THE EXHIBIT 491 



(b) Personal identification. Even the minutiae of finger tip patterns are 

 controlled by heredity. Ultimately our whole population should 

 be fingerprinted as a matter of course. Try getting your fingers 

 printed. 

 Exhibits: 



1. Cases (2) of anthropometric apparatus. 



Exhibited by: Prof. Dr. Adolf Basler, Sun Yat Sen University, Can- 

 ton, China, and Hauptpostlagernd, Tuebingen, Wuerttemberg, 

 Germany. Narrangansett Machine Co., Pawtucket, R. I. C. H. 

 Stoelting Co. ,424 N. Homan Ave., Chicago, 111. Siebe, Gorman & 

 Co., 187 Westminster Bridge Road, London England. P. Herman 

 Rickenbach, Scheuchzerstrasse 71, Zurich, Switzerland. 



2. Wet Spirometer. 



Exhibited by: Narragansett Machine Co., Pawtucket, R. I. 



3. Foot measure. 



Exhibited by: Prof. Dr. Basler, China and Germany. 



4. Stadiometers — 2. 



Exhibited by: Prof. Dr. Basler, China and Germany, and the Narra- 

 gansett Machine Co., Pawtucket, R. I. 



5. Colored posters (9) with photographs showing the methods used in 



taking physical measurements. 

 Exhibited by: Physical Growth Section, Iowa Child Welfare Re- 

 search Station. 



6. Photographs showing types of body build. 



Exhibited by: Dr. Charles B. Davenport, Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y. 



7. Three-dimension graph showing distribution of relative chest girth. 

 Exhibited by: Dr. Charles B. Davenport, Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y. 



8. Table summarizing material pertaining to mental disorders in twins. 

 Exhibited by: Aaron J. Rosanoff, M.D., 2007 Wilshire Blvd., Los 



Angeles, California. 



9. Charts (2) showing results of unpublished study of identical and 



fraternal twins. 

 Exhibited by: Dr. Frank N. Freeman, University of Chicago, Chi- 

 cago, 111. 



10. Twin studies — 59 photographs, 1 chart and 1 book. 



Exhibited by: Dr. Gustav Korkhaus, Hofgartenstrasse 1, Bonn, 

 Germany. 



11. Charts (2) showing fingerprints of twins. 



Exhibited by: Dr. P. J. Waardenburg, Arnhem, Holland. 



