FOOTNOTES:

[7] In the alarming statistics of disease circulated by the Press no distinction was drawn between gonorrhœa and syphilis, yet the larger part of the Government returns of Army Venereal Disease refer to gonorrhœal affections.—See Report of Departmental Committee, 1897, p. 27.

[8] See Appendix ([p. 105]). See also Dr. T. More Madden in Medical Annual, 1897; Dr. W. J. Sinclair’s Gonorrhœal Infection in Women; Researches of Sanger and other German Investigators; Dr. Lawson Tait on Diseases of Women; and The Pathology and Treatment of Diseases of the Ovaries, 1877 and 1883, etc.

[9] See The Human Element in Sex, pp. 22, 23, and pp. 47-58.

[10] See Hirsch, Handbook of Geographical and Historical Pathology, vol. ii., chap. ii. (The New Sydenham Society).

[11] Since the above was written an event has occurred full of hope for the future. See Appendix II. ([p. 109]).