22 THE KALLIKAK FAMILY 



(Chart VI), was feeble-minded, alcoholic, epileptic, and 

 sexually immoral. She had three illegitimate children 

 who were sent to the almshouse, and from there bound 

 out to neighboring farmers. -One of these turned out 

 normal, one was feeble-minded, and the other undeter- 

 mined. Neither of the two older ones had any chil- 

 dren. The third child, a daughter, was tubercular, but 

 nothing is known of her descendants, except that there 

 were several children and grandchildren. 



The seventh child of Martin Jr. was a daughter, 

 Sylvia (Chart VII), who seemed to be a normal woman. 

 She was taken very young by a good family who brought 

 her up carefully. She later married a normal man. 

 Although we have marked her normal, she was always 

 peculiar. All her children and grandchildren were 

 either normal or are undetermined. 



The youngest child of Martin Jr. who lived to grow 

 up was Amy Jones, also normal. (Chart VIII.) She, 

 too, was taken into a good family and married a normal 

 man, and lived to be very old. Two of Amy's children 

 died in infancy. Of two others, one was normal and 

 one feeble-minded. This latter married a normal man 

 and had one feeble-minded and immoral daughter; 

 five other children are undetermined. 



We now return to Martin Jr.'s oldest son, Millard 



