[157]. Idem.
[158]. Hygiène de la Femme Enceinte. De la Puericulture Intrauterine, par Dr. A. Pinard. Xe Congrès International d’Hygiène, etc., Paris, 1900, p. 417.
Factory Employment and Childbirth, by Adelaide M. Anderson, in Dangerous Trades, edited by Professor Thomas Oliver.
Is the High Infantile Death-rate due to the Occupation of Married Women? by Mrs. F. J. Greenwood, Sanitary Inspector for Sheffield. Reprinted from the Englishwoman’s Review, 1901.
In Germany, it is worth remembering, the working woman who is compelled to cease work owing to the birth of a child receives a sum equal to half her weekly wage.—See Infant Mortality and Factory Labor, by Dr. George Reid, in Dangerous Trades, p. 89.
[159]. Report of the Interdepartmental Committee on Physical Deterioration.
[160]. The Social Unrest, by John Graham Brooks, p. 292.
[161]. Vide leaflet issued by the Child Labor Committee of New York.
[162]. How to Save the Babies of the Tenements, by Virginia M. Walker, in Charities, August 5, 1905.
[163]. Report of the Interdepartmental Committee on Physical Deterioration, vol. ii, pp. 442–450.