of labor in school could be saved to the scholars of all the U. S. public schools, by the substitution of the metric system for the existing system. This saving would enable the scholars to learn more in other directions during the time saved. Nevertheless, it is sometimes gravely asserted that the value of the present system is the difficulty it provides for exchange, and estimates, and computations of all kinds, thus affording useful mental exercise, both for school children and for adults. Fears are occasionally expressed that the substitution of the metric system would make mental arithmetic in such matters so easy that the aptitude would be lost. According to this argument, we should make all mental operations as hard as possible, artificially.
So complex is our customary system of weights and measures, that there are comparatively few persons who can recite from memory all the various tables taught in our schools. So ambiguous is the system, that many cultured persons are not aware of the difference between British and U. S. gallons, quarts, pints, bushels, pecks, etc. Some cultured persons are even unaware of the difference between the apothecary's ounce or pound and the avoirdupois ounce or pound.
The argument is often made that the English-speaking people should adhere, for patriotic reasons, to their national standards as against standards of French creation. Surely the answer to such a plea is that the question is not between the English and the French peoples, but between the English-speaking peoples and the rest of the civilized world. The metric system is the only system of weights and measures that can be called international. Moreover, only the very best available system should be good enough for Americans.
It is sometimes complained that the meter as a unit should be set aside because it is inaccurate. In order to make the standard length international, France decided upon a decimal fraction (the ten millionth part) of the distance between the geographical pole and the equator, measured on the Paris Meridian of the earth's surface. The meter arrived at by the French geodesists at the beginning of the nineteenth century appears by the most recent publications of the Bureau des Longitudes to have been a little short of the mark. It seems that the international meter, defined as the distance between the centers of two marks on the standard meter bar kept in the International Bureau of Weights and Measures at Paris, is just about one-fiftieth part of 1 per cent, shorter than the ten millionth part of the quadrantal arc of the earth above referred to. This small discrepancy is evidently of no material consequence; partly because a discrepancy ceases to be a source of error as soon as its magnitude becomes known, and partly because all copies of the meter are made by bar-to-bar comparison and not from comparison with the dimension of the earth,