WORLD'S GEOLOGISTS AT ST. PETERSBURG. 217 



If there is an object for the 

 congress to accomplish, it is 

 to open its doors and honors 

 equally to all geologists. It 

 is thought that if the con- 

 gress decides that only bu- 

 reau . employees enjoy ex- 

 clusive privileges and alone 

 constitute the personnel of 

 the permanent organization, 

 which keeps the organiza- 

 tion alive in session and out, 

 then the body has simply be- 

 come a medium of officialism, 

 a governments' trust, and 

 should be disbanded. As a 

 trust, it will simply continue 

 to extenuate errors and pre- 

 serve the power of govern- 

 ment survey directors. The 

 independent geologists think 

 the congress has been per- 

 verted and diverted from its 

 original high purpose, and that the 



PROF. B. K. EMERSON, Amherst College. 



PROF. C. H. HITCHCOCK, Dartmouth College. 



time has come to rescue it. 

 They desire it to be the high- 

 est tribunal of appeal on 

 purely scientific matters. 



The protesting Americans 

 are led by Dr. Persifor Fra- 

 zer, of Philadelphia, who is 

 an able linguist and parlia- 

 mentarian. He will repre- 

 sent the American Philosoph- 

 ical Society, the Philadelphia 

 Academy of Sciences, and the 

 editorial staff of the Ameri- 

 can Geologist. Prof. Giovan- 

 ni Capellini (Italy), who re- 

 cently received the Hayden 

 medal and who will probably 

 be decorated by the Czar at 

 this congress, thinks the bat- 

 tle against officialism already 

 won. In a recent letter he 

 states: "The committee of 

 organization has the good 



