[1] p. 18.
[2] B.M.J. No. 2824, Feb. 13, 1915.
[3] Only the larger print, such as the leading articles and letters from Admirals.
[4] September 1914.
[5] Pope’s Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot.
[6] Journ. Roy. Army Med. Corps, vol. xx. No. 6, 1913. The figures in this chapter are taken from this article.
[7] With Napoleon at Waterloo. By Edward Bruce Low; edited by Mackenzie MacBride; p. 21. London: Francis Griffiths, 32 Maiden Lane, Strand, W.C. 1911.
[8] New Series, No. 102.
[9] Reports on Public Health and Medical Subjects (New Series), No. 85, pp. 15 and 16.
[10] One of the first to fall a victim in defending the South African Federation against De Wet’s rebellion.
[11] T. holosericeum.
[12] A µ = 1000th of a millimetre.
[13] Sarcoptes scabiei.
[14] November 1914.
[15] Campbell’s Lives of the Chancellors, vol. vi.
[16] Proverbs xxx. 15.
[17] Materia Medica and Therapeutics. By Charles D. F. Phillips, p. 1015.
[18] I wonder if it is any use pointing out that the German word Kultur is not the equivalent—as our daily Press takes it to be—of the English word ‘Culture,’ brought into fashion forty years ago by Matthew Arnold and sadly overworked. Put shortly Kultur = ‘civilisation.’ The German word which we associate with ‘Culture’ is Bildung.