[371] Friedrich Hammer, “The Regulation of Prostitution,” published in The Journal for the Suppression of Venereal Diseases, 1904, 1905, vol. iii., pp. 373-385, 426-435.
[372] S. Bettmann, “The Medical Treatment of Prostitutes” (Jena, 1905)—a thorough study of all the available material.
[373] Schmölder, “Professional Fornication and Compulsory Inscription on the List of Prostitutes” (Berlin, 1894).
[374] “The Social Evil, with Especial Reference to Conditions existing in the City of New York. A Report prepared under the Direction of the ‘Committee of Fifteen,’” pp. 91, 92 (New York and London, 1902).
[375] A severe criticism of regulation and its consequences is to be found in the excellent dissertation of Paul Emile Morhardt, “Les Maladies Vénériennes et la Réglementation de la Prostitution au Point de Vue de l’Hygiène Sociale” (Paris, 1906).
[376] Cf. the admirable description of soutenage given by Hans Ostwald, “Soutenage in Berlin” (Berlin and Leipzig, 1905).
[377] “The human being awakens in the prostitute. That is the whole secret and the cause of soutenage.”—H. Ostwald.
[378] The dislike to the brothels of Paris is confirmed by Lassar (“Prostitution in Paris,” Berliner klinische Wochenschrift, 1892, No. 5).
[379] J. Rutgers (“Sketches from Holland,” published in The Journal for the Suppression of Venereal Diseases, 1906, vol. v., p. 345) has admirably expressed this fact in the following words: “The danger of infection is directly proportionable to centralization.”
[380] Anna Pappritz, “What Protection can Brothel Streets Offer?” published in The Journal for the Suppression of Venereal Diseases, 1904, 1905, vol. iii., pp. 417-424.