Public Documents of the State of Wisconsin: Being the Reports of the Various State Officers, Departments and Institutions, Volume 1854 |
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Page 6
... attend to the defense of such suits ; and , under the circumstances , it would seem that the State ought not to be troubled with such litigation . The whole number of criminal cases now on the calendar of the Supreme Court is thirty ...
... attend to the defense of such suits ; and , under the circumstances , it would seem that the State ought not to be troubled with such litigation . The whole number of criminal cases now on the calendar of the Supreme Court is thirty ...
Page 6
... attend to the defense of such suits ; and , under the circumstances , it would seem that the State ought not to be troubled with such litigation . The whole nunber of criminal cases now on the calendar of the Supreme Court is thirty ...
... attend to the defense of such suits ; and , under the circumstances , it would seem that the State ought not to be troubled with such litigation . The whole nunber of criminal cases now on the calendar of the Supreme Court is thirty ...
Page 27
... attend to the interests of the state , and prevent , if possible , the commission of such depredations . The provision made by section 49 , chap . 134 R. S. , above cited , is evidently altogether inadequate to affect any good result in ...
... attend to the interests of the state , and prevent , if possible , the commission of such depredations . The provision made by section 49 , chap . 134 R. S. , above cited , is evidently altogether inadequate to affect any good result in ...
Page 27
... attend to the interests of the state , and prevent , if possible , the commission of such depredations . The provision made by section 49 , chap . 134 R. S. , above cited , is evidently altogether inadequate to affect any good result in ...
... attend to the interests of the state , and prevent , if possible , the commission of such depredations . The provision made by section 49 , chap . 134 R. S. , above cited , is evidently altogether inadequate to affect any good result in ...
Page 15
... attended school , and the per cent . of attendance in each year : Year . Whole No. of Children . No. attending School . , Per cent . 1849 71,455 1850 91,305 1851 111,852 1852 124,340 1853 138,658 1854 155,125 31,486 44 61,649 67.5 ...
... attended school , and the per cent . of attendance in each year : Year . Whole No. of Children . No. attending School . , Per cent . 1849 71,455 1850 91,305 1851 111,852 1852 124,340 1853 138,658 1854 155,125 31,486 44 61,649 67.5 ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres amount annual appropriation arrangement audited BERIAH BROWN blue limestone Blue Mounds Brothertown Indians Calumet county cents chief Chippewas Columbia County commenced commissioners committee contract crevices deaf and dumb diem Diggings DISBURSEMENTS district dollars duty early settler East and West erection estimate expense extending feet Fever river flat openings flint Fond du Lac furnished Governor Green Bay Hazel Green hundred inches Indian instances institution instruction iron iron pyrites John Lake lands legislature less Loans lower bed Madison Manitowoc McGuffy Milwaukee Mineral Point Mounds North and Souths Platteville portion Prairie present prison Proudfit pupils quarter Racine Racine County ranges river rock Rock River salary sandstone school fund secure sheets Shullsburg Smith society strata superintendent teachers tion town Treasurer University upper bed upper magnesian veins vertical Waukesha wings Winnebago Wisconsin witness fee
Popular passages
Page 48 - ... feelings of shame or delicacy to prevent their disclosing the seat, symptoms and causes of complaints peculiar to them. However commendable a modest reserve may be in the common occurrences of life, its strict observance in medicine is often, attended with the most serious consequences, and a patient may sink under a painful and loathsome disease, which might have been readily prevented had timely intimation been given to the physician. SEC. 5. A patient should never weary his physician with...
Page 46 - Frequent visits to the sick are in general requisite, since they enable the physician to arrive at a more perfect knowledge of the disease, to meet promptly every change which may occur, and also tend to preserve the confidence of the patient. But unnecessary visits are to be avoided, as they give useless anxiety to the patient, tend to diminish the authority of the physician, and render him liable to be suspected of interested motives.
Page 42 - No senator or representative shall, during the time for which he shall have been elected, be appointed to any civil office of profit under this State, which shall have been created, or the emoluments of which shall have been increased during such term, except such offices as may be filled by elections by the people.
Page 6 - ... the school fund." the interest of which and all other revenues derived from the school lands shall be exclusively applied to the following objects, to wit: 1.
Page 46 - The life of a sick person can be shortened not only by the acts, but also by the words or the manner of a physician. It is, therefore, a sacred duty to guard himself carefully in this respect, and to avoid all things which have a tendency to discourage the patient and to depress his spirits.
Page 142 - No hospital for the insane, however limited its capacity, should have less than fifty acres of land, devoted to gardens and pleasure grounds for its patients. At least one hundred acres should be possessed by every State hospital, or other institution for two hundred patients, to which number these propositions apply, unless otherwise mentioned.
Page 48 - ... 3. Patients should prefer a physician whose habits of life are regular, and who is not devoted to company, pleasure, or to any pursuit incompatible with his professional obligations. A patient should, also, confide the care of himself and family, as much as possible, to one physician ; for a medical man who has become acquainted with the peculiarities of constitution, habits, and predispositions of those he attends, is more likely to be successful in his treatment than one who does not possess...
Page 3 - He shall submit to the legislature an annual report containing: 1. A statement of the condition of the common schools of the state, and of all other schools and institutions under his supervision, and subject to his visitation as superintendent 2.
Page 46 - For the physician should be the minister of hope and comfort to the sick ; that, by such cordials to the drooping spirit, he may smooth the bed of death, revive expiring life, and counteract the depressing influence of those maladies which often disturb the tranquillity of the most resigned in their last moments.