[86] Études sur l’Économie Politique; Nouveaux Principes d’Économie Politique.
[87] Loc. cit., ii. p. 253.
[88] Ibid., i. p. 451. An opinion to the same effect, italicized, has already been quoted.
[89] Ibid., ii. pp. 316, 317.
[90] Ibid., i. p. 452, foot-note.
[91] Ibid., i. p. 447.
[92] Nouveaux Principes, &c., liv. vii. ch. 5.
[93] Medical Ethics, p. 79.
[94] Since our last article, the report of the Committee appointed in 1858 to investigate the Health Department of the City of New York has appeared, and we find that our statements regarding the frequency of the crime in the metropolis are fully corroborated. Not merely are additional official statistics on this point given (pp. 182, 183), but valuable testimony from Drs. Griscom (pp. 25, 30), McNulty (p. 55), Francis (p. 64), and Bulkley (p. 133). Dr. Reese’s paper on Infant Mortality, republished by the Committee (pp. 90-100), from the Transactions of the American Medical Association for 1857, also contains incidental reference to the frequency of abortion, and for its direct and earnest dealing with the subject deserves unqualified commendation.
In this connection we would call attention to the evidence of the extent of the crime in Boston, afforded since our own remarks upon that point were in type, by Dr. Walter Channing. (Boston Med. and Surg. Journal, March 17, 1859.)