DISREGARD Or THE LAWS Or

... volution in the liquid of cesspools are not removed by filtration through gravel, however bright the water may become, and that typhoid fever, like malignant cholera, ia one of the great group of dream whir infect the ground. Mr. Austin, the principal engineer ...

Published: Saturday 22 June 1861
Newspaper: West Middlesex Herald
County: Middlesex, England
Type: Article | Words: 646 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

THE WICKLOW NEWS-LETTER,

... course was adopted last year in several instances where leaky drains and cesspools infecting both water ami air induced or fed typhoid fever, aggravated iu some cases by defective ventilation in cottages with window's made not open.” an instance of what stdl ...

THE ILL! We (Freeman Turin, the sth in culars of the illne M. de Cavou ports (serious en lieve. before

... aeasot ness of bloed. Oi cofiee after dinner, fit. The medics ing him so iron vomiting set in, a treated for apoplet that the typhoid long ignored, and blood-letting. A'i a panic spreading desolation. The are not amongst t' these painful circu lerated march ...

Published: Tuesday 11 June 1861
Newspaper: The Evening Freeman
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 595 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

FRANCE

... Opinion Nationale by a fried of the Marquis de flavour, that the paled was suffering from cerebral infiamroalios instead of typhoid beer. • private despatch to the Preset from Tad. gives the folleerbg account of the progress made by the fatal dhesse.:— ...

Published: Monday 10 June 1861
Newspaper: Cambria Daily Leader
County: Glamorgan, Wales
Type: | Words: 888 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

JAMES WALLACE

... Another account says : I saw to-day his own doctor, very able professor in our university. He told they feared that the typhoid fever would degenerate into Jifvre pemicioue (if I mistake not what you call putrid fever). ' The Count.,’ said informant ...

Published: Wednesday 12 June 1861
Newspaper: Belfast Mercury
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1564 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

POLAND

... and Blair take different views of their duty. Mr Douglas died yesterday, at Chicago, at ten minutes past 9 His disease was typhoid fever, but he was literary worn out by fast living, hard work, and political dimappolutment. He had been insensible for several ...

COUNT CAVuUKS LAST HOURS

... know the fact that bleeding ia just as frightfully carried on at Home or Naples as at Turin. Count Cavour’a illness was “typhoid fever, the | nvidern name of congestive gastric. Typhus is a different disease altogether. A chestnut horse and 1 horse chestnut ...

Published: Tuesday 11 June 1861
Newspaper: Dublin Evening Post
County: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 736 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

CONCERT & RECREATION

... ooo geodes. The physideas ordered six sad et the of des% ea the dbea s r ise t• symptoms already saatemesd la Me to be • typhoid —dist is, week wed selbseis The 'dila of dte fever was sew MS, far there were merked sod of fever at stated imamate by salmis( ...

HOW COUNT CAVOUR WAS LOST

... diseases dwindle again into the self-same I one. He tells of typhus : but this was the invention of the telegrams— a mistake for typhoid (the -common name for gastric). He tells of pernicious fev^r: this is the French term for the same disease. So we are thus ...

Published: Monday 17 June 1861
Newspaper: Morning Post
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 808 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

wc NORTH B been were ae q THE V ETERINA RIAN. INFLUENZA IN HORSES. ye Is Lengon, as yell ‘Katilburgh

... sore. But, whatever form ‘it assumes, € it speedily induces great weakness, whilst the ac- companying fever ia. of a low typhoid type In many cases occurring during the present season the liver and have been inyolred, as indicated by the symptoms of ...

Published: Wednesday 12 June 1861
Newspaper: North British Agriculturist
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 788 | Page: 11 | Tags: none

THE LATE COUNT CAVOUR

... well to know tbe fact that bleeding just as frightfully carried on at Rome or Naples at Turin. Count favours illness was 'typhoid' fever, the modern name ot congestive gastric. I foresaw Count Cavour's serious illness ten days ago, the first moment 1 read ...

Published: Friday 14 June 1861
Newspaper: Carlisle Journal
County: Cumberland, England
Type: Article | Words: 2239 | Page: 9 | Tags: none