[30]Auerbach, 1898, p. 211.
[30]Auerbach, 1898, p. 211.
[31]1891, p. 30. Dr. Bassanovitch has most courteously sent me a sketch map showing the results of these researches. Deniker, 1897, p. 203, and 1898 a, describes them also.
[31]1891, p. 30. Dr. Bassanovitch has most courteously sent me a sketch map showing the results of these researches. Deniker, 1897, p. 203, and 1898 a, describes them also.
[32]Deniker, 1898 a, p. 122; Weisbach, 1877, p. 238; Rosny, 1885, p. 85.
[32]Deniker, 1898 a, p. 122; Weisbach, 1877, p. 238; Rosny, 1885, p. 85.
[33]1879, p. 233.
[33]1879, p. 233.
[34]1893, p. 282.
[34]1893, p. 282.
[35]Popular Science Monthly, October, 1898, p. 734.
[35]Popular Science Monthly, October, 1898, p. 734.
[36]1891, p. 31. Women dolicho-, twenty-five per cent; meso-, forty-two per cent; brachy-cephalic, thirty per cent; while among men the percentages are 3, 16, and 81 ± per cent respectively.
[36]1891, p. 31. Women dolicho-, twenty-five per cent; meso-, forty-two per cent; brachy-cephalic, thirty per cent; while among men the percentages are 3, 16, and 81 ± per cent respectively.
[37]Popular Science Monthly, January, 1899, p. 350.
[37]Popular Science Monthly, January, 1899, p. 350.
[38]Bassanovitch's series of 1,955 individuals averages only 1.638 metre.Op. cit., p. 30. Auerbach, 1898, p. 259, gives an average of 1.63 metre for 880 Wallachians in Transylvania. Obédénare, 1876, p. 374, states brown eyes to be most frequent in Roumania.
[38]Bassanovitch's series of 1,955 individuals averages only 1.638 metre.Op. cit., p. 30. Auerbach, 1898, p. 259, gives an average of 1.63 metre for 880 Wallachians in Transylvania. Obédénare, 1876, p. 374, states brown eyes to be most frequent in Roumania.
[39]This table of statistics need not be quoted here in full. The following section, embracing the ten years prior to 1889 and including 1884, will suffice:Year.Date quota filled.Hauling grounds driven.Number of drives.Killed on land.Killed at sea.1879167136110,4118,5571880177838105,7188,4181881209934105,06310,382188220863699,81215,551188319813979,50916,55718842110142105,43416,97118852710663105,02423,04018862611774104,52128,49418872410166105,76030,62818882710273103,30426,18918898111074102,61729,858
[39]This table of statistics need not be quoted here in full. The following section, embracing the ten years prior to 1889 and including 1884, will suffice:
Year.Date quota filled.Hauling grounds driven.Number of drives.Killed on land.Killed at sea.1879167136110,4118,5571880177838105,7188,4181881209934105,06310,382188220863699,81215,551188319813979,50916,55718842110142105,43416,97118852710663105,02423,04018862611774104,52128,49418872410166105,76030,62818882710273103,30426,18918898111074102,61729,858
[40]An address to the students of Mason University College, Birmingham, at the opening of the session, October 4, 1898.
[40]An address to the students of Mason University College, Birmingham, at the opening of the session, October 4, 1898.
[41]Pascal Duprat, born at Hagetman (Department of the Landes), March 24, 1816, was professor of history at Algiers and at Paris. He took the direction of theRevue independantein 1847; founded with Lamennais the journalLe Peuple constituant, and was an ardent promoter of the Revolution of 1848. Having became a member of the National Assembly, he opposed thecoup d'étatof Louis Napoleon Bonaparte. Being obliged in consequence of this act to exile himself, he retired to Belgium and afterward to Lausanne. He did not return to France till after the war of 1870, and died in August, 1885. The most interesting of his works is the Historical Essay on the Races of Africa (Essai historique sur les Races de l'Afrique, 1845).
[41]Pascal Duprat, born at Hagetman (Department of the Landes), March 24, 1816, was professor of history at Algiers and at Paris. He took the direction of theRevue independantein 1847; founded with Lamennais the journalLe Peuple constituant, and was an ardent promoter of the Revolution of 1848. Having became a member of the National Assembly, he opposed thecoup d'étatof Louis Napoleon Bonaparte. Being obliged in consequence of this act to exile himself, he retired to Belgium and afterward to Lausanne. He did not return to France till after the war of 1870, and died in August, 1885. The most interesting of his works is the Historical Essay on the Races of Africa (Essai historique sur les Races de l'Afrique, 1845).
[42]Les Singes domestiques. Paris, 1886.
[42]Les Singes domestiques. Paris, 1886.
[43]Sketch of the Evolution of our Native Fruits. By L. H. Bailey, New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 472. Price, $2.
[43]Sketch of the Evolution of our Native Fruits. By L. H. Bailey, New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 472. Price, $2.
[44]The Tides; and Kindred Phenomena in the Solar System. The Lowell Institute Lectures for 1898. By George Howard Darwin. New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. Pp. 378. $2.
[44]The Tides; and Kindred Phenomena in the Solar System. The Lowell Institute Lectures for 1898. By George Howard Darwin. New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. Pp. 378. $2.
[45]Elementary Zoölogy. By Frank E. Beddard. New York: Longmans, Green & Co. Pp. 208. Price, 90 cents.
[45]Elementary Zoölogy. By Frank E. Beddard. New York: Longmans, Green & Co. Pp. 208. Price, 90 cents.
[46]An Introductory Logic. By James Edwin Creighton. New York: The Macmillan Company, pp. 392. $1.10.
[46]An Introductory Logic. By James Edwin Creighton. New York: The Macmillan Company, pp. 392. $1.10.
[47]The Workers: an Experiment in Reality. The West. By Walter A. Wyckoff. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Pp. 878. $1.50.
[47]The Workers: an Experiment in Reality. The West. By Walter A. Wyckoff. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Pp. 878. $1.50.
[48]Manual of Determinative Mineralogy, with an Introduction on Blowpipe Analysis. By George J. Brush. Revised and enlarged, with entirely new tables for the identification of minerals. Fifteenth edition, first thousand. New York: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 312.
[48]Manual of Determinative Mineralogy, with an Introduction on Blowpipe Analysis. By George J. Brush. Revised and enlarged, with entirely new tables for the identification of minerals. Fifteenth edition, first thousand. New York: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 312.
[49]A Manual of Chemical Analysis, Qualitative and Quantitative. By G. S. Newth. New York: Longmans, Green & Co., pp. 462. $1.75.
[49]A Manual of Chemical Analysis, Qualitative and Quantitative. By G. S. Newth. New York: Longmans, Green & Co., pp. 462. $1.75.
[50]Human Immortality. Two Supposed Objections to the Doctrine. By William James. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., pp. 70. $1.
[50]Human Immortality. Two Supposed Objections to the Doctrine. By William James. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., pp. 70. $1.
Transcriber's Notes:Obvious printer's errors have been repaired, other inconsistent spellings have been kept, including inconsistent use of hyphen (e.g. "newcomers" and "new-comers").Some illustrations were relocated to correspond to their references in the text.
Obvious printer's errors have been repaired, other inconsistent spellings have been kept, including inconsistent use of hyphen (e.g. "newcomers" and "new-comers").
Some illustrations were relocated to correspond to their references in the text.