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;------------------------------------. • • • • • • • - • I "COMET" ...... "Comet," :first passenger steamboat, 173, p icture, 1969. Comfrey (kum'fre), flower, picture, 527. Comic opera, 2699. Comino (k o-rne'no), isl., 2299. Comitadji (k orn-i-tii'zhe). Lawless bands of Bulgarian fighter .. ; during the World War t h ey a cted with t h e Bulgarian army in the Balkan operations. Comi' tia centuria' ta, Rom. assembly, 3113. Comitia tribu' ta, Rom. assembly, 3114. Comma, mark of punctuat ion, 2994. Comma butterfly, picture, 629. Commander, Brit. naval officer whose rank is n ext b elow captain. Commander or Kommander Islands, group of isls. in Bering Sea, belonging to R ussia ; seal fisheries, 3241. Commander-in-Chief. Formerly the highest position in the Brit. army, abolish ed in 1904; d1uin g t imes of war the officer commanding the army in the field receives the title. Commandments, The Ten, 2483. Commen' sal, a living organism which forms partnership with anoth er, 1006. See also in I ndex Symbiosis. Commerce, 926- 43 ; banking, 348- 9 ; beginnings in barter, 905; Board of Trade, 478; cable systems, ~39-46; comm ercial rivalry a factor in international politics, 943, (Africa) 57, (Asia) 249, 2727, 3264- 5, (E. Indies) 1188, (Mediterranean) 2377- 8, (Near East and · Balkans) 319, 326, 1979, (petroleum) 2678, (Punic Wars) 3115- 6, 733, (World War) 1347, 3790 ; consular ser vice, 952 ; drugs, 1142 ; Europe, 1343 ; modern fa irs, 3148, 1366, 2173; geographical influences, 1338, 2635, 1773, 1691- 2; Gr eat Lakes, map , 1689; ships and ocean routes, 3279- 85, 3432, 2377, maps, 288; S. Amer ., 3334- 5; trans• porta tion, 3565- 6; U .S.A., 2635; weights and m easures, 3737- 8. H isto1·y, ancient : Carthage, 7 33- 4 ; Crete, 25, 26; E gypt, 96; Greece, 1691, 1692, 1695; Oriental, 1929, 246, 2757, 3296, 3433, 3482 ; Phoonicians, 2845, 3546; Rome, 3116- 8, 3296.--JWediceval and mode1·n : Arabs, 2444, 2814; effect of Cru sad es~ 1027; fairs and markets, 1366 ; F la nders, 405, 416 ; fur trade, 1530, 1881, 3630; guilds: 1741; Hanseatic L eague, 1 772 ; It. cities, 1548, 3667- 9, 1002; pu·acy, 2887; Portugal, 2941, 1532- 3; slave trade, 3305; spice and sugar trade, 1188, 3367, 3433; U.S.A. clipper trade with Far East, 249, 3280. See also in I ndex Exploration ; Trade routes ; Transportation ; and names of chief commercial cit ies, countries, and products. Commercial geography, 1567. Commines (ko-men'), Philippe de (1445 ?1511 ?). Fr. historian, called " first . truly modern writer " (" l\1:emoirs," one of classics of history). Committee of Public Safety, Fr., 1512, 3098- 9. Commodore, temporary rank in Brit. nav3' . Com' modus, Lucius lEiius Aurelius (A .D. 161- 192), Rom. emperor 180- 192, son of Marcus AuTelins ; a brutal tyrant, h e was assassinated. Common carriers, 3566. " Commoner, The Great," Nickname of William P itt the elder. Common law, origin of, 2158. Common Pleas, Court of, 1004. Commons, House of, in Brit. Parl., 2786- 7, 2469, 1638, 1655, pictures, 1637, 1640- 1; in Canadia n P ari. , 684. Commonwealth, The, in E n g. (1649- 59), 1020, 2427. Com'mune of Paris (1871), 1499, 2783. Commu' nion. See in I ndex Eucharist. Com'munism, form of social organization, 3319; in Russia, 3147, 3170, 3319; in Serbia, 3249. Com'munist Manifesto, 2355. Com'mutator, in electric motors, 1247; in dynamo, 1154, picture, 1154. Como (ko' rno), beautiiul la ke in N. It. at foot of Alps, 55t sq. m. , city of Como (pop. 48,000) at s . extremity, 25 m. N . of Milan; p ictures, 1564, 2026; Castle of Balbia n ello, p icture, 2021. Corn' oro Islands, group of small isls. in Moza mbique Channel, 217 4. Company, unit in an army; it consists of four platoons in the Brit. army, and comprises 6 offi cers and 221 men ; its strength h as varied in the past. Comparative anatomy, 1353. Comparison, of adjective, 21 ; of adverb, 23. . Compass, mariner's, 943- 4; gyToscopic, 1753; importance of, 2556- 8, 3565. Compass plants, name given to cer tain plants whose leaves point N . and s. to obtain n ecessary ligh t; the Australian eucalyptus is an example. Compensating pendulum, 2807. Compiegne (kon-pyen'), Fr., historic tn. in N . on r. Oise, pop. 17,000 ; Joan of Arc taken prisoner by Eng., 1430 ; h eadquarters of Ger. army 1870- 1 ; taken by Germa ns 1914 ; objective of 1918 offensive, 3814. Complementary colours, 920. Complex sentence, 3247. Compluten' sian Polyglot Bible, 434. Composit~ (k om-poz'i-te), family of plants with composite flowers, 1440 ; typical floral structure, 253. Composition, in painting, 1384-8. Compositor, 2584. Compostella (kom -p·os-tel 'ltt), Sp. Same as Santiago de Compostella. Compound, in chemistry, 813- 4. Compound eye, an eye composed of numerous simple eyes, 1957, p ictures, 1361 ; of dragon-fly, 1130; of drone b ee, 393. Compound leaves, 2171. Compound microscope, 2399. Compound sentence, 3247. Compound steam engines, 3407- 8. Compressed air, 77- 8; in diving apparatus, 1119; in glass-blowing, 1615; in tunnel constructionJ 3601. Compressed air appliances, 2917, 77- 8. Com'promise of 1850, name given to an agreement between the slavery and antislavery parties in the U .S.A., su ggested by H enry Clay, "th e Gr eat Pacificator." Compton (kum't 6n), Edward (1854- 1918). Eng. a ctor, son of H enry Compton, who first appeared in London in 1877 at Drury Lane ; founded the Ed ward Compton Company which toured the country for about 30 years ; Fay Compton, the actress, is his daughter , and Compton Mackenzie, the author, his son. Compton, Henry (1805- 77). Eng. actor, father of Edward Compton, whose r eal name was Charles Mack enzi e ; h e was most successful as a Shakespear ean clown. Compton Wyniates (wi n'ytits), castle in Warwicksh ire, Eng., 3716. Compurga' tion, trial by, 2075. Computing scale, 213. Comte (kont), Auguste (1798- 1857), F r . philosopher, founder of P ositivist school of philosophy, 3320, 262; quoted, 1506. Comus (ko'mus). In late Gk. myth., god of r evelry ; in Milton's great poem, enchanter, son of Circe, who, like h er, offers a brutalizing dra ught to travellers, to accomplish their ruin. " Comus," poem by Milton, 2426, 2428. Concave lens, 2176, 3362. Concave mirror, 2438. Concepcion (k on-sep-sion'), Chile. City on Bio-bio R ., 8 m. from Bay of Con cepcion ; pop. 67,000 ; trade centre for agricultuTal r egion ; 4 times destroyed by earthquake. Concepcion (Villa Con cepcion), tn. and r. port of Paraguay ; p op. 25,000. Concerto (kan-cher'to), musical composition, 2514. Conch, or concha, in architecture, t erm for the con cave ribless surface of a vault ; also a n apse or the dome of an apse. Conciergerie (kon-sy e1·-zhe-re'), prison in P aris, 2332. " Conciliation with the Colonies," Burke's speech on, 618. Conoilium plebis (k on-sil'i-um pleb'i s), assembly in anc. Rome, 3113. Con'clave, 2768. Concord, N.H., U.S.A., cap. of state, on Merrimack R. ; pop. 22,1 67 ; granite: silverwar e, electrical appliances. Key to Pronunciation-Cape, dt, far, fast, CONGREVEI sw~t, f~ll; Concord Bridge, battle, pictu1·e, 1920. Concor' dat, a type of treaty, 3586; Fr. (1801), 492. Concorde (kon-korcl'), Place de la, Paris, picture, 2781. Concrate, building mat erial, 944; cement, 778; con struction , 608, pictures, 608. Conde (kon-dti'), Louis I de Bourbon, Prince of (1530- 69), Fr. gen eral and Huguenot leader , 912. Conde, Louis 11 de Bourbon, Prince of (1621- 86), called " The Great Conde." Fr. gen eral ; won victory of Rocroy, 1643, which ended Span. and began Fr. military predominance, p i ctu're, 21Q8. Con' dell, Henry (d. 1627), En g. actor associated with Shakesp eare, 3258, 3260. Condensa' tion of water vap our, 890. Condensed milk, 2424. Condenser, gas, p ictu,re, 1543 ; in radio apparatus, 3770. Condensing steam engines, 3407-8. Condens'ite, a plastic material, 896, 776. Condillac (kon-de- yttk'). Etienne Bonnot de (1715-80). F r. philosoph er ; m emb er of Fr ench Academy. Con' diments and spices, 3367-8. Condor (kon' dO?-), large Andean vulture, 945, 3690 ; youn g, 455. Condorcet (kon-dOr-sa/), Marie Jean Carita.t, Marquis de (1743-94). Fr. matheInatician, philosopher , and revolutionist ; as member of L egislative Assembly laid foundation of Fr. educational system. Condottieri (kan-dot-tya're ), mercenary forces, 13th to 15th cents., 232. Conduction of heat, 1815. Conductiv' ity, electrical, 1233; affected by radioactivity, 3032; silver, 3300. Condy's fluid, 2332. Cone, of coniferous trees, 2884, 2886. Cone, of volca no, 3687. Cone-bearing trees. See i n I ndex Conifers. Cone shell, picture, 3271. Coney Island, seaside r esort of New York City, of which it is a p art , pict'u,re, 2589. Confec'tionery, chocolate bars, 855; food value, 1454 ; glucose in, 1620. Confederate States of America, name by which t hose st ates which broke from the union in 1860- 1 were known; S. Car olina was t h e first to act ; foreign rela tions, 1611; Robert E . Lee, 2171-2; Lincoln's attitude, 2194. Confirmation, Church sacrament, by which one is admitted into full ChUI·ch m emb ership. " Confirmation of the Charters,'' in En g. history, 120 3. Confu' cianism, commonly called a r e1igion, system of ethics taught by Confucius, 946, 3056, 846; in J apan, 2040; number of adherents, 3056. Confucius (kon-fu'shius), (551-479 B.O.), Chin ese philosoph er, founder of Confucianism, 945, 3056. Conger eel, a large salt-water type, 1206, 135. Congo, Freneh. See in I ndex French Equatorial Africa. Congo marsh buck, picture, 2309. Congo River, Africa, · 4th longest r. in world ; length, 3, 000 m. ; 946-7; basin, 42 ; Stanley's explorations, 3401, 48; tributaries, 44; upper course discovered by Livingstone, 2209, 48. Congo State, Belgian colony of equatorial Africa ; 910,000 sq. m. ; pop. 8,500,000 ; 947, 57, map s, 58, 947; formed, 3401; jungles and animal life, 43; rubber, 3137. Congrega' tionalism, a r eligious denomination ; world m embership about 1,425,000 ; 2995, 3056. Congregations, Roman, administrative commissions to aid Pope, 2767 .. 8, 1938. Congress, Library of, 3722, picture, 3634. Congress Ha11, Philadelphia, 2835. Congress of the United States, the legislative branch of the govt. of U .S.A., composed of Senate and House of R epresentatives, capitol, picture, 3721 ; library, pictu,re, 3643; powers, 3651 • Con' greve, William (1670- 1729), Eng. dramatist, one of greatest writers of comedy ; plots are intricate, charact ers often gross and h eartless, but brilliant • • me, y et, fern, there; i ce, bit; row, not, for, won, d .Q ; cure, b'llt, 3910 • • • • • •