EDITOR'S TABLE.
123
were the fewest illiterates as compared with those where there were the most. In the succeeding numbers of the Monthly two writers, apparently accepting the statistics without question, have proceeded to draw conclusions from them. Some one has wittily said that "nothing can lie like figures"; and certainly any one who deals much with statistics knows that unless carefully and thoughtfully handled they are capable of giving the most deceptive results. For this reason startling conclusions should not be accepted without careful consideration. There is getting to be too wide a tendency to accept statistics as decisive proof on any subject without regard to how they were prepared or discussed.
In the January Lend a Hand, Mr. David C. Torrey carefully discussed the records of crime in Massachusetts, which was one of the States where Mr. Reece found his highest per cent of criminals, and some of his results seem worthy of quoting, as throwing much light on this subject:
YEAR. | COMMITMENTS FOR CRIMES AGAINST | |
Persons and property. |
Order and decency. | |
1865 | 3,975 | 5,760 |
1870 | 5,097 | 11,290 |
1880 | 3,779 | 13,274 |
1885 | 4,839 | 21,812 |
YEAR. | Commitments for intem- perance. |
Commitments for all other crimes. |
Total com- mitments. |
1850 | 3,341 | 5,420 | 8,761 |
1855 | 8,221 | 7,811 | 16,032 |
1860 | 3,442 | 8,322 | 1,1674 |
1865 | 4,302 | 5,616 | 9,918 |
1870 | 9,350 | 7,250 | 16,600 |
1875 | 24,548 | ||
1880 | 10,962 | 6,091 | 17,053 |
1885 | 18,701 | 7,950 | 26,651 |
H. Helm Clayton, |
Blue Hill Observatory, Readville, Mass., March 30, 1890. |
PRACTICAL ECONOMICS.
IN last month's Table we had a few words upon the discredit into which what is sometimes called the "orthodox" political economy has fallen among practical men. It is a pleasure to be able to call attention to a book which furnishes a signal example of the way in which economical studies should be pursued. We refer to the volume brought out a few months ago by Mr. D. A. Wells, under the title of Recent Economic Changes. Mr. Wells is not a dogmatist, though it is evident he has sufficiently definite opinions of his own. He conceives it to be his main business to marshal the facts that seem to him capable of explaining the present material condition of society, and of indicating the course that things are likely