Proceedings and debates of the third National Quarantine and Sanitary ConventionEdmund Jones, 1859 - 288 pages |
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... object second to none other in im- portance , and one altogether worthy the highest consideration of those who were the custodians of the public health . " To this appeal , I am happy to say , the Committee received the hearty con ...
... object second to none other in im- portance , and one altogether worthy the highest consideration of those who were the custodians of the public health . " To this appeal , I am happy to say , the Committee received the hearty con ...
Page 5
... object second to none other in im- portance , and one altogether worthy the highest consideration of those who were the custodians of the public health . " To this appeal , I am happy to say , the Committee received the hearty con ...
... object second to none other in im- portance , and one altogether worthy the highest consideration of those who were the custodians of the public health . " To this appeal , I am happy to say , the Committee received the hearty con ...
Page 12
... objects could be constituted on the other side of the Atlantic superior to it in ability , and extent and variety of learning , or better qualified to take up and decide the great questions , relating to sanitary science , which are now ...
... objects could be constituted on the other side of the Atlantic superior to it in ability , and extent and variety of learning , or better qualified to take up and decide the great questions , relating to sanitary science , which are now ...
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... objects which call us together are divided into two classes- first , those relating to the external ; and secondly , those relating to the internal sanitary police of communities . The first has a phi- losophy and practice as broad as ...
... objects which call us together are divided into two classes- first , those relating to the external ; and secondly , those relating to the internal sanitary police of communities . The first has a phi- losophy and practice as broad as ...
Page 17
... objects which have brought us together . ( Applause . ) Gentlemen , I have the honor to represent upon this floor , an Association , the first , I believe , of its kind in America , and per- haps the only one yet existing . A Sanitary ...
... objects which have brought us together . ( Applause . ) Gentlemen , I have the honor to represent upon this floor , an Association , the first , I believe , of its kind in America , and per- haps the only one yet existing . A Sanitary ...
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Common terms and phrases
adopted ammonia appointed arriving atmosphere authorities Baltimore believe Board of Health body Brooklyn carbonic acid cargoes cause chloride chloride of lime Cholera circumstances commerce Committee contagion contagious Convention death delegates deodorizers disease disinfectants districts drainage drains duty effect enacted enforced epidemic experience fact fomites gases gentlemen GRISCOM Harry Hill Health Officer hospital houses hydrogen hygiene importance infected vessels inhabitants Island labors Larnaudés lazaretto Ledoyen liquid London matter Mayor means ment miasms necessary object odor opinion Orleans passengers persons pestilence pestilential Philadelphia physicians plague poison population port present President proper proposition public health purpose quaran quarantine laws quarantine regulations question reference regard removed resolution sanitary measures sewage sewerage sewers ship sick Staten Island streets sulphate sulphureted supply system of quarantine thing tine tion town Typhus Fever Velabrum ventilation vote wards Yellow Fever York
Popular passages
Page 352 - They form a portion of that immense mass of legislation, which embraces everything within the territory of a state, not surrendered to the general government ; all which can be most advantageously exercised by the states themselves. Inspection laws, quarantine laws, health laws of every description, as well as laws for regulating the internal commerce of a state, and those which respect turnpike roads, ferries, &c., are component parts of this mass.
Page 650 - ... quit the premises within such time as the board may deem reasonable. If the persons so notified, or any of them, neglect or refuse to comply with the terms of the notice, the board may cause the premises to be properly...
Page 645 - Sewers through, across, or under any Turnpike Road, or any Street or Place laid out as or intended for a Street, or under any Cellar or Vault which may be under the Pavement or Carriageway of any Street, and, after reasonable Notice in Writing in that Behalf, (if upon the Report of the Surveyor it should appear to be necessary,) into, through, or under...
Page 648 - ... communicate with and be emptied into such covered cesspool or other place, not being under any house...
Page 434 - Odyssey, a full stop of a very qualified import. Hoping that the immortality which you have given to the Fudges you will receive from them ; and in the firm expectation that, when London shall be an habitation of bitterns ; when St. Paul's and Westminster Abbey shall stand, shapeless and nameless ruins, in the midst of an unpeopled marsh...
Page 642 - means any drain of and used for the drainage of one building only, or premises within the same curtilage, and made merely for the purpose of communicating therefrom with a cesspool or other like receptacle for drainage, or with a sewer into which the drainage of two or more buildings or premises occupied by different persons is conveyed : "Sewer" includes sewers and drains of every description, except drains to which the word
Page 658 - Provisions as they think necessary as to the giving of Notices, as to the Deposit of Plans and Sections by Persons intending to lay out Streets or to construct Buildings, as to Inspection by the Local Board, and as to the Power of the Local Board to remove, alter, or pull down any Work begun or done in contravention of such Byelaws...
Page 656 - ... and extending along the entire frontage thereof, and upwards from six inches below the level of the floor thereof up to the surface of the said street or ground, an open space of at least two feet and six inches wide in every part, nor unless the same be well and effectually drained...
Page 641 - In this Act, unless there is something inconsistent in the context, the following expressions shall respectively have the meanings herein-after assigned to them ; that is to say, " The jurisdiction of the Admiral...
Page 652 - ... clean, and shall not permit more than two cart loads of manure to accumulate and remain in or near the same, at any one time...