WORKS OF REFERENCE FOR THE SECTION OF 

 PSYCHIATRY 



BONDURANT, E. D., Arterio-sclerosis among the Insane. International Medical 

 Magazine, 1896. 



CLARKE, L. PIERCE, and H. P. ALAN MONTGOMERY, Psychopathic Wards, Pavil- 

 ions and Hospitals. American Journal of Insanity, no. 1, 1904. 



DANA, CHARLES L., The Asylum Superintendents and the Needs of the Insane, 

 with Statistics. Report of the National Association for the Protection of the 

 Insane, 1882. 



EWING, JAMES, Clinical Pathology, 1904. 



FOLIN, OTTO, Metabolism Studies. American Journal of Insanity, April, 1904. 



JELLIPFE, SAMUEL ELY, The Blood in General Paresis. New York State Hospital 

 Bulletin, July, 1897. 



KELLOGG, THEODORE H., Text-Book of Mental Diseases. Wm. Wood & Co. 

 (This book contains much valuable statistical matter.) 



KRAEPELIN, EMIL, The Duty of the State in the Care of the Insane. American 

 Journal of Insanity, vol. LVH, no. 2, 1900. 



MACDONALD, CARLOS F., The Etiological Potency of Heredity in Mental Dis- 

 eases. Trans. New York State Medical Society, 1902. 



TUKE, Psychological Dictionary. Articles on Statistics, Longevity, Increase of 

 Insanity. 



WARNER, SAMUEL GEORGE, The Improvement in Longevity during the Nine- 

 teenth Century. 



Quarterly Reports of Bellevue Hospital, Psychopathic Wa/d, 1902-3. 



Central Indiana Hospital for the Insane, Annual Report, and reports of the various 

 other hospitals throughout the country, showing changes in population and cost. 



Annual Report of the Massachusetts State Board of Lunacy, 1903. 



Annual Reports of Middletown State Hospital, 1880, 1890, 1900. 



Annual Report of the New York State Board of Lunacy, 1903. 



Heredity Statistics of New York State. 



Insane and Feeble-minded of the United States, U. S. Census of 1880 and 1890. 



Total Insane, 1880 91,957 



Total Insane, 1890 106,485 



Total Idiots, 1890 95,609 



Total Insane and Feeble-minded, 1890 .... 202,094 

 Population, 1890 50,155.783 



Estimated insane, based on reports from thirty states to the Committee of the 

 National Conference of Charities and Correction in 1896, was 145,000. The 

 Statistics of the United States Census of 1900 are not yet obtainable. 



