31. Ibid.—Also man, age 58. Similar case. Same opinion.

32. Ibid. 1883, xxxiii., pp. 1118-1120.—Woman. age 23. Question whether she committed suicide by hanging or was strangled and then hung. Opinion, that it was a case of suicide.

33. Hofmann: Allg. Wien. med. Zeit., 1870, xv., pp. 192-214.—Man, age 60. Suicide by hanging or homicide; opinion, that it was the former.

34. Van Haumeder: Wien. med. Woch., 1882, xxxii., pp. 531-533.—Suicide by hanging or homicide. There were many wounds in the head; these occurred during the delirium of typhus.

35. Maschka: “Sammlung gericht. Gutacht.,” etc. (Prag), Leipzig, 1873, p. 137.—Boy, age 9; found dead in sitting position. Injuries on neck and elsewhere. Question, had he hung himself or been choked? Were the injuries inflicted before or after death? Opinion, suicide.

36. Ibid., p. 144.—Boy, age 13. Found hanging in sitting position. Question whether murder, suicide, or accident. Opinion, suicide.

37. Ibid., p. 149.—Woman, age 60; found hanging, sitting position. Suicide or homicide. Opinion, suicide.

38. Ibid., p. 156.—Woman, age 30; found hanging. Opinion, suicide.

39. Ibid., p. 165.—Man, age 63. Suicide by hanging, or homicide by strangling? Opinion, suicide.