. Cleveland medical gazette. me sufficiently elevatedto melt the snow that up to this time had been frozen hard, andduring the early days of April there were frequent warm consequence of these atmospheric conditions the entire mass ofdejecta that had been passed daring the course of his illness waswashed directly into the stream supplying the reservoirs fromwhich the town obtained the largest part of its water. The amount of pollution was therefore exceptionally great,and the disease-producing elements must have been disseminatedby means of the water very shortly aftenvard; at all e
. Cleveland medical gazette. me sufficiently elevatedto melt the snow that up to this time had been frozen hard, andduring the early days of April there were frequent warm consequence of these atmospheric conditions the entire mass ofdejecta that had been passed daring the course of his illness waswashed directly into the stream supplying the reservoirs fromwhich the town obtained the largest part of its water. The amount of pollution was therefore exceptionally great,and the disease-producing elements must have been disseminatedby means of the water very shortly aftenvard; at all events, theepidemic that was obtained shoAvs that the first cases of the epi-demic appeared within from two to three weeks—the period of in- Notes and Comments. 55 cubation of typhoid fever—after the polluted water had been dis-tl-ibuted through the town. • The accompanying is a chart of Plymouth, with sources of its water, and the distribution of the polluted supply marked From Abbotts Hygiene of Transunssible Disease/. 56 Notes and Comments. Newspaper Doctors. It seems that there are certain mem-bers of our profession—some of them good men and in every way,except their newspaper advertising^weakness, strong men—whoare given to periodical manias for advertising themselves in thedaily press. Perhaps some new cure for hydrophobia, an idea ob-tained during a sojourn in Europe, creeps into their brain and theyimmediately, through the medium of cigars or a bottle of whisky,creep into the daily newspaper with a long account of a new dis-covery. A distorted, blood cell found under the miscroscope, andthey rush for a reporter. Shame on these men! They are a dis-grace to themselves and to the profession, but so long as time lastswe must be infested, or, rather, troubled by these parasitic neo-phytes. Usually these individuals try to be respectable so long asthey can work the medical profession and the newspapers and thelaity, and maintain their grip on the County Medical Socie
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear190