Dublin Core
Title
"Phrenological Character of George W. Gardner, given at Fowler & Wells' Phrenological Cabinet, January 29th, 1894"
Subject
Phrenology.; Gardner, George Washington, 1862-1934.
Description
Top-stapled document of 19 pages detailing a phrenological exam performed on George W. Gardner by the Fowler & Wells Phrenological Cabinet on June 29th, 1894, at No. 27 East 21st Street, New York. The Practical Phrenologist who performed the exam is Nelson Sizer.
Creator
Fowler & Wells Phrenological Cabinet
Source
Gardner-Hannah Family.
Publisher
Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)
Date
June 29, 1894
Contributor
Digital surrogate item from privately held collection.
Rights
This image may be protected by copyright law. Contact the Traverse Area District Library for permission to reproduce, display or transmit this image.
Relation
Part of the Gardner-Hannah Family Collection.
Format
PDF
Language
English.
Type
Document
Identifier
ph0076
Coverage
New York, New York
PDF Text
Text
I
PRINCIPLES OF PHFENOLOGY.
/
i:!Eii§:i;;8r:i°i:,:::::t:;;j3y:t:h;§a:i:r:a::;ii:e;;;a;;je:;:::n:;iGj§::iiei:;:o;:;:::;;:Sfi:;::;:;§jy:j£:::i:eT
than
3.
4.
`The
;ii¥::]So;a`i¥j68£;€¥::£iiin:Si]izi:?°:Eteh];ggo±±3nfaTu%ai,:tt;a:SIP:e;ij[g;;8r§:on::::c::pdborfi[i
Fowler&WellsCo.,PublisherB,87East81stStreet,NewYorko
ifiE± dr,I t\``^jrfeSaeB±EEEEE=x ~~,A
z
Jam . 29 ,1894 .
8.
£e:¥dpfepE:ir:a:t§£t£:ie£:t:h:;:n£#fg£[3ngi:Yr:uuEi.iey+:a`nu6era-o~ai-fi6dbypr-opertraining,
Fowler&WellsCo.,Publishers,87East81stStreebNewY\orko
tTan . 29 ,189 4 .
G
.
8.
W
.
G A R D IJ F. R
.
----- L--0 0 ;I_?8 0 a ------
YOLi. have a large heacl; ?,31/4 is lar.g`e
enou.gil for a man wj'io weighs 180;. anc'l the distance fr.orr_I the opening' o±` the ear over. tjre toll
is 14 3/4, and you should try to make yowl. body
a]] tliat belongs to it.
If yQi will wear. bo()t,s wrien yChi get back
to }¥{innesota,the bony ankle,that has not im.icri
but bone in it,wi]] be sul.rounded by a section
of warm air that wi]] keeij ttLc b]ootl flowing
as freely as I.ray be back and I.or.tJi and relieve
your kidneys from congestion,youi. liver. I.I.an
congestion,your stomach t'md i)rain fro}?I a2 ngcs-
tion,ancl make you feel bette.r in evci.y way.
It `t'/as a great, mist,ake when tire Knicker.-
2
bocker.s carne in that they f orgot to put on
boots sucji as they used to ljiJear bef ore. Fort,y
years ago a litt,le 1`]oy expected his boots at
Christmas, and €3ot tliei[i, ancl the papers used to
maJre a JlttJe Christrrias boy showing the boots
to J'iis grandpa, ancl sJio\i/ing his boots on the
str.eet to anybocly l[ic met, he was so tickled
Tit 11
t heJ`,1,
In cold climates, it is very lmicll bettor
to have tile ankle scr'eened; ever.yw±`iere c]se
we al-.e scr'eened by a dozen tjiicknesses; lJut
just \.`rhel.e i-.i,'e need it
tlte most .`f;c scr.eon tJre
least. :`Iow, if you iiri]]
just obey that sugges-
tion wlien you get back to the nor.th,gettini5' a
pair of boots made f or. cold weather -the.v need
not be coarse ttiings -a morocco or calf-skin
bootleg is good enough, anc-i it `.vil] keep tne
blood I`l (]T'7in{,;` mor.e freely.
I had a boy under rriy liands wlio had a 2?, inch
head, ancl }ie was t,welve years old and weighed
seventy pc>unds.
I or.der.ed hot)ts on I.Tim, and
1,lie motjier was scared,and glad to ch
it;
arid in
five montjis time the boy had gained seven pounds
one
tent+1 of his weight; that Tvchi]d l>e equal
t,a seventeen pounds for 3/-ou. Pjut I do
not 1.Irant
you t,o get much heavier;I want you to li.ave
more fr.ee circulation. 'j.Tliis won.lan to]¢i ine
t,liat two of .rier boys Jiad g]ne to tile grave
just as tl-1 is boy was facling away,arid I could
ha,ve saved theiil if I had seen tlrem.
I:e liad o+r`.
a merino sock whicli ]otjked pretty,like an altar
boy's sock; 1iis mothpier may have
thougJ`Lt ±ie mic;ht
sneak into heaven as an altar boy. But it suited her fancy and it pleased people, arid s!ie was
ki]]ingherboys off one at a time.
I\,rowt+Tat
;
I
]itl;le boy, sul]i.)opting a 22 i}ich head,ought to
have weiglted 150 f or the size of 1.tis heacl.
1;ven lie,to st,art
witli,in
tile middle
of winte.I.,
by givin£5 liis blood free circulation, went to
wor`j`: and gained one-tentl-i part of tJie whole ,
#£
weigli.t in five montJng, which is equivalent to
twenty five per.cent per. annurri. Then there is
less
liability
to congest,ion somet,imes wlien a
person is in a ho-I, controversy.
If the blood
cannot go to the feet wjten the heart is pumping very we]] , it will
go vrhere it will go the
easiest,
lJo.v./, you are a 8ooil tjiin-ken; `you are as sound
as a do]]ar; ancl if you I-`.ad a good education
:tyrou could talk I ike a book.11. I c ould wave
lay hand ancl €r3ive `you a university education
witlt a lai,.ryer.'s license or adriission at the lJar,
I .iyould do it for ycu; because with the r.igj`it
previous and subsequent education,tiiat brain of
your.s,1.nfit:o as good a bocly as you 1`Lave under.` it,
`ttTch.}Jd nrake you known and respected.
You have
good nature,kindness,justice,se]f-
r.espect; but, you have scope arul gr.ip of intel-
lect,the desire to know, and the power. to find
out,and the ap|Jr'eciation of it when you get it;
ancl,last but not least,the power to talk it
back.
They take scra|J ir.on izito a f oundr.y,
ant-i send it out in tjrie sha|Je of Cook stoves
or. ]ocoriiotive castings.
In ot,her words, you
ge.. facts and '\',fork them up into new material.
You have Jar.ge IIuman Nature, whic±i judges af
str.anger.s, i.thicli is anxit>us to
know men; alrd
ill you were in a pinch, you would know the right
man to select. For instance, if yt-ju were a thou-
sand mi]r,]s from home with no te]egrapJts,you
cuu]d work out and vJork t±moi,idi; and ir it v.rere
necessar.y for y()u any time, you I,a/c>ul a lot)k into
a ®mpanv of` twenty men,and t,rou l.youlci I)ick out
a man who wouJ d lend you money enough to get
you home,
and +Lie itircu]d think lie rmist.
If you
Wer.e Sitting in a rail car ancl it wits 11+ot `,I,rea-
thc3r.,
and tlielre wer.e sinfj]e seats along Wit!i
one }Tlan in eacii, arid i.ron saw a dozen men Com-
ing in,you would say,"F.very one of us liave got
to take somebody
to sit witli us; I don't ]ikc it`L
biJ.t when you see you have to d() it,tiien you
begin t,o look out ol` t,±te
would please to
rrian out.
car to see. wh(Jln :ou
take,and ychi would fisl~i `ycmr.
I dicl that way in Pl'ii]adelpliia once,
ancl before I a-ot
to
}`Tewark,I ±`ound I;'ry' inan 'i]Jas
tile President of the First Natiolra] Bank; he
7
was ruling elder in the First Presbyterian
cliurcli.; l'ie was state senator;
ancl ric was pr.esi-
tlent of t±-ie State Temperance Association -one
of the nicest gcnt]emen -lie totjk my hand in
both his and was hal)I)y to thirck we had met; and
I a(hoitted him I.rch.I necessity, but he was a
goocl feJ]ow; tlien I saw he was a superior man,
and I dicl my best t() make him feel at home and
that Jie had not made a mist,ake in acce|]t ing the
invitation. That is tjie know]ed&re of human
character that, enables a man to Oho()se tile right
one, just as a dog who has lost his master
wi]] g`o int,o a bar-room or railroad station
-f,Jj'ier.e there are twentitt men,and sniff around
aird select
goitre I:ran and T7afj his i,b'e]ccme and
sit doi,I/n i,here ancl talk to liil-+`i, as muclt as to
say,"]v+ow,I am a good dog if. `you t,I.eat, me riglit;
8
if you want a dog,I am your. dog to go j'iol.rie will;h
.vou". And he wi]]
`i,1iat cr.owd,
picJ7L Gut
the best r`fian in
and the rficn it.ri]]
say so; he may be
•.+
an old 1.i`,Tsty looking farmeri,but he is "do{¥natic'.'
You have ]arg.e Constmctiveness and Idea]ity,
ant..1 these would make you a good Architect.
You like to construct solnething Jar.ge and €en-
er.ous,that has an o|)en door t,hat swings inward,
as the writers say.
i}ut, you sli.ou]ci t,alk,you
should vi/rite, you should cb
the thinking for
ol,her' people; and if y(in wel.e a lawyer and a
scliolar,y(]u would 1,alk to a jur.y,so t,hat wlien
peo|.1c knew ytn.I were speaking at, tj+re Co\irt, :-±ouse
H]ercfiants would leave t+`Leir clerks in Charge t]f
the
storte and go over. i.o liear. l|.o\Jr it was going;
and when you got thr.ough,tjiey if,rould €p
I`ind out 1-,he verclict to-morrow. ,
back and
You believe in tJie do]]ar, and tJ-ie clo]]ar
is rriialitiel' in }rt)ur fist tl.Lan it is in that of
ltiany, because you would know liow to use it.
You \t,till
€3enera]]y inix up with tt`Lat I,i/hicli all.iounts
to something and is respectaU]e; and if you
Jived in a neighborhood card had a ]itt]e money
s(i tliat yt-u would put in sometlling wit,Ii enter.-
pr.iscs but not ver.y mich, so that tliey did not
\,`/ant yQi for you.r. money,but ycni had cnoui;Ji to
go in a ]itt]e, t+len tl`.ey would lmke you Pr.esi-
cient or. Treasurer. if tliey wanted it, and one of
tjl`.e Board of Dir.ectors;
ttiey yTou]d want you to
itiix in T'rith tlic cooci cr.owd. You liave no birsincss
to be a slouch; you have no business to be a
1`ailur.e; you ought to be a success; axes do not
always have an intimat.e acquaintance with
tile
{j;i'.ind stone (namely the scliooll'.louse) ,biL;.t,
tile
JO
stuff is tJiere ir`i I,iany an ere, aruLi `you tnve it
in you; all it needs is to be grouncl and handlLicl ri£-'3htly.
Then t,hc tr.ees wi]] pay respect
t 0 y Ou.
You have ]arige Caution,which rerider's you
Ti-at chful , anxi t>us , fi+uarded , care ful . Cons c i ere e
makes yoii tru`i,hful and upright, but you do ntjt
always te]] a]]
the tr.utli you know; i±` a man
asks you a question that iyoi.i have no business
to
tell, and he I.`Las no rif3Jlt to
ask you,you
say,"We]] ,i,That makes yoii ask me that;I liave been
thinking abcut t!`iat
question some ±`or tl`ie
last fey/ weeks, and I liave sonetimes thougJ`it
I s]iould like to know; but I have not asked."
Yet you have the invitation in your' |iocket.
It, is none of theii. business; you clo not tcl]
a falsehood, but, tjie|`r clo not got tl-re tmth out
t,,`--------------I
JJ
of you because they have no business to have
it,
You ape not qu.ite as large as I would iirake
you in Self.-esteem if I could. I would give you
a ]itt]e more of tile su|)r.eme independence.
I 'vi//;u]cl give you more ol` tliat feeling wliich
sometimes ii,Ire think a Inn lias after he l`ias CcFTjne
intci a mi]]ion
tries not to
dollars;
i±` he
is
sensible,jie
show it, but soirrehow lie i`ee]s
v,rlien.he butt,ons up his over.coat as if lie could
have anot+rier. wli.en that vTas usecl up.
A little
more assurance you want.
Yoti. have Combativeness and Destructiveness
enough to make }rou asser.t your.self' wlien you
£:et warmed up.
In tl`ie micldle o]` an ar'gril-i.lent
in Court;, ill y(]u were a I awyer,you 1,iroult--i begin
to interrogate a]] crest,ion,and look as :i±` yc>u
Jiad a I.i£#it I'or. an answer; l]ut you \,trouJd not
st,ar.t
big.
A]imentiveness is large; ycni do like t,o hcave
things cor]ked well and to have eirotjgti o±` it;
and you ar.e a ]iber.a] provider,especia]]y a
]iber'a]
server. at the table; I,4.'lien yoii
ar.e
car.ving, pcop]e get more tl`[an they think tjiey
need, some of tliem;
and s(metimes you wi]] see
peo|]le cat sic)wly a.ncl rliilicing]y for. fear it
wi]]
i;3ive
out, n.ot knowing whetl.`ier tl`[cy are
a.oing to get any more, ancl not want,ing t,o seem
I,o need nor.e,they ar.e ashamed to eat more;
ljt-,.i. if it is |ii]ett ont,o
their. p]€Lte tjiey
it and ask no questions; yt)u wi]]
go
£3`ener.a]]y
i;ive them enough. For. instance,you would give
a modest per.son enough, one wl'io,y(iu t,}iought,
would not accept any lnore
i±` ?rou ()f±.erect it,
J5
|Jut it, t,jier.e and they would say nothing and
keeij wor.king at it,eat to save it.
You like to
liave enou{3h your.se]f', ancl your Benevolence is
large,and thei-.efore you I ike to have otlier
people have enoudi.
I notice the hair. is i+jetting grey on your
]3enevo]ence and on your. IIope;
st>metimes it
does g`et grey in spots. A ]!-lan l`Lad a white spot
about tv,ro incrLes in clialneter at t±iL> extema]
col.ners c`tf the Jiead wlier.e Caution is located;
iL was so i.7hite it was a mark a]] over, and
I,]iei.e was not a grt`y hair elsewhere. I asked
Ji,his man,"Wer.e you in imninent -peril ol` your.
]il`e a]] ni{J5lit,l`ianc;ing onto tjre yards
sel
of` a ves-
di|JrJii'lg` into t,jie water and tLralf. dr.o\mintj
•;vrou?
|s that what is t„[re rna.t,ter vritll your. {3r.ey
ILair on your. CautioiL?
" I[e ]ookecl up ancl said,
''No:
I hun(_; six hour.s on t,he keel ol-` a boat
all night, an(11,he week after. my hair. was wl-iite."
=!e thou{3li[t
tl`,at was a pr`ett,y good hit.
I only
LtJJi, i.he i.i'rolic t,hill.g to l\ang ont, o, but, he `iras
fian£.ing on a]] the same.
You Jove life; yori want
to hang on as long
as you can.
You love chi]dr'en, and tlrey like y()u.
You are a £=ooc'i fi..icrld; i-'rierids ]ikc yciu,
and
some cjl` t:ten do not knot.`/ why and to not, car.e,
ori]y,"It is gHjod I`or.
us to be her.e;let, us hi i]d
thr.ee ` tab ei.nac] es . "
Nc>w,
i±` you 1..rere just set do\m in the micld]e
ol. stranger.s and cChild not
3Lnybody only the
collununicate with
str.ai.iger.s,you wctuld make ±`ricnds
who I.vould help you in wliatever' you had occasion
to do. You ccju]cl take a suiJerintendency of sane-
thing that a man could lear.n, and £3o in there
vJit,h your. char.acter and bare hands and £TjrovT up
in it, ancl be a lnaster of tile situation; and
be.rot.e yt>`] `ti,rtnim cl`..juble your. age , }rou woitld be
1,tie President o±` it,unless it r.equired t,ot) much
mor`iey;
1)ut i/.ou ar.e not
grjing i,o cut
yowl_r bi€r3ness
with money mer.ely; you may get I.ici`„ but t,iiaL
wi]] not be what will put you ahead; it ii'ia'jr help
:;.rchi; but t,+ICY wi]] not, elect
you because you are
wortli a hundred lliousand dollar.s ;
ant-i tl`iey ',front
visit you because y(ju are worth more money titan
theyare.
PeoI)le wi]] like you. and wish
:>r`)u had as much money as tl`Leir had so
that t,jlc:,t
could take you jol]ifyirig and have ytu 1`ee] wil]in£],
Lo go;
`you
\7t>iuld not
be vri]]irng
to ±30
and li.ave them pay the bills; i/ou would not vvrant
to f,o as a g\]est or deadhead.
You have inventive talent, and if you had
+Lhe CiutL`tre and trainin£-; in t,hc clir.tL-;ction wliich
iiftrt-`nild invite your. talents in that line,`you
'`i,'tj-i-I.1d ver.y
sotjn
sl`L()w
skill
in
ttiose wa:`rs;
gi.ird
if+
you went into a new busirress tJrat you never.1iearla
of or knew about,you would contrive new wa}rs
1,o do
tJle thint3 better., and somebody might come
a]ong I`r.om some old sett,]erirent and say you ',I,rere
doing it just as t,l`iey wer.e doin€';-it over. triere;
you would invelit tire thinLrs and |Jut
them in
|>r.actice whicli jii3j.d b{jen invented arid |>ut in
Pr.lot,ice in ot,her countries by long ex|)i`;rience.
It does not take yLu Verl,r
]orif to
gf,`t hold ol.
the best ways of doing` thin(js.
Yoi]` are conjugal in your. love; there ar'e
st)me men ttrat, seem to be like \Ttrart`i }tlJlc A]] ister,
playing gracefully
to everybody,and yet
ccmcen-
t,rating t,j`Lcir thou8tit ul)()Zl no par.ticu]€`.r ()ne ,
]ikinc t,I.`iel!l a]]
Ji.u
Cjioose.
so vlJe]]
tl-iey do flot,
I\Tow you are 'L.il`f'er.erit
knoi`^,r v,rhicli
I`r.cjm tjlat.
Ij` you wer.e entir'ely fancy 1.r.ee, and you wer.e
i,o go into a carlnunity in which ?;ou knew they
vrer.e
a]]
r.espectaljle,nice
1.teople,
ancd
if you
could be assured tjiey were a]] wor.tl-I twenty
1,irousancl do]]ars apiece ancl Jiad an academic
ed.ucation ancl be]onsed to respectable far!li]ies
so
t+rat you l|Lave not tf3ot to stoop to conquer,
you `i,.ijch,I.Id go
into
a crowd,and if it was neces-
sary for. I,rou to forim a ju(`igrrient,
it, v/Ch,lid not
take :`rou six hours to make up your' mind which
of the seventy five nice girls t!iere were tiiere
was t,Ire one for Tyau; and pr.obab]y it would riot
take you six minutes il' you ct3ii.Id {3ct a i;ood
look at the w±io]c o±` them; but t`rJien lou i-;ot your
mind fixed,it i:/ou]d be like one of t,hese snap
Jocks t,hat has no ke}r.
You are conjugal in i.rour.
love; and il` you could, rave the one you want,
`jrcn,I wi]]
give a tiuit,claim deed to us I`or all the
rest of them.
I do nut say you wtjuld not be
jealous il. tJ`.ere wer'e any reason I.or. i{, ,Ljut }rou
would not want Lo be jca]ous;
you lJ'Jou]d not
liu.nt I or' a chance t,o be jca]ous; you would not
look 1`or indications o±` jealousy, but ychi would
i,Trant
to feel that she believed in yCh,1 a.ncl tliat
sJILe haci made a capital
it;
Catch and ciid not I.egr.et
yowl mi{;.I`Lt wonder Once
:vrou T,17er.e
in a wlrile Ti'rlieither
{3ooc:I. enough for her,
but,
that vJcj\nci be
your business and riot hers if she tliought it
1,``.rag a]]
I.ight.
in your. love.
In c>t,tiei. wor.ds, }.'ou
ar.e loyal
Some bir.ds mat,e I)romiscuously as
s(ime animals do;ancl sorr`e animals and bir.ds
.`Je]ect
their-mate
I'or.
]il`e,
ant+
f or
t,hir.ty
years will
raise a brood on a slie]ving ]ed&.e o±.
I.oak over the I.oar.ing ocean, and tl`Ley are knoun
miles ancT miles ar.ound, -
a pair ol. eagles,
known whe!.e t+`Ley live ancT ht-jw long they have
Jived tlic;.re.
I dc) not thick you are a traitor.
1,o anybody or. any subject, or. tjiing`.
OHARAOTER ' FROM PHOTOGRAPHS.
#ureg;?1?=:.a.f,oo,his,.-:i:age:§ii;,iiaat,se:;#!#pa:v;::i:I:je::t:hu:i:ost:hs,ey:[c:a,::i!n:g:av,i.iio'.:kdpciisi:gqtu'esat`,':i:
-vi.!jn;:.t:gi:.ri:!:ti::i:ui;s;.i;:ci.i#ii,;wgalc;:ifi;;-fi:.!fto:i,!!et;;c#i::i`s;gr:i:pi:g::e;:;c:,¥,!c;:f:::¥c.in:,I;ne:giasi:e¥ci
®/:ah:Sycj¥aud]§T`w:a|'Cfi:I:`d¥r'*t°i::f;ohrethMoi:dd':i::uds:six;,::Xse:i:hv:¥Scesr?°win8thefoTm3
!:::i::a?€gu,s::ifio!1!;irinig::o|;.i=;;ifiai.f;,i!o:::r`;I;;,Ei!¥!o!;,:i;!i:.3y::I:i;:.ra:a::ei;gtiije;bthe;c?:is,I:ea:ifen:dlii
#1:,:o¥kn:t;#i::nl:t::I;al:;:!£r:¥::d:1.#±!:c`:rr:th:a#c¥:%:u:£crs?ua}#5c:i°:n±`%¥.h;:?:i:::u#]:a;::Fia'.':nedchwat?:
iEe]gcif:cini;iif!.:i:gciis;e;a:::i:e;i!n!is:iiieics:i!jl:;i::tnjit,;!o;aih::c'i!a#d|oe:!;:e!!:?i:;,?i:;t;o:f:ro::-a`::,d:`io`::
•g;i.;,:h;ifiirfw:#fi;.dj.:ia:::!;3;i,i:%pi:::3!:!siii:iif:a?jp:i¥!lii:!f:i,:n:.e:a;!iii:;to:I:tiEee::i;iao#:gc.:!-c;onE:
p,o:i:I;!rouia,I.w.ioM[!e¥ures°tf::?Ch!ind."alludcdtobcforc.aplalnstcm3,ctc.,.Ddwiiibegont
`fm¥iecalhabvccnepfiu,md¥v¥d'£ttirsthteesa'ifvy:!cne8ai°d::sct£¥tro:?mopf:{tis.Cdclincation..andthegrca
A CASE IN POINT.
Abo`it a month afterward we received a letter from the father. addressed to the cxamincr
which we copy : .
" I remain, very truly yours,
--~-"
\havTnwg°Xvcae=h¥T¥amrdatkyEr¥L£]£dcye.Called.ndeherselfkr)ve.and.ndythackedusfo,
From .nothcr wc have the following, written by a fond and aprious parent :
" FcrwuER & WirLLS..
Chicago` 1ll.` |rSF col |8|i.
:¥iii¥i;i;i::;:g:y§;uV§s§aii§jeii|gi{ti§j°;ia§:{ek;i:iija;8i§i'eiii,;:d;::isi§:!y&:i:'re:;is;`it::Sg,i::i!i¥;t,8Pi§:
8. H.,,
AIL lcttetl .( inquiry chould Contain .tafDp for postage, and be addres.ed e.
Fowler & Wells Co„ Publishers, 87 East 81st Street, New York .
Names of 1,he Faculties.
1.
AMATrvE^'Ess.-Love
betw¥n
tlie sexes.
A. Col.JUGAI. LovH.-Union
liftl, rna,t,iDg instinct.
for
2. PHILopROGENITlvE>-Ess.-Lo v e
of children and pets.
3. Frientlship.-Sociability,
tachment to frlends.
at-
4. IhTHABITlvE>.ES3.-IIove of home
a:I d I. ountry .
5. CoNTI}ruIT¥.~APplication, consecutiveness.
E. VITATlvENEEis:. -Love of 1,i.,1ongevitr.
6. CoMBATlvm-Ess.-Defence, courage.
7. I)ESTRuCTrvENEss.-Exe cutiveness.
8. AljlHE.`-TlvmtEss.-Appetite for foodt etc.
19. ACQulslTlvENE <s.-Frugality, economy.
I 0. SECRETIVE.`.Ess.~Policy, ci`nning, tact.
11. CAUTloTrsNEss.~Guardednr ss, fear.
12. AppROBATlvENEss.-I,ove of proLise.
13. SELF,EST EM.-,Dignity, self-renance.
14. FIRMNEss.-Stability, perseverance.
15. Coh'sclENTlousNEss.-Sense Of right.
16. HopE.-Expectation, anticipation.
17. SPIRITUALITY.-Sense of the unknown.
18. VENE ..ATloN-Adoratio[`, a\`-e.
19. BENHvoLENCB:-Sympathy, kindness.
34. INDIVIDUAL\IT¥.-Sense of objects.
25. For.".-Shape, drai`.ing talent.
20. SlzE.-Measur('ment of dimensions.
27. WEIGHT.-Control of motion, balancing.
2S. CoLOR.-Discernmer.t and love of color.
29. ORDER.-Method, system, neatness. .
30. CALcuLATlcN`-Mental arithmetic.
31. LocALITr.-Memory of place, position.
32. EVENTuiLIH.-Memory of facts, events.
33. T"E.-Te`lling when. time Of day, dates.
34. Tu,rqE.-Love of music, singing.
35. LA+VGUAGE.-Expression by words, acts`
36. CJitL-sALI'r¥.-Planning, thinkil]g.
37. Co-2pARlsoN.-AnalFsis, inferring.
a. HUHAN NATURE.-Sense of character
90. I`oHSTRuo"vEttEss.-The mcking irstinct.
21. IDF.ALIT¥.-Love of beanty` imagiDation.
For complete deanitions of all the mental
8. SuBi,iuiT¥ .-.- Love ot the gi.and` vast.
faculties` See SEI.F I i-sTRucTOR IN PERENOLOGY
22. 1HiTATloN.-Adaptiveness` mi micr y.
23. MIRTH-Fun, wit, ridicule, fac. tiousntlse.price 50 cents, cloth, $1.00.
Fowl,ER a WEI,I,a CO., Ptibli8her`, 27 Ea,bt 218t 8troet, Now York.
PRINCIPLES OF PHFENOLOGY.
/
i:!Eii§:i;;8r:i°i:,:::::t:;;j3y:t:h;§a:i:r:a::;ii:e;;;a;;je:;:::n:;iGj§::iiei:;:o;:;:::;;:Sfi:;::;:;§jy:j£:::i:eT
than
3.
4.
`The
;ii¥::]So;a`i¥j68£;€¥::£iiin:Si]izi:?°:Eteh];ggo±±3nfaTu%ai,:tt;a:SIP:e;ij[g;;8r§:on::::c::pdborfi[i
Fowler&WellsCo.,PublisherB,87East81stStreet,NewYorko
ifiE± dr,I t\``^jrfeSaeB±EEEEE=x ~~,A
z
Jam . 29 ,1894 .
8.
£e:¥dpfepE:ir:a:t§£t£:ie£:t:h:;:n£#fg£[3ngi:Yr:uuEi.iey+:a`nu6era-o~ai-fi6dbypr-opertraining,
Fowler&WellsCo.,Publishers,87East81stStreebNewY\orko
tTan . 29 ,189 4 .
G
.
8.
W
.
G A R D IJ F. R
.
----- L--0 0 ;I_?8 0 a ------
YOLi. have a large heacl; ?,31/4 is lar.g`e
enou.gil for a man wj'io weighs 180;. anc'l the distance fr.orr_I the opening' o±` the ear over. tjre toll
is 14 3/4, and you should try to make yowl. body
a]] tliat belongs to it.
If yQi will wear. bo()t,s wrien yChi get back
to }¥{innesota,the bony ankle,that has not im.icri
but bone in it,wi]] be sul.rounded by a section
of warm air that wi]] keeij ttLc b]ootl flowing
as freely as I.ray be back and I.or.tJi and relieve
your kidneys from congestion,youi. liver. I.I.an
congestion,your stomach t'md i)rain fro}?I a2 ngcs-
tion,ancl make you feel bette.r in evci.y way.
It `t'/as a great, mist,ake when tire Knicker.-
2
bocker.s carne in that they f orgot to put on
boots sucji as they used to ljiJear bef ore. Fort,y
years ago a litt,le 1`]oy expected his boots at
Christmas, and €3ot tliei[i, ancl the papers used to
maJre a JlttJe Christrrias boy showing the boots
to J'iis grandpa, ancl sJio\i/ing his boots on the
str.eet to anybocly l[ic met, he was so tickled
Tit 11
t heJ`,1,
In cold climates, it is very lmicll bettor
to have tile ankle scr'eened; ever.yw±`iere c]se
we al-.e scr'eened by a dozen tjiicknesses; lJut
just \.`rhel.e i-.i,'e need it
tlte most .`f;c scr.eon tJre
least. :`Iow, if you iiri]]
just obey that sugges-
tion wlien you get back to the nor.th,gettini5' a
pair of boots made f or. cold weather -the.v need
not be coarse ttiings -a morocco or calf-skin
bootleg is good enough, anc-i it `.vil] keep tne
blood I`l (]T'7in{,;` mor.e freely.
I had a boy under rriy liands wlio had a 2?, inch
head, ancl }ie was t,welve years old and weighed
seventy pc>unds.
I or.der.ed hot)ts on I.Tim, and
1,lie motjier was scared,and glad to ch
it;
arid in
five montjis time the boy had gained seven pounds
one
tent+1 of his weight; that Tvchi]d l>e equal
t,a seventeen pounds for 3/-ou. Pjut I do
not 1.Irant
you t,o get much heavier;I want you to li.ave
more fr.ee circulation. 'j.Tliis won.lan to]¢i ine
t,liat two of .rier boys Jiad g]ne to tile grave
just as tl-1 is boy was facling away,arid I could
ha,ve saved theiil if I had seen tlrem.
I:e liad o+r`.
a merino sock whicli ]otjked pretty,like an altar
boy's sock; 1iis mothpier may have
thougJ`Lt ±ie mic;ht
sneak into heaven as an altar boy. But it suited her fancy and it pleased people, arid s!ie was
ki]]ingherboys off one at a time.
I\,rowt+Tat
;
I
]itl;le boy, sul]i.)opting a 22 i}ich head,ought to
have weiglted 150 f or the size of 1.tis heacl.
1;ven lie,to st,art
witli,in
tile middle
of winte.I.,
by givin£5 liis blood free circulation, went to
wor`j`: and gained one-tentl-i part of tJie whole ,
#£
weigli.t in five montJng, which is equivalent to
twenty five per.cent per. annurri. Then there is
less
liability
to congest,ion somet,imes wlien a
person is in a ho-I, controversy.
If the blood
cannot go to the feet wjten the heart is pumping very we]] , it will
go vrhere it will go the
easiest,
lJo.v./, you are a 8ooil tjiin-ken; `you are as sound
as a do]]ar; ancl if you I-`.ad a good education
:tyrou could talk I ike a book.11. I c ould wave
lay hand ancl €r3ive `you a university education
witlt a lai,.ryer.'s license or adriission at the lJar,
I .iyould do it for ycu; because with the r.igj`it
previous and subsequent education,tiiat brain of
your.s,1.nfit:o as good a bocly as you 1`Lave under.` it,
`ttTch.}Jd nrake you known and respected.
You have
good nature,kindness,justice,se]f-
r.espect; but, you have scope arul gr.ip of intel-
lect,the desire to know, and the power. to find
out,and the ap|Jr'eciation of it when you get it;
ancl,last but not least,the power to talk it
back.
They take scra|J ir.on izito a f oundr.y,
ant-i send it out in tjrie sha|Je of Cook stoves
or. ]ocoriiotive castings.
In ot,her words, you
ge.. facts and '\',fork them up into new material.
You have Jar.ge IIuman Nature, whic±i judges af
str.anger.s, i.thicli is anxit>us to
know men; alrd
ill you were in a pinch, you would know the right
man to select. For instance, if yt-ju were a thou-
sand mi]r,]s from home with no te]egrapJts,you
cuu]d work out and vJork t±moi,idi; and ir it v.rere
necessar.y for y()u any time, you I,a/c>ul a lot)k into
a ®mpanv of` twenty men,and t,rou l.youlci I)ick out
a man who wouJ d lend you money enough to get
you home,
and +Lie itircu]d think lie rmist.
If you
Wer.e Sitting in a rail car ancl it wits 11+ot `,I,rea-
thc3r.,
and tlielre wer.e sinfj]e seats along Wit!i
one }Tlan in eacii, arid i.ron saw a dozen men Com-
ing in,you would say,"F.very one of us liave got
to take somebody
to sit witli us; I don't ]ikc it`L
biJ.t when you see you have to d() it,tiien you
begin t,o look out ol` t,±te
would please to
rrian out.
car to see. wh(Jln :ou
take,and ychi would fisl~i `ycmr.
I dicl that way in Pl'ii]adelpliia once,
ancl before I a-ot
to
}`Tewark,I ±`ound I;'ry' inan 'i]Jas
tile President of the First Natiolra] Bank; he
7
was ruling elder in the First Presbyterian
cliurcli.; l'ie was state senator;
ancl ric was pr.esi-
tlent of t±-ie State Temperance Association -one
of the nicest gcnt]emen -lie totjk my hand in
both his and was hal)I)y to thirck we had met; and
I a(hoitted him I.rch.I necessity, but he was a
goocl feJ]ow; tlien I saw he was a superior man,
and I dicl my best t() make him feel at home and
that Jie had not made a mist,ake in acce|]t ing the
invitation. That is tjie know]ed&re of human
character that, enables a man to Oho()se tile right
one, just as a dog who has lost his master
wi]] g`o int,o a bar-room or railroad station
-f,Jj'ier.e there are twentitt men,and sniff around
aird select
goitre I:ran and T7afj his i,b'e]ccme and
sit doi,I/n i,here ancl talk to liil-+`i, as muclt as to
say,"]v+ow,I am a good dog if. `you t,I.eat, me riglit;
8
if you want a dog,I am your. dog to go j'iol.rie will;h
.vou". And he wi]]
`i,1iat cr.owd,
picJ7L Gut
the best r`fian in
and the rficn it.ri]]
say so; he may be
•.+
an old 1.i`,Tsty looking farmeri,but he is "do{¥natic'.'
You have ]arg.e Constmctiveness and Idea]ity,
ant..1 these would make you a good Architect.
You like to construct solnething Jar.ge and €en-
er.ous,that has an o|)en door t,hat swings inward,
as the writers say.
i}ut, you sli.ou]ci t,alk,you
should vi/rite, you should cb
the thinking for
ol,her' people; and if y(in wel.e a lawyer and a
scliolar,y(]u would 1,alk to a jur.y,so t,hat wlien
peo|.1c knew ytn.I were speaking at, tj+re Co\irt, :-±ouse
H]ercfiants would leave t+`Leir clerks in Charge t]f
the
storte and go over. i.o liear. l|.o\Jr it was going;
and when you got thr.ough,tjiey if,rould €p
I`ind out 1-,he verclict to-morrow. ,
back and
You believe in tJie do]]ar, and tJ-ie clo]]ar
is rriialitiel' in }rt)ur fist tl.Lan it is in that of
ltiany, because you would know liow to use it.
You \t,till
€3enera]]y inix up with tt`Lat I,i/hicli all.iounts
to something and is respectaU]e; and if you
Jived in a neighborhood card had a ]itt]e money
s(i tliat yt-u would put in sometlling wit,Ii enter.-
pr.iscs but not ver.y mich, so that tliey did not
\,`/ant yQi for you.r. money,but ycni had cnoui;Ji to
go in a ]itt]e, t+len tl`.ey would lmke you Pr.esi-
cient or. Treasurer. if tliey wanted it, and one of
tjl`.e Board of Dir.ectors;
ttiey yTou]d want you to
itiix in T'rith tlic cooci cr.owd. You liave no birsincss
to be a slouch; you have no business to be a
1`ailur.e; you ought to be a success; axes do not
always have an intimat.e acquaintance with
tile
{j;i'.ind stone (namely the scliooll'.louse) ,biL;.t,
tile
JO
stuff is tJiere ir`i I,iany an ere, aruLi `you tnve it
in you; all it needs is to be grouncl and handlLicl ri£-'3htly.
Then t,hc tr.ees wi]] pay respect
t 0 y Ou.
You have ]arige Caution,which rerider's you
Ti-at chful , anxi t>us , fi+uarded , care ful . Cons c i ere e
makes yoii tru`i,hful and upright, but you do ntjt
always te]] a]]
the tr.utli you know; i±` a man
asks you a question that iyoi.i have no business
to
tell, and he I.`Las no rif3Jlt to
ask you,you
say,"We]] ,i,That makes yoii ask me that;I liave been
thinking abcut t!`iat
question some ±`or tl`ie
last fey/ weeks, and I liave sonetimes thougJ`it
I s]iould like to know; but I have not asked."
Yet you have the invitation in your' |iocket.
It, is none of theii. business; you clo not tcl]
a falsehood, but, tjie|`r clo not got tl-re tmth out
t,,`--------------I
JJ
of you because they have no business to have
it,
You ape not qu.ite as large as I would iirake
you in Self.-esteem if I could. I would give you
a ]itt]e more of tile su|)r.eme independence.
I 'vi//;u]cl give you more ol` tliat feeling wliich
sometimes ii,Ire think a Inn lias after he l`ias CcFTjne
intci a mi]]ion
tries not to
dollars;
i±` he
is
sensible,jie
show it, but soirrehow lie i`ee]s
v,rlien.he butt,ons up his over.coat as if lie could
have anot+rier. wli.en that vTas usecl up.
A little
more assurance you want.
Yoti. have Combativeness and Destructiveness
enough to make }rou asser.t your.self' wlien you
£:et warmed up.
In tl`ie micldle o]` an ar'gril-i.lent
in Court;, ill y(]u were a I awyer,you 1,iroult--i begin
to interrogate a]] crest,ion,and look as :i±` yc>u
Jiad a I.i£#it I'or. an answer; l]ut you \,trouJd not
st,ar.t
big.
A]imentiveness is large; ycni do like t,o hcave
things cor]ked well and to have eirotjgti o±` it;
and you ar.e a ]iber.a] provider,especia]]y a
]iber'a]
server. at the table; I,4.'lien yoii
ar.e
car.ving, pcop]e get more tl`[an they think tjiey
need, some of tliem;
and s(metimes you wi]] see
peo|]le cat sic)wly a.ncl rliilicing]y for. fear it
wi]]
i;3ive
out, n.ot knowing whetl.`ier tl`[cy are
a.oing to get any more, ancl not want,ing t,o seem
I,o need nor.e,they ar.e ashamed to eat more;
ljt-,.i. if it is |ii]ett ont,o
their. p]€Lte tjiey
it and ask no questions; yt)u wi]]
go
£3`ener.a]]y
i;ive them enough. For. instance,you would give
a modest per.son enough, one wl'io,y(iu t,}iought,
would not accept any lnore
i±` ?rou ()f±.erect it,
J5
|Jut it, t,jier.e and they would say nothing and
keeij wor.king at it,eat to save it.
You like to
liave enou{3h your.se]f', ancl your Benevolence is
large,and thei-.efore you I ike to have otlier
people have enoudi.
I notice the hair. is i+jetting grey on your
]3enevo]ence and on your. IIope;
st>metimes it
does g`et grey in spots. A ]!-lan l`Lad a white spot
about tv,ro incrLes in clialneter at t±iL> extema]
col.ners c`tf the Jiead wlier.e Caution is located;
iL was so i.7hite it was a mark a]] over, and
I,]iei.e was not a grt`y hair elsewhere. I asked
Ji,his man,"Wer.e you in imninent -peril ol` your.
]il`e a]] ni{J5lit,l`ianc;ing onto tjre yards
sel
of` a ves-
di|JrJii'lg` into t,jie water and tLralf. dr.o\mintj
•;vrou?
|s that what is t„[re rna.t,ter vritll your. {3r.ey
ILair on your. CautioiL?
" I[e ]ookecl up ancl said,
''No:
I hun(_; six hour.s on t,he keel ol-` a boat
all night, an(11,he week after. my hair. was wl-iite."
=!e thou{3li[t
tl`,at was a pr`ett,y good hit.
I only
LtJJi, i.he i.i'rolic t,hill.g to l\ang ont, o, but, he `iras
fian£.ing on a]] the same.
You Jove life; yori want
to hang on as long
as you can.
You love chi]dr'en, and tlrey like y()u.
You are a £=ooc'i fi..icrld; i-'rierids ]ikc yciu,
and
some cjl` t:ten do not knot.`/ why and to not, car.e,
ori]y,"It is gHjod I`or.
us to be her.e;let, us hi i]d
thr.ee ` tab ei.nac] es . "
Nc>w,
i±` you 1..rere just set do\m in the micld]e
ol. stranger.s and cChild not
3Lnybody only the
collununicate with
str.ai.iger.s,you wctuld make ±`ricnds
who I.vould help you in wliatever' you had occasion
to do. You ccju]cl take a suiJerintendency of sane-
thing that a man could lear.n, and £3o in there
vJit,h your. char.acter and bare hands and £TjrovT up
in it, ancl be a lnaster of tile situation; and
be.rot.e yt>`] `ti,rtnim cl`..juble your. age , }rou woitld be
1,tie President o±` it,unless it r.equired t,ot) much
mor`iey;
1)ut i/.ou ar.e not
grjing i,o cut
yowl_r bi€r3ness
with money mer.ely; you may get I.ici`„ but t,iiaL
wi]] not be what will put you ahead; it ii'ia'jr help
:;.rchi; but t,+ICY wi]] not, elect
you because you are
wortli a hundred lliousand dollar.s ;
ant-i tl`iey ',front
visit you because y(ju are worth more money titan
theyare.
PeoI)le wi]] like you. and wish
:>r`)u had as much money as tl`Leir had so
that t,jlc:,t
could take you jol]ifyirig and have ytu 1`ee] wil]in£],
Lo go;
`you
\7t>iuld not
be vri]]irng
to ±30
and li.ave them pay the bills; i/ou would not vvrant
to f,o as a g\]est or deadhead.
You have inventive talent, and if you had
+Lhe CiutL`tre and trainin£-; in t,hc clir.tL-;ction wliich
iiftrt-`nild invite your. talents in that line,`you
'`i,'tj-i-I.1d ver.y
sotjn
sl`L()w
skill
in
ttiose wa:`rs;
gi.ird
if+
you went into a new busirress tJrat you never.1iearla
of or knew about,you would contrive new wa}rs
1,o do
tJle thint3 better., and somebody might come
a]ong I`r.om some old sett,]erirent and say you ',I,rere
doing it just as t,l`iey wer.e doin€';-it over. triere;
you would invelit tire thinLrs and |Jut
them in
|>r.actice whicli jii3j.d b{jen invented arid |>ut in
Pr.lot,ice in ot,her countries by long ex|)i`;rience.
It does not take yLu Verl,r
]orif to
gf,`t hold ol.
the best ways of doing` thin(js.
Yoi]` are conjugal in your. love; there ar'e
st)me men ttrat, seem to be like \Ttrart`i }tlJlc A]] ister,
playing gracefully
to everybody,and yet
ccmcen-
t,rating t,j`Lcir thou8tit ul)()Zl no par.ticu]€`.r ()ne ,
]ikinc t,I.`iel!l a]]
Ji.u
Cjioose.
so vlJe]]
tl-iey do flot,
I\Tow you are 'L.il`f'er.erit
knoi`^,r v,rhicli
I`r.cjm tjlat.
Ij` you wer.e entir'ely fancy 1.r.ee, and you wer.e
i,o go into a carlnunity in which ?;ou knew they
vrer.e
a]]
r.espectaljle,nice
1.teople,
ancd
if you
could be assured tjiey were a]] wor.tl-I twenty
1,irousancl do]]ars apiece ancl Jiad an academic
ed.ucation ancl be]onsed to respectable far!li]ies
so
t+rat you l|Lave not tf3ot to stoop to conquer,
you `i,.ijch,I.Id go
into
a crowd,and if it was neces-
sary for. I,rou to forim a ju(`igrrient,
it, v/Ch,lid not
take :`rou six hours to make up your' mind which
of the seventy five nice girls t!iere were tiiere
was t,Ire one for Tyau; and pr.obab]y it would riot
take you six minutes il' you ct3ii.Id {3ct a i;ood
look at the w±io]c o±` them; but t`rJien lou i-;ot your
mind fixed,it i:/ou]d be like one of t,hese snap
Jocks t,hat has no ke}r.
You are conjugal in i.rour.
love; and il` you could, rave the one you want,
`jrcn,I wi]]
give a tiuit,claim deed to us I`or all the
rest of them.
I do nut say you wtjuld not be
jealous il. tJ`.ere wer'e any reason I.or. i{, ,Ljut }rou
would not want Lo be jca]ous;
you lJ'Jou]d not
liu.nt I or' a chance t,o be jca]ous; you would not
look 1`or indications o±` jealousy, but ychi would
i,Trant
to feel that she believed in yCh,1 a.ncl tliat
sJILe haci made a capital
it;
Catch and ciid not I.egr.et
yowl mi{;.I`Lt wonder Once
:vrou T,17er.e
in a wlrile Ti'rlieither
{3ooc:I. enough for her,
but,
that vJcj\nci be
your business and riot hers if she tliought it
1,``.rag a]]
I.ight.
in your. love.
In c>t,tiei. wor.ds, }.'ou
ar.e loyal
Some bir.ds mat,e I)romiscuously as
s(ime animals do;ancl sorr`e animals and bir.ds
.`Je]ect
their-mate
I'or.
]il`e,
ant+
f or
t,hir.ty
years will
raise a brood on a slie]ving ]ed&.e o±.
I.oak over the I.oar.ing ocean, and tl`Ley are knoun
miles ancT miles ar.ound, -
a pair ol. eagles,
known whe!.e t+`Ley live ancT ht-jw long they have
Jived tlic;.re.
I dc) not thick you are a traitor.
1,o anybody or. any subject, or. tjiing`.
OHARAOTER ' FROM PHOTOGRAPHS.
#ureg;?1?=:.a.f,oo,his,.-:i:age:§ii;,iiaat,se:;#!#pa:v;::i:I:je::t:hu:i:ost:hs,ey:[c:a,::i!n:g:av,i.iio'.:kdpciisi:gqtu'esat`,':i:
-vi.!jn;:.t:gi:.ri:!:ti::i:ui;s;.i;:ci.i#ii,;wgalc;:ifi;;-fi:.!fto:i,!!et;;c#i::i`s;gr:i:pi:g::e;:;c:,¥,!c;:f:::¥c.in:,I;ne:giasi:e¥ci
®/:ah:Sycj¥aud]§T`w:a|'Cfi:I:`d¥r'*t°i::f;ohrethMoi:dd':i::uds:six;,::Xse:i:hv:¥Scesr?°win8thefoTm3
!:::i::a?€gu,s::ifio!1!;irinig::o|;.i=;;ifiai.f;,i!o:::r`;I;;,Ei!¥!o!;,:i;!i:.3y::I:i;:.ra:a::ei;gtiije;bthe;c?:is,I:ea:ifen:dlii
#1:,:o¥kn:t;#i::nl:t::I;al:;:!£r:¥::d:1.#±!:c`:rr:th:a#c¥:%:u:£crs?ua}#5c:i°:n±`%¥.h;:?:i:::u#]:a;::Fia'.':nedchwat?:
iEe]gcif:cini;iif!.:i:gciis;e;a:::i:e;i!n!is:iiieics:i!jl:;i::tnjit,;!o;aih::c'i!a#d|oe:!;:e!!:?i:;,?i:;t;o:f:ro::-a`::,d:`io`::
•g;i.;,:h;ifiirfw:#fi;.dj.:ia:::!;3;i,i:%pi:::3!:!siii:iif:a?jp:i¥!lii:!f:i,:n:.e:a;!iii:;to:I:tiEee::i;iao#:gc.:!-c;onE:
p,o:i:I;!rouia,I.w.ioM[!e¥ures°tf::?Ch!ind."alludcdtobcforc.aplalnstcm3,ctc.,.Ddwiiibegont
`fm¥iecalhabvccnepfiu,md¥v¥d'£ttirsthteesa'ifvy:!cne8ai°d::sct£¥tro:?mopf:{tis.Cdclincation..andthegrca
A CASE IN POINT.
Abo`it a month afterward we received a letter from the father. addressed to the cxamincr
which we copy : .
" I remain, very truly yours,
--~-"
\havTnwg°Xvcae=h¥T¥amrdatkyEr¥L£]£dcye.Called.ndeherselfkr)ve.and.ndythackedusfo,
From .nothcr wc have the following, written by a fond and aprious parent :
" FcrwuER & WirLLS..
Chicago` 1ll.` |rSF col |8|i.
:¥iii¥i;i;i::;:g:y§;uV§s§aii§jeii|gi{ti§j°;ia§:{ek;i:iija;8i§i'eiii,;:d;::isi§:!y&:i:'re:;is;`it::Sg,i::i!i¥;t,8Pi§:
8. H.,,
AIL lcttetl .( inquiry chould Contain .tafDp for postage, and be addres.ed e.
Fowler & Wells Co„ Publishers, 87 East 81st Street, New York .
Names of 1,he Faculties.
1.
AMATrvE^'Ess.-Love
betw¥n
tlie sexes.
A. Col.JUGAI. LovH.-Union
liftl, rna,t,iDg instinct.
for
2. PHILopROGENITlvE>-Ess.-Lo v e
of children and pets.
3. Frientlship.-Sociability,
tachment to frlends.
at-
4. IhTHABITlvE>.ES3.-IIove of home
a:I d I. ountry .
5. CoNTI}ruIT¥.~APplication, consecutiveness.
E. VITATlvENEEis:. -Love of 1,i.,1ongevitr.
6. CoMBATlvm-Ess.-Defence, courage.
7. I)ESTRuCTrvENEss.-Exe cutiveness.
8. AljlHE.`-TlvmtEss.-Appetite for foodt etc.
19. ACQulslTlvENE <s.-Frugality, economy.
I 0. SECRETIVE.`.Ess.~Policy, ci`nning, tact.
11. CAUTloTrsNEss.~Guardednr ss, fear.
12. AppROBATlvENEss.-I,ove of proLise.
13. SELF,EST EM.-,Dignity, self-renance.
14. FIRMNEss.-Stability, perseverance.
15. Coh'sclENTlousNEss.-Sense Of right.
16. HopE.-Expectation, anticipation.
17. SPIRITUALITY.-Sense of the unknown.
18. VENE ..ATloN-Adoratio[`, a\`-e.
19. BENHvoLENCB:-Sympathy, kindness.
34. INDIVIDUAL\IT¥.-Sense of objects.
25. For.".-Shape, drai`.ing talent.
20. SlzE.-Measur('ment of dimensions.
27. WEIGHT.-Control of motion, balancing.
2S. CoLOR.-Discernmer.t and love of color.
29. ORDER.-Method, system, neatness. .
30. CALcuLATlcN`-Mental arithmetic.
31. LocALITr.-Memory of place, position.
32. EVENTuiLIH.-Memory of facts, events.
33. T"E.-Te`lling when. time Of day, dates.
34. Tu,rqE.-Love of music, singing.
35. LA+VGUAGE.-Expression by words, acts`
36. CJitL-sALI'r¥.-Planning, thinkil]g.
37. Co-2pARlsoN.-AnalFsis, inferring.
a. HUHAN NATURE.-Sense of character
90. I`oHSTRuo"vEttEss.-The mcking irstinct.
21. IDF.ALIT¥.-Love of beanty` imagiDation.
For complete deanitions of all the mental
8. SuBi,iuiT¥ .-.- Love ot the gi.and` vast.
faculties` See SEI.F I i-sTRucTOR IN PERENOLOGY
22. 1HiTATloN.-Adaptiveness` mi micr y.
23. MIRTH-Fun, wit, ridicule, fac. tiousntlse.price 50 cents, cloth, $1.00.
Fowl,ER a WEI,I,a CO., Ptibli8her`, 27 Ea,bt 218t 8troet, Now York.