7" THEORY OF STATISTICS.
TasLe IL —Showing the Numbers of Married Women, in certain Quaker
Families, Dying at Different Ages. (Cited from Proc. Loy. Soc., vol. 1xvii.
(1900), p. 172. On the Correlation between Duration of Life and Number
of Offspring, by Miss M. Beeton, Karl Pearson, and G. U. Yule.)
Number of Number of
; 4 !
Age at Death, Poms Dying Age at Death, i Pi Dying
Yenrd etween onTs etween
: said Years : said Years
of Age. of Age.
175-225 29 62°5— 67°5 73
225-275 87 67°5- 725 83
27'5-32°5 99 72'5- 77'5 77
325-375 109 77'5- 825 78
37:5-42°5 90 82:5— 875 59
425-475 87 87:5—- 925 26
47:5-52°5 64 92:5- 97°5 7
525-575 54 97°5-102°5
575-625 69 -
Total -295
The distribution is somewhat more irregular than in the last
case; the commencement is abrupt; a maximum frequency is
attained in the fourth class (age at death 325 to 37°), and then
there is a slow fall to the age-class 525-575. After this class
the frequency rises again and attains a secondary maximum in
the age-class 67°5-72°5.
(c) Table III. The numbers of stigmatic rays on a number
of Shirley poppies were counted. As the range of variation is
not great, the unit is taken as the class-interval. The frequency-
distribution is given by the following table.
TaBLE III. —Showing the Frequencies of Seed Capsules on certain Shirley
Poppies, with Different Numbers of Stigmatic Rays. (Cited from
Biometrika, ii. p. 89, 1902.)
Number of Number of
Number of Capsules Number of Capsules
Stigmatic with said Stigmatic with said
Rays. Number of Rays. Number of
Stigmatic Rays’ Stigmatic Rays.
5 3 14 302
{ 11 15 234
| B=: 16 128
106 17 50
10 | 152 18 19
i 238 19 }
Ar 305 20
13 315
Total 5
8
100
i
190F