Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 22 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 65002 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 66 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 Dr. 11 child 6 woman 6 life 6 Eugenics 5 mother 5 marriage 5 illustration 5 great 5 family 5 United 5 States 5 State 5 Professor 5 New 4 time 4 good 4 birth 4 Mr. 4 London 4 England 3 rate 3 race 3 parent 3 man 3 individual 3 form 3 condition 3 character 3 case 3 York 3 University 3 Nature 3 God 3 Galton 3 FIG 2 water 2 treatment 2 person 2 page 2 mental 2 mendelian 2 heredity 2 girl 2 fact 2 european 2 education 2 disease 2 day 2 cause Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 4388 child 3546 man 2984 woman 2036 case 1998 life 1917 time 1571 year 1523 family 1501 condition 1453 race 1427 mother 1395 number 1385 marriage 1290 birth 1281 fact 1273 individual 1253 character 1244 rate 1213 day 1211 parent 1129 part 1079 disease 1022 way 1011 result 971 person 956 law 951 age 838 generation 823 girl 820 form 806 people 790 hand 783 heredity 780 nature 778 body 772 question 767 class 758 one 745 effect 741 work 741 mind 729 world 728 animal 727 sex 715 thing 706 state 681 influence 679 water 679 matter 677 society Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 9339 _ 769 | 685 Dr. 496 C. 450 New 439 Mr. 432 England 395 IV 388 Professor 373 Mrs. 365 Eugenics 330 State 318 Sir 317 II 304 John 294 States 283 United 281 Vivian 267 C 263 Germany 262 Miss 254 bro 245 fa 245 London 236 France 231 F.R.S. 229 Society 226 York 217 University 211 English 207 Galton 201 H. 200 E. 192 J. 187 America 184 N. 183 . 181 et 175 W. 173 Europe 165 God 164 Royal 158 Social 156 Darwin 154 Nature 152 St. 152 III 149 L. 148 William 145 M. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 13646 it 5097 we 4705 they 3635 i 3380 he 2347 she 2249 them 2077 you 929 her 927 him 856 us 789 me 574 themselves 485 itself 341 one 340 himself 216 herself 151 ourselves 107 myself 70 yourself 33 yours 18 ''em 16 hers 12 ours 11 mine 10 ''s 9 theirs 8 thee 7 oneself 4 his 4 em 2 ye 2 limit.--poverty 1 | 1 yy 1 yourselves 1 you''re 1 years+ 1 whosoever 1 way.--when 1 valve.--this 1 traits:--they 1 thyself 1 thou 1 this:-- 1 these:-- 1 tend_.--they 1 talk,--they 1 pelf 1 key:-- Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 53389 be 12257 have 3573 do 2465 make 1803 say 1671 give 1637 find 1588 take 1546 see 1422 know 1360 show 1269 become 1098 come 987 bear 932 go 834 seem 768 follow 752 produce 715 use 690 think 679 bring 674 marry 661 keep 625 call 614 live 609 regard 596 appear 574 leave 574 get 573 increase 523 consider 522 begin 520 look 488 mean 487 put 475 let 445 hold 436 believe 433 remain 421 develop 420 work 415 lead 409 carry 408 affect 404 fall 403 grow 400 feel 398 need 395 exist 393 cause Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 8701 not 3539 more 2675 so 2556 other 2343 only 1962 great 1952 well 1877 very 1841 most 1825 many 1825 good 1786 such 1582 first 1564 much 1515 even 1504 as 1501 same 1415 high 1210 out 1171 large 1145 now 1055 then 1050 also 1040 up 1039 long 1029 social 1011 little 1007 less 970 far 935 own 929 young 888 human 886 mental 846 never 829 too 826 few 811 certain 802 often 801 however 796 thus 749 present 736 here 735 old 733 possible 727 new 721 always 695 still 687 necessary 669 natural 662 early Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 662 good 520 most 356 least 296 high 207 great 108 bad 76 low 72 Most 59 early 47 strong 45 slight 37 large 37 fine 36 noble 35 fit 32 late 30 small 29 simple 20 old 19 deep 18 poor 16 common 15 wise 14 near 14 full 13 young 13 weak 13 pure 13 eld 11 sure 9 easy 9 close 8 safe 8 mild 8 manif 8 long 8 holy 7 true 7 heavy 7 healthy 7 grave 7 able 6 l 6 happy 6 dear 5 sweet 5 fair 5 bright 4 wide 4 sharp Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1321 most 97 least 85 well 3 long 2 goethe 1 ¦ 1 soon 1 something,--most 1 near 1 lest 1 highest 1 greatest 1 eldest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 library.case.edu Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44948/44948-h/44948-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44948/44948-h.zip 1 http://library.case.edu/ksl/aboutus/organization/preservation 1 http://library.case.edu/digitalcase/datastreamDetail.aspx?PID=ksl:eugabs00&DSID=eugabs00.pdf Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 28 _ see _ 19 _ see also 16 _ is _ 15 child is not 11 children are not 10 children do not 9 child does not 8 women are not 8 women do not 7 _ are _ 7 man is not 7 rate is not 6 condition is not 6 marriage is not 6 men are not 6 men do not 6 rate is due 6 time is not 5 conditions are not 5 man does not 5 marriage does not 5 mother is not 5 rate is higher 5 women are more 4 case is over 4 character is due 4 character is not 4 child is more 4 children are often 4 children are usually 4 conditions do not 4 life is not 4 parent was epileptic 4 rate has not 4 rate is rapidly 4 rate is very 4 results are not 4 woman is not 4 women are so 3 _ does _ 3 _ have _ 3 _ is war 3 _ married _ 3 case is different 3 characters are not 3 characters is therefore 3 child has adenoids 3 child has broncho 3 child is usually 3 disease is not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 child is not only 3 mother is not strong 2 characters are not transmissible 2 child is not very 2 child was not breast 2 marriage is not necessarily 2 marriages are not desirable 2 men are not so 2 time is not far 2 woman is no longer 1 _ are no longer 1 _ are not _ 1 birth have no instinct 1 birth is not necessarily 1 births is not generally 1 case is no less 1 cases have no discoverable 1 child is not necessarily 1 child is not properly 1 child is not quite 1 child is not sick 1 child is not so 1 child knows no god 1 children are no comfort 1 children are not fit 1 children are not mentally 1 children are not necessarily 1 children are not objectionable 1 children are not quite 1 children are not sick 1 children are not theirs 1 children being not uncommon 1 children does not always 1 children had no influence 1 children have no time 1 condition is not common 1 condition is not contagious 1 condition is not diphtheria 1 condition is not satisfied 1 conditions are no better 1 conditions are not dissimilar 1 conditions are not just 1 conditions are not so 1 conditions are not wholly 1 conditions had not nature 1 conditions were not so 1 day taking no broadly 1 days saw no incongruity 1 disease is not nearly 1 disease is not only A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 47976 author = Baker, La Reine Helen McKenzie title = Race Improvement; or, Eugenics: A Little Book on a Great Subject date = keywords = Eugenics; Nature; State; child; eugenist; fact; good; life; marriage; mother; race; woman summary = regards race improvement as a desirable and practicable process. Thaw case forced on the public, the necessity for protecting children differences how on the present basis of marriage a nobler race may be Eugenics opposes chaos in the interests of the race. importance in the making of human life and character is heredity. existent biology of Eugenics means a study of non-human life. Race improvement requires, under modern conditions of life, welfare of the State by increasing the number of happy children growing institution we are only beginning the ideal of Eugenic life. weighed at all Eugenics would naturally favour fitness instead of sex women cannot be convinced that Eugenic reform is in the interests of of the best possible life for men and women must be added the Eugenic force upon the public the necessity of Eugenic experiments. the race interests demand that the child shall not suffer. id = 63432 author = Carter, Manfred A. title = Colony of the Unfit date = keywords = Dr.; Earth; Henderson; Hilda; Jake; John; Mars; Zingar summary = John Greely looked at Hilda''s freshly gloved, artificial hand, as John slipped on his transparent all-weather coat and helped Hilda with John drove past the old wooden houses of their small city and then let Hilda burst free from the second group of women and cried, "John! John and Hilda walked with the group of alcoholics and arrested Near Hilda and John walked Major Henry Mattson, a psychiatric casualty "I wonder where they''re taking us," said Hilda, clinging to John''s arm Hilda seized John''s arm in terror, as they felt faces, on slender bodied old men, before a gleaming mirror-like "Look, Hilda, there''s a new white spot on the wall. Hilda pointed to words in her lexicon and John wrote, John stepped quickly to the stretcher and ran his hands over Jake''s "But those sick ones--they are human!" cried Hilda to John, weeping. "The old man wouldn''t live that long," said Zingar quietly. id = 16254 author = Chapple, W. A. (William Allan) title = The Fertility of the Unfit date = keywords = CHAPTER; Malthus; New; State; Zealand; birth; child; family; increase; life; rate; year summary = those who do not limit.--Poverty and the Birth-rate.--Defectives Influence of self-restraint without continence.--Desire to limit families with prudence and self-control.--The limited family usually born in early that limits families is inhibition with prudence.--Defective self-control the great and increasing army of defectives constitutes the fit man''s operated to limit population--vice, misery, and moral restraint: vice, birth-rate is the desire on the part of both sexes to limit the number checks to increase, vice, misery, and moral restraint are operative in _Decline of birth-rates rapid and persistent.--Food cost in New _Decline of birth-rates rapid and persistent.--Food cost in New is stated that "The mean number of children borne by females married at _Fertility the law of life.--Man interprets and controls this _Fertility the law of life.--Man interprets and controls this moral force that limits families is inhibition with prudence.--Defective _Education of defectives in prudence and self-restraint of little id = 22090 author = Ellis, Havelock title = The Task of Social Hygiene date = keywords = Anglo; Dr.; Ellen; England; English; Eugenics; Europe; France; French; Germany; God; Hygiene; Individualism; International; Key; London; New; Relation; Russia; Social; Society; South; States; United; Vol; american; birth; child; european; great; life; marriage; rate; socialism; woman summary = of Life--Yet Social Reform Remains highly Necessary--The Question of Women''s Suffrage--Sex Questions in Germany--Bebel--The Woman''s Rights The New Movement for giving Sexual Instruction to Children--The Need of the Race--The Better Organization of Life Involved by Social The great movement of social reform during the nineteenth century, we It may be pointed out that this movement of practical social reform has The new Social Hygiene was for the first time rendered possible. birth-rate, the movement began to spread to Europe generally. the claim of natural and reasonable living in the social state towards At the same time the new movement of German women, however it may arise population of child-bearing age has a high birth-rate, considerably produces a far greater natural increase than a low birth-rate with a ascertain the birth-rate of married women at different age-periods (15 under the action of this law of social capillarity, and the birth-rate id = 9887 author = Ellis, Havelock title = Essays in War-Time: Further Studies in the Task of Social Hygiene date = keywords = America; Dr.; England; English; Europe; Feminism; France; Germany; God; Russia; Slave; State; War; White; birth; british; european; great; nature; rate; woman; world summary = From the point of view of literature, the Great War of to-day has The Great War of to-day has rendered acute the question of the place of warfare in Nature and the effect of war on the human race. primitive human races, and that war always will be an essential method highest civilisation the same rule holds good, that human war is the point of view, is a war of States which use military methods for special after war may create a stimulating influence on the birth-rate, leading victims of war for each civilised country during half a century, and that war with France was regarded as an English gentleman''s best method wage the present war if it had not been for the high German birth-rate France of a birth-rate higher than that of Germany to-day, the most it has been found possible to doubt whether the great War of to-day, when id = 11562 author = Galton, Francis title = Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development date = keywords = Africa; America; Anthropological; Appendix; Dr.; Fig; Footnote; Institute; Mr.; Number; Plate; Royal; Society; South; animal; case; different; english; family; find; form; illustration; large; man; mental; person; race; time summary = large number of weakly persons; some appearances of weakness likeness; cases of similar forms of insanity in both twins; the varied hereditary faculties of different men, and of the great The instincts and faculties of different men and races by different combinations of a large number of minute influences; and power of seeing mental pictures can nevertheless give life-like appears in one case with 56 in large figures upon it), the country case where each number in a Form seems to bear its own _weight_. associate colours with numbers, but there is a great difference in Number-Forms of different persons are mutually unintelligible. change from one form to another, in his case also for as long a time RELATIVE NUMBER OF ASSOCIATIONS FORMED AT DIFFERENT differences in natural dispositions of human races may in one case different persons possess the power of seeing images in their mind''s id = 17128 author = Galton, Francis title = Noteworthy Families (Modern Science) An Index to Kinships in Near Degrees between Persons Whose Achievements Are Honourable, and Have Been Publicly Recorded date = keywords = Biog; Charles; Coll; F.R.S.; General; George; Henry; Hon; John; London; Lord; President; Professor; Robert; Royal; Sir; University; William summary = _fa fa bro_, Sir John Bernard BOSANQUET (1773-1847), Judge of Common _fa bro son_, Thomas COTTERILL, third wrangler, 1832; fellow of St. John''s Coll., Cambridge; one of the earliest members of the London _me ½ bro son_, Charles Robert DARWIN, F.R.S., the naturalist.--See of the Royal Society; author of numerous works on geology, also _fa me me bro_, Sir Robert ABERCROMBY (1740-1827), General; Governor _bro son_, Joseph Jackson LISTER, F.R.S., biologist; Fellow of St. John''s Coll., Cambridge.--["Who''s Who."] _fa bro son_, Lieutenant-General Sir Edwin MARKHAM (b. _me bro son_, Right Hon. Sir Frederick MILNER, Bart. _me bro son_, Hon. Sir Henri Thomas TASCHEREAU (b. _bro son_, Charles William SCOTT, engineer to Irish Lights Board. _fa bro son_, Edward William SCOTT, General Bengal Artillery; for _me bro_, William Bindon BLOOD, Professor of Engineering; author of _me bro son_, Sir Bindon BLOOD (b. _wife''s me bro son_, Sir Henry Meredith PLOWDEN, Senior Judge of id = 38551 author = Gilman, Charlotte Perkins title = The Crux: A Novel date = keywords = Bellair; Cloud; Dr.; Dykeman; Elder; Grandma; Hale; Lane; Miss; Morton; Mr.; Mrs.; Orella; Pettigrew; Skee; St.; Susie; Vivian summary = "My daughter, Vivian, Mrs. Williams," said her mother; and the other mother said quietly, "A girl''s place is at home--''till she marries." "You''re going to see your Saint--I know!" said Miss Susie, tossing her "I do hope, Viva," said her mother, "that you''re not letting that Dr. Bellair put foolish ideas into your head." "I have some real good friends--boys, I mean," Susie agreed, looking "I don''t see what this has to do with going to Colorado," said Mrs. Pettigrew, looking from one to the other with a keen, observing eye. Good evening, Mrs. Pettigrew--and Miss Susie. "I think you''re dead right, Mrs. Pettigrew," said Dr. Bellair. particularly wants you, Mrs. Pettigrew--and Miss Elder--the girls, of Mrs. Pettigrew insisted on playing with Miss Elder, so Vivian had the "Come out into the dining-room," said Miss Orella, after Dr. Hale had "My dear Miss Elder!" she said, coming forward; "and Vivian! id = 39751 author = Guyer, Michael F. (Michael Frederic) title = Being Well-Born: An Introduction to Eugenics date = keywords = Doctor; FIG; Heredity; New; States; United; York; case; cell; character; child; chromosome; condition; feeble; form; generation; germ; illustration; individual; inheritance; mendelian; mental; normal; parent summary = apart of the germ-cells--Individuality of chromosomes--Pairs of conditions in man--Breeding out defects--Other inheritable general not specific--Certain characters inexplicable as inherited =Parent Body and Germ Not Identical.--=Inasmuch as each new individual gives rise to a series of new germ-cells which reside in that individual, germ-cells coming as they do from two individuals, one the male, the other germ-cells in successive generations of individuals. forms that produce a new individual from the union of two germ-cells, one would bear germ-cells carrying the determiner of one character and half, the mature germ-cells of the male carry the black-producing factor, and germ-cell may contain chromosomes from each of the original parents but in many cases of defect or susceptibility to disease, a given individual For example, a normal individual carrying a recessive defect will bear =Effects of Body on Germ-Cells General, Not Specific.--=As far as the in a germ-cell which determines the development of a particular character id = 19594 author = Hague, W. Grant (William Grant) title = The Eugenic Marriage, Volume 1 (of 4) A Personal Guide to the New Science of Better Living and Better Babies date = keywords = Dr.; III; New; York; baby; care; child; confinement; education; eugenic; labor; mother; nurse; page; physician; time; treatment; woman summary = Diet, of nursing mother, I, 121; of the pregnant woman, I, 77; of sick Mother, the cheerful, III, 400; education of the, II, 277; existence of the woman stay in bed after confinement--Why do physicians permit women to get menstruating--Care of breasts while weaning child--Nervous nursing mothers of the race "tango" their time, their morals, and their vitality No mother should work, because in the care of her children she is already The eugenic education of children is the real beginning at LABOR--MANAGEMENT OF ACTUAL BIRTH OF CHILD--POSITION OF WOMAN DURING race that mothers do feel this way: and it is good for all concerned that during which time the patient is confined to bed. A mother who nurses her child beyond that period is not A mother therefore must be in good physical and mental health if she certain time each day, immediately after a nursing when baby is likely to id = 21418 author = Hague, W. Grant (William Grant) title = The Eugenic Marriage, Volume 4 (of 4) A Personal Guide to the New Science of Better Living and Better Babies date = keywords = Department; acute; cause; child; cold; condition; day; disease; ear; fever; good; mother; patient; time; treatment; water summary = persistent vomiting--Acute intestinal diseases of children-be followed by a cold--for example, taking the child from a warm room to fever, in which case a physician should look the child over and Cough in an infant or growing child is usually the result of a cold and Treatment of an Acute Attack of Tonsilitis.--Put the child in bed at child is fed for twenty-four hours too long on milk, the condition which A child suffering from this disease presents the following the fever is high and the skin dry, the child should be given a cool giving the infant or child a large drink of cool boiled water. caused by conditions which effect the stability of the child''s nervous Treatment of an Acute Attack.--The child should be put in bed and kept caught the disease, and the time when the child is taken sick. id = 34299 author = Holbrook, M. L. (Martin Luther) title = Homo-Culture; Or, The Improvement of Offspring Through Wiser Generation date = keywords = Darwin; Dr.; Mr.; Page; Plato; Professor; Spencer; State; Weismann; character; child; great; heredity; life; marriage; offspring; parent; race; sexual summary = Life''s Experiences Affecting Child; Germ-plasm; Congenital the Mother-cell Necessary to Produce True Germ-plasm; What Statistics as to Ages of Parents of Finest Children; Effects of Alcohol on Offspring; Food and the Germ-plasm; Effect Darwin''s Opinions; Race Modifications by Natural Selection; children, the congenial offspring of excellent parents." The principles mothers nursing their own children; nature, by providing them with two unions between first cousins are advisable depends, as appears from Mr. Huth''s remarks, on considerations which affect the question generally. communicate the highest physical and mental characters to her offspring. AN ILLUSTRATIVE CASE.--How great is the influence on unborn offspring LIFE''S EXPERIENCES AFFECTING CHILD.--Unless characteristics acquired by effects on offspring, causing deterioration of the organic disposition natural question arises in the mind: Are the children of those who live human children have no time to know or learn her ways. Parental life, influence of, over offspring, 95 id = 44948 author = International Eugenics Congress (1st : 1912 : London) title = Abstracts of Papers Read at the First International Eugenics Congress University of London, July, 1912 date = keywords = Abstract; Committee; Congress; Darwin; Dr.; Eugenics; Galton; Inheritance; London; Mortality; Professor; University; birth; child; family; figure; indian; sidenote summary = that the number of children born is less and their mortality greater Birth-curve, general, and that for Feeble-minded Children compared, C. Birth and Death Rates and Infant Mortality, relation between, H. Children, _see also_ Infant Mortality, Numbers, Numerical Position, &c. of Children, in relation to Age at Death of Parents, C. A Non-tuberculous families, number of children surviving 20th year. +Average number of children in each generation; the families being influence on infant mortality, only in families with twelve children or Relation of Number of Births to Infant Mortality. Influence of the Number of Births and the Age of the Parents at the Influence of the Number of Children Born to a Family on Infant +Number of children and child mortality+: Bluhm adds:--"Figure C 121, "+The Number of Children in Families of Different Classes in C 121, "+The Number of Children in Families of Different Classes in id = 31705 author = Kellicott, William E. (William Erskine) title = The Social Direction of Evolution: An Outline of the Science of Eugenics date = keywords = Eugenics; Eugenist; FIG; Galton; Nature; Pearson; States; United; fact; family; heredity; illustration; individual; mendelian summary = the mere fact of the possibility of a natural increase of human large group of any organisms usually gives a result of the kind large group of men the amount of individual variation from the average the life of the State the character of the general average of the bearings of the facts of human heredity upon the possibility of the generation; each individual forms a single kind of germ human unit characters whose heredity has been traced and which have Human heredity involves both physical and psychical characters--both chief object, is to be able to state the facts of human heredity in certain facts of heredity is still useful in this bio-social field. general law of heredity--again, an individual case may belong to a the race; facts regarding human heredity of normal and pathological The facts of heredity stated in the statistical form of averages and id = 35417 author = Nearing, Scott title = The Super Race: An American Problem date = keywords = Adjustment; Eugenics; Man; Race; Social; States; Super; United summary = future may boast a society of men and women possessing the qualities of possess the qualities of the Super Man--physical normality, mental the hereditary qualities of the Super Man, provided through eugenic Hence, Eugenics, Social Adjustment and Education are sciences, Thus the distinctive qualities of the Super Man appear in the past with an Positive Eugenics is the science of race building through wise mating. other races have done, or progress toward the Super Man. The science of social gardening--Social Adjustment--has been given a great Eugenics provides the hereditary qualities of the Super Man; Social shall the individual express, through Eugenics, Social Adjustment, and develop the qualities of the Super Man? The Super Race is the produce of heredity, of social environment, and of the development of the Super Race in the United States to-day than there determining the development of a Super Race, the United States possesses id = 13444 author = Nichols, J. L. (James Lawrence) title = Searchlights on Health: The Science of Eugenics date = keywords = Children; Dr.; God; Men; Miss; Treatment; avoid; bad; care; cause; character; child; condition; day; disease; form; fresh; girl; good; great; hand; health; home; hot; illustration; lady; life; little; love; man; marriage; marry; mind; mother; page; parent; person; remedy; right; rule; self; time; water; wife; woman; word; young summary = Home Treatments for the Diseases of Infants and Children, page 338 How to Apply and Use Hot Water in All Diseases, page 368 A true woman loving one man will speak well of all 1. Women naturally love courage, force and firmness in men. 1. FEMALE BEAUTY.--Men love beautiful women, for woman''s beauty is and good and pure conduct awaken a man''s love for women. want good and pure children, and it is natural to select women who 1. Marriage is the natural state of man and woman. 2. If a good pure-minded man does not marry, he will suffer no serious Let the young man be pure in heart like Men by nature love virtue, and for a life 4. THE TIME FOR MARRIAGE.--When a young man''s means permit him to 9. Give the baby a little cold water several times a day. id = 35244 author = Pollock, Horatio M. (Horatio Milo) title = Eugenics as a Factor in the Prevention of Mental Disease date = keywords = Committee; Dr.; Hygiene; Mental summary = The National Committee for Mental Hygiene The National Committee for Mental Hygiene and its affiliated state organized work in mental hygiene, the importance of the movement at once mental disease under treatment in institutions increased from 74,028 in States on account of mental disease, including loss of earnings as well as mental disease must be carefully studied before the related family stock QUARTERLY MAGAZINE OF THE NATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR MENTAL HYGIENE, INC. Committee for Mental Hygiene_ Mental Hygiene Problems of Normal Adolescence _Jessie Taft_ 741 Eugenics as a Factor in the Prevention of Mental Disease Eugenics as a Factor in the Prevention of Mental Disease Eugenics as a Factor in the Prevention of Mental Disease A Psychological Study of Some Mental Defects in the Normal Members and Directors of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene 895 Y., or to The National Committee for Mental Hygiene, Inc., 370 Seventh id = 19560 author = Popenoe, Paul title = Applied Eugenics date = keywords = College; Dr.; England; Eugenics; FIG; Galton; Heredity; Journal; Karl; London; Negro; New; Pearson; Professor; States; United; University; York; american; child; family; illustration; man summary = We assume that in general, a eugenically superior or desirable person but we women know what effects prenatal influence works on children." feeble-minded person mates with a normal individual, in whose family no depend on a large number of different factors, a man''s size being due to studying heredity may offer results of great value to eugenics, even individual marriages, it is yet of great value to applied eugenics. selection in man has probably done little to cause marked change in his the average number of children in the lowest class families is 5.44. character of the population, and from a eugenic point of view changing cases_ be best that no children result from such a marriage. and women may excel mentally in very many different ways, and eugenics, The average number of children per married man was to 1870, remained single; the average number of children per married man id = 19848 author = Saleeby, C. W. (Caleb Williams) title = Woman and Womanhood: A Search for Principles date = keywords = Dr.; England; Gilman; Mr.; Mrs.; Nature; Professor; Spencer; State; case; child; education; future; girl; good; great; high; individual; life; marriage; mother; present; sex; woman; womanhood summary = future lives of men and women, entrusted to her ante-natal care by their women as individuals, and their still greater natural differences as importance of the woman question for the composition of the coming race, woman''s case at the present time, but I have endeavoured to state it inferior women to constitute half of all future generations, shall on accepting and applying to human life Nature''s great principle of the differences between men and women except that, as Plato declared, woman that it is the mother who determines the sex of her children in the case marriage and provide far more natural and desirable conditions under natural fact of human kind, and destroys infant life everywhere, though marriage, so that the best women shall become the mothers of the future, men, women and children, present and to come. not merely for the women of the present but for both sexes in the