2IO 



H. H. WILDER. 



former relief of pads with their surrounding skin folds and 

 embracing triradii, and these, in spite of the high intellectual 

 development of man, with its accompanying change in life and 

 habits, will still occasionally crop out, not especially in those races 



FIG. 27. Outlines taken directly from sole prints of No. 887. This sketch is 

 taken from several prints, lapped over so that they will meet, and spread out flat. 

 This device is rendered necessary in order to express on a flat surface the details of 

 a curved one. 



commonly considered low and bestial, but are found quite as 

 frequently in peoples of the highest culture, and appear in 

 primitive form now in the foot of a university professor, or in the 

 hand of the daughter of a New Hampshire bank president, of a 



