FOOTNOTES:
[34] See Preface, page [xiii].
[35] C (?) = Possibly contagious; isolate.
[36] C = Contagious; child should be isolated.
[37] Diagnosis of a specific disease in a given case can only be made by an experienced physician. The Table is of value particularly as indicating the mild symptoms with which these begin. Incubation is the period from exposure to first symptoms. Isolation dates from first symptoms.
[38] G. = Onset gradual.
[39] S. = Onset sudden.
[40] Quoted from Rose’s “Laboratory Manual in Dietetics”, and Sherman’s “Food Products”, by permission.
[41] In part, quoted from Fisher’s “Graphic Method in Dietetics”, by permission; in part, calculated by the author, from data in Rose’s “Manual.”
[42] Exact figures not yet available; mineral about 3 times that in bolted.
[43] Exact figures for unpolished not yet available; mineral about 3 times that in polished.
[44] T = tablespoon.
[45] c = cup.
[46] t = teaspoon. Level measures.
[47] From “Food Products”, H. C. Sherman, by permission of the publishers (The Macmillan Company). Complete tables there itemized.
[48] Blatherwick.
[49] Amer. Jour. Diseases of Children, November, 1914. Doctor Roland G. Freeman.
[50] For normal relativity see tables, pages [374], [375].
[51] Daten und Tabellen, Vierordt.
[52] Girls average ½ inch shorter until 2 to 4 years, then 1 to 2 inches shorter until 11 to 14 years; ½ to 2 inches taller 11 to 14 years; then shorter.
[53] Girls average ½ pound lighter than boys during first year; then 1 to 2 pounds lighter until 12 years; 2 to 3 pounds heavier until 14 years, then lighter.
[54] From the Ninth Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, by courtesy of the author, Doctor Thomas D. Wood. (Data are based upon examinations, during fourteen years, of pupils in Horace Mann School, New York City.)
[55] Holt.
[56] Uffelmann, quoted by Holt.
[57] Vierordt, quoted by Holt.
[58] In the United States the rate in the registration area, according to the Census of 1910, was 124 per 1,000, a total of 159,435, from which the Census Bureau estimates the total deaths for the entire country as 300,000 under 1 year of age.
[59] Before vaccine was generally used, was as prevalent as tuberculosis.