Health in the dwelling. Vol. 4-6. Health in diet. Vol. 7-9. Health in relation to civic life. Vol. 10-12. General hygiene. Vol. 13-16. Conference on education. Vol. 17. Miscellaneous, including papers on Japan. Vol. 18. Miscellaneous, including jury awards and official catalogue. Vol. 19. Miscellaneous, including papers on ChinaW. Clowes & Sons, 1884 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 48
Page 3
... of worshipping the " lady in the Revelation , " as I have heard Rome called by those who identify her with Babylon ? And now I want to tell you something about Early English Houses , and because it is an English subject , it will be B 2.
... of worshipping the " lady in the Revelation , " as I have heard Rome called by those who identify her with Babylon ? And now I want to tell you something about Early English Houses , and because it is an English subject , it will be B 2.
Page 4
... called Freedom from the deep and founded her Empire on the waves . It is generally thought that we are descended from a kind of centaur - only not half horse , half man ; but half horse , half alligator and whole savage ! No wonder that ...
... called Freedom from the deep and founded her Empire on the waves . It is generally thought that we are descended from a kind of centaur - only not half horse , half man ; but half horse , half alligator and whole savage ! No wonder that ...
Page 9
... called wind - eyes ; their object being ventilation rather than lighting the hall . The roof was of the gable form , rather pointed , and covered either with wooden shingles painted and gilt so as to glitter in the sun like gold , or ...
... called wind - eyes ; their object being ventilation rather than lighting the hall . The roof was of the gable form , rather pointed , and covered either with wooden shingles painted and gilt so as to glitter in the sun like gold , or ...
Page 13
... called hed - ærn , and the wine was kept in a cellar dug under the earth and called the win - ærn . The word ærn simply means a place and not necessarily a cellar , and I must be understood as calling it a cellar on the hypothesis of ...
... called hed - ærn , and the wine was kept in a cellar dug under the earth and called the win - ærn . The word ærn simply means a place and not necessarily a cellar , and I must be understood as calling it a cellar on the hypothesis of ...
Page 14
... called schuppen to this day Then came the west - em , or wash- house , where the men of the household was washed , and considering the scrupulous deanliness of our forefathers this must have been no mean portion of the establishment ...
... called schuppen to this day Then came the west - em , or wash- house , where the men of the household was washed , and considering the scrupulous deanliness of our forefathers this must have been no mean portion of the establishment ...
Common terms and phrases
Anglo-Saxon apparatus appliances Arthur Gamgee atmosphere average death-rate bakehouses basement bath big booth boiler brick building burner burning byelaws called carbonic acid causes cesspool cistern closet coal coal-gas combustion connected construction cubic Deaths of children Devizes diarrhoeal diseases diphtheria domestic dust dwelling English ERNEST HART evil Exhibition factories fever fire flame floor foul air fresh air furnaces hall heat Holbeck house drain Illustrated impurities inside joint kind lecture London means measles Metropolis Moritz Heyne nuisance ordinary Ormskirk outer air passing porringers potter present Price principal zymotic diseases production rain-water pipes Rogers Field Roman roof sanitation scarlet fever second house sewer sink smell Smoke Abatement Committee soil pipe soil-pipe steam Stoke-on-Trent stove supply syphon temperature therma things tiles towns trap underneath ventilation walls Walsall warm waste waste-pipe whooping-cough Wolstanton workshops
Popular passages
Page 181 - ... pounds for each offence, and in the case of a continuing offence a further penalty not exceeding forty shillings for each day after written notice of the offence from the local authority...
Page 134 - ... the workers to an injurious extent, it appears to an inspector that such inhalation could be to a great extent prevented by the use of a fan or other mechanical means, the inspector may direct a fan or other mechanical means of a proper construction for preventing such inhalation to be provided within a reasonable time...
Page 134 - If in a factory or workshop where grinding, glazing, or polishing on a wheel, or any process is carried on by which dust is generated and inhaled by the workers to an injurious extent...
Page 181 - Such bye-laws, when so confirmed, published, and affixed, shall be binding upon and be observed by all parties, and shall be sufficient to justify all persons acting under the same...
Page 181 - Board, shall be conclusive evidence of the existence and of the due making of the same in all proceedings under the same, without adducing proof of such seal or of the fact of such making.
Page 149 - In 1819 the attention of parliament was directed to the question, and a select committee was appointed " to inquire how far persons using steam-engines and furnaces could erect them in a manner less prejudicial to public health and comfort.
Page 200 - THE SWEDISH FISHERIES. By Professor FA Smitt, Royal Commissioner for Sweden to the International Fisheries Exhibition. dd. NOTES ON THE FISH SUPPLY OF NORWAY. By Frederik M. Wallem, Executive Commissioner for Norway to the International Fisheries Exhibition. dd. NOTES ON THE FOOD FISHES AND EDIBLE MOLLUSCA OF NEW SOUTH WALES, ETC. By EP Ramsay, Commissioner for New South Wales.
Page 181 - Gazette, and printed and hung up at the county hall and be open to public inspection without payment, and copies thereof shall be delivered to any person applying for the same on payment of such sum, not exceeding...
Page 77 - Ibs. would require 1280 cubic feet ; but at a very low computation of the velocity of the gases in an ordinary chimneyflue, the air would pass up the chimney at a rate of from 4 to 6 feet per second, or from 14,000 to 20,000 cubic feet per hour ; with the chimneys in ordinary use, a velocity of from 10 to 15 feet per second often prevails, giving an out.
Page 180 - Act, 1862.) 42. An Act to amend an Act passed in the session of Parliament held in the sixteenth and seventeenth years of the reign of Her present Majesty...