indeed, being conscious of
+reading it word by word, but only of its meaning as I looked at it;
+the one word I actually seemed to see, letter by letter, was the name
+of the drug, and that changed and fluctuated beneath my vision as I
+gazed at it, the final impression being _selvdrolla_. The doctor took
+from a shelf a bottle containing a bright yellow oleaginous fluid, and
+poured a little out, remarking that it had lately come into favor,
+especially in uric-acid disorders, but was extremely expensive. I
+expressed my surprise, having never before heard of it. Then, again to
+my surprise, he poured rather copiously from the bottle on to a plate
+of food, saying, in explanation, that it was pleasant to take and not
+dangerous. This was a vivid morning dream, and on awakening I had no
+difficulty in detecting the source of its various minor details,
+especially a note received on the previous evening and containing a
+dubious figure, the precise nature of which I had used my pocket lens
+to determine. But what was _selvdrolla_, the most vivid element of the
+dream? I sought vainly among my recent memories, and had almost
+renounced the search when I recalled a large bottle of salad oil seen
+on the supper table the previous evening; not, indeed, resembling the
+dream bottle, but containing a precisely similar fluid. _Selvdrolla_
+was evidently a corruption of "salad oil." I select this dream to
+illustrate the uncertainty of dream consciousness, because it also
+illustrates at the same time the element of certainty in dream
+_subconsciousness_. Throughout my dream I remained, consciously, in
+entire ignorance as to the real nature of _selvdrolla_, yet a latent
+element in consciousness was all the time presenting it to me in
+ever-clearer imagery.
+
+While the confusions of dreaming are usually the union of unconnected
+streams of imagery which have, as it were, come from widely remote
+parts of the memory system to strike together at the narrow focus of
+shaping consciousness, in some rarer cases the fused images are really
+suggested by analogy and are not accidental. Maury records successions
+of dream imagery strung together by verbal resemblances; I have found
+such dreams rare, but other forms of association fairly common. Thus I
+once dreamed that I was with a dentist who was about to extract a
+tooth from a patient. Before applying the forceps he remarked to me
+(at the same time setting fire to a perfumed cloth at the end of
+something like a broomstick in order to dissipate the unpleasant odor)
+that it was the largest tooth he had ever seen. When extracted I found
+that it was indeed enormous, in the shape of a caldron, with walls an
+inch thick. Taking from my pocket a tape measure (such as I always
+carry in waking life) I founds the diameter to be not less than
+twenty-five inches; the interior was like roughly hewn rock, and there
+were sea-weeds and lichenlike growths within. The size of the tooth
+seemed to me large, but not extraordinarily so. It is well known that
+pain in the teeth, or the dentist's manipulations, cause those organs
+to seem of extravagant extent; in dreams this tendency rules
+unchecked; thus a friend once dreamed that mice were playing about in
+a cavity in her tooth. But for the dream first quoted there was no
+known dental origin; it arose solely or chiefly from a walk during the
+previous afternoon among the rocks of the Cornish coast at low tide,
+and the fantastic analogy, which had not occurred to waking
+consciousness, suggested itself during sleep.
+
+The following dream illustrates an association of quite a different
+order: I imagined I was sitting at a window, at the top of a house,
+writing. As I looked up from my table I saw, with all the emotions
+naturally accompanying such a sight, a woman in her night dress appear
+at a lofty window some distance off and throw herself down. I went on
+writing, however, and found that in the course of my literary
+employment--I am not clear as to its precise nature--the very next
+thing I had to do was to describe exactly such a scene as I had just
+witnessed. I was extremely puzzled at such an extraordinary
+coincidence: it seemed to me wholly inexplicable. Such dreams,
+reduplicating the imagery in a new sensory medium, are fairly common,
+with me at all events, though I can not easily explain them. The
+association is not so much of analogy as of sensory media, in this
+case the visual image becoming a verbal motor image. In other cases a
+scene is first seen as in reality, and then in a picture. It is
+interesting to observe the profound astonishment with which sleeping
+consciousness apperceives such simple reduplication.
+
+It sometimes happens that the confused imagery of dreams includes
+elements drawn from forgotten memories--that is to say, that sleeping
+consciousness can draw on faint impressions of the past which waking
+consciousness is unable to reach. This is a very important type of
+dream because of its bearing on the explanation of certain dream
+phenomena which we are sometimes asked to bow down before as
+supernatural. I may illustrate what I mean by the following very
+instructive case. I woke up recalling the chief items of a rather
+vivid dream: I had imagined myself in a large old house, where the
+furniture, though of good quality, was ancient, and the chairs
+threatened to give way as one sat on them. The place belonged to one
+Sir Peter Bryan, a hale old gentleman who was accompanied by his son
+and grandson. There was a question of my buying the place from him,
+and I was very complimentary to the old gentleman's appearance of
+youthfulness, absurdly affecting not to know which was the grandfather
+and which the grandson. On awaking I said to myself that here was a
+purely imaginative dream, quite unsuggested by any definite
+experiences. But when I began to recall the trifling incidents of the
+previous day I realized that that was far from being the case. So far
+from the dream having been a pure effort of imagination I found that
+every minute item could be traced to some separate source. The name of
+Sir Peter Bryan alone completely baffled me; I could not even recall
+that I had at that time ever heard of any one called Bryan. I
+abandoned the search and made my notes of the dream and its sources. I
+had scarcely done so when I chanced to take up a volume of
+biographies which I had glanced through carelessly the day before. I
+found that it contained, among others, the lives of Lord
+_Peter_borough and George _Bryan_ Brummel. I had certainly seen those
+names the day before; yet before I took up the book once again it
+would have been impossible for me to recall the exact name of Beau
+Brummel, and I should have been inclined to say that I had never even
+heard the name of Bryan. I repeat that I regard this as,
+psychologically, a most instructive dream. It rarely happens (though I
+could give one or two more examples from the experience of friends)
+that we can so clearly and definitely demonstrate the presence of a
+forgotten memory in a dream; in the case of old memories it is usually
+impossible. It so happened that the forgotten memory which in this
+case re-emerged to sleeping consciousness was a fact of no consequence
+to myself or any one else. But if it had been the whereabouts of a
+lost deed or a large sum of money, and I had been able to declare, as
+in this case, that the impression received in my dream had never to my
+knowledge existed in waking consciousness, and yet were to declare my
+faith that the dream probably had a simple and natural explanation, on
+every hand I should be sarcastically told that there is no credulity
+to match the credulity of the skeptic.
+
+The profound emotions of waking life, the questions and problems on
+which we spread our chief voluntary mental energy, are not those which
+usually present themselves at once to dream consciousness. It is, so
+far as the immediate past is concerned, mostly the trifling, the
+incidental, the "forgotten" impressions of daily life which reappear
+in our dreams. The psychic activities that are awake most intensely
+are those that sleep most profoundly. If we preserve the common image
+of the "stream of consciousness," we might say that the grave facts of
+life sink too deeply into the flood to reappear at once in the calm of
+repose, while the mere light and buoyant trifles of life, flung
+carelessly in during the day, at once rise to the surface, to dance
+and mingle and evolve in ways that this familiar image of "the stream
+of consciousness" will not further help us to picture.
+
+So far I have been discussing only one of the great groups into which
+dreams may be divided. Most investigators of dreams agree that there
+are two such groups, the one having its basis in memories, the other
+founded on actual physical sensations experienced at the moment of
+dreaming and interpreted by sleeping consciousness. Various names have
+been given to these two groups; Sully, for instance, terms them
+central and peripheral. Perhaps the best names, however, are those
+adopted by Miss Calkins, who calls the first group representative, the
+second group presentative.
+
+All writers on dreaming have brought forward presentative dreams, and
+there can be no doubt that impressions received during sleep from any
+of the external senses may serve as a basis for dreams. I need only
+record one example to illustrate this main and most obvious group of
+presentative dreams. I dreamed that I was listening to a performance
+of Haydn's Creation, the chief orchestral part of the performance
+seeming to consist chiefly of the very realistic representation of the
+song of birds, though I could not identify the note of any particular
+bird. Then followed solos by male singers, whom I saw, especially one
+who attracted my attention by singing at the close in a scarcely
+audible voice. On awakening the source of the dream was not
+immediately obvious, but I soon realized that it was the song of a
+canary in another room. I had never heard Haydn's Creation, except in
+fragments, nor thought of it at any recent period; its reputation as
+regards the realistic representation of natural sounds had evidently
+caused it to be put forward by sleeping consciousness as a plausible
+explanation of the sounds heard, and the visual centers had accepted
+the theory.
+
+It is a familiar fact that internal sensations also form a frequent
+basis of dreams. All the internal organs, when disturbed or distended
+or excited, may induce dreams, and especially that aggravated kind of
+dreaming which we call nightmare. This fact is so well known that such
+dreams are usually dismissed without further analysis. It is a
+mistake, however, so to dismiss them, for it seems probable that it is
+precisely here that we may find the most instructive field of dream
+psychology. On account of the profoundly emotional effect of such
+dreams they are very interesting to study, but this very element of
+emotion renders them somewhat obscure objects of study. I do not
+venture to offer with absolute certainty one or two novel suggestions
+which dream experiences have led me to regard as probable.
+
+Dreams of flying have so often been recorded--from the time of St.
+Jerome, who mentions that he was subject to them--that they may fairly
+be considered to constitute one of the commonest forms of dreaming.
+All my life, it seems to me, I have at intervals had such dreams in
+which I imagined myself rhythmically bounding into the air and
+supported on the air. These dreams, in my case at all events, are not
+generally remembered immediately on awakening (seeming to indicate
+that they depend on a cause which does not usually come into action at
+the end of sleep), but they leave behind them a vague but profound
+sense of belief in their reality and reasonableness.[3] Several
+writers have attempted to explain this familiar phenomenon. Gowers
+considers that a spontaneous contraction of the stapedius muscle of
+the ear during sleep causes a sensation of falling. Stanley Hall, who
+has himself from childhood had dreams of flying, boldly argues that we
+have here "some faint reminiscent atavistic echo from the primeval
+sea"; and that such dreams are really survivals--psychic vestigial
+remains--taking us back to the far past, in which man's ancestors
+needed no feet to swim or float. Such a theory may accord with the
+profound conviction of reality that accompanies such dreams, though
+this may be more simply accounted for, even by mere repetition, as
+with dreams of the dead; but it is rather a hazardous theory, and it
+seems to me infinitely more probable that such dreams are a
+misinterpretation of actual internal sensations.
+
+My own explanation was immediately suggested by the following dream. I
+dreamed that I was watching a girl acrobat, in appropriate costume,
+who was rhythmically rising to a great height in the air and then
+falling, without touching the floor, though each time she approached
+quite close to it. At last she ceased, exhausted and perspiring, and
+had to be led away. Her movements were not controlled by mechanism,
+and apparently I did not regard mechanism as necessary. It was a vivid
+dream, and I awoke with a distinct sensation of oppression in the
+chest. In trying to account for this dream, which was not founded on
+any memory, it occurred to me that probably I had here the key to a
+great group of dreams. The rhythmic rising and falling of the acrobat
+was simply the objectivation of the rhythmic rising and falling of my
+own respiratory muscles under the influence of some slight and unknown
+physical oppression, and this oppression was further translated into a
+condition of perspiring exhaustion in the girl, just as it is recorded
+that a man with heart disease dreamed habitually of sweating and
+panting horses climbing up hill. We may recall also the curious
+sensation as of the body being transformed into a vast bellows which
+is often the last sensation felt before the unconsciousness produced
+by nitrous oxide gas. When we are lying down there is a real rhythmic
+rising and falling of the chest and abdomen, centering in the
+diaphragm, a series of oscillations which at both extremes are only
+limited by the air. Moreover, in this position we have to recognize
+that the whole internal organism--the circulatory, nervous, and other
+systems--are differently balanced from what they are in the upright
+position, and that a disturbance of internal equilibrium
+always accompanies falling. Further, it is possible that the
+misinterpretation is confirmed to sleeping consciousness by sensations
+from without, by the absence of the tactile pressure produced by
+boots on the foot, or the contact of the ground with the soles; we are
+at once conscious of movement and conscious that the soles of the feet
+are in contact only with the air. Thus in normal sleep the conditions
+may be said to be always favorable for producing dreams of flying or
+of floating in the air, and any slight thoracic disturbance, even in
+healthy persons, arising from lungs, heart, or stomach, and serving to
+bring these conditions to sleeping consciousness, may determine such a
+dream.
+
+There is another common class of dreams which, it seems fairly evident
+to me, must also find their psychological explanation chiefly in the
+visceral sensations--I mean dreams of murder. Many psychologists have
+referred with profound concern to the facility and prevalence of
+murder in dreams, sometimes as a proof of the innate wickedness of
+human nature made manifest in the unconstraint of sleep, sometimes as
+evidence of an atavistic return to the modes of feeling of our
+ancestors, the thin veneer of civilization being removed during sleep.
+Maudsley and Mme. de Manaceine, for example, find evidence in such
+dreams of a return to primitive modes of feeling. It may well be that
+there is some element of truth in this view, but even if so we still
+have to account for the production of such dreams. For this we must,
+in part at least, fall back upon the logical outcome of dream
+confusions, owing to which, for instance, a lady who has carved a duck
+at dinner may a few hours later wake up exhausted by the imaginary
+effort of cutting off her husband's head. But I think we may find
+evidence that the dream of murder is often a falsely logical deduction
+from abnormal visceral and especially digestive sensations.
+
+I may illustrate such dreams by the following example: A lady dreamed
+that her husband called her aside and said: "Now, do not scream or
+make a fuss; I am going to tell you something. I have to kill a man.
+It is necessary, to put him out of his agony." He then took her into
+his study and showed her a young man lying on the floor with a wound
+in his breast, and covered with blood. "But how will you do it?" she
+asked. "Never mind," he replied, "leave that to me." He took something
+up and leaned over the man. She turned aside and heard a horrible
+gurgling sound. Then all was over. "Now," he said, "we must get rid of
+the body. I want you to send for So-and-so's cart, and tell him I wish
+to drive it." The cart came. "You must help me to make the body into a
+parcel," he said to his wife; "give me plenty of brown paper." They
+made it into a parcel, and with terrible difficulty and effort the
+wife assisted her husband to get the body down stairs and lift it into
+the cart. At every stage, however, she presented to him the
+difficulties of the situation. But he carelessly answered all
+objections, said he would take the body up to the moor, among the
+stones, remove the brown paper, and people would think the murdered
+man had killed himself. He drove off and soon returned with the empty
+cart. "What's this blood in my cart?" asked the man to whom it
+belonged, looking inside. "Oh, that's only paint," replied the
+husband. But the dreamer had all along been full of apprehension lest
+the deed should be discovered, and the last thing she could recall,
+before waking in terror, was looking out of the window at a large
+crowd which surrounded the house with shouts of "Murder!" and threats.
+
+This tragedy, with its almost Elizabethan air, was built up out of a
+few commonplace impressions received during the previous day, none of
+which impressions contained any suggestion of murder. The tragic
+element appears to have been altogether due to the psychic influences
+of indigestion arising from a supper of pheasant. To account for our
+oppression during sleep, sleeping consciousness assumes moral causes
+which alone appear to it of sufficient gravity to be the adequate
+cause of the immense emotions we are experiencing. Even in our waking
+and fully conscious states we are inclined to give the preference to
+moral over physical causes, quite irrespective of the justice of our
+preferences; in our sleeping states this tendency is exaggerated, and
+the reign of purely moral causes is not disturbed by even a suggestion
+of mere physical causation.
+
+There is certainly no profounder emotional excitement during sleep
+than that which arises from a disturbed or distended stomach, and is
+reflected by the pneumogastric to the accelerated heart and the
+impeded respiration.[4] We are thereby thrown into a state of
+uninhibited emotional agitation, a state of agony and terror such as
+we rarely or never attain during waking life. Sleeping consciousness,
+blindfolded and blundering, a prey to these massive waves from below,
+and fumbling about desperately for some explanation, jumps at the idea
+that only the attempt to escape some terrible danger or the guilty
+consciousness of some awful crime can account for this immense
+emotional uproar. Thus the dream is suffused by a conviction which the
+continued emotion serves to support. We do not--it seems most simple
+and reasonable to conclude--experience terror because we think we have
+committed a crime, but we think we have committed a crime because we
+experience terror. And the fact that in such dreams we are far more
+concerned with escape from the results of crime than with any agony of
+remorse is not, as some have thought, due to our innate indifference
+to crime, but simply to the fact that our emotional state suggests to
+us active escape from danger rather than the more passive grief of
+remorse. Thus our dreams bear witness to the fact that our
+intelligence is often but a tool in the hands of our emotions.[5]
+
+I have had frequent occasion to refer to the objectivation of
+subjective sensations as a phenomenon of dreaming. It is, indeed, so
+frequent and so important a phenomenon that it needs some further
+reference. In hysteria (which by some of the most recent authorities,
+like Sollier, is regarded as a species of somnambulism), in
+"demon-possession," and many other abnormal phenomena it is well known
+that there is, as it were, a doubling of personality; the _ego_ is
+split up into two or more parts, each of which may act as a separate
+personality. The literature of morbid psychology is full of
+extraordinary and varied cases exhibiting this splitting up of
+personality. But it is usually forgotten that in dreams the doubling
+of personality is a normal and constant phenomenon in all healthy
+people. In dreaming we can divide our body between ourselves and
+another person. Thus a medical friend dreamed that in conversation
+with a lady patient he found his hand resting on her knee and was
+unable to remove it; awakening in horror from this unprofessional
+situation he found his own hand firmly clasped between his knees; the
+hand had remained his own, the knee had become another person's, the
+hand being claimed, rather than the knee, on account of its greater
+tactile sensibility. Again, we sometimes objectify our own physical
+discomforts felt during sleep in the emotions of some other person, or
+even in some external situations. And, possibly, every dream in which
+there is any dramatic element is an instance of the same splitting up
+of personality; in our dreams we may experience shame or confusion
+from the rebuke or the arguments of other persons, but the persons who
+administer the rebuke or apply the argument are still ourselves.
+
+When we consider that this dream process, with its perpetual
+dramatization of our own personality, has been going on as long as man
+has been man--and probably much longer, for it is evident that animals
+dream--it is impossible to overestimate its immense influence on human
+belief. Men's primitive conceptions of religion, of morals, of many of
+the mightiest phenomena of life, especially the more exceptional
+phenomena, have certainly been influenced by this constant dream
+experience. It is the universal primitive explanation of abnormal
+psychic and even physical phenomena that some other person or spirit
+is working within the subject of the abnormal experience. Certainly
+dreaming is not the sole source of such conceptions, but they could
+scarcely have been found convincing, and possibly could not ever have
+arisen, among races who were wholly devoid of dream experiences. A
+large part of all progress in psychological knowledge, and, indeed, a
+large part of civilization itself, lies in realizing that the
+apparently objective is really subjective, that the angels and demons
+and geniuses of all sorts that seemed at first to take possession of
+the feeble and vacant individuality are themselves but modes of action
+of marvelously rich and varied personalities. But in our dreams we are
+brought back into the magic circle of early culture, and we shrink and
+shudder in the presence of imaginative phantoms that are built up of
+our own thoughts and emotions, and are really our own flesh.
+
+There is one other general characteristic of dreams that is worth
+noting, because its significance is not usually recognized. In dreams
+we are always reasoning. It is sometimes imagined that reason is in
+abeyance during sleep. So far from this being the case, we may almost
+be said to reason much more during sleep than when we are awake. That
+our reasoning is bad, even preposterous, that it constantly ignores
+the most elementary facts of waking life, scarcely affects the
+question. All dreaming is a process of reasoning. That artful
+confusion of ideas and images which at the outset I referred to as the
+most constant feature of dream mechanism is nothing but a process of
+reasoning, a perpetual effort to argue out harmoniously the absurdly
+limited and incongruous data present to sleeping consciousness. Binet,
+grounding his conclusions on hypnotic experiments, has very justly
+determined that reasoning is the fundamental part of all thinking, the
+very texture of thought. It is founded on perception itself, which
+already contains all the elements of the ancient syllogism. For in all
+perception, as he shows, there is a succession of three images, of
+which the first fuses with the second, which in its turn suggests the
+third. Now this establishment of new associations, this construction
+of images, which, as we may easily convince ourselves, is precisely
+what takes place in dreaming, is reasoning itself.
+
+Reasoning is a synthesis of images suggested by resemblance and
+contiguity, indeed a sort of logical vision, more intense even than
+actual vision, since it produces hallucinations. To reasoning all
+forms of mental activity may finally be reduced; mind, as Wundt has
+said, is a thing that reasons. When we apply these general statements
+to dreaming, we may see that the whole phenomenon of dreaming is
+really the same process of image-formation, based on resemblance and
+contiguity, which is at the basis of reasoning. Every dream is the
+outcome of this strenuous, wide-ranging instinct to reason. The
+supposed "imaginative faculty," regarded as so highly active during
+sleep, is simply the inevitable play of this automatic logic. The
+characteristic of the reasoning of dreams is that it is unusually bad,
+and this badness is due chiefly to the absence of memory elements that
+would be present to waking consciousness, and to the absence of
+sensory elements to check the false reasoning which without them
+appears to us conclusive. That is to say--to fall back on the
+excellent generalization which Parish has elaborately applied to all
+forms of hallucination--there is a process of dissociation by which
+ordinary channels of association are temporarily blocked and the
+conditions prepared for the formation of the hallucination. It is, as
+Parish has argued, in sleep and in those sleep-resembling states
+called hypnagogic that a condition of dissociation leading to
+hallucination is most apt to occur.
+
+The following dream illustrates the part played by dissociation: A
+lady dreamed that an acquaintance wished to send a small sum of money
+to a person in Ireland. She rashly offered to take it over to Ireland.
+On arriving home she began to repent of her promise, as the weather
+was extremely wild and cold. She began, however, to make preparations
+for dressing warmly, and went to consult an Irish friend, who said she
+would have to be floated over to Ireland tightly jammed in a crab
+basket. On returning home she fully discussed the matter with her
+husband, who thought it would be folly to undertake such a journey,
+and she finally relinquished it, with great relief. In this dream--the
+elements of which could all be accounted for--the association between
+sending money and postal orders which would at once occur to waking
+consciousness was closed; consciousness was a prey to such suggestions
+as reached it, but on the basis of these suggestions it reasoned and
+concluded quite sagaciously. The phenomena of dreaming furnish a
+delightful illustration of the fact that reasoning, in its rough form,
+is only the crudest and most elementary form of intellectual
+operation, and that the finer forms of thinking only become possible
+when we hold in check this tendency to reason. "All the thinking in
+the world," as Goethe puts it, "will not lead us to thought."
+
+It is in such characteristics as these--at once primitive, childlike,
+and insane--that we may find the charm of dreaming. In our sleeping
+emotional life we are much more like ourselves than we are in our
+sleeping intellectual life. It is a mistake to imagine that our moral
+and aesthetic instincts are abolished in dreams; they are often
+weakened, but by no means abolished. Such a result is natural when we
+remember that our emotions and instincts are both more primitive and
+less under the dominion of the external senses than are our ideas. Yet
+in both respects we are removed a stage backward in our dreams.
+The emotional intensity, the absurd logic, the tendency to
+personification--nearly all the points I have referred to as
+characterizing our dreams--are the characteristics of the child, the
+savage, and the madman. Time and space are annihilated, gravity is
+suspended, and we are joyfully borne up in the air, as it were, in the
+arms of angels; we are brought into a deeper communion with Nature,
+and in his dreams a man will listen to the arguments of his dog with
+as little surprise as Balaam heard the reproaches of his ass. The
+unexpected limitations of our dream world, the exclusion of so many
+elements which are present even unconsciously in waking life, imparts
+a splendid freedom and ease to the intellectual operations of the
+sleeping mind, and an extravagant romance, a poignant tragedy, to our
+emotions. "He has never known happiness," said Lamb, speaking out of
+his own experience, "who has never been mad." And there are many who
+taste in dreams a happiness they never know when awake. In the waking
+moments of our complex civilized life we are ever in a state of
+suspense which makes all great conclusions impossible; the
+multiplicity of the facts of life, always present to consciousness,
+restrains the free play of logic (except for that happy dreamer, the
+mathematician) and surrounds most of our pains and nearly all our
+pleasures with infinite qualifications; we are tied down to a sober
+tameness. In our dreams the fetters of civilization are loosened, and
+we know the fearful joy of freedom.
+
+At the same time it is these characteristics which make dreams a fit
+subject of serious study. It was not until the present century that
+the psychological importance of the study of insanity was recognized.
+So recent is the study of savage mind that the workers who have laid
+its foundation are yet all living. The systematic investigation of
+children only began yesterday. To-day our dreams begin to seem to us
+an allied subject of study, inasmuch as they reveal within ourselves a
+means of entering sympathetically into ideas and emotional attitudes
+belonging to narrow or ill-adjusted states of consciousness which
+otherwise we are now unable to experience. And they have this further
+value, that they show us how many abnormal phenomena--possession,
+double consciousness, unconscious memory, and so forth--which have
+often led the ignorant and unwary to many strange conclusions, really
+have a simple explanation in the healthy normal experience of all of
+us during sleep. Here, also, it is true that we ourselves and our
+beliefs are to some extent "such stuff as dreams are made of."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] On Dreaming of the Dead. Psychological Review, September, 1895. In
+this paper I reported several cases showing the nature and evolution
+of dreams concerning dead friends. I have since received evidence from
+various friends and correspondents, scientific and unscientific, of
+both sexes, confirming my belief in a frequency of this type of dream.
+Professor Binet (L'Annee Psychologique, 1896) has also furnished a
+case in support of my view, and is seeking for further evidence.
+
+[2] In Japan stories of the returning of the dead are very common.
+Lafcadio Hearn gives one as told by a Japanese which closely resembles
+the type of dream I am discussing. "A lover resolves to commit suicide
+on the grave of his sweetheart. He found her tomb and knelt before it
+and prayed and wept, and whispered to her that which he was about to
+do. And suddenly he heard her voice cry to him 'Anata!' and felt her
+hand upon his hand; and he turned and saw her kneeling beside him,
+smiling and beautiful as he remembered her, only a little pale. Then
+his heart leaped so that he could not speak for the wonder and the
+doubt and the joy of that moment. But she said: 'Do not doubt; it is
+really I. I am not dead. It was all a mistake. I was buried because my
+parents thought me dead--buried too soon. Yet you see I am not dead,
+not a ghost. It is I; do not doubt it!'"
+
+[3] Many saints (Saint Ida, of Louvain, for example) claimed the power
+of rising into the air, and one asks one's self whether this faith may
+not be based on dream experiences mistranslated by a disordered brain.
+M. Raffaelli, the eminent French painter, who is subject to these
+sleeping experiences of floating on the air, confesses that they are
+so convincing that he has jumped out of bed on awaking and attempted
+to repeat the experience. "I need not tell you," he adds, "that I have
+never been able to succeed."
+
+[4] Other pains and discomforts--toothache, for instance--may,
+however, give rise to dreams of murder.
+
+[5] It may be added that they also present evidence--to which
+attention has not, I believe, been previously called--in support of
+the James-Lange or physiological theory of emotion, according to which
+the element of bodily change in emotion is the cause and not the
+result of the emotion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The harmonious and equitable evolution of man, says President
+ Dabney, of the University of Tennessee, "does not mean that every
+ man must be educated just like his fellow. The harmony is within
+ each individual. That community is most highly educated in which
+ each individual has attained the maximum of his possibilities in
+ the direction of his peculiar talents and opportunities."
+
+
+
+
+THE BEST METHODS OF TAXATION.
+
+BY THE LATE HON. DAVID A. WELLS.
+
+
+PART I.
+
+This historical survey of tax experience among peoples widely
+differing in their economic condition and social relations, and this
+examination of the scope and practice of taxation, with especial
+reference to the tax systems of the United States as defined and
+interpreted by judicial authority, prepare the way for a discussion of
+the best methods of taxation for a country situated as is the United
+States. General as are the theoretical principles underlying taxation,
+the application of these principles to existing conditions must be
+modified to meet the long usage and inherited prejudice of the people,
+and the form of production or manner of distributing wealth. This
+holds true in the face of appearances so opposed to it as to defy
+definition and acceptance. No less promising field for an income tax
+can be pictured than British India, and few more promising fields than
+France. Yet India has borne such a tax for years, while France will
+not permit a true tax on income to be adopted as a part of its revenue
+system. In the latter country the plea is made that the upper and
+middle classes already pay under other forms of taxation more than
+their due proportion of the public burdens, and an additional and
+necessarily discriminating duty laid upon them will only make this
+inequality the greater. Class interest may thus oppose its veto to a
+change that promises to reduce the burdens of one class of taxpayers
+at the expense of another; or may even oppose a change that offers the
+chance of collecting a larger revenue with less real difficulty and
+sacrifice on the part of the taxed. No opposition can set aside even
+temporarily the great rules that clearly define a tax from tribute, a
+legal and beneficial taking by the state of a certain part of the
+public wealth from a demand that involves waste or mischievous
+expenditure, for which the state or people derive no advantage
+commensurate with the cost, or from which individuals obtain a gain
+not defensible in justice, and at the expense of only one part of the
+community.
+
+After so many centuries of experiment, in which hardly a possible
+source of state revenue has escaped attention, some knowledge of the
+great principles of taxation might have been evolved. Unfortunately,
+the experience of one nation is not accepted as containing lessons
+applicable to the needs or conditions of another, and one generation
+rarely appeals to history save to defend its own experiments.
+Ignorance, half knowledge, which is quite as dangerous, and interest
+guide or influence legislation, and those who predict failure or
+danger are regarded as theorists, and denounced as unpractical.
+Nowhere is the tendency to move independent of enlightened knowledge
+more evident than in the United States. At every appearance of the tax
+question, State and national legislatures are overwhelmed with
+measures that have been tried in the past, and after a thorough test
+condemned beyond any hope of defense.
+
+Yet history shows the gradual disappearance of certain forms of
+taxation which enjoyed great popularity for a time, and accomplished
+the end of their creation in a crude and often cruel manner. Looking
+over long periods of time, it is seen that some advances have been
+made, rather from a change in the economic condition of the people
+than from a true appreciation of the principles in question. The
+development of popular liberty has been an essential factor, and the
+alterations in tax methods require a close analysis of the causes
+leading to the rise and dominance of political and constitutional
+principle. While it is true that a popular uprising against fiscal
+exactions usually marked the limit of endurance of an oppressive
+system, it is also true that the same uprisings marked the completion
+of one stage of political development, and the readiness or even the
+need of entering upon a new stage. In one sense the progress of a
+people toward civilization in its highest meaning may be illustrated
+by its fiscal machinery and methods of obtaining its revenue from the
+people. It will be of interest to glance at some of these passing
+phases which have generally come down to a late day, and are still to
+be found in activity in some of the most advanced states of Europe.
+
+The practice of farming out the revenues of a state or any part of it
+has become nearly obsolete, and where it does exist is the mark of a
+fiscal machinery as yet not fully developed. The opportunities and
+temptation which the contract system offered for oppressing the
+taxpayers were apparent long before the state was in a position to
+assert its ability to make its own collections. In France the
+_fermiers generaux_ were a political factor, standing between the king
+and his people, regarded as necessary to the former and as oppressors
+of the latter. Their unpopularity, in part justified by their conduct,
+was a not unimportant item in the arraignment of royalty by the
+people. Wherever introduced, the farming of taxes proved in the long
+run as unwise politically as it was unprofitable financially; and the
+only reasonable defense for adopting it was the want of strength in
+the state to command its own revenue--a want as likely to arise from
+the dishonesty of its agents as from a political weakness. In early
+times the most universal manner of supplying the treasury of the
+state, the farming of taxes has become so rare as to be classed as a
+curiosity. Italy still employs this machinery to collect her taxes on
+tobacco, and Spain from necessity has mortgaged her taxes to the
+bank, with the task of collecting them.
+
+Of the same general character are the state lotteries, of which some
+few and quite important instances may still be found in action. Of the
+immorality of these instruments there can be little doubt, and there
+is quite as unanimous an opinion as to their inefficiency as fiscal
+instruments. Yet it is only within very recent years that state
+lotteries have been discarded even in the most advanced countries. The
+machinery of lotteries has often been modified, but, no matter how
+altered in details, they all have appealed to the love of games of
+chance. Adam Smith asserted that the "absurd presumption" of men in
+their own good fortune is even more universal than the overweening
+conceit which the greater part of men have in their own abilities.[6]
+Yet another assertion of the same writer is as true: "The world
+neither ever saw, nor ever will see, a perfectly fair lottery, or one
+in which the whole gain compensated the whole loss." Where the state
+undertakes it, there is a profit generally assured to the state, but
+that profit is by no means certain, and can not make good the
+demoralization introduced among the people. State lotteries are still
+a part of the revenue system in Italy and Austria (proper), where the
+receipts are important, but show a decided tendency to diminish;
+Hungary and Denmark, where they are of little moment; and in Spain,
+where they are retained because of the general incapacity of the
+administration to reach other and more profitable sources of revenue.
+The experience of the State of Louisiana in connection with a State
+lottery is too recent to require examination. It is not probable that
+once abandoned such an instrument for obtaining money from the people
+will be revived, save as a last resort.
+
+The state monopoly in the manufacture and sale of an article for
+fiscal purposes holds a place in European countries of high
+importance, and is met elsewhere under conditions not so favorable to
+its maintenance. As an example of the latter may be cited the colonial
+policy of the Dutch in their possessions in the East. After the
+termination of the trading companies, the Government undertook the
+entire control of the colonies, and sought to make them a source of
+revenue. The natives were to be taxed, but, having little of their own
+to be taxed, and practicing no occupation that could of its own
+volition become a profitable source of revenue, the state undertook to
+organize industry, and, by creating an opportunity for employing the
+labor of the natives, to receive the profits of production for its own
+uses. The native chiefs were made "masters of industry" and collectors
+of the revenue; and a certain part of the labor of the natives, one
+day in every five, was decreed to the state. In order to derive a
+profit, this labor must be bestowed in cultivating some product as
+find a market in international trade. Hence arose the importance of
+the sugar, coffee, tobacco, and spice crops of these Dutch islands,
+and for many years a handsome profit to the treasury was obtained from
+the management and sales of product. With the great fall in prices of
+sugar and coffee throughout the world, and the narrowing of the market
+for cane sugar, the Government obtained a less income each year, and
+has found it of advantage to relax the conditions surrounding
+cultivation, and to throw the management of the plantations more and
+more into private hands. To such an extent has this transition been
+effected that the state can no longer be considered as controlling a
+monopoly in product or sales, and is content with a revenue from other
+sources, one that does not even cover the expenses incurred in the
+colonial system. This experiment differs widely from those industries
+undertaken with the aid or encouragement of the state to be found in
+India. It was not with a fiscal object that they were established, and
+not infrequently the state sacrifices revenue by releasing them from
+tax burdens they would ordinarily endure. As one of the few remaining
+instances of the direct participation of a state in the production of
+products intended for foreign markets, yet undertaken and maintained
+for fiscal reasons, the history of the Dutch colonies in the East is
+instructive.
+
+In Prussia the working of certain mines is in the hands of the state,
+and was originally looked upon as an important contribution to the
+income of the state. As in the Dutch experience, the changes in
+production throughout the world have greatly reduced the returns and
+made the income variable; yet there is little disposition to dispose
+of these possessions. "The danger of mineral supplies being worked in
+a reckless and extravagant manner without regard to the welfare of
+future generations, and the dread of combinations by the producers of
+such commodities as tin, copper, and salt, with the aim of raising
+prices, have both tended to hinder the alienation of state mines."[7]
+
+The more common form of state monopoly is that which occupies a middle
+position, established for reasons of public safety or utility as well
+as of revenue. The salt monopoly enforced in Prussia was only
+abolished in 1867, and is still maintained in every canton of
+Switzerland. The strongest plea in its defense has been the guarantee
+by the state of the purity of the article sold, and this phase of the
+question has superseded the revenue aspect. Few articles of prime
+necessity, like salt, are subject to monopolies imposed by the state,
+and by a process of elimination it is only articles of luxury or
+voluntary consumption that are regarded as fit objects of monopoly for
+the benefit of the state.
+
+A tax imposed upon an article at a certain stage of its production or
+manufacture may enforce the expediency or necessity of a state
+monopoly. Where the supervision of the state agents must be so close
+as to interfere with the conduct of the industry, the state intervenes
+and itself controls the manufacture and sale. Tobacco has long been
+subject to this fiscal _regime_, and, proving so productive of
+revenue, there is little to be said against a monopoly by the state of
+its manufacture and sale.
+
+In Italy the tobacco monopoly is conceded to a company, but its return
+of net revenue to the state is nearly as large as the revenue derived
+from the taxes on real property (about thirty-eight million dollars a
+year). Prussia imposes a charge on the home-grown tobacco by a tax on
+the land devoted to its culture, but the return is very small, and
+Bismarck wished to introduce a true tobacco monopoly, modeled on that
+of France. But the conditions were opposed to his scheme, for the use
+of tobacco is general throughout the empire, and a proposition to
+increase its price by taxation or modify its free manufacture and
+distribution excited a widespread opposition. France maintains a full
+monopoly, and finds it too profitable to be lightly set aside unless
+some equally profitable source of revenue is discovered to make good
+the loss its abolition would involve.
+
+While historical support is given to the maintenance of a monopoly as
+in France, it is not probable that the system will find imitators in
+other states, however tempting the returns obtained might seem. Great
+Britain has by her insular position solved the problem in another way.
+By interdicting the domestic cultivation of tobacco, all that is
+consumed must be imported, and a customs duty offers a ready
+instrument for making the plant, in whatever form it enters,
+contribute its dues to the exchequer. In Russia, as in the United
+States, where tobacco is a domestic product, the tax is imposed upon
+its manufacture, and this method requires supervision but no monopoly
+of the state.
+
+The tobacco _regime_ is defended almost entirely on fiscal grounds,
+and as a monopoly, an extreme measure, has proved its value as an
+instrument of taxation. Other reasons, of a moral character, are urged
+to induce the state to monopolize the manufacture and sale of
+distilled spirits. Both France and Germany have considered this
+question, and, in spite of confident predictions of a large profit,
+have decided not to undertake it. Russia, on the other hand, has taken
+it up quite as much on social as on revenue grounds, and is gradually
+securing a monopoly of the trade in spirits. The initial cost of the
+undertaking is large, and, as the system has not yet been perfected,
+it is too early to give a judgment on its availability as a financial
+instrument.
+
+The transit dues, once commonly used by different countries, have been
+generally abandoned, and in China must they be sought for in their
+original forms of vexatious and unprofitable force. They arose from a
+desire to derive some benefit from a commerce permitted grudgingly,
+and rarely attaining any high results. The same end was sought by
+duties on exports, much employed when the country was supposed to be
+drained of its wealth by what was sent out of it. The conditions
+necessary for a successful duty on exports are not often found, and
+only in a few countries are they now existent. In Italy, South
+America, and Asia, exports of certain natural products are taxed, and,
+as in the case of Brazil, yield a notable revenue. In view of the
+rapid advancement of production in new countries and of inventions in
+the old, whereby many natural monopolies have been destroyed and
+competition made more general, such duties prove to be more
+obstructive to trade than productive of revenue, and are rapidly being
+abandoned. In spite of a formal prohibition of export duties in the
+Constitution of the United States, they are sometimes suggested in all
+seriousness.
+
+In thus clearing the path of what may be called dead or dying methods
+of recent tax systems, the advantages enjoyed by the United States in
+their freedom from such survivals become more evident. The practice of
+farming taxes never gained a foothold in any part of the country.
+Lotteries have been occasional, and with two exceptions have been
+conducted on a limited scale--that of Louisiana is well known; an
+earlier instance is less known. During the Revolution one of the means
+resorted to by the Continental Congress for income was a lottery, but
+the attempt proved disastrous to all concerned, and was finally
+abandoned even more thoroughly than was the continental currency.
+State monopolies of production and sale of any commodity have never
+met with favor, and stand condemned in the desire for individual
+initiative. As sources of revenue, the public lands, state control of
+the post office, and of such municipal undertakings as the water and,
+in a very few cases, the gas supply, has been employed, and in place
+of profit the mere cost of management is sought. More than any country
+of continental Europe, the United States has depended upon taxes, pure
+and simple, unsupported or modified by state domains, state mines,
+state manufactures, or state monopolies. Even Great Britain in her
+local taxation is bound and hampered by precedent, and pursues a
+system that is notoriously confused, costly, and vexatious. Long usage
+and the erection of independent and conflicting authorities on
+principles other than fiscal have imposed upon the local agents the
+duty of assessing and collecting county and borough taxes which are as
+indefensible in theory as they are difficult in practice.
+
+From this weight of tradition and precedent the United States has been
+almost entirely free, and it was possible to construct out of small
+beginnings systems of Federal and State taxation at least reasonable
+and consistent, producing an increasing revenue with the rapid
+development of wealth and the larger number of taxable objects; and so
+elastic as to adapt themselves to such changes as are inevitable in
+any progressive movement of commerce or industry. That no such system
+has resulted after a century of national life, and an even longer term
+of local (colonial and State) activities, these papers have tended to
+show. That the time is at hand when the problem of a thorough reform
+of both State and Federal taxation must be met, current facts prove
+beyond any doubt. If I have aided in a proper comprehension of these
+problems, and, by collecting certain experiences in taxation among
+other peoples and in different stages of civilization, contributed
+toward a proper solution, the end of this work will have been
+attained. It is not possible to introduce a complete change of policy
+at once; it is not only feasible but necessary to indicate the
+direction this change should take, and the ends to be secured in
+making them. And first as to Federal taxation:
+
+In a democracy like that of the United States, the continuance of a
+mixed system of direct and indirect taxes is a foregone conclusion.
+Not that there is an absence of change or modification in the details
+of this double system, or in the application or distribution of a
+particular impost or duty. To deny such modification is to deny any
+movement in the body politic, or any progress in the industrial and
+commercial economy of the people. There is a steady and continuous
+movement in every direction, and the mere effort to escape taxation
+results in a new adjustment of related facts. This development has,
+partly through necessity and partly through a rising consciousness of
+what a tax implies, been tending from indirect to direct taxes. Ever
+restive under a rigid supervision by the state of private concerns,
+there has been a wholesome opposition to inquisitorial taxes. But this
+opposition has been carried too far, and is due more to the ignorant
+and at times brutal disregard by the agents selected for enforcing the
+law than to an appreciation of the injustice of the tax. Whether in
+customs or excise, the same blunders of management have been
+committed, and created a spirit in the people that is injurious to
+their best interests. On the one hand, private enterprises have been
+unduly favored by the removal of foreign competition, a favor that is
+now disappearing through the remarkable development of domestic
+competition. Thus taxes have been extensively used for other purposes
+than to obtain revenue, and for private ends. On the other hand, there
+has been created the feeling that taxation is a proper instrument for
+effecting a more equal distribution of wealth among the people, and
+readily becomes an instrument of oppression.
+
+The almost absolute dependence of the Federal Government upon the
+customs duties for revenue through a great part of its existence was a
+striking fact. The simplicity of collection and the comparatively
+moderate scale of duties, although considered high at the time of
+imposition, gave this branch of the possible sources of revenue a
+magnified importance. The development of the country was slow, and at
+times greatly hampered by the tariff policy; but until about 1857 no
+other source of income was needed to meet the expenditures of the
+Government in a time of peace.
+
+In recent years this has all changed, and not for the better. The
+immense development in manufactures and financial ability accomplished
+since 1860 has made a tariff for protection an anachronism. The
+political features of customs legislation have been pushed so far as
+almost to overshadow the fiscal qualities. The wave of protectionism
+that followed the abrogation of the commercial treaties of Europe
+about 1880 has resulted in tariffs framed with the desire to injure
+the commerce of other states rather than to meet the needs of a
+treasury. In the United States this policy has been carried beyond
+that of Europe, and the tariff now in existence is more protective
+than any hitherto enforced, short of absolute prohibition of imports.
+
+In more respects than one the tariff law of 1897 was an extreme
+application of the protective policy. Each year the United States has
+demonstrated its ability not only to meet the industrial competition
+of the world on an equal footing, but to engage with it aggressively
+and with complete success. It is not necessary to give the figures of
+exports of manufactures to establish this fact; it is now beyond
+question. To frame a measure of extreme protection was, therefore, to
+overlook the most striking phase of the industrial situation existing
+in the United States. With an ability to manufacture cheaply and on a
+grand scale, and with a capacity to supply the demands of a market
+larger than any home market, there was no foreign competition to
+encounter, and the higher rates of duties meant nothing, either for
+protection or for revenue. In carrying further into action a tariff
+framed more for protection than for revenue, a twofold error was
+committed. The provisions were so complicated as to make the
+application difficult, and in applying these provisions inquisitorial
+and vexatious regulations were necessary to assure even a reasonable
+fulfillment of the requirements. In former tariff laws a general
+description carried a large class of articles, and a uniform duty,
+usually _ad valorem_, was collected. But under the demand for a more
+scientific tariff, these general classes were broken up into a number
+of enumerated articles, each one carrying a specific or mixed duty,
+and an omnium or basket clause at the end to catch any article that
+could not be included in any enumeration. This desire to fix specific
+rates upon each imported commodity has been applied more generally in
+the law of 1897 than in any previous tariff act. An examination of the
+imports of manufactures of textile fibers will illustrate this
+increase of complexity without any increase of revenue. Indeed, these
+classifications and rates, being suggested by interested parties, have
+for their object a reduction of imports, and as a rule a reduction in
+revenue from them follows.
+
+The second objection to the increasing complexity of the tariff laws
+is to be found in the petty annoyances imposed upon importers and
+others in enforcing the not always consistent provisions of the law.
+These vexations are made all the more telling by the fact that the
+administration of the law is apt to be in the hands of those who are
+openly hostile to foreign importations, and therefore regard the
+importer in an unfriendly spirit. The power given to the customs
+agents is enormous, and it is not remarkable that it is abused. The
+demand for samples, the appraisement of articles, the classification
+of new or compound commodities, all offer room for controversy, which
+is not always decided by an appeal to the courts of justice. In
+special instances, where a section of the law has been framed in
+behalf of a special interest, the attempt to enforce it becomes petty
+tyranny of the most intolerable kind.
+
+In operation the law soon exhibited its failure as a revenue measure.
+Although duties were generally increased, the more important articles
+taxed yielded a smaller revenue than under lower rates. The aggregate
+collections under the bill did not meet the expectations of its
+sponsors, and for two reasons: first, because the higher duties
+discouraged imports; and secondly, the demand for imported articles
+was steadily decreasing under the expanding ability of home
+manufactures to meet the needs of the market. No measure short of a
+direct encouragement to importations can change this situation, or
+prevent the further shrinkage in the use of foreign manufactures. It
+follows that the tariff, unless radically altered, can no longer be
+depended on for a return sufficient to defray one half of the rapidly
+increasing expenditures of the national Government. By refusing to
+impose moderate duties on articles of general consumption, revenue is
+sacrificed; by insisting upon imposing protective duties where little
+revenue can be had, the tariff is converted into a political weapon.
+Its dangerous qualities are strengthened by turning these duties
+against the products of certain countries, a policy specially fit to
+invite reprisals.
+
+Even the framers of this latest tariff entertained the belief that
+some provision should be made for breaking its full effect. The
+familiar scheme for reciprocity treaties, under which moderate
+concessions in some of the duties could be made, was retained; but
+France was the only power that could have an object in seriously
+entertaining the proposition to enter into a negotiation. No real
+reduction in duties could be given to Germany or any other country,
+and it has become a recognized fact that Germany does not hesitate to
+seize an opportunity to exclude the products of the United States, and
+on the same grounds as support the high duties in the American tariff.
+The system of drawbacks has ceased to be of much moment in our customs
+policy, and in the export interest in canned goods finds its chief
+exercise. Nor does a privilege to manufacture in bond affect more than
+one article of importance--ores of lead containing silver. No matter
+how it is regarded, the tariff of 1897 was not framed for revenue, and
+in experience has not proved sufficiently productive to meet its share
+of the expenditures of Government. The animus of its sponsors in
+attaining the immediate political object sacrificed the more important
+and permanent object of revenue.
+
+Were the true object of customs duties--revenue--to be kept in view in
+tariff legislation, it would be a simple matter to devise a measure
+that would be satisfactory and highly productive of revenue. In the
+fifteen hundred or more articles enumerated in the tariff schedules,
+more than fourteen hundred are nonproductive, or yield so small a
+return as to have in the aggregate no appreciable effect on the total
+receipts. The number left after so large an exclusion can be still
+further reduced without reducing the revenue one tenth; and it is from
+a small number of articles, hardly twenty-five, that the great part of
+the customs revenue is obtained. By reducing the rates of duties on
+these to a point of highest revenue efficiency, at which the import is
+not interfered with and yet not encouraged, a higher return could be
+had than from the existing complicated, overloaded, and political
+compilation of duties, usually imposed for any reason other than what
+they will bring into the treasury.
+
+When, therefore, the best methods of Federal taxation are broached,
+the reform of the tariff stands first in importance. It is necessary
+to bring it more into line with the industrial conditions of to-day,
+which call for foreign markets rather than a domestic or closed
+market; and for a liberal commercial policy in place of one that
+regards the products of other countries, whether imported in the crude
+or manufactured forms, as constituting a menace to American labor and
+American interests. It calls for a systematic and intelligent
+revision, which shall throw out such duties as are no longer of
+service even for protection, and to reduce those that are hostile to
+the products of other countries and bear in themselves the seeds of
+reprisals in the future. Now that the United States is going into the
+great markets with its manufactures, and obtaining a foothold against
+all competitors, the invitation to retaliation holds a danger far
+greater to its own interests than any that can be inflicted on other
+peoples. The greater the advances made the more readily will recourse
+be had to reprisals and hostile legislation; and in support of every
+act appeal may be had to examples set by the United States.[8]
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[6] Wealth of Nations, vol. i, p. 112 (Rogers's edition).
+
+[7] Bastable. Public Finance, p. 181.
+
+[8] "The old protectionist, with the stock arguments about the
+influence of the tariff upon wages and all the rest of it, is
+beginning to die out. He told us all he had to say about the 'pauper
+labor' of Europe, by which he often meant the best educated and most
+skillful artisans of the world. We got tired of hearing about how the
+importer paid the tax, how it was Europe and England in particular
+that was all the time squeezing our lives out, till nearly all of us,
+being of English ancestry ourselves, wondered whether we, even, could
+be so good as we hoped we were, if we had sprung from something so
+essentially perverted and bad. We were told, too, that American
+tourists who went to Europe and spent money there which they ought to
+have squandered at home were not friends of their country, and that
+they did us a particularly hostile act when they brought clothing,
+statuary, or diamond rings back with them from foreign parts. A season
+of high prices was a real heaven, and wars and fires were good things
+because they destroyed property that would have to be replaced, and
+this would create that demand which, reacting on supply, would
+increase prices. To say that an article was cheap was to say that the
+political party in power was no longer worthy of public confidence. It
+was related that each government could make its people so rich, and
+the idea was thought to have been traced down from Henry C. Carey,
+that the rest of the world could be safely disregarded altogether.
+
+"Seriously, who believes any of this stuff nowadays? The protectionist
+is not reckoning with such popular impotency and stupidity. He
+believes in his fellow-man, and wants to give him a helping hand. He
+does not care what effect it has on England or Ireland. He is not sure
+that a protective tariff in and of itself will increase the wages of
+the workmen. He is even inclined to think that less wages and profits
+would do well enough for every man, if it were cheaper to live and
+there were not such extravagant demands upon every person from all
+sides--this without being a socialist. He is certain that 'a cheap
+coat' does not necessarily make 'a cheap man,' but the cheaper the
+coat the better it will be for the wearer. That is what we are all
+trying to do, improve our processes, increase our effective working
+power, which means, if you please, to make things cheaper."--_The
+Manufacturer_ (organ of the Manufacturers' Club of Philadelphia).
+
+
+
+
+MENTAL DEFECTIVES AND THE SOCIAL WELFARE.
+
+BY MARTIN W. BARR, M. D.,
+
+CHIEF PHYSICIAN, PENNSYLVANIA TRAINING SCHOOL FOR FEEBLE-MINDED
+CHILDREN, ELWYN, PA.
+
+
+Periods of extraordinary efflorescence or fruitage are followed by
+exhaustion and sterility not infrequently demanding the free use of
+the pruning knife; and, just as we remark how frequent is idiocy the
+offspring of genius, so do we find the same seeming paradox, of mental
+defect in rank and increasing growth the product of this most
+wonderful nineteenth century.
+
+True, science has contributed to numbers by revealing as mental
+defectives the many "misunderstood," "the backward," "the feebly
+gifted," as well as by showing what was once esteemed moral perversion
+to be moral imbecility; but a truth to which science also attests is,
+that unstable nerve centers uniting and reacting through successive
+generations, producing various forms of neuroses, evidenced in
+insanity, moral and mental imbecility, idiocy and epilepsy, do show
+the influence of a highly nervous age.
+
+Our last census reports, although necessarily uncertain and
+unreliable, yet show ninety thousand mental defectives, not including
+the insane. Unrecognized and unacknowledged cases swell the number
+easily to one hundred thousand within our present borders--how many we
+are going to annex remains to be seen; but this is an enemy that
+attacks not our frontiers but our hearthstones. We have reached that
+point when we must conquer it, lest it should conquer us, and the
+means to this end may be summed up in three words--separation,
+asexualization, and permanent sequestration. "Diseases desperate grown
+by desperate appliances are relieved, or not at all," and we must
+recognize that heroic measures now are as essential to the welfare of
+the unfortunate as to society, which will then naturally adjust itself
+to new conditions. Viewing the separation and massing of these
+irresponsibles--innocent victims of ignorance, debauchery, or selfish
+lust--men will come to realize that a greater crime than taking is the
+giving of such life; and so a greater reverence for the sacredness of
+marriage, a deeper sense of the great responsibilities of parenthood,
+will do more to avert this evil than the most stringent marriage laws.
+That the present demands some restraint upon the ignorant and the
+indifferent there can be no doubt, and laws preventing the marriage of
+defectives and of their immediate descendants would go far to stem the
+tide of harmful heredity.
+
+But what to do with those now in our midst is the vital question! They
+must be provided for in a way that shall insure safety to society,
+economy to the State, and protection and happiness to the individual.
+The answer found in the experience of half a century is, briefly,
+asylums for the helpless--training schools and colonies for those
+capable of becoming helpful. These in very name and nature being
+widely separate, just as separate as titles and names indicate, should
+be their working systems. Work among the feeble-minded, a
+philanthropic movement directed first toward the idiot, soon found a
+limit in dealing with a subject not trainable and but slightly if at
+all improvable. Thence, diverging and broadening as idiocy became
+better understood and imbecility in various phases became recognized,
+it found its true province in strengthening and encouraging feeble
+intellects, arousing and stimulating indolent and weak wills, and in
+training and directing into healthful channels the abnormal energy of
+those destitute of the moral sense. How wide the divergence can
+readily be seen, as also how entirely incompatible with union must be
+work further apart in reality than is the training of an imbecile and
+a normal child.
+
+[Illustration: EXCITABLE IDIOT. Practically unimprovable.
+
+APATHETIC IDIOT. Practically unimprovable.
+
+IDIO-IMBECILE. But slight hope of improvement.]
+
+For the idiot, who not only can not be trained, but who in many cases
+is unimprovable even in the simplest matters of self-help, nothing is
+needed but that care and attention found in every well-regulated
+nursery of delicate children, the _sine qua non_ being regular hours,
+simple nourishing food, frequent baths, and tender mothering. As many
+are paralyzed, blind, lame, or epileptic, it is desirable that the
+dormitories, well ventilated, be on the same floor with the living
+rooms and of easy access to bathrooms and playgrounds. Covered and
+carefully guarded porches should afford the much-needed fresh air and
+outdoor life in all weathers. These, with cheerful, sunny playrooms,
+provided with simple toys and furnished with bright decorations
+varying with the season, will contribute the maximum of pleasure for
+this life of perpetual infancy. Low vitality, general poverty of the
+whole physical make-up, the prevalence of phthisis and epilepsy and
+kindred diseases require the daily inspection of a physician, while
+the comfort and well-being of the whole, both workers and children,
+are insured by a capable and sympathetic house mother.
+
+The character of attendants is of the first importance, as these are
+they who live with the children; it should combine that firmness,
+tenderness, and balance that constitute an even temperament, capable
+of recognizing and meeting an occasion without loss of self-control.
+The duties involve not only the care of the idiots, but the training
+and direction of idio-imbeciles as aids, and this dealing with natures
+often wholly animal, requires a certain refinement and dignity of
+character--at least an entire absence of coarseness--while a knowledge
+of the simpler manual arts, and if possible of drawing and music, will
+do much to soften and brighten these darkened natures. As these
+qualities are valuable as well as rare, the remuneration should be in
+proportion; certainly sufficient to induce permanency and to
+compensate for such isolation. A life of constant wear and tear
+demands also regular periods of rest, and the corps therefore should
+be sufficiently large to give relief hours daily as well as vacations.
+
+The idio-imbecile, but one remove from his weaker brother, to whose
+wants he may be trained to minister, finds here his fitting place, and
+the domestic service of these asylums may be largely drawn from this
+class and also from that of the low-grade imbecile. Working as an aid,
+never alone, always under direction, he finds in a monotonous round of
+the simplest daily avocations his life happiness, his only safety from
+lapsing into idiocy, and therefore his true home.
+
+The relief to the home, the actual benefit to the State in this
+housing and care of the idiot and idio-imbecile can never be fully
+estimated. It is reckoned, however, in a general way that for every
+idiot sequestrated the energies of two if not four normal persons are
+returned to society.
+
+Imbecility, mental or moral, congenital or accidental, is either an
+inherent defect or an irrecoverable loss, an incurable disease for
+which hospitals can do nothing, nor can reformatories form again that
+which never has been formed. Could language be made clear enough to
+enable the public mind to grasp this fact, the work of training
+schools, the only hope of the imbecile, would then be simplified, and
+people might be willing to accept what they can give, in the only way
+in which it can be given, to be of any permanent value. As it is, the
+few charlatans who profess to train and in a few years send out an
+imbecile ready to take a high-school or college course not only
+deceive those from whom they may gather a few thousands, but their
+representations, coupled with that of a sensational press, effectually
+impede the progress of a work which must eventually find its true
+place in the system of public education.
+
+Influenced by these misrepresentations, parents come with profound
+idiots and high hopes of a course of training (here is one of the
+misfortunes of an idiot asylum within a training school), and simply
+refuse to accept a negative to their expectations. Again--to waifs and
+strays, high-grade imbeciles, developing after years of labored
+training proficiency in music, drawing, or some one of the industrial
+arts, friends will suddenly crop up and, dazzled by what seems
+phenomenal genius, seek to withdraw them just as they become useful to
+the community. Little do they know of the weak will, indolent nature,
+and utter lack of "go," that forbid competition with normal labor and
+must forever be subject to the will of another; still less of the weak
+physical build that is kept intact only by watchful care, and which
+would succumb to any undue hardship. So much for the difficulties that
+beset the work. Now as to the work itself.
+
+As this must vary according to the status of the individual, a careful
+study and a correct diagnosis are of primary importance in order that
+the work may be fitted to the child, not the child to the work. The
+plan pursued is as follows: A thorough examination--physical, mental,
+and moral--is first made by the chief physician in connection with
+papers properly filled out giving personal and family history. He is
+then sent to the hospital for a fortnight to insure immunity from
+disease. There, while perfectly free and unrestrained among his
+fellows, he is under constant observation of the nurses; these
+observations, carefully noted, are returned to the chief physician,
+who turns both over to the principal of schools, designating the grade
+in which he is to enter for probation. Here under different
+environment he is again tested for some weeks and finally placed.
+
+[Illustration: HIGH-GRADE IMBECILE.
+
+HIGH-GRADE IMBECILE. Very improvable--can read, write, draw, etc.
+
+LOW-GRADE IMBECILE. Only slightly improvable.]
+
+It is hard for the uninitiated to understand that the grade, be it
+high, middle, or low, is not associated with promotion and advancement
+as in schools for normal children. On the contrary, it signifies the
+quality and status of the individual, his limitations, his
+possibilities, and consequently determines almost unfailingly the
+training for his life work; not by any hard-and-fast lines, but by a
+general mapping out of means which experience has proved will best
+insure his development, because best suited to his needs. Every
+latitude is allowed and, as the comfort of both the teacher and the
+entire class depends upon each going to his own place, there is easy
+and natural transference according to the necessity indicated by
+either progress or retrogression; but the varied occupations in each
+grade give ample scope for indulgence of individual proclivity in the
+means of development, and it is found that the original diagnosis,
+based upon experience, rarely errs.
+
+The motto of the schools--"We learn by doing; the working hand makes
+strong the working brain"--shows manual training to be the basis of
+the scheme of development, varied for each grade to suit the
+intelligence. Thus classified, various occupations are arranged and
+presented with the double intent of securing all-round development,
+and of giving at the same time opportunity for choice according to
+individual bent, the child being gradually permitted to devote himself
+more exclusively to that in which he shows a tendency to excel, and to
+gain a certain automatic ease in what shall prove the initial of a
+life employment. A knowledge of writing and of numbers is acquired
+incidentally as a necessary part of these occupations in daily
+practice, and arithmetic, taught with objects, is chiefly counting,
+separating into fractional parts, and practical measurements. Books
+are used rather as a convenient means of attracting and holding
+attention while inducing habits of consecutive thinking than for a
+knowledge of facts to be memorized. Those who can learn to read gain
+naturally a means of self-entertainment, of self-instruction, hence a
+certain amount of culture, so long as protected in an institution from
+indiscriminate and pernicious literature.
+
+The low-grade imbecile, but a slight degree removed from the
+idio-imbecile, is, like him, totally incapable of grasping artificial
+signs or symbols. He can therefore never learn to read or write;
+figures have no meaning for him, nor numbers, beyond the very simplest
+counting acquired in the daily repetition of some simple task such as
+knitting, netting, braiding rope, straw, or knotting twine. The
+excitation of interest in these, which will also give hand and arm
+power, the arousing of the sluggish, indolent will, through the
+stimulus of pleasurable emotions, the physical development by means of
+the various drills and the moral influence of refined, orderly
+surroundings--these, together with some practical work of house,
+garden, or farm, which forms part of the daily routine, are all that
+school life can do for him.
+
+[Illustration: MORAL IMBECILE OF HIGH GRADE.
+
+MORAL IMBECILE OF MIDDLE GRADE.
+
+MORAL IMBECILE, LOW GRADE.]
+
+From this preparation he passes to the industrial department, where he
+receives training in that occupation which the school has indicated
+for him, becoming in his limited way a useful and contented member of
+a community which should be his life home. As both of these types
+develop either extreme docility or perversity--the one quiet, gentle,
+obedient, following any suggestion even of a comrade's stronger will;
+the other obstinate, indolent, often brutal and cruel--the necessity
+for constant guardianship is therefore self-evident.
+
+When we consider that the training of a high-grade imbecile takes four
+times the period commonly allotted to a normal child, some idea of the
+vital energy expended on the training of the lower grades may be found
+in the following example:
+
+I find in our museum of educational work a little ball which I am
+inclined to regard the most valuable thing in the whole collection.
+The boy who made it was a low-grade imbecile. His hand against every
+man, he fancied every man's against him. Always under strict custodial
+care, that he might harm neither himself nor others, he would vent his
+spleen in tearing his clothing. His teacher, a woman of rare patience
+and devotedness, sat beside him one day, tearing strips of old linen
+and laying them in order. "See, Willie, let us make some pretty strips
+and lay them so." His wonder grew apace at seeing her doing what he
+had been reproved for doing; at once he responded, and a new bond of
+sympathy was established between them. She was playing his game--the
+only one, poor little lad, that he was capable of--and he joined in.
+
+"Now, we will draw out the pretty threads and lay them in rows." For
+weeks the boy found quiet pastime in this occupation, and the violent
+nature grew quieter in proportion. One day the teacher said, "Let us
+tie these threads together and make a long string." It took him months
+and months to learn to tie those knots, but meanwhile his attendants
+were having breathing space. "Now we will wind this into a pretty
+ball, and I will cover all you make for the boys to play with"; and a
+new occupation was added to his meager list.
+
+The next link in this chain of development was a lesson in knitting.
+Again, through months of patient teaching, it was at last
+accomplished, and the boy to the day of his death found his life
+happiness in knitting caps for the children, in place of tearing both
+them and their clothing. You see the teacher was wise enough to
+utilize the natural activities of the child and divert evil
+propensities into healthful channels. Had she brought knitting and
+bright yarn or anything foreign to him first, it would in truth have
+been fitting new cloth to old garments and the rent would have been
+widened: his obstinacy would have been aroused, and he would have
+continued to tear to the end of the chapter.
+
+[Illustration: HIGH-GRADE IMBECILES (FEEBLY GIFTED) AT SLOYD WORK.]
+
+The imbecile of middle grade receives that fuller presentation of work
+suited to fuller capacity. Some time is devoted to the three "Rs," as
+it is found that attention may be aroused and concentrated in the
+phonetic drills, more especially if associated with pictures, and the
+drawing of the objects named free-hand; thus eye, ear, and hand are
+encouraged to work simultaneously. Those who accomplish finally the
+reading of short simple stories not only enjoy evenings in the
+library, but may be enabled to glean suggestions for the various
+handicrafts for which they are being trained. This effort at quick
+observation and original thinking is further carried forward in the
+ambidextrous movements of free-hand drawing, designing, and sketching
+from life--finding ready and practical application in the daily use of
+tools. The value of the rule and the try-square is tested in the
+manufacture of the various useful articles in both paper and wood
+included under the head of sloyd, and "a boy can not learn to take a
+straight shaving off a plank," says Ruskin, "or to drive a fine curve
+without faltering, or to lay a brick level in the mortar, without
+learning a multitude of other matters which life of man could never
+teach him."
+
+Equally useful to the girl in the workroom as to the boy in the shop
+is this training of a ready eye, this quick intuition of balance and
+proportion, this practice of obedience of hand and arm to brain, until
+it becomes automatic. To both, therefore, the value of such
+preparation will be incalculable. It is noticeable that boys of this
+grade turn out as good workers in the ordinary crafts of shoemaking,
+carpentering, and house painting as those of higher grade who,
+although capable of grasping more intelligently the details of work,
+yet do not bring to it that energy and perseverance of one who finds
+in it "this one thing I do." With the imbecile of high grade, able to
+accomplish studies equal to about the first intermediate of the public
+schools, there is a diffusion of interest; the intelligence broadens
+rather than deepens during the school period in natural response to
+environment. With greater grasp of numerical values and of letters he
+attains proficiency impossible to the lower grades in drawing, in
+music, in printing, and in cabinet work. Other industries will
+probably be provided for him as the demand increases, for it must be
+remembered that this is a class whose needs have been the last to be
+recognized in a work begun, as I have before said, for the idiot.
+Regarded as queer, unlike other children--unable to keep up--he has,
+after an unsuccessful trial at school, been kept at home, in some
+cases an aid, in others a tyrant, to those relatives charged with his
+care.
+
+Changed conditions of both family and school, fortunately for him,
+combine to render this no longer possible, as absence of proper
+training is always certain to result in deterioration. The pressure
+upon the primary schools in the struggle for higher education leaves
+no time to contend with dull, backward children. In the family the
+care-takers grow fewer in proportion as the home-makers become
+home-winners, and so these feeble ones are a burden instead of an aid
+in the ordinary household offices.
+
+The next hope is a training school where, with false hopes fostered by
+ignorance and sensationalism, they are entered, and after a few years,
+a time all too short for any lasting benefit, a sentimentality equally
+stupid withdraws them from that guardianship absolutely essential,
+with just that little knowledge which will render them more dangerous
+to society, because less recognizable--an evil element perpetuating an
+evil growth. Under both conditions these unfortunates have suffered
+from that lack of constant care and supervision which should be theirs
+from the cradle to the grave.
+
+The separation of backward children in the schools and the placing of
+them in special classes for special training is the first step in the
+right direction. Here, after sufficient time for observation and
+diagnosing by teacher and physician, the defectives so adjudged will
+naturally drift to the training schools for the feeble-minded; these,
+if relieved of the odium as well as the care of their helpless
+population, will then be encouraged to arrange for this brighter class
+of defectives industries which will provide not only for development
+and happiness, but will largely aid in maintenance. The recognition of
+the necessity for this weeding out of the schools, having place first
+on the Continent, next in England, and later in our own country, marks
+an era in the national as well as in the special schools. Both will be
+benefited largely, and formal expression of this, found in the
+addition to our National Educational Association of a department
+representing the training of all classes of defectives, is one of the
+most encouraging signs of the times.
+
+[Illustration: MIDDLE-GRADE IMBECILES.]
+
+The same experience which dictates the separation of the idiot from
+the imbecile, the backward from the normal child, urges also that a
+permanent sequestration would tend alike to the safety and happiness
+of the normal and abnormal classes. The experiment made of preparing
+and sending out into the world these irresponsibles has proved, to say
+the least, not encouraging, and the advisability of their permanent
+detention has become self-evident.
+
+The heads of training schools here are a unit in urging that provision
+be made for those who have reached the limit of school progress. That
+experience has reached a similar conclusion in England is testified
+in the munificent gift lately made to the Royal Albert Asylum, and by
+the opinion of its superintendent, Dr. T. Telford-Smith, thus clearly
+expressed:
+
+"It is yearly more noticeable that the public mind is coming gradually
+but surely to recognize the threefold value of the work of such
+institutions as the Royal Albert Asylum. The educational and the
+custodial aspects early aroused the sympathies of the charitable; but
+the preventive aspect is another which must force itself upon all who
+thoughtfully consider the subject. The far-reaching and inexorable law
+of heredity is written large for those who study the imbecile."
+
+The following paragraph, from a daily paper, shows that, in America at
+least, public opinion and the acts of the legislature have become ripe
+for action:
+
+"The State of Connecticut is about to try a curious experiment in
+social legislation, having passed a law forbidding any man or woman,
+imbecile or feeble-minded, to marry under forty-five years of age, the
+penalty being imprisonment for not less than three years; and persons
+aiding and abetting are also liable. The hope of the legislature is to
+keep down degenerate families."
+
+That this experiment is wise and justifiable who can doubt?
+
+[Illustration: LOW-GRADE IMBECILES. No. 1, obstinate, perverse,
+indolent; No. 2, gentle and obedient.]
+
+To glance at another and sadder, but not less real, side of the same
+question, can any one doubt but that the adolescent and adult female
+imbecile needs lifelong care and protection? Surely the noble gift to
+the asylum by Sir Thomas Storey of a home for forty such cases is a
+wise, far-seeing, and statesmanlike act.
+
+It is greatly to be hoped that this noble example may be speedily
+emulated on both sides of the sea, and that each State may shortly
+possess, in addition to its training school, its own colony farm with
+all the industries of a village, drawing its workers from the
+well-directed energies of a carefully guarded community. Cottages,
+each with its house mother, would insure that sense of home, and that
+affectionate and sympathetic oversight so essential to this society
+composed of those who are always children, while measures, which
+science has already pointed out and experience proved as advisable,
+might, if protected by wise legislation, permit less vigilance on the
+part of care-takers and consequent happiness because of greater
+freedom to its members.
+
+It is a happy coincidence that Massachusetts, the pioneer State in the
+work among the feeble-minded, should in its fifty-first year celebrate
+the beginning of its second half century by the inauguration of this
+most eventful step in the onward progress of the work. The training
+school at Waltham has lately purchased sixteen hundred and sixty acres
+of land for the establishment of a colony which is to have natural and
+healthful growth from the fostering care of the parent institution.
+
+As these colonies increase, drawing from society a pernicious element
+and transforming it under watchful care into healthful growth, may not
+in time the national Government, finding these homes of prevention a
+more excellent way than prison houses of cure for ill, be induced to
+provide a national colony for this race more to be commiserated
+because of a childhood more hopeless than that of the two others in
+our midst on whom so much has been expended?
+
+
+
+
+THE WHEAT PROBLEM AGAIN.
+
+BY EDWARD ATKINSON.
+
+
+In a recent article in the North American Review, Mr. John Hyde, the
+statistician of the United States Department of Agriculture, a
+gentleman of very high authority and repute, presents this problem in
+such terms as to throw a doubt upon the validity of any forecast of
+the potential increase in the product of wheat, or, in fact, of any
+crop in this country. Without referring to myself by name, he yet
+makes it very plain that he does not attach any value to my recent
+forecast of wheat production printed in the Popular Science Monthly
+for December, 1898.
+
+On the other hand, he rightly says that since Tyndall's address to the
+British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1874 no treatise
+presented to that association has excited so general an interest or
+provoked so much unfavorable criticism as Sir William Crookes's recent
+utterances on the subject of the approaching scarcity in the supply of
+wheat.
+
+Mr. Hyde disclaims any intention to give his own views, but yet no one
+can read his treatise without noting a substantial agreement with Sir
+William Crookes, perhaps almost unconsciously to himself. In his
+closing paragraph he says: "To discuss the extent to which under
+conceivable conditions the United States may, _notwithstanding the
+somewhat dubious outlook_, still continue to contribute to the food
+supply of other nations, would be little more than speculation."
+
+The Italics are my own.
+
+I venture to point out that the use of the word "speculation" is an
+example of many instances. Like a dog, one may give a word a bad name,
+yet it may be a good dog and a very good word when rightly used. In
+the true and very innocent meaning of the word "speculation" we find
+exactly what the public has a right to expect and even to demand from
+the Department of Agriculture. In Webster's Dictionary I find that,
+when used in such a connection as this problem of the potential of
+this country in farm productions, the word "speculation" stands for "a
+mental view of anything in its various aspects and relations;
+contemplation; intellectual examination."
+
+If any "mental view" has yet been taken in the Department of
+Agriculture of the proportion of the land of this country which may be
+termed "arable," I have yet to find the record. If any "contemplation"
+has been devoted to the proportions of this arable land which may be
+devoted to different crops in each section, I have been remiss in not
+securing the reports. If any "mental view" has been taken of the
+relative area now devoted to each principal crop, and that which may
+be so devoted hereafter in order to meet the prospective demand upon
+the land, either for the supply of our own population or of other
+nations, where is the record? If there is no such "speculation" now of
+record, is it not time that a true agricultural survey corresponding
+to our geologic and geodetic surveys should be entered upon? I have
+reason to believe that such surveys have been made by many European
+states in which all the arable land in some kingdoms is classified,
+listed, and so recorded that any one wishing to know the best place
+for any special product can get the information by reference to the
+proper department of the Government.
+
+I have had occasion to make several studies of this kind. In order to
+inform myself on the potential of the South in the production of
+cotton, I undertook a study of the physical geography and climatology
+of the cotton States and of other cotton-producing countries nearly
+forty years ago. The results of this research were first given in
+Cheap Cotton by Free Labor, published in 1861. In that pamphlet and in
+many treatises following, finally in an address in Atlanta, in 1880, a
+true forecast or "speculation" or "intellectual examination" will be
+found of the production of the cotton fiber, the potential of the
+future and of the cotton-seed-oil industry, then almost unheard of in
+this country. In 1880 I also entered upon my first "speculation" (not
+in the market) on the lines of a "contemplation" or forecast of the
+effect of agricultural machinery applied to our wheat land, coupled
+with the prospective reduction in the cost of carrying wheat to
+England, upon the condition of the American farmer and the British
+landlord. That forecast of prosperity to our farmers in the supply of
+bread at low cost to our kin beyond the sea has been justified at
+every point and in every detail. I therefore ventured to review Sir
+William Crookes's address, and I am well assured that what Mr. Hyde
+now calls a "somewhat dubious outlook" is subject to no doubt whatever
+as to our ability to continue our full supply for domestic consumption
+and export for the next century.
+
+Let me now repeat again what I have often said: statistics are good
+servants, but very bad masters. I long since ceased to put any great
+reliance upon averages of crops, wages, or products covering wide
+areas and varying conditions, unless I could find out, _first_, the
+personal equation of the man who compiled them; _second_, ascertain
+what he knew himself about the subject of which his statistics or
+figures were the symbols; and, _third_, unless I could verify these
+great averages from one or more typical areas of farm land, or from
+one or more representative factories or workshops, of the conditions
+of which I could myself obtain personal information.
+
+General statistics and averages of farm products and earnings I regard
+with more suspicion than almost any others because of the immense
+variation in conditions.
+
+I have sometimes almost come to the conclusion that so many of the
+figures of the United States census are mere statistical rubbish as to
+throw a doubt on nearly all the schedules. Yet without accurate
+statistics on many points, many of them yet to be secured, the conduct
+of our national affairs must become as uncertain as would be the
+conduct of any great business corporation without a true ledger
+account and a trial balance. Hence the necessity for a permanent
+census bureau and for a careful "speculation" or "intellectual" and
+intelligent examination and "contemplation" or study of the facts
+about our land by which our future welfare must be governed.
+
+A good beginning has been made by the authorities of many States, yet
+more by the body of well-trained men in charge of the Agricultural
+Experiment Station, in whose support too much can not be said. To them
+I appealed when trying to get an adequate conception of our potential
+in wheat.
+
+When we think of the blunders which have been made in very recent
+years, we may well have some suspicion that we may still be very
+ignorant on many points about our own country. Who really knows very
+much about the great middle section of the South, what is called the
+"Land of the Sky," comprising the upland plateaus and mountain
+sections of Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama,
+eastern Tennessee, and Kentucky? Within this area, as large as France
+and twice as large as Great Britain, will be found timber and minerals
+equal to both the countries named, and a potential in agriculture
+equal to either, as yet very sparsely populated.
+
+Yet under a craze for centrifugal expansion we are now in danger of
+trying to develop tropical islands far away, already somewhat densely
+peopled, where white men can not work and live, to our detriment,
+danger, and loss, while we fail to see that if we expand centripetally
+by the occupation and use of the most healthy and productive section
+of our own country, we may add immensely to our prosperity, our
+wealth, to our profit without cost and without militarism. This
+sparsely settled Land of the Sky is greater in area and far greater in
+its potential than the Philippine Islands, Cuba, and Porto Rico
+combined. Verily, it seems as if common sense were a latent and
+sluggish force, often endangered by the noisy and blatant influence of
+the venal politician and the greed of the unscrupulous advocates of
+vassal colonies who now attempt to pervert the power of government to
+their own purposes of private gain.
+
+Witness the blunders of the past:
+
+We nearly gave away Oregon because it was held not to be worth
+retaining.
+
+When the northern boundary of Wisconsin was being determined, it was
+put as far north as it was then supposed profitable farming could ever
+extend, excluding Minnesota, now one of our greatest sources of wheat.
+
+The Great American Desert in my own school atlas covered a large part
+of the most fertile land now under cultivation.
+
+What blunders are we now making for lack of "speculation" or
+"intellectual examination" as to the future of American farming and
+farm lands?
+
+On one point to which Mr. Hyde refers I must cry _peccavi_. He rebukes
+the editor of the Popular Science Monthly for admitting an article in
+which a potential of 400,000,000 bushels of wheat is attributed to the
+State of Idaho. The total depravity of the type-writing machine caused
+the mechanism to spell Montana in the letters I-d-a-h-o. What I
+imputed to Idaho is true of Montana, if the Chief of the Agricultural
+Experiment Stations of Montana is a competent witness, if all its
+arable land were devoted to wheat. It will be observed that I
+mentioned Idaho incidentally (meaning Montana), taking no cognizance
+of the estimate given, because it was at present of no practical
+importance.
+
+I have expressed my distrust of great averages in respect to
+agriculture and farm products.
+
+In illustration of this fallacy, the figures presented by Mr. Hyde
+will now be dealt with. It is held that in 1930, which is the year
+when Sir William Crookes predicts starvation among the bread-eating
+people of the world for lack of wheat (as if good bread could only be
+made from wheat), the population of this country may be computed at
+130,000,000. The requirements of that year for our own consumption Mr.
+Hyde estimates at 700,000,000 bushels of wheat, 1,250,000,000 bushels
+of oats, 3,450,000,000 bushels of corn (maize), and 100,000,000 tons
+of hay; and, although other products are not named by him, we may
+assume a corresponding increase.
+
+Subsequently Mr. Hyde gives the present delusive average yields per
+acre of the whole country, and then throws a doubt on the future
+progress of agricultural science, saying, "Whatever agricultural
+science may be able to do in the next thirty years, up to the present
+time it has only succeeded in arresting that decline in the rate of
+production with which we have been continually threatened." Without
+dealing at present with this want of and true consideration of or
+"speculation" upon the progress made in the last decade under the lead
+of the experiment stations and other beginnings in remedying the
+wasteful and squalid methods that have been so conspicuous in pioneer
+farming, let us take Mr. Hyde's averages and see what demand upon land
+the requirements of 1930 will make, even at the present meager average
+product per acre.
+
+Mr. Hyde apparently computes this prospective product as one that will
+be required for the domestic consumption of 130,000,000 people by
+ratio to our present product. He ignores the fact that our present
+product suffices for 75,000,000, with an excess of live stock,
+provisions, and dairy products exported nearly equal in value to all
+the grain exported, and in excess of the exports of wheat. If we can
+increase proportionally in one class of products, why not in another?
+Whichever pays best will be produced and exported.
+
+ _1897 and 1930 compared.--Data of 1897._
+ ------+------------------------+-----------------+----------------------
+ | Products. |Average per acre.| Area required.
+ ------+------------------------+-----------------+----------------------
+ Maize | 1,902,967,933 bushels. | 23.8 bushels. | 125,150 square miles.
+ Wheat | 530,149,168 " | 13.4 " | 61,660 " "
+ Oats | 698,767,809 " | 27.2 " | 40,200 " "
+ Hay | 60,664,770 tons. | 1.43 " | 66,290 " "
+ | | |----------------------
+ Total in square miles | 293,300 square miles.
+ -------------------------------------------------+----------------------
+
+All other farm crops carry the total to less than 400,000 square miles
+now under the plow, probably not exceeding 360,000.
+
+Prospective demand of 1930, at the same meager average product per
+acre, without progress in agricultural science:
+
+ ------+------------------------+---------------+----------------------
+ | Crop called for. | Per acre. | Area required.
+ ------+------------------------+---------------+----------------------
+ Maize | 3,450,000,000 bushels. | 23.8 bushels. | 226,600 square miles.
+ Wheat | 700,000,000 " | 13.4 " | 81,600 " "
+ Oats | 1,250,000,000 " | 27.2 " | 70,800 " "
+ Hay | 100,000,000 tons. | 1.43 " | 109,400 " "
+ | | |----------------------
+ Total in square miles | 488,400 square miles.
+ -----------------------------------------------+----------------------
+
+Assuming all land under the plow in 1930 in the ratio as above, the
+area of all now in all crops 400,000 square miles--an excessive
+estimate--that year (1930) will call for 667,000 square miles of
+arable land in actual cultivation.
+
+I have been accustomed to consider one half our national domain,
+exclusive of Alaska, good arable land in the absence of any
+"speculation" on that point in the records of the Department of
+Agriculture; but from the returns given by the chiefs of the
+experiment stations and secretaries of agriculture of the States
+hereafter cited, that estimate may be increased probably to two
+thirds, or 2,000,000 square miles of arable land out of a total of
+3,000,000 square miles, omitting Alaska.
+
+Assuming that we possess 2,000,000 square miles of arable land,
+capable at least of producing the present meager average product cited
+above, the conditions of 1930 will be graphically presented on the
+following diagram:
+
+
+ _Prospective Use of Land in the Year 1930 on Present Crop Average._
+
+ [Sidenote: Arable land assumed to be 2,000,000 square miles in the
+ outer lines of the diagram.]
+
+ +----------+----------+----------+--------------+------------+----------+
+ | Oats, | Wheat, | Hay, |Miscellaneous.| Maize, | Wheat |
+ | 70,800 | 81,600 | 109,400 |Roots, cotton,|Indian corn,| for |
+ |sq. miles.|sq. miles.|sq. miles.|tobacco, etc.,| 226,600 | export, |
+ +----------| | |168,600 sq. m.| sq. miles. | 143,000 |
+ | +----------+----------| Excessive. | |sq. miles.|
+ | +--------------+------------+----------+
+ |Arable land unassigned 1,200,000 square miles.|
+ |Deduct for cities, towns, parks, |
+ | and reserves of all kinds 200,000 " " |
+ | --------- |
+ | Reserve for future use 1,000,000 " " |
+ | |
+ | Forest, mountain, arid, etc., not counted, about 1,000,000 square |
+ | miles, not included in these lines or squares. |
+ +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+ No reduction on area cultivated on prospective improvement in the
+ present methods of farming, although it may be assumed that the
+ prospective increase of crop per acre will exert great influence.
+
+If the facts should be in 1930 consistent with Mr. Hyde's
+"speculation" it would therefore appear that our ability to meet the
+domestic demand of 1930 with proportionate export of cattle,
+provisions, and dairy products, and to set apart a little patch of
+land for the export of 1,226,000,000 bushels of wheat raised at the
+rate of only 13.4 bushels per acre from 143,000 square miles of land
+will be met by the cultivation of not exceeding 700,000 square miles
+out of 2,000,000 available.
+
+I should not venture to question the conclusions emanating from the
+Department of Agriculture, or the deductions of so eminent a scientist
+as Sir William Crookes, had I not taken the usual precaution of a
+business man in studying a business question. I went to the men who
+know the subject as well as the figures on which statistics are to be
+compiled.
+
+Being supplied by the Popular Science Monthly with one hundred proofs
+of the first nine and a half pages of the December article in which
+the terms of the problem are stated, I sent those proofs to the chiefs
+of the experiment stations and to the secretaries of agriculture in
+all the States from which any considerable product of wheat is now or
+may be hereafter derived; also to many makers of wheat harvesters; to
+the secretaries of Chambers of Commerce, and to several economic
+students in the wheat-growing States. This preliminary study was
+accompanied by the following circular of inquiry:
+
+
+ BOSTON, MASS., _October 5, 1898_.
+
+ _To the Chiefs of the Agricultural Experiment Stations and others in
+ Authority_:
+
+Calling your attention to the inclosed advance sheets of an article
+which will by and by appear in the Popular Science Monthly, I beg to
+put to you certain questions.
+
+If the matter interests you, will you kindly fill up the blanks below
+and let me have your replies within the present month of October, to
+the end that I may compile them and give a digest of the results? I
+shall state in the article that I am indebted to you and others for
+the information submitted.
+
+Area of the State of....................... square miles.
+
+1. What proportion of this area do you believe to be arable land of
+fair quality, including pasture that might be put under the plow?
+
+ Answer ................... square miles.
+
+2. What proportion is now in forest or mountain sections which may not
+be available for agriculture for a long period?
+
+ Answer ................... square miles.
+
+3. What has been done or may be done by irrigation?
+...........................................................................
+...........................................................................
+............................
+
+4. What proportion of the arable land above measured should you
+consider suitable to the production of wheat under general conditions
+such as are given in the text, say, a stable price of one dollar per
+bushel in London?
+
+ Answer ................... square miles.
+
+5. To what extent, in your judgment, is wheat becoming the cash or
+surplus crop of a varied system of agriculture as distinct from the
+methods which prevail in the opening of new lands of cropping with
+wheat for a term of years?
+
+....................................................................
+
+What further remarks can you add which will enable me to elucidate
+this case, to complete the article and to convey a true impression of
+the facts to English readers?
+
+....................................................................
+....................................................................
+....................................................................
+
+Your assistance in this matter will be gratefully received.
+
+ Respectfully submitted,
+ EDWARD ATKINSON.
+
+To this circular I received twenty-four detailed replies, containing
+statistics mostly very complete; also many suggestive letters, in
+every case giving full support to the general views which I had
+submitted in the proof sheets. It has been impossible for me to give
+individual credit within the limits of a magazine article to the
+gentlemen who have so fully supplied the data. Space will only permit
+me to submit a digest of the more important facts in a table derived
+from these replies:
+
+ -------------+-----------------------------------------+-------------
+ | FROM RETURNS MADE TO MY INQUIRY. |From United
+ |----------------+----------+-------------|States report
+ NAME. | Area of State. | Arable. | Suitable to | in wheat,
+ | | | wheat. | 1897.
+ -------------+----------------+----------+-------------+-------------
+ Minnesota | 84,287 | 66,000 | 50,000 | 7,189
+ South Dakota | 76,000 | 42,500 | 40,000 | 4,187
+ North Dakota | 74,312 | 50,000 | 50,000 | 4,300
+ Illinois | 56,000 | 54,000 | 20,000 | 2,292
+ Missouri | 68,000 | 64,000 | 64,000 | 2,448
+ Wisconsin | 56,000 | 35,000 | 35,000 | 961
+ |----------------+----------+-------------+------------
+ | 414,599 | 311,500 | 259,000 | 21,372
+ |================+==========+=============+===========
+ Texas | 269,694 | 200,000 | 100,000 | 700
+ California | 158,360 | 54,000 | 30,000 | 5,062
+ Montana | 145,310 | 30,000 | 25,000 | 109
+ Idaho | 87,000 | 30,000 | 15,000 | 192
+ |----------------+----------+-------------+------------
+ | 660,364 | 314,000 | 170,000 | 6,063
+ |================+==========+=============+============
+ Total | 1,074,963 | 625,500 | 429,000 | 27,435
+ -------------+----------------+----------+-------------+------------
+
+I do not give the data of the Eastern and Southern States, and I have
+selected only the most complete data of the other States, choosing the
+more conservative where two returns have been made from one State.
+
+The foregoing States produced a little over one third of the wheat
+crop of 1897. They comprise a little over one third the area of the
+land of the United States, excluding Alaska.
+
+The list covers States like Illinois, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, now
+very fully occupied relatively to Texas, Montana, and Idaho, as yet
+but sparsely settled.
+
+Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, Oregon, and
+Washington combined far exceed the above list in wheat production;
+but, as I have no complete data from these States, I can only say that
+the national or census statistics, as far as they go, develop
+corresponding conditions to those above given. The very small product
+of Texas and Montana, even of Idaho, as compared with the claimed
+potential, will attract notice, and perhaps excite incredulity. But
+let it be remembered that in 1880 the Territory of Dakota yielded less
+than 3,000,000 bushels of wheat, while in 1898 the two States of North
+and South Dakota, formerly in one Territory, claim to have produced
+100,000,000 bushels. Perhaps it will then be admitted that the
+potential of Montana, and even of Idaho, may be attained in some
+measure corresponding to the reports from those States; but as yet
+their product is a negligible quantity, as that of Dakota was only
+twenty years since.[9]
+
+Again, let it be remembered that Texas will produce a cotton crop,
+marketed in 1898-'99, above the average of the five ante-war crops of
+the whole country, and nearly equal to the largest crop ever grown in
+the United States before the war. Texas could not only produce the
+present entire cotton crop of the United States but of the world, on
+but a small part of her land which is well suited to cotton. When
+these facts are considered, perhaps the potential of that great State
+in wheat and other grain, in cattle and in sheep, as well as in
+cotton, may begin to be comprehended.
+
+The writer is well aware that this treatment of a great problem is
+very incomplete, but it is the best that the leisure hours of a very
+busy business life would permit. If it discloses the general ignorance
+of our resources, the total inadequacy of many of our official
+statistics, the lack of any real agricultural survey, and the
+necessity for a reorganization and concentration of the scientific
+departments of the Government as well as of a permanent census bureau,
+it will have served a useful purpose.
+
+If it also serves to call attention to the meager average crops and
+the poor quality of our agriculture as a whole down to a very recent
+period, it may suggest even to those to whose minds the statistics of
+the past convey but gloomy and "doubtful views" of the future, that
+the true progress in scientific agriculture could only begin when
+substantially all the fertile land in the possession of the Government
+had either been given away or otherwise distributed. So long as "sod
+crops" and the single-crop system yielded adequate returns to
+unskilled farmers, no true science of agriculture could be expected,
+any more than a large product of wool can be hoped for in States where
+it has been wittily said that "every poor man keeps one cur dog, and
+every d--d poor man keeps two or more."
+
+Finally, if I shall have drawn attention to the very effective work
+which is being done in the agricultural experiment stations by men of
+first-rate ability, I shall have drawn attention to a great fact. This
+work has already led to a complete revolution from the old practice
+of maltreating land, and to the renovation of soils that had been
+partially exhausted. Governor Henry A. Wise, of Virginia, long since
+condemned the old methods of Southern agriculture by telling his
+hearers, "The niggers skinned the land and the white men skinned the
+niggers." We are changing all that by new and progressive methods. I
+hope that in this recognition of the work of the experiment stations I
+shall have made some return for the attention which has been given to
+my inquiry by so many of my correspondents that the space assigned me
+forbids a list of my authorities being given by name.
+
+When the suggestion is made from the Department of Agriculture that
+all that science has yet accomplished has been to stop a tendency to a
+lessened production from the land now under the plow, and when it is
+even suggested that in 1930 the present meager average of crops per
+acre may still exist, it seems to me that little credit is given to
+the good work already accomplished in the short period in which the
+separate Department of Agriculture has been represented in the
+Cabinet, especially in the last five or six years, while the
+suggestion itself shows very little consideration of the great work of
+the experiment stations.
+
+Unless it can be proved that my correspondents and myself have entered
+into a conspiracy to mislead the public in dealing with the potential
+of this country in wheat production, nearly all the deductions from
+the figures of the past must be considered mere statistical rubbish.
+These statistics cover sections and States in which wheat should never
+be grown or attempted in competition with the true wheat soils and
+climate. As well might misplaced iron furnaces, built to boom city
+lots where there are no favorable conditions for the production of
+iron, be included in an average and held up as a standard of our
+potential in iron and steel production.
+
+In my efforts to discover the rule of progress in the arts and
+occupations of the people of this country, it has become plain that in
+ratio to the application of science and invention to every art the
+quantity of product is increased, the number of workmen is relatively
+diminished, the price of the product tends to diminish, while the
+wages or earnings of those who do the work are augmented. I have
+investigated many branches of industry, and find evidence conclusive
+to my own mind that such is the law of industrial development. This
+rule is subject to temporary variations under the restriction of
+statutes. In my own judgment, the so-called protective principle or
+policy of interference with commerce by imposing fines on foreign
+imports has retarded the progress of the specially protected arts, and
+has in some measure obstructed the diversity of manufactures; but the
+opposite policy of absolutely free trade in our domestic traffic over
+a greater area and among a much larger number of people than have
+elsewhere secured their own liberty has been so much more potent in
+its progressive influence as to have lessened the evils of the
+restrictions on foreign trade.
+
+According to my observation, all the efforts to regulate railroad
+charges by State legislation and under the interstate commerce act
+have greatly retarded the progress of the railway, and have deprived
+great States, notably Texas, of any service at all commensurate to the
+demand which might otherwise have been supplied to the mutual benefit
+of the owners of the railways and the inhabitants of the State. The
+most serious retarding influence, especially evil in its effect upon
+farmers, was the useless panic of 1893, caused by the silver
+craze--that is to say, by the effort to enact a force bill by which
+the producers of our great crops would have been compelled to accept
+money of half the purchasing power of that to which their industry had
+been long adjusted. This caused a temporary paralysis of industry, in
+which I think none suffered so much as the farmers of the country.
+
+But admitting these temporary variations, I find the same rule
+governing the products of the farm that governs the mine, the factory,
+and the workshop--namely, a lessening of the number occupied in ratio
+to the product; a great reduction in the cost of labor; an increased
+return in due proportion of the skill and intelligence of the farmer;
+a rapid reduction in the farm mortgages, ending at the present date in
+making the farmers of the grain-growing States the creditors of the
+world, especially those occupied upon wheat.
+
+But in the development of this progress we find the reverse of the
+practice in the factory and the workshop. The most important
+applications of science and invention led first to what might be
+called the manufacture of wheat on an extensive method of making a
+single crop on great areas of land. That phase has about spent its
+force; the great farms are in process of division; the single-crop
+system has about ended; the intensive system of making a larger
+product from a lessened area with alternation and variation in crops
+is rapidly taking the place of former methods.
+
+Therefore, while many branches of manufacturing tend more and more to
+the collective method, the tendency in agriculture is more and more to
+individualism in dealing with the land itself, coupled with collective
+ownership in the more expensive farm machinery, in creameries, cheese
+factories, and the like. We are apparently at a halfway stage in this
+revolution of agriculture. The intelligent and intensive methods of
+breeding cattle and sheep is also rapidly taking the place of the
+semibarbarous conditions of the ranch.
+
+If these points are well taken, the very suggestion that we must
+compute the land which should be under the plow in 1890 in order to
+supply the needs of 130,000,000 people on the basis of the imperfect
+statistics and inadequate data of the past, becomes almost an
+impertinence. It is much more probable that the 400,000 square miles
+which now meet the needs of 75,000,000 people, with an enormous excess
+for export, will in 1930 still suffice for the domestic supply of
+130,000,000 people, with a proportionate export corresponding to the
+present.
+
+If the product of the farms of the West now yielding the largest
+crops, or of the renovated lands of the South now yielding the best
+crops, be taken as the average standard of the near future, as they
+should be, then it may be true in 1930, as it is now, that one fifth
+of the arable land of this country when put under the plow will still
+suffice for all existing demands, the remainder of our great domain
+extending the promise of future abundance and welfare to the yet
+greater numbers who will occupy the land a century hence.
+
+I may add that in the course of a very friendly correspondence with
+Sir William Crookes, while we are still at variance in our estimates
+of the area which may be converted to the production of wheat in this
+country without trenching upon any other product, we are wholly at an
+agreement on a most material point. I quote from one of his letters:
+"Under the present wasteful method of cultivation there will be in a
+limited number of years an insufficient supply of wheat. Apply
+artificial fertilizers judiciously, and the supply may be increased
+indefinitely." I would only venture to add to the judgment of so
+eminent a writer the words "or natural," to the end that the paragraph
+should read, "Apply artificial or natural fertilizers judiciously, and
+the supply can be increased indefinitely."
+
+Many years ago I was asked among others, "What would be the next great
+discovery of science or invention?" To which I replied, "A supply of
+nitrogen at low cost." Has not that discovery been made in the recent
+development of the functions of the bacteria which, living and dying
+upon the leguminous plants, dissociate the nitrogen of the atmosphere
+and convert it through the plant to the renovation of the soil? Is not
+the invention of methods of nitrifying the soil by distributing the
+germs of bacteria one of the most wonderful discoveries of science
+ever yet attained? Can any one yet measure the potential of any given
+area of land in any part of this country in the production of any one
+of its great crops? That there is a limit may be admitted. Can any one
+venture to say that any of our average crops yet approach beyond a
+small fractional measure the true limit of production, whatever it may
+be, either in cotton, maize, wheat, or any other product of the soil?
+
+In this, as in many other developments of the theory of evolution, the
+factor of mental energy, which is the prime factor in all material
+production, may have been or is almost wholly ignored. We are ceasing
+to treat the soil as a mine subject to exhaustion, but we have as yet
+made only a beginning in treating it as an instrument of production
+which will for a long period respond in its increasing product in
+exact ratio to the mental energy which is applied to the cultivation
+of the land.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[9] I have been permitted to review the detailed statements of the
+accounts of one of the great enterprises which I have called the
+manufacture of wheat on a large scale on various large farms,
+separated one from another but under one control, aggregating more
+than twenty thousand acres, in North Dakota. They are managed mainly
+from a long distance through agents and foremen, therefore at a
+relative disadvantage compared to a farmer owning his own land, acting
+as his own foreman, and saving heavily in expense. Such farmers,
+making no charge for their own time, are computed to have a cash
+advantage of one dollar an acre.
+
+A large part of this land has been cropped in wheat for twenty-four
+years, one farm of six thousand acres showing an average in excess of
+eighteen bushels per acre for the term of seventeen years. The details
+of the product of other farms are not given, but this may be
+considered a rule. Of course, this cropping can not be carried on
+indefinitely. The land is now being allowed to rest, and other crops,
+such as maize, oats, barley, millet, and timothy, are to some extent
+being raised in rotation, but not to the extent in which individual
+wheat farms are now passing into rotation, especially in Minnesota.
+
+In this enterprise the manufacture of wheat is the main purpose, but
+under the changed conditions on the small farms in Minnesota wheat is
+becoming rather the cash or excess crop in a rotation of four; at
+present, in North Dakota, wheat constitutes about three fourths the
+total product.
+
+In these accounts of this great farm are included all charges of every
+name and nature except what might be called the rent of land: the
+labor, the harvesting and thrashing, the general expense including the
+foreman and all other charges; the office expenses, the taxes, the
+insurance, and, when summer fallow is introduced, the cost of the
+summer fallow. Suffice it that these figures for 1898--a year of high
+charge for seed and one which yielded a fraction over the average in
+product--prove conclusively an average of all charges of less than
+five dollars an acre for the cost of the product. In different years
+under these conditions the cost of the wheat varies from a little over
+twenty cents to approximately thirty-five cents per bushel. The cost
+of oats, which are cultivated with the wheat mainly for use on the
+farms, ranges from ten to fifteen cents per bushel.
+
+These are facts. The pending question in this discussion is, How much
+land, occupied by owners but not now in use, is there in this section
+of the country on which similar results can be attained, with better
+results by individual farmers who possess mental energy and practical
+skill? The figures given by the chiefs of the agricultural experiment
+stations may rightly be taken in the solution of this question.
+
+
+
+
+THE COMING OF THE CATBIRD.
+
+BY SPENCER TROTTER.
+
+
+In southeastern Pennsylvania there comes a day in February that brings
+with it an indefinable sense of joyousness. A southerly wind wanders
+up the Delaware with a touch of the spring in its air that quickens,
+for the first time, the slumbering life. It is then that those
+mysterious forces in the cells of living things begin their subtle
+work--hidden in the dark, underground storehouses of plants and the
+sluggish tissues of animals buried in their winter sleep. On such a
+day the ground hog ventures from his burrow, some restless bee is
+lured from the hive to wander disconsolate over bare fields, a snake
+crawls from its hole to bask awhile in the sunshine, and one looks
+instinctively for the first breaking of the earth that tells of the
+early crocus and the peeping forth of daffodils. The southerly wind is
+more apt than not to be a telltale, for with all its springtime
+softness it is drawing toward some storm center, near or remote, that
+will inevitably follow with rough weather in its sweep. The country
+folk rightly call such a day a "weather breeder," and even the ground
+hog knows its portent in the very sign of his shadow. Come as it will,
+the day is really a day borrowed in advance from the spring, as though
+to hearten one through all the dreary days that will follow and, in
+starting the growing forces of vegetation, to make ready for the
+season's coming.
+
+With this forerunner of the year come the harbingers of the bird
+migration. With the rise of the temperature to sixty or over, a
+well-marked bird wave from the south spreads over the Delaware Valley.
+On this balmy, springlike day we hear for the first time since
+November the croaking of grackles as a loose flock wings overhead or
+scatters among the tree tops. A few robins may show themselves, and
+the mellow piping of bluebirds lends its sweet influence to the charm
+of such a day. There is a sense of uncertain whereabouts in the
+bluebird's note, a sort of hazy, in-the-air feeling that suggests sky
+space. It does not seem to have the tangible element by which we can
+locate the bird as in the voices of the robin and the song sparrow. It
+is on such a day as this that song sparrows are first heard--cheery
+ditties from the weather-beaten fences and the bare, brown tangle of
+brier patches. The day may close lurid with the frayed streamers of
+lofty cirrus clouds streaking across the sky--the vaporous overflow of
+a coming storm--or a week of the same bright weather may continue with
+the wind all the while blowing softly out of the south, but sooner or
+later the inevitable winter storm must close this foretaste of the
+spring.
+
+A decided wave of rising temperature usually reaches the Delaware
+Valley from the middle to the last of March, maintaining itself longer
+than the February rise, and ushering in a well-marked bird wave. It is
+about this time that the vanguard of the robin migration scatters over
+the country. The grackles or crow blackbirds, which have been more or
+less in evidence since their first appearance in February, begin
+renovating the old nests or laying the foundations of new ones in the
+tops of tall pines. The shrill call of the flicker sounds through the
+woods, and before the end of the month one is sure to hear the
+plaintive song of the field sparrow. This is about the time that the
+spicebush shows its yellow blossoms through the grays and browns of
+the spring underwoods, and the skunk cabbage unfolds its fresh, green
+leafage in rank abundance along the boggy course of woodland rills. A
+week earlier the streaked yellow and purple of its fleshy spathes
+shows here and there in the oozy ground by the side of the folded leaf
+spikes. It is just at this time, too, that one must go to the woods
+for the first spring wild flowers--bloodroot, hepatica, anemones, and
+the yellow dog-tooth violet--if one would get the real freshness of
+spring into his soul. The crows, that all through the winter filed
+away each evening in straggling lines of flight toward the distant
+roost, have broken ranks, and go rambling in small groups through the
+woods and over the fields of green winter wheat. Like the grackles,
+they have thoughts of courtship and the more earnest business of
+family cares. The liquid notes of meadow larks sound clear and sweet
+in the greening fields and pastures, and small flocks of vociferous
+killdeers scatter in wheeling flight over the newly plowed lands. In
+tangle covers the rustle of dead leaves here and there tells of the
+whereabouts of a flock of fox sparrows halting in their northward
+pilgrimage. The pewee is back, inspecting her last year's house under
+the span of some old bridge, and the melancholy voice of the dove is
+borne on the air from the fence rows and cedars along the farther side
+of fields.
+
+After the 1st of April the tide of migration sets in with force, and
+the earlier waves bring several species of summer birds--those that
+come to build and breed in our woods--that rarely if ever make their
+appearance before this time. It is an interesting fact that none of
+the migrants that make their first appearance in April are ever found
+in the Delaware Valley during the winter, though several, if not all,
+of the species that come on the March waves are occasionally met with
+in the winter months. It appears, further, that the winter quarters of
+certain birds which are summer residents with us and some that are
+transient, passing on to more northern breeding grounds, lie not so
+very far to the south. If the last of March has been marked by warm
+weather lapping over into the first days of April, then one may expect
+soon to hear the familiar notes of the chipping sparrow from the
+swelling branches of garden shrubbery and the trees about the lawn,
+and a brown thrasher is sure to be heard volubly proclaiming his
+arrival from some near-by tree top. Among the budding sprigs of
+thickets the elusive chewink breaks into occasional fragments of song,
+and from the red-blossomed maples and the jungle of pussy willows and
+alders that fringe the meadow brook the metallic creaking notes of the
+red-winged blackbirds sound not unpleasingly. This jargon of the
+red-wing has a true vernal ring about it, suggesting the fresh green
+of oozy bogs and the loosening up of sap.
+
+From the middle to the last of April there are several big waves of
+migration that bring many of the summer residents as well as some
+transient species, forerunning the greater waves that are to follow in
+May. On certain warm April days the barn and the bank swallows appear,
+and the chimney swifts are seen scurrying to and fro above the trees
+and house tops. These are genuine signs of the coming summer, for
+swallows and swifts feed only on the minute gnats and other ephemera
+that develop under conditions of warm temperature. Whoever knows of a
+martin box that year after year is visited by its colony has an
+unfailing source of delight at this time in watching the lovely birds.
+The martins are very prompt in their arrival, rarely coming before the
+1st of April nor later than the 10th. We are aware for the first time
+that the house wren has come back by the voluble song that greets us
+some morning from the branches just beyond our window--a song that
+only the lover of his own rooftree can fully appreciate, for the
+wren's chant, more than any other bird song, seems to voice the home
+instinct in a man. By the last week of April the woods are fast
+closing up their vistas in a rich profusion of unfolding leafage. The
+umbrellalike leaves of the May apple are scattered everywhere through
+the woods and fields, forming conspicuous patches of green. During
+this last week of the month a few straggling thrushes make their
+appearance--the hermit thrush with its russet tail, the veery, and the
+wood thrush. The first two are transients, flitting through the
+underwoods or rustling among fallen leaves in search of their insect
+food. To hear the incomparable matins and vespers of the hermit one
+must follow to the bird's breeding range on the wooded slopes of the
+Appalachians or farther into the deep recesses of the Canadian
+forests. The wood thrush breeds with us, and the melody of its notes
+adds a peculiar charm to our groves and woodlands that would leave an
+unfilled blank in the choir if the bird were a transient like the
+hermit or the veery.
+
+From the 1st to the 10th of May a succession of bird waves comes from
+the south of such vast proportions as to the number of individuals and
+variety of species that all the previous migratory waves seem
+insignificant in comparison. It is the flood tide of the migration,
+bringing with it the host of warblers, vireos, orioles, tanagers, and
+thrushes that suddenly make our woods almost tropical in the variety
+of richly colored species and strange bird notes. It would take a
+volume to describe the wood warblers, sylvan nymphs of such bizarre
+color patterns and dainty forms that one is fain to imagine himself in
+the heart of some wondrous forest of a far-away land. Their curious
+dry notes, each different in its kind and expression, yet all of the
+same insectlike quality; their quick, active motions, now twisting
+head downward around the branches, prying into every nook and cranny
+in their eager search for food, or fluttering about the clusters of
+leaves, add to the strange effect. Their names, too, are richly
+stimulative to the color sense--the black-throated green, the
+black-throated blue, the chestnut-sided, the bay-breasted, the black
+and yellow, the cerulean, the Blackburnian, the blue-winged yellow,
+the golden-winged, the blue-yellow-backed or parula warbler, and the
+Maryland yellow-throat are each suggestive of a wealth of coloring.
+Others have names that carry us to southern realms, like the myrtle
+and the palm warblers; and others again tell of curious habits, as the
+worm-eating warbler, the hooded fly-catching warbler, and the black
+and white creeping warbler that scrambles about the tree trunks like a
+true creeper. There is nothing in all the year quite like the May
+woods. Then, if never again, you can step from your dooryard into an
+enchanted forest. The light yellowish effects of new green in the
+feathery masses of the oak catkins and the fresh, unfolding leafage of
+the forest trees are a rich feast to the eyes. Against this wealth of
+green the dogwood spreads its snow-white masses of bloom. In sunlit
+spaces of greenness the scarlet flash of a tanager, the rich blue
+coloring of the indigo bird, newly arrived from its winter quarters in
+South America, and the glimpse of a rose-breasted grosbeak among the
+high tree tops are strangely suggestive of a tropical forest. The ear,
+too, is charmed with a multitude of curious notes. The weird cries of
+the great-crested flycatcher among the topmost branches, and the loud
+chant of the ovenbird with its rising cadence coming from farther
+depths of the wood are two of the most characteristic bird voices of
+the May woodlands. If one would have the famous song of the mocking
+bird in this sylvan carnival he has only to loiter in the nearest
+grove to hear the wonderful performance of the catbird. The catbird is
+the real harbinger of summer. He is familiar throughout the
+countryside, liked or disliked according to the dispositions of folks,
+but when he appears amid the May-day throng every one knows that
+summer has come. As a countryman once said to me: "You can't place any
+dependence on the robin--it may snow the very day he comes; but a
+catbird never makes a mistake--it's summer with him for sure."
+
+The passing on of the great warbler waves to the north and the ending
+of the migration likewise mean the passing of the spring. It is summer
+any time after the 15th of May, or, to be more accurate, after the
+last of the migratory warblers, thrushes, and tanagers have passed
+beyond our woods. To a New-Englander summer will come a little later,
+nearer the true almanac date of June 1st. To a dweller in Virginia the
+last of April is the passing of spring and the advent of summer.
+
+Some ten or more years ago several enthusiastic ornithologists living
+in the neighborhood of Philadelphia began keeping records of the times
+of arrival of the different species of birds, and at the same time
+noted the conditions of temperature in relation to the abundance of
+individuals. After several years of these observations they were able
+to see clearly that these bird waves were directly related to the
+waves of rising temperature marking the advent of warm spells of
+weather. One of the most significant facts deduced from these
+observations was the remarkable regularity in the first appearance of
+certain species. For example, the Baltimore oriole in eight years of
+observation never arrived before the 1st of May, and only twice later
+than the 4th--viz., once on the fifth and once on the 7th. The list on
+the opposite page shows the date of first arrivals extending over a
+period of eight years, from 1885 to 1892.[10]
+
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------+
+ | 1885. | 1886. | 1887. | 1888. |
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------|
+ Flicker | April 10 | Mar. 24 | Mar. 26 | Mar. 30 |
+ Chimney swift | April 22 | April 23 | April 22 | April 20 |
+ Hummingbird | April 29 | May 12 | May 12 | May 14 |
+ Kingbird | May 6 | May 11 | May 7 | May 6 |
+ Crested flycatcher | May 2 | May 12 | May 3 | May 1 |
+ Pewee | April 3 | Mar. 20 | Mar. 21 | Mar. 22 |
+ Wood pewee | May 6 | May 15 | April 30 | May 13 |
+ Red-winged | | | | |
+ blackbird | Mar. 4 | Feb. 19 | Feb. 19 | Feb. 21 |
+ Meadow lark | ....... | Feb. 10 | Mar. 19 | Mar. 21 |
+ Baltimore oriole | May 5 | May 4 | May 2 | May 2 |
+ Purple grackle | Mar. 16 | Mar. 7 | Feb. 19 | Feb. 21 |
+ Chipping sparrow | April 8 | April 9 | April 8 | Mar. 31 |
+ Field sparrow | April 11 | April 7 | April 9 | April 2 |
+ Chewink | April 22 | April 23 | April 27 | April 18 |
+ Indigo bird | May 16 | May 11 | May 7 | May 12 |
+ Scarlet tanager | May 9 | May 12 | May 5 | May 8 |
+ Barn swallow | April 22 | April 19 | April 21 | April 12 |
+ Red-eyed vireo | May 7 | May 11 | May 4 | April 29 |
+ Black-and-white | | | | |
+ warbler | April 30 | May 4 | April 27 | April 21 |
+ Yellow warbler | May 6 | May 4 | May 2 | May 5 |
+ Myrtle warbler | May 2 | April 10 | May 2 | April 25 |
+ Black-throated | | | | |
+ green warbler | May 2 | May 11 | May 5 | April 26 |
+ Ovenbird | April 30 | May 3 | April 29 | April 30 |
+ Maryland | | | | |
+ yellow-throat | April 29 | April 24 | April 28 | April 30 |
+ Chat | May 2 | May 12 | May 5 | May 5 |
+ Redstart | May 2 | May 4 | May 3 | May 1 |
+ Catbird | May 2 | May 4 | May 3 | May 5 |
+ Brown thrasher | April 24 | April 25 | April 28 | April 15 |
+ House wren | May 3 | April 27 | April 24 | April 28 |
+ Wood thrush | May 2 | May 1 | May 1 | May 1 |
+ Veery | ....... | May 11 | April 25 | May 3 |
+ Hermit thrush | April 13 | April 7 | April 9 | April 3 |
+ Robin | Mar. 7 | Mar. 10 | Feb. 28 | Feb. 19 |
+ Bluebird | Mar. 18 | ....... | Feb. 17 | Feb. 21 |
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------+
+
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ | 1889. | 1890. | 1891. | 1892.
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+----------
+ Flicker | Mar. 28 | Mar. 26 | Mar. 30 | April 2
+ Chimney swift | April 15 | April 22 | April 16 | April 27
+ Hummingbird | ....... | May 7 | May 11 | .......
+ Kingbird | May 6 | May 14 | May 1 | May 4
+ Crested flycatcher | May 8 | May 1 | April 30 | May 3
+ Pewee | Mar. 27 | Mar. 27 | Mar. 31 | April 3
+ Wood pewee | May 12 | May 14 | May 6 | May 17
+ Red-winged | | | |
+ blackbird | Mar. 13 | Mar. 12 | Feb. 25 | Mar. 9
+ Meadow lark | Mar. 14 | Mar. 12 | Feb. 23 | Mar. 17
+ Baltimore oriole | May 7 | May 1 | May 1 | May 3
+ Purple grackle | Mar. 2 | Feb. 13 | Feb. 18 | Mar. 6
+ Chipping sparrow | Mar. 29 | April 8 | April 13 | April 4
+ Field sparrow | Mar. 29 | Mar. 13 | Mar. 15 | Mar. 26
+ Chewink | April 11 | May 1 | April 18 | April 24
+ Indigo bird | May 12 | May 10 | May 8 | May 10
+ Scarlet tanager | May 9 | May 4 | April 28 | May 3
+ Barn swallow | April 22 | April 19 | April 19 | April 24
+ Red-eyed vireo | May 5 | April 30 | May 2 | May 3
+ Black-and-white | | | |
+ warbler | April 20 | April 30 | April 24 | May 1
+ Yellow warbler | May 11 | May 1 | May 8 | May 4
+ Myrtle warbler | April 20 | April 27 | April 18 | April 7
+ Black-throated | | | |
+ green warbler | May 5 | May 2 | April 19 | April 30
+ Ovenbird | May 3 | May 3 | April 29 | April 30
+ Maryland | | | |
+ yellow-throat | May 6 | April 30 | May 1 | May 3
+ Chat | May 11 | May 5 | May 1 | May 3
+ Redstart | May 4 | May 3 | April 29 | April 30
+ Catbird | May 5 | May 5 | May 4 | April 30
+ Brown thrasher | April 22 | April 30 | April 19 | April 30
+ House wren | April 14 | April 30 | April 19 | May 5
+ Wood thrush | May 3 | April 30 | April 23 | May 2
+ Veery | May 6 | May 2 | April 28 | May 4
+ Hermit thrush | April 10 | April 13 | April 12 | April 3
+ Robin | Mar. 7 | Feb. 26 | Feb. 24 | Mar. 9
+ Bluebird | Mar. 8 | Feb. 23 | Feb. 17 | Mar. 9
+ -------------------+----------+----------+----------+---------
+
+Another fact of great interest which bears on the south-to-north
+movement of migrating birds, and which these observations very clearly
+brought out, was the earlier appearance of individuals of various
+species at points nearer the river, the first arrival of the same
+species at points back from the river being, in many instances,
+several days later. The first report of the arrival of a given species
+usually came from a low, marshy tract of land immediately bordering
+the western shore of the Delaware. The second report came from a
+locality several miles back of the eastern shore of the river, but
+situated in the low plain of the river valley and within tide-water
+limits. The third report came from a place some miles back from the
+river on the uplands, but near the head of a stream emptying into the
+Delaware from the west. The last two places to report arrivals were
+situated farther up the river and some distance back from it. All this
+confirms the general idea that in migrating most, if not all, of the
+various land birds follow river valleys and invade the upland
+districts, lying back from either side, by way of the smaller
+tributaries.
+
+The fact of greatest importance resulting from these observations was
+that relating to temperature. It was found that there was always a
+marked increase in the number of individuals of a given species
+following a warm wave of temperature as marked by a decided rise of
+the thermometer. The following graphic representation, based on the
+abundance from day to day of three common and easily observed
+species--the brown thrasher, chipping sparrow, and flicker--affords an
+interesting illustration of the relative movements of the two waves.
+It will be understood that the numbers in the extreme left-hand column
+refer to the relative abundance of individuals of the three species
+collectively. The inside column refers to temperature. The period of
+observation was twenty days, as shown by the line across the top of
+the figure.[11]
+
+[Illustration: A, migration; B, temperature.]
+
+The advent of spring is marked by the northward progression of the
+isotherm of 42.8 deg. F., which is the initial temperature required to
+awaken the dormant reproductive and germinating activities in animals
+and plants. With the gradual invasion of the United States, from the
+south northward, by temperatures above this, there passes over the
+different regions the ever-old but ever-new panorama of the spring
+with its opening blossoms, its unfolding green, and its waves of
+migrating birds. The restlessness produced by the periodic development
+of the reproductive function under the stimulus of increased
+temperature causes the highly organized bird life to spread out from
+its winter quarters, wherever those may be, and follow the zone of new
+green that steadily widens northward with its increase of food supply
+in the form of myriads of insects. The comparative regularity in the
+recurrence of this phenomenon year after year is attested by the
+observations just noted. Each species has a certain, definite
+physiological relation to temperature, and its migratory movement
+toward the breeding ground is determined by the movement of the
+isotherm of this temperature. Just as warm a spell of weather may
+occur in early April as in the first week of May, but it does not
+represent the permanent summer rise; and the majority of the warblers,
+the catbird, the tanager, the rose-breasted grosbeak, the two species
+of oriole, the vireos, and the kingbird, are rarely if ever seen in
+abundance in the Delaware Valley before the 1st of May. The migratory
+movement of such species is as regular as any other periodic
+phenomenon in Nature.
+
+It is hard to realize the enormous multitude of birds that form a
+so-called "wave." During the whole period of migration there is a
+general northward movement of all the migratory species, but under the
+influence of warm spells of weather this more or less uniform movement
+rises into a vast wavelike sweep of birds. These bird waves, as
+already noted, _follow_ the rise of temperature appearing at any given
+locality about a day or two after the first day of the warm spell.
+Many species of land birds migrate at night--such, for example, as the
+orioles, tanagers, warblers, vireos, wrens, the majority of the
+finches, the woodpeckers, and the thrushes, excepting the robin.
+During the passing of one of the May waves the darkness overhead is
+alive with flying birds. One may stand for hours at a time and hear
+the incessant chirping and twittering of hundreds of birds calling to
+one another through the night as though to keep from getting
+separated. The great mass of individuals are probably guided by these
+call notes.
+
+The usually accepted notion that birds migrate from south to north in
+traveling to their breeding grounds is largely true of shore birds and
+waterfowl, but among many of the species of land birds conditions of
+topography tend to deflect a direct northward movement. The Atlantic
+coast plain, reaching up into southern New Jersey, and the Mississippi
+basin, each offers a broad south-to-north highway for birds leaving
+the Gulf shores of the United States on their northward journey in the
+spring. A great majority of species find in the wilderness of the
+Appalachian highland, from the Catskills to Georgia, breeding grounds
+quite as well adapted to their needs as the forests of Maine and
+Canada. Large numbers of birds, according to their regional relations,
+will constantly turn from the Atlantic coast plain up the numerous
+rivers, which become great highways of migration, leading to the
+highlands. The northward movement has thus a large westerly deflection
+on the Atlantic slope of the middle United States. It is also quite
+certain that many birds winter in favorable localities on the Atlantic
+coast plain much farther north than is generally supposed. This is
+especially true of the holly thickets among the coastwise sand dunes
+of southern New Jersey and the cedar swamps and pine barrens in the
+vicinity of Cape May. Many of the finches, the marsh wrens,
+red-winged blackbirds, meadow larks, thrashers, and myrtle warblers
+are frequently seen in these localities through the winter. I spent
+one first day of February some years ago among the dunes below
+Atlantic City, N. J. At Philadelphia that morning it was bleak winter
+weather, but two hours later we found ourselves in a warm expanse of
+sunlight on the seaward beaches. The balmy air was filled with bird
+notes, and the holly thickets and bay bushes fairly swarmed with
+myrtle warblers. It seems to be a fact that many birds thus make
+comparatively short migratory movements between the seacoast plain and
+the mountains, up and down the river valleys.
+
+The phenomenon of the migrating bird has always appealed in a
+wonderful manner to the human mind. The guiding geographical sense
+that all animals, and wild animals and birds in particular, possess is
+peculiarly attractive to men of civilized society, because they have
+largely lost this same natural instinct of direction, and now look
+upon it in wonderment. Birds have very sure landmarks; their senses
+are keen for noting features of topography. They undoubtedly know the
+Potomac, the Susquehanna, the Delaware, the Hudson, and the
+Connecticut, and never confuse one with another. They know to which
+side the sea lies and that the rivers flow down from a wild, wooded
+region where there are plenty of food and the best possible places to
+raise their young. All these facts get fixed in their brains. The
+bird's brain-cell structure is built on these lines and is only
+waiting to get the impressions of the first migratory experience. They
+keep in with one another, follow their chirpings in the night, learn
+to tell the Hudson from the Delaware, or where this or that stretch of
+woodland lies, just as they learned when first out of the nest how to
+tell good from bad sorts of food, or how to find their way about the
+home woods, and that an owl or a fox was an undesirable acquaintance.
+In the fall migration the young birds follow the older ones in the
+general movement southward, and are often belated, showing that the
+impulse to leave their birthplaces is forced upon them, rather from
+necessity than choice, and is not the well-developed instinct
+impressed by former experience which their elders seem to possess. The
+old birds who have bred and reared these young ones set the example of
+early departure which the birds of the year through inexperience are
+tardy in appreciating. The habit waits upon experience.
+
+Each year, from midwinter, when the first warmth of advancing sunlight
+calls to the sleeping life, on to the first fervid heat of the
+reproductive summer, we have the joyous pageant of the spring. This
+steady waxing of the new light appealed to the pagan mind of western
+Europe with a far deeper sense than the modern mind can appreciate. To
+our rude ancestors it was the goddess Eastre, bountiful in her gift
+of warmth and the magic of reproductive life, that each year came with
+the light to drive away the frost giants. And with the goddess, whom
+we still love to picture as a maiden tripping lightly through the
+budding groves in her wind-blown garments, came the birds. It was the
+cuckoo that brought the summer with "daisies pied and violets blue,"
+and to-day, when its voice is heard for the first time in the year,
+every one knows that summer has come again to the hedgerows of England
+and the lands of the Rhine. So with us across the Atlantic, summer
+comes when the catbird first pours out its babel of sweet notes in
+green woodland ways and the tangled nooks of old gardens.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[10] The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Prepared under
+the direction of the Delaware Valley Ornithological Club. By Witmer
+Stone. Philadelphia, 1894.
+
+[11] Stone. The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
+
+
+
+
+GUESSING, AS INFLUENCED BY NUMBER PREFERENCES.
+
+BY F. B. DRESSLAR.
+
+
+About two years ago a certain progressive clothing company of Los
+Angeles, California, procured a very large squash--so large, indeed,
+as to attract much attention. This they placed uncut in a window of
+their place of business, and advertised that they would give one
+hundred dollars in gold to the one guessing the number of seeds it
+contained. In case two or more persons guessed the correct number, the
+money was to be divided equally among them. The only prerequisite for
+an opportunity to guess was that the one wishing to guess should walk
+inside and register his name, address, and his guess in the notebook
+kept for that purpose.
+
+The result of this offer was that 7,700 people registered guesses, and
+but three of these guessed 811, the number of seeds which the squash
+contained.
+
+It occurred to me that a study of these guesses would reveal some
+interesting number preferences, if any existed, for the conditions
+were unusually favorable for calling forth naive and spontaneous
+results, there being no way of approximating the number of seeds by
+calculation, and very little or no definite experience upon which to
+rely for guidance. It seemed probable, therefore, that the guesses
+would cover a wide range, and by reason of this furnish evidence of
+whatever number preference might exist. It is undoubtedly safe to
+assume, too, that the guesses made were honest attempts to state as
+nearly as possible best judgments under conditions given; but even if
+some of the guesses were more or less facetiously made, the data would
+be equally valuable for the main purpose in hand.
+
+According to the theory of probability, had there been no preference
+at all for certain digits or certain combinations of digits within
+the limits of the guesses, one figure would occur about as often as
+another in units' or tens' place. It was argued, therefore, that any
+marked or persistent variation from such regularity in such a great
+number of cases would reveal what might be termed an unconscious
+preference for such numbers or digits for these places.
+
+The purpose of this study, then, was to determine whether or not there
+existed in the popular mind, under the conditions offered, any such
+preferences.
+
+After the very arduous and tedious task of collating and classifying
+all the guesses for men and women separately had been done, the
+following facts appeared:
+
+In the first place, marked preference is shown for certain digits both
+for units' and tens' places. This statement is based on a study of the
+6,863 guesses falling below one thousand. Of these, 4,238 were made by
+men and 2,625 were made by women. By tabulations of the digits used in
+units' place by both men and women, the following facts have been
+determined: 800 used 9, while but 374 used 8; 1,070 used 7, and 443
+preferred 6; 881 used 5, and only 295 preferred 4; 862 chose 3, while
+331 used 2; 577 ended with 1, while 1,230 preferred 0 as the last
+figure.
+
+A tabulation of the figures used in tens' place shows, save in the
+case of 2 and 3, where 2 is used oftener than 3, the same curious
+preferences, but in a much less marked degree. To go into detail, 850
+chose 9 for tens' place, while 559 took 8; 907 used 7, while only 637
+selected 6; 748 took 5, while only 536 used 4; 601 used 3, and 634
+chose 2; 728 used 1, as against 872 who used 0.
+
+Were it not that the selections here in the main correspond with the
+preferences shown in units' place, the significance of these figures
+would be much less important; but the evidence here can not wholly be
+ignored when taken in connection with the facts obtained in the
+preferences shown in the case of the figures occupying units' place.
+
+We are enabled, then, as a result of the study of these guesses, to
+say that under the conditions offered, aside from a preference of 0
+over 1 to end the numbers selected, digits representing odd numbers
+are conspicuously preferred to those representing even numbers. How
+far this will hold under other conditions can not now be stated, but
+the facts here observed are of such a nature as to suggest the
+possibility of an habitual tendency in this direction. However,
+further investigations can alone determine whether or not this bias
+for certain numbers is potent in a general way.
+
+The curve on the next page, exhibiting the results noted above, shows
+at a glance the marked and persistent preference for the odd numbers.
+
+It will be noticed that of the digits preferred, 7 surpasses any of
+the others. Not only, then, do we tend to select an odd number for
+units' place when the guess ranges between one and a thousand, but of
+these digits 7 is much preferred. In connection with this fact one
+immediately recalls all he has heard about 7 as a sacred number, and
+its professed significance in the so-called "occult sciences." I think
+one is warranted in saying from an introspective point of view that
+there is a shadow of superstition present in all attempts at pure
+guessing. There appears to be some unexpressed feeling of lucky
+numbers or some mental easement when one unreasoned position is taken
+rather than any other.
+
+[Illustration: CHOICE OF DIGITS IN TENS' AND UNITS' PLACES (MEN AND
+WOMEN).
+
+Vertical distance shows the number of times the figure on the
+horizontal line immediately below was used.]
+
+It is impossible on the evidence furnished by this study to give more
+than hints at the probable reason for the preference here indicated.
+But it is worth while to glance backward to earlier conditions, when
+the scientific attitude toward all the facts of life and mind was far
+more subordinated to supernatural interpretations than it is to-day.
+In this way we may catch a thread which still binds us to habits
+formed in the indefinite past.
+
+The Greeks considered the even numbers as representative of the
+feminine principle, and as belonging and applying to things
+terrestrial. To them the odd numbers were endowed with a masculine
+virtue, which in time was strengthened into supernatural and celestial
+qualities. The same belief was prevalent among the Chinese. With them
+even numbers were connected with earthly things, partaking of the
+feminine principle of Yang. Odd numbers were looked upon as proceeding
+out of the divine and endued with the masculine principle. Thirty was
+called the number of earth, because it was made up by the addition of
+the even numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10. On the other hand, 25, the sum of
+the five odd numbers 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9, was called the number of
+heaven.
+
+It is generally true that, as lower peoples developed the need of
+numbers and the power to use them, certain of these numbers came to be
+surrounded with a superstitious importance and endued with certain
+qualities which led at once to numerical preferences more or less
+dominant in all their thinking connected with numbers.
+
+It would certainly be unjustifiable to conclude from the evidence at
+hand that the preferences shown in the guesses under consideration are
+directly traceable to some such superstition; and yet one can scarcely
+prevent himself from linking them vaguely together. Especially is this
+true when some consideration is given to a probable connecting link as
+shown in our modern superstitious notions. I have found through a
+recent study of these superstitions that where numbers are introduced,
+the odd are used to the almost complete exclusion of the even. For
+example, I have collected and tabulated a series of more than sixty
+different superstitions using odd numbers, and have found but four
+making use of the even. Besides these specific examples there are many
+more which in some form or another express the belief that odd numbers
+have some vital relation with luck both good and bad.
+
+It would be impossible to define precisely or even approximately just
+what sort of a mental state the word "luck" stands for, but one
+element in its composition is a more or less naive belief in
+supernatural and occult influences which at one time work for and at
+another time against the believer. In its more pronounced forms, the
+belief in luck lifts itself into a sort of a blind dependence upon
+some ministering spirit which interposes between rational causes and
+their effects. In a way one may say that the more or less vague and
+shadowy notions of luck which float in the minds of people to-day are
+but the emaciated and famishing forms of a once all-embracing
+superstition, and that these shadows possess a potency over life and
+action oftentimes beyond our willingness to believe.
+
+There is another interesting and somewhat curious thing to be noticed
+in connection with these guesses. There is a persistent tendency to
+the duplication of digits, or, if one thinks of the numbers as at
+first conceived in terms of language, a tendency to alliteration. For
+example, the numbers 111, 222, 333, 444, 555, 666, 777, 888, and 999
+occur oftener by sixty-seven per cent than any other combination
+possible in the tens thus represented. That is to say, other things
+equal, one would have a right to expect 334 or 332 to occur as often
+as 333. But the fact is, in this particular case, 333 occurred
+forty-eight times, while the other two put together occurred only
+three times. Here, however, we have the combined influence of the
+preference for the odd over the even and the digital sequence. Still,
+if we select 444, we find that this number, made up though it is of
+three digits in general least selected of all, the preference for
+alliterative effect is strong enough to make the number occur 28 times
+to 14 times for both 443 and 445. If we take 777, we find that it was
+used more times than all the other combinations from 770 to 779
+inclusive, put together.
+
+Therefore, under conditions similar to those presented for these
+guesses, one would be safe to expect these duplicative or alliterative
+numbers to occur much oftener than any other single number in the
+series.
+
+It would evidently be unsafe to generalize upon the basis of this
+study, notwithstanding the large number of guesses considered.
+However, it seems to me that the results here obtained at least
+suggest a field of inquiry which promises interesting returns. If it
+be true, as here suggested, that odd numbers are preferred by
+guessers, advantage could be taken of this preference in many ways.
+Furthermore, as I suspect, it may be that this probable preference
+points to a habit of mind which more or less influences results not
+depending strictly on guessing. It has been shown, for example, that
+the length of criminal sentences has been largely affected by
+preferences for 5 or multiples of 5--that is to say, where judges have
+power to fix the length of sentence within certain limits, there is a
+strong probability that they will be influenced in their judgments by
+the habitual use of 5 or its multiples. Here it would seem that
+unconscious preference overrides what one has a right to consider the
+most careful and impartial judgments possible, based upon actual and
+well-digested data.[12]
+
+Another thing is noticeable in these guesses. The consciousness of
+number beyond 1,000 falls off very rapidly. The difference in the
+values of 1,000 and 1,500 seems to have had less weight with the
+guessers than a difference of 50 had at any place below 1,000. And so,
+in a way, 1,000 seems to mark the limit of any sort of definite mental
+measurement. This fact is more and more emphasized as the numbers
+representing the guesses increase until one can see there exists
+absolutely no conception of the value of numbers. For example, many
+guessed 1,000,000, while several guessed more than 10,000,000.
+Guessing means, with many people, no attempt at any sort of reasonable
+measurement, but rather an attempt to express their guess in such a
+way as to afford them the greatest amount of mental relief. And this
+relief can not be wholly accomplished without satisfying number
+preferences. Therefore, guessing is likely to exhibit, in a greater or
+less degree, some habitual lines of preference subject to
+predetermination. It may be that much practical advantage has been
+taken of these facts in games of chance where number selections play
+an important part.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[12] See H. Le Poer. Influence of Number in Criminal Sentences.
+Harper's Weekly, May 14, 1896.
+
+
+
+
+CONCERNING WEASELS.
+
+BY WILLIAM E. CRAM.
+
+
+[Illustration: A Weasel standing on the ground]
+
+Why is it that while popular fancy has attributed all sorts of uncanny
+and supernatural qualities to owls and cats, and that no ghost story
+or tale of horrid murder has been considered quite complete without
+its rat peering from some dark corner, or spider with expanded legs
+suddenly spinning down from among the rafters, no such grewsome
+association has ever attached itself to the weasels, creatures whose
+every habit and characteristic would seem to suggest something of the
+sort? Now, fond as I am of cats, I should never think of denying that
+they are uncanny creatures, to say the least. But, suppose it was the
+custom of our domestic tabbies to vanish abruptly or even gradually on
+occasion, like the Cheshire cat after its interview with Alice, that
+would at least furnish some excuse for the general prejudice against
+them, but would really be no more than some of our commonest weasels
+do whenever it serves their purpose. I remember one summer afternoon I
+was trout-fishing along a little brook that ran between pine-covered
+hills. As I lay stretched on the bank at the foot of a great maple I
+saw a weasel run along in the brush fence some distance away. A few
+seconds later he was standing on the exposed root of the tree hardly a
+yard from my eyes. I lay motionless and examined the beautiful
+creature minutely, till suddenly I found myself staring at the smooth
+greenish-gray root of the maple with no weasel in sight. Judging from
+my own experience, I should say that this is the usual termination of
+any chance observations of either weasels or minks.
+
+Occasionally they may be seen to dart into the bushes or behind some
+log or projecting bank, but much more frequently they vanish with a
+suddenness that defies the keenest eyesight.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel lying on a branch]
+
+In all probability this vanishing is accomplished by extreme rapidity
+of motion, but if this is the case then the creature succeeds in doing
+something utterly impossible to any other warm-blooded animal of its
+size. Mice, squirrels, and some of the smaller birds are all of them
+swift enough at times, but except in the case of the humming bird none
+of them, I believe, succeed in accomplishing the result achieved by
+the weasels. The humming bird, in spite of its small size, leaves us a
+pretty definite impression of the direction it has taken when it darts
+away; but when a mink, half a yard in length and weighing several
+pounds, stands motionless before one with his dark coat conspicuous
+against almost any background, and the next instant is gone without a
+rustle or the tremor of a blade of grass, it leaves one with an
+impression of witchcraft difficult to dispel; and best appreciated
+when one sees it for one's self. Nor is the everyday life of the
+weasel quiet or commonplace; his one object in life apparently is to
+kill, first to appease his hunger, then to satisfy his thirst for warm
+blood, and after that for the mere joy of killing.
+
+[Illustration: A white weasel]
+
+The few opportunities I have had for observing these animals have
+never shown them occupied in any other way, nor can any hint of
+anything different be gained from the various writers on the subject,
+while accounts of their attacking and even killing human beings in a
+kind of blind fury are too numerous and apparently well authenticated
+to be entirely ignored. These attacks are said usually to be made by a
+number of weasels acting in concert, and the motive would appear to be
+revenge for some injury done to one of their number. There seems to be
+something peculiar about the entire family of weasels. The American
+sable or pine marten is said to have strange ways that have puzzled
+naturalists and hunters for years. In the wilderness no amount of
+trapping has any effect on their numbers, nor do they show any
+especial fear of man or his works, occasionally even coming into
+lumber camps at night and being especially fond of old logging roads
+and woods that have been swept by fire; but at the slightest hint of
+approaching civilization they disappear, not gradually, but at once
+and forever, and the woods know them no more. If there is anything in
+the theory of the survival of the fittest, why is it that not one
+marten has discovered that, like other animals of its size, it could
+manage to live comfortably enough in the vicinity of man? The mink and
+otter still follow the course of every brook and river and manage to
+avoid the keen eyes of the duck hunter, while for six months in the
+year their paths are sprinkled with steel traps set either especially
+for them or for the more plebeian muskrat. If a pair of sables could
+be persuaded to take up their quarters in some parts of New England
+they could travel for dozens of miles through dark evergreen woods
+with hollow and decaying trees in abundance, while at present there
+are almost no traps set in a manner that need disturb creatures of
+their habits. Partridges, rabbits, and squirrels, which form their
+principal food, are nearly if not quite as abundant as before the
+country was settled, so that it would certainly not require any very
+decided change of habits to enable them to exist, but evidently the
+root of the matter goes deeper than that, and, like some tribes of
+Indians, it is impossible for them to multiply or flourish except in
+the primeval forest.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel on the ground]
+
+The common weasel or ermine, which is the only kind I have seen
+hereabouts, would seem to have everything on its side in the struggle
+for existence, and when one happens to be killed by some larger
+inhabitant of the woods it must be due entirely to its own
+carelessness. Nevertheless, they do occasionally fall victims to owls
+and foxes, and I once shot a red-tailed hawk that was in the act of
+devouring one. Still, these casualties among weasels are probably few
+and far between. Fortunately, however, they never increase to any
+great extent. Occasionally in the winter the snow for miles will be
+covered with their tracks all made in a single night, and then for
+weeks not a track is to be seen; but usually they prefer to hunt
+alone, each having its beat a mile or more in length, over which it
+travels back and forth throughout the season, passing any given point
+at intervals of two or three days. This habit of keeping to the same
+route instead of wandering at random about the woods is
+characteristic of the family, the length of the route depending to a
+certain extent on the size of the animal. The mink is usually about a
+week in going his rounds, and may cover a dozen miles in that time,
+while the otter is generally gone a fortnight or three weeks. When it
+is possible the ermine prefers to follow the course of old tumble-down
+stone walls, and lays its course accordingly. In favorable districts
+he is able to keep to these for miles together, squeezing into the
+smallest crevices in pursuit of mice or chipmunks. All the weasels
+travel in a similar manner--that is, by a series of leaps or bounds in
+such a way that the hind feet strike exactly in the prints made by the
+fore paws, so that the tracks left in the snow are peculiar and bear a
+strong family resemblance. On soft snow the slender body of the ermine
+leaves its imprint extending from one pair of footprints to the next,
+and as these are from four to six feet apart, or even more, the
+impression left in the snow is like the track of some extremely long
+and slender serpent with pairs of short legs at intervals along its
+body. I have said that the ermine is the only true weasel I have found
+in this vicinity, but this is not strictly true, at least I hope not.
+One winter I repeatedly noticed the tracks of an exceedingly large
+weasel--so very large, in fact, that I was almost forced to believe
+them to be those of a mink. The impression of its body in the snow was
+quite as large as that made by a small mink, but the footprints
+themselves were smaller, and the creature appeared to avoid the water
+in a manner quite at variance with the well-known habits of its more
+amphibious cousin, while, unlike the common weasel, it never followed
+stone walls or fences. I put my entire mind to the capture of the
+little beast, and set dozens of traps, but it was well along in the
+month of March before I succeeded. It proved to be a typical specimen
+of the Western long-tailed weasel, though I can find no account of any
+other having been taken east of the Mississippi. Its entire length was
+about eighteen inches; the tail, which was a little over six, gave the
+effect at first glance of being tipped with gray instead of black, but
+a closer inspection showed that the black hairs were confined to the
+very extremity and were partly concealed by the overlying white ones;
+the rest of the fur was white, with a slight reddish tinge, and much
+longer and coarser than that of an ermine. Since then I have
+occasionally seen similar tracks, but have not succeeded in capturing
+a second specimen. In all probability the least weasel is also to be
+found here if one has the patience to search carefully enough; none,
+however, have come under my observation as yet. All the small weasels
+that I have seen have proved on close inspection to be young ermines
+with thickly furred black-tipped tails; in the least weasel the tail
+is thinly covered with short hair and without any black whatever. Late
+in the autumn or early in the winter the ermine changes from
+reddish-brown to white, sometimes slightly washed with greenish-yellow
+or cream color, and again as brilliantly white as anything in Nature
+or art; the end of the tail, however, remains intensely black, and at
+first thought might be supposed to make the animal conspicuous on the
+white background of snow, but in reality has just the opposite effect.
+Place an ermine on new-fallen snow in such a way that it casts no
+shadow, and you will find that the black point holds your eye in spite
+of yourself, and that at a little distance it is quite impossible to
+follow the outline of the weasel itself. Cover the tail with snow, and
+you can begin to make out the position of the rest of the animal, but
+as long as the tip of the tail is in sight you see that and that only.
+The ptarmigan and northern hare also retain some spot or point of dark
+color when they take on their winter dress, and these dark points
+undoubtedly serve the same purpose as in the case of the ermine.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel catching a bird]
+
+An old hunter, one of the closest observers of Nature I have ever
+known, once told me that female minks hibernated in winter in the same
+manner as bears, though it was his belief that, unlike the bears, they
+never brought forth their young at that season. At first I refused to
+take the slightest stock in what he said; the whole thing appeared so
+absurd and so utterly at variance with the teachings of those
+naturalists who have made the closest possible study of the habits of
+minks. Since then, however, I have kept my eyes open for any hint that
+might have the slightest bearing on the subject, and to my surprise
+have found many things that would seem to point to the correctness of
+the old hunter's theory. To begin with, he said that late in the
+winter he had repeatedly known female minks to make their appearance
+from beneath snow that had lain undisturbed for days or even weeks,
+the tracks apparently beginning where he first observed them, the
+difference in size between the two sexes being sufficient to make it
+easy to distinguish between their tracks at a glance; and, moreover,
+since he first began trapping he had noticed that while the sexes were
+about equally abundant in the autumn, the females always became very
+scarce at the approach of winter and remained so until spring, when
+they suddenly increased in numbers and became much the more abundant
+of the two.
+
+[Illustration: A weasel on a log]
+
+This is also the experience of trappers in general, and may be
+verified by any one who cares to take the trouble to look into the
+matter. Evidently no one has ever discovered a mink in a state of
+hibernation; at any rate, no such case appears ever to have been
+reported; but this does not necessarily prove that it is not a regular
+habit among them.
+
+The cry of the mink is seldom heard, even in places where they are
+fairly abundant, as they have evidently learned that the greatest
+safety lies in silence. It is a peculiarly shrill, rattling,
+whistlelike scream, that can be heard at a considerable distance.
+
+
+
+
+CARE OF THE THROAT AND EAR.
+
+BY W. SCHEPPEGRELL, A. M., M. D.,
+
+PRESIDENT WESTERN OPTHALMOLOGIC AND OTO-LARYNGOLOGIC ASSOCIATION, NEW
+ORLEANS, LA.
+
+
+Hygiene is that branch of medical science which relates to the
+preservation and improvement of the health. As the prevention of
+disease is more important than its cure--in fact, superior to all
+methods for its cure--this is a subject which demands our most earnest
+attention. Hygiene is not limited to the preservation and improvement
+of the health of the individual, but includes that of whole
+communities. As, however, the health of a community depends upon the
+state of the health of the various families composing it, and this
+again of its members, the proper understanding of the hygienic laws by
+each individual is of the utmost importance.
+
+For some reason, however, the subject of hygiene or the prevention of
+disease does not create the enthusiasm caused by methods advocated for
+its cure. A Koch, who publishes to the world a supposed means of
+curing tuberculosis, or a Behring, who introduces the serum therapy of
+diphtheria, arouses an interest which is limited only by the four
+corners of the world. The modest worker in sanitation, however, who
+explains the means of the development of these diseases, and the
+conditions and laws by means of which they may be prevented, is looked
+upon without interest and frequently with disfavor. But in spite of
+these conditions, the laws of hygiene are gradually becoming more
+farspread, and their influence is felt more with each advancing year.
+
+The nose, throat, and ear are so intimately connected with the other
+parts of the body that their health depends to a large extent upon the
+condition of the system in general. The laws of hygiene and their
+application which refer to the body in general are also applicable to
+these parts, and whatever condition benefits the former will have a
+useful influence on the upper respiratory passages, and, inversely,
+any injurious effect will injure the health of these organs.
+
+The physiology of this region is of much importance. Formerly the nose
+was considered principally in its relation to the organ of smell. This
+is a most important function, as it is a constant sentinel over the
+air we breathe and the food we eat. It is a curious circumstance that
+many of the functions that are referred to the organ of taste really
+belong to that of smell. In eating ice cream, for instance, the sense
+of taste simply informs us that it is sweet or otherwise, but the
+flavor is perceived only by the sense of smell. A proof of this is
+that where this function is destroyed, all ability in this direction
+disappears, and the patient thus affected will frequently complain
+that his sense of taste is defective, not realizing that it is the
+sense of smell which performs this act.
+
+The nose, however, has a much more important function to
+perform--viz., in respiration. Strange to say, however, this has only
+recently been realized, and it is even yet not well understood. You
+have all observed that, when you had a severe "cold" which prevented
+nasal breathing, the next morning the mouth and throat were dry and
+parched and frequently inflamed, the voice sometimes hoarse, and there
+was a general feeling of depression. While the progress of the
+inflammatory process may be a factor in this, still the mechanical
+obstruction of the nose from any cause whatsoever will have a similar
+effect. In patients in whom, for various reasons, an artificial
+opening has been made in the trachea, the air of the room has to be
+heated to an almost intolerable point and saturated with moisture, or
+severe bronchial inflammation will soon develop in the patient, simply
+because the nose has not taken an active part in the act of
+respiration. These effects, therefore, clearly demonstrate that the
+nasal passages have an important function to perform in the breathing
+process. Summarized in a few words, it is simply to warm, moisten, and
+clean the air which we inhale.
+
+The healthy nostrils are anatomically and physiologically so formed
+that when the current of air passes through them it will have been
+freed of its mechanical impurities, warmed to within a few degrees of
+the temperature of the body, and moistened to saturation. This has
+been experimentally demonstrated.
+
+The opening of the passage of the ear into the throat has several
+objects, the most important being ventilation and the adjustment of
+the atmospheric equilibrium. This passage leads outward until it
+enters the cavity of the middle ear, which is closed by the drum on
+the outside, thus separating it from the external canal of the ear. We
+know that atmospheric pressure varies at different times and in
+different altitudes. It is much less, for instance, at the top of a
+mountain than at the seaside. The opening into the throat allows the
+air to enter, and adjusts the atmospheric pressure within the ear to
+these various external conditions. Those of you who have ascended
+Lookout Mountain by means of the incline cable car may have noticed
+the adjustment taking place by a peculiar click when different
+altitudes were reached.
+
+So intimately are the nose, throat, and ear connected that it is
+unusual to find one affected to any considerable extent without the
+others being involved. While the rules of hygiene in general are
+applicable to the nose, throat, and ear, there are certain special
+conditions which deserve consideration. One of the most common causes
+of injurious effects to the nose, throat, and ear is the so-called
+"cold." The cold in this connection is, of course, understood to be
+simply the cause, the condition itself being a peculiar inflammation
+of the parts concerned. As cold is so frequently a cause of diseases
+of these parts, it would be well to consider under what circumstances
+it develops and the best mode of prevention.
+
+I have often noticed that persons who suffer most frequently and
+severely from colds usually insist that they exercise the greatest
+care to avoid exposure. They have dressed in the warmest clothing,
+wrapped the neck in the heaviest mufflers, remained in the closest
+rooms, and avoided every draught, and yet they continually "take
+cold." The street urchin, on the other hand, with only two or three
+garments and without shoes, and who lives out of doors, suffers less
+frequently from this affection.
+
+"Colds" have truly been called a product of modern civilization. The
+trouble was rare among the aborigines and is more common among the
+cultured than among the laboring classes. If we make a plant an
+exotic, we must keep it in the conservatory, and even here it is not
+free from danger. On the other hand, if we wish to harden it and make
+it proof against atmospheric and climatic changes, we must prepare it
+by judicious exposure for these conditions. The warm clothing which is
+thought to be a protection against cold is frequently the most fertile
+cause. It relaxes the body, moistens the skin, and the perspiration
+which is induced especially prepares the unresisting body for its
+attacks. This applies especially to warm covering around the neck, to
+which the air has periodic access. Except in unusually severe weather,
+the throat requires no more covering or protection than the face.
+
+The method of having only two systems of underclothing, the heavy to
+be worn until it is quite warm, and _vice versa_, is also a source of
+danger. There should be three changes: one of the lightest texture for
+the warm weather of summer, a medium for spring and fall, and the pure
+wool for winter, which in this climate need not be very heavy.
+Waterproof shoes, rubbers, furs, etc., are not recommended for
+customary use, and should be worn only when absolutely indicated.
+
+The best preventive of recurrent colds is the judicious use of the
+sponge or cold shower bath. The ordinary bath should usually be of a
+temperature not disagreeable to the body, but after the question of
+cleanliness has been attended to, an application, either by means of a
+sponge or shower, of ordinary cold water should be made. This should
+be of short duration, and friction with a coarse towel follow at once.
+When properly conducted, a reaction sets in so that there is no danger
+from this, and the toning effect of the method is of the utmost value
+in the prevention of colds. This applies, of course, only to persons
+in ordinarily good health. Even in these cases there are rare
+occasions in which this method is not advisable, and it may on general
+principles be stated that it should not be used by persons who do not
+react promptly. As stated, however, the application of cold water
+should be only momentary. The daily application of cold water to the
+throat and chest is also a useful practice for strengthening these
+parts.
+
+In addition to these means there are certain injurious conditions that
+it would be well to avoid. One almost universally present in large
+cities is that of dust. The constant inhalation of the small particles
+of sand and of organic impurities of which dust is composed has an
+irritating effect on the delicate lining of the nose and throat, which
+may develop a chronic inflammation, resulting in injury to both the
+throat and ear. This evil, however, can be prevented by the artificial
+watering of our streets.
+
+Excessive tobacco smoking produces injurious effects in the nose and
+throat. Of all forms of smoking, the cigarette is the most injurious,
+and allowing the smoke to pass through the nostrils the most
+dangerous. Occasionally ladies inhale the smoke of a closed room
+where the male members of the household are smoking, and this is
+injurious to a delicate throat.
+
+Loud and excessive talking is sometimes a factor in throat diseases.
+The former is more apt to be exercised in transit in our steam or
+electric cars, and members of the theatrical profession realize this
+so well that they rarely use their voice while traveling. In excessive
+talking, in addition to the mechanical wear and tear of the throat,
+the respiration is usually spasmodic, a combination that is likely to
+lead to evil results. At puberty, when the voices of boys and girls
+are changing, the former sometimes almost an octave and the latter
+usually a note or two, special care should be taken of the voice, and
+singing or vocal exercises should be discontinued until the change has
+been finally established.
+
+The effect of singing on the throat is of much interest, but it is one
+of such an extensive character that it can be only casually referred
+to here. The exercise required in singing improves the healthy throat
+in the same manner that exercise benefits the body in general. The
+diseased throat, however, may be injured by this practice, as no form
+of vocal culture can remedy a mechanical interference in its action.
+The method of singing is also of the utmost importance; an erroneous
+one may not only injure a promising voice, but may also have a bad
+effect on a normal throat. The subject of register requires careful
+consideration. The placing of the voice in the wrong register is
+fruitful of evil; the ambition of the singer to reach a few notes
+higher or lower than her range may also work severe injury to the
+throat.
+
+The throat may be improved or strengthened by any of the forms of
+exercise, especially the out-of-door, which have been advised for the
+health in general. In addition to this, breathing exercises are of
+special value. These consist of taking deep inhalations through the
+nose, holding the breath for a few seconds and then gently expiring
+it, the body in the meanwhile being free from all restraint from tight
+clothing. The practice of this exercise for five minutes mornings and
+evenings will have a remarkable effect in developing the chest and
+throat.
+
+In order to anticipate serious complications, children should be
+taught to allow their mothers to examine their throats freely and
+without resistance. I feel especially the importance of this subject,
+as I have frequently seen children almost sacrificed on account of the
+nervous dread of having their throats examined, or by their inability
+to control themselves. The method is exceedingly simple: the child is
+placed facing a bright window, and the handle of a spoon placed on the
+tongue and so depressed that the posterior part of the throat can be
+distinctly seen. At first this may be difficult, but the child soon
+becomes accustomed to the manipulation and the throat may then be
+examined without difficulty. Another advantage of this procedure is
+that the mother becomes familiar with the normal appearance of the
+throat, and can easily note any change due to disease.
+
+In view of the important function of the nose in warming, cleaning,
+and moistening the inspired air, the greatest care should be taken to
+teach children to breathe through the nostrils. When only a portion of
+the air enters through the mouth, the irritation is not as marked as
+when all the air is inhaled in this manner, but it nevertheless
+develops a condition of chronic irritation which is easily recognized
+by one familiar with its appearance, and which may lead to important
+complications. In many cases, mouth breathing is not due to habit, but
+to some obstruction in the nostrils or throat. These cases form a
+proper subject for the consideration of the physician. After the
+removal of any existing obstruction, children will sometimes, from
+force of habit, continue to breathe through the mouth, but this can
+usually be overcome by attention and firmness on the part of the
+parents.
+
+The prevention of grave throat diseases, such as diphtheria,
+necessarily forms a subject of much interest to the public in general
+and to mothers in particular. The causation of this disease has been
+much cleared up in later years, and we now know that the important
+factor is a bacillus--a small organism of the vegetable kingdom--which
+is the cause of this disease and a necessary material for its
+propagation. Bacteriologic investigations have shown that the
+so-called "membranous croup" is in by far the largest number of cases
+identical with diphtheria, and the same precautions which apply to the
+latter should therefore also be carried out in this disease.
+
+As diphtheria is strictly an infectious disease, and one which must be
+directly or indirectly contracted from a similar case, there is no
+sanitary reason why this dreaded malady in the course of time should
+not be entirely eliminated from the earth. In view of the fact that
+diphtheria is so frequently present in our larger cities, this may
+appear at present a Utopian idea. It is not so many years ago,
+however, when smallpox was almost universal, and yet we now but rarely
+have it in our midst. Not only is this the case, but the health
+authorities are severely criticised when a number of these cases
+exist, as indicating that there has been a lack of watchfulness in
+carrying out certain well-known means of prevention.
+
+While we have at the present time no means of inoculation that will
+permanently protect against infection from diphtheria, still it is not
+of such an infectious character as smallpox, as the cases are usually
+limited to children, and its spread may therefore be more easily
+prevented. Not only should children who have had diphtheria be
+prevented from returning to school until infection is no longer
+possible, but other children of the same household should also be kept
+at home. A few years ago a certain school in this city was rarely
+without a case of diphtheria among its pupils for many months. I am
+convinced that had the principal of the school or the parents insisted
+upon the other children of the infected household remaining at home,
+the spread in this direction would have been arrested and much
+suffering avoided.
+
+When a patient has recovered from diphtheria, thorough disinfection is
+a most important measure. Unfortunately, however, many persons
+consider it a hardship if articles which can not be disinfected are
+destroyed, and many will even use every endeavor to prevent the
+representatives of the Board of Health from carrying out their
+regulations. In this way the germ of the disease remains on the
+premises, and under suitable conditions again finds another victim in
+the household. To illustrate this, I recall an instance some years ago
+in which I was called in consultation to see a most malignant case of
+diphtheria. The little patient fortunately recovered, and the premises
+were thoroughly disinfected, the parents being anxious to avoid any
+repetition of the dreaded malady. Five months later, however, a
+younger child became ill, and was found to have diphtheria. In view of
+the vigorous efforts which had been made to disinfect the house
+thoroughly, and of the fact that the child could not have contracted
+it elsewhere, not having left its home for several weeks, the cause at
+first appeared a mystery. Careful inquiry, however, soon elicited a
+fact which clearly explained the case. The first patient had used a
+mouth-organ just before its illness, and when this was abandoned, the
+toy was carelessly thrown on the top of a bookcase, the nature of the
+child's illness at the time not being known. The second child, just
+before its illness, had accidentally found this toy and used it
+frequently. This experience explains the necessity of disinfection in
+all its details, and also illustrates the tenacious character of the
+germ which produces this disease.
+
+Our knowledge of the specific cause of scarlet fever is not as
+complete as that of diphtheria, but we have much useful information
+which is of importance from a hygienic standpoint. As in diphtheria,
+the specific poison is probably produced in the throat of the patient,
+and may therefore be spread by the dried secretion from the mouth and
+throat. The most common means of contagion, however, is the skin,
+which peels off in the later stage of the disease, infection being
+produced by the inhalation into the nostrils of some of the diseased
+particles.
+
+A predisposing factor which applies alike to diphtheria and all other
+throat affections is the abnormal condition of the nose and throat.
+When these important parts are in an unhealthy condition, where mouth
+breathing exists and other conditions inimical to normal health, the
+patient is more predisposed to all forms of maladies of this region,
+and the attack when developed is more apt to be of a serious
+character. The more ordinary forms of sore throat, such as tonsilitis,
+are frequently due to defects in the sanitary conditions and
+surroundings of the home. While modern sanitary plumbing, when
+properly constructed, adds much to the convenience of the household,
+it is a certain menace to all its members if, through improper
+construction or defective ventilation, decomposing matter collects in
+the waste pipes and vitiates the atmosphere of the rooms. Many
+recurrent cases of tonsilitis are due to this cause. Even the ordinary
+stationary washstands may be a source of danger, especially in the
+bedroom, unless thoroughly ventilated and care exercised that the
+traps are not filled with decomposing matter. A physician of large
+experience in this city is so imbued with the danger of this form of
+plumbing that he condemns it _in toto_. When well constructed and well
+ventilated, however, they can not be the source of danger in the
+household.
+
+Tuberculosis, which is responsible for so enormous a mortality,
+frequently also affects the throat as well as the lungs. Although it
+usually originates within the chest, it sometimes finds its primary
+origin in the throat, and in a large percentage of cases the throat
+affection forms a complication of tuberculosis of the lungs. In spite
+of the numerous remedies which have been advocated for the cure of
+this disease, it must be admitted that our chief reliance is in proper
+nourishment and climatic effects, and that hygiene is the sheet-anchor
+which will eventually rescue us from this terrible foe of the human
+race.
+
+Recent investigations tend to prove more and more that tuberculosis is
+inherited in but rare cases; that inheritance is simply a predisposing
+factor, and that the real cause is infection. As an illustration of
+this, all have seen instances in which there had been apparently no
+cases in a family for ten or fifteen years, when from some cause one
+case develops, and this is soon followed by other cases in the same
+family. Whatever role heredity may play in these cases, this simply
+shows that the first case produced the infectious material which found
+a suitable soil in the other members of the family and developed a
+similar disease. The inheritance theory has been the source of much
+injury by causing members of the afflicted family to submit to the
+apparently inevitable instead of instituting measures for its
+prevention. The infectious product in tuberculosis is not the breath,
+as is so frequently believed by the laity, but simply the
+expectoration which comes from the diseased lungs or throat. When this
+is allowed to come in contact with clothing or other material in the
+room, it becomes dry and loads the atmosphere with a dust which
+contains the infectious bacillus, which may cause a similar disease in
+a person predisposed by heredity or sickness to this affection.
+
+The germ of tuberculosis is the seed, and the predisposed person the
+soil, and it requires a combination of both to develop the disease. To
+illustrate the necessity of suitable conditions for the development of
+plants--for it is now almost universally admitted that the germ of
+tuberculosis is a micro-organism which belongs to the vegetable
+kingdom--I remember some years ago, while in North Europe, seeing in a
+hothouse a plant which is here commonly known as the "four o'clock."
+The gardener in charge of the conservatory considered it a remarkable
+plant, but difficult to propagate, and stated that it was absolutely
+impossible to raise it out of doors. In this part of the world,
+however, we know that this plant grows so easily that once established
+in a garden it is difficult to keep it within limits. In both of the
+cases we have the same seed, the difference being only in the soil and
+the conditions favorable for its development. The absence of either
+the seed or the soil will absolutely prevent tuberculosis, and if the
+laws of hygiene are properly carried out, both in destroying the seed
+and in preventing the formation of a suitable soil, favorable effects
+will soon be shown.
+
+Hygiene in regard to patients demands simply that the infectious
+character of the expectoration be destroyed. The vessels for this
+purpose should contain some disinfecting solution, should be cleaned
+regularly, and handkerchiefs, towels, or other material with which the
+expectoration has come in contact should be sterilized by being placed
+for at least half an hour in boiling water. This is necessary not only
+for those in the same room with the patient, but also for the patient,
+as it is quite possible that a former expectoration may produce
+reinfection of the patient himself.
+
+Another method of contracting tuberculosis is by means of animals,
+such as cows, used for food and milking, which are known to be subject
+to this disease. It has been shown in some localities that one cow out
+of every twenty-five was affected with tubercular disease. This
+suggests the importance of having competent veterinarians to examine
+not only the meat which is sold, but also the cows used for milking
+purposes. Where there is the slightest doubt as to the nature of the
+meat or milk, the former should be thoroughly cooked and the latter
+sterilized before using.
+
+In this connection it would be well to refer to the subject of
+spitting in street cars and in public places. While this nuisance is
+the subject of danger to every one in the street cars, especially in
+winter, when the windows are closed and a large amount of impurities
+is inhaled, it is more particularly so to ladies, whose skirts, in
+spite of every care, are soiled by the filthy expectoration, thus
+making them subject not only to the inhalation in the car, but also
+to carrying the infectious material to their homes.
+
+The danger of this condition is not merely speculative. It has been
+bacteriologically demonstrated that the organisms of various
+contagious diseases thus find a lodging place in our cars and public
+places, and experiments on animals, in which the inoculation has
+developed diseases, have shown that these organisms retain their
+vitality in these places and may propagate disease under favorable
+conditions.
+
+A factor in the spread of diseases of the throat and mouth that should
+not be overlooked is kissing. Unfortunately, this matter has usually
+been treated with much levity, and where a sanitarian is bold enough
+to condemn the habit he is frequently made the subject of all forms of
+ridicule in the public press.
+
+The tender lining of the lips, mouth, and throat, and its large blood
+supply, make it peculiarly susceptible to contagion, and I have no
+doubt that the habit of kissing is responsible for many cases of
+infection. Last year I noticed a lady coming from a house from which a
+diphtheria flag was flying, who walked to the corner to take the
+street car, when a nurse with a small child approached. The lady
+without hesitation stooped down and kissed the little child. As it is
+well known that a healthy person may transmit a disease without
+incurring the disease himself, this lady voluntarily risked the danger
+of inflicting this disease upon the innocent child. It is not an
+uncommon thing for nurses to kiss the children under their charge, and
+here in New Orleans even the colored nurses sometimes practice this
+habit, occasionally with the permission of the parents. In fact, a
+fashionable lady on one occasion told me, when I remonstrated with her
+about this, that she feared to hurt the feelings of the old nurse, who
+had been a valuable servant in the family for many years.
+
+How often this habit is productive of evil results is of course only
+speculation. I recall, however, an instance in which two small
+children of one family developed a specific disease which originated
+in the mouth and affected the whole system. Examination proved this to
+have been caused by a nurse, a white woman, who had been in the habit
+of kissing the children. If women will voluntarily incur risks
+by using kissing as a form of salutation in all stages of
+acquaintanceship, I would at least request that the innocent children
+be spared the possible consequences.
+
+The subject of the hygiene of the ear is so intimately connected with
+conditions influencing the nose and throat, which have already been
+explained, that but few words are needed to cover this part of my
+subject. In general, the best care of the ear is to leave it alone.
+Ear scoops are injurious; the ear should be cleaned simply on the
+outside, and nothing, as a rule, should be inserted into the external
+canal. I have seen many cases of abscess and the most severe
+inflammation due to endeavors to clean the ear with the omnipresent
+hairpin and other objects used for this purpose. The use of cotton in
+the ear in general is to be condemned. It produces an artificial
+condition in the outer canal of the ear which reduces its physical
+resistance and makes it more liable to injury from exposure. The ear
+is sometimes injured by the entrance of cold water. This happens
+occasionally during ordinary bathing, but more frequently in outdoor
+bathing and in swimming. In surf bathing, where the water is thrown up
+with considerable force, it is much more liable to enter the external
+orifice of the ear, and severe inflammation may originate from this
+cause.
+
+Salt water has been claimed to be more injurious than fresh, but my
+personal experience leads me to believe that it is more a question of
+temperature than of the quality of the water. Some years ago a large
+reservoir was built by an educational institute near this city, the
+water, which was quite cold even in summer, being supplied by an
+artesian well. The tank was used for bathing purposes, but earache
+soon became so frequent among the boys that the use of the reservoir
+for this purpose had to be entirely abandoned. In ordinary bathing,
+the entrance of water into the ear can easily be avoided. In swimming
+or surf bathing it is advisable to use a pledget of lamb's wool to
+close the opening of the ears. Ordinary cotton soon becomes saturated
+and is of no use in this connection, but the wool, which is slightly
+oily, forms an excellent protection in these cases.
+
+The "running ear" is a diseased condition which should not be tampered
+with by the inexperienced, but which should not be neglected. The old
+idea that the child will outgrow it, or that it is a secretion of the
+head which if interfered with would prove dangerous, has been fruitful
+of many cases of deafness and even more serious complications.
+
+Another condition to which I would call your attention is the
+incipient development of deafness in children. Where the capacity of
+hearing is quickly lowered from the normal to fifty per cent, it is so
+striking that the patient is much distressed and even confused. But
+when this change takes place insidiously from day to day, it is
+frequently not observed by either the patient or those around him
+until it has greatly advanced. Children thus affected hear only with
+difficulty and by straining certain small muscles of the ear, which
+soon become fatigued, and the child becomes listless and inattentive.
+I have seen numerous cases in which children have been severely
+punished for inattention, when this was due to defective hearing.
+Watchfulness and early attention in these cases will frequently
+prevent the more serious forms of deafness.
+
+
+
+
+THE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE WEST INDIES.
+
+BY F. L. OSWALD.
+
+
+I.--THE FAUNA OF THE ANTILLES: MAMMALS.
+
+The study of the geographical distribution of plants and animals has
+revealed facts almost as enigmatical as the origin of life itself.
+Water barriers, as broad as that of the Atlantic, have not prevented
+the spontaneous spread of some species, while others limit their
+habitat to narrowly circumscribed though not geographically isolated
+regions.
+
+Tapirs are found both in the Amazon Valley and on the Malay Peninsula;
+the brook trout of southern New Zealand are identical with those of
+the Austrian Alps. Oaks and _Ericacea_ (heather plants) cover northern
+Europe from the mouth of the Seine to the sources of the Ural; then
+suddenly cease, and are not found anywhere in the vast Siberian
+territories, with a north-to-south range rivaling that of all British
+North America.
+
+But still more remarkable is the zoological contrast of such
+close-neighborhood countries as Africa and Madagascar, or Central
+America and the West Indian archipelago. The Madagascar virgin woods
+harbor no lions, leopards, hyenas, or baboons, but boast not less than
+thirty-five species of mammals unknown to the African continent, and
+twenty-six found nowhere else in the world.
+
+Of a dozen different kinds of deer, abundant in North America as well
+as in Asia and Europe, not a single species has found its way to the
+West Indies. The fine mountain meadows of Hayti have originated no
+antelopes, no wild sheep or wild goats.
+
+In the Cuban sierras, towering to a height of 8,300 feet, there are no
+hill foxes. There are caverns--subterranean labyrinths with countless
+ramifications, some of them--but no cave bears or badgers, no marmots
+or weasels even, nor one of the numerous weasel-like creatures
+clambering about the rock clefts of Mexico. The magnificent coast
+forests of the Antilles produce wild-growing nuts enough to freight a
+thousand schooners every year, but--almost incredible to say--the
+explorers of sixteen generations have failed to discover a single
+species of squirrels.
+
+The Old-World tribes of our tree-climbing relatives are so totally
+different from those of the American tropics that Humboldt's traveling
+companion, Bonplant, renounced the theory of a unitary center of
+creation (or evolution), and maintained that South America must have
+made a separate though unsuccessful attempt to rise from lemurs to
+manlike apes and men. Of such as they are, Brazil alone has
+forty-eight species of monkeys, and Venezuela at least thirty. How
+shall we account for the fact that not one of the large West Indian
+islands betrays a vestige of an effort in the same direction?
+
+More monkey-inviting forests than those of southern Hayti can not be
+found in the tropics, but not even a marmoset or squirrel-monkey
+accepted the invitation. In an infinite series of centuries not one
+pair of quadrumana availed itself of the chance to cross a sea gap,
+though at several points the mainland approaches western Cuba within
+less than two hundred miles--about half the distance that separates
+southern Asia from Borneo, where fourhanders of all sizes and colors
+compete for the products of the wilderness, and, according to Sir
+Philip Maitland, the "native women avoid the coast jungles for fear of
+meeting Mr. Darwin's grandfather."
+
+The first Spanish explorers of the Antilles were, in fact, so amazed
+at the apparently complete absence of quadrupeds that their only
+explanation was a conjecture that the beasts of the forest must have
+been exterminated by order of some native potentate, perhaps the great
+Kubla Khan, whose possessions they supposed to extend _eastward_ from
+Lake Aral to the Atlantic. The chronicle of Diego Columbus says
+positively that San Domingo and San Juan Bautista (Porto Rico) were
+void of mammals, but afterward modifies that statement by mentioning a
+species of rodent, the _hutia_, or bush rat, that annoyed the
+colonists of Fort Isabel, and caused them to make an appropriation for
+importing a cargo of cats.
+
+Bush rats and moles were, up to the end of the sixteenth century, the
+only known indigenous quadrupeds of the entire West Indian
+archipelago, for the "Carib dogs," which Valverde saw in Jamaica, were
+believed to have been brought from the mainland by a horde of
+man-hunting savages.
+
+But natural history has kept step with the advance of other sciences,
+and the list of undoubtedly aboriginal mammals on the four main
+islands of the Antilles is now known to comprise more than twenty
+species. That at least fifteen of them escaped the attention of the
+Spanish creoles is as strange as the fact that the Castilian cattle
+barons of Upper California did not suspect the existence of precious
+metals, though nearly the whole bonanza region of the San Joaquin
+Valley had been settled before the beginning of the seventeenth
+century. But the conquerors of the Philippines even overlooked a
+variety of elephants that roams the coast jungles of Mindanao.
+
+Eight species of those West Indian _incognito_ mammals, it is true,
+are creatures of a kind which the Spanish zoologists of Valverde's
+time would probably have classed with birds--bats, namely, including
+the curious _Vespertilio molossus_, or mastiff bat, and several
+varieties of the owl-faced _Chilonycteris_, that takes wing in the
+gloom preceding a thunderstorm, as well as in the morning and evening
+twilight, and flits up and down the coast rivers with screams that
+can be heard as plainly as the screech of a paroquet. The _Vespertilio
+scandens_ of eastern San Domingo has a peculiar habit of flitting from
+tree to tree, and clambering about in quest of insects, almost with
+the agility of a flying squirrel. There are times when the moonlit
+woods near Cape Rafael seem to be all alive with the restless little
+creatures; that keep up a clicking chirp, and every now and then
+gather in swarms to contest a tempting find, or to settle some probate
+court litigation. San Domingo also harbors one species of those
+prototypes of the harpies, the fruit-eating bats. It passes the
+daylight hours in hollow trees, but becomes nervous toward sunset and
+apt to betray its hiding place by an impatient twitter--probably a
+collocution of angry comments on the length of time between meals. The
+moment the twilight deepens into gloom the chatterers flop out to fall
+on the next mango orchard and eat away like mortgage brokers. They do
+not get fat--champion gluttons rarely do--but attain a weight of six
+ounces, and the Haytian darkey would get even with them after a manner
+of their own if their prerogatives were not protected by the intensity
+of their musky odor. The above-mentioned _hutia_ rat appears to have
+immigrated from some part of the world where the shortness of the
+summer justified the accumulation of large reserve stores of food, and
+under the influence of a hereditary hoarding instinct it now passes
+its existence constructing and filling a series of subterranean
+granaries. Besides, the females build nurseries, and all these burrows
+are connected by tunnels that enable their constructors to pass the
+rainy season under shelter. They gather nuts, _belotas_ (a sort of
+sweet acorns), and all kinds of cereals, and with their _penchant_ for
+appropriating roundish wooden objects on general principles would
+probably give a Connecticut nutmeg peddler the benefit of the doubt.
+
+They also pilfer raisins, and a colony of such tithe collectors is a
+formidable nuisance, for the _hutia_ is a giant of its tribe, and
+attains a length of sixteen inches, exclusive of the tail. It is found
+in Cuba, Hayti, Jamaica, Porto Rico, Antigua, Trinidad, the Isle of
+Pines, Martinique, and two or three of the southern Bahama Islands,
+and there may have been a time when it had the archipelago all to
+itself. The Lucayans had a tradition that their ancestors found it on
+their arrival from the mainland, and in some coast regions of eastern
+Cuba it may still be seen basking in the sunlight--
+
+ "Sole sitting on the shore of old romance,"
+
+and wondering if there are any larger mammals on this planet.
+
+Its next West Indian congener is the Jamaica rice rat, and there are
+at least ten species of mice, all clearly distinct from any Old-World
+rodent, though it is barely possible that some of them may have stolen
+a ride on Spanish trading vessels from Central America.
+
+Water-moles burrow in the banks of several Cuban rivers, and two
+genera of aquatic mammals have solved the problem of survival: the
+bayou porpoise and the manatee, both known to the creoles of the early
+colonial era, and vaguely even to the first discoverers, since
+Columbus himself alludes to a "sort of mermaids (_sirenas_) that half
+rose from the water and scanned the boat's crew with curious eyes."
+
+Naturally the manatee is, indeed, by no means a timid creature, but
+bitter experience has changed its habits since the time when the
+down-town sportsmen of Santiago used to start in sailboats for the
+outer estuary and return before night with a week's supply of manatee
+meat. The best remaining hunting grounds are the reed shallows of
+Samana Bay (San Domingo) and the deltas of the Hayti swamp rivers. Old
+specimens are generally as wary as the Prybilof fur seal that dive out
+of sight at the first glimpse of a sail; still, their slit-eyed
+youngsters are taken alive often enough, to be kept as public pets in
+many town ponds, where they learn to come to a whistle and waddle
+ashore for a handful of cabbage leaves.
+
+Fish otters have been caught in the lagoons of Puerto Principe
+(central Cuba) and near Cape Tiburon, on the south coast of San
+Domingo, the traveler Gerstaecker saw a kind of "bushy-tailed
+dormouse, too small to be called a squirrel."
+
+But the last four hundred years have enlarged the list of indigenous
+mammals in more than one sense, and the Chevalier de Saint-Mery should
+not have been criticised for describing the bush dog of Hayti as a
+"_canis Hispaniolanus_." Imported dogs enacted a declaration of
+independence several centuries before the revolt of the Haytian
+slaves, and their descendants have become as thoroughly West Indian as
+the Franks have become French. A continued process of elimination has
+made the survivors climate-proof and self-supporting, and above all
+they have ceased to vary; Nature has accepted their modified type as
+wholly adapted to the exigencies of their present habitat. And if it
+is true that all runaway animals revert in some degree to the
+characteristics of their primeval relatives, the ancestor of the
+domestic dog would appear to have been a bush-tailed, brindle-skinned,
+and black-muzzled brute, intermittently gregarious, and combining the
+burrowing propensity of the fox with the co-operative hunting
+_penchant_ of the wolf.
+
+Fourteen years of bushwhacker warfare have almost wholly exterminated
+the half-wild cattle of the Cuban sierras, but the bush dog has come
+to stay. The yelping of its whelps can be heard in thousands of jungle
+woods and mountain ravines, both of Cuba and Hayti, and no variety of
+thoroughbreds will venture to follow these renegades into the
+penetralia of their strongholds. Sergeant Esterman, who shared the
+potluck of a Cuban insurgent camp in the capacity of a gunsmith,
+estimates the wild-dog population of the province of Santiago alone at
+half a million, and predicts that in years to come their raids will
+almost preclude the possibility of profitable cattle-breeding in
+eastern Cuba.
+
+Still, the _perro pelon_, or "tramp dog," as the creoles call the
+wolfish cur, is perhaps a lesser evil, where its activity has tended
+to check the over-increase of another assisted immigrant. Three
+hundred years ago West Indian sportsmen began to import several breeds
+of Spanish rabbits, and with results not always foreseen by the
+agricultural neighbors of the experimenters. Rabbit meat, at first a
+luxury, soon became an incumbrance of the provision markets, and
+finally unsalable at any price. Every family with a dog or a
+trap-setting boy could have rabbit stew for dinner six times a week,
+and load their peddlers with bundles of rabbit skins.
+
+The burrowing coneys threatened to undermine the agricultural basis of
+support, when it was learned that the planters of the Fort Isabel
+district (Hayti) had checked the evil by forcing their dogs to live on
+raw coney meat. The inexpensiveness of the expedient recommended its
+general adoption, and the rapidly multiplying quadrupeds soon found
+that "there were others." The Spanish hounds, too, could astonish the
+census reporter where their progeny was permitted to survive, and
+truck farmers ceased to complain.
+
+In stress of circumstances the persecuted rodents then took refuge in
+the highlands, where they can still be seen scampering about the
+grassy dells in all directions, and the curs of the coast plain turned
+their attention to _hutia_ venison and the eggs of the chaparral
+pheasant and other gallinaceous birds. On the seacoast they also have
+learned to catch turtles and subdivide them, regardless of
+antivivisection laws. How they can get a business opening through the
+armor of the larger varieties seems a puzzle, but the _canis rutilus_
+of the Sunda Islands overcomes even the dog-resisting ability of the
+giant tortoise, and in Sumatra the bleaching skeletons of the victims
+have often been mistaken for the mementos of a savage battle.
+
+Near Bocanso in southeastern Cuba the woods are alive with capuchin
+monkeys, that seem to have escaped from the wreck of some South
+American trading vessel and found the climate so congenial that they
+proceeded to make themselves at home, like the ring-tailed colonists
+of Fort Sable, in the Florida Everglades. The food supply may not be
+quite as abundant as in the equatorial birthland of their species, but
+that disadvantage is probably more than offset by the absence of
+tree-climbing carnivora.
+
+Millions of runaway hogs roam the coast swamps of all the larger
+Antilles, and continue to multiply like our American pension
+claimants. The hunters of those jungle woods, indeed, must often smile
+to remember the complaint of the early settlers that the pleasure of
+the chase in the West Indian wilderness was modified by the scarcity
+of four-footed game, and in the total number (as distinct from the
+number of species) of wild or half-wild mammals Cuba and Hayti have
+begun to rival the island of Java.
+
+[_To be continued._]
+
+
+
+
+IRON IN THE LIVING BODY.
+
+BY M. A. DASTRE.
+
+
+Iron occurs, in small and almost infinitesimal proportions, in
+numerous organic structures, in which its presence may usually be
+detected by the high color it imparts; and in the animal tissues is an
+important ingredient, though far from being a large one. It is
+essential, however, that the animal tissues, and particularly the
+liquids that circulate through them, should be of nearly even weight,
+else the equilibrium of the body would be too easily disturbed, and
+disaster arising therefrom would be always imminent. Hence the iron is
+always found combined and associated with a large accompaniment of
+other lighter elements which, reducing or neutralizing its superior
+specific gravity, hold it up and keep it afloat. Thus the molecule of
+the red matter of the blood contains, for each atom of iron, 712 atoms
+of carbon, 1,130 of hydrogen, 214 of nitrogen, 245 of oxygen, and 2 of
+sulphur, or 2,303 atoms in all. Existing in compounds of so complex
+composition, iron can be present only in very small proportions to the
+whole. Though an essential element, there is comparatively but little
+of it. The whole body of man does not contain more than one part in
+twenty thousand of it. The blood contains only five ten-thousandths;
+and an organ is rich in it if, like the liver, it contains one and a
+half ten-thousandths. When, then, we seek to represent to ourselves
+the changes undergone by organic iron, we shall have to modify
+materially the ideas we have formed respecting the largeness and the
+littleness of units of measure and as to the meaning of the words
+abundant and rare. We must get rid of the notion that a thousandth or
+even a ten-thousandth is a proportion that may be neglected. The
+humble ten-thousandth, which is usually supposed not to be of much
+consequence, becomes here a matter of value. Chemists working with
+iron in its ordinary compounds may consider that they are doing fairly
+well if they do not lose sight of more than a thousandth of it; but
+such looseness would be fatal in a biological investigation, where
+accuracy is necessary down to the infinitesimal fraction. The balances
+of the biologists must weigh the thousandth of a milligramme, as their
+microscopes measure the thousandth of a millimetre.
+
+The great part performed by iron in organisms, what we may call its
+biological function, appertains to the chemical property it possesses
+of favoring combustion, of being an agent for promoting the oxidation
+of organic matters.
+
+The chemistry of living bodies differs from that of the laboratory in
+a feature that is peculiar to it--that instead of performing its
+reactions directly it uses special agents. It employs intermediaries
+which, while they are not entirely unknown to mineral chemistry, yet
+rarely intervene in it. If it is desired, for example, to add a
+molecule of water to starch to form sugar, the chemist would do it by
+heating the starch with acidulated water. The organism, which is
+performing this process all the time, or after every meal, does it in
+a different way, without special heating and without the acid. A
+soluble ferment, a diastase or enzyme, serves as the oxidizing agent
+to produce the same result. Looking at the beginning and the end, the
+two operations are the same. The special agent gives up none of its
+substance. It withdraws after having accomplished its work, and not a
+trace of it is left. Here, in the mechanism of the action of these
+soluble ferments, resides the mystery, still complete, of vital
+chemistry. It may be conceived that these agents, which leave none of
+their substance behind their operations, which suffer no loss, do not
+have to be represented in considerable quantities, however great the
+need of them may be. They only require time to do their work. The most
+remarkable characteristic of the soluble ferments lies, in fact, here,
+in the magnitude of the action as contrasted with infinitesimal
+proportion of the agent, and the necessity of having time for the
+accomplishment of the operation.
+
+Iron behaves in precisely the same way in the combustion of organic
+substances. These substances are incapable at ordinary temperatures of
+fixing oxygen directly, and will not burn till they are raised to a
+high temperature; but in the presence of iron they are capable of
+burning without extreme heat, and undergo slow combustion. And as iron
+gives up none of its substance in the operation, and acts, as a simple
+intermediary, only to draw oxygen from the inexhaustible atmosphere
+and present it to the organic substance, we see that it need not be
+abundant to perform its office, provided it have time enough. This
+action resembles that of the soluble ferments in that there is no
+mystery about it, and its innermost mechanism is perfectly known.
+
+Iron readily combines with oxygen--too readily, we might say, if we
+regarded only the uses we make of it. It exists as an oxide in Nature;
+and the metallurgy of it has no other object than to revivify burned
+iron, remove the oxygen from it, and extract the metal. Of the two
+oxides of iron, the ferrous, or lower one, is an energetic base,
+readily combining with even the weakest acids, and forming with them
+ferrous or protosalts. Ferric oxide, on the other hand, is a feeble
+base, which combines only slowly with even strong acids to form ferric
+salts or persalts, and not at all with weak acids like carbonic acid
+and those of the tissues of living beings. It is these last, more
+highly oxidized ferric compounds that provide organic substances with
+the oxygen that consumes them, when, as a result of the operation,
+they themselves return to the ferrous state.
+
+Facts of this sort are too nearly universal not to have been observed
+very long ago, but they were not fully understood till about the
+middle of this century. The chemists of the time--Liebig, Dumas, and
+especially Schoenbein, Woehler, Stenhouse, and many others--established
+the fact that ferric oxide provokes at ordinary temperatures a rapid
+action of combustion on a large number of substances: grass, sawdust,
+peat, charcoal, humus, arable land, and animal matter. A very common
+example is the destruction of linen by rust spots; the substance of
+the fiber is slowly burned up by the oxygen yielded by the oxide.
+About the same time, Claude Bernard inquired whether the process took
+place within the tissues, in contact with living matter in the same
+way as we have just seen it did with dead matter--the remains of
+organisms that had long since submitted to the action of physical
+laws--and received an affirmative answer. Injecting a ferric salt into
+the jugular vein of an animal, he found it excreted, deprived of a
+part of its oxygen, as a ferrous salt.
+
+This slow combustion of organic matter, living or dead, accomplished
+in the cold by iron, represents only one of the aspects of its
+biological function. A counterpart to it is necessary in order to
+complete the picture. It is easy to perceive that the phenomenon would
+have no bearing or consequence if it was limited to this first action.
+With the small provision of oxygen in the iron salt used up, and, if
+reduced to the minimum of oxidation, the source of oxygen being
+exhausted, the combustion of organic matter would stop. The oxidation
+obtained would be insignificant, while the oxidation should be
+indefinite and unlimited, and it is really so.
+
+There is a counterpart. The iron salt, which has gone back to the
+minimum of oxidation and become a ferrous salt, can not remain long in
+that state in contact with the air and with other sources of the gas
+to which it is exposed. It has always been known that ferrous
+compounds absorb oxygen from the air and pass into the ferric state;
+we might say that we have seen it done, for the transformation is
+accompanied by a characteristic change of color, by a transition from
+the pale green tint of ferrous bases to the ochery or red color of
+ferric compounds.
+
+We can understand now what should happen when the ferruginous compound
+is placed in contact alternately with organic matter and oxygen. In
+the former phase the iron will yield oxygen to the organic matter; in
+the second phase it will take again from the atmosphere the
+combustible which it has lost, and will be again where it started. The
+same series of operations may be continued a second time and a third
+time, and indefinitely, as long as the alternations of contact with
+organic matter and exposure to atmospheric oxygen are kept up, the
+iron simply performing the part of a broker. The same result will
+occur if atmospheric air and organic matter are constantly together;
+the consumption will continue indefinitely, and the iron will perform
+the part of an intermediary till one of the elements of the process is
+exhausted.
+
+This explanation was necessary to make clear the solution of the
+mystery of slow or cool combustion, the existence of which has been
+known since Lavoisier, without its mechanism being understood. That
+illustrious student gave out the theory that animal heat and the
+energy developed by vital action originated in the chemical reactions
+of the organism, and that, on the other hand, the reactions that
+produce heat consisted of simple combustions, slow combustions, that
+differed only in intensity from that of the burning torch. The
+development of chemistry has shown that this figure was too much
+simplified from the reality, and that most of these phenomena, while
+they are in the end equivalent to a combustion, differ greatly from it
+in mechanism and mode of execution. By this we do not mean to say that
+all the combustions are of this character, and that there do not exist
+in the organism a large number of such as Lavoisier understood, and of
+such as the combustions effected by the intervention of iron furnish
+the type of. Lavoisier's successors, Liebig among them, tried to find
+reactions conformed to this type. Their attempts were unsuccessful,
+but they had the happy result of revealing, if not the real function
+of iron in the blood, at least that of the red matter in which it is
+fixed.
+
+The question of the presence of iron in the coloring matter of the
+blood gave rise to long discussions. Vauquelin denied it. He made the
+mistake of looking for iron in the form of a known compound, in direct
+combination with the blood, while later researches have shown that it
+is found almost exclusively in the red matter that tinges the
+globules, in a complicated combination that escapes the ordinary
+tests; or, according to a usual method of expression, it is
+dissimulated. Liebig also failed to find this combination, and it was
+not till 1864 that Hoppe-Seyler succeeded in obtaining it pure and
+crystallized. But Liebig had already perceived its essential
+properties, and was able to point out approximately its functions as
+early as 1845; yet the single fact that there was no assimilation
+possible between this substance and the salts of iron, cut this
+question off into a kind of negative suspense. Different from these
+compounds, it could not behave like them, and accomplish slow
+combustions of the same type. It is a remarkable fact, and one that
+illustrates well how iron preserves through all its vicissitudes some
+trace of its fundamental property of favoring the action of oxygen on
+substances, that this composition, so special and so different from
+the salts of iron, behaves nearly as they do. While it is not of
+itself an energetic combustible, it is, according to Liebig's
+expression, "a transporter of oxygen"--a luminous view, which the
+future was destined to confirm. Although the transportation is not
+produced by the mechanism supposed by Liebig, but by another, the
+general result is very much the same from the point of view of the
+physiology of the blood. The coloring matter of the blood conveyed by
+the globules fixes oxygen in contact with the pulmonary air, and
+distributes it as it passes through the capillaries upon the tissues.
+The globule of blood brings nothing else and distributes nothing else,
+contrary to the opinion that had been held before. The theory of slow
+combustion effected through iron, while not absolutely contradicted in
+principle, was not entirely confirmed in detail, so far as concerned
+iron, or the more prominently ferruginous tissue.
+
+No search was made for other tissues or organs presenting more
+favorable conditions, for no others were known that had iron in
+themselves. The liver and the spleen were supposed to receive it from
+the blood under the complicated form in which it exists there, or
+under some equivalent form. It was not, therefore, supposed till
+within a very few years that the two conditions were realized in any
+organ that were required to secure a slow combustion by iron--that is,
+combinations resembling ferrous and ferric salts with a weak acid and
+a source of oxygen. The doubt has been resolved by recent studies. The
+liver fulfils the requirement. It contains iron existing under forms
+precisely comparable to the ferrous and ferric compounds, and is
+washed by the blood which carries oxygen in a state of simple solution
+in its plasma and of loose combination in its globules. Thus all the
+conditions necessary for the production of slow combustion are
+gathered here, and we can not doubt that it takes place. A new
+function is therefore assigned to the liver, and it becomes one of the
+great furnaces of the organism.
+
+Compounds of iron are so abundant in the ground and the water that we
+need not be surprised when we find them in various parts of plants,
+and particularly in the green parts. Their habitual presence does not,
+however, authorize the conclusion that this metal is necessary to the
+support and development of vegetable life. Some substances, evidently
+indifferent, foreign, and even injurious, if they exist abundantly in
+a soil, may be drawn into roots through the movement of the sap, and
+fix themselves in various organs. This occurs with copper in certain
+exceptional circumstances when the soil is saturated with its
+compounds, and if such a condition should be found to be repeated over
+a large extent of country, we might be led, by analysis alone of its
+vegetable productions, to the false conclusion that copper was an
+essential or even necessary constituent of them. But the value of the
+part performed by an element can not be determined by analysis alone.
+Direct proofs are necessary for that, methodical and comparative
+experiments in cultivation in mediums artificially deprived or
+furnished with the element the importance of which we wish to
+estimate. This has been done for combinations of iron, and the utility
+of that metal, especially to the higher plants, has been made thereby
+to appear.
+
+If iron is absent from the nutritive medium the plant will wither. If
+we sprout seeds in a solution from which this metal has been carefully
+excluded, the development will follow its regular course as long as
+the plant is in the condition properly called that of germination, or
+while it does not have to draw anything from the soil. The stem rises
+and the first leaves are formed as usual. But all these parts will
+continue pale, and the green matter, the granulation of chlorophyll,
+will not appear. Now, if we add a small quantity of salt of iron to
+the ground in which the roots are planted, or a much-diluted solution
+is sprinkled on the leaves and the stem, the chlorotic plant will
+recover its health and take on its normal coloration. Experiments of
+this sort make well manifest that iron is necessary to green plants,
+and they show, besides, the bearing of its action, and that what is
+most special and most characteristic in the phenomena of vegetable
+life may be traced exactly to the organization of that green matter.
+It was long thought that if iron was necessary for the formation of
+chlorophyll, it was because it had a part in its constitution. We know
+now that this is not so. The metal does nothing but accompany the
+chlorophyll in the granulation in which it is found.
+
+The influence which iron exerts in the development of the lower
+plants, like the muscidenes, was illustrated with great precision in a
+study made about thirty years ago by M. Raulin, who experimented with
+the common mold (_Aspergillus niger_), to determine the coefficient of
+importance of all the elements that have a part in its vegetation.
+When the iron was removed from a medium that had been shown capable of
+giving a maximum crop of that mold, the plants languished, and the
+return fell off immediately to one third. Estimating the quantity of
+metal that produces this effect, it was found that the addition of one
+part of iron was sufficient to determine the production of a weight of
+plant nearly nine hundred times as great. The suppression of the iron
+further caused an irreparable loss, for when it was sought to remedy
+the wilting of the plants by restoring the iron which had been taken
+from the medium--an experiment which had been successful with higher
+plants--the attempt was a failure, and the plants could not be
+prevented from perishing.
+
+These facts are full of interest in themselves, and they further show
+well the necessity or utility of iron in plant life, but they teach us
+no more. They reveal nothing of the mechanism of the action, and if we
+wish to penetrate further in the matter we always have to turn to
+animal physiology.--_Translated for the Popular Science Monthly from
+the Revue des Deux Mondes._
+
+
+
+
+THE MALAY LANGUAGE.
+
+BY R. CLYDE FORD,
+
+PROFESSOR OF GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE, ALBION COLLEGE.
+
+
+A gentleman who had lived for several years among the Indians of the
+Canadian northwest said that he went among them believing they were an
+untutored race. But when they told him of a dozen kinds of berries
+growing in a locality where he knew but two, brought him flowers he
+could not find after careful search, and around their council fires
+showed as deep an insight into the mysteries of life as the _savants_
+of his university, then he concluded they could no longer be called
+untutored.
+
+And why should they be? Is there no culture or civilization outside of
+the enlightenment of Europe or America? And because a civilization
+does not exactly fit the grooves in which most of the world has moved,
+may it not be a real civilization for all that? If such is possible,
+then we vote the Malays a cultured people. Of course, their culture is
+not like our own; it knows no railroads, no telegraphs, boasts of no
+intricate political machinery, has no complicated social despotisms.
+Native princes rule for the most part over peaceful states, and
+politics means no more than the regulation of quiet village life. But
+what need of railroads, when the rivers are avenues of trade and
+communication? Why telegraphs, when the world is bounded by the jungle
+horizon? Or why, in short, severe civil and social enactments, when
+the common _Wahlspruch_ of life is, "Fear disgrace rather than death"?
+Such a civilization, we admit, is a humble one; but it also has the
+advantage of being a happy one. And where contentment dwells, where
+honesty prevails, where the home is a stronghold, there are culture
+and civilization, even though they may not coincide with our own.
+
+The Malays are not barbarians, and their language by its grace and
+adaptability has shown its right to be. To-day it is the mother tongue
+of more than forty millions of people, and the _lingua franca_ of
+Chinamen, Hindus, European, and natives. It is spoken from Madagascar
+to the distant islands of the Pacific, and from the Philippines to
+Australia. With it one can barter in Celebes and sell in Java;
+converse with a sultan in Sumatra or a Spaniard in Manila. Moreover,
+it is soft and melodious, rich in expression, poetical in idiom, and
+simple in structure--a language almost without grammar and yet of
+immense vocabulary, with subtle distinctions and fine gradations of
+thought and meaning; a language that sounds in one's ears long after
+_Tanah Malayu_ and the coral islands and the jungle strand have sunk
+into hazy recollection, just as they once dropped out of sight behind
+one's departing ship.
+
+Malay is written in the Arabic character, which was adopted with
+Mohammedanism, probably in the thirteenth century. Anciently, the
+Malays used a writing of their own, but it is not yet clearly settled
+what it was. There are now thirty-four characters employed, each
+varying in form, according as it is isolated, final, medial, or
+initial. Naturally, the Arabic influence over the language has been a
+marked one; the priest who dictates in the religion of a people is a
+molder and shaper of language. We have only to recall the Catholic
+Church and the influence of the Latin tongue in the mouths of her
+priests to know that this is so. Many Arabic words and phrases have
+been adopted, but more in the language of literature than in that of
+everyday speech. A large number of expressions of court and royalty,
+and terms of law and religion, are Arabic; also the names of months,
+days, and many articles of commerce and trade; nevertheless, the
+language of common speech is still Malay.
+
+Another influence, also, has been felt in the Malay--that of the
+Sanskrit language. The presence of many Sanskrit words has caused some
+very ingenious theories to be constructed in proof that the Malays
+were of Indian origin, and such word fragments the survival of the
+primitive tongue. Such theories, however, have not stood the test of
+philology, and the fact still remains that the language is essentially
+unique, with an origin lost in the darkness of remote antiquity.
+However, Sanskrit influence has been much greater, and has penetrated
+much deeper into the elemental structure of the language than the
+Arabic. In fact, the aboriginal language, before it felt the animating
+spirit of the Aryan tongue, must have been a barren one, the language
+of a primitive man, a fisherman, a hunter, a careless tiller of the
+soil. As Maxwell says in his Manual of the Malay Language, the
+Sanskrit word _hala_ (plow) marks a revolution in Malayan agriculture
+and, one may say further, Malayan civilization. What changed the
+methods of cultivating the soil, changed the people themselves. It is
+probable that this change came through contact with people to whom
+Sanskrit was a vernacular tongue, but whether through conquest by the
+sword or by religion is hard to tell. Perhaps it was by both. At any
+rate, it was deep and strong, and left a lasting impression on the
+language. Sanskrit names fastened on trees, plants, grain, fruits,
+household and agricultural implements, parts of the body, articles of
+commerce, animals, metals and minerals, time and its division and
+measurement, family relationships, abstract conceptions, warfare, and
+fundamental ideas of religion and superstition. Such a conquest must
+have been an early and tremendous one.
+
+Strangely enough, Malay is almost a grammarless tongue. It has no
+proper article, and its substantives may serve equally well as verbs,
+being singular or plural, and entirely genderless. However, adjectives
+and a process of reduplication often indicate number, and gender words
+are added to nouns to make sex allusions plain. Whatever there is of
+declension is prepositional as in English, and possessives are formed
+by putting the adjectives after the noun as in Italian. Nouns are
+primitive and derivative, the derivations being formed by suffixes or
+prefixes, or both, and one's mastery of the language may be gauged by
+the idiomatic way in which he handles these _Anhaengsel_. Adjectives
+are uninflected.
+
+The use of the pronouns involves an extensive knowledge of Oriental
+etiquette--some being used by the natives among one another, some
+between Europeans and natives, some employed when an inferior
+addresses a superior and _vice versa_, some used only when the native
+addresses his prince or sovereign; and, last of all, some being
+distinctly literary, and never employed colloquially. Into this maze
+one must go undaunted, and trust to time and patience to smooth out
+difficulties.
+
+Verbs, like nouns, are primitive and derivative, with some few
+auxiliaries and a good many particles which are suffixed or prefixed
+to indicate various states and conditions. These things are apt to be
+confusing, and when the student learns that a verb may be past,
+present, or future without any change in form, he does not know
+whether to congratulate himself or not. Prepositions, too, are many
+and expressive; conjunctions, some colloquial, some pedantic.
+
+We now come to a peculiarity which Malay has in common with other
+Indo-Chinese languages--the "numeral co-efficients," as Maxwell calls
+them, which are always employed with a certain class of objects, just
+as we say "head" of horses, "sail" of ships, etc. They are very many
+as compared with English, and very idiomatic in their use. For
+instance, the Malay says, "Europeans, three _persons_," "cats, four
+_tails_," "ships, five _fruits_," "cocoanuts, three _seeds_," "spears,
+two _stems_," "planks, five _pieces_," "houses, two _ladders_," and so
+on to fifteen or twenty different classes of articles or objects. By
+some this has been regarded as a peculiarity of the languages of
+southeastern Asia; but the same thing may be noticed in the Indian
+languages of our own continent.
+
+As a language Malay is easily learned and has much to repay for so
+doing. It is full of wonders and surprises--among other things is the
+natural home of euphemism, where a spade is called anything but a
+spade. For instance, to die is beautifully expressed in Malay as a
+return to the mercy of Allah. The language is decidedly rich in
+poetical expression and imagery. A neighbor is one whom you permit to
+ascend the ladder of your cottage, and your friend is a sharer of your
+joys and sorrows. Interest is the flower of money, a spring is an eye
+of water, the sun the eye of day, and a policeman all eyes. A walk is
+a stroll to eat the wind, a man drunk is one who rides a green horse,
+and a coward a duck without spurs. A flatterer is one who has sugar
+cane on his lips, a sharper is a man of brains, a fool a brain-lacker.
+
+In his proverbs also the Malay shows a matchless use of metaphor and
+imagery, his words having the softness of the jungle breeze, and at
+the same time the grimness of the jungle shades. Nowhere does the
+nature of his race or the peculiar genius of his language show out
+better than in these terse, pithy sayings which the Malay uses to
+sweeten his speech or lend effectiveness to it. The real Malay is a
+creature of the forest or the sea, whence he draws his livelihood, and
+it is but natural that he should envelop his daily and perhaps
+dangerous life with homely philosophy. He loves the freedom which he
+enjoys; take him away from it and he eats his heart out in
+homesickness. "Though you feed a jungle fowl from a golden plate, it
+will return to the jungle again." In his humble life he has discovered
+that blood, be it good or bad, counts for something, and he thinks of
+the forest lairs; "a kitten and small, but a tiger's cub." He is beset
+with dangers by sea and land; often he is between the devil and the
+deep. "One may escape the tiger, and fall into the jaws of the
+crocodile." He recognizes the inevitable, and draws what consolation
+he can. "When the prow is wrecked the shark gets his fill"--a very
+stoical recognition of ill winds. "For fear of the ghost he hugs the
+corpse," is often the solution of his dilemma. Sometimes he indulges
+in drollery, but is never unphilosophical. "To love one's children,
+one must weep for them now and then; to love one's wife, one must
+leave her now and then." The language is full of such expressions;
+they are the natural products of the speech of a poetical and
+Nature-loving folk. Without attempting a classification we give a few
+of the most characteristic proverbs, drawing largely on a collection
+made in the Malay Peninsula by W. E. Maxwell, at one time British
+resident there:
+
+ Will the crocodile respect the carcass?
+ Follow your heart, death; follow your feelings, destruction.
+ You find grasshoppers where you find a field.
+ Earth does not become grain.
+ Don't grind pepper for a bird on the wing.
+ The flower comes, age comes.
+ When the father is spotted, the son is spotted.
+ The plant sprouts before it climbs.
+ When he can't wring the ear, he pulls the horn.
+ The creel says the basket is poorly made.
+ Ask from one who has,
+ Make vows at a shrine,
+ Sulk with him who loves you.
+ When the house is done the chisel finds fault.
+ As the crow goes back to his nest (no richer, no poorer).
+ Whoever eats chilies burns his mouth.
+ Because of the mouth the body comes to harm.
+ If you are at the river's mouth at nightfall, what's the use of
+ talking of return?
+ A broken thread may be mended, but charcoal never.
+ The pea forgets its pod.
+ As water rolls from a _kladi_ leaf.
+ A shipwrecked vessel may float again, a heart once broken is broken
+ forever.
+ It is a project, and the result with God.
+ He carries a torch in daylight.
+ A slave who does well is never praised; if he does badly, never
+ forgiven.
+ It rains gold afar, but stone at home.
+ What if you sit on a cushion of gold with an uneasy mind!
+ When money leaves, your friend goes.
+ If you dip your hand into the fish tub, go to the bottom.
+ Whoever digs a hole falls into it himself.
+ If your legs are long, have your blanket long.
+ Like a frog under a cocoanut shell, he thinks he sees the sky.
+ If you can't get rattan, bind with roots.
+ The plantain does not bear twice.
+ He sits like a cat, but leaps like a tiger.
+ The tortoise lays a thousand eggs and tells no one; the hen lays a
+ single egg and tells all the world.
+ Those will die of thirst who empty the jar when it thunders in a dry
+ time.
+ Handsome as a princess, poisonous as a snake.
+ Small as an ant, wise as a mouse-deer.
+
+
+
+
+LIFE ON A SOUTH SEA WHALER.[13]
+
+BY FRANK T. BULLEN.
+
+
+Cachalots, or sperm whales, must have been captured on the coasts of
+Europe in a desultory way from a very early date, by the incidental
+allusions to the prime products spermaceti and ambergris which are
+found in so many ancient writers. Shakespeare's reference--"The
+sovereign'st thing on earth was parmaceti for an inward bruise"--will
+be familiar to most people, as well as Milton's mention of the
+delicacies at Satan's feast--"Grisamber steamed"--not to carry
+quotation any further.
+
+But in the year 1690 the brave and hardy fishermen of the northeast
+coasts of North America established that systematic pursuit of the
+cachalot which has thriven so wonderfully ever since, although it must
+be confessed that the last few years have witnessed a serious decline
+in this great branch of trade.
+
+For many years the American colonists completely engrossed this branch
+of the whale fishery, contentedly leaving to Great Britain and the
+continental nations the monopoly of the northern or arctic fisheries,
+while they cruised the stormy, if milder, seas around their own
+shores.
+
+As, however, the number of ships engaged increased, it was inevitable
+that the known grounds should become exhausted, and in 1788, Messrs.
+Enderby's ship, the Emilia, first ventured round Cape Horn, as the
+pioneer of a greater trade than ever. The way once pointed out, other
+ships were not slow to follow, until, in 1819, the British whale ship
+Syren opened up the till then unexplored tract of ocean in the western
+part of the North Pacific, afterward familiarly known as the "Coast of
+Japan." From these teeming waters alone, for many years an average
+annual catch of forty thousand barrels of oil was taken, which, at the
+average price of L8 per barrel, will give some idea of the value of
+the trade generally.
+
+From the crushing blow of the civil war the American sperm-whale
+fishery has never fully recovered. When the writer was in the trade,
+some twenty-two years ago, it was credited with a fleet of between
+three and four hundred sail; now it may be doubted whether the numbers
+reach an eighth of that amount. A rigid conservatism of method hinders
+any revival of the industry, which is practically conducted to-day as
+it was fifty or even a hundred years ago; and it is probable that
+another decade will witness the final extinction of what was once one
+of the most important maritime industries in the world.
+
+In the following pages an attempt has been made--it is believed for
+the first time--to give an account of the cruise of a South Sea whaler
+from the seaman's standpoint. Its aim is to present to the general
+reader a simple account of the methods employed and the dangers met
+with in a calling about which the great mass of the public knows
+absolutely nothing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At the age of eighteen, after a sea experience of six years from the
+time when I dodged about London streets, a ragged Arab, with wits
+sharpened by the constant fight for food, I found myself roaming the
+streets of New Bedford, Massachusetts.
+
+My money was all gone, I was hungry for a ship; and so, when a long,
+keen-looking man with a goatlike beard, and mouth stained with dry
+tobacco juice, hailed me one afternoon at the street corner, I
+answered very promptly, scenting a berth. "Lookin' fer a ship,
+stranger?" said he. "Yes; do you want a hand?" said I anxiously. He
+made a funny little sound something like a pony's whinny, then
+answered: "Wall, I should surmise that I want between fifty and sixty
+hands, ef yew kin lay me onto 'em; but, kem along, every dreep's a
+drop, an' yew seem likely enough." With that he turned and led the way
+until we reached a building, around which was gathered one of the most
+nondescript crowds I had ever seen. There certainly did not appear to
+be a sailor among them--not so much by their rig, though that is not a
+great deal to go by, but by their actions and speech. However, I
+signed and passed on, engaged to go I knew not where, in some ship I
+did not know even the name of, in which I was to receive I did not
+know how much or how little for my labor, nor how long I was going to
+be away.
+
+From the time we signed the articles, we were never left to ourselves.
+Truculent-looking men accompanied us to our several boarding houses,
+paid our debts for us, finally bringing us by boat to a ship lying out
+in the bay. As we passed under her stern, I read the name Cachalot, of
+New Bedford; but as soon as we ranged alongside, I realized that I was
+booked for the sailor's horror--a cruise in a whaler. Badly as I
+wanted to get to sea, I had not bargained for this, and would have run
+some risks to get ashore again; but they took no chances, so we were
+all soon aboard. Before going forward, I took a comprehensive glance
+around, and saw that I was on board of a vessel belonging to a type
+which has almost disappeared off the face of the waters. A more
+perfect contrast to the trim-built English clipper ships that I had
+been accustomed to I could hardly imagine. She was one of a class
+characterized by sailors as "built by the mile, and cut off in lengths
+as you want 'em," bow and stern almost alike, masts standing straight
+as broomsticks, and bowsprit soaring upward at an angle of about
+forty-five degrees. She was as old-fashioned in her rig as in her
+hull. Right in the center of the deck, occupying a space of about ten
+feet by eight, was a square erection of brickwork, upon which my
+wondering gaze rested longest, for I had not the slightest idea what
+it could be. But I was rudely roused from my meditations by the harsh
+voice of one of the officers, who shouted, "Naow then, git below an'
+stow yer dunnage, 'n look lively up agin!" Tumbling down the steep
+ladder, I entered the gloomy den which was to be for so long my home,
+finding it fairly packed with my shipmates. The whole space was
+undivided by partition, but I saw at once that black men and white had
+separated themselves, the blacks taking the port side and the whites
+the starboard. Finding a vacant bunk by the dim glimmer of the ancient
+teapot lamp that hung amidships, giving out as much smoke as light, I
+hurriedly shifted my coat for a "jumper" or blouse, put on an old cap,
+and climbed into the fresh air again. Even _my_ seasoned head was
+feeling bad with the villainous reek of the place. I had hardly
+reached the deck when I was confronted by a negro, the biggest I ever
+saw in my life. He looked me up and down for a moment, then opening
+his ebony features in a wide smile, he said: "Great snakes! why,
+here's a sailor man for sure! Guess thet's so, ain't it, Johnny?" I
+said "yes" very curtly, for I hardly liked his patronizing air; but he
+snapped me up short with "yes, _sir_, when yew speak to me, yew blank
+limejuicer. I'se de fourf mate of dis yar ship, en my name's Mistah
+Jones, 'n yew jest freeze on to dat ar, ef yew want ter lib long 'n
+die happy. See, sonny?" I _saw_, and answered promptly, "I beg your
+pardon, sir, I didn't know." "Ob cawse yew didn't know, dat's all
+right, little Britisher; naow jest skip aloft 'n loose dat
+fore-taupsle." "Ay, ay, sir," I answered cheerily, springing at once
+into the fore-rigging and up the ratlines like a monkey, but not too
+fast to hear him chuckle, "Dat's a smart kiddy, I bet." On deck I
+could see a crowd at the windlass heaving up anchor. I said to myself,
+"They don't waste any time getting this packet away." Evidently they
+were not anxious to test any of the crew's swimming powers. They were
+wise, for had she remained at anchor that night I verily believe some
+of the poor wretches would have tried to escape.
+
+The anchor came aweigh, the sails were sheeted home, and I returned on
+deck to find the ship gathering way for the heads, fairly started on
+her long voyage.
+
+Before nightfall we were fairly out to sea, and the ceremony of
+dividing the crew into watches was gone through. I found myself in the
+chief mate's or "port" watch (they called it "larboard," a term I had
+never heard used before, it having long been obsolete in merchant
+ships), though the huge negro fourth mate seemed none too well pleased
+that I was not under his command, his being the starboard watch under
+the second mate.
+
+I was pounced upon next morning by "Mistah" Jones, the fourth mate,
+whom I heard addressed familiarly as "Goliath" and "Anak" by his
+brother officers, and ordered to assist him in rigging the
+"crow's-nest" at the main royal-mast head. It was a simple affair.
+There were a pair of cross-trees fitted to the mast, upon which was
+secured a tiny platform about a foot wide on each side of the mast,
+while above this foothold a couple of padded hoops like a pair of
+giant spectacles were secured at a little higher than a man's waist.
+When all was fast one could creep up on the platform, through the
+hoop, and, resting his arms upon the latter, stand comfortably and
+gaze around, no matter how vigorously the old barky plunged and kicked
+beneath him. From that lofty eerie I had a comprehensive view of the
+vessel. She was about three hundred and fifty tons and full
+ship-rigged--that is to say, she carried square sails on all three
+masts. Her deck was flush fore and aft, the only obstructions being
+the brick-built "try-works" in the waist, the galley, and cabin
+skylight right aft by the taffrail. Her bulwarks were set thickly
+round with clumsy-looking wooden cranes, from which depended five
+boats. Two more boats were secured bottom up upon a gallows aft, so
+she seemed to be well supplied in that direction.
+
+The weather being fine, with a steady northeast wind blowing, so that
+the sails required no attention, work proceeded steadily all the
+morning. The oars were sorted, examined for flaws, and placed in the
+boats; the whale line, Manilla rope like yellow silk, an inch and a
+half round, was brought on deck, stretched, and coiled down with the
+greatest care into tubs holding, some two hundred fathoms, and others
+one hundred fathoms each. New harpoons were fitted to poles of rough
+but heavy wood, without any attempt at neatness but every attention to
+strength. The shape of these weapons was not, as is generally thought,
+that of an arrow, but rather like an arrow with one huge barb, the
+upper part of which curved out from the shaft. The whole of the barb
+turned on a stout pivot of steel, but was kept in line with the shaft
+by a tiny wooden peg which passed through barb and shaft, being then
+cut off smoothly on both sides. The point of the harpoon had at one
+side a wedge-shaped edge, ground to razor keenness; the other side was
+flat. The shaft, about thirty inches long, was of the best malleable
+iron, so soft that it would tie into a knot and straighten out again
+without fracture. Three harpoons, or "irons" as they were always
+called, were placed in each boat, fitted one above the other in the
+starboard bow, the first for use being always one unused before.
+Opposite to them in the boat were fitted three lances for the purpose
+of _killing_ whales, the harpoons being only the means by which the
+boat was attached to a fish, and quite useless to inflict a fatal
+wound. These lances were slender spears of malleable iron about four
+feet long, with oval or heart-shaped points of fine steel about two
+inches broad, their edges kept keen as a surgeon's lancet. By means of
+a socket at the other end they were attached to neat handles, or
+"lance poles," about as long again, the whole weapon being thus about
+eight feet in length, and furnished with a light line, or "lance
+warp," for the purpose of drawing it back again when it had been
+darted at a whale. The other furniture of a boat comprised five oars
+of varying lengths from sixteen to nine feet, one great steering oar
+of nineteen feet, a mast and two sails of great area for so small a
+craft, spritsail shape; two tubs of whale line containing together
+eighteen hundred feet, a keg of drinking water, and another long,
+narrow one with a few biscuits, a lantern, candles and matches
+therein; a bucket and "piggin" for baling, a small spade, a flag or
+"wheft," a shoulder bomb gun and ammunition, two knives, and two small
+axes. A rudder hung outside by the stern.
+
+With all this gear, although snugly stowed, a boat looked so loaded
+that I could not help wondering how six men would be able to work in
+her; but, like most "deep-water" sailors, I knew very little about
+boating. I was going to learn.
+
+The reports I had always heard of the laziness prevailing on board
+whale ships were now abundantly falsified. From dawn to dark work went
+on without cessation. Everything was rubbed and scrubbed and scoured
+until no speck or soil could be found; indeed, no gentleman's yacht or
+man-of-war is kept more spotlessly clean than was the Cachalot.
+
+On the fourth day after leaving port we were all busy as usual except
+the four men in the "crow's-nests," when a sudden cry of "Porps!
+porps!" brought everything to a standstill. A large school of
+porpoises had just joined us, in their usual clownish fashion, rolling
+and tumbling around the bows as the old barky wallowed along,
+surrounded by a wide ellipse of snowy foam. All work was instantly
+suspended, and active preparations made for securing a few of these
+frolicsome fellows. A "block," or pulley, was bung out at the bowsprit
+end, a whale line passed through it and "bent" (fastened) on to a
+harpoon. Another line with a running "bowline," or slip noose, was
+also passed out to the bowsprit end, being held there by one man in
+readiness. Then one of the harpooners ran out along the back ropes,
+which keep the jib boom down, taking his stand beneath the bowsprit
+with the harpoon ready. Presently he raised his iron and followed the
+track of a rising porpoise with its point until the creature broke
+water. At the same instant the weapon left his grasp, apparently
+without any force behind it; but we on deck, holding the line, soon
+found that our excited hauling lifted a big vibrating body clean out
+of the smother beneath. "'Vast hauling!" shouted the mate, while, as
+the porpoise hung dangling, the harpooner slipped the ready bowline
+over his body, gently closing its grip round the "small" by the broad
+tail. Then we hauled on the noose line, slacking away the harpoon, and
+in a minute had our prize on deck. He was dragged away at once and the
+operation repeated. Again and again we hauled them in, until the fore
+part of the deck was alive with the kicking, writhing sea pigs, at
+least twenty of them. All hands were soon busy skinning the blubber
+from the bodies. Porpoises have no skin--that is, hide--the blubber or
+coating of lard which incases them being covered by a black substance
+as thin as tissue paper. The porpoise hide of the bootmaker is really
+leather, made from the skin of the _Beluga_, or "white whale," which
+is found only in the far north. The cover was removed from the
+"try-works" amidships, revealing two gigantic pots set in a frame of
+brickwork side by side, capable of holding two hundred gallons
+each--such a cooking apparatus as might have graced a Brobdingnagian
+kitchen. Beneath the pots was the very simplest of furnaces, hardly as
+elaborate as the familiar copper hole sacred to washing day. Square
+funnels of sheet iron were loosely fitted to the flues, more as a
+protection against the oil boiling over into the fire than to carry
+away the smoke, of which from the peculiar nature of the fuel there
+was very little. At one side of the try-works was a large wooden
+vessel, or "hopper," to contain the raw blubber; at the other, a
+copper cistern or cooler of about three hundred gallons capacity, into
+which the prepared oil was baled to cool off, preliminary to its being
+poured into the casks. Beneath the furnaces was a space as large as
+the whole area of the try-works, about a foot deep, which, when the
+fires were lighted, was filled with water to prevent the deck from
+burning.
+
+It may be imagined that the blubber from our twenty porpoises made but
+a poor show in one of the pots; nevertheless, we got a barrel of very
+excellent oil from them. The fires were fed with "scrap," or pieces of
+blubber from which the oil had been boiled, some of which had been
+reserved from the previous voyage. They burned with a fierce and
+steady blaze, leaving but a trace of ash. I was then informed by one
+of the harpooners that no other fuel was ever used for boiling blubber
+at any time, there being always amply sufficient for the purpose.
+
+We were now in the haunts of the sperm whale, or "cachalot," a
+brilliant lookout being continually kept for any signs of their
+appearing. One officer and a foremast hand were continually on watch
+during the day in the main crow's-nest, one harpooner and a seaman in
+the fore one. A bounty of ten pounds of tobacco was offered to whoever
+should first report a whale, should it be secured; consequently there
+were no sleepy eyes up there.
+
+At last, one beautiful day, the boats were lowered and manned, and
+away went the greenies on their first practical lesson in the business
+of the voyage. There were two greenies in each boat, they being so
+arranged that whenever one of them "caught a crab," which of course
+was about every other stroke, his failure made little difference to
+the boat's progress. They learned very fast under the terrible
+imprecations and storm of blows from the iron-fisted and iron-hearted
+officers, so that before the day was out the skipper was satisfied of
+our ability to deal with a "fish" should he be lucky enough to "raise"
+one. I was, in virtue of my experience, placed at the after oar in the
+mate's boat, where it was my duty to attend to the "main sheet" when
+the sail was set, where also I had the benefit of the lightest oar
+except the small one used by the harpooner in the bow.
+
+The very next day after our first exhaustive boat drill, a school of
+"blackfish" was reported from aloft, and with great glee the officers
+prepared for what they considered a rattling day's fun.
+
+The blackfish (_Phocaena sp._) is a small toothed whale, not at all
+unlike a miniature cachalot, except that its head is rounded at the
+front, while its jaw is not long and straight, but bowed. It is as
+frolicsome as the porpoise, gamboling about in schools of from twenty
+to fifty or more, as if really delighted to be alive. Its average size
+is from ten to twenty feet long and seven or eight feet in girth;
+weight, from one to three tons. Blubber about three inches thick,
+while the head is almost all oil, so that a good rich specimen will
+make between one and two barrels of oil of medium quality.
+
+We lowered and left the ship, pulling right toward the school, the
+noise they were making in their fun effectually preventing them from
+hearing our approach. It is etiquette to allow the mate's boat first
+place, unless his crew is so weak as to be unable to hold their own;
+but as the mate always has first pick of the men this seldom happens.
+So, as usual, we were first, and soon I heard the order given, "Stand
+up, Louey, and let 'em have it!" Sure enough, here we were right
+among them. Louis let drive, "fastening" a whopper about twenty feet
+long. The injured animal plunged madly forward, accompanied by his
+fellows, while Louis calmly bent another iron to a "short warp," or
+piece of whale line, the loose end of which he made a bowline with
+round the main line which was fast to the "fish." Then he fastened
+another "fish," and the queer sight was seen of these two monsters
+each trying to flee in opposite directions, while the second one
+ranged about alarmingly as his "bridle" ran along the main line.
+Another one was secured in the same way, then the game was indeed
+great. The school had by this time taken the alarm and cleared out,
+but the other boats were all fast to fish, so that didn't matter. Now,
+at the rate our "game" were going, it would evidently be a long while
+before they died, although, being so much smaller than a whale proper,
+a harpoon will often kill them at a stroke. Yet they were now so
+tangled or "snarled erp," as the mate said, that it was no easy matter
+to lance them without great danger of cutting the line. However, we
+hauled up as close to them as we dared, and the harpooner got a good
+blow in, which gave the biggest of the three "Jesse," as he said,
+though why "Jesse" was a stumper. Anyhow, it killed him promptly,
+while almost directly after another one saved further trouble by
+passing in his own checks. But he sank at the same time, drawing the
+first one down with him, so that we were in considerable danger of
+having to cut them adrift or be swamped. The "wheft" was waved thrice
+as an urgent signal to the ship to come to our assistance with all
+speed, but in the meantime our interest lay in the surviving blackfish
+keeping alive. Should _he_ die and, as was most probable, sink, we
+should certainly have to cut and loose the lot, tools included.
+
+We waited in grim silence while the ship came up, so slowly,
+apparently, that she hardly seemed to move, but really at a good pace
+of about four knots an hour, which for her was not at all bad. She got
+alongside of us at last, and we passed up the bight of our line, our
+fish all safe, very much pleased with ourselves, especially when we
+found that the other boats had only five between the three of them.
+
+Chain slings were passed around the carcasses, the end of the "fall,"
+or tackle rope, was taken to the windlass, and we hove away cheerily,
+lifting the monsters right on deck. A mountainous pile they made.
+After dinner all hands turned to again to "flench" the blubber and
+prepare for trying out. This was a heavy job, keeping us busy until it
+was quite dark, the latter part of the work being carried on by the
+light of a "cresset," the flames of which were fed with "scrap," which
+blazed brilliantly, throwing a big glare over all the ship. The last
+of the carcasses was launched overboard by about eight o'clock that
+evening, but not before some vast junks of beef had been cut off and
+hung up in the rigging for our food supply.
+
+"Trying out" went on busily all night, and by nightfall of the next
+day the ship had resumed her normal appearance, and we were a tun and
+a quarter of oil to the good. Blackfish oil is of medium quality, but
+I learned that, according to the rule of "roguery in all trades," it
+was the custom to mix quantities such as we had just obtained with
+better class whale oil, and thus get a much higher price than it was
+really worth.
+
+We had now been eight days out, having had nothing, so far, but steady
+breezes and fine weather. As it was late autumn--the first week in
+October--I rather wondered at this, for even in my brief experience I
+had learned to dread a "fall" voyage across the "Western Ocean."
+
+Gradually the face of the sky changed, and the feel of the air, from
+balmy and genial, became raw and cheerless. The little wave tops broke
+short off and blew backward, apparently against the wind, while the
+old vessel had an uneasy, unnatural motion, caused by a long, new
+swell rolling athwart the existing set of the sea.
+
+We were evidently in for a fair specimen of Western Ocean weather, but
+the clumsy-looking, old-fashioned Cachalot made no more fuss over it
+than one of the long-winged sea birds that floated around, intent only
+upon snapping up any stray scraps that might escape from us. Higher
+rose the wind, heavier rolled the sea, yet never a drop of water did
+we ship, nor did anything about the deck betoken what a heavy gale was
+blowing. During the worst of the weather, and just after the wind had
+shifted back into the northeast, making an uglier cross sea than ever
+get up, along comes an immense four-masted iron ship homeward bound.
+She was staggering under a veritable mountain of canvas, fairly
+burying her bows in the foam at every forward drive, and actually
+wetting the clews of the upper topsails in the smothering masses of
+spray, that every few minutes almost hid her hull from sight.
+
+It was a splendid picture; but--for the time--I felt glad I was not on
+board of her. In a very few minutes she was out of our ken, followed
+by the admiration of all. Then came, from the other direction, a huge
+steamship, taking no more notice of the gale than as if it were calm.
+Straight through the sea she rushed, dividing the mighty rollers to
+the heart, and often bestriding three seas at once, the center one
+spreading its many tons of foaming water fore and aft, so that from
+every orifice spouted the seething brine. Compared with these
+greyhounds of the wave, we resembled nothing so much as some old
+lightship bobbing serenely around, as if part and parcel of the
+mid-Atlantic.
+
+The gale gradually blew itself out, leaving behind only a long and
+very heavy swell to denote the deep-reaching disturbance that the
+ocean had endured. And now we were within the range of the sargasso
+weed, that mysterious _fucus_ that makes the ocean look like some vast
+hayfield, and keeps the sea from rising, no matter how high the wind.
+It fell a dead calm, and the harpooners amused themselves by dredging
+up great masses of the weed, and turning out the many strange
+creatures abiding therein.
+
+We were all gathered about the fo'lk'sle scuttle one evening, a few
+days after the gale referred to above, and the question of
+whale-fishing came up for discussion. Until that time, strange as it
+may seem, no word of this, the central idea of all our minds, had been
+mooted. Every man seemed to shun the subject, although we were in
+daily expectation of being called upon to take an active part in
+whale-fighting. Once the ice was broken, nearly all had something to
+say about it, and very nearly as many addle-headed opinions were
+ventilated as at a Colney Hatch debating society. For we none of us
+_knew_ anything about it. It was Saturday evening, and while at home
+people were looking forward to a day's respite from work and care, I
+felt that the coming day, though never taken much notice of on board,
+was big with the probabilities of strife such as I at least had at
+present no idea of--so firmly was I possessed by the prevailing
+feeling.
+
+The night was very quiet. A gentle breeze was blowing, and the sky was
+of the usual "trade" character--that is, a dome of dark blue fringed
+at the horizon with peaceful cumulus clouds, almost motionless. I
+turned in at 4 A. M. from the middle watch and, as usual, slept like a
+babe. Suddenly I started wide awake, a long, mournful sound sending a
+thrill to my very heart. As I listened breathlessly, other sounds of
+the same character but in different tones joined in, human voices
+monotonously intoning in long-drawn-out expirations the single word
+"bl-o-o-o-ow." Then came a hurricane of noise overhead, and
+adjurations in no gentle language to the sleepers to "tumble up lively
+there, no skulking, sperm whales." At last, then, fulfilling all the
+presentiments of yesterday, the long-dreaded moment had arrived.
+Happily, there was no time for hesitation; in less than two minutes we
+were all on deck, and hurrying to our respective boats. The skipper
+was in the main crow's-nest with his binoculars. Presently he shouted:
+"Naow then, Mr. Count, lower away soon's y'like. Small pod o' cows,
+an' one 'r two bulls layin' off to west'ard of 'em." Down went the
+boats into the water quietly enough; we all scrambled in and shoved
+off. A stroke or two of the oars were given to get clear of the ship
+and one another, then oars were shipped and up went the sails. As I
+took my allotted place at the main-sheet, and the beautiful craft
+started off like some big bird, Mr. Count leaned forward, saying
+impressively to me: "Y'r a smart youngster, an' I've kinder took
+t'yer; but don't ye look ahead an' get gallied, 'r I'll knock ye
+stiff wi' th' tiller; y'hear me? N' don't ye dare to make thet sheet
+fast, 'r ye'll die so sudden y' won't know whar y'r hurted." I said as
+cheerfully as I could, "All right, sir," trying to look unconcerned,
+telling myself not to be a coward, and all sorts of things; but the
+cold truth is that I was scared almost to death, because I didn't know
+what was coming. However, I did the best thing under the
+circumstances, obeyed orders and looked steadily astern, or up into
+the bronzed impassive face of my chief, who towered above me, scanning
+with eagle eyes the sea ahead. The other boats were coming flying
+along behind us, spreading wider apart as they came, while in the bows
+of each stood the harpooner with his right hand on his first iron,
+which lay ready, pointing over the bow in a raised fork of wood called
+the "crutch."
+
+All of a sudden, at a motion of the chief's hand, the peak of our
+mainsail was dropped, and the boat swung up into the wind, laying
+"hove to," almost stationary. The centerboard was lowered to stop her
+drifting to leeward, although I can not say it made much difference
+that ever I saw. _Now_, what's the matter? I thought, when to my
+amazement the chief addressing me said, "Wonder why we've hauled up,
+don't ye?" "Yes, sir, I do," said I. "Wall," said he, "the fish hev
+sounded, an' 'ef we run over 'em, we've seen the last ov 'em. So we
+wait awhile till they rise agin, 'n then we'll prob'ly git thar' 'r
+thareabouts before they sound agin." With this explanation I had to be
+content, although if it be no clearer to my readers than it then was
+to me, I shall have to explain myself more fully later on. Silently we
+lay, rocking lazily upon the gentle swell, no other word being spoken
+by any one. At last Louis, the harpooner, gently breathed "Blo-o-o-w";
+and there, sure enough, not half a mile away on the lee beam, was a
+little bushy cloud of steam apparently rising from the sea. At almost
+the same time as we kept away all the other boats did likewise, and
+just then, catching sight of the ship, the reason for this apparently
+concerted action was explained. At the mainmast head of the ship was a
+square blue flag, and the ensign at the peak was being dipped. These
+were signals well understood and promptly acted upon by those in
+charge of the boats, who were thus guided from a point of view at
+least one hundred feet above the sea.
+
+"Stand up, Louey," the mate murmured softly. I only just stopped
+myself in time from turning my head to see why the order was given.
+Suddenly there was a bump, at the same moment the mate yelled, "Give't
+to him, Louey, give't to him!" and to me, "Haul that main sheet, naow
+haul, why don't ye?" I hauled it flat aft, and the boat shot up into
+the wind, rubbing sides as she did so with what to my troubled sight
+seemed an enormous mass of black India rubber floating. As we
+_crawled_ up into the wind, the whale went into convulsions befitting
+his size and energy. He raised a gigantic tail on high, thrashing the
+water with deafening blows, rolling at the same time from side to side
+until the surrounding sea was white with froth. I felt in an agony
+lest we should be crushed under one of those fearful strokes, for Mr.
+Count appeared to be oblivious of possible danger, although we seemed
+to be now drifting back on to the writhing leviathan. In the agitated
+condition of the sea it was a task of no ordinary difficulty to unship
+the tall mast, which was of course the first thing to be done. After a
+desperate struggle, and a narrow escape from falling overboard of one
+of the men, we got the long "stick," with the sail bundled around it,
+down and "fleeted" aft, where it was secured by the simple means of
+sticking the "heel" under the after thwart, two thirds of the mast
+extending out over the stern. Meanwhile, we had certainly been in a
+position of the greatest danger, our immunity from damage being
+unquestionably due to anything but precaution taken to avoid it.
+
+By the time the oars were handled, and the mate had exchanged places
+with the harpooner, our friend the enemy had "sounded"--that is, he
+had gone below for a change of scene, marveling, no doubt, what
+strange thing had befallen him. Agreeably to the accounts which I,
+like most boys, had read of the whale-fishery, I looked for the
+rushing of the line round the loggerhead (a stout wooden post built
+into the boat aft), to raise a cloud of smoke with occasional bursts
+of flame; so, as it began to slowly surge round the post, I timidly
+asked the harpooner whether I should throw any water on it. "Wot for?"
+growled he, as he took a couple more turns with it. Not knowing "what
+for," and hardly liking to quote my authorities here, I said no more,
+but waited events. "Hold him up, Louey, hold him up, cain't ye?"
+shouted the mate, and to my horror, down went the nose of the boat
+almost under water, while at the mate's order everybody scrambled aft
+into the elevated stern sheets.
+
+The line sang quite a tune as it was grudgingly allowed to surge round
+the loggerhead, filling one with admiration at the strength shown by
+such a small rope. This sort of thing went on for about twenty
+minutes, in which time we quite emptied the large tub and began on the
+small one.
+
+Suddenly our boat fell backward from her "slantindicular" position
+with a jerk, and the mate immediately shouted, "Haul line, there! look
+lively, now! you--so on, etcetera, etcetera" (he seemed to invent new
+epithets on every occasion). The line came in hand over hand, and was
+coiled in a wide heap in the stern sheets, for, silky as it was, it
+could not be expected in its wet state to lie very close. As it came
+flying in, the mate kept a close gaze upon the water immediately
+beneath us, apparently for the first glimpse of our antagonist. When
+the whale broke water, however, he was some distance off, and
+apparently as quiet as a lamb. Now, had Mr. Count been a prudent or
+less ambitious man, our task would doubtless have been an easy one, or
+comparatively so; but, being a little over-grasping, he got us all
+into serious trouble. We were hauling up to our whale in order to
+lance it, and the mate was standing, lance in hand, only waiting to
+get near enough, when up comes a large whale right alongside of our
+boat, so close, indeed, that I might have poked my finger in his
+little eye, if I had chosen. The sight of that whale at liberty, and
+calmly taking stock of us like that, was too much for the mate. He
+lifted his lance and hurled it at the visitor, in whose broad flank it
+sank, like a knife into butter, right up to the pole-hitches. The
+recipient disappeared like a flash, but before one had time to think,
+there was an awful crash beneath us, and the mate shot up into the air
+like a bomb from a mortar. He came down in a sitting posture on the
+mast thwart; but as he fell, the whole framework of the boat collapsed
+like a derelict umbrella. Louis quietly chopped the line and severed
+our connection with the other whale, while in accordance with our
+instructions we drew each man his oar across the boat and lashed it
+firmly down with a piece of line spliced to each thwart for the
+purpose. This simple operation took but a minute, but before it was
+completed we were all up to our necks in the sea--still in the boat,
+it is true, and therefore not in such danger of drowning as if we were
+quite adrift; but, considering that the boat was reduced to a mere
+bundle of loose planks, I, at any rate, was none too comfortable. Now,
+had he known it, was the whale's golden opportunity; but he, poor
+wretch, had had quite enough of our company, and cleared off without
+any delay, wondering, no doubt, what fortunate accident had rid him of
+our very unpleasant attentions.
+
+I was assured that we were all as safe as if we were on board the
+ship, to which I answered nothing; but, like Jack's parrot, I did some
+powerful thinking. Every little wave that came along swept clean over
+our heads, sometimes coming so suddenly as to cut a breath in half. If
+the wind should increase--but no--I wouldn't face the possibility of
+such a disagreeable thing. I was cool enough now in a double sense,
+for, although we were in the tropics, we soon got thoroughly chilled.
+
+Help came at last, and we were hauled alongside. Long exposure had
+weakened us to such an extent that it was necessary to hoist us on
+board, especially the mate, whose "sudden stop," when he returned to
+us after his little aerial excursion, had shaken his sturdy frame
+considerably, a state of body which the subsequent soaking had by no
+means improved. In my innocence I imagined that we should be
+commiserated for our misfortunes by Captain Slocum, and certainly be
+relieved from further duties until we were a little recovered from the
+rough treatment we had just undergone. But I never made a greater
+mistake. The skipper cursed us all (except the mate, whose sole fault
+the accident undoubtedly was) with a fluency and vigor that was, to
+put it mildly, discouraging.
+
+A couple of slings were passed around the boat, by means of which she
+was carefully hoisted on board, a mere dilapidated bundle of sticks
+and raffle of gear. She was at once removed aft out of the way, the
+business of cutting in the whale claiming precedence over everything
+else just then. The preliminary proceedings consisted of rigging the
+"cutting stage." This was composed of two stout planks a foot wide and
+ten feet long, the inner ends of which were suspended by strong ropes
+over the ship's side about four feet from the water, while the outer
+extremities were upheld by tackles from the main rigging, and a small
+crane abreast the try-works.
+
+These planks were about thirty feet apart, their two outer ends being
+connected by a massive plank which was securely bolted to them. A
+handrail about as high as a man's waist, supported by light iron
+stanchions, ran the full length of this plank on the side nearest the
+ship, the whole fabric forming an admirable standing place whence the
+officers might, standing in comparative comfort, cut and carve at the
+great mass below to their hearts' content.
+
+So far the prize had been simply held alongside by the whale line,
+which at death had been "rove" through a hole cut in the solid gristle
+of the tail; but now it became necessary to secure the carcass to the
+ship in some more permanent fashion. Therefore, a massive chain like a
+small ship's cable was brought forward, and in a very ingenious way,
+by means of a tiny buoy and a hand lead, passed round the body, one
+end brought through a ring in the other, and hauled upon until it
+fitted tight round the "small" or part of the whale next the broad
+spread of the tail. The free end of the fluke chain was then passed in
+through a mooring pipe forward, firmly secured to a massive bitt at
+the heel of the bowsprit (the fluke-chain bitt), and all was ready.
+
+The first thing to be done was to cut the whale's head off. This
+operation, involving the greatest amount of labor in the whole of the
+cutting in, was taken in hand by the first and second mates, who,
+armed with twelve-foot spades, took their station upon the stage,
+leaned over the handrail to steady themselves, and plunged their
+weapons vigorously down through the massive neck of the animal--if
+neck it could be said to have--following a well-defined crease in the
+blubber. At the same time the other officers passed a heavy chain
+sling around the long, narrow lower jaw, hooking one of the big
+cutting tackles into it, the "fall" of which was then taken to the
+windlass and hove tight, turning the whale on her back. A deep cut
+was then made on both sides of the rising jaw, the windlass was kept
+going, and gradually the whole of the throat was raised high enough
+for a hole to be cut through its mass, into which the strap of the
+second cutting tackle was inserted and secured by passing a huge
+toggle of oak through its eye. The second tackle was then hove taut,
+and the jaw, with a large piece of blubber attached, was cut off from
+the body with a boarding knife, a tool not unlike a cutlass blade set
+into a three-foot-long wooden handle.
+
+Upon being severed the whole piece swung easily inboard and was
+lowered on deck. The fast tackle was now hove upon while the third
+mate on the stage cut down diagonally into the blubber on the body,
+which the purchase ripped off in a broad strip or "blanket" about five
+feet wide and a foot thick. Meanwhile the other two officers carved
+away vigorously at the head, varying their labors by cutting a hole
+right through the snout. This, when completed, received a heavy chain
+for the purpose of securing the head. When the blubber had been about
+half stripped off the body, a halt was called in order that the work
+of cutting off the head might be finished, for it was a task of
+incredible difficulty. It was accomplished at last, and the mass
+floated astern by a stout rope, after which the windlass pawls
+clattered merrily, the "blankets" rose in quick succession, and were
+cut off and lowered into the square of the main hatch or "blubber
+room." A short time sufficed to strip off the whole of the body
+blubber, and when at last the tail was reached, the backbone was cut
+through, the huge mass of flesh floating away to feed the innumerable
+scavengers of the sea. No sooner was the last of the blubber lowered
+into the hold than the hatches were put on and the head hauled up
+alongside. Both tackles were secured to it and all hands took to the
+windlass levers. This was a small cow whale of about thirty
+barrels--that is, yielding that amount of oil--so it was just possible
+to lift the entire head on board; but as it weighed as much as three
+full-grown elephants, it was indeed a heavy lift for even our united
+forces, trying our tackle to the utmost. The weather was very fine,
+and the ship rolled but little; even then, the strain upon the mast
+was terrific, and right glad was I when at last the immense cube of
+fat, flesh, and bone was eased inboard and gently lowered on deck.
+
+As soon as it was secured the work of dividing it began. From the
+snout a triangular mass was cut, which was more than half pure
+spermaceti. This substance was contained in spongy cells held together
+by layers of dense white fiber, exceedingly tough and elastic, and
+called by the whalers "white horse." The whole mass, or "junk," as it
+is called, was hauled away to the ship's side and firmly lashed to the
+bulwarks for the time being, so that it might not "take charge" of the
+deck during the rest of the operations.
+
+The upper part of the head was now slit open lengthwise, disclosing an
+oblong cistern or "case" full of liquid spermaceti, clear as water.
+This was baled out with buckets into a tank, concreting as it cooled
+into a waxlike substance, bland and tasteless. There being now nothing
+more remaining about the skull of any value, the lashings were loosed,
+and the first leeward roll sent the great mass plunging overboard with
+a mighty splash. It sank like a stone, eagerly followed by a few small
+sharks that were hovering near.
+
+As may be imagined, much oil was running about the deck, for so
+saturated was every part of the creature with it that it really gushed
+like water during the cutting-up process. None of it was allowed to
+run to waste, though, for the scupper holes which drain the deck were
+all carefully plugged, and as soon as the "junk" had been dissected
+all the oil was carefully "squeegeed" up and poured into the try-pots.
+
+Two men were now told off as "blubber-room men," whose duty it became
+to go below and, squeezing themselves in as best they could between
+the greasy mass of fat, cut it up into "horse-pieces" about eighteen
+inches long and six inches square. Doing this, they became perfectly
+saturated with oil, as if they had taken a bath in a tank of it; for
+as the vessel rolled it was impossible to maintain a footing, and
+every fall was upon blubber running with oil. A machine of wonderful
+construction had been erected on deck in a kind of shallow trough
+about six feet long by four feet wide and a foot deep. At some remote
+period of time it had no doubt been looked upon as a triumph of
+ingenuity, a patent mincing machine. Its action was somewhat like that
+of a chaff-cutter, except that the knife was not attached to the
+wheel, and only rose and fell, since it was not required to cut right
+through the "horse-pieces" with which it was fed. It will be readily
+understood that, in order to get the oil quickly out of the blubber,
+it needs to be sliced as thin as possible, but for convenience in
+handling the refuse (which is the only fuel used) it is not chopped up
+in small pieces, but every "horse-piece" is very deeply scored as it
+were, leaving a thin strip to hold the slices together. This, then,
+was the order of work: Two harpooners attended the try-pots,
+replenishing them with minced blubber from the hopper at the port
+side, and baling out the sufficiently boiled oil into the great
+cooling tank on the starboard. One officer superintended the mincing,
+another exercised a general supervision over all. So we toiled watch
+and watch, six hours on and six off, the work never ceasing for an
+instant night or day. Though the work was hard and dirty, and the
+discomfort of being so continually wet through with oil great, there
+was only one thing dangerous about the whole business. That was the
+job of filling and shifting the huge casks of oil. Some of these were
+of enormous size, containing three hundred and fifty gallons when
+full, and the work of moving them about the greasy deck of a rolling
+ship was attended with a terrible amount of risk. For only four men at
+most could get fair hold of a cask, and when she took it into her
+silly old hull to start rolling, just as we had got one halfway across
+the deck, with nothing to grip your feet, and the knowledge that one
+stumbling man would mean a sudden slide of the ton and a half weight,
+and a little heap of mangled corpses somewhere in the lee
+scuppers--well, one always wanted to be very thankful when the
+lashings were safely passed.
+
+The whale being a small one, as before noted, the whole business was
+over within three days, and the decks scrubbed and rescrubbed until
+they had quite regained their normal whiteness. The oil was poured by
+means of a funnel and long canvas hose into the casks stowed in the
+ground tier at the bottom of the ship, and the gear, all carefully
+cleaned and neatly "stopped up," stowed snugly away below again.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[13] From The Cruise of the Cachalot. By Frank T. Bullen.
+(Illustrated.) New York: D. Appleton and Company. Pp. 379.
+
+
+
+
+SKETCH OF MANLY MILES.
+
+
+To Dr. Manly Miles belongs the distinction of having been the first
+professor of practical agriculture in the United States, as he was
+appointed to that then newly instituted position in the Michigan
+Agricultural College in 1865.
+
+Professor Miles was born in Homer, Cortland County, New York, July 20,
+1826, the son of Manly Miles, a soldier of the Revolution; while his
+mother, Mary Cushman, was a lineal descendant of Miles Standish and
+Thomas Cushman, whose father, Joshua Cushman, joining the Mayflower
+colony at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1621, left him there with
+Governor Bradford when he returned to England.
+
+When Manly, the son, was eleven years old, the family removed to
+Flint, Michigan, where he employed his time in farm work and the
+acquisition of knowledge, and later in teaching. He had a
+common-school education, and improved all the time he could spare from
+his regular occupations in reading and study. It is recorded of him in
+those days that he was always successful in whatever he undertook. In
+illustration of the skill and thoroughness with which he performed his
+tasks, his sister relates an incident of his sowing plaster for the
+first time, when his father expressed pleasure at his having
+distributed the lime so evenly and so well. It appears that he did not
+spare himself in doing the work, for so completely was he covered that
+he is said to have looked like a plaster cast, "with only his bright
+eyes shining through." A thrashing machine was brought on to the
+farm, and Manly and his brother went round thrashing for the
+neighbors. Industrious in study as well as in work, the boy never
+neglected his more prosaic duties to gratify his thirst for knowledge.
+He studied geometry while following the plow, drawing the problems on
+a shingle, which he tacked to the plow-beam. Whenever he was missed
+and inquiry was made about him, the answer invariably was, "Somewhere
+with a book." He was most interested in the natural sciences,
+particularly in chemistry in its applications to agriculture, and in
+comparative physiology and anatomy, and was a diligent student and
+collector of mollusks.
+
+Choosing the profession of medicine, Mr. Miles was graduated M. D.
+from Rush Medical College, Chicago, in 1850, and practiced till 1859.
+In the meantime he became greatly interested in the subject of a
+geographical survey of the State, for which an act was passed and
+approved in 1858. In the organization of the survey, in 1859, he was
+appointed Assistant State Geologist in the department of zoology; and
+in the next year was appointed professor of zoology and animal
+physiology in the State Agricultural College at Lansing.
+
+In his work as zoologist to the State Geological Survey, in 1859,
+1860, and 1861, he displayed rare qualities as a naturalist, so that
+Mr. Walter R. Barrows, in recording his death in the bulletin of the
+Michigan Ornithological Club, expresses regret that many of the years
+he afterward devoted to the development of experimental agriculture
+"were not spent in unraveling some of the important biological
+problems which the State afforded, which his skill and perseverance
+would surely have solved." He was a "born collector," Mr. Barrows
+adds, "as the phrase is, and his keen eyes, tireless industry, and
+mathematical precision led to the accumulation of thousands of
+valuable specimens and more valuable observations."
+
+Mr. Bryant Walker, of Detroit, who knew Professor Miles well in later
+years, and had opportunity to review his zoological work, regards the
+part he took during this service in developing the knowledge of the
+fauna of the State as having been very prominent. "The catalogues he
+published in the report for 1860 have been the basis for all work
+since that time." He kept in correspondence with the most eminent
+American naturalists of the period, including Cope, Prime, Lea, W. G.
+Binney, Baird, and Agassiz, and supplied them with large quantities of
+valuable material. From the many letters written by these naturalists
+which are in the possession of his friends, we take, as illustrating
+the character of the service he rendered and of the trust they reposed
+in him, even previous to his going on the survey, one from Agassiz, of
+February 4, 1856:
+
+"DEAR SIR: As you have already furnished me with invaluable materials
+for the natural history of the fishes of your State, I am emboldened
+to ask another favor of you. I am preparing a map of the Geographical
+Distribution of the Turtles of North America, and would be greatly
+indebted to you for any information respecting the range of those
+found in your State, as far as you have noticed them, even if you
+should know them only by their common names, my object being simply to
+ascertain how far they extend over different parts of the country. If
+you could add specimens of them, to identify them with precision, it
+would be, of course, so much the better; but as I am almost ready for
+the press, I could not for this paper await the return of spring, but
+would thank you for what you could furnish me now. I am particularly
+interested in ascertaining how far north the different species
+inhabiting this continent extend." On the back of this letter was Dr.
+Miles's indorsement that a box had been sent.
+
+A number of letters from Professor Baird, of 1860 and 1861, relate to
+the identification of specimens collected by Dr. Miles, and to the
+fishes of Michigan, and contain inquiries about gulls and eggs. Dr.
+Miles likewise supplied Cope with a considerable amount of material
+concerning Michigan reptiles and fishes.
+
+While mollusks were the favorite object of Dr. Miles's investigations,
+he also made studies and valuable collections of birds, mammals,
+reptiles, and fishes; and he seems, Mr. Barrows says, "to have
+possessed, in a high degree, that strong characteristic of a true
+naturalist, a full appreciation of the value of good specimens. Many
+of his specimens are now preserved at the Agricultural College, and
+among his shells are many which are of more than ordinary value from
+having served as types of new species, or as specimens from type
+localities, or as part or all of the material which has helped to
+clear up mistakes and misconceptions about species and their
+distribution." Mr. Walker speaks of his having done a great work in
+conchology. His catalogue, which contained a list of one hundred and
+sixty-one species, was by far the most complete published up to that
+time. "He described two new species--_Planorbis truncatus_ and _Unio
+leprosus_. The former is one of the few species which are, so far as
+known, peculiar to Michigan, and is a very beautiful and distinct
+form; while the latter, although now considered as synonymous with
+another species, has peculiarities which in the then slight knowledge
+of the variability of the species was a justification of his position.
+He was also the discoverer of two other forms which were named after
+him by one of our most eminent conchologists--viz., _Campeloma
+Milesii_ (Lea) and _Guiobasis Milesii_ (Lea)." Mr. Walker believes
+that "in general, it can be truthfully stated that Dr. Miles did more
+to develop the general natural history of that State (Michigan) than
+any other man either before or since he completed his work as State
+Geologist."
+
+As professor of zoology and animal physiology, Dr. Miles is described
+by one of his students, who afterward became a professor in the
+college and then its president, as having been thoroughly interested
+in the subjects he taught, and shown that interest in his work and in
+his treatment of his students. He labored as faithfully and
+industriously with the class of five to which President Clute belonged
+as if it "had numbered as many score." He supplemented the meager
+equipment of his department from his more extensive private apparatus
+and collections, which were freely used for class work; and, when
+there was need, he had the skill to prepare new pieces of apparatus.
+"He was on the alert for every chance for illustration which occasion
+offered: an animal slaughtered for the tables gave him an opportunity
+to lecture on its viscera; a walk over the drift-covered fields found
+many specimens of rock which he taught us to distinguish; the mud and
+the sand banks along the river showed how in the periods of the dim
+past were formed fossil footprints and ripples; the woods and swamps
+and lakes gave many useful living specimens, some of which became the
+material for the improvised dissecting room; the crayon in his hand
+produced on board or paper the chart of geologic ages, the table of
+classification, or the drawing of the part of an animal under
+discussion."
+
+Prof. R. C. Kedzie came to the college a little later, in 1863, when
+Dr. Miles had been for two years a professor, and found him then the
+authority "for professors and students alike on beasts, birds, and
+reptiles, on the stones of the field, and insects of the air,"
+thorough, scholarly, and enthusiastic, and therefore very popular with
+his classes.
+
+The projection of agricultural colleges under the Agricultural College
+Land Grant Act of 1862 stimulated a demand for teachers of scientific
+agriculture, and it was found that they were rare. Of old school
+students of science there was no lack--able men, as President Clute
+well says, who were familiar with their little laboratories and with
+the old theories and methods, but who did not possess the new vision
+of evolution and the conservation of energy, men of the study rather
+than the field, and least of all men of the orchard and stock farm;
+and they knew nothing of the practical application of chemistry to
+fertilization and the raising of crops and the composition of feed
+stuffs, of physiology to stock-breeding, and of geology and physics to
+the study of the soils.
+
+With a thorough knowledge of science and familiarity with practical
+agriculture Professor Miles had an inclination to enter this field,
+and this inclination was encouraged by President Abbott and some of
+the members of the Board of Agriculture. He had filled the
+professorship of zoology and animal physiology with complete success,
+and had he consulted his most cherished tastes alone he would have
+remained there, but he gradually suffered himself to be called to
+another field. The duties of "acting superintendent of the farm" were
+attached to his chair in 1864. In 1865 he became professor of animal
+physiology and practical agriculture and superintendent of the farm;
+in 1869 he ceased to teach physiology, and gave his whole time to the
+agricultural branch of his work; and in 1875 the work of the
+superintendent of the farm was consigned to other hands, and he
+confined himself to the professorship proper of practical agriculture.
+
+The farm and its appurtenances, with fields cumbered with stumps and
+undrained, with inadequate and poorly constructed buildings, with
+inferior live stock, and everything primitive, were in poor condition
+for the teaching or the successful practice of agriculture. Professor
+Miles's first business was to set these things in order. Year by year
+something was done to remove evils or improve existing features in
+some of the departments of the life and management of the premises,
+till the concern in a certain measure approached the superintendent's
+ideal--as being a laboratory for teaching agriculture, conducting
+experiments, and training men, rather than a money-making
+establishment.
+
+In this new field, Professor Kedzie says, Professor Miles was even
+more popular than before with students, and created an enthusiasm for
+operations and labors of the farm which had been regarded before as a
+disagreeable drudgery. The students "were never happier than when
+detailed for a day's work with Dr. Miles in laying out some difficult
+ditch or surveying some field. One reason why he was so popular was
+that he was not afraid of soiling his hands. His favorite uniform for
+field work was a pair of brown overalls. The late Judge Tenney came to
+a gang of students at work on a troublesome ditch and inquired where
+he could find Dr. Miles. 'That man in overalls down in the quicksands
+of the ditch is Dr. Miles'; the professor of practical agriculture was
+in touch with the soil."
+
+Prof. Byron D. Halsted, of the New Jersey Agricultural College
+Experiment Station, who was an agricultural pupil of Dr. Miles in
+Lansing, characterizes him as having been a full man who knew his
+subjects deeply and fondly. "In those days I am safe in writing that
+he represented the forefront of advanced agriculture in America. He
+was in close touch with such men as Lawes and Gilbert, Rothamstead,
+England, the famous field-crop experimenters of the world, and as for
+his knowledge of breeds of live stock and their origin, Miles's
+Stock-Breeding is a classic work. Dr. Miles, in short, was a close
+student, a born investigator, hating an error, but using it as a
+stepping-stone toward truth. He did American farming a lasting
+service, and his deeds live after him."
+
+While loved by his students, most of whom have been successful and
+many have gained eminence as agricultural professors or workers in
+experiment stations, and while receiving sympathy and support from
+President Abbott, Dr. Miles was not appreciated by the politicians, or
+by all of the Board of Agriculture, or even by the public at large.
+Unkind and captious criticisms were made of his work, and it was found
+fault with on economical grounds, as if its prime purpose had been to
+make money. He therefore resigned his position in 1875, and accepted
+the professorship of agriculture in the Illinois State University.
+Thence he removed to the Houghton Farm of Lawson Valentine, near
+Mountainville, N. Y., where he occupied himself with scientific
+experimental investigation. He was afterward professor of agriculture
+in the Massachusetts Agricultural College, at Amherst. In announcing
+this appointment to the students, Dr. Chadbourne, then president of
+the institution, and himself a most successful teacher, stated that he
+considered Dr. Miles as the ablest man in the United States for that
+position. In 1886, shortly after Dr. Chadbourne's death, Dr. Miles
+returned to his old home in Lansing, Michigan, where he spent the rest
+of his life in study, research, and the writing of books and articles
+for scientific publications.
+
+During these later years of his life he took up again with what had
+been his favorite pursuit in earlier days, but with which he had not
+occupied himself for thirty years--the study of mollusks--with the
+enthusiasm of a young man, Mr. Walker says, who being interested in
+the same study, was in constant correspondence with him at this time;
+"and as far as his strength permitted labored with all the acumen and
+attention to details which were so characteristic of him. I was
+particularly struck with his familiarity with the present drift of
+scientific investigation and thought, and his thorough appreciation of
+modern methods of work. He was greatly interested in the work I was
+carrying on with reference to the geographical distribution of the
+mollusca, and, as would naturally be supposed from his own work in
+heredity in connection with our domestic animals, took great pleasure
+in discussing the relations of the species as they are now found and
+their possible lines of descent. He was a careful and accurate
+observer of Nature, and if he had not drifted into other lines of work
+would undoubtedly have made his mark as a great naturalist. As it is,
+his name will always have an honored place in the scientific history
+of Michigan."
+
+When Professor Miles began to teach in the Michigan Agricultural
+College, the "new education" was new indeed, and the textbook method
+still held sway. But the improved methods were gradually taking the
+place of the old ones, and Professor Miles was one of the first to
+co-operate in them, and he did it with effect. He used text-books,
+"but his living word," President Clute says, "supplemented the book;
+and the animal from the farm under his knife and ours, the shells
+which he led us to find under the rotten logs and along the rivers and
+lakes, the insects he taught us to collect and classify, the minerals
+and fossils he had collected on the geological survey of Michigan, all
+were used to instruct and inspire his students, to cultivate in them
+the scientific spirit and method."
+
+Among the more important books by Professor Miles are Stock-Breeding,
+which had a wide circulation and has been much used as a class-book;
+Experiments with Indian Corn, giving the results of some important
+work which he did at Houghton Farm; Silos and Ensilage, which helped
+much in diffusing knowledge of the silo in the times when it had to
+fight for recognition; and Land Drainage. Of his papers, he published
+in the Popular Science Monthly articles on Scientific Farming at
+Rothamstead; Ensilage and Fermentation; Lines of Progress in
+Agriculture; Progress in Agricultural Science; and How Plants and
+Animals Grow. To the American Association for the Advancement of
+Science he contributed papers on Energy as a Factor in Rural Economy;
+Heredity of Acquired Characters (also to the American Naturalist);
+Surface Tension of Water and Evaporation; Energy as a Factor in
+Nutrition; and Limits of Biological Experiments (also to the American
+Naturalist). Other articles in the American Naturalist were on Animal
+Mechanics and the Relative Efficiency of Animals as Machines. In the
+Proceedings of the American Educational Association is an address by
+him on Instruction in Manual Arts in Connection with Scientific
+Studies. The records of the U and I Club, of Lansing, of which he was
+a valued member for ten years, contain papers on a variety of
+scientific subjects which were read before it, and were highly
+appreciated. This list does not contain all of Professor Miles's
+contributions to the literature of science, for throughout his life he
+was a frequent contributor to the agricultural and scientific press,
+and a frequent speaker before associations and institutes, "where his
+lectures were able and practical."
+
+No special record is made of the work of Professor Miles in the
+American Agriculturist, but the correspondence of Professor Thurber
+with him furnishes ample proof that he was one of the most trusted
+advisers in the editorial conduct of that journal. The familiar tone
+of Professor Thurber's letters, and the undoubting assurance with
+which he asked for information and aid on various subjects, well
+demonstrate how well the editor knew whom he could rely upon in an
+emergency.
+
+In all his work the great desire of Professor Miles was to find and
+present the truth. His merits were recognized by many scientific
+societies. He was made a corresponding member of the Buffalo Society
+of Natural Sciences in 1862; a corresponding member of the
+Entomological Society of Philadelphia in January, 1863; a
+correspondent of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia in
+1864; a member of the American Association for the Advancement of
+Science in 1880, and a Fellow of the same body in 1890; and held
+memberships or other relations with other societies; and he received
+the degree of D. V. S. from Columbia Veterinary College, New York, in
+March, 1880.
+
+His students and friends speak in terms of high admiration of the
+genial qualities of Professor Miles as a companion. The resolutions of
+the U and I Club of Lansing describe him as an easy and graceful
+talker, a cheerful dispenser of his learning to others. "To spend an
+hour in his 'den,' and watch his delicate experiments with 'films,'"
+says President Clute, "and see the light in his eyes as he talked of
+them, was a delight." "He was particularly fond of boys," says
+another, "and never seemed happier than when in the company of boys or
+young men who were trying to study and to inform themselves, and if he
+could in any way assist them he was only too glad to do so"; and he
+liked pets and children. Incidents are related showing that he had a
+wonderful accuracy in noting and recollecting the minutest details
+that came under his observation--a power that he was able to bring to
+bear instantly when its exercise was called for.
+
+Dr. Miles kept up his habits of reading and study to the last days of
+his life; but all public work was made difficult to him in later years
+by an increasing deafness. He was tireless in investigation, patient,
+and always cheerful and looking for the bright side; and when one
+inquired of him concerning his health, his usual answer was that he
+was "all right," or, if he could not say that, that he would be "all
+right to-morrow."
+
+No sketch of Dr. Miles is complete without a word of tribute to his
+high personal character, his life pure and noble in every
+relationship, his unswerving devotion to truth, and the unfaltering
+loyalty to his friends, which make his memory a benediction and an
+inspiration to all who knew him well.
+
+He was married in 1851 to Miss Mary E. Dodge, who remained his devoted
+companion until his death, which occurred February 15, 1898.
+
+
+
+
+Editor's Table.
+
+
+_SCIENCE AND CULTURE._
+
+We do not know from whom the philosopher Locke quotes the saying,
+"_Non vitae sed scholae discimus_," but he translates it well, "We learn
+not to live, but to dispute." The adage has reference to the old
+systems of education which had for their aim neither the discovery of
+truth nor the perfecting of the human faculties in any broad sense,
+but the fitting of the individual to take his place in a world of
+conventional ideas and discuss conventional topics upon conventional
+lines. In other words, the preparation was for school, not for life,
+the whole subsequent career of the individual being regarded simply as
+a prolongation of the intellectual influences and discipline of the
+school. That system, which was ecclesiastical in its origin, has now,
+save for strictly ecclesiastical purposes, passed away. We consider
+life as the end of school and not school as the end of life.
+
+It may be questioned, however, whether we have as yet thoroughly
+adapted our educational methods to this change of standpoint. Do we as
+yet take a sufficiently broad view of life? If we conceive life
+narrowly as essentially a business struggle, and adapt our procedure
+to that conception, the results will show very little relation to the
+larger and truer conception according to which life means development
+of faculty, activity of function, and a harmonious adjustment of
+relations between man and man. If, again, we make too much of
+knowledge that has only a conventional value, having little or no
+bearing on the understanding of things or the accomplishment of useful
+work, we are so far falling into the old error of "learning for
+school." The address by Sir Archibald Geikie, which we published last
+month, gives a useful caution against undervaluing "the older
+learning." The older learning can certainly be made an effective
+instrument for the cultivation of taste, of sympathy, and of
+intellectual accuracy along certain lines. It tends further, we
+believe, to promote a certain intellectual self-respect, which is a
+valuable quality. In the study of language and literature the human
+mind surveys, as it were, its own peculiar possessions, and thus
+acquires a sense of proprietorship which a study of the external world
+can hardly give. Still, it is well to cultivate a consciousness of the
+essentially limited and arbitrary nature of such knowledge. It is
+important, we may admit, to have a good text of such an author as
+Chaucer; but the minutiae into which critics of his text enter can not
+be said to possess any broad human interest. Whether he wrote this
+word or that word, adopted this spelling or that, can not be a
+question on which much depends; and could one know the exact truth on
+a thousand such points, he would not really be much the wiser. Among
+Chaucer scholars he could speak with a good deal of confidence; but
+the knowledge of these details would not really help to round out any
+useful _system_ of knowledge, nor could any single fact possess the
+illuminating power which sometimes belongs to some single and, at
+first sight, unimportant fact in the realm of natural knowledge.
+
+This is not said with any intention of disparaging the culture that
+comes of literary study. It is a culture that tends to brighten human
+intercourse and to sweeten a man's own thoughts. It is a culture
+eminently favorable to flexibility of mind and quick insight into
+human character. So far it is a culture "for life"; but too often it
+tends to become a culture "for school"--that is to say, when things
+are learned simply to meet conventional demands and conform to the
+fashion of the time.
+
+A true and sufficient culture can never, as we conceive, be founded on
+literature and language alone. No mind can be truly liberalized
+without imbibing and assimilating the fundamental principles of
+science. There is darkness in the mind that believes that anything can
+come out of nothing and which has never obtained a glimpse of the
+exactness with which Nature solves her equations. In the region of
+mechanics alone there are a thousand beautiful and varied
+illustrations of the unfailing constancy of natural laws. It is a
+liberal education to trace the operation of one law under numberless
+disguises, and thus arrive at an ineradicable conviction that the same
+law must be reckoned with always and everywhere. The persistence of
+force, the laws of the composition and resolution of forces, the laws
+of falling bodies and projectiles, the conservation of energy, the
+laws of heat, to mention only a few heads of elementary scientific
+study, are capable, if properly unfolded and illustrated, of producing
+in any mind open to large thoughts a sense of harmony and a trust in
+the underlying reason of things, which are constitutive elements of
+the very highest culture. Only, care must be taken to approach these
+studies in a right spirit. There is a way of regarding the laws of
+Nature which tends to vulgarize rather than refine the mind. If we
+approach Nature merely as something to be exploited, we get no culture
+from the study of it; but if we approach it as the great men of old
+did, and feel that in learning its laws we are grasping the thoughts
+which went to the building of the universe, and, by so doing, are
+affirming our own high calling as intelligent beings, then every
+moment given to the study of Nature means intellectual, moral, and
+spiritual gain. When we look into literature there is much to charm,
+much to delight and satisfy; and doubtless, in relation to what any
+one man can accomplish, the field is infinite; but still we know we
+are looking into the limited. On the other hand, when we are face to
+face with Nature, we know we are looking into the infinite, and that,
+however many veils we may take away, there is still "veil after veil
+behind."
+
+It is needless to say that there are thousands of minds in the world
+possessed of good native power, but laboring under serious disability
+for the want of that culture which science alone can bestow. Some of
+these are sick with morbid longings for unattainable knowledge, and
+openly or secretly rebellious at the limitations of a Nature whose
+powers they have never even begun to explore. To such persons anything
+like an adequate insight into the harmony amid diversity of Nature's
+laws would come with all the force of a revelation, and would, we may
+well believe, clear their minds of the feverish fancies which have
+made them so restless and dissatisfied; but, alas! it is rarely that
+such enlightenment comes to those who have not in youth imbibed a
+portion of the scientific spirit. In this class are to be found the
+victims of spiritualism, of the Keeley motor, and even of that
+grotesque satire, the success of which we remember almost with fear
+and trembling, the "sympsychograph." Still, to all such we would say:
+
+ "Come forth into the light of things;
+ Let Nature be your teacher."
+
+The "Nature" which we require to teach us for the peace and
+tranquillity of our souls is the Nature of everyday phenomena, the
+Nature that forms the clouds and rounds the raindrops, that springs in
+the grass and pulses in the tides, that glances in the sunbeam and
+breathes in the flower, that works witchery in the crystal and breaks
+into glory in the sunset. The mind that knows what can be known of
+these things has feasted full of wonder and beauty, and makes no
+greedy demand for higher grace or mightier miracle.
+
+Then again there are those who for want of a little elementary
+scientific knowledge, and particularly for want of an assured
+conviction that Nature gives nothing for nothing, are continually
+attempting the impossible in the way of projected inventions. They
+catch at a phrase and think it must represent a fact; they fall
+victims to a verbal mythology of their own manufacture. If there was
+much hope of their learning anything of value through disappointment,
+they might be left to the teaching of experience, costly as the
+lessons of that master are. But they do not learn: their hopes are
+blasted, their fortunes, if they had any, are wrecked, but their
+infatuations survive. Where is the inventor of a perpetual motion who
+ever ceased to have confidence in his peculiar contrivance? The thing
+may be as motionless as a tombstone, save when urged by external force
+into a momentary lumbering activity; but all the same, it only needs,
+its misguided author thinks, a little doctoring, a trifling change
+here or there, to make it tear round like mad. And so with other
+inventors of the impossible: they take counsel not with Nature, but
+with their own wholly incorrect notions of what the operations of
+Nature are. The least power of truly analyzing a natural phenomenon,
+and separating the factors that produce it, would show them the
+falsity of their ideas; but that power they do not possess.
+
+We can not, then, plead too strongly for the teaching of science, not
+with a view to results in money, but with a view to the improvement of
+the mind and heart of the learner, or, in other words, as a source of
+culture. Literature introduces us to the world of human thought and
+action, to the kingdom of man; and science shows us how the thought
+and powers of man can be indefinitely enlarged by an ever increasing
+acquaintance with the laws of the universe. Literature alone leaves
+the mind without any firm grasp of the reality of things, and science
+alone tends to produce a hard, prosaic, and sometimes antisocial
+temper. Each helps to bring out the best possible results of the
+other; and it is only by their joint action that human faculties and
+human character can ever be brought to their perfection.
+
+
+_SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST._
+
+It is singular what a propensity some writers have to misunderstand
+and misrepresent the views of Mr. Herbert Spencer, even upon points in
+regard to which he has made every possible effort to avoid occasion
+for misapprehension. The term "survival of the fittest" is one which
+Mr. Spencer himself introduced as being, perhaps, a little less open
+to misunderstanding than the Darwinian expression "natural selection."
+The latter seemed to imply purposive action, and Mr. Spencer thought
+that this implication would be less prominent if the phrase were
+changed to "survival of the fittest." From the very first, however, he
+recognized that the difference between the two terms in this respect
+was, if we may so express it, purely quantitative; and he took care to
+make it clear that by "the fittest" he did not in the least intend to
+signify any form of ideal or subjective fitness, but simply a superior
+degree of adaptation, as a matter of actual fact, to environing
+conditions. The conditions at any given moment are as they are, and
+the "fitness" of any particular organism is such a correspondence with
+those conditions as permits and favors its perpetuation. The
+conditions do not create fitness; they merely eliminate unfitness; nor
+does Mr. Spencer conceive any agency as producing _ab extra_ the
+fitness which enables an organism or a number of organisms to survive.
+He differs, however, from what is perhaps the dominant school of
+biology to-day, in holding that the higher forms of organic life are,
+as he expresses it, "directly equilibrated" with their surroundings
+through the inheritance of physical features resulting from effort and
+habit.
+
+To whatever cause it may be attributed, few writers whose intellectual
+activity has extended over so long a term of years as Mr. Spencer's
+have been so consistent in their utterances at different stages as he.
+The "Synthetic Philosophy" is the realization of a scheme of thought
+no less wonderful in its coherence and solidity than in its compass,
+the author having planted himself from the first at a point of view
+which gave him a clear command of his entire field. To say that no
+other system of thought equally comprehensive and equally coherent
+exists in the world to-day would be to make a statement which few
+competent and dispassionate authorities would deny. Notwithstanding
+this, there are writers not a few, particularly of the class "who
+write with ease," who, as we said at the outset, have a propensity for
+misunderstanding Mr. Spencer, and who consequently accuse him of
+inconsistencies and self-contradictions for which nothing that he has
+ever said affords any warrant. One of these gentlemen is the Duke of
+Argyll, who has lately offered the world another superfluous book
+under the title of Organic Evolution Cross-examined. The duke
+particularly concerns himself with Mr. Spencer's teaching in regard to
+the "survival of the fittest," and Mr. Spencer, in the columns of
+Nature, replies to him in a brief but sufficient manner. It is safe to
+say that Mr. Spencer's philosophy will show Cyclopean remains
+generations after the name of his ducal critic shall have passed
+forever into the mists of oblivion; and the "survival of the fittest"
+will thus be illustrated in a sense in which Mr. Spencer himself never
+used the words.
+
+
+
+
+Scientific Literature.
+
+
+SPECIAL BOOKS.
+
+The study of the methods through which the topographical features and
+rock forms of particular districts have been worked out, as presented
+in numerous popular monographs, is a fascinating one; and we can
+hardly doubt that many persons who would never otherwise have thought
+of it have been made interested in geology by some of these masterly
+picturesque descriptions of regions with which they were superficially
+familiar. Other treatises on the origin of surface features, dealing
+with the subject more fundamentally, but likewise of limited scope,
+are not wanting. Yet, as Prof. _James Geikie_ well says, there is no
+English work to which readers not skilled in geology can turn for a
+general account of the whole subject. Professor Geikie has therefore
+prepared his elaborate book on _Earth Sculpture_[14] to supply this
+want, to furnish an introductory treatise for those persons who may be
+desirous of acquiring some broad knowledge of the results arrived at
+by geologists as to the development of land forms generally. A vast
+number of geological questions are involved in the exhaustive
+treatment of the subject. All the forces with which geologists become
+acquainted in the study of the earth, and their operation, come into
+consideration. The effects of these forces assume aspects that vary
+according to the nature of the material on which they operate, and
+they are again modified according to the peculiar combinations of
+forces at work. The subject is therefore not the easy one it may be
+supposed at first sight to be, and the reader who peruses Professor
+Geikie's work with the intention of mastering it will find he has some
+studying to do. Yet Professor Geikie is clear, and it is only because
+he has gone deeper than the others that he may be harder. The first
+point he insists upon is that in the fashioning of the earth's surface
+no hard-and-fast line separates past and present. The work has been
+going on for a long time, and is still in progress, under a law of
+evolution as true for the crust of the globe as for the plants and
+animals. In setting out upon our inquiry we must in the first place
+know something about rocks and the mode of their arrangement, of the
+structure or architecture of the earth's crust. This leads to the
+distinction between the igneous and the subaqueous, the volcanic,
+plutonic, and metamorphic, and the derivative rocks on which epigene
+agencies have performed their shaping work. These rocks have been
+modified in various ways, and the surface appearance of the earth has
+been affected by forces operating from the interior, and by external
+factors, the work of which is called denudation. The agents of
+denudation are described--air, water, heat, frost, chemical action,
+plants, and animals--often so closely associated in their operations
+that their individual shares in the final result can hardly be
+determined. The various influences of these factors as exerted upon
+different forms of geological structure and different sorts of rocks
+are then taken up and described as applied to land forms in regions of
+horizontal, or gently inclined, and of highly folded and disturbed
+strata, and in regions affected by normal faults or vertical
+displacements. Land forms due directly or indirectly to igneous action
+and the influence of rock character on the determination of land forms
+are subjects of special chapters. Glacial action is one of the most
+important factors in modifying the forms of northern lands, and is
+treated with considerable fullness. AEolian action--of the air and
+wind--has peculiar and important effects in arid regions, and
+underground water in limestone districts, and these receive attention.
+Then come basins--those due to crustal deformation, crater lakes,
+river lakes, glacial basins, and others, and coast lines. Finally, a
+classification is given of these land forms as plains or plateaus of
+accumulation and of erosion, original or tectonic and subsequent or
+relict hills and mountains, original or tectonic and subsequent or
+erosion valleys, basins, and coast lines, and the conclusions are
+reached that we do not know, except as a matter of probability,
+whether we have still visible any original wrinkles of the earth's
+crust; and that some of the estimates of the time it has taken to
+produce the changes of which we witness the results have been very
+much exaggerated.
+
+The curious conclusions obtained by Dr. _Le Bon_ in his psychological
+investigations,[15] delivered to us in startling language, are said to
+be the fruit of extensive travel and of the personal measurement of
+thousands of skulls. His memoir on cervical researches, published in
+1879, upholds the theory that the volume of the skull varies with the
+intelligence. This theory has perhaps suffered a permanent
+adumbration. Facts seem to prove that the bony structure of the skull,
+or even its cranial capacity, gives no positive indication of
+intellect.
+
+In the present volume the theme of discussion is the soul of races.
+Anthropological classification is set aside and mankind is divided
+into four groups according to mental characteristics: the primitive,
+inferior, average, and superior races--the standard of judgment being
+the degree of their aptitude for dominating reflex impulses. It is
+perhaps worthy of note that while the Frenchman belongs to a superior
+race, the Semitic peoples are placed in the class below, or the
+average sort. For the primitive varieties it is not necessary to
+observe a South Sea islander, the lower strata of Europeans furnishing
+numerous examples. When greater differentiation is reached, the word
+"race" is used in a historical sense. It requires, however, more
+complete fusion than some nations exhibit to earn this title; for,
+although there are Germans and Americans, "it is not clear as yet that
+there are Italians." The race having been once evolved, acquires
+wondrous potentialities with Dr. Le Bon. He compares it to the
+totality of cells constituting a living organism, asserts that its
+mental constitution is as unvarying as its anatomical structure, that
+it is a permanent being independent of time and founded alone by its
+dead. It is a short step to endow this entity with a soul consisting
+of common sentiments, interests, and beliefs--what in brief, robbed of
+hyperbole, we should call national character. He states that the
+notion of a country is not possible until a national soul is formed.
+This, in time, like germ-plasm, becomes so stable that assimilation
+with foreign elements is impossible. Like natural species, it has
+secondary characteristics that may be modified, but its fundamental
+character is like the fin of the fish or the beak of the bird. The
+acquisition of this soul marks the apogee of the greatness of a
+people. Psychological species, however, are not eternal, but may decay
+if the functioning of their organs is troubled profoundly.
+
+The soul of the race is best expressed in its art, not in its history
+or institutions, and, as it can not bequeath its soul, so it can not
+impress its civilization or art upon an alien race. It was on account
+of this incompatibility of soul that Grecian art failed to be
+implanted in India. The unaltering constituent of the soul corresponds
+to character, while intellectual qualities are variable. By character
+is meant perseverance, energy, power of self-control, also morality.
+The latter is hereditary respect for the rules on which a society is
+based. This definition would make polygamy a moral notion for Mormons.
+The knowledge of character "can be acquired neither in laboratories
+nor in books, but only in the course of long travel." Whence it is
+learned that different races can not have mutual comprehension.
+Luckily for the student who is unable to travel, the same phenomenon
+may be observed in the gulf that separates the civilized man and
+woman. Although highly educated, "they might converse with each other
+for centuries without understanding one another." These differences
+between races and individuals demonstrate the falsity of the notion of
+equality. Indeed, through _science_ "man has learned that to be slaves
+is the natural condition of all human beings." Naturally he becomes
+dispirited, anarchy seizes upon the uneducated and sullen indifference
+the more cultivated. "Like a ship that has lost its compass, the
+modern man wanders haphazard through the spaces formerly peopled by
+the gods and rendered a desert by science." In France morality is
+gradually dying out, while the United States is threatened by a
+gigantic civil war. What to do is problematical, since we are informed
+"that people have never derived much advantage from too great a desire
+to reason and think," and what is most harmful to a people is to
+attain too high a degree of intelligence and culture, the groundwork
+of the soul beginning to decline when this level is reached. The
+remedy suggested to us is "the organization of a very severe military
+service and the permanent menace of disastrous wars." But if we fail
+to see the improving tendency of this advice, it is probably because
+we are like historians, "simple-minded," while Dr. Le Bon is much too
+complex for our understanding. According to his own theory, there is
+no hope that we may comprehend him, since the outpourings of a soul of
+the Latin race can not be transferred by a simple bridge of
+translation to the apprehension of an Anglo-Saxon mind, separated, as
+he would term it, by "the dead weight of thousands of generations."
+
+
+GENERAL NOTICES.
+
+In preparing the new edition of his _Text-Book of Mineralogy_[16]
+first published in 1877, Prof. _E. S. Dana_ has found it necessary to
+rewrite the whole as well as to add much new matter and many new
+illustrations. The work being designed chiefly for use in class or
+private instruction, the choice of topics discussed, the order and
+fullness of treatment, and the method of presentation have been
+determined by that object. The different types of crystal forms are
+described under the thirty-two groups now accepted, classed according
+to their symmetry. In the chapters on physical and chemical
+mineralogy, the plan of the former edition is retained of presenting
+somewhat fully the elementary principles of the science on which the
+mineral characters depend, and the author has tried to give the
+student the means of becoming practically familiar with the modern
+means of investigation. Especial attention is given to the optical
+qualities of crystals as revealed by the microscope; and frequent
+references are introduced to important papers on the different
+subjects discussed. The descriptive part of the volume is essentially
+an abridgment of the sixth edition of Dana's System of Mineralogy,
+published in 1892, to which the student is referred for fuller and
+supplementary information. A full topical index is furnished in
+addition to the usual index of species.
+
+The title, _The Story of the Railroad_,[17] carries with it the
+suggestion of an eventful history. The West, in the author's view,
+begins with the Missouri River. The story of its railroad is the story
+of the line, now very multiple, that leads to the Pacific Ocean. The
+beginning of white men's travels in these routes is traced by the
+editor to the Spanish adventurers of the sixteenth century, who made
+miserable journeys in search of gold or visionary objects, through
+regions now traversed by some of the more southern lines. Then came
+trappers; next costly and painfully undertaken Government expeditions
+into the then regions of the unknown, the stories of which were the
+boyhood delight of men now living. The period of practical traversing
+of the continent began with the raging of the California gold fever,
+when the journey of many weeks was tiresomely made with ox teams, in
+the face of actual perils of the desert, starvation, thirst, and the
+Indians. After California became important, stage and express lines
+were put on; but still, at the time Mr. Warman takes up the story,
+less than sixty years ago, the idea of building a railroad to the
+Pacific was regarded as too visionary to be entertained, and Asa
+Whitney sacrificed a fortune trying to induce somebody to take it up.
+The first dreams were for a short route to the Orient. Eventually the
+idea was developed that the American West might be worth going after,
+and then the idea of a railroad to it began to assume practical form.
+Young Engineer Dodge, afterward Major General, began surveys before
+the civil war; after it General Sherman gave the scheme a great
+impulse, and the Union Pacific Railroad was built--when and how are
+graphically and dramatically told in Mr. Warman's book. Next came the
+Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe, and other transcontinental lines, the
+histories of all of which are related in similar style, with stories
+of adventures, perils encountered, and lively incidents, including the
+war between two of the lines for the possession of the Arkansas Canyon;
+financial mishaps, and political scandal. Then came the settlement of
+the plains, road-making in Mexico, and the opening of Oklahoma, all of
+which were made possible by the railroads, and have in turn
+contributed to support them. The beginnings and growth of the express
+business are described, and the later lines that have penetrated the
+plains are mentioned.
+
+Prof. _William Benjamin Smith's_ treatise on the _Infinitesimal
+Analysis_[18] has been written, the author says, on what appeared, in
+the light of ten years' experience in teaching the calculus, to be
+lines of least resistance. The aim has been, within a prescribed
+expense of time and energy, to penetrate as far as possible into the
+subject, and in as many directions, so that the student shall attain
+as wide knowledge of the matter, as full comprehension of the methods,
+and as clear consciousness of the spirit and power of this analysis as
+the nature of the case would admit. The author has accordingly often
+followed what seemed to be natural suggestions and impulses toward
+near-lying extensions or generalizations, and has even allowed them to
+direct the course of the discussion. In accordance with the plan and
+purpose of the book as given, "Weierstressian rigor" has been excluded
+from many investigations, and the postponement has been compelled of
+some important discussions, which were considered too subtle for an
+early age of study. Real difficulties, however, have not been
+knowingly disguised, and pains have been taken on occasion to warn the
+reader that the treatment given is only provisional, and must await
+further precision or delimitation. Where the subject has been found
+too large for the compass of the intended work, or too abstruse or
+difficult for the contemplated students, the treatment has been
+compressed or curtailed. The book is, in fact, written for such as
+feel a genuine interest in the subject; and the illustrations and
+exercises have been chosen with frequent reference to practical or
+theoretic importance or to historic interest.
+
+Mr. _George Jacob Holyoake_ has written with much enthusiasm the
+_Jubilee History of the Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society_.[19]
+Many schemes have been started on lines similar to those of this one,
+but very few besides it have grown from the very beginning, and,
+having become to all appearance a permanent institution, can look back
+upon a career of fifty years with complete satisfaction. The society
+began in times of public distress. The ground was prepared for it by
+the "Redemption" Society, which was founded at Leeds in 1845, by
+admirers of Robert Owen, after the experiment at Queenswood had
+failed. It practiced a kind of co-operation and had some distinguished
+friends to wish it well. Among the speakers at its meetings was Dr.
+Frederic Hollick, still living, now a resident of New York city. The
+co-operative society was started as a means of getting cheaper flour
+for its members. On February 25, 1847, an appeal headed "Holbeck
+Anti-Corn Mill Association" was issued to the working classes of Leeds
+and vicinity by the "working people of Messrs. Benyon & Co.'s mill,"
+Holbeck, inviting combination and subscriptions for establishing a
+mill to be the property of the subscribers and their successors, "in
+order to supply them with flour and flour only." Meetings were held,
+an organization was effected, and the mill was started. The history of
+the society and how it grew, how "flour only" was stricken from its
+scheme and other things were added and it branched out, how
+co-operative stores were established, how it gained the confidence of
+the public and the respect of rivals in business, its successes and
+its mistakes, its triumphs and failures, are told by Mr. Holyoake,
+year by year, in a detail in which everything is set down and nothing
+covered up. In 1897 the cooperative society had productive departments
+of flour, bakery, bespoke clothing, boot and shoe factory, brush
+factory, cabinet making, building, millinery, and dressmaking,
+employing 541 hands and turning over L26,949; 80 large stores for the
+sale of these and various other kinds of goods in Leeds and vicinity;
+drapery branches and boot and shoe stores; 43 butchering branches; and
+37,000 subscribing purchasers. Its capital stood at L447,000; and its
+sales for the year amounted to L1,042,616.
+
+D. Appleton and Company have added to their Home Reading Series _The
+Earth and Sky_, a primer of Astronomy for Young Readers, by Prof.
+_Edward S. Holden_. It is intended to be the first of a series of
+three or more volumes, all treating of astronomy in one form or
+another, and suited for reading in the school. The treatment is based
+on the principle that "it is not so simple as it appears to fix in the
+child's mind the fundamental fact that it is Nature which is true, and
+the book or the engraving which is a true copy of it. 'It says' is the
+snare of children as well as of their more sophisticated elders. The
+vital point to be insisted on is a constant reference from words to
+things." The volume is written as a conversation with a young lad. He
+is first shown how he may know for himself that the earth is not flat,
+though it certainly appears to be so. The next step is to show him
+that he may know that the earth is in fact round, and that it is a
+globe of immense size. Its situation in space is next considered, and
+the child's mind is led to some formal conclusions respecting space
+itself. It is then directed to the sun, to the moon and its changes,
+to the stars and their motions, to the revolution of the earth, etc.
+
+In 1887 _E. S. Holden_ published through the Regents of the University
+of California a list of recorded earthquakes on the Pacific coast, it
+being the first systematic publication of the sort. The purpose of it
+was to bring to light all the general facts about the various shocks,
+and enable studies to be made of particular earthquake phenomena. It
+was necessary at the Lick Observatory to keep a register of the times
+of occurrence of all shocks on account of their possible effects on
+the instruments. With this was associated in 1888, when the
+observatory began its active work, the collection of reports of shocks
+felt elsewhere on the Pacific coast. Mr. Holden now reprints this
+pamphlet through the Smithsonian Institution in _A Catalogue of
+Earthquakes felt on the Pacific Coast, 1769 to 1897_, with many
+corrections and additions, including a complete account of the
+earthquake observations at Mount Hamilton from 1887 to 1897, and an
+abstract of the great amount of information that has been collected
+regarding other Pacific coast earthquakes during the same interval.
+
+The _Psychologie als Erfahrungs-Wissenschaft_ of _Hans Cornelius_ is
+not intended for a complete account and review of the facts of
+psychical life, but rather to present the fundamentals of a purely
+empirical theory, excluding all metaphysical views. Such an account
+should not start from any arbitrary abstractions or hypotheses, but
+simply from actually ascertained, directly perceived psychical
+experiences. On the other hand, an empirical definition should be
+required for all the terms that are used in a comprehensive
+description of the experience; and no term should be used without the
+psychical manifestation described by it being pointed out. After an
+introduction in which the method and place of psychology, subjective
+and objective, physiological and genetic, are referred to, the
+elementary facts of consciousness are discussed. The coherency of
+knowledge is treated of in the next chapter, and in the third,
+Psychical Analysis and the conception of unobserved consciousness; and
+the succeeding chapters are devoted to Sensation, Memory, and Fancy;
+The Objective World, Truth and Error, and Feeling and Will. (Published
+at Leipsic, Germany: B. G. Teubner.)
+
+An extremely interesting book is given us in the publications of the
+Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Society of studies by _George
+W._ and _Elizabeth Peckham_, of the _Instincts and Habits of the
+Solitary Wasps_. These insects are familiar enough to us all, as we
+meet them or see their nests of one or a few cells every day, and then
+think no more of them. But Mr. and Mrs. Peckham, following them to
+their haunts and keeping company with them, have found them
+manifesting remarkable instincts and exercising curious customs, which
+they describe in the style of persons who are in love with their work.
+The opportunity for the studies was given in two gardens, one on the
+top of a hill and the other lower down, with an island in a lake close
+by and acres of woodland all about, offering a rich variety of nesting
+places. There are more than a thousand species of these solitary wasps
+in the United States, to only about fifty of the social ones, and they
+live without knowledge of their progenitors and without relations with
+others of their kind.
+
+The eighth volume of the report of the _Iowa Geological Survey_
+comprises the accounts of surveys completed during 1897 in six
+counties, making up the whole number of twenty-six counties in which
+the areal work has been completed. This does not, however, represent
+the whole extent of the operations of the survey, for some work has
+been done in nearly every county in the State, and in many counties it
+will require but little additional work to make a complete report. In
+addition to the areal work, too, special studies of coal, clay,
+artesian waters, gypsum, lead, zinc, etc., have engaged attention. A
+growing public appreciation of the work of the survey as illustrated
+in the demand for the volumes of the reports and for special papers,
+is recognized by the State Geologist, Mr. _Samuel Calvin_; and an
+increasing use of the reports as works for reference and for general
+study in high schools and other educational institutions is observed.
+The survey is now collecting statistics of production of various
+minerals mined in the State.
+
+One of the features most likely to attract attention in the _Annual
+Report of the State Geologist_ of New Jersey for 1897 is the paper of
+Mr. C. C. Vermeule on the Drainage of the Hackensack and Newark Tide
+Marshes. In it a scheme is unfolded for the reclamation and diking of
+the flats, under which an ample navigable waterway shall be developed,
+and the cities which now stop at their edges may be extended and built
+up to the very banks of the new harbor, made a highway for ocean
+sailing vessels. An interesting paper is published by Lewis Woolman on
+Artesian and Bored and other Wells, in which many important wells are
+described with reference to the geological strata they penetrate.
+Other papers relate to iron mining and brick and clay industries,
+mineral statistics, and statistics of clays, bricks, and terra cotta.
+The field reports describe progress in the surveys of the surface
+geology, the Newark system, and the upper Cretaceous formations.
+
+On the basis of a reconnoissance made by him for Alexander Agassiz,
+Mr. _Robert T. Hill_ has published through the Bulletin of the Museum
+of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University, a paper on _The
+Geological History of the Isthmus of Panama and Portions of Costa
+Rica_. He finds that there is considerable evidence that a land
+barrier in the tropical region separated the two oceans as far back as
+Jurassic time, and continued through the Cretaceous period. The
+geological structure of the Isthmus and Central American regions, so
+far as investigated, when considered aside from the paleontology,
+presents no evidence by which the former existence of a free
+communication of oceanic waters across the present tropical barriers
+can be established. The paleontological evidence indicates the
+ephemeral existence of a passage at the close of the Eocene period.
+All lines of inquiry give evidence that no communication has existed
+between the two oceans since the close of the Oligocene.
+
+The _Twenty-second Annual Report of the Department of Geology and
+Natural Resources_ of Indiana, _W. S. Blatchley_, State Geologist,
+embraces, in part, the results of the work of the several departments
+of the survey during 1897. These appear in the form of papers of
+economic importance on the petroleum, stone, and clay resources of the
+State, natural gases and illuminating oils, a description of the
+curious geological and topographical region of Lake and Porter
+Counties, and an extended paper on the Birds of Indiana, with specific
+descriptions. A large proportion of the energies of the department
+were employed during the year in gathering data for a detailed report
+on the coal area of the State, which is now in course of preparation.
+
+The _Report of the United States Commissioner of Education_ for
+1896-'97 records an increase in the enrollment of schools and colleges
+of 257,586, the whole number of pupils being 14,712,077 in public
+institutions and schools, and 1,513,016 in private. The increase is
+confined to the public institutions, the private ones having suffered
+from "hard times." Among the numerous papers published in the volume
+containing the report are those on Education in Great Britain and
+Ireland, France, Denmark, Norway, Central Europe, and Greece;
+Commercial Education in Europe; the Teaching of Civics in France,
+Switzerland, and England; Sunday Schools, including accounts of the
+several denominational systems; the Legal Rights of Children; and
+sketches of Horace Mann and Henry Barnard and their work in furthering
+education.
+
+Mr. _David T. Day's_ report on the _Mineral Resources of the United
+States_ for 1896 appears as Part V of the Eighteenth Annual Report of
+the United States Geological Survey, in two volumes of fourteen
+hundred pages in all; the first of which is devoted to Metallic
+Products and Coal, and the second to Nonmetallic Products except Coal.
+The report covers the calendar year 1896, and shows only a slight
+increase in total values over 1895. Of some substances, however--gold,
+copper, aluminum, and petroleum being the most important ones--the
+value was the greatest ever attained. Of other substances, including
+lead, bituminous coal, building stones, mineral waters, salt, and
+pyrites, the product was increased in amount, but the value was less.
+A paper, by Mr. George F. Becker, on the Witwatersrand Banket, records
+observations made by him in the Transvaal gold fields.
+
+_A Geological Reconnoissance of the Coal Fields of the Indian
+Territory_, published in the Contributions to Biology of the Hopkins
+Seaside Laboratory of Leland Stanford Junior University, by _Noah
+Fields Drake_, is based upon a six months' examination made by the
+author during the spring, summer, and fall of 1896, of the larger part
+of the coal measures and adjacent formations of Indian and Oklahoma
+Territories. The best maps that could then be had being exceedingly
+inaccurate, sketch maps were made of areas that were especially
+important. On account of features of particular geological interest,
+nearly all the area south and east of the Canadian River and the
+bordering areas of the Boone chert and limestones were sketched and
+studied rather closely.
+
+The _American Catholic Historical Society_ at Philadelphia publishes
+in its _Quarterly Records_ much that, while it must be of deep
+interest to historical students holding the Roman Catholic faith,
+possesses, perhaps, a strong though more general interest to all
+students of American history; for the men of that faith have had no
+small part in the colonization and development of this country. The
+number for June, 1898, contains a portrait and a bibliographical
+sketch of the Rev. Peter Henry Lemke, O. S. B., of Pennsylvania,
+Kansas, and Elizabeth, N. J.; a poem on the Launch of the American
+Frigate United States, whose commander was a Catholic; articles on the
+Sir John James Fund, and Catholic Chronicles of Lancaster, Pa., and
+Extracts from the Diary of the Rev. Patrick Kenny.
+
+A memoir on _A Determination of the Ratio ([Greek: chi]) of the
+Specific Heats at Constant Pressure and at Constant Volume for Air,
+Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide, and Hydrogen_ gives the result of a series of
+investigations by Drs. _O. Lummer_ and _E. Pringshein_, of
+Charlottenburg, Germany, made with the aid of a grant from the
+Hodgkins Fund of the Smithsonian Institution. Besides being of
+exceptional importance in thermodynamics, the specific heat ratio is
+of interest as affording a clew to the character of the molecule. In
+the present investigation coincident results on the gases examined
+appear to have been reached for the first time. (Published by the
+Smithsonian Institution.)
+
+From the greater lightness of the air and the higher velocity of its
+currents, it is evident that the materials it may carry and deposit
+will be somewhat different in composition and structure from those
+which are laid down in water. They are as a rule finer, they exhibit a
+different bedding, and are more capriciously placed. Mr. _Johan August
+Udden_ has made a careful study of the subject, the results of which
+he publishes under the title of _The Mechanical Composition of Wind
+Deposits_, as the first number of the Augustana Library Series, at the
+Lutheran Augustana Book Concern, Rock Island, Ill.
+
+The _History Reader for Elementary Schools_ (The Macmillan Company, 60
+cents), prepared by _L. L. W. Wilson_ and arranged with special
+reference to holidays, contains readings for each month of the school
+year, classified according to different periods and phases of American
+history generally, so chosen that some important topic of the group
+shall bear a relation to the month in which it is to be read. The
+groups concern the Indians, the Discovery of America, Thanksgiving,
+Other Settlements (than those of Virginia and the Pilgrims), Dr.
+Franklin, Lincoln and Washington, the Revolution, Arbor Day, and Brave
+Sea Captains, etc., closing with articles in reference to Flag Day.
+The insertion of an article on the War with Spain seems premature.
+Public sentiment is not yet at rest on the subject.
+
+
+PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.
+
+Agricultural Experiment Stations. Bulletins and Reports. Cornell
+University: No. 160. Hints on Rural School Grounds. By L. H. Bailey.
+Pp. 20; No. 161. Annual Flowers. By G. N. Lanman and L. H. Bailey. Pp.
+32; No. 162. The Period of Gestation in Cows. By H. H. Wing. Pp.
+120.--Delaware College: No. 43 (abridged edition). The European and
+Japanese Chestnuts in the United States. By G. H. Powell. Pp.
+16.--Michigan: Nos. 164 and 165. Methods and Results of Tillage, and
+Draft of Farm Implements. By M. W. Fulton. Pp. 24; Elementary Science
+Bulletin, No. 5. Branches of Sugar Maple and Beech as seen in Winter.
+By W. J. Beal. Pp. 4; do., No. 6. Potatoes, Rutabagas, and Onions. By
+W. J. Beal. Pp. 6.--New Jersey: No. 133. Peach Growing in New Jersey.
+By A. T. Jordan. Pp. 16; No. 134. Fermentation and Germ Life. By
+Julius Nelson. Pp. 24.--North Dakota: No. 15. Some Chemical Problems
+Investigated. Pp. 28.--Ohio: Newspaper Bulletin 188. Sugar Beets and
+Sorghum in Ohio. Pp. 2.
+
+Aston, W. G. A History of Japanese Literature. New York: D. Appleton
+and Company. Pp. 408. $1.50.
+
+Berry, Arthur. A Short History of Astronomy. New York: Charles
+Scribner's Sons. Pp. 440. $1.50.
+
+Brush and Pencil. An Illustrated Magazine of the Arts and Crafts.
+Monthly. Chicago: Arts and Crafts Company. Pp. 64. 25 cents. $2.50 a
+year.
+
+Bulletins, Reports, etc. Colgate University, Department of Geology and
+Natural History: Announcement. Pp. 16.--Field Columbian Museum,
+Chicago: Annual Report of the Board of Directors for 1897-'98. Pp. 90,
+with plates.--Financial Reform Association: 1848 to 1898. Fifty Years'
+Retrospect. London. Pp. 54, with plates; Financial Reform Almanac for
+1899. London. Pp. 316. 1 shilling.--New York State Library:
+Legislative Bulletin for 1898. Pp. 132. 25 cents.--New York
+University: Catalogue and Announcements for 1898-'99. Pp.
+358.--Perkins Institution and Massachusetts School for the Blind:
+Sixty-seventh Annual Report of the Trustees, to August 31, 1898. Pp.
+305.--United States Department of Labor: Bulletin No. 20, January,
+1899. Edited by Carroll D. Wright and Oren W. Weaver. Pp. 170.
+
+Byrd, Mary E. Laboratory Manual in Astronomy. Boston: Ginn & Co. Pp.
+273.
+
+Cajori, Florian. A History of Physics in its Elementary Branches,
+including the Evolution of Physical Laboratories. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 323. $1.60.
+
+Callie, J. W. S. John Smith's Reply to "Merrie England, Defense of the
+Liberal Programme." London: John Heywood. Pp. 88. Sixpence.
+
+Chapman, Frank H., Editor. Bird Lore. February, 1898, Vol. I, No. 1.
+Bimonthly. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 32. 20 cents. $1 a
+year.
+
+Davenport, Charles B. Experimental Morphology. Part II. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 509. $2.
+
+Evans, A. H. Birds (The Cambridge Natural History, edited by S. F.
+Harmer and A. E. Shipley, Vol. IX). New York: The Macmillan Company.
+Pp. 635. $3.50.
+
+Egbert, Seneca. A Manual of Hygiene and Sanitation. Philadelphia: Lea
+Brothers & Co. Pp. 368.
+
+Foulke, William Dudley. Slav or Saxon: a Study of the Growth and
+Tendencies of Russian Civilization. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. Pp.
+141. $1.
+
+Huntington, Elon. The Earth's Rotation and its Interior Heat. Pp. 33.
+
+Janes, Lewis G. Our Nation's Peril. Social Ideas and Social Progress.
+Pp. 31. 25 cents.
+
+McLellan, J. A., and Ames, A. F. The Public School Mental Arithmetic.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 138. 25 cents. Boston: James H.
+West & Co.
+
+Maltbie, Milo Ray. Municipal Functions. A Study of the Development,
+Scope, and Tendency of Municipal Socialism. (Municipal Affairs,
+December, 1898.) New York: Reform Club, Committee of Municipal
+Administration. Pp. 230. 75 cents.
+
+Mason, Hon. William E. Speech in the United States Senate on the
+Government of Foreign Peoples. Pp. 26.
+
+Patten, Simon N. The Development of English Thought. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 415. $3.
+
+Pittsburg Press Almanac, The, for 1899. Quarterly. St. Louis: The
+Press Publishing Company. Pp. 536.
+
+Recejac, E. Essay on the Basis of the Mystic Knowledge. Translated by
+Sera Carr Upton. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Pp. 287. $2.50.
+
+Reprints. Caldwell, Otis W. The Life History of Lemna Minor. Pp.
+32.--Calkins, G. N. Some Hydroids from Puget Sound. Pp. 24, with six
+plates.--Cope, Edward D. Vertebrate Remains from the Port Kennedy Bone
+Deposit. Pp. 75, with plates.--Fitz, G. W. Play as a Factor in
+Development. Pp. 7; The Hygiene of Instruction in Elementary Schools.
+Pp. 7.--Howard, William Lee. Double Personality; Lenten Hysteria. Pp.
+8.--Howe, R. H., Jr. North American Wood Frogs.--Hunt, Charles
+Wallace. The Engineer: His Work, his Ethics, his Pleasures.
+(President's Address, American Society of Mechanical Engineers.)
+Pp. 15.--Hunter, S. J. The Coccidae of Kansas. Pp. 15, with
+plates.--Krauss, W. C. The Stigmata of Degeneration. Pp. 360.--Lichty,
+D. Thalassic Submersion a Means of Disposal of the Dead. Pp.
+12.--McDonald, Arthur. Emile Zola. Pp. 16.--Phillips, W. B. Iron
+Making in Alabama. Montgomery. Pp. 380.--Saunders, De Alten.
+Phycological Memoirs. Pp. 20, with plates.--Schlicht, Paul J. A New
+Process of Combustion. Pp. 32.--Stevens, F. L. The Effect of Aqueous
+Solutions upon the Germination of Fungus Spores. Pp. 30.--Stock, H. H.
+The International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pennsylvania. Pp.
+12.--Urn, The. Modern Thought on Modern Cremation. United States
+Cremation Company. Pp. 40.--Veeder, M. A. The Relative Importance of
+Flies and Water Supply in Spreading Disease. Pp. 8.
+
+Robinson, Albert Gardner. The Porto Rico of To-day. New York: Charles
+Scribner's Sons. Pp. 240, with maps. $1.50.
+
+Salazar, A. E. Kalkules de Kanerius de Agua (Calculations of Water
+Conduits). Santiago de Chile. Pp. 246.
+
+Schnabel, Dr. Carl. Handbook of Metallurgy. Translated by Henry Louis.
+2 vols. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 876 and 732. $10.
+
+Seligman, E. R. A. The Shifting and Incidence of Taxation. Second
+edition. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 337. $3.
+
+Semon, Richard. In the Australian Bush and on the Coast of the Coral
+Sea. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 552. $6.50.
+
+Spencer, Baldwin, and Gillen, F. J. The Native Tribes of Central
+Australia. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 671, with plates.
+$6.50.
+
+Technology Review, The. A Quarterly Magazine relating to the
+Massachusetts Institute of Technology. January, 1899. Pp. 143. 35
+cents.
+
+United States National Museum. Annual Report for the Year ending June
+30, 1896. (Smithsonian Institution.) Washington. Pp. 1107, with
+plates.
+
+Weir, James. The Dawn of Reason. Mental Traits in the Lower Animals.
+New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 234. $1.25.
+
+Westcott, Edward N. David Harum. New York: D. Appleton and Company.
+Pp. 392. $1.50.
+
+Whipple, G. C. The Microscopy of Drinking Water. New York: John Wiley
+& Sons. Pp. 300, with nineteen plates. $3.50.
+
+Wilkinson, F. The Story of the Cotton Plant. (Library of Useful
+Stories.) New York: D. Appleton and Company. Pp. 191. 40 cents.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[14] Earth Sculpture, or the Origin of Land Forms. By James Geikie.
+New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. Pp. 397. Price, $2.
+
+[15] The Psychology of Peoples. By Gustave Le Bon. New York: The
+Macmillan Company. Pp. 236. Price, $1.50.
+
+[16] A Text-Book of Mineralogy, with an Extended Treatise on
+Crystallography and Physical Mineralogy. By Edmund Salisbury Dana. New
+edition, entirely rewritten and enlarged. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
+Pp. 593. $4.
+
+[17] The Story of the Railroad. By Cy Warman. New York: D. Appleton
+and Company (Story of the West Series). Pp. 280. Price, $1.50.
+
+[18] Infinitesimal Analysis. By William Benjamin Smith. Vol. I.
+Elementary; Real Variables. New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 352.
+$3.25.
+
+[19] The Jubilee History of the Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society
+from 1847 to 1897. Traced Year by Year. By George Jacob Holyoake.
+Leeds (Eng.) Central Co-operative Office. Pp. 260.
+
+
+
+
+Fragments of Science.
+
+
+=The Nernst Electric Lamp.=--Prof. Walter Nernst, of the University of
+Goettingen, has recently devised an electric lamp which promises to be
+an important addition to our present methods of lighting. The part of
+the lamp which emits the light consists of a small rod of highly
+refractory material, said to be chiefly thoria, which is supported
+between two platinum electrodes. The rod is practically a nonconductor
+when cold, but by heating it (in the smaller sizes a match is
+sufficient) its conductivity is so raised that a current will pass
+through it; after the current is once started the heat produced by the
+resistance of the rod is sufficient to keep up its conductivity, and
+the latter is raised to a state of intense incandescence, and gives
+out a brilliant white light. As the preliminary heating by means of a
+match or other flame would in some cases be an inconvenience,
+Professor Nernst has devised a lamp which, by means of a platinum
+resistance attachment, can be started by simply turning a switch. The
+life of the rods is about five hundred hours. The lamps are said to
+work equally well with either alternating or direct currents, and
+there is no vacuum necessary. If this lamp proves a success as a
+commercial apparatus, it will be but another example of how slight a
+matter may make all the difference between success and failure. There
+have been numerous experimenters trying for the last ten years, and in
+fact ever since the appearance of the arc lamp, to utilize in an
+electric lamp the great light-giving power of the refractory earths in
+a state of incandescence; but, owing to their high resistance at
+ordinary temperatures, no results were obtained until Professor Nernst
+thought of heating his thoria rod, and this simple procedure seems to
+have solved the whole difficulty. It is claimed that the Nernst lamp
+is a much more economical transformer of electricity into light than
+the present incandescent electric lamps. An apparatus called a kaolin
+candle, which has been suggested as an anticipation of Professor
+Nernst's lamp, was constructed by Paul Jablochkoff in 1877 or 1878. It
+consisted of a strip of kaolin, along which ran a "match" of some
+conducting material. The current was passed through this "match" until
+the kaolin strip became heated sufficiently to become a conductor
+itself. The lamp did not, however, prove a commercial success.
+
+=Laws of Climatic Evolution.=--The problem of the laws of climatic
+evolution was characterized by Dr. Marsden Manson, in a paper read at
+the British Association, as one of the grandest and most far-reaching
+problems in geological physics, since it embraces principles and laws
+applicable to other planets than ours. After presenting a formulation
+of those laws, the author pointed out that in consequence of their
+working, a hot spheroid rotating in space and revolving about a
+central sun, and holding fluids of similar properties to water and air
+within the sphere of its control, must pass through a series of
+uniform climates at sea level, gradually decreasing in temperature and
+terminating in an ice age, and that this age must be succeeded by a
+series of zonal climates gradually increasing in temperature and
+extent. The conclusions thus reached were that in the case of the
+earth zonal distribution of climates was inaugurated at the
+culmination of the ice age, and is gradually increasing in temperature
+and extent by the trapping of the solar energy in the lower
+atmosphere, and that the rise has a moderate limit; that the ice age
+was unique and due to the physical properties of water and air, and to
+the difference in specific heat of land and water; and that prior to
+the ice age local formation of glaciers could occur at any latitude
+and period. Dr. Manson then observed that Jupiter was apparently in a
+condition through which the earth has already passed, and Mars was in
+one toward which the climatic evolution of the earth was tending.
+
+=Poisonous Plants.=--Statistics in regard to poisonous plants are
+lacking on account of a general ignorance of the subject, and it is
+therefore impossible to form even an approximate estimate of the
+damage done by them. Besides the criminal uses that may be made of
+them, there are some other problems connected with them that are of
+general public interest. The common law of England holds those who
+possess and cultivate such plants responsible for damages accruing
+from them; and a New York court has awarded damages in a case of
+injury from poison ivy growing in a cemetery. In order to obtain
+information on the subject, the botanical division of the Department
+of Agriculture arranged to receive notices through the clipping
+bureaus of the cases of poisoning recorded in the newspapers. Thus
+through the persons named in the articles or through the local
+postmaster it was put in correspondence with the physician in the
+case, who furnished the authentic facts. A large number of correct and
+valuable data were thus secured. It is proved by these facts that all
+poisonous plants are not equally injurious to all persons nor to all
+forms of life. Thus poison ivy has no apparent external effect upon
+animals, and a few of them eat its leaves with impunity; and it acts
+upon the skin of the majority of persons with varying intensity--on
+some hardly at all, while others are extremely sensitive to it. A
+similar variability is found in the effects of poisonous plants taken
+internally. In some cases often regarded as of that kind, death is
+attributable not to any poison which the plant contains, but to
+immoderate or incautious eating, or to mechanical injury such as is
+produced in horses by the hairs of crimson clover, or to the effect of
+parasitic growths, such as ergot on rye. Excluding all which operate
+in these ways, there are, however, a large number of really poisonous
+plants, the properties of which are comparatively unknown. It is
+concerning these that information has been sought by the botanical
+division. Its report contains descriptions of about forty plants, with
+figures, belonging to seventeen families.
+
+=The United States Biological Survey.=--The Biological Survey of the
+United States Department of Agriculture aims to define and map the
+agricultural belts of the country in order to ascertain what products
+of the soil can and what can not be grown successfully in each, to
+guide the farmer in the intelligent introduction of foreign crops, and
+to point out his friends and his enemies among the native birds and
+animals. For information on these subjects so important to him the
+farmer has had to rely on his own experiments or those of his
+neighbors, often carried on at enormous cost to persons little able to
+bear it. The Survey and its predecessor, the division of ornithology
+and mammology, have had small parties in the field traversing the
+public domain for the purpose of studying the geographic distribution
+of our native land animals and plants and mapping the boundaries of
+the areas they inhabit. It was early learned that North America is
+divisible into seven transcontinental belts or life zones and a much
+larger number of minor areas or _faunas_, each characterized by
+particular associations of animals and plants. The inference was
+natural and has been verified that these same zones and areas, up to
+the northern limit of profitable agriculture, are adapted to the needs
+of particular kinds or varieties of cultivated crops. The Survey is
+engaged in tracing as precisely as possible the actual boundaries of
+these belts and areas, and in finding out and designating the
+varieties of crops best adapted to each. In this undertaking it aims
+to point out such exotic products as, from their importance in other
+lands, are likely to prove of value if introduced on fit soils and
+under proper climatic conditions. The importance of this work will be
+realized when it is recollected that all the climatic life zones of
+the world, except the hottest tropical, are represented in our
+country. The colored maps prepared by the Survey furnish the best
+guide the farmer can have for judging what crops will be best adapted
+for his particular region; and in connection with the work of the
+entomologist, show the belts along which noxious insects are likely to
+spread. The report of the Survey, prepared under the direction of its
+chief, C. Hart Merriam, though full of valuable information not before
+presented consecutively, is preliminary and only touches the edge of a
+subject which is susceptible of copious elaboration, and is destined
+to be worked up with immense profit.
+
+=A Neolithic Lake Dwelling.=--A crannog, or lake dwelling, discovered
+in the summer of 1898 on the banks of the Clyde, has received much
+attention from English archaeologists because of its unique situation
+on a tidal stream, and of its being apparently neolithic or far more
+ancient than any other crannog yet examined, in all others the relics
+being of the bronze age. Careful excavations have been made in it and
+are still in progress, and the refuse mound of the former settlement
+has been sifted, with results that have made it plain that there were
+design and execution in the building, and that it was occupied and
+inhabited for a long period. Positive evidence of fire is afforded in
+the shape of numerous firestones and calcined embers, and indications
+of the condition of life at the period are given by the implements,
+ornaments, and tools recovered. The crannog is about sixteen hundred
+yards east of the Castle Rock of Dumbarton, and about fifty yards from
+the river at low tide, but is submerged when the tide is in to a depth
+of from three to twelve feet, and is one hundred and eighty-four feet
+in circuit. The piles in the outer circle are of oak, which below the
+mud surface is still quite fresh. The transverse beams and pavement
+inside are of wood of the consistence of cheese--willow, alder, and
+oak--while the smaller branches are of fir, birch, and hazel, with
+bracken, moss, and chips. The stones in the outer circle and along the
+causeway leading to the dwelling place seem to have been set in a
+methodical order, most of the bowlders being about a lift for a man.
+The refuse mound extends for about twelve feet outside for the
+greater part of the circuit, and here most of the bone and flint
+implements have been discovered. The largest article found in the site
+was a very fine canoe, thirty-seven feet long and forty inches beam,
+dug out of a single oak tree, which lay in what has proved to have
+been a dock. A curious ladder was also found here, the rungs of which
+were cut out of the solid wood, and which has somewhat the general
+appearance of a post of a post-and-rail fence. The exploration of the
+site is much interfered with by the rising of the tide, which covers
+the crannog for a considerable time every day. All the relics
+found--consisting chiefly of objects of bone, staghorn, jet, chert,
+and cannel coal, with some querns, the canoe, ladder, etc.--have been
+placed in the museum at Glasgow.
+
+=Portland Cement.=--The following facts are taken from an address
+delivered before the Franklin Institute by Mr. Robert W. Lesley: "It
+was not until the end of the last century that the true principles of
+hydraulic cement were discovered by Smeaton, who, in the construction
+of the Eddystone Lighthouse, made a number of experiments with the
+English limestones, and laid down, as a result, the principle that a
+limestone yielding from fifteen to twenty-five per cent of residue
+when dissolved in hydrochloric acid will set under water. These
+limestones he denominated hydraulic limestones, and from the principle
+so laid down by him come the two great definitions of what we now know
+as cement, namely, the natural and artificial cements of commerce. The
+natural variety, such as the Rosendale, Lehigh, and Cumberland
+cements, was first made by Joseph Parker in 1796, who discovered what
+he called 'Roman cement,' based upon the calcination at low
+temperatures of the nodules found in the septaria geological formation
+in England. This was practically the first cement of commerce, and
+gave excellent results. Joseph Aspdin, a bricklayer or plasterer, took
+out a patent in England in 1824 on a high-grade artificial cement,
+and, at great personal deprivation, succeeded in manufacturing it on a
+commercial scale by combining English chalks with clay from the river
+beds, drying the mixed paste, and after calcining at high heat the
+material thus produced, grinding it to powder. This cement, which was
+the first Portland cement in the market, obtained its name from its
+resemblance when it became stone to the celebrated Portland stone, one
+of the leading building materials in England. The rocks used in the
+manufacture of Portland cement are very similar to those from which
+natural cement is made. The various layers in the natural rock may
+vary in size or stratification, so that the lime, alumina, and silica
+may not be in position to combine under heat, or there may be too much
+of one ingredient, or not enough of the others in close proximity to
+each other. In making Portland cement, these rocks, properly
+proportioned, are accordingly ground to an impalpable powder, the
+natural rock being broken down and the laminae distributed in many
+small grains. This powder is then mixed with water, and is made into a
+new stone in the shape of the brick, or block, in which all the small
+grains formerly composing the laminae of the original rock are
+distributed and brought into a close mechanical juxtaposition to each
+other. The new rock thus made is put into kilns with layers of coke,
+and is then calcined at temperatures from 1,600 deg. to 1,800 deg. The
+clinker, as it comes from the kiln, is then crushed and ground to an
+impalpable powder, which is the Portland cement of commerce. Portland
+cement may be made from other materials, such as chalk and clay,
+limestone and clay, cement rock and limestone, and marls and clays. In
+every case the principle is the same, the breaking down and the
+redistributing of the materials so that the fine particles may be in
+close mechanical union when subjected to the heat of the kiln."
+
+=The French Nontoxic Matches.=--It is believed, by Frenchmen at least,
+that the problem long sought, of finding a composition for a match
+head in which all the advantages of white phosphorus shall be
+preserved while its deleterious qualities are eliminated or greatly
+reduced, has been solved in the new matches which the French
+Government has placed upon the market. These matches are marked S. C.,
+by the initials of the inventors, MM. Sevene and Cahen, are made in
+the factories at Trelaze, Begles, and Samtines, and have been well
+received by the public. In preparing the composition, the chlorate of
+potash of the old flashing and safety matches has been retained, and
+the sesquisulphide of phosphorus is used instead of the white or red
+phosphorus of the old matches. The latter substance, besides the
+indispensable qualities of fixity and resistance to atmospheric
+influences, has the two important properties of inflaming at 95 deg. C.,
+much nearer the igniting point of white phosphorus (60 deg. C.) than of
+red (260 deg. C.), and being therefore easier to light; and of having a
+low latent or specific heat. With these properties embodied in the
+inflammable composition of the head, the new match is expected to be
+comparatively free from accidental explosions during manufacture and
+export, to take fire by friction, and to burn steadily and regularly.
+The expectation has so far been fulfilled. The phosphorus compound has
+a special odor, in which the sulphur characteristic predominates, but,
+not boiling under 380 deg. C., does not become offensive in the shops; and
+the match heads made with it do not emit the phosphorescence which is
+often exhibited by matches made with white phosphorus. It is only
+feebly toxic by direct absorption, experiments on guinea pigs
+indicating that it is only about one tenth as much so as white
+phosphorus.
+
+=Trees as Land Formers.=--John Gifford, in a paper presented to the
+Franklin Institute on Forestry in Relation to Physical Geography and
+Engineering, mentions as illustrating the way forests counteract
+certain destructive forces, the mangrove tree as "the great land
+former which, supplementing the work of the coral polyp, has added to
+the warm seashore regions of the globe immense areas of land." The
+trees grow in salt water several feet deep, where their labyrinth of
+roots and branches collect and hold sediment and flotage. Thus the
+shore line advances. The seeds, germinating on the plant, the
+plantlets fall into the water, float away till their roots touch the
+bottom, and there form the nucleus of new islands and life. The forest
+constantly improves the soil, provided the latter is not removed or
+allowed to burn. The roots of trees penetrate to its deeper layers and
+absorb great quantities of mineral matters, a large percentage of
+which goes to the leaves, and is ultimately deposited on the surface.
+"The surface soil is both enriched by these mineral substances and
+protected by a mulch of humus in varying stages of decomposition. As
+the lower layers rot, new layers of leaves and twigs are being
+constantly deposited, so that the forest soil, in the course of time,
+fairly reeks with nourishing plant food, which seeps out more or less
+to enrich neighboring soils." The forest is also a soil former. "Even
+the most tender rootlet, because of its acidity, is able to dissolve
+its way through certain kinds of rock. This, together with the acids
+formed in the decomposition of humus, is a potent and speedy agent in
+the production of soil. The roots of many species of trees have no
+difficulty whatever in penetrating limestone and in disintegrating
+rocks of the granitic series. As the rock crumbles, solid inorganic
+materials are released, which enrich neighboring soils, especially
+those of the valleys in regions where the forest is relegated to the
+mountain sides and top, as should be the case in all mountainous
+regions. In view of the destruction caused by mankind, it is a
+consoling fact that Nature, although slowly, is gradually improving
+her waste lands. If not interrupted, the barest rock and the fallowest
+field, under conditions which may be called unfavorable, will become,
+in course of time, forest-clad and fertile. The most important
+function of the forest in relation to the soil, however, is in holding
+it in place and protecting it from the erosive action of wind and
+rain."
+
+=The Atlantic Slope.=--The Atlantic slope of the United States is
+described in the New Jersey State Geological Survey's report on the
+Physical Geography of the State as "a fairly distinct geographical
+province. Its eastern boundary is the sea; its western boundary on the
+north is the divide between the drainage flowing southeast to the sea
+and that flowing northeast to the St. Lawrence. Farther south its
+western limit is the divide between the streams flowing east to the
+Atlantic and those flowing west to the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers."
+The line between it and the geographical province next west follows
+the watershed of the Appalachian system of mountains. It is divided,
+according to elevations, into several subprovinces, all of which
+elongate in a direction roughly parallel to the shore. Next to the
+coast there is usually a belt of lowland, few or many miles wide,
+called the _Coastal Plain_. Inland from the Coastal Plain is an
+intermediate height, between the Coastal Plain to the east and the
+mountains to the west, known in the South as the _Piedmont Plateau_.
+The mountainous part of the slope constitutes the third province,
+known as the _Appalachian Zone_. The Atlantic slope may be divided
+into two sections--a northern and a southern--in which the Coastal
+Plain is narrow and wide respectively. These two sections meet in New
+Jersey, where the division runs from the Raritan River, just below New
+Brunswick, to Trenton. South of this line the Coastal Plain expands,
+and all considerable elevations recede correspondingly from the shore.
+These three subprovinces are especially well shown in the southern
+section of the Atlantic slope. They are less well developed in the
+northern section, and even where the topography is comparable the
+underlying rock structure is different. In New Jersey a fourth belt,
+the Triassic formation, is interposed between the Coastal Plain and
+the Highlands corresponding to the Piedmont Plateau. North of New
+Jersey the Coastal Plain has little development, though Long Island
+and some small areas farther east and northeast are to be looked upon
+as parts of it.
+
+=American Fresh-water Pearls.=--The facts cited by Mr. George F. Kunz
+in his paper, published in the Report of the United States Fish
+Commission, on the Fresh-water Pearls and Pearl Fisheries of the
+United States, give considerable importance to this feature of our
+natural history. The mound explorations attest that fresh-water pearls
+were gathered and used by the prehistoric peoples of the country "to
+an extent that is astonishing. On the hearths of some of these mounds
+in Ohio the pearls have been found, not by hundreds, but by thousands
+and even by bushels--now, of course, damaged and half decomposed by
+centuries of burial and by the heat of superficial fires." The
+narratives of the early Spanish explorers make several mentions of
+pearls in the possession of the Indians. For a considerable period
+after the first explorations, however, American pearls attracted but
+little attention, and "for some two centuries the Unios [or
+'fresh-water mussels'] lived and multiplied in the rivers and streams,
+unmolested by either the native tribes that had used them for food, or
+by the pioneers of the new race that had not yet learned of their
+hidden treasures." Within recent years the gathering of Unio pearls
+has attained such importance as to start economical problems
+warranting and even demanding careful and detailed inquiry. The first
+really important discovery of Unio pearls was made near Paterson, N.
+J., in 1857, in the form of the "queen pearl" of fine luster, weighing
+ninety-three grains, which was sold to Eugenie, wife of Napoleon III,
+for twenty-five hundred dollars, and is now worth four times that
+amount. As a result the Unios at Notch Brook, where it was found, were
+gathered by the million and destroyed. Within a year fully fifteen
+thousand dollars' worth of pearls were sent to the New York market.
+Then the shipments gradually fell off. Some of the best American
+pearls that were next found were at Waynesville, Ohio, where Mr.
+Israel H. Harris formed an exceedingly fine collection. It contained
+more than two thousand specimens, weighing more than as many grains.
+Among them were one button-shaped on the back and weighing
+thirty-eight grains, several almost transparent pink ones, and one
+showing where the pearl had grown almost entirely through the Unio. In
+1889 a number of magnificently colored pearls were found at different
+places in the creeks and rivers of Wisconsin, of which more than ten
+thousand dollars' worth were sent to New York within three months.
+These discoveries led to immense activity in pearl hunting through all
+the streams of the region, and in three or four seasons the shells
+were nearly exhausted. The pearl fisheries of this State have produced
+at least two hundred and fifty thousand dollars' worth of pearls since
+1889. Another outbreak of the "pearl mania" occurred in Arkansas in
+1897, and extended into the Indian Territory, Missouri, Georgia, and
+other States.
+
+=Distribution of Cereals in the United States.=--To inquiries made
+preparatory to drawing up a report on the Distribution of Cereals in
+North America (Department of Agriculture, Biological Survey), Mr. C.
+S. Plumb received one thousand and thirty-three answers, eight
+hundred and ninety-seven of which came from the United States and the
+rest from the Canadian provinces. These reports showed that in many
+localities, particularly in the East and South, but little attention
+is paid to keeping varieties pure, and many farmers use mixed,
+unknown, or local varieties of ordinary merit for seed. In New England
+but little grain is grown from sowing, owing to the cheapness of
+Western grain, and wheat is rarely reported. Oats are now mostly sown
+from Western seed, and the resulting crop is mown for hay, while most
+of the corn is cut for green fodder or silage. On certain fine
+lowlands--as, for example, in the Connecticut Valley--oats, and more
+especially corn, are often grown for grain. While reports on most of
+the cereals were rendered from the lower austral zone, or the region
+south of the Appalachians and the old Missouri Compromise line, this
+region, except where it merges with the upper austral or the one north
+of it, is apparently outside the area of profitable cultivation of
+wheat and oats. In Louisiana and most of the other parts of the lower
+austral, except in northern Texas and Oklahoma, wheat is almost an
+unknown crop. The warm, moist climatic conditions here favor the
+development of fungous diseases to such a degree that the plants are
+usually ruined or greatly injured at an early stage of growth. In
+Florida, as a rule, cereals are rarely cultivated except on the
+uplands at the northern end of the State. In a general way, corn and
+wheat are most successfully grown in the upper austral zone, or
+central States, while oats are best and most productive in the
+transition zone (or northern and Lake States and the Dakotas), or
+along the border of the upper austral and transition. The gradual
+acclimation of varieties of cereals, through years of selection and
+cultivation, has gone so far, however, that some varieties are now
+much better adapted to one zone than to another.
+
+=Spanish Silkworm Gut.=--The business of manufacturing silkworm gut in
+Spain is a considerable industry. The method of preparation is thus
+described in the Journal of the Society of Arts: After the silkworm
+grub has eaten enough mulberry leaves, and before it begins to spin,
+which is during the months of May and June, it is thrown into vinegar
+for several hours. The insect is killed and the substance which the
+grub, if alive, would have spun into a cocoon is drawn out from the
+dead worm into a much thicker and shorter silken thread, in which
+operation considerable dexterity and experience are required. Two
+thick threads from each grub are placed for about four hours in clear
+cold water, after which they are put for ten or fifteen minutes in a
+solution of some caustic. This loosens a fine outer skin on the
+threads, which is removed by the hands, the workman holding the
+threads in his teeth. The silk is then hung up to dry in a shady
+place, the sun rendering it brittle. In some parts of the country
+these silk guts are bleached with sulphur vapor, which makes them
+beautifully glossy and snow-white, while those naturally dried have a
+yellowish tint. The quality of the gut is decided according to the
+healthy condition of the worm, round indicating a good quality and
+flat an inferior one.
+
+=The Nests of Burrowing Bees.=--Prof. John B. Smith, having explained
+to his section of the American Association a method which has been
+successfully applied, of taking casts in plaster of Paris of the homes
+of burrowing insects, with their branchings, to the depth of six feet,
+described some of the results of its application. Bees, of the genus
+_Calletes_, dig vertically to the depth of eighteen inches or more,
+then burrow horizontally from two to five inches farther, and
+construct a thin, parchmentlike cell of saliva, in which the egg is
+deposited, with pollen and honey for the food of the larva. They then
+start a new horizontal burrow a little distance from the first, and
+perhaps a third, but no more. The vertical tubes are then filled up,
+so that when the bees come to life they must burrow from six to
+twenty-four inches before they can reach the surface. Another genus
+makes a twisted burrow; another makes a vertical burrow that may be
+six feet deep. About a foot below the surface it sends off a lateral
+branch, and in this it excavates a chamber from one to two and a half
+inches in diameter. Tubes are sent down from this chamber, as many
+perhaps as from six to twenty together, and these are lined with clay
+to make them water-tight. This bee, when it begins its burrow, makes
+an oblique gallery from four to six inches long before it starts in
+the vertical direction, and all the dirt is carried through this
+oblique gallery. Then the insect continues the tube vertically upward
+to just below the surface, and makes a small concealed opening to it
+here, taking care to pile no sand near it. This is the regular
+entrance to the burrow.
+
+
+MINOR PARAGRAPHS.
+
+In a report of an inspection of three French match factories,
+published as a British Parliamentary paper, Dr. T. Oliver records as
+his impressions and deductions that while until recently the match
+makers suffered severely from phosphorus poisoning, there is now
+apparently a reduction in the severe forms of the illness; that this
+reduction is attributable to greater care in the selection of the work
+people, to raising the age of admission into the factory, to medical
+examination on entrance, subsequent close supervision, and repeated
+dental examination; to personal cleanliness on the part of the
+workers; to early suspension on the appearance of symptoms of ill
+health; and to improved methods of manufacture. The French Government
+is furthering by all possible means new methods of manufacture in the
+hope of finding a safer one; and a match free from white phosphorus
+and still capable of striking anywhere is already manufactured.
+
+A mechanical and engineering section is to be organized in the
+Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, to be devoted to the consideration
+of subjects bearing upon the mechanic arts and the engineering
+problems connected therewith. The growth of the various departments of
+this institution--which has been fitly termed a "democratic learned
+society," from the close affiliation in it of the men of the
+professions and the men of the workshops--by natural accretion, and
+the steadily growing demands for the extension of its educational work
+during the past decade, have increased the costs for maintenance and
+administration and have been the cause of a deficit in nearly every
+year. A movement is now on foot, approved by the board of managers,
+and directed by a special committee, to secure for it an endowment,
+toward which a number of subscriptions ranging from two hundred and
+fifty to twenty-five hundred dollars have already been received.
+
+The earthquake which took place in Assam, June 12, 1897, was described
+by Mr. R. D. Oldham in the British Association as having been the most
+violent of which there is any record. The shock was sensible over an
+area of 1,750,000 square miles, and if it had occurred in England, not
+a house would have been left standing between Manchester and London.
+Landslips on an unprecedented scale were produced, a number of lakes
+were formed, and mountain peaks were moved vertically and
+horizontally. Monuments of solid stone and forest trees were broken
+across. Bridges were overthrown, displaced, and in some places thrust
+bodily up to a height of about twenty feet, and the rails on the
+railroads were twisted and bent. Earth fissures were formed over an
+area larger than the United Kingdom, and sand rents, from which sand
+and water were forced in solid streams to a height of three or four
+feet above the ground, were opened "in incalculable numbers." The loss
+of life was comparatively small, as the earthquake occurred about five
+o'clock in the afternoon, and the damage done was reduced by the fact
+that there were no large cities within the area of greatest violence;
+but in extent and capacity of destruction, as distinguished from
+destruction actually accomplished, this earthquake surpassed any of
+which there was historical mention, not even excepting the great
+earthquake of Lisbon in 1755.
+
+The first section of the electric railway up the Jungfrau, which is
+intended to reach the top of the mountain, was opened about the first
+of October, 1898. The line starts from the Little Scheidegg station of
+the existing Wengern Alp Railway, 6,770 feet above the sea, and
+ascends the mountain masses from the north side, passing the Eiger
+Glacier, Eiger Wand, Eismeer, and Jungfraujoch stations, to Lift,
+13,430 feet, whence the ascent is completed by elevator to the summit,
+13,670 feet. The road starts on a gradient of ten per cent, which is
+increased to twenty per cent about halfway to the Eiger Glacier
+station, and to twenty-five per cent, the steepest, after passing that
+station. There are about 85 yards in tunnel on the section now opened,
+but beyond the Eiger Glacier the road will not touch the surface
+except at the stations. About 250 yards of the long tunnel have been
+excavated so far. The stations beyond Eiger Wand will be built within
+the rock, and will be furnished with restaurants and beds. At the
+Eiger Wand and Eismeer stations passengers will contemplate the view
+through windows or balconies from the inside; but at the Jungfraujoch
+station tourists will be able to go out and take sledges for the great
+Aletsch Glacier. The cars will accommodate forty passengers each, and
+the company expects to complete the railroad by 1904.
+
+Alexander A. Lawes, civil engineer, of Sydney, Australia, suggests a
+plan of mechanical flight on beating wings as presenting advantages
+that transcend all other schemes. He believes that the amount of power
+required to operate wings and the difficulty in applying it are
+exaggerated beyond all measure. The wings or sustainers of the bird in
+flight, he urges, are held in the outstretched position without any
+exertion on its part; and many birds, like the albatross, sustain
+themselves for days at a stretch. "This constitutes its aerial
+support, and is analogous to the support derived by other animals from
+land and water." The sole work done by the bird is propulsion and
+elevation by the beating action of the wings. Mr. Adams's machine,
+which he does not say he has tried, is built in conformity to this
+principle, and its sails are modeled as nearly as possible in form and
+as to action with those of the bird. The aid of an air cylinder is
+further called in, through which a pressure is exerted balancing the
+wings. The wings are moved by treadles, and the author's picture of
+the aeronaut looks like a man riding an aerial bicycle.
+
+Carborundum, a substance highly extolled by its manufacturers
+as an abrasive, is composed of carbon and silicon in atomic
+proportions--thirty parts by weight of carbon and seventy of silicon.
+It is represented as being next to the diamond in hardness and as
+cutting emery and corundum with ease, but as not as tough as the
+diamond. It is a little more than one and a fifth times the weight of
+sand, is infusible at the highest attainable heat, but is decomposed
+in the electric arc, and is insoluble in any of the ordinary solvents,
+water, oils, and acids, even hydrofluoric acid having no effect upon
+it. Pure carborundum is white. In the commercial manufacture the
+crystals are produced in many colors and shades, partly as the result
+of impurities and partly by surface oxidation. The prevailing colors
+are green, black, and blue. The color has no effect upon the hardness.
+Crude carborundum, as taken from the furnace, usually consists of
+large masses or aggregations of crystals, which are frequently very
+beautifully colored and of adamantine luster.
+
+A peculiarity of Old English literary usage is pointed out by Prof.
+Dr. L. Kellner, of Vienna, as illustrated in a sentence like "the mob
+is ignorant, and they are often cruel." This is considered a bad
+solecism in modern English, but in Old and Middle English
+constructions of exactly the same kind are so often met with that it
+is impossible to account for them as slips and mistakes. They may be
+brought under several heads, as, Number (the same collective noun used
+as a singular and a plural); Case (the same verb or adjective
+governing the genitive and accusative, the genitive and dative, or the
+dative and accusative); Pronoun ("thou" and "ye" used in addressing
+the same person); Tense (past and perfect, or past and historical
+present used in the same breath); Mood (indicative and subjunctive
+used in the same clause). Finite verb and infinitive dependent on the
+same verb; simple and prepositional infinitives dependent on the same
+verb; infinitive and verbal noun used side by side; different
+prepositions dependent on the same verb, like Caxton's "He was eaten
+by bears and of lions"; direct and indirect speech alternating in the
+same clause. These facts, which are met with as late as 1611 (Bible,
+authorized version), point to the conclusion that what to us appears
+as a grammatical inconsistency was once considered a welcome break in
+the monotony of construction.
+
+Mr. Fischer Sigwart is quoted in the _Revue Scientifique_ as having
+studied the life of frogs for thirty years, and found that they are
+night wanderers, keeping comparatively quiet during the day and
+seeking their prey after dark. In the fall they leave their hunting
+grounds in the fields and woods and take refuge near swamps and ponds,
+passing the winter in the banks of rivers or the mud in the bottoms of
+ponds, whence they come out in the spring, when the process of
+reproduction begins. The frog is not sexually mature till it is four
+or five years old. The coupling process lasts from three to thirty
+days. Between its spring wakening and spawning the frog eats nothing
+except, perhaps, its own skin, which it moults periodically. After
+spawning, frogs leave the water and go to the fields and woods. They
+can be fed, when kept captive, upon insects and earthworms.
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+A relation has been discovered by Professor Dolbear and Carl A. and
+Edward A. Bessey between the chirping of crickets and the temperature,
+the chirps increasing as frequently as the temperature rises. The
+Besseys relate, in The American Naturalist, that when, one cool
+evening, a cricket was caught and brought into a warm room, it began
+in a few minutes to chirp nearly twice as rapidly as the out-of-door
+crickets, and that its rate very nearly conformed to the observed rate
+maintained other evenings out of doors under the same temperature
+conditions.
+
+C. Drieberg, of Colombo, Ceylon, records, in Nature, a rainfall at
+Nedunkeni, in the northern province of Ceylon, December 15 and 16,
+1897, of 31.76 inches in twenty-four hours. The highest previous
+records, as cited by him, are at Joyeuse, France, 31.17 inches in
+twenty-two hours; Genoa, 30 inches in twenty-six hours; on the hills
+above Bombay, 24 inches in one night; and on the Khasia Hills, India,
+30 inches in each of five successive days. The average annual rainfall
+at Nedunkeni has been 64.70 inches, but in 1897 the total amount was
+121.85 inches. The greatest annual rainfall is on the Khasia Hills,
+India, with 600 inches. The wettest station in Ceylon is Padupola, in
+the central province, with 230.85 inches as the mean of twenty-six
+years, but in 1897 the amount was 243.07 inches.
+
+The Korean postage stamps are printed in the United States. As
+explained in the United States consular reports, they are of four
+denominations, and all alike except in color and denomination. Of the
+inscriptions, the characters on the top are ancient Chinese, and those
+at the bottom, having the same meaning, are Korean; the characters on
+the right are Korean and those on the left are Chinese, both giving
+the denominations, with the English translation just below the center
+of the stamp. The plum blossom in each corner is the royal flower of
+the present Ye dynasty, which has been in existence more than five
+hundred years, and the figures at the corners of the center piece
+represent the four spirits that stand at the corners of the earth and
+support it on their shoulders. The national emblem in the center is an
+ancient Chinese phallic device.
+
+A paragraph in _La Nature_ calls to mind that the year 1898 was the
+"jubilee" of the sea serpent, the first mention of a sight of the
+monster--whether fabulous or not is still undecided--having been made
+by the captain and officers of the British ship Daedalus in 1848. They
+said they saw it between the Cape of Good Hope and St. Helena, and
+that it was about six hundred feet long. Since then views of sea
+serpents have been reported nearly every year, but none has ever been
+caught or seen so near or for so long a time as to be positively
+identified. There are several creatures of the deep which, seen for an
+instant, might be mistaken with the aid of an excited imagination for
+a marine serpent; and it is not wholly impossible that some
+descendants of the gigantic saurians of old may still be living in the
+ocean undetected by science.
+
+The results of a study of the winter food of the chickadee by Clarence
+M. Weed, of the New Hampshire College Agricultural Experiment Station,
+shows that more than half of it consists of insects, a very large
+proportion of which are taken in the form of eggs. Vegetation of
+various sorts made up a little less than a quarter of the food; but
+two thirds of this consisted of buds and bud scales that were
+accidentally introduced along with plant-lice eggs. These eggs made up
+more than one fifth of the entire food, and formed the most remarkable
+element of the bill of fare. The destruction of these eggs of plant
+lice is probably the most important service which the chickadee
+renders during its winter residence. Insect eggs of many other kinds
+were found in the food, among them those of the tent caterpillar and
+the fall cankerworm, and the larvae of several kinds of moths,
+including those of the common apple worm.
+
+The Merchants' Association of San Francisco has been trying the
+experiment of sprinkling a street with sea water, and finds that such
+water binds the dirt together between the paving stones, so that when
+it is dry no loose dust is formed to be raised by the wind; that sea
+water does not dry so quickly as fresh water, so that it has been
+claimed when salt water has been used that one load of it is equal to
+three loads of fresh water. The salt water which is deposited on the
+street absorbs moisture from the air during the night, whereby the
+street is thoroughly moist during the early morning, and has the
+appearance of having been freshly sprinkled.
+
+The Tarahumare people, who live in the most inaccessible part of
+northern Mexico, were described by Dr. Krauss in the British
+Association as ignorant and primitive, and many still living in caves.
+What villages they have are at altitudes of about eight thousand feet
+above the sea level. They are a small and wiry people, with great
+powers of endurance. Their only food is _pinoli_, or maize, parched
+and ground. They have a peculiar drink, called _teshuin_, also
+produced from maize and manufactured with considerable ceremony, which
+tastes like a mixture of sour milk and turpentine. Their language is
+limited to about three hundred words. Their imperfect knowledge of
+numbers renders them unable to count beyond ten. Their religion seems
+to be a distorted and imperfect conception of Christian traditions,
+mixed with some of their own ideas and superstitions.
+
+The directory of the School of Anthropology of Paris, which consists
+chiefly of the professors in the institution, has chosen Dr. Capitan,
+professor of pathological anthropology, to succeed M. Gabriel de
+Mortillet, deceased, as professor of prehistoric anthropology. Dr.
+Capitan's former chair is suppressed.
+
+The highest cog-wheel railroad in Europe and probably in the world is
+the one from Zermatt, Switzerland, to the summit of the Goerner Grat,
+upward of eleven thousand five hundred feet above the sea. It is
+between five and six miles long, and rises nearly fifty-two hundred
+feet, with a maximum grade of twenty per cent. There are two
+intermediate stations, at the Riffel Alp and the Riffelberg, and the
+ascent is made in ninety minutes. The height of this road will be
+surpassed by that of the one now being erected up the Jungfrau.
+
+Extraordinary advantages are claimed by Mrs. Theodore R. MacClure, of
+the State Board of Health, for Michigan as a summer and health-resort
+State. The State has more than sixteen hundred miles of lake line, the
+greater part of which is or can be utilized for summer-resort
+purposes; there are in its limits 5,173 inland lakes varying in size
+and having a total area of 712,864 square acres of water. The many
+rivers running through the State furnish on their banks delightful
+places for camping and for recreation.
+
+An action of bacteria on photographic plates was described by Prof. P.
+P. Frankland at the last meeting of the British Association. Ordinary
+bacterial cultures in gelatin and agar-agar are found to be capable of
+affecting the photographic film even at a distance of half an inch,
+while, when they are placed in contact with the film, definite
+pictures of the bacterial growths can be obtained. The action does not
+take place through glass, and therefore, as in the case of Dr. W. J.
+Russell's observations with some other substances, it is considered
+probably due to the evolution of volatile chemical materials which
+react with the sensitive film. Many varieties of bacteria exert the
+action, but to a different degree. Bacterial growths which are
+luminous in the dark are much more active than the non-luminous
+bacteria hitherto tried.
+
+Telephonic communication, it is said, has been established between a
+number of farms in Australia by means of wire fences. A correspondent
+of the Australian Agriculturist from a station near Colmar represents
+that it is easy to converse with a station eight miles distant by
+means of instruments connected on the wire fences, and that the same
+kind of communication has been established over a distance of eight
+miles. Several stations are connected in this way.
+
+We have to record the deaths of F. A. Obach, electrical engineer, at
+Graetz, Austria, December 27th, aged forty-six years. He was author of
+numerous papers on subjects of electrical science in English and
+German publications, and of lectures on the chemistry of India rubber
+and gutta percha; Dr. Reinhold Ehret, seismologist and author of books
+on earthquakes and seismometers, who died from an Alpine accident in
+the Susten Pass; Dr. Joseph Coats, professor of pathology at the
+University of Glasgow, and author of a manual of pathology, a work on
+tuberculosis, etc.; Thomas Hincks, F. R. S., author of books on marine
+zoology, February 2d; Major J. Hotchkiss, president in 1895 of the
+Geological Section of the American Association and author of papers on
+economic geology and engineering; Wilbur Wilson Thoburn, professor of
+biomechanics at Leland Stanford Junior University; Dr. Giuseppe
+Gibelli, professor of botany in the University of Turin; Dr. G.
+Wolffhuezel, professor of hygiene in the University of Goettingen; Dr.
+Dareste de Chavannes, author of researches in animal teratology, and
+formerly president of the French Society of Anthropology; Dr. Rupert
+Boeck, professor of mechanics in the Technical Institute of Vienna;
+William Colenso, F. R. S., of New Zealand, naturalist and author of
+investigations of Maori antiquities and myths; Dr. Lench, assistant in
+the observatory at Zuerich, Switzerland; Dr. Franz Lang, rector and
+teacher of natural history in the cantonal schools of Soleure,
+Switzerland, and one of the presidents of the Swiss Natural History
+Society, aged seventy-eight years; Dr. William Rutherford, professor
+of physiology in the University of Edinburgh, and author of several
+books in that science, February 21st, in his sixtieth year; and Sir
+Douglas Galton, president of the British Association in 1895 and an
+authority and author on sanitation, March 10th, in his seventy seventh
+year.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+ARTICLES MARKED WITH AN ASTERISK ARE ILLUSTRATED.
+
+
+ Academy della Crusca, The. (Frag.), 572
+
+ Adulteration of Butter with Glucose. (Frag.), 570
+
+ Allen, Grant. The Season of the Year, 230
+
+ America, Middle. Was it Peopled from Asia? E. S. Morse, 1
+
+ Animals' Bites. (Frag.), 430
+
+ Anthropology. Decorated Skulls and the Power ascribed to them
+ (Frag.), 570
+
+ " Estrays from Civilization. (Frag.), 573
+
+ " Huichol Indians of Jalisco. (Frag.), 574
+
+ " Lessons of. (Table), 411
+
+ " Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments. E. S. Morse*, 712
+
+ " Superstitions, Aboriginal, about Bones. (Frag.), 572
+
+ " Superstition and Crime. E. P. Evans, 206
+
+ Archaeology. Earliest Writing in France. G. de Mortillet, 546
+
+ " Lake Dwelling, A Neolithic, 856
+
+ " Stone Age in Egypt. J. de Morgan, 202
+
+ Architectural Forms in Nature. S. Dellenbaugh*, 63
+
+ Astronomical Photographs, A Library of. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Astronomy. Bombardment, The Great. C. F. Holder*, 506
+
+ Atkinson, E. Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States, 145
+
+ " " The Wheat Problem again, 759
+
+ Atlantic Slope, The. (Frag.), 858
+
+
+ Bactrian Camel for the Klondike. (Frag.), 136
+
+ Barr, M. W. Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare*, 746
+
+ Bede, Chair of the Venerable. (Frag.), 283
+
+ Bees, Burrowing, The Nests of. (Frag.), 860
+
+ Bering Sea Controversy and the Scientific Expert. G. A. Clark, 654
+
+ Biological Survey, The United States. (Frag.), 856
+
+ Blackford, Charles Minor, Jr. Soils and Fertilizers, 392
+
+ Blake, I. W. Our Florida Alligator*, 330
+
+ Bombardment, The Great. C. F. Holder*, 506
+
+ Books Noticed 126, 274, 415, 559, 704, 845
+ Agriculture. Michigan Board, Thirty-fifth Annual Report of, 423.
+ Alexander, A. Theories of the Will in the History of
+ Philosophy, 566.
+ Andrews, C. M. The Historical Development of Modern Europe, 126.
+ Anthropology. Indians of Northern British Columbia, Facial Paintings
+ of. F. Boas, 710.
+ Archaeology, Introduction to the Study of North American. C.
+ Thomas, 420.
+ Arthur and Trembly. Living Plants and their Properties, 564.
+ Astronomy, A Text-Book of Geodetic. J. F. Hayford, 129.
+ -- Corona and Coronet. M. L. Todd, 418.
+ -- Earth and Sky, The. E. S. Holden, 850.
+ -- Tides, The. G. H. Darwin, 705.
+ Bailey, L. H. Evolution of our Native Fruits, 704.
+ Baldwin, J. M. The Story of the Mind, 565.
+ Barnes, C. R. Form and Function of Plant Life, 277.
+ Barra, Eduardo de la. Literature arcaica, 280.
+ Beauchamp, W. M. Polished-Stone Articles used by New York Aborigines
+ before and during European Occupation, 279.
+ Beddard, F. E. Elementary Zoology, 706.
+ Beker, G. A. Rrimas, 280.
+ Binet, Alfred. L'Annee Psychologique, 129.
+ Bjoerling, P. R. Mechanical Engineer's Pocketbook, 132.
+ Boas, Franz. Facial Paintings of the Indians of Northern British
+ Columbia, 710.
+ Bolton, H. C. Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals
+ (1665-1895), 566.
+ Botany. Familiar Life in Field and Forest. F. S. Mathews, 418.
+ -- Fossil Plants. A. C. Seward, 127.
+ -- Fruits, The Evolution of our Native. L. H. Bailey, 704.
+ -- Function and Forms of Plant Life. C. R. Barnes, 277.
+ -- Les Vegetaux et les Milieux Cosmiques, 132.
+ -- Living Plants and their Properties. Arthur and Trembly, 564.
+ -- Practical Plant Physiology, 128.
+ Brain Weight, Indexes of. McCurdy and Mohyliansky, 709.
+ Brush, George J. Manual of Determinative Mineralogy, 707.
+ Butler, Amos W. The Birds of Indiana, 422.
+ Carus-Wilson, C. A. Electro-Dynamics, 277.
+ Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals (1665-1895). H. C.
+ Bolton, 566.
+ Chemical Analysis, Manual of. G. S. Newth, 708.
+ Chemistry. Inorganic according to the Periodic Law. Venable and
+ Howe, 567.
+ -- Qualitative Analysis. E. A. Congdon, 567.
+ -- Short Manual of Analytical. John Muter, 419.
+ Clark, William J. Commercial Cuba, 564.
+ Conant, F. S. Biographical Pamphlet, 132.
+ Congdon, E. A. Brief Course in Qualitative Analysis, 567.
+ Cornelius, Hans. Psychologie als Erfahrungs-wissenschaft, 850.
+ Costantin, M. J. Les Vegetaux et les Milieux Cosmiques, 132.
+ Creighton, J. E. An Introductory Logic, 706.
+ Crook, J. W. History of German Wage Theories, 708.
+ Cuba, Commercial. William J. Clark, 564.
+ Dana, E. S. Text-Book of Mineralogy, 848.
+ Dana, James D. Revised Text-Book of Geology, 418.
+ Darwin, George Howard. The Tides, 705.
+ Davis, H. S. Star Catalogues, 280.
+ Day, D. T. Mineral Resources of the United States, 852.
+ Detmer, W. Practical Plant Physiology, 128.
+ Drey, Sylvan. A Theory of Life, 280.
+ Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast. E. S. Holden, 850.
+ Economics. Commercial Cuba. William J. Clark, 564.
+ -- German Wage Theories, History of. J. W. Crook, 708.
+ -- Public Administration in Massachusetts. R. H. Whitten, 422.
+ Education. Greek Prose. H. C. Pearson, 708.
+ -- Handbook of Nature Study for Elementary Schools, 130.
+ -- Harold's Rambles. J. W. Troeger, 567.
+ -- On a Farm. N. L. Helm, 423.
+ -- United States Commissioner's Report for 1896-'97, 852.
+ Electricity. Electro-Dynamics. C. A. Carus-Wilson, 277.
+ -- Industrial. A. G. Elliott, 132.
+ -- The Discharge of, through Gases. J. J. Thomson, 565.
+ -- The Storage Battery. A. Treadwell, 421.
+ Elliott, A. G. Industrial Electricity, 132.
+ Engineering. Mechanical Engineer's Pocketbook, 132.
+ Ethnology. Explorations in Honduras. G. B. Gordon, 133.
+ Forestry. American Woods. R. B. Hough, 276.
+ -- Conditions in Wisconsin. F. Noth, 709.
+ Geikie, James. Earth Sculpture, 845.
+ Geography. Natural Advanced. Redway and Hinman, 421.
+ -- Philippine Islands and their People. D. C. Worcester, 415.
+ -- Physical, of New Jersey. R. D. Salisbury, 422.
+ Geological Bulletin, Part II, Vol. III, of the University of
+ Upsala, 280.
+ Geological Survey of Kansas. Vol. IV. S. W. Williston, 709.
+ Geology. Earth Sculpture. James Geikie, 845.
+ -- Indiana, Twenty-second Annual Report of Department of, 852.
+ -- Indian Territory, Reconnaissance of Coal Fields of. N. F.
+ Drake, 852.
+ -- Iowa Survey. Eighth volume, 851.
+ -- Mineralogy, Manual of Determinative, 707.
+ -- Mineralogy, Text-Book of. E. S. Dana, 848.
+ -- Mineral Resources of the United States. D. T. Day, 852.
+ -- New Jersey State Report for 1897, 851.
+ -- Panama, Geological History of the Isthmus of. R. T. Hill, 851.
+ -- Text-Book of. J. D. Dana, 418.
+ Giddings, Franklin H. Elements of Sociology, 559.
+ Goldman, Henry. The Arithmetician, 279.
+ Goode, G. B. Report of United States National Museum for 1895, 710.
+ Gordon, G. B. Ethnological Explorations in Honduras, 133.
+ Groos, Karl. The Play of Animals, 274.
+ Harris, Edith D. Story of Rob Roy, 709.
+ Hayford, J. P. Text-Book of Geodetic Astronomy, 129.
+ Helm, Nellie Lathrop. On a Farm, 423.
+ Hill, R. T. Geological History of the Isthmus of Panama, 851.
+ History. Commune, The. Lissagaray. Translated by E. M. Aveling, 423.
+ -- Europe, The Historical Development of Modern. C. M. Andrews, 126.
+ -- Napoleon III and his Court. Imbert de Saint-Amand, 422.
+ -- Reader for Elementary Schools. L. L. W. Wilson, 853.
+ -- Spanish Literature. J. Fitzmaurice-Kelly, 275.
+ Hoffman, F. S. The Sphere of Science, 128.
+ Holden, E. S. Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast, 1769-1897, 850.
+ -- The Earth and Sky, 850.
+ Holyoake, G. J. Jubilee History of the Leeds Co-operative
+ Society, 849.
+ Hough, R. B. American Woods, 276.
+ Iowa State University Bulletin, Vol. IV, No. 3, 279.
+ James, William. Human Immortality, 708.
+ Jayne, Horace. The Mammalian Anatomy of the Cat, 278.
+ Jordan, D. S. Lest we Forget, 568.
+ Keyser, L. S. News from the Birds, 567.
+ Lambert, R. A. Differential and Integral Calculus, 421.
+ Lange, D. Handbook of Nature Study for Elementary Schools, 130.
+ Lantern Land, In. (Monthly.) Allen and Carleton, 708.
+ Le Bon, Gustave. The Psychology of Peoples, 847.
+ Leeds Industrial Co-operative Society, Jubilee History of. G. J.
+ Holyoake, 849.
+ Library Bulletin, No. 9, New York State, 133.
+ Lissagaray. History of the Commune. Translated by E. M.
+ Aveling, 423.
+ Logic, An Introductory. J. E. Creighton, 706.
+ Lyte, E. O. Elementary English, 279.
+ McConachie, L. G. Congressional Committees, 131.
+ Mathematics. Differential and Integral Calculus. R. A. Lambert, 421.
+ -- Infinitesimal Analysis. William B. Smith, 849.
+ -- Lectures on the Geometry of Position. T. R. Reye. Translated.
+ Mathews, F. Schuyler. Familiar Life in Field and Forest, 418.
+ Maurice-Kelly, James Fitz. History of Spanish Literature, 275.
+ Meteorology. Wind Deposits, Mechanical Composition of. J. A.
+ Udden, 853.
+ Mills, Wesley. Nature and Development of Animal Intelligence, 562.
+ Mivart, St. George. The Groundwork of Science, 563.
+ Music, A Short Course in. Ripley and Tupper, 133.
+ Muter, John. Manual of Analytical Chemistry, 419.
+ Natural History. Animal Intelligence, Nature and Development of.
+ Wesley Mills, 562.
+ -- Birds, News from the. L. S. Keyser, 567.
+ -- Birds of Indiana, 422.
+ -- Four-footed Americans and their Kin. M. O. Wright, 563.
+ -- Solitary Wasps, Habits of. G. W. and E. P. Peckham, 851.
+ -- Taxidermy, The Art of. John Rowley, 420.
+ -- Wild Animals I have Known. E. S. Thompson, 417.
+ Newth, G. S. Manual of Chemical Analysis, 708.
+ Ornithology. How to Name the Birds. H. E. Parkhurst, 131.
+ Overton, Frank. Physiology, Applied, 277.
+ -- Physiology for Advanced Grades, 566.
+ Paleontology. Fossil Plants. A. C. Seward, 127.
+ Parkhurst, H. E. How to Name the Birds, 131.
+ Pearson, H. C. Greek Prose, 708.
+ Peckham, G. W. and E. P. Habits of the Solitary Wasps, 851.
+ Philosophy. Immortality, Human. William James, 708.
+ Physiology, Applied. Frank Overton, 277.
+ -- Applied, for Advanced Grades. F. Overton, 566.
+ Psychology. Child, The Study of the. A. R. Taylor, 564.
+ -- L'Annee Psychologique, 129.
+ -- Mind, The Story of the. J. M. Baldwin, 565.
+ -- of Peoples. G. Le Bon, 847.
+ -- Play of Animals, The. Karl Groos, 274.
+ -- Psychologie als Erfahrungs-wissenschaft. Hans Cornelius, 850.
+ -- Will, Theories of the, in the History of Philosophy. A.
+ Alexander, 566.
+ Quinn, D. A. Stenotypy. Second edition, 279.
+ Redway, J. W., and Hinman K. Natural Advanced Geography, 421.
+ Reye, Theodor R. Lectures on the Geometry of Position.
+ Translated, 419.
+ Rice, W., and Eastman Barrett. Under the Stars, and Other
+ Verses, 134.
+ Richter, J. P. F. Selections from the Works of, 279.
+ Ripley, F. H., and Tupper, T. A Short Course in Music, 133.
+ Rollin, H. J. Yetta Segal, 278.
+ Rowley, John. The Art of Taxidermy, 420.
+ Saint-Amand, Imbert de. Napoleon III and his Court, 422.
+ Salisbury, Rollin D. Physical Geography of New Jersey, 422.
+ Science, Groundwork of, The. St. George Mivart, 563.
+ -- Sphere of. F. S. Hoffman, 128.
+ Seward, A. C. Fossil Plants, 127.
+ Smith, William B. Infinitesimal Analysis, 849.
+ Sociology. Congressional Committees. L. G. McConachie, 131.
+ -- Currency Problems of the United States in 1897-'98. A. B.
+ Stickney, 133.
+ -- Elements of. F. H. Giddings, 559.
+ -- The State. W. Wilson, 130.
+ -- Workers, The. W. A. Wyckoff, 707.
+ Stickney, A. B. Currency Problem of the United States in
+ 1897-'98, 133.
+ Still, A. Alternating Currents and the Theory of Transformers, 133.
+ Story of the Railroad, The. Cy Warman, 848.
+ Taylor, A. R. The Study of the Child, 564.
+ Thomas, C. Introduction to North American Archaeology, 129.
+ Thompson, Ernest Seton. Wild Animals I have Known, 417.
+ Thomson, J. J. The Discharge of Electricity through Gases, 565.
+ Todd, Mabel L. Corona and Coronet, 418.
+ Treadwell, Augustus. The Storage Battery, 421.
+ Troeger, John W. Harold's Rambles, 567.
+ Udden, J. A. Mechanical Composition of Wind Deposits, 853.
+ United States National Museum, Report of, for 1895, 710.
+ Venable and Howe. Inorganic Chemistry according to the Periodic
+ Law, 567.
+ Waring, George E., Jr. Street-Cleaning Methods in European
+ Cities, 131.
+ Warman, Cy. Story of the Railroad, 848.
+ Whitten, Robert H. Public Administration in Massachusetts, 422.
+ Wilson, L. L. W. History Reader, for Elementary Schools, 853.
+ Wilson, Woodrow. The State, 130.
+ Winter, H. L. Notes on Criminal Anthropology, 280.
+ Worcester, Dean C. The Philippine Islands and their People, 415.
+ Wright, Mabel Osgood. Four-footed Americans and their Kin, 563.
+ Wyckoff, W. A. The Workers, 707.
+ Zoology, Elementary. E. E. Beddard, 706.
+
+ Botany. English Names for Plants. (Frag.), 428
+
+ " Forest Planting on the Plains. (Frag.), 718
+
+ " Light and Vegetation. D. T. MacDougall, 193
+
+ " Plant Characters, Changes in. (Frag.), 286
+
+ " Poisonous Plants. (Frag.), 855
+
+ " Seeds, Dispersal of. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Boyer, M. J. Sketch of Clemence Royer. (With Portrait), 690
+
+ Brain Weights and Intellectual Capacity. J. Simms, 243
+
+ Brooks, William Keith. Mivart's Groundwork of Science, 450
+
+ Bullen, Frank T. Life on a South Sea Whaler, 818
+
+
+ Canada, The Interior of. (Frag.), 141
+
+ Catbird, The Coming of the. S. Trotter, 772
+
+ Causses of Southern France, The. (Frag.), 138
+
+ Cereals in the United States. Distribution of. (Frag.), 859
+
+ Clarke, F. W. Sketch. (With Portrait), 110
+
+ Clark, George A. The Scientific Expert and the Bering Sea
+ Controversy, 654
+
+ Climatic Evolution, Laws of. (Frag.), 855
+
+ Collier, J. The Evolution of Colonies, 52, 289, 577
+
+ Colonies, The Evolution of. J. Collier, 52, 289, 577
+
+ Commensals. (Frag.), 716
+
+ Cooking Schools in Philadelphia. (Frag.), 428
+
+ Cordillera Region of Canada. (Frag.), 283
+
+ Cram, W. E. Concerning Weasels*, 786
+
+ Criminology. California Penal System. C. H. Shinn*, 644
+
+ Cuba, The Climate of. (Frag.), 426
+
+ Curious Habit, Origin of a. (Frag.), 286
+
+
+ Dastre, M. Iron in the Living Body, 807
+
+ Dawson, E. R. The Torrents of Switzerland, 46
+
+ Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap. T. A. Jaggar*, 475
+
+ Decorated Skulls and the Power ascribed to them. (Frag.), 570
+
+ Dellenbaugh, F. S. Architectural Forms in Nature*, 63
+
+ Dodge, C. R. Possible Fiber Industries of the United States*, 15
+
+ Dorsey, George A. Up the Skeena River*, 181
+
+ D Q, The New Planet. (Frag.), 426
+
+ Dream and Reality. M. C. Melinand, 96
+
+ " " " (Table), 103
+
+ Dreams, The Stuff of. Havelock Ellis, 721
+
+ Dresslar, F. B. Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences, 781
+
+ Dutch Charity, A Practical. J. H. Gore, 103
+
+
+ Earliest Writing in France, The. G. de Mortillet, 542
+
+ Earthquakes, Modern Studies of. George Geraland, 362
+
+ Economics. Cereals, Distribution of, in the United States, 859
+
+ " Conquest, The Spirit of. J. Novicow, 518
+
+ " Gold, Marvelous Increase in Production of. A. E.
+ Outerbridge, Jr., 635
+
+ " Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States. E.
+ Atkinson, 145
+
+ " Wheat Problem, The. E. Atkinson, 759
+
+ Education and Evolution. (Smith.) (Corr.), 554
+
+ " and Evolution. (Table), 269
+
+ " German School Journeys. (Frag.), 573
+
+ " History of Scientific Instruction. J. N. Lockyer, 372, 529
+
+ " Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School. L. L. W.
+ Wilson, 313
+
+ " Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools. L. G. Oakley, 176
+
+ " Science and Culture. (Table), 842
+
+ " Science in. Sir A. Geikie, 672
+
+ " Series Method, The. A Comparison. Charlotte Taylor, 537
+
+ " Should Children under Ten learn to Read and Write? G. T. W.
+ Patrick, 382
+
+ " The Goal of. (Table), 118
+
+ Electricity. The Nernst Electric Lamp. (Frag.), 854
+
+ Ellis, Havelock. The Stuff that Dreams are made of, 721
+
+ Emerson and Evolution. (Alexander.) (Corr.), 555
+
+ " " " (Table), 558
+
+ Estrays from Civilization. (Frag.), 573
+
+ Ethnology. Was Middle America Peopled from Asia? E. S. Morse, 1
+
+ Evans, E. P. Superstition and Crime, 206
+
+ Evolution and Education. (Smith.) (Corr.), 554
+
+ " and Education. (Table), 269
+
+ " Extra Organic Factors of. (Frag.), 427
+
+ " of Pleasure Gardens. (Frag.), 717
+
+ " Social. What is it? Herbert Spencer, 35
+
+ " Survival of the Fittest. (Table), 844
+
+
+ Fads and Frauds. (Table), 701
+
+ Fiber Industries of the United States. C. R. Dodge*, 15
+
+ Florida Alligator, Our. I. W. Blake*, 330
+
+ Ford, R. Clyde. The Malay Language, 813
+
+ Forest Planting on the Plains. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Fossils as Criterions of Geological Ages. (Frag.), 427
+
+ Foundation, A Borrowed. (Table), 273
+
+ French Science, Two Gifts to. M. H. de Parville*, 81
+
+
+ Galax and its Affinities. (Frag.), 571
+
+ Geikie, Sir A. Science in Education, 672
+
+ Geography. Atlantic Slope, The. (Frag.), 858
+
+ " West Indies, Physical, of. F. L. Oswald, 802
+
+ Geological Romance, A. J. A. Udden*, 222
+
+ Geology. Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap. T. A. Jaggar*, 475
+
+ " Glacial, in America. D. S. Martin, 356
+
+ " Siamese Geological Theory, A. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Geraland, George. Modern Studies of Earthquakes, 362
+
+ German School Journeys. (Frag.), 573
+
+ Glacial Geology in America. D. S. Martin, 356
+
+ Glaciation and Carbonic Acid. (Frag.), 135
+
+ Gold, Marvelous Increase in Production of. A. E. Outerbridge, Jr., 635
+
+ Gore, J. H. A Practical Dutch Charity, 103
+
+ Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences. F. B. Dresslar, 781
+
+
+ Hanging an Elephant. (Frag.), 286
+
+ Herrings at Dinner. (Frag.), 574
+
+ Hitchcock, Charles H., Sketch of*, 260
+
+ Holder, C. F. The Great Bombardment*, 506
+
+ Huichol Indians of Jalisco. (Frag.), 574
+
+ Huxley Lecture, The. (Frag.), 425
+
+ Hygiene. Rebreathed Air as a Poison. (Frag.), 714
+
+ " Throat and Ear, Care of the. W. Scheppegrell, 791
+
+
+ Ide, Mrs. G. E. Shall we Teach our Daughters the Value of Money?, 686
+
+ Indian Idea of the "Midmost Self." (Frag.), 136
+
+ Ireland, W. Alleyn. The Labor Problem in the Tropics, 481
+
+ Iron in the Living Body. M. Dastre, 807
+
+ Iztaccihuatl (the White Lady Mountain). (Frag.), 569
+
+
+ Jaggar, T. A. Death Gulch, a Natural Bear-Trap*, 475
+
+ Jastrow, Joseph. The Mind's Eye*, 289
+
+ Jordan, D. S. True Tales of Birds and Beasts, 352
+
+
+ Kekule, Friedrich August. Sketch. (With Portrait), 401
+
+
+ Labor Problem in the Tropics. W. A. Ireland, 481
+
+ Lake Dwelling, A Neolithic. (Frag.), 856
+
+ Light and Vegetation. D. T. MacDougall, 193
+
+ Lockyer, J. N. A Short History of Scientific Instruction, 372, 529
+
+
+ MacDougall. Light and Vegetation, 193
+
+ Malay Language. R. C. Ford, 813
+
+ Martel, M. E. A. Speleology, or Cave Exploration, 255
+
+ Martin, D. S. Glacial Geology in America, 356
+
+ Melinand, M. C. Dream and Reality, 96
+
+ Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. M. W. Barr*, 746
+
+ Meteorology, Climatic Evolution, Laws of, 855
+
+ " Sahara, Winds of. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Miles, Manly, Sketch of. (With Portrait), 834
+
+ Mind's Eye, The. Joseph Jastrow*, 289
+
+ Missouri Botanical Garden, Additions to. (Frag.), 135
+
+ Molecular Asymmetry and Life. (Frag.), 139
+
+ Mongoose in Jamaica, The. C. W. Willis*, 86
+
+ Moon and the Weather, The. G. J. Varney. (Corr.), 118
+
+ Morgan, J. de. Stone Age in Egypt, 202
+
+ Morse, E. S. Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments.* (Frag.), 712
+
+ " " Was Middle America Peopled from Asia?, 1
+
+ Mortillet, Gabriel de, Sketch of. (With Portrait), 546
+
+ " " " The Earliest Writing in France, 542
+
+
+ Names, Technical and Popular. (Frag.), 285
+
+ Naples Aquarium, The. (School for the Study of Life under the Sea.) E.
+ H. Patterson, 668
+
+ Natural History. Catbird, The Coming of the. S. Trotter, 772
+
+ " " Commensals. (Frag.), 716
+
+ " " Herrings at Dinner. (Frag.), 574
+
+ " " Origin of a Curious Habit. (Frag.), 286
+
+ " " School for the Study of Life under the Sea. E. H.
+ Patterson, 668
+
+ " " Scorpion, My Pet. Norman Robinson*, 605
+
+ " " Weasels. W. E. Cram*, 786
+
+ Natural Selection and Fortuitous Variation. (Frag.), 141
+
+ Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School. L. L. W. Wilson, 313
+
+ Nernst Electric Lamp, The. (Frag.), 854
+
+ Neufeld, Dr. (Frag.), 140
+
+ Nicaragua and its Ferns. (Frag.), 137
+
+ Nontoxic Matches, The French. (Frag.), 857
+
+ Novicow, J. The Spirit of Conquest, 518
+
+
+ Oakley, Isabella G. Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools, 176
+
+ Observation, The Science of. C. L. Whittle*, 456
+
+ Ocean Currents, Drift of. (Frag.), 716
+
+ Oswald, F. L. Physical Geography of the West Indies, 802
+
+ Outerbridge, A. E., Jr. Marvelous Increase in Production of Gold, 635
+
+
+ Parville, M. H. de. Two Gifts to French Science*, 81
+
+ Patrick, G. T. W. Should Children under Ten learn to Read and
+ Write?, 382
+
+ Patterson, Eleanor H. A School for the Study of Life under the
+ Sea, 668
+
+ Pearls, American Fresh-Water. (Frag.), 859
+
+ Pedigree Photographs. (Frag.), 428
+
+ Physics. Utilization of Wave Power. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Physiology. Iron in the Living Body. M. Dastre, 807
+
+ Plant Characters, Changes in. (Frag.), 286
+
+ Plant Names, English. (Frag.), 428
+
+ Playgrounds of Rural and Suburban Schools. Isabella G. Oakley, 163
+
+ Pleasure Gardens, Evolution of. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Plumandon, J. R. The Cause of Rain, 89
+
+ Poisonous Plants. (Frag.), 855
+
+ Portland Cement. (Frag.), 856
+
+ Potteries, Doulton. (Frag.), 430
+
+ Pre-Columbian Musical Instruments. E. S. Morse*, 712
+
+ Psychology. Dreams. Havelock Ellis, 721
+
+ " Guessing as Influenced by Number Preferences. F. B.
+ Dresslar, 781
+
+ Pulpit, A Voice from the. (Table), 409
+
+
+ Rabies Bacillus, The. (Frag.), 284
+
+ Racial Geography of Europe. W. Z. Ripley, 163, 338, 614
+
+ Rain, The Cause of. J. R. Plumandon, 89
+
+ Rebreathed Air as a Poison. (Frag.), 714
+
+ Ripley, W. Z. Racial Geography of Europe, 163, 338, 614
+
+ Robinson, Norman. My Pet Scorpion*, 605
+
+ Royer, Clemence, Sketch of. (With Portrait.) M. J. Boyer, 690
+
+ Russell's Photographic Researches. (Frag.), 139
+
+
+ Saghalin, The Island of. (Frag.), 285
+
+ St. Kildans, The. (Frag.), 284
+
+ Scheppegrell, W. Care of the Throat and Ear, 791
+
+ Science, A Doubtful Appendix to. (Table), 120
+
+ " and Culture. (Table), 842
+
+ " Christian. The New Superstition. (Table), 557
+
+ " Education in. (Words of a Master.) (Table), 699
+
+ " Mivart's Groundwork of. W. K. Brooks, 450
+
+ " The Advance of. (Table), 415
+
+ Scientific Instruction, A Short History of. J. N. Lockyer, 372, 529
+
+ Scorpion, My Pet. Norman Robinson*, 605
+
+ Seasons of the Year, The. Grant Allen, 230
+
+ Seeds, Dispersal of. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Series Method, The. A Comparison. Charlotte Taylor, 537
+
+ Shinn, Charles Howard. The California Penal System*, 644
+
+ Siamese Geological Theory, A. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Silkworm Gut, Spanish. (Frag.), 860
+
+ Simms, Joseph. Brain Weights and Intellectual Capacity, 243
+
+ Skeena River, Up the. George A. Dorsey*, 181
+
+ Smell, The Physics of. (Frag.), 283
+
+ Smith, Franklin. Politics as a Form of Civil War, 588
+
+ Smith, Stephen. Vegetation a Remedy for the Summer Heat of
+ Cities*, 433
+
+ Social Decadence, An Example of. (Table), 412
+
+ Sociology. California Penal System. C. H. Shinn*, 644
+
+ " Mental Defectives and the Social Welfare. M. W. Barr*, 746
+
+ " Politics as a Form of Civil War. F. Smith, 588
+
+ " The Foundation of. (Giddings.) (Corr.), 553
+
+ Soils and Fertilizers. C. M. Blackford, Jr., 392
+
+ South Sea Whaler, Life on a. F. T. Bullen, 818
+
+ Spain's Decadence, The Cause of. (Table), 122
+
+ Speleology, or Cave Exploration. M. E. A. Martel, 255
+
+ Spencer, Herbert. What is Social Evolution?, 35
+
+ Spirit of Conquest, The. J. Novicow, 518
+
+ Stone Age in Egypt, The. J. de Morgan, 202
+
+ Submarine Telegraphy, Early. (Frag.), 569
+
+ Superstition and Crime. E. P. Evans, 206
+
+ " Aboriginal, about Bones. (Frag.), 572
+
+ " The New. (Table), 557
+
+ Survival of the Fittest. (Table), 844
+
+ Switzerland, The Torrents of. E. B. Dawson, 46
+
+
+ Taxation, Principles of. Hon. D. A. Wells, 319, 490, 736
+
+ Taylor, Charlotte. The Series Method, 537
+
+ Throat and Ear, Care of the. W. Scheppegrell, 791
+
+ Toes in Walking, The. (Frag.), 429
+
+ Trade Hunting, Scientific. (Frag.), 140
+
+ Trait, A, Common to us all. (Frag.), 429
+
+ Travel. Up the Skeena River. George A. Dorsey, 181
+
+ Tree Planting in Arid Regions. (Frag.), 282
+
+ Trees as Land Formers. (Frag.), 858
+
+ Trotter, Spencer. The Coming of the Catbird, 772
+
+ True Tales of Birds and Beasts. D. S. Jordan, 352
+
+
+ Udden, J. A. A Geological Romance*, 222
+
+
+ Varney, G. J. The Moon and the Weather. (Corr.), 118
+
+ Vegetation a Remedy against the Summer Heat of Cities. Dr. S.
+ Smith, 433
+
+
+ War, The "Hell" of. (Frag.), 718
+
+ Wave Length and other Measurements. (Frag.), 137
+
+ Wave Power, The Utilization of. (Frag.), 715
+
+ Weasels, Concerning. W. E. Cram*, 786
+
+ Weir, J., Jr. The Herds of the Yellow Ant*, 75
+
+ Wells, David Ames, Death of. (Table), 271
+
+ " " " Principles of Taxation, 319, 490, 736
+
+ West Indies, Physical Geography of. F. L. Oswald, 802
+
+ Wheat-growing Capacity of the United States. E. Atkinson, 145
+
+ Wheat Problem, The, again. E. Atkinson, 759
+
+ White Lady Mountain, The. (Frag.), 569
+
+ Whittle, C. L. The Science of Observation*, 456
+
+ Willis, C. W. The Mongoose in Jamaica*, 86
+
+ Wilson, L. L. W. Nature Study in the Philadelphia Normal School, 313
+
+ Winds of the Sahara. (Frag.), 717
+
+ Words of a Master. (Table), 699
+
+
+ Yellow Ant, The Herds of the. J. Weir, Jr.*, 75
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+
+Words surrounded by _ are italicized.
+
+Words surrounded by = are bold.
+
+Obvious printer's errors have been repaired, other inconsistent
+spellings have been kept, including inconsistent use of hyphen (e.g.
+"co-operative" and "cooperative") and capitalisation (e.g.
+"Fresh-Water" and "Fresh-water").
+
+Captions added to captionless illustrations.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Appletons' Popular Science Monthly,
+April 1899, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE, APRIL 1899 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 44544.txt or 44544.zip *****
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