Hygienic and medical reports [electronic resource] . ton navy-yard, by Passed Assistant Surgeon Talleyrand D. Myers 975 62. Medical topography of the International Exhibition of 1876, by Medical Director Joseph Wilson 981 63. International Medical Congress, Geneva, Switzerland, by Medical Director Eobert T. Maccoun 987 64. Turkish hospitals, and means for transportation of sick and wounded in the Turkish army during the late war, by PassedAssistant Surgeon John C. Wise 1001 65. Madeira as a sanitarium, by Passed Assistant Surgeon Andrew M. Moore 1009 66. Transportation of the sick and wounded


Hygienic and medical reports [electronic resource] . ton navy-yard, by Passed Assistant Surgeon Talleyrand D. Myers 975 62. Medical topography of the International Exhibition of 1876, by Medical Director Joseph Wilson 981 63. International Medical Congress, Geneva, Switzerland, by Medical Director Eobert T. Maccoun 987 64. Turkish hospitals, and means for transportation of sick and wounded in the Turkish army during the late war, by PassedAssistant Surgeon John C. Wise 1001 65. Madeira as a sanitarium, by Passed Assistant Surgeon Andrew M. Moore 1009 66. Transportation of the sick and wounded of vessels of war, by Medical Inspector Albert L. Gihon 1013 67. Vaccination in Japan, by Surgeon Abel F. Price 1025 68. Life-saving at sea, by Medical Insioector C. J. Cleborne 1029 69. Statistics from the Fifthgeneral census of Chili, 1875, by Sur- geon George R. Brush 1049 70. The navigation of the Amazon hygienically considered, by Sur- geon Melancthon L. Ruth 1055^ PART I. HYGIENIC REPORTS FROM MEDICAL OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY. 1 IIY. ^hLLCOME INSTITUTE\ LIBRARY Coll. welMOmec Call No. NORTH ^^TIC ^^. 18 7 5. 3 NORTH ATLANTIC STATION. U. S. S. OF SURGEON EDWARD KERSHNER. Tlie wliole comi)lemeut, comi)osing tlie crew of the UuitedStates steamer Swatara, consists of the coiiimaiicler, 14 ward-room officers, 8 steerage officers, 4 warrant officers, and 173 men. The followhig is the cnbic capacity of the different habitableportions of the ship, and the nnmber of cubic feet of air-spaceto each individual: The cabin has 4,550 cubic feet of air-space; occupied by one(Officer, the commander. The wardroom, in which 12 officers live, has 7,256 cubic feetof air-space, averaging, to each officer, cubic feet of air-space, i. e., providing the doors to all the state-rooms are open,allowing throughout a free circulation; otherwise the afterrooms (which are much smaller than the forward) get less than400 cubic feet. The steerage, inhabited by 8 o


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectnavalmedicine, bookye