The Health exhibition literature. v. 3, 3. köideW. Clowes & Sons, 1884 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 26
Page 5
... keep the dweller cool - to refresh him after the sultry weather with- out and shield him from the heat . In such a climate the structures raised by man would naturally be fortresses to keep out the heat where it was too abundant for his ...
... keep the dweller cool - to refresh him after the sultry weather with- out and shield him from the heat . In such a climate the structures raised by man would naturally be fortresses to keep out the heat where it was too abundant for his ...
Page 8
... keeping out the wind . Nor were the benches and settles without their bright and attractive coverings . We find , from the wills which have come down to us , frequent bequests of sethrægl or coverings of seats , often so valuable as to ...
... keeping out the wind . Nor were the benches and settles without their bright and attractive coverings . We find , from the wills which have come down to us , frequent bequests of sethrægl or coverings of seats , often so valuable as to ...
Page 13
... keeping food in the summer . As these places in Russia are cellars , however , and the whole construction of the Russian house agrees in so many particulars with what we read of the Early English houses , there is nothing absolutely ...
... keeping food in the summer . As these places in Russia are cellars , however , and the whole construction of the Russian house agrees in so many particulars with what we read of the Early English houses , there is nothing absolutely ...
Page 14
... keep them going for another fortnight . Thus when Tacitus speaks of the constant use of the warm bath by northern nations we know what he means , and we are led to understand why our forefathers paid so much attention to the bath as to ...
... keep them going for another fortnight . Thus when Tacitus speaks of the constant use of the warm bath by northern nations we know what he means , and we are led to understand why our forefathers paid so much attention to the bath as to ...
Page 22
... keeps to his room , but he is a builder ; a house , too , in German may be said to be gut gezimmert - well built . Frauen- zimmer is a being of female build . With the name , much of the art went over to the stone , and 22 ANGLO - SAXON ...
... keeps to his room , but he is a builder ; a house , too , in German may be said to be gut gezimmert - well built . Frauen- zimmer is a being of female build . With the name , much of the art went over to the stone , and 22 ANGLO - SAXON ...
Common terms and phrases
Anglo-Saxon apparatus appliances Arthur Gamgee atmosphere average death-rate basement boiler breathing brick building burn burner byelaws carbonic acid carried cause cesspool cistern closet coal coal-gas combustion country houses Deaths of children diarrhoeal diseases diphtheria disconnection domestic dust dwelling English Ernest Hart evil factories fever FISH FISHERIES EXHIBITION FISHERIES LITERATURE-VOL flame floor foul air fresh air furnaces gully hall Health Exhibition heat Illustrated impurities inside kind larder lecture London manufacturing means measles Metropolis Moritz Heyne nuisance ordinary Ormskirk outer air pass present Price principal zymotic diseases production radiating rain-water pipe rats Rogers Field Roman roof sanitary arrangements sanitation scarlet fever second house sewer sewer gas sink smell soil pipe soil-pipe Spencer Walpole steam stove temperature thing towns trap underneath ventilation walls warm waste waste-pipe water supply whooping-cough WILLIAM CLOWES workshops zymotic diseases
Popular passages
Page 213 - ... 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 ; but all such byelaws imposing any penalty shall be so framed as to allow of the recovery of any sum less than the full amount of the penalty.
Page 214 - 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 213 - ... 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 214 - 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 156 - Hence at this late hour, while I am thus feebly, but earnestly, pleading the cause of these oppressed children, what numbers of them are still tethered to their toil, confined in heated rooms, bathed in perspiration, stunned with the roar of revolving wheels, poisoned with the noxious effluvia of grease and gas, till, at last, weary and exhausted, they turn out, almost naked, into the inclement air, and creep, shivering, to beds from which a relay of their young work-fellows have just risen. Such,...
Page 181 - 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 158 - ... 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...