338 NOTES AND AUTHORITIES 



Chapin, and the pamphlets by Dr. Goler, fre- 

 quently quoted in these pages. 



2. I do not wish this statement to be taken too 



literally. It would be hard to say, without a 

 good deal of calculation, whether the advocates 

 of pasteurization or the radical opponents have 

 done a greater amount of research. But I do 

 not think the most radical will deny the pas- 

 teurizers the credit of being the pioneers of 

 popular agitation on the subject of milk reform. 



3. See, for instance, Mr. Straus's paper. Pure Milk 



or Poison? read at the Milk Conference, New 

 York, November 20, 1906. 



4. See page 111. 



Also New York Times, January 11, 1908. 



5. Vide letter of Dr. Park, to Milk Conference, New 



York, November 20, 1906. 



6. Idem. 



7. Some Experiments on the Temperature Necessary 



for killing Tubercle Bacilli in Milk, by Gustav 

 Bang, Transactions of the British Congress on 

 Tuberculosis, London, 1901, vol. iii. 



8. The Thermal Death Point of Tubercle Bacilli in 



Milk and Some Other Fluids, by Theobald 

 Smith, Journal of Experimental Medicine, 

 March, 1899, pp. 217-233. 



9. See Straus, Pure Milk or Poison? 

 10. Idem. 



