INSANITY. 325 her of the family of the patient, not prisoner, will be conscientious enough to come forward and pay the bill. I have taken more of your time than I should, and my real reason for doing so must now appear. Never, perhaps, has there been in that county such an unmistakable outburst of public disapproval as followed the announcement of the verdict of the jury, and it came, not only from individuals, but from press and pulpit as well; and that it did come is no cause for surprise, because no greater travesty of' justice was ever enacted. How did it happen? How did it occur that a jury, sworn to try the case upon its merits, swept all evidence aside and decided the questions involved without assistance? I will tell you. A member of the jury was approached a few days subsequent to the trial and asked why they brought in such a verdict, and here is his reply: mark it well: “Because no sane man would kill his son.” What object could be accomplished by offering evidence to a jury, each member of which had already made up his mind that an act is in itself a sufficient evidence of insanity? They believed that a man who commits such an unnatural act as that of killing his son must for that very reason be insane. If this be true; if the killing of a son by his father is unequivocal evidence of insanity, then the killing of a father by his son would be insanity; or the killing of wife by husband; or brother by brother; or friend by friend; or—but where would such a course of reasoning lead? Do all fathers love their sons under all circumstances; or are sons always filial; or brothers always devoted; or friends always fond; or wives always true? While it may be readily conceded that to kill one we love, or, indeed, to murder one we are supposed to love, is an unnatural act, yet, so long as fathers and sons and husbands and wives and brothers and friends, sane and clothed in their right minds,have killed each other, it requires no high order of ability to discern how unsafe and perilous it would be to advocate the establishment of insanity on the ground of an unnatural act. There was a time when the thinking world was startled by the announcement of a belief that no sane man ever committed suicide, but no one who has given the matter any attention will be led astray by such a statement. Insane men suicide, but so have sane men, time and time again, and with the best of reasons for doing so. In these cases, as in all others, sanity or insanity will be determined by the reason, "or lack of reason, for suiciding, but not by the act itself. While actions may usually be regarded as an index to the mental state of the individual, yet we know from observation and experience that they are frequently quite the reverse; that apparently innocent acts frequently have their origin in the most malicious and malevolent natures; that seemingly disorderly acts are often the result of attend- ing and unforseen circumstances and not unlawful motives; that actions which appear to bear the unmistakable trademark of insanity often reveal the crafty handiwork of crime, and that no act can be so criminal in its nature that it may not have its origin in a delusion.326 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL Unsatisfactory and insecure indeed must be a condition whose founda- tions rest upon nothing more substantial or reliable than conduct; and vague and uncertain must be the position of anyone who bases his knowledge and understanding of insanity upon the actions of the individual alone. The presence of insanity is to be determined: 1st. From the life history of the individual. 2nd. From changes in temperament, character, moods, habits*, and modes of thought. ' 9 3d. From physical evidences of disease. 4th. From the presence' of delusions. 5th. From gait, mode of expression, appearance and general de- meanor. * 6th. From stigmata of degeneration. These conditions may be indicated, or suggested, or even illumin- ated by the actions of the individual, but this is the sole and only value of concrete acts in the establishment of insanity. They may point the finger of suspicion but they prove nothing in themselves. Insanity is a question of morbid physiology; it is a question of perverted metabolism; it is a question of psychical involvement due to physical disease; it is all this and possibly more; but it can never be safely regarded as a question of conduct. LIBRARIES IN THE STATE INSTITUTIONS. By Johnson Brigham, State Librarian and President of the Iowa Library Commission. The request of this body, acting on the recommendation of its; program committee, they in turn acting on the suggestion of a member of the Board of Control whom I am always glad to serve, coupled! with a desire on my part to serve the State wherever and when- ever I can—and especially to further the progress of the Library cause in the State,—induced me to enter a field filled with trained workers and attempt to advise the workers as to a part of their work. Finding the subject assigned me has not been covered by the papers and discussions reported in the bulletins issued by the Board of Control, I discover that to me has been accorded the rare privilege of pioneering the way toward future understanding of the subject from a general viewpoint. Should my suggestions seem to you as needless as the proverbial carrying of coals to Newcastle; you will still have* as consolation for the time you have accorded me, the first generali-INSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 32,7 £/ 2J7* 4> •zations thus far made, as far as I am able to discover, along, three separate yet related lines of investigation as to libraries in State Institutions, namely: I— Institutional Libraries in other States than qurs. II— Institutional libraries in Iowa. III— The evolution of the “Iowa- Idea” as applied to libraries in State Institutions, with suggestions as to the future development of that idea. Note in passing two points, namely: (1) that in using the term 'institutions’ in this paper I employ it in a restricted sense, including only those for which the Board of Control is held directly responsible, and not including purely educational institutions; and (2) that in giving the status of institutions in other states than ours, I have drawn my .information—limited at most—chiefly from the laws and reports of those states and not from personal replies to questions as in the case of the Iowa institutions. And this leads me here to acknowledge my indebtedness to the superintendents represented in this body for their prompt, painstaking and courteous responses to my calls for information. I. It was my original intention to compile a mass of statistics from the several states which might be helpful , in regulating the ratio of books to readers and to institutions, and in the development of a general policy for the use of books and libraries as contributory to the mental and moral evolution of the inmates of your several insti- tutions. But my search among the reports 6f institutions in other states, while not wholly in vain, has not enabled me to draw any very satisfactory conclusions. I might say here that, selfishly, the most satisfactory conclusion I have been able to draw from the many reports consulted is that Iowa has in a few years placed herself in advance of many if not most of the states in the formulation of a library policy for State institutions. We naturally turn first to literary New England, the home of the library movement, for examplars in the work of engrafting the library upon the educational system ■ adopted in state institutions. A sweeping generalization will suffice to show what the New England •states are actually doing so far as their own reports give information. MAINE: Of the several institutions in Maine I find mention of libraries only in four. At the Insane Hospital there was expended for reading matter during the year last reported the sum of $161.81 of which $120.15 was for periodicals. Number of patients, 771. Amount expended per capita, nearly twenty-one cents. I find that this money is not an appropriation, but interest on an endowment fund of $3,222.91. The trustees’ report contains a tribute to the benefits of the library —a tribute seemingly out of proportion to the small sum of money expended per capita. The Industrial School for Girls, 165 inmates, has an endowment328 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL fund of $3,912.50, the income of which is used for the purchase of books, periodicals and pictures, and for entertainments and other recreation. Just what portion of the interest on this small fund is devoted to the library is not stated. In reports on the needs and policy of the school no mention is made of the library. The Military and Naval Orphan Asylum with 95 inmates expended for the purchase of books $207.70,—or about $2.19 per capita. In the trustee’ report mention is made of additions to the library “which were fully appreciated and enjoyed.” In the State Prison, 184 inmates, there was expended during the year for papers, magazines, music, etc., the sum of $313.99. How much of this small sum went for ‘music, etc.’ we have no means of knowing. The chaplain reports the destruction of over one hundred volumes worn beyond repair. These were replaced by second-hand books donated by convicts and others interested. Sixty volumes were added by purchase. At this rate of purchase—sixty volumes for a population of 184—or nearly one book for every three convicts, no wonder the books are worn out in the service. The prison evidently depends for periodicals on gifts of newspapers and old magazines. The State Reform School, 148 inmates, appropriated for library and reading room, $43.61—or nearly thirty cents per capita. There is nothing in the superintendent’s report to indicate that there is a library or even a reading room, other than an acknowledgment of donations of newspapers. In the School for the Deaf, with 87 inmates, I could find no expen- diture for books other than for school supplies. I looked in vain in the principal’s report for a reference to books or a library, either under the head of ‘educational department’ or under that of ‘needs.’ Acknowledgments are .given for contributions of magazines, fruits, nuts, etc. NEW HAMPSHIRE: I find little in the reports of New Hamp- shire to throw light upon the subject. The State Hospital reports 425 inmates and an expenditure of $437.42 for stationery, library, printing, etc. The portion received by the library was necessarily small. The Industrial School for the Feeble Minded, with 147 inmates, reports the receipt of $45.04 interest on fund for books, or less than thirty-two cents per capita. Beyond this sum the institution seems to depend upon donations. The State Prison, with 210 inmates, gives no evidence of financial aid for the library; but there doubtless is an outlay for books for the chaplain in his report states that he has revised and reprinted a catalogue of books and is rebinding and adding new books. The chaplain bears testimony to the aid rendered by books, both in giving information and in calling attention to other things than self and their surroundings. VERMONT: Little is given in relation to libraries in the VermontINSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 329 reports. In. the State Hospital for the Insane, with 514 patients, there was an expenditure of $261.66, or less than fifty-one cents for each patient. Donations of hooks and periodicals are acknowledged. I find.no mention of hooks or a library in the report of the Brattlehoro Retreat or in that of the Lakeside Sanitorium. The State Prison with 147 convicts has no discoverable expenditure for hooks. The chaplain reports few hooks added in two years, but gives testimony of the beneficial effect' of good reading upon the convicts. The House of Correction and the Industrial School reports give no evidence of the purchase of anything beyond school books. MASSACHUSETTS: In my study of the voluminous Massachus- etts reports I found gratifying uniformity in the statistics furnished concerning the numerous hospitals for the insane and other institu- tions, but when I came to tabulate the statistics of the other State institutions I found so many variations that it was impossible to pres- ent any aggregates, or averages, which would be conclusive on any one point. The most I am able to present that has any significance for us of Iowa is the ratio of annual expenditure for books, periodicals, etc., to the number of inmates in several of the State institutions. Take for example the State Hospital for the Insane at Danvers. Dur- ing the last year reported, there was an average of 1105 inmates with $437.01 expended for books, etc., or nearly forty cents per capita. North Hampton .................................Per Capita, $ .338 {Taunton ...................................... “ “ .1-12 Worcester .................................... “ ** .427 Worcester Insane Asylum ........................ “ “ .362 Westboro ..................................... “ “ . .266 Medfield Insane Asylum ......................... “ “ .09 To these may be added also the following ratios: Bridgewater State Farm..........................Per Capita, Tewksbury State Hospital ........................ “ “ School for Feeble-Minded ..........:.............. “ “ Hospital for Dipsomaniacs ....................... “ “ State Sanitorium ............................... “ “ Hospital for Epileptics......................... “ “ State Reformatory .............................. “ “ Reformatory Prison for Women..................... “ “ The term ‘et cetera’ coupled with books in the figures just read, renders the ratios of questionable value as a basis of comparison. I cannot find any allusion to library or books in the report of the Massachusetts State Prison, although the prison contains 817 inmates. The School for the Blind with 278 inmates, makes no separate mention of expenditure for books, though the school has a library valued at $29,458. The school library is evidently well endowed. $ .484 .133 .29 .83 .238 .83 1.17 1.18330 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL It is interesting to note the valuations put upon the several librar- ies in these institutions as far as they are given: North Hampton Insane Hospital............................$ 1,240.00 Danvers ” ” 1,545.00 Medfield ” ” .......................... 534.81 Taunton ” ” 900.00 Worcester ” ” 5,401.44 ” ” Asylum .............................. 650.00 Bridgewater State Farm .................................. 300.00 Tewksbury State Hospital ........................ 31,000.00 Perkins Institute and School for the Blind................ 59,458.00 In the reports from the trustees and superintendents of the several institutions above named no mention whatever is made of books or need of books except general acknowledgements of gifts of books and periodicals, and,' in two cases, the chaplain’s tribute to the increasing value of books in fostering character, strengthening mental resources and affording wholesome recreation. RHODE ISLAND: The Rhode Island Board of State Charities and Corrections, makes mention of libraries only in connection with two of the five State institutions covered by its latest report. It refers to the well selected library in the School for Boys—the students numbering 357—and notes an authorization of an expenditure of $100 for additional books, or nearly twenty-nine cents per capita. In the School for Girls, there is mention of nine general periodicals but no mention of books. In the report of t^e warden of the State Prison with 183 convicts, is ah item of $52.85 for library—or nearly twenty-nine cents per capita. CONNECTICUT: I have studied the Connecticut reports only to find a single instance in which are given separate library statistics, and these give no clue as to expenditure. I find that the Connecticut State Prison with 500 inmates has 4,300 volumes with a circulation of 24,080 and with a library catalogue distributed among the convicts. The several institutional reports are valuless so for as my purpose is concerned, in that in two instances stationery, books and postage are run together as a single item; the library and chapel in another; postage, periodicals, etc., in another. NEW YORK: I turned with confidence to the State of New York, with its wealth of public documents and its uniformity in the prepara- tion of the same—thanks to the commendable efforts of Dr. Whitten of the New York State Library in that direction. I found in connection with the several State Hospital reports an approximate uniformity in statement: but the uniformity is not carried far enough to serve my purpose. Instead of separate items for books in the several expense accounts, I found books and stationery thrown together, thus giving ho basis for the estimate I had hoped to make of the expenditure for books per capita.INSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 331 I wrote Dr. Whitten, asking him if he could separate for me the expenditure for books from the expenditure for stationery. Let me read you his reply: Dear Mr. Brigham:—Dr. Hill of the State Board of Charities tells me that no systematic effort has been made in the past to provide libraries for inmates of State charitable institutions. Some of the institution's have received important donations of money and books from time to time. The item in the financial report “Books and stationery” refers usually to blank books purchased for the book- keeping department. An item has been included in this year’s appropriation bill of $1,200 to be expended by the State Library for a traveling library for state institutions. This is intended as the nucleus of a system of institutional libraries. The State Insane hospitals have fared better in rdgard to library facilities and I have asked Mr. McGarr, Secretary of the Commission in Lunacy, to write you in regard to them. Very truly yours, ROBERT H. WHITTEN. f Let me read the letter from Secretary McGarr: Dear Sir:—Doctor Whitten has handed me your letter to him under date of May 22nd. Assuming that the point you desire information upon is as to the books supplied to the hospital patients, I have to say that the re- quisitions of the fourteen large State Hospitals under the control of the Commission vary so greatly that it is not possible for me to give you information that would be of great value. The purchases of these books are made from an allowance which varies from 2 to 3y2 cents per capita made every two months [or 12 to 21 cents per capita per year] to these institutions, the variation being due to the differing size of the institutions, the larger per capita allowance being made for the smaller institutions. This per capita allowance, however, is for all kinds of amusements and diversion regarded by the hospital superintendents as appropriate for their charges. The superintendents devote a very considerable portion of this allowance to the purchase of books. As to the grouping in our financial statements of books and sta- tionery, this refers only to medical books intended for the library used by the physicians of the hospitals. Very respectfully yours, T. E. McGARR, Secretary. In the state prisons, reformatories and hospitals for insane con- victs, there is not the same uniformity in reports. Sing Sing, with 1274 inmates reports a general circulation of books during the year amounting to 39,123 volumes of which 30,651 was fiction. It is inter- esting to note that in the list of novelists preferred, Dumas, Reade, Collins, King and Kipling take the lead. This prison has an appropri- ation of $500 for books,—-or nearly forty cents per capita. Auburn, with 1082 inmates, has $500, or over forty-six cents per capita, and with this sum has added 750 volumes. Clinton with its 1028 inmates and $500 appropriation, or nearly fifty cents per, capita, has a beginning of about 500 volumes in its332 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OP CONTROL library. The report from the East New York reformatory, with its 234 inmates makes no mention of books. Matteawan Hospital for insane convicts, with 640 inmates seems to be dependent upon contributions for books and periodicals. Dannemora, with 112 inmates, has $500 appropriation or over $4.46 per capita, nearly all of which is annually expended. The report from the State Industrial School incidentally mentions a library and offices for the chaplain, parole agent, and disciplinary department but makes no mention of books. The Society for the Reformation of Juvenile Delinquents, New York City, speaks of the purchase of $300 worth of new books, of the organization of class libraries and of the encouragement which a free use of the books has given to a further increase of the number of books in the library. The New York Juveline Asylum reports an unexpended balance of $759.52 in the Fanshaw library fund. The Western House of Refuge for Women reports an appropria- tion of $200 for library wants. Eight other State institutional reports seem to ignore books and libraries entirely. The State Reformatory at Elmira, an institution with a world-wide reputation for reform in methods of treating youthful criminals, cov- ers its expenditures for books under some general item, probably “educational”; but its school director, Mr. Upham, gives me in a single page more of suggestion than can be found in all the other New York reports. He thinks the library indispensable, but that it also presents serious problems. As for example: How much shall the in- mates be allowed to read? He finds few have sufficient self-control to leave story-books for studies. How much shall they be given to read? Pew have the reading habit and those few prefer the trashiest form of novel. How best to cultivate the reading habit, and develop that into the habit of reading good books? In his attempt to answer these hard questions, Mr. Upham would limit the men of the lower classes to one book a week. He would sort the poor books from the good with the purpose of eliminating the bad, the uninteresting and the unprofitable books that find their way into the library. He would considerably extend the reading privilege of the men in the academical division. In addition to the one book a week, those in this division may every two weeks draw another book on some serious subject such as history, biography, etc. He would stimulate interest by putting into the hands of every inmate, (except those in the very lowest class) a list of books on history, biography, literature, science and travel. He selects fiction, not in accordance with the wishes of the inmates, but in accordance with their needs and environments. He makes free use of special lists of best books selected by the Free Traveling Library department of the State Library,—a department quivalent to our Iowa Library Commission.INSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 333 Since this, outline of Mr. Upham’s suggestions was written, a later report—that of 1904—has been received. From this report I learn that about 300 books have been added to the library during the year; but that this is counterbalanced by the loss of an equal number destroyed on account of epidemics and through natural wear. With a population of 1,387, this addition of only 300 books—-scarcely making good the loss of books withdrawn—would seem a meager encourage- ment to Mr. Upham in his worthy purpose to solve the serious prob- lems to which reference has been made. The Institution for the Blind shows a library fund with an un- expended balance of $2,754.44. The State Library cooperates with its superintendent in supplying the blind with embossed books. In the other institutional reports of the State of New York I find little of interest on the subject under consideration. I extended my investigation to but one of the middle-western states—that one presumably the most progressive. OHIO: I find no appropriation for books and no mention of same in connection with the Toledo Hospital. The Columbus Hospital with an income of $207,308.21 gives an expenditure of $68.27 for books and instruments!—Evidently noth- ing for library books. Massillon State Hospital with a total income of over $81,000 reports an expenditure of $926 for books and pictures. Cleveland Hospital reports an expenditure of $421.25 for books. The Boys’ Industrial School reports arrangements made with the State Library by which it is to receive the benefit of the State Traveling Library system which will allow the institution 100 books every three months. But the report adds that the library ought to have more books, and calls for an extra appropriation therefor. It will thus be seen that with all the progress Ohio has made, the library movement has not yet had full and free course in her State institutions. Time and your patience would not permit a further extension of these unclassified outlines. . I will generalize by stating that, so far as I have investigated, the institutional reports which come to us from the South present dreary masses of figures relating to material things, with little or nothing to indicate that the Southern States regard their criminal class as worth the effort of reformation, and much to indicate that they are speculating off that class by means of labor contracts, the inevitable tendency of which being to demonize, not humanize, the violators of law. And, in the main, the policy of the Southern States toward its dependent classes, with few exceptions, seems to be a reluctant ac- ceptance of responsibility for these classes and a reduction of the expenses of their support to the minimum of maintenance.334 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL IL I must not linger longer outside the confines of our own State. Here I want to add my testimony to the aid which the Board of Control has rendered the library movement and the State of Iowa by extending that movement to the institutions under their immediate control. The previous condition of servitude of two members of the Board in library work, may not have entered the mind of the Governor who appointed them,—their all-around fitness for the position having been so apparent; but, fortunately, they came to their task with years of experience as ex-officio members of the State Library Board, and that at a time when the then new Traveling Library system was in- augurated by that Board. One of its members, Judge Kinne, was one of the committee to select the first $4,500 worth of books for the Traveling Library and upon that committee devolved the duty of making the first rules to govern the workings of the new system. Every detail, not only of the State Library, but of the Traveling Library, came under the close and careful scrutiny of Judge Robinson, the other member to whom I refer, who, as a member of the book committee of the Board, was largely responsible for all the book pur- chases made by the State Librarian. These two experienced bookmen needed only to present the subject to the third member, Mr. Cownie, to convince him that the needs of the State called for the planting and upbuilding of libraries in every State institution; not only for the elimination of ignorance but also for the minimizing of mental affliction and bodily suffering and the helpful stimulation of high ideals of citizenship and of individual life. With the initiative of a Board so constituted, a Board happily re- moved from the bane of party and partisan politics, it is scarcely to be wondered at that the comparatively young State of Iowa should have progressed beyond many of the older states in the development of a policy making books and libraries a potent force for good in State institutions. Here I desire to present, as part of my findings on the theme assigned me, a brief and interesting resume of the library policy of the Board of Control prepared by Judge Kinne in response to my request. He says: Dear Sir:—Replying to your favor touching the libraries in the State institutions under the control of this Board, we beg to say there is no limit fixed by the Board to the purchase of books either in the aggregate or for any particular institution. Until the act of the legis- lature of two years ago there was no money provided for the pur- chase of books at any institution except as we obtained special ap- propriations therefor. These were usually in small amounts. Thai legislature passed an act setting apart, under the control of the Board, a certain portion of the money received for admissions to the peni- tentiaries for use in procuring libraries for other state institutions. Under this act very large additions have been made to the libraries at the hospitals at Cherokee and at Independence,—and like provision made for the Boys’ Industrial School at Eldora. There is no particu-INSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 335 lar policy regarding libraries for any of our institutions or class of institutions. The only thing we seek to do is to provide each institu- V tion with a good working library of a healthy character and best" suited to the needs of its inmates. Manifestly it would require a somewhat different' class of books at the industrial schools than at the hospitals or at the penitentiaries; so each institution in this re- spect is treated separately as its needs seem to demand. No prepared instructions have been sent to superintendents regarding the purchase of libraries and the care and use of books. Many of the additions to the libraries have been made at our suggestion, because we thought they were badly needed, and superintendents have been instructed from \ time to time to make estimates for libraries composed of such books as they deemed best. These lists have usually been submitted to some one in your department that they might be carefully scanned and such additions and changes made as seemed desirable. In some in- stances we have eliminated certain books that were asked for. At the penitentiaries the lists have usually been made up by the chaplains. ‘ The two late large purchases at Independence and Cherokee were made from lists made up in your office very largely. It is the policy of the Board to expend, so far as the finances will permit, any amount > of money that may be necessary or proper for the development of the libraries in all of the institutions. Quite a good library has already been accumulated at Council Bluffs since the late fire. This was picked out of course by the authorities at that institution. Considerable of a library has been accumulated at Glenwood, originally the gift of a man by the name of Y/ilkinson to the institution. Also the library at Davenport has been added to by appropriations from time to time and also a small gift by a citizen of Davenport who is now deceased. There is quite a large library at the hospital at Mt. Pleasant,—very much of it bought many years ago and very many of the books in ex- . pensive bindings, hardly appropriate for an institution of that kind; and many of the books are of too solid and heavy a character for reading by the patients. Several hundred volumes are in the library at Clarinda, having been purchased in the last four or five years, and are being added to from time to time. Other expenditures are expected to be made every year in the filling up of these libraries and putting on the shelves such new books as may comihend themselves from time to time. In addition to all this all the institutions are furnished from their regular funds with a large number of the current magazines - of the day, and usually several copies of each, so that they are passed from one to another as they are read and they are found to be not only very useful but very much sought for by the inmates of all the institutions. Very truly yours, BOARD OP CONTROL OP STATE INSTITUTIONS, By L. G. Kinne. In my somewhat hastily considered questions which you, gentle- men, were kind enough to answer, I sought to learn something of the conditions under which you are separately, and in a measure variously* working toward a common end. Let me give you, at the outset, a few interesting aggregates with certain suggestive ratios drawn from same. (For the aggregates of population and expenditures for books I am indebted to Judge Kinne* of the Board of Control, and to Mr. Treat, chief clerk of the Board.336 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL No. of Books Expended Books Ex- Latest average pop- No. of books in added in for books per pend- ulation in State In- library as re- last biennial in last bi- cap. ed per stitutions.* ported to me. period. ennial period. cap. Anamosa .... . 385 9,000 1,293 $1,579.39. 23.38 $4.10 Cherokee .... . 732 956 956 928.66 1.30 1.26 Clarinda . 934 1,529 214 197.65 1.63 .21 Council Bluffs. 240 2,200 9.17 Davenport ... . 492 4,000 8.13 Eldora . 458 2,635 . 885 899.34 5.75 1.96 Ft. Madison.. . 567 8,000 507 592.85 14.10 1.04 Glenwood ... .1,009 800 ' 23 39.11 .79 .04 Independence. 1,050 1,200 738 616.55 1.14 .60 Marshalltown 786 1,745 2.22 Mitchellville.. 206 1,000 266 215.98 4.85 1.04 Mt. Pleasant. .1,051 2,800 152 147.56 2.66 .14 Vinton . 151 6,044 40.00 Total ... .8,061 41,909 5,034 $5,217.09 8.85 $1.04 This large aggregate of population—-over 8,000—committed to your care by the State, with the already large and growing aggregation of books committed to your keeping by the Board, must force upon you a serious consideration of the whole subject of library policy. The tentative and therefore temporary policies which have been pursued in most of the institutions represented here must of necessity be soon or late supplanted by a clearly defined policy adequate for present needs and, of infinitely more importance, sufficient for the greater needs of the future. I find that six institutions have a common reading room each with a collection of books on the shelves; six have no general library, and one, the School for the Deaf, has none now but soon will have one. I find that seven institutions loan books to individuals; three loan to groups of fifty or more, using in a general sense the Traveling Library system, and three loan both to individuals and groups or wards. III. These inquiries were made more with a view to finding out the facts than to make suggestions. Librarians have to contend against the innate desire to create a system that shall be uniform in all re- spects. I am of the opinion that in these days when system is the word—not only on Wall Street, but also in our western cities and towns—it is easy to squeeze the life out of a wholesome movement in the direction of general organization by insisting on absolute uniform- ity. I think the Board and the superintendents who have honored me with a hearing will agree with me that you, individually and collectively * Anamosa and Ft. Madison penitentiaries; Cherokee, Clarinda, In- dependence and Mt. Pleasant, hospitals for the insane; Council Bluffs, School for the deaf; Davenport, Soldiers’ Orphans’ Home; Eldora Indus- trial School for Boys; Glenwood, Home for the Feeble-Minded; Marshall- town, Soldiers’ Home; Mitchellville, Industrial School for Girls; Vinton, College for the Blind.INSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 337 are not in the State's service for the purpose of building up a system that shall work automatically without variation or shadow of turning. Each, I doubt not, will clearly recognize the fact that the problems to be solved in the School for the Feeble-Minded and those to be wrought out in the institutions for those whose minds are abnormally active; the problems of the hospital and those of the prison; the problems of the School for the Deaf and those of the School for the Blind; the problems of the Soldiers’ Orphans’ Home and those of the Home for veterans whose remaining years are at best but years of waiting, are only in general, surely not in detail, alike. You are where you are because you have brought your reserves of judgment and experience to the positions you respectively occupy for the purpose of working out certain factors in the great general problem to which the State is committed, namely: How best to care for the State’s dependent ones—reducing to a minimum their inefficiency, raising to the maximum their helpfulness and at the same time building up the foundations of character, self- respect and regard for others. In some degree the problem of each is unique, and your success will largely depend upon your individual aptness for handling that particular factor which is distinctively your own. The Board of Control has wisely refrained from repressing that most important part of every intricate problem—the individuality of the man to whom it is committed. Applying these reflections on the general library policy of the Board to the question raised by me in my list of questions,—that of a central library,—I would only say that it would seem to me desirable that every institution should have its central library and reading room and that the books in that library should be accessible to all comers. I am aware that in the penitentiary there must be severity of discipline which would limit this free use of the library, that the physical and mental conditions in the hospitals would of themselves seriously limit the use of the general library, and that there are still other limitations which will occur to you; but the fact remains, that in every institu- tion a general library accessible to all who can avail themselves of its benefits, should be utilized as an incentive to the inmate’s well- doing and, in turn, as contributory to, his well-being. I would especially urge the central library and reading room for the benefit of the corps of officers and assistants when off duty; but of this, more further on. In the many cases of exception to the rule, it would seem to be well to imitate the practical wisdom of Mahomet who, on finding that the mountain would not come to him, went to the moun- tain. If good books exercise the informing, educating and elevating influence which we claim for them, they should be brought from the central library to the ward, the cell, the room, the cot, the individual— not in a promiscuous, haphazard way, but with the utmost discretion— almost as much discretion as the physician uses in bringing medicine to the sick. In some institutions the group or ward system will recom- mend itself in preference to the central library reading room. In these338 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL cases the central library, if such there be, will be only a store-room for books; but I urge you to push to the outside limit of discretion the permission to have direct, personal access to books. Here I recall a picture which may have some bearing upon the problem of the superintendents of the hospitals for the insane. It is related that after the poet. Southey lost his reason, his favorite haunt was his library in Greta Hall at Keswick. It is pathetically related that he was wont to spend hours of the day walking back and forth in front of his book shelves, his hands resting lovingly upon certain of his books which in other years had been to him a comfort and consolation. I think those of you who are booklovers, and doubtless this term would include every member of this conference, will agree with me in that there is a certain consolation to the mind perturbed or worn, in the mere presence and companionship of books. But getting back to practical details, I, as president of the Iowa Library Commission, would invite the members of this conference to visit the rooms of the Commission at the west end of the Capitol base- ment. I invite you not only that you may know what the Commission is doing in a general way for the library movement in our state, but also that you may study the Traveling Library system as it is operated throughout the State. It may be that there is something in the details of the system, as for instance, the book cases and the charging system in use, which could be utilized in your respective institutions—espec- ially the larger ones. I would call your attention especially to the simple charging system adopted by the Commission, a system wrought out by Miss Margaret W. Brown, librarian of the Commission,-—the product of long experience in handling the complicated details of loaning books. In general it is simply this: A card-pocket is pasted in the front cover and each book has a book-card with the author and title written plain- ly on it. When the book is loaned the book-card is taken from the book and the librarian writes on it the name of the borrower and the date of the loan. When the book is returned the librarian returns the card to the pocket in the book after adding the date of the return. There is room for many entries on the card. The advantage of this system is not only that it is an easy method of keeping a record of the loan and return of books, but it also gives a history of each book— not only the number of readers but the names of the readers. When one card is exhausted another takes its place. This, filed, gives a com- plete record of the book; and the records, together, give a history of the library with all the data necessary to compiling reports as to cir- culation, etc. This system does away with your record books, sub- stituting the all-including card system, with the many advantages of that system which I need not take time to explain. FICTION.—I find the fiction question has scarcely more than en- tered your respective Edens to disturb your serenity. It is a question on which many a public library board has split, on,£ on which many librarians have found themselves out of harmony with their respectiveINSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 339, boards, and one which adds sometimes seriousness and sometimes gaiety to the annual conferences of the American Library Association. It will be well to anticipate the question and so avoid, or at least re- duce to a minimum,' the friction attending its after-solution. As you know there is no longer any such fiction question as that which con- fronted us older men in our youth. It used to take such forms as this: “Is novel reading a benefit or a detriment?” Or, giving the question an ethical turn, “Is novel reading a blessing or a curse?” I have heard, as; have some of you, the novel unqualifiedly condemned from the pulpit as a shrewd device of the devil for entrapping the souls of the young, the weak and the unwary. But all this is changed. Now everybody reads more or less of fiction,—in the newspapers and magazines and books. Teachers use novels in their classes, preachers quote from them in their sermons, lecturers make them the themes of their lectures. The world’s best literary critics are agreed in that much of the thought which in other years was put into lyric, descriptive, dramatic and epic poetry, now finds its way into the novel. Novels embody the best work of many of the great poets of the last century, among whom may be found Victor Hugo, Alexander Dumas, Dickens, George Eliot and George Meredith. Confining ourselves to our own country, not a few of our best poets have found most of their inspira- tion in the novel. This is almost true of Longfellow—I refer especially to his 'Hyperion’—and of Aldrich, with his half-dozen or more novels, and is wholly true of Howells, Helen Hunt Jackson, Edith Wharton, Hamlin Garland and many another poet-novelist of to-day. Fiction is life either crystallized or symbolized in the printed page, as painting is life crystallized or symbolized on canvas. Fiction is philosophy teaching by example. Fiction is preaching by illustration and suggestion. Fiction is the glass through which men and women see their own souls reflected. • Burns cried out for— “—Some power the giftie gie us To see oursels as ithers see us.” That power lies within the grasp of the Scotts, the Thackerays, the Dickenses, the Crocketts, the Barries, the Hawthornes, the Poes, the Howellses, the Cables, the Harriet Beecher Stowes, the Hamlin Garlands, the Octave Thanets. I need not stop to reason with you on the fundamental question —the value of books in institutional work. The fact that fiction finds eager readers when and where there is no apparent desire for works of theology, philosophy, phililogy, science in the abstract, or history in its severer forms, is one which you as students of psychology are not slow to note. Let me impress upon your minds the fact that while there are many—at least ten—wide open gates to the world of literature, few there bo who seek to enter by nine of the ten. Nearly all, make directly for the more attractive gate of fiction. So universal is this condition among all classes of men—including women and children— that you may truthfully declare that there is practically one general340 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL entrance to the world of books, and that is by the fiction gate. Will you emulate the example of mediaeval scientists and mechanics who fought electricity as an emanation from the devil; or shall you more wisely avail yourselves of this universal taste for fiction as modern scientists and mechanics have utilized that ex-spirit of the power of the air, electricity, making what was once regarded as man’s enemy his faithful friend and serviceable ally. The question, allowing me to put it, admits of but one answer . Your problem lies, not in the abstract, but in the concrete; and your question is not “fiction or no fiction?” but rather, How much “—or, if you prefer “How little fiction?” Here let me note the status of fiction in the several State institu- tions here represented: IN THE PENITENTIARIES. At Anamosa, in round numbers.......................50 per At Fort Madison, approximately.....................37 Vz ” cent 97 Making an average of 43 % ” IN THE HOSPITALS FOR THE INSANE. At Cherokee.........................................75 per cent At Clarinda ...................................... 85 ” ” At Independence ....................................80 ” ” At Mt. Pleasant................................... 25 ” ” Making an average of....................... 66 % ” ” IN THE STATE SCHOOLS. In the School for the Deaf. ........................33 1-3 per cent In the Industrial School for Boys...................33 1-3 ” ” In the School for Feeble Minded Children............ 33 1-3 ” ” In the Industrial School for Girls.................. 88 ” ” In the School for the Blind......................... 25 ” ” Making an average of.........................42 3-5 ” ” IN THE HOMES. In the Soldiers’ Orphans’ Home.................... .33 1-3 per cent In the Soldiers’ home................................ 21 ” ” Making an average of........................271-6 This gives a general average of nearly 45 per cent. Is the average too high, or too low?INSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 341 As applied to your own respective institutions, your answers to the question are as follows: Eight are of the opinion that the ratio of fiction to other hooks is about right as it is and five favor an increase. None favor a decrease. I now deliberately enter upon dangerous ground, for I am likely to run against settled judgments formed from personal and practical study of the several problems committed to you for solution. But if I shall do no more than put your conclusions to the test of criticism, I shall be satisfied. Let me say right here that when I use the term ‘fiction’ I have in mind good, sane, helpful, wholesome, and at the same time enter- taining fiction. Not the penny-dreadfuls that sow in youthful minds the seeds of vice, nor the elegantly bound and handsomely illustrated novels that confound love with lust and condone offenses against the moral law which are robbing aged parents of the support that is their due, and breeding the social sins that war against the home, society and the State. Nor, have'I in mind the goody-goody fiction which shuns .all contact with sin and would ignore the three provocatives of mis- conduct, figuratively named by the old theologians as “the world, the flesh and the devil.” There can be no strong character-building without resistance, without struggle and triumph; and it follows that there can be no great work of fiction which .ignores the soul-con- flicts forth from which come characters that really count for something in the world. I like to recommend for young men such helpful stories as Edna Lyall’s ‘Donovan’, Dr. Holland’s ‘Arthur Bonnicastle,’ Mrs. Humphry Ward’s ‘David Grieve,’ Miss Glasgow’s ‘Voice of the People,’ E. Hopkinson Smith’s ‘Caleb West,’ and his ‘Tom Grogan; or for young women such character-making stories as Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward’s ‘A Singular Life,’ Mrs. Burnett’s ‘That Lass o’ Lowrie,’ Balzac’s '’Eugenie Grandet,’ Dinah Muloch Craik’s ‘John Halifax,’ and her ‘Noble Life’ and such books of the period as Eleanor Gates ‘Biography of a Prairie Girl,’ which have in the narration the strength of actual -encounter with sin and adverse circumstance. Such books are to the moral nature what the gymnasium and athletic sports are to the physical nature. But to return to my analysis. The three institutions whose superintendents favor an increase in the ratio of fiction to all other books in their respective libraries are ns follows: School for Boys 33 1-3 per cent fiction School for Girls 88 99 Institution for Feeble Minded Children .....33 1-3 ” ” ” Soldiers’ Home 21 ” ” *> Hospital at Mt. Pleasant ......25 ” ” My outside judgment—take it for v/hat it is worth—-is that in the342 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL School for the Boys and the Institution for the Feeble-Minded the fiction may well be speedily increased from 33 1-3 per cent.- to 50 per cent, and then gradually increased to 60 per cent.; that the fiction in the School for Girls may well be decreased from 88 per cent, to 60 per cent.; that the percentage at Mt. Fleasant may well be speedily increased from 25 to 50 and then gradually increased to 60; that the percentage of fiction in the Soldiers’ Home may well be in- creased as speedily as possible from 21 to 50, and then gradually in- creased to 75. Of the several classes of institutions whose superintendents recom- mend no change in the ratio, my best outside judgment, whatever it is worth, is as follows: that the libraries in the hospitals for the insane should contain 75 per cent, of fiction. This would reduce the* ratio at Clarinda 10 per cent, and at Independence 5 per cent. As- before stated it would increase the ratio at Mt. Pleasant 50 per cent, and leave the percentage at Cherokee as it now stands. In the several schools I would have fiction range from 50 to 60. per cent., thus materially increasing the ratio in all the schools but one. In the Soldiers’ Orphans’ Home, which is virtually a school, I would gradually increase the percentage from 33 1-3 to a point be- tween 50 and 60. I would in general terms define my position as to fiction for convicts as follows: First—The convict mind is rarely philosophical, rarely analytical, largely governed by feelings and influenced by emotions and passions. The ethical side of the convict’s education is possible only as the feelings, emotions and passions are touched. To reach the convict the educator must knock at the door of his imagination. If that door swings open, all else is possible, if that door remains closed, all other doors are sure to be doubly bolted and barred. I am sure Chaplain Jessup, of Ft. ^Madison, must have found the secret of ingress to the convict’s mind, for in a letter accompanying, his answers to my questions, he pays this strong tribute to the library as an adjunct to educational work at the prison: “It cannot be too' highly spoken of in relation to discipline, and its direct effect on. the prisoner is remarkable.” I have no doubt in my own mind that the work of the chaplain at Ft. Madison would be accompanied with far richer results were the companionship to which he refers enriched by a large accession of rare works of fiction through which the life blood of great men and women has been found to flow. I would be extremely liberal in dealing out well selected fiction to the insane. It has been demonstrated, over and over again, and the. superintendents of our Iowa hospitals confirm the demonstration, that in many cases books do minister to the mind diseased. Over the door of the public library in ancient Alexandria was a significant in-INSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 343 rscription which freely translated would read, “Medicine for Hurt Minds/' When you think of the possibilities for the diversion and en- tertainment of diseased minds, which may he found between the covers of a book, do not hesitate to supply the books that directly appeal to the imagination, books that afford the bewildered mind an avenue leading forth from its labyrinth into some other world in which self is lost in sympathy. In the several schools I would have about the same proportion as should be placed in any other school library, the kind and quality dependent upon local conditions. Here should ever be kept in mind the duty of superintendent, or librarian, to make the reading of fiction a healthful stimulus to the reading of poetry, biography, history, philosophy, science and the applied sciences. The best fiction suggests, or at least stimulates interest in, the substantial lines of investigation and the more elevating planes of thought. The step from the historical novel to biography should be invited by the librarian in charge. The step from the novel of affairs to the study of affairs—the study of inven- tions, of trade combinations, of world movements—and the study of careers, their weakness and their strength; the step from the novel of motive, of aspiration and of purpose, to the ethical works which make pointed and practical right motive and purposes and which direct the newly aroused ambition into healthful channels,—all this should be en- couraged by the librarian in charge and by all who come in contact with the student-mind. When we come to the veterans of the War of the Rebellion, we find a class by itself. The State, appreciating their past services and deploring their necessities, has provided them a home, not distinc- tively a hospital, not in any sense a place of detention nor in any 'sense a school. Many of them are inveterate readers and more of them would read, and be the happier therefor, if the appetite were more strongly tempted. In view of the solace which reading would afford them in their declining years, what limit would I put upon fiction with this class? I have given figures, but am disposed to withdraw them, leaving as my final answer: The only limit I would put upon them is that which they would put upon themselves. In other words, with a variety of good books of all classes to draw from, with a larger percentage of fiction than of any other one class, and with freest access to the books on the shelves, I would have the librarian make careful note of all selections and, at the end of the year, find the percentage of class with class, revising this percentage with every succeeding year. I would follow this lead, making the library at the Soldiers' Home strong along the line of natural selection. PERIODICALS—In all thirteen institutions represented here, I am pleased to note a liberal supply of such periodicals as are found to stimulate interest in world-happenings, in the trend of world-thought and of the life-currents surging all about them of which they would otherwise know little or nothing. The pictures in the illustrated magazines are of themselves worth many times more than they cost344 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OP CONTROL as wholesome food for the imagination. In the magazines of the period we may find that happy mean between two extremes, namely healthful recreation and helpful information and suggestion. Let me add right here the suggestion that our Library Commission clearing house is now overstacked with such standard magazines, as McClure’s, the CosmopolL tan and Munsey’s, which are yours for the asking—your institutions paying the freight. ASSISTANTS—In my questions put to the superintendents nothing was said of the literary necessities of the assistants variously named in various institutions,—the valuable and essential corps of allies on whom the Board and the superintendents rely for the develop- ment of their policy and the working out of their plans. I do not mean simply the physicans, the trained nurses, the chaplains in the prisons, the teachers in your schools and the instructors in your workshops, though most of the reading is likely to be done by them ; but I would include also the humblest employes in the various institu- tions. Attractive as positions in State institutions seem to many on the outside, those who fill them must come to feel that they are missing some of the gratification which comes from life in the larger world outside. In a limited sense they are prisoners—though self-elected to imprisonment. It is important that these, from the greatest to the least,, shall be made not only comfortable but happy in their work; and the work which you are doing toward the building of libraries in your respective institutions will not be what it should be, unless the library as an institution becomes a constant source of solace and satisfaction, of entertainment and instruction to those who have cast their lot with you. In planning for the future of your library, keep ever in mind the duty, the necessity, of providing for the intellectual needs of your executive family. Library Training and the Summer School. In another paragraph I have referred to the services rendered, or the services which might be rendered, by acting librarians in encouraging and directing the reading of those with whom they come in contact. It gives me pleasure to note that in all, or nearly all, of the State institutions represented here, there has been more or less encouragement extended to those who should use the library. I note also with satisfaction, that in most of the institutions here represented some meaure of classifica- tion or cataloging has been attempted. Several institutions have well arranged and helpful book or pamphlet catalogues for the use of the inmates. Only one institution reports an attempt at a card catalogue and that only an author’s list without the necessary classification which must come later. Let me urge upon you, and upon the Board, the present desirability and, too, the future if not the present necessity of the card catalogue known in library circles as the dictionary catalogue, one consisting of authors’ names and titles and subjects of books alphabetically arranged with appropriate classification according to the now generally accepted decimal system, and with shelf-numbers which shall make the class and not the alcove the unit of location.INSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 315 Without attempting a detailed explanation, let me add that under such a system there is no possibility of embarrassment through the encroachment of one class, or department, upon space preempted by another. Under the alcove system, or under the arbitrary setting aside of certain space for one class and certain other space for another class of books, the moment your space in one department is filled you are helpless, and until it is filled you have more or less unused space; while under the expansive system now in general use in libraries, there can be no encroachment of one class upon another for the depart- ment or class, to-day, next week or next year, is just as large as the number of books it contains. '‘But,” you say,' “the number of books in our library it too small to require a card catalogue.” Possibly, and yet you would be surprised to find how much a card catalogue would be consulted if one were inaugurated in your library. But the chief reason for inaugurating it now, is that under the general plan and purpose of the Board with reference to libraries as outlined in Judge Kinne’s letter, your library will continue to grow and must soon assume proportions which will make it more and more difficult to handle under the old system—or lack of system. The re-cataloging of an old library is laborious and expensive. The re-cataloging of our State Library was a work of six years, the ex- pense of which to the State for cataloguer’s salary alone was $6,000 to which may be added at least another $1,000 for material and inci- dental expense. Begin your card catalogue early and much inconven- ience, annoyance and expense will be avoided. All this leads down to an experiment I want to see tried. A sug- gestion occurs in one of the questions put in my letter of inquiry, as follows: “Would you recommend that your acting librarian be sent, at State expense, to the Summer Library School at the State University (six weeks) provided the Regents of the University would be willing to remit the entrance fee?” As I had anticipated, the answer in most cases was in the nega- tive. Of course it was not to be expected that convicts, or mildly insane persons, or children, or persons only temporarily acting as librarian, would be sent to the Summer School. Of the ten who answered the question but two gave affirmative answers. Namely the superintendent of the Soldiers’ Orphans’ Home and the superintendent of the School for the Deaf, fin the case first named the librarian is the superintendent’s stenographer, and in the second case the librarian is a teacher in the school. After receiving the replies, I wrote to President MacLean of the State University, asking him if he would recommend remitting the entrance fee to two pupils sent to the Library School by the Board of Control. Miss Tyler, secretary of the Library Commission, and director of the school united with me in the inquiry. His answer was that he would be pleased to make346 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL such recommendation to the Regents. I regard the President’s letter as conclusive and would therefore urge upon the Board of Control the sending of the two persons above ndmed, that the Board may judge from the outcome as to the value of training to acting librarians in State Institutions. I hope to see the experiment tried because I am convinced of the direct good which will result therefrom; and, too, because I am of the opinion that with growing libraries on your hands it is only a question of time when the uncertainty of tenure of the acting librarian, and other reasons given by eight of the super- intendents will cease to exist. In other words the time is nearing when every State institution must have as its acting librarian some one whose tenure is reasonably sure and whose knowledge includes not only a general knowledge of books, but also at least a general knowledge of library science. The eight institutions from whom negative answers were received to the question as to the training of acting librarians, represent libraries the contents of which aggregate 35,691 volumes—an average of 4,461, which average is of itself a good-sized library, calling for the practical application of the general principles of library science. The immediate application of these principles to all the State institutions is not advisable and would not be desirable. My duty begins and ends with recommending the sending of two acting li- brarians to the Summer School—which commences very soon—that they, the institutions they represent, and the State that maintains them, may receive the benefit thereof,—leaving with you and the Board of Control the question of ending the experiment there or carrying it further. Let me add a few words on the reasons assigned for the negative answers returned. Two cases gave uncertainty of tenure of acting li- brarian—a good and sufficient season, but one which should not long exist. In one institution, the simple nature of the books kept was given as the reason. The emphasis now given in all the library schools of the country to instruction for children’s librarians must convince the most skeptical that there is much work for. librarians among the young and, by parity of reasoning, among the mentally backward. The special instruction given at the school last summer by Miss Moore, of Brooklyn, N. Y., in library work among children would seem to me to he extremely valuable to one in charge of books for the feeble-minded. In the case of one institution the reason assigned for the negative answer was the impropriety of recommending a relative to the advantages of the Summer School. I see the force of this objection and would leave the matter to the Board of Control without comment. A library of even 1200 volumes would seem to me to warrant scientific classification, cataloging and shelf-listing as a basis for future accessions. It would be worth something to the State in the future to have a nucleus of librarians sufficiently trained to do ‘organizing work* such as classifying, cataloging, shelf-listing, etc., who could be trans-INSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 347 ferred temporarily from one institution to another as they might be needed, and who would have in the larger institutions sufficient work to keep them occupied when not on special duty. At the present time it would pay the state of Iowa to employ at a salary of §75 a month, a trained cataloguer and organizer to go from one institution to another, organizing each library on a scientific basis and instructing the librarian, or an assistant, in scientific methods of handling hooks with the best results therefrom. Let me urge upon you the desirability of keeping and embodying in future reports for future reference, such library statistics as, for example, the exact total number of books—instead of the round—very round—numbers used in several of the answers received. Also the accessions and withdrawals since the last report, the amount expended for books since the last report, with a report of the number and quality of the circulation of the books. In response to my genera! question: Is the library a help to you in your work, the answers were, all together, an unqualified tribute to the value of books as a comfort and solace, a benefit and blessing, and therefore a valuable means to a desirable end. In their enthusiasm some who responded to my inquiry were not restrained within the limits of an affirmation. Let me quote from some of the tributes: One pronounced the library “a most important help.** Another writes: “We are proud of our library, only hoping to increase the number of books, thereby increasing the benefit derived therefrom.” Another: "We should hardly know how to get along without it during the winter months.” A prison chaplain writes: “It is one of the best things about the prison, helpful to the discipline and an en- couragement to the men to look hopefully to an improved future.” And in an accompanying letter the answer is emphasized in these suggestive words: “The library as an adjunct to the prison cannot be too highly spoken of in relation to discipline and its direct effect on the prisoner. The lot of the prisoner would be doubly hopeless and his reforma- tion much less a possibility without the aid and companionship of hoods.” Prom the Soldiers* Home comes this word: ' “Our library is cer- tainly a great help to the institution. But, as you know, when men reach an advanced age it is hard for them to see, or to fix their minds on any deep study or reading; nevertheless the books, together with the magazines and papers, furnish occupation and enjoyment to many of the old veterans.” Thus having ascertained the value of the library as a means to a most important end, and having made such suggestions as time would permit, let me conclude with a single generalization from the theme to which I have addressed myself. I would crystallize into a single phrase the general policy of348 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL Iowa’s Boar.d of Control and of the executive officers of the institutions under its control: “The most and the best books, for the least money; the best ethical and educational results, with the most of satisfaction to the reader.” Sterne in his “Sentimental Journey” describes a trifling incident which has its suggestion for you. While walking down a long, dark passage-way, soliloquizing on the Bastile and the necessity of penal laws, he heard a childish voice and the startling words: “I can’t get out! I can't get out!” He looked up and down the passage-way but was unable to discover man, woman, or child. Later, returning, he heard the same words, repeated time after time, and finally looking up, he saw they came from a starling hung in a cage overhead. The tourist turned and said “But I’ll help thee! Cost what it will!” He tried in vain to twist the wires of the cage. The bird flew to the place where he was attempting its deliverance and thrust its head through the trellis pressing its breast against the wires. Unable to effect its release the man walked away, his mind regretfully recalling his former soliloquy concerning the necessity of penal laws. As he walked up stairs he conscientiously unsaid the words which he had said while going down. A postrophizing imprisonment of body, or of mind, he exclaimed: “Disguise thyself as thou wilt; still, still thou art a bitter draught! and, though thousands in all ages have been made to drink thee, thou art no less bitter on that account.” Then, address- ing himself to liberty, he added: “ ’Tis thou, thrice sweet and gracious goddess, whom all in public or in private worship; whose taste is grateful, and will ever be so, till Nature herself shall change.” Recol- lections of the imprisoned starling pursued the traveler to his room. He sat down at his table, leaning his head upon his hand, and gave full sweep to his imagination. He thought of the millions of his fellow creatures born to no inheritance but slavery. He thought of all the heart-sickness that follows hope deferred. He saw the iron enter into the soul of the prisoner. He heard the clanking chains upon his legs. He burst into tears. Who among us has not at some time in his life, if not at every stage of life’s progress, felt to some degree the shut-in feeling which the starling voiced in the words “I can’t get out!” If we who are, in theory at least, in full enjoyment of our freedom, find ourselves more of less shut in by walls of circumstance, how much more must that feeling take possession of those who are shut in by afflictions—physical or mental, by those who are restrained by necessary, discipline and by those whose restraint is part of the public protection! If the library is worth something to us, what may it not be made to do for the eight thousand shut-in souls committed to your keeping! In approaching the library question keep this thought in mind and, too, let your imagination dwell upon the fact that the library is a monument to the godlike dignity of man,—man the dreamer of dreams, the seer of visions,—the only one of God’s creatures that dreams dreams and seesINSTITUTION LIBRARIES. 319 visions,—the only one that bends himself determinedly to the task of realizing his dreams and materializing his visions; the only one that iooLs back to find the wisdom of the ages as written in the history of nations and the lives of men. The birds in yonder fields and woods build their nests as those of their kind built them ages ago. The beavers build their homes exactly as their remote ancestors built them in a prehistoric past. The only changes they make are forced upon them by changed environment. But man is ever on the outlook for new worlds to conquer, for new contributions to humanity’s service, for new visions of the thought of God as felt in the laws of the •universe and as written in the wisdom of the ages. See to it, then, that the library—that epitome of the world’s knowledge, philosophy and progress—is given the treatment it deserves in all your educational and ethical plans and that the several libraries you create in your respective institutions shall be so many monuments to your judgment and to your enlightened and enlightening benevolence. CONCERNING TEMPERANCE INSTRUCTION. By Geo. M. Kline, M. D., Second Assistant Physician, Mt. Pleasant State Hospital. It may appear from the title, in as much as this paper will treat the subject to a considerable extent from the standpoint of the school, that the writer is presumptive in entering into a field of investigation belonging more properly to the teacher. No one will deny that the introduction of temperance instruction into the school curriculum was a wise and progressive step in combating the drink evil, and it is not to be inferred that the writer is endeavor- ing to belittle the importance and is not in sympathy with its aims. Nevertheless, it is to be regretted that this instruction as now -pursued in our public schools, is not as effective as it should be. A letter of inquiry was addressed to the county school superinten- dents throughout the state to learn what was being done along this line in Iowa and that some conclusions might be arrived at, as to the value of instruction on this subject. The replies to this letter showed that the results attained were not commensurate with the energy and time employed in the teaching. A very few felt satisfied that all was being, accomplished that was possible, but the majority, as far as they were able to observe maintained that the present method of instruction has not materially lessened the evils of drinking among our boys. This ineffectiveness, from the general trend of the replies, is due to the following causes:—a failure to give any instruction whatsoever on this subject; a lack of interest manifested by many teachers in3 01 2 077875745 350 BULLETIN IOWA BOARD OF CONTROL this work; the inaccurate and unfit way with which text books handle the question; and, a constant destruction of the school teaching by conditions in the home life. It is apparent that very little regard is given its importanc^ in many schools. One superintendent says, “I believe that in rhany schools, the effects of drinking are taught simply to comply with the law.” Another writes, ‘Teachers must not report this subject taught in all grades, as was done in a town I have in mind, when to my knowledge not a word had been spoken upon this subject during the entire year.” Several teachers admitted that the subject'was taught in an indifferent manner, little interest being taken in present- ing the subject. The cause of temperance must surely suffer when such an atti- tude of inactivity and .indifference is manifested by the teacher. And, though no system of instruction can be devised that will be ideal and accomplish all that is to be desired, lasting results of this instruction could be greatly enhanced by more earnest and systematic work on the part of the teacher. * . In this state as in nearly all the states, temperance instruction in schools is now compulsory. In compliance with the law, the subject is taught in connection with that of physiology and hygiene. It was necessary at the time that this temperance legislation was passed that the text books on physiology be revised and attention, too often undue attention, drawn to the dangers of drinking. In this revision of the text book,, that the law would be complied with, and more especially it would seem, to satisfy the clamor of the over-zealous temperance society and worker, much material of a harmful character was inserted. A great deal of it was of a kind that had a tendency to scare children into not using alcoholics, rather than give simple easily understood reasons for avoiding their use. In many texts, extreme cases of alcoholism are described with the result that they appear overdrawn and exaggerated to the ordinary pupil. Nearly every superintendent thought that the text books con- tained many unscientific statements and much that was undesirable on this subject. One superintendent writes, “Many text books give exaggerated and untrue accounts and the average pupil quickly finds such statements with the result that doubt is cast on the true state- ment and the pupil unconsciously becomes in a slight sense , the defendant, as all children naturally will side with the person who is receiving unfair treatment.” It is easily seen that if the statements and theories on the alcohol question, to which considerable space is devoted in the modern text book, are discredited by pupils that they are apt to doubt the truth- fulness of other branches of the physiology. To illustrate this point, the argument in one text book for exercise, as stimulating the circula- tion is almost identical, word for word, with a criticism on the use of intoxicants.