[44] Op. cit., pp. 47 et seq.
[45] Op. cit., pp. 36-117.
[46] Papers in Penology, 1891, pp. 57-69; cf. Collin, also in same, pp. 27, 28; Wright, American Journal of Neurology and Psychiatry, vols. ii and iii, pp. 135 et seq.
[47] A Measure of Mental Capacity, Popular Science Monthly, vol. xlix, p. 758.
[48] Op. cit.
[49] Pedagogical Seminary, vol. iii, pp. 213 et seq.
[50] Donaldson, The Growth of the Brain, chapters ix to xiii.
[51] Cf. Sidis, The Psychology of Suggestion; and Vernon Lee and C. A. Thompson, Beauty and Ugliness, Contemporary Review, vol. lxxii, pp. 544-569 and 669-688.
[52] Max West, in North American Review, May, 1897, p. 635.
[53] The word cadastre was derived from the Latin capitastrum, or register of capita, griga, or units of territorial taxation into which the Roman provinces were divided for the purposes of capitatio terrena, or land tax. It is of modern use and is locally found in Louisiana.