A CLUB'S BALL SUPPER
... SAZLAE. It gives instant, reief in hcodaohe, sea. or bilious sickness, constipation, heart. tarn, eoarket and othler fevers, smallpox, meoaslos, eruptive and: sli ooo~tius- seno substitute. H. IIArPIOroon, 113, ...
... SAZLAE. It gives instant, reief in hcodaohe, sea. or bilious sickness, constipation, heart. tarn, eoarket and othler fevers, smallpox, meoaslos, eruptive and: sli ooo~tius- seno substitute. H. IIArPIOroon, 113, ...
... TaE HIA34PSTRAD SMALLaPOX HOSPIT&c.- A large torchlight procession in support of the movement to obtain the removal of the Smallpox hospital at Hampstead, paraded -the vicinity on Wednesday night, and this weasfollowed by two crowded meetings, at which ...
... Sr1ArLPOX .ttasrdinary meeting of The Metropolitan Asyfls board, yesterday, tjie return' of smallpox patents was read, showing that there was admitted1to he smallpox hospitals, 475; died, 38;,dicharged recovered, 86; sent to other hospitals or ca-zap, 293 ...
... view of restraining them from continuing to use certain lands in their occupation at Darenth, Kent, as a hospital camp for small-pox patients. The tanagers have at present about five hundred patients under treatment at this camp, .and they contemplate e ...
... heat, and the ground floor and the contents suffered from water. SMALL-POX IN THE METROPOLIS. At a meeting of the Asylums Board on Saturday, a comparative retutlf the number of small-pox patients in the several hospitals of ?? ianagerS was presented. This ...
... having beet groplng in the dart about the room where the lift-hole was, S.MALL-POX IN KENT. About three weeks ago a collier put in at Ramsgate fronm Sunderiand, oltere small-pox exists. One of the seamen, named Rigden, belonging to Whittsable, went on ...
... and heat, and the ground floor and the contents suffered from water. SMALL-POX IN THE METROPOLIS. At a meeting of the Asylums Board on Saturday, a comparative ?? the number of small-pox patients in the several hospitals of the inanage1s was presented. This ...
... Fleet-road, to consider the action of the Metro- politan Asylums Board in using the Hampstead Hospital for the recep- tion of small-pox and fever cases from all parts of London. General Williams proposed and Colonel Beckley seconded a resolution, 'Ihat if ...
... as possible by the native police, many of the deaths being from other causes than this malady, which the creoles say is small-pox. They are now prosecuting Dr. Lepper for manslaughter on account of the eighty deaths ; they howl at him round his house ...
... been 19 3 and 21-3 per 1,000 in the two preceding weeks, further rose last week to 21-6. The 1,660 deaths included' 11 from small-pox, 61 from measles, 27 from scarlet fever, 14 from diphtheria, 117 from whooping-cough, 1 from typhus, 15 from enteric fever ...
... much talk in London just now. In New York sse jiracticasly have no small-pox at all, snimply because we hlxve a rcomi lete system both of isola- tion and of vacchiation. When tie small-pox hospital was placed under the IBoard of Health some years ago, there ...
... Northern Courts will probably wait until they discover what Lord Northbrook intends to do in Egypt. The decrease in the small-pox epidemic goes on steadily. At the recent meeting of the Metropolitan Asylums Board it was stated that on the 20(tlh ult. ...