NORMAL AND MORBID CONDITIONS OF THE TESTES FROM BIRTH TO OLD AGE IN ONE HUNDRED ASYLUM AND HOSPITAL CASES

In conclusion, we must, I fear, confess to a very unsatisfactory position at present in regard to preventive measures in the treatment of influenza. But to know how little we know is an essential step in progress. The great need is organized research and organized hospitalization, and now is the time for these things to be carried out. Let us -not cease to urge upon those responsible for the public health the importance of the problem and the great un. certainty of our present knowledge, reminding them that economy here is of the falsest, and that the country possesses no asset to be compared in value with the health of its citizens.