United States Congressional Serial SetU.S. Government Printing Office, 1913 - United States Reports, Documents, and Journals of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. |
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Page 7
... considered to be one of degree , a question of the quantity taken , and this element in the definition of a poison ... considered as an essential factor , since one- sixteenth part of a grain might easily be poisonous to a child 6 months ...
... considered to be one of degree , a question of the quantity taken , and this element in the definition of a poison ... considered as an essential factor , since one- sixteenth part of a grain might easily be poisonous to a child 6 months ...
Page 8
... considered beneficial . It may also be said that the stimulation resulting from small doses of a stimulant drug is much like the stimulation derived from food or from some of the products of metabolism as the xanthine bases and carbon ...
... considered beneficial . It may also be said that the stimulation resulting from small doses of a stimulant drug is much like the stimulation derived from food or from some of the products of metabolism as the xanthine bases and carbon ...
Page 9
... considered where crimi- nal responsibility was under investigation . Partly on this account , but more particularly because it seems the only rational procedure , it is urged that all poisonous substances should be classified according ...
... considered where crimi- nal responsibility was under investigation . Partly on this account , but more particularly because it seems the only rational procedure , it is urged that all poisonous substances should be classified according ...
Page 11
... considered . Of first importance is the avenue by which the substance under inquiry shall be given , since the practical value of such toxicity experiments on animals depends on their applicability to man . On the surface it would ...
... considered . Of first importance is the avenue by which the substance under inquiry shall be given , since the practical value of such toxicity experiments on animals depends on their applicability to man . On the surface it would ...
Page 12
... considered in determin- ing what animal should be chosen for the toxicity coefficient work . Mice were finally chosen on account of the greater ease with which they are handled and cared for . Of importance also is the fact that they ...
... considered in determin- ing what animal should be chosen for the toxicity coefficient work . Mice were finally chosen on account of the greater ease with which they are handled and cared for . Of importance also is the fact that they ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acid col Anderson animals antiseptic Atchison AVERAGE NUMBER bacteria Bacteriological basin Board of Health Bonner Springs carbolic acid cent CHART chemical coal-tar Coefficient 4.5 coli content Council Bluffs cresol cubic centimeter deodorant diluted discharge disinfectant disinfectant solutions Distillate Dose per gram effluent gallons Gas Acid germicide gram body weight hypochlorite Iowa Jefferson City John F July June Kans Kansas City Kansas River Kansas State Board Lawrence Leavenworth Lethal M. J. Rosenau Manufactured mice miles Missouri River Missouri River water Mouse weight Murray Galt Motter N. Y. Labeled Nebr Nonpoisonous Note Omaha outlets packing plants Phenol Platte River Plattsmouth poisonous prevalence of typhoid Prof Public Health Service public water supply purification Quindaro rivers and waterways Samples taken Sampling point sanitary sedimentation Sewage Laboratory sewage pollution SEWERAGE SYSTEM sewers shows Sioux City Spreader substances Survived tion total bacteria toxicity coefficient typhoid fever Urban population Wardell Stiles Worth Hale
Popular passages
Page 28 - July 10 July 11 July 12 July 13 July 15 July 16 July 17 July 18 July 19 July 20 July 22 July 23 July 24 July 25 July 26 July 27 July 30 July 31 Total bacteria. 300 300 600
Page 74 - parasites of man. By Ch. Wardell Stiles. *No. 18.—An account of the tapeworms of the genus Hymenolepis parasitic in man, including reports of several new cases of the dwarf tapeworm (77. nana) in the United States. By Bray ton H. Ransom. *No. 19.—A method for inoculating animals
Page 65 - 16 17 18 19 ao 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Aug. 1 Sampling point 17, Missouri River, below the Troost Avenue sewer. Total count.
Page 44 - procured from the SUPERINTENDENT or DOCUMENTS, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC, at 6 cents per copy TREASURY DEPARTMENT United States Public Health Service HYGIENIC LABORATORY—BULLETIN No. 89 MAY, 1913 SEWAGE POLLUTION OF INTERSTATE AND INTERNATIONAL WATERS WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE SPREAD OF TYPHOID FEVER VI. THE MISSOURI RIVER FROM SIOUX CITY TO ITS MOUTH By ALLAN j. MCLAUGHLIN
Page 46 - (5) That when the extent of the pollution is such as to affect the public health. in any way by any reasonable use of the river or the water of the river, the sanitary aspect of the situation should control and the degree of pollution should be regulated accordingly. NOTE.—This proposition involves
Page 46 - this limit are not the same in all cases, but vary according to the use that is made of the river or of the water of the river, and according to the character of the territory through which it flows. No universal standard of purity can be wisely established or maintained.
Page 46 - up to certain limiting points the use of our rivers and waterways as vehicles for the reception, transmission, and ultimate disposal of sewage and other liquid wastes is primarily an economic question. The discharge of raw sewage into our streams and harbors should not be universally prohibited by law. (3) That the method of disposal of sewage by dilution is
Page 46 - control. (9) That even when the demands of public health, offense to decency, and interference with navigation are such as to place a limit to the pollution of the stream, the economic aspects of the case should be considered
Page 78 - for publications thus marked should be made. ADDITIONAL COPIES of this publication -ii- may be procured from the SUPERINTENDENT or DOCUMENTS, Government Printing Office, Washington. DC, at
Page 72 - of Kansas, Lawrence, Kans.: Mr. Young.] KANSAS RIVER AT BONNER SPRINGS. No. 1 2 3 4 5 g g 9 10 11 12 13 14