I9II] A. J. ROSANOFF AND FLORENCE I. ORR 247 



of the State Commission in Lunacy, among those showing com- 

 paratively low or moderate incidence of insanity." 



Our material is presented in detail in the shape of pedigree 

 charts, some of which have already appeared in connection with 

 § 4 and § 5 ; the rest are appended here. 



CHART XXX. U. G. CASE NO. 6873. 

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1. Alcoholic. 



2. Feeble-minded. 



3. Feeble-minded. 



4. Hypochiondriacal, had nervous prostration. 



5. Daughter insane, died in State hospital. 



6. " Visionary, had no idea of the value of money, always trying big schemes, became a 



complete wreck from drink." 



7. Eccentric. 



8. Allied to manic-depressive insanity, in State hospital. 



9. " Visionary, unsound, goes wild in arguments, imagines he owns everything." 



10. " Crazy," fits of temper, gets wild; violent headaches. 



11. Dementia prsecox, paranoid, in State hospital. 



12. Microcephalic, defective, died in infancy. 



CHART XXXI. F. N. CASE XO. 7452. 



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1. Nervous temperament, easily e.xcited. 



2. Nervous temperament, easily excited. 



3. Excessively alcoholic early in life, had cirrhosis of the liver. 



4. Has spells of rigidity and twitching "only when she can't have her way"; always 



queer, never lived with husband, finally divorced; "worse than the- patient herself 

 (sister) sometimes." 



5. Dementia prsecox, paranoid, in State hospital. 



CHART XXXn. L. P. CASE NO. 6234. 



1. Epilepsy. 



2. "Great talker"; inferior make-up. 



3. Very nervous following birth of son, recovered. 



4. Dementia pnecox, paranoid, in State hospital. 



" Report of the New York State Commission in Lunacy for the year 



ending September 30, 1909. 



