Man and abnormal man, including a study of children, in connection with bills to establish laboratories under federal and state governments for the study of the criminal, pauper, and defective classes, with bibliographies . ality in the centralprisons (Tardiu): Men. Women. Condemned to hard labor Per Condemned to seclusion . . nondemnpd for corvRction Onndprnnfid to f>ha,infi Out of 1,319 deaths in the central prisons, 345 were from acutemaladies—247 men and 78 women; 974 were from chronic maladies—769 men and 205 women. It is found that farmers
Man and abnormal man, including a study of children, in connection with bills to establish laboratories under federal and state governments for the study of the criminal, pauper, and defective classes, with bibliographies . ality in the centralprisons (Tardiu): Men. Women. Condemned to hard labor Per Condemned to seclusion . . nondemnpd for corvRction Onndprnnfid to f>ha,infi Out of 1,319 deaths in the central prisons, 345 were from acutemaladies—247 men and 78 women; 974 were from chronic maladies—769 men and 205 women. It is found that farmers, soldiers, sailors,vagabonds, and beggars give a much larger death rate when in theprisons for life than those engaged in other occupations; those in theliberal professions show a lower rate of mortality; then follow thosein diverse sedentary callings, inhabitants of the city for the most part. Dr. Castello calls attention to the fact that prostitutes, who furnisha large number of criminals, are cardiopathic and have affectionsconnected with the cerebro-spinal regions. As to the resistance andmorbidity of criminals of all races, transported far from home, there 510 STATISTICS OF CRIME, SUICIDE, INSANITY, are two conditions: (1) Where they are placed as free among a popu-lation not much better than themselves, an agglomeration by selectionor by intermingling of races is formed, where characteristics tend tomingle; (2) the condition wheie the criminals are gradually allowedto mingle with the noncriminal. Orgeas gives this table: Free Europeans Transported Europeans - Negroes and mulattoes Transported negroes -. Transported Hindoos and immigrantsChinese and Anamites According to the annual statistics of France for 1887, out of 24,170introduced into Guiana from 1852 to 1883 (thirty-one years), 12,148died and 3,140 disappeared or escaped. The figures are encouraging as far as acclimatization is concerned;reform by colonization in healthy climates as in New Caledonia isfav
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