GrauntJohn, “Natural and political observations on the bills of mortality,”6th edition, 1676, chap, xii, No. 12.
2.
PriceWilliam, “First additional essay,”1775, Works by Morgan, 7th edition, ii, 218.
3.
First Annual Report of the Registrar-General, 1839, appendix P., 109.
4.
Fifth Annual Report of the Registrar-General, 1843, “Causes of high mortality in town districts,” (a) p. 406, (b) p. 415, (c) P. 429, (d) p. 427.
5.
. Sixteenth Annual Report of the Registrar-General, 1856, xvi, and Table XV. Supplement to Twenty-fifth Annual Report 1851–60, xxxiii, and Table XXI. Supplement to Thirty-fifth Annual Report, 1861–70, xxiv, and Table 48.
6.
Fifty-fifth Annual Report of the Registrar-General; Supplement for 1881–90, xlvi, and Table R. Sixty-fifth Annual Report; Supplement for 1891–1900, xix, and Table S.
7.
Sixty-fifth Annual Report of the Registrar-General; Supplement, cxv.
8.
Report to the Police Board by the Medical Officer of Health of Glasgow for the first quarter of1869.
9.
ChalmersA. K. (a), “The house as a contributory factor in the death-rate,”Proc. Roy. Soc. Med., 1912–13, vi (Sect. Epidemiol., 155–190); (b) “National death-rates in relation to national differences in methods of housing,” ibid., 1925–26, xix (Sect. Epidemiol., 13–22).
10.
EmersonHaven, “Sunshine and health,”American Journal of Public Health, 1933, xxiii, 437.
11.
RussellW. T., “The statistics of erysipelas in England and Wales,”Journal of Hygiene, 1933, xxxiii, No. 3, 421.
12.
McKinlayP. L., “Some statistical aspects of infant mortality,”Journal of Hygiene, 1929, xxviii, No. 4, 402–3.
13.
NewsholmeA., “Poverty and disease,”Proc. Roy. Soc. Med., 1907–8, i (Sect. Epidemiol., 36).
14.
KermackW. O.McKendrickA. G.McKinlayP. L. M., “Death-rates in Great Britain and Sweden,”Lancet, 1934, No. 5770 (ccxxvi).