Refine Search

.+'w.C 41:101.1, •41. easam.l,

... .+'w.C •••• AL Orr. kr 4 WOW 4,144. W. Chariot dries Orr . INFANT MORTALITY. Imo the Orr &WAN 5 M.., Writortroup W. 1111D1 5 . itt , ream W. W. is r 4111 A. GMT p .. .r .W le The Orr Weber Sailer bolt. .Y. pod, prelim PP at era. ea tiWww ww ...

Published: Wednesday 14 February 1906
Newspaper: Winsford & Middlewich Guardian
County: Cheshire, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 209 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

IMPORTANT PURCHASE ladies- and children’s jackets, t-APEs, maniles, dress materials, AN FURS. RmIIERT SATURDAY, ..

... who died dining the vrter w-r» i'j yearn old nod were infante who had not completed their first year. The pr.q>.rs j..n old people among thoee who died waa. iher.fu.-e, eery .mall. Trie infant mortality ex.- #«ite being equal 25* per l.OOtl hirtha. The ...

Published: Saturday 26 October 1895
Newspaper: Northwich Guardian
County: Cheshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 900 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

VEVTILATIIIO THZ ITUISEHT

... VEVTILATIIIO THZ ITUISEHT. The tremendous proportion of infant mortality in town slums, as compared to country cottages, is, says the Methee's Maya:bit, directly predisposed to by overcrowding and lack of pure air. The nursery, both by day and by night ...

in soodiOal offacer;' aani;al reporti

... Runcorn 156. The report further pointe out that Nantwich ir. the preceding year lad an infant mortality of 199, ea that for two consecutive years the infant mortality has been higher in this town than in any other Cheshire district For the credit of the ...

Published: Saturday 30 July 1904
Newspaper: Cheshire Observer
County: Cheshire, England
Type: | Words: 2088 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

IMITTLATING TI NV

... TI NV . The tremendous proportion of infant mortality in town alums, as compared to country cottages, is, says the Mother's directly predisposed to by overcrowding and lack of pure air. The nursery, both by day and by night, can hardly have too much fresh ...

Published: Wednesday 05 December 1894
Newspaper: Chester Courant
County: Cheshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 280 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

COMPARISONS WITHENGLISH TOWNS

... the fact is that in normal conditions there is a very heavy infant mortality. Only the other day the Mayor of Stockport drew attention in his speech after clection to the heavy infant mortality of Stockport, which during the year 1900 was equivalent to ...

Published: Monday 18 November 1901
Newspaper: Cheshire Daily Echo
County: Cheshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1812 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

BELLTH LECTURES IN STOCKPOLT. }TEST OF THE SERIE& DR CAMERON ON DANGERS TO HEALTH WITHIN THE HOME

... the ray of Leeds, was qualified to deal with the subject. He had no doubt that he would hare sonsellung to ray about Infant mortality. The returns for booed that. roughly 'peaking, an , marage of onceistil of the children born ad not the firrt year of ...

HlOtigli OILBINOTON

... including one in the workhouse, as compared with 82 in 1898. and 82 in 1897. The death-rate was 9.1 thousand persons, and the infant mortality as measured by the percentage of deaths of children under one year of age 8.16. There were five deaths of persons over ...

Published: Saturday 10 February 1900
Newspaper: Birkenhead News
County: Cheshire, England
Type: | Words: 337 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

1.!

... said ho would be glad if Dr Hodgson would arrange for a comparative analysis, shewing the causes of death, betweeu the infant mortality in London and in Crewe. Dr Hodgson agreed with Alderman Whale that especial attention should be drawn to the fact that ...

BURNIKG SHAME

... it, if it forgot it. if it pissed by on the other side ? That was what was at the bottom of all our terrible tale of infant mortality. We suffered at least 100 babies out of every 1,000 in the poorer districts of London to perish without natural causes ...

Published: Saturday 28 December 1907
Newspaper: Runcorn Examiner
County: Cheshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 310 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

nradfirinn and !Holds – diseon• ladieweld -•01'

... confirmed by a Russian gentleman whom he had met only that day) the mortality reached 600 children per 1,000, Who died in the first year of their exietence. European Russia lost 1,200,002 infants in the first year of their existence per annum. Such figures were ...

Published: Wednesday 18 March 1908
Newspaper: Birkenhead News
County: Cheshire, England
Type: | Words: 434 | Page: 2 | Tags: none