The Sanitarian, Volume 13A. S. Barnes and Company, 1884 |
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Page 20
... Professor Morton would explain the quality of the color- ing materials used and show that they were not injurious to health . ous . Professor Morton then took the witness chair , and without 20 Chrome Yellow and Celestial Blue as a Repast .
... Professor Morton would explain the quality of the color- ing materials used and show that they were not injurious to health . ous . Professor Morton then took the witness chair , and without 20 Chrome Yellow and Celestial Blue as a Repast .
Page 21
Professor Morton then took the witness chair , and without being sworn , gave an informal statement of the kind of drugs used in coloring coffee . He thought that the use of chrome yellow and Prussian blue should be prohibited , as it ...
Professor Morton then took the witness chair , and without being sworn , gave an informal statement of the kind of drugs used in coloring coffee . He thought that the use of chrome yellow and Prussian blue should be prohibited , as it ...
Page 34
... professors is reported , and financial embarrass- ments are a hindrance . Thirteen normal schools exist , and more are contemplated . College attendance is not what it should be . An educational commission is trying to place pri- mary ...
... professors is reported , and financial embarrass- ments are a hindrance . Thirteen normal schools exist , and more are contemplated . College attendance is not what it should be . An educational commission is trying to place pri- mary ...
Page 38
... Professor JURGENSEN , of Tubingen , on True Pneumonia : Its Etiology , Pathology , Clinical Course and Therapy . * The author gave a history of the growth of our knowledge of croupous pneumonia , and showed how opinions as to its nature ...
... Professor JURGENSEN , of Tubingen , on True Pneumonia : Its Etiology , Pathology , Clinical Course and Therapy . * The author gave a history of the growth of our knowledge of croupous pneumonia , and showed how opinions as to its nature ...
Page 41
... PROFESSOR NOTHNAGEL said that , in pneumonia , as in all infectious diseases , we look for a specific , and meanwhile treat symptomatically . In the last twenty - five years alcohol had entered largely into the therapeutics of the ...
... PROFESSOR NOTHNAGEL said that , in pneumonia , as in all infectious diseases , we look for a specific , and meanwhile treat symptomatically . In the last twenty - five years alcohol had entered largely into the therapeutics of the ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid adulterated alcohol Annual Association attention authorities Board of Health Bremen Brooklyn carbonic carbonic acid cause cent cesspools cholera College colored Committee common danger death-rate diphtheria disinfection drainage drains effect ensilage epidemic diseases experience fact feet filth gallons germs Health Officer heat Hospital Hygiene important improvement inches increase infected inspection interest land laws leprosy less Liverpool Louis Louisiana Marine Hospital Service means Medical Society medicine ment method milk mortality National Board number of deaths organic matter Orleans paper patient persons physician Physiology pneumonia poison population ports practical present President Prof Professor quarantine question river SANITARIAN sanitary science sanitation scarlet fever schools Secretary sewage sewerage sewers sick small-pox soil supply Surgeon temperature tion typhoid fever United ventilation vessels water-supply whooping-cough yellow fever York zymotic diseases
Popular passages
Page 411 - Indian race, from the mouth of the St. Lawrence to the mouth of the Mississippi, had become estranged from the English and friendly to the French.
Page 131 - There is no straw given unto thy servants, and they say to us, Make brick: and, behold, thy servants are beaten; but the fault is in thine own people.
Page 386 - Thou hast spread thy wing, and sheltered us from the pestilence that walketh in darkness, and the destruction that wasteth at noon-day.
Page 90 - Hooper's Physician's Vade Mecum; A Manual of the Principles and Practice of Physic, with an Outline of General Pathology, Therapeutics, and Hygiene.
Page 434 - ... per cent, by weight of absolute acetic acid, and in the case of cider vinegar shall contain in addition not less than two per cent, by weight of...
Page 418 - The removal of local unsanitary conditions favorable to the development of cholera is the especial work of state and local boards of health. Much has been done already in some states, but much remains which should receive immediate attention. Where it can be done. State Sanitary Inspectors should be appointed to visit all towns and cities specially liable" to the disease, to counsel with the local authorities as to the best methods of prevention.
Page 112 - ... set it on fire by hot coals or with the aid of a spoonful of alcohol, and allow the room to remain closed for twenty-four hours. For a room about ten feet square, at least two pounds of sulphur should be used ; for larger rooms, proportionally increased quantities.
Page 133 - The General Assembly shall provide for the establishment and maintenance of a State Board of Health, which shall have supervision of all matters relating to public health, with such powers and duties as may be prescribed by law; and also for the establishment and maintenance of such local boards of health as may be necessary, to be under the supervision of the State Board, to such extent and with...
Page 417 - Congress take such measures as will bring about concerted action with the Dominion and the British Government by which the 'consuls of this country or of England at foreign ports shall examine and take such action as they may deem effective, and notify the authorities of such government as has authority over any port to which any ship may sail in the United States or Canada, in order that such government may be in a position to take effective measures against the imp'ortation of these diseases. We...
Page 419 - The cause of cholera is contained in the discharges from persons affected by the disease, or in things infected by such discharges. Should the disease reach our shores, the first case, and after this the first case which reaches any given community, should be strictly isolated ; all infective material from these and from any subsequent cases should be destroyed in such manner as to stamp out the disease.