SMALL-POX
... ...
... ...
... compulsory abptiou of the flew systern of icia. At a meet- ing held by a Soety, formed for thepr- pose of fextermiinatin~g sthe small-pox;,: held at the London'feavern- on the 19th in- stant, you and'a DR, CLARKE are reported, in the public papersi to have eipressed ...
... sirsdaalli- tiaily couneeradled b the Utriiuitt' cnsdea;ouirs of thb- S.'iai! 2poX ±-ospital at Pticri sa h inoccn-late ..i.h small-pox matter ill thiat-o~nin:, gri iai d turn them lose aain. upoca the comtnupitVy'7: So pernicious an institution Cs 'tsisg whiih ...
... SMALL-POX IIVOCULATION. It is fit the Public should keow that the deaths bV Ernall-Pox are increasing to a very great degree: for the last three months about ei>hty persons lave died weekly of it, chiefly infants, within the bills of nmorta- lity ; andt ...
... the Engrlish East India possessions ; in An. dalusia, and several other provinces of Spain ; in Vienna and Mttseilles, the Small-Pox has-been completely ex- terminated by the pradice of, Vaccine Inoct4ation, , ihps reman ig Vat Yr tforrn tiie secon& dlifl ...
... aseilles the small-pox had been ?? in Germany the ?? -.had decreased from goo aisiually; en about eight or ten, per year-that in tele East lndiles two mrilliosh4scesa~ 15 dergone the vraccinationa-and that its the Island of CeyloIn the 8 .Small-pox Hospital ...
... calculaaii ' of deaths. He'said that in the Report of the Royal College of Physiciaps, it was stated, that in the natural small-pox one out of six died, by Owe inoculated sinall-pdx about one in' 300 ;whereas, out of T64,38i persons, whp had -been vaccinated ...
... been liable to ?? Pox. * .6 Stafferers from Vaccination out of soeb. . Thus, instead of two thousand persons, killed -bythe Small-Pox, ari. sis thousand iendered nikerable for. life, nota single death-would have happened,. and only six zpersons could in any ...
... Surgeon, the result of which Iwas, that the deaths'which had. iapperned ensued from cases of the very worst species of natural small-pox, and' iH some of them it turned out that the persons isad been vac~cinated with matter of a spsirious nature, so that the ...
... N-a-a! what's thy business at Reading?, A chrirt'ning-baria,-or weddIng; To sec the poor have food and bedding, To stop t'e small-pox, if 'tis spreading Nor frown nor smile of statesman dreading, BSt, in 'the path of mnrnetj treading:- Far -tlts ?? Pampel'a ...
... be turned of forty years ot age, not exceeding'-live feet five ?? high, tolera5ly proportio'ned, niuch markjed with thle small-pox, Wvithstrnrig features; has nottiolgpl)repossessingnormajes- ti^zin his appearahce,although he is said to p6ssess a great ...
... the birth of thre King- of Ro,,1 He. l1ft Rarnbouillet at six in tlhe evcning to repair to tius Ltmxembourg Palace. Thie small-pox being prevalent at Piris, thle Court PhT. sid22nn; have thought pr?.ter tQ ha.e the King of Itq' vaccinated. His health is ...