MENTAL AND MORAL QUALITIES. 



52; 



(7) Leopold I. of Belgium, 3; (10) Sweden, Gustavus Adolphua, 2; 



(7.3) Average 4.09. 



Analyzing all the grades, we find that the higher grades for virtues 

 possess a higher average of mental capacity and that this is almost 

 perfect for both the male and female groups taken separately. An 

 average of the two makes a curve that leaves practically nothing to be 

 desired. There is every reason to believe that if the total were great 

 enough the correlation would be perfect. 



Females. 



The average number of children who reached adult (21) years born 

 to each grade is seen below to give figures representing a less smooth 

 curve. This is probably due to an insufficiency in the total number, 

 though I feel that this can not be dogmatically asserted. 



Females. 



Such figures drawn from royalty, in regard to the fertility of dif- 

 ferent grades, can have, of course, but a slight bearing on the question 

 of race suicide agitated at the present time. They do, however, show 

 that, imhampered by restraint, as is fair to suppose has been the case 



