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Schenck, Fred.
E.
Langley, Walter
Clauson, George 1873 to 1875
Sherlock, John 1873 to 1875
A.

1873 to 1875

Hanley

1873 to 1875

Water Colour Painter.

Designer to Messrs. Simpson.

Designer for Damask.
Art Master, Hanley.

Birmingham
S.Kensington Designer.
Warrington

Humphries, 1874 to 1876 S.Kensington
Charles

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Designer for Ecclesiastical Furniture.

Bowcher, Alfred 1881 to 1883 S.Kensington Modeller, Terra-cotta Works,

Canstock, Cornwall.

Designer for Pottery.

Wood Draughtsman, Fine Art Society, Bond Street.

Designer.

Designer, Stained Glass Works,
Birmingham.

Designer and Decorator.
Employed by Department.
Manchester School of Art.
Designer.

Employed by Department in Italy.

Preston School of Art.

under-Lyme

under-Lyme

Tomlins, Henry J.

1882

Worcester

Examiner of Designs, Patent

Steeley, Frank

Bradburn, John

Office, Chancery Lane.

1882 to 1883 Birmingham Designer for Silver Plate, Bir

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W.

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INDEX.

ACCIDENTAL injuries, 165-255; introductory remarks, 165-167; the
skeleton and position of internal organs, 167-181; method of treating a
sprain, 171; causes of dislocations, with methods of treatment, 176–178;
composition and function of muscles, 181, 182; nervous system, 182,
183; circulation of the blood, 183-185; respiration, 185, 186; blood-
vessels, 186-188; course of the arteries in the lower limb, 188-190; how
to stop arterial bleeding, 190-207; from the thigh, 190-197; leg, 197,
198; foot, 198; arm, 200, 201; wrist, 201-203; forearm, 203; elbow or
lower end of arm, 203; armpit, 203, 204; carotids, 204; tongue, 204,
205; lips, 205; nose, 205, 206; face, 206; head, temple, top or back of
head, 206, 207; how to stop bleeding from veins, 207, 208; and capillaries,
208, 209; treatment of contused wounds, 209, 210; of lacerated wounds,
210; description and methods of applying the triangular bandage, 210,
211; description of various kinds of fracture, and methods of rendering
aid, 211-232; injuries to the brain by compression and concussion, 232–
236; physical conditions of shock and indication of treatment, 236, 237;
character and treatment of fits: epileptic, 237, 238; fainting, 238, 239;
and hysterical, 239; treatment of bites and stings, 239-241; description
of canine rabies, 241; symptoms and treatment of apoplexy, 241-243;
frequently mistaken for drunkenness or alcoholic poisoning, 233, 253;
burns and scalds, 243, 244; methods of restoring the apparently drowned
or suffocated, 244–248; removal of foreign bodies from the eye, ear, and
nostril, 248-249; measures to be adopted in suffocation or asphyxia, 250,
251; symptoms and treatment of cases of poisoning, 251–254; sunstroke,
254, 255; frost-bite, 255

Acts of Parliament relative to dwellings of the poor, 639; Mr. Torrens' Acts,
1868-1882, 673-692; Sir Richard Cross's Acts, 692-710

Ague, 58; its origin and prevention, 59

Air, when loaded with organic matter, contributory to the chilling of the body,
38; average rate of movement, 39; power of its purifying action, 39;
influence of light on the condition of the atmosphere, 40; carbonic acid
in air in crowded places, 40; disease poisons mainly communicable
through the air, 41; moral responsibility with regard to the air breathed,
41; supply of air to dwellings, 41; cubic space and ventilation of
London houses, 42; evils arising from keeping late hours, 43; pollution
of London air, 43, 44; death rate from fog, 44; grates of fire-clay, 44, 45
Alcohol, 55

Ambulance Lift (Macdonald's), 370-372; Organisation, Equipment, and
Transport, 267-388; introductory remarks, 267-270; difference between
VOL. VII.-H. H.

3 L

ancient and modern warfare, 271, 272; work of Larrey and Percy in the
improvement of ambulance arrangements, 272, 273; medical arrange-
ments of an English Army Corps, 273, 274; battalion help, 274;
divisional bearer company, 274-277; field hospitals, 277; the base
hospital, 277; hospital ships, 277; army medical staff, 277, 278;
militia service, 278; volunteer service, 278; the ambulance service of
the English army still in a developmental stage, 278; defects of an
English war hospital, 279; Knightly Orders and their efforts to mitigate
suffering in times of war, 281; work of the United States Sanitary
Commission, 281; origin of the Red Cross movement, 282; the Geneva
convention, 282, 283; good and weak points of the movement, 283, 284;
Red Cross societies have done little to aid the English army, 284, 285;
work that might be done by the English Red Cross Society, 285;
enumeration of various Knightly Orders and Red Cross European societies,
286-288; ambulance arrangements in American cities, 289, 290; need of
the same in England, 290; treatment of drunken men in the streets, 290,
291; street stretcher-lockers, 291, 312; London ambulance service,
291, 292, 300, 301; railway ambulance service, 292, 293; poor law
arrangements, 293; municipal ambulance systems, 294-297; Metro-
politan Asylums Board, and its work, 294-297; the hospitals and
ambulance arrangements, 294-297; defects of the old parochial system,
296, 297; the ambulance steamer 'Red Cross' on the Thames, 297;
rural ambulance systems, 298, 299; Battle district of Sussex, 298;
Lady Brassey's system, 298; ambulance organisation at Brighouse,
Yorkshire, 299; civil ambulance societies, 299, 300; good done
by the St. John's Ambulance Association, 299, 300; the St.
Andrew's (Glasgow) Ambulance Association, 301; the Samaritan
Society' of Kiel, 301; the surgical haversack, 302; water-bottles, 302;
portable medicine-cases, or field companions, 302, 303; the soldier's first
dressing, 304; means of carrying it, 304; identification label, 304;
Esmarch triangular bandage, 304, 305; and braces, 305; uniform of the
ambulance staff and army nurses, 306; the Faris stretcher, 307, 308;
Baron Percy's stretcher, 308-310; Furley's Lowmoor jacket, 310, 311;
use of hammocks, 311; dhoolies, 311, 312; dandies, 312; English
military wheeled stretcher, 314, 315; the Ashford litter, 315, 316;
Neuss litter with wheeled support, 316-318; need of good mule
equipment for our varying wars, 319; English medicine panniers, 321,
322; mule cacolets, 323; mule litters, 323, 324, 325; use of puckalls in
India, 325; ideal mule loads for a field hospital, 325; camel Kadjawas
for convoys of sick and wounded, 326; Bryce's camel dhoolies, 327;
ambulance equipment waggons, 328, 329; surgery waggon of the bearer
company, 329, 330; Lohner's surgery waggon of the Austrian Red Cross
Society, 330, 331; operating tables, etc., 331, 332; the pharmacy
waggon of the field hospital, 332; field hospital store-waggon, 333;
field hospital kitchen-waggon, 333, 334; the water-cart, 334, 335; the
laundry waggon, 335, 336; the electric-light waggon, 336, 337; con-
struction of the army regulation sick transport waggon, 338-342;
construction of Lohner's sick transport waggon of the Austrian Red
Cross Society, 342-344; the Rucker plan of arrangements of seats and
stretchers, 344, 345; civil ambulance sick transport waggons, 347; the
Howard sick transport waggon, 347-350; Davy's sick transport waggon,

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