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Notice to Schools of Contagious Disease (sample blank form). Occupational Brass Poisoning. Occupational Diseases - Beakey, Mo. Bu., March, 1913.

Occupational Diseases in their Relation to Rural Districts.

Occupational Heart Disease.

Ohio and Its Tuberculosis Problem Paterson, Mo. Bu., Nov., 1912.

OHIO PUBLIC HEATH JOURNAL, Vol. VIII (1917), index and title page (xvi pp.).

Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital Law, With Regulations for the Government of Tuberculosis Hospitals (8 pp.).

Open Air Sleeping (Type of Porch) (4 pp).

Opinion of the Attorney General in Re Demarcation Between House Drain and House Sewer-Mo. Bu., March, 1914.

Oral Hygiene as a Factor in the Conervation of Health Brown, Mo. Bu., Dec., 1913.

Orders and Regulations for Villages and Townships - Bauman, Mo. Bu, Aug., 1914.

Orders and Regulations Recommended for Adoption by Township Boards of Health.

Orders and

Regulations Recommended for Adoption by Village Boards of Health.

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Orders and Regulations mended for Adoption by Village Health Officers.

Orders and Regulations Governing the Sale of Ice Cream, Sodas and Soda Fountain Sundries.

Ordinances to Control the Use of Sewers O. P. H. J., March, 1916. Organization of District Tuberculosis Hospital (diagram, 1 p.).

Organized Work for the Prevention of Blindness as Carried on by the Ohio State Commission for the Blind Campbell, Mo. Bu., Feb., 1914.

Our Duty in Public Dental Education and Our Relation to the Public Press Brown, Mo. Bu., July, 1913.

Outfits for Chemical and Bacteriological Field Determinations Van Bus

kirk, Mo. Bu., April, 1913.

Painters Avoid Lead Poisoning. Past, Present, and Future of the Ohio River from a Sanitary Standpoint Swartzel, Quart. Bu., Dec., 1910.

Pathological Oral Conditions as a Source of Some Systemic Disturbances -Brown, Mo. Bu., May, 1914.

Peculiar Poisoning in a Construction Camp-Report of Deaths and Prostrations.

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Prevention of Blindness from Inflammation of the Eyes of the Newborn An Act.

Prevention Rather than Cure-Groeniger, O. P. H. J., Jan.-Feb.-Mch., 1916. Principles and Scope of the Survey of Industrial Health Hazards and Occupational Diseases in Ohio.

Printers-Avoid Consumption-Avoid Lead Poisoning.

Private Water Supplies (7 p. pamphlet).

Privies and Cesspools for Residences in Unsewered Districts - Van Buskirk, Mo. Bu., Aug., 1913.

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Progress and Present Status of the Work of the State Department of Health Sutton, O. P. H. J., Jan., 1917.

Progress in Therapeutics for 1915Sheets, O. P. H. J., Jan.-Feb.-Mch., 1916. Protection of Exposed Food Products Dennison, Mo. Bu., May, 1911.

Protective Inoculation Against Disease McCampbell, O. P. H. J., July, 1915.

Public Health Nursing in OhioPaterson and Stewart, O. P. H. J., May, 1915.

Public Health Nursing in Ohio Stewart, O. P. H. J., April, 1915.

Public Health Nursing Service in Ohio Paterson, O. P. H. J., Sept., 1915.

Public Water Supplies for Cities; Some General Considerations - Dittoe, Mo. Bu., Nov., 1914.

Psychopathic Hospital and Public Health-Harris, Mo. Bu., Jan., 1914. Rabies.

Regulations for the Prevention and Control of Whooping Cough (4 pp.). Regulations for the Prevention of Venereal Diseases (4 pp.).

Regulations Governing the Examination of Water (4 p. leaflet).

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Relation of the Funeral Director and Embalmer to the Public Health Campbell, Mo. Bu., July, 1914.

Relative Value of Improvements Affecting the Sanitation of Villages-Dittoe, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1914.

Report Blanks for Cases of Inflammation of the Eyes of the Newborn(book of 25 cards).

Report of Wood County Survey with Especial Reference to the Sanitary Condition of the Schools - Obetz, O. P. H. J., Jan.-Feb.-Mch., 1916.

Report on Investigation of Chemical Closets O. P. H. J., Jan., 1915.

Report on Investigation of Death Said to Be Due to Pollen Poisoning.

Report on Investigation of Four Cases of Sudden Death Which Took Place at the Athens State Hospital.

Report on the Public Water Supply of Cleveland With Reference to the Treatment by Calcium Hypochlorite Dittoe and Van Buskirk, Mo. Bu., Jan., 1913.

Responsibility of the Health Officer
Sutton, Mo. Bu., April, 1913.
Sample Quarantine Card.

Sanitary Conditions Affecting the Home in Village and Country- - Warner, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1911.

Sanitary Requirements of the Farmer's Home Storey, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1911. Scarlet Fever Its Restriction and Prevention (8 p. pamphlet).

Securing and Training Nurses for Rural Communities Stewart, O. P. H. J., Sept.-Oct., 1916.

Sewage Disposal for Residences Adams and Durrell, with Notes on Plumbing by W. C. Groeniger, O. P. H. J., Sept.-Oct., 1916.

Sewage Disposal for School Buildings in Ohio - O. P. H. J., July, 1916. Sexual Science - Who Should Teach It Harlan, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1911.

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Should Sexual Science be Taught in the Public Schools? Heidingsfeld, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1911.

Should Sexual Science be Taught in the Public Schools? - McHenry, Mo. Bu., Aug., 1911.

Should the Common Drinking Cup in Public Places be Abolished?- Stone. Mo. Bu., Sept., 1911.

Should the Schools Be Held Responsible for Physical Growth of School

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1914.

Some Filtration Plant Bacteriological Data - Hoover and Scott, O. P. H. J., Jan., 1915.

Some Things a Young Man Should Know About Sex and Sex Diseases (8 pp.).

Some Weird Diagnoses as Observed by a Registrar of Vital Statistics Ford, Mo. Bu., April, 1914.

State Program for Child Welfare — Hollingshead, O. P. H. J., March, 1918. State Public Health Organizations McDowell, O. P. H. J., Dec., 1916.

Street Dust and Street Cleaning in Relation to Health, Comfort, and Economy Landis, Mo. Bu., March, 1911. The Abatement of Nuisances man, Mo. Bu., Sept., 1913.

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The Benefits to Be Derived From a Public Water Supply and Sewerage System Dittoe, Mo. Bu., May, 1914.

The Causes and Prevention of Venereal Diseases (4 p. leaflet, 3rd ed., 1916).

The Child as a Community AssetHollingshead, O. P. H. J., Dec., 1916. The Classification of Hazardous Occupations.

The Collection and Value of Morbidity Statistics - Arner, O. P. H. J., Oct.. 1915.

The Common Drinking Cup; What Shall We Do With It? Baker, Mo. Bu, May, 1911.

The Comparative Advantage From a Health Standpoint Between Country and City Life - Sutton, Mo. Bu., 1911. The Conservation of Public Health McCampbell, Mo. Bu., Jan., 1914. The Construction_and Regulation of School Buildings - Baker.

The Control of Contagious and Infectious Diseases - Warner, Quart. Bu.. Dec., 1910.

The Co-operation of Physicians and Dentists in the Conservation of Health -- Upham, Mo. Bu., Dec., 1914.

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The Disinfection of Water - Dittoe, O. P. H. J., Aug., 1915.

The Disposal of Municipal Wastes in Small Cities and Villages - McDowell, Mo. Bu, Sept., 1912.

The Duration of Quarantine in Transmissible Diseases - Boudreau, Mo. Bu, May, 1914.

The Dental Phase of School Hygiene and Public Health Problems - Brown, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1913.

The Development of State Public Health Nursing-Paterson, O. P. H. J., Dec., 1915.

The Economic Loss to the Community from Preventable Diseases - Light, O. P. H. J., June, 1915.

The Engineering Work of the State Board of Health-Dittoe, Mo. Bu, June, 1914.

The Expenses of Boards of HealthBauman, Mo. Bu., Nov., 1913.

The Health Department Under the Commission-Manager Form of Government - McDowell, O. P. H. J., July, 1915.

The Health Hazards of Industries, With Special Reference to Ohio.

The High Spots for the Adoption of the State Sanitary Codes and State Inspection Groeniger, O. P. H. J., Jan.Feb.-Mch., 1916.

The Hilltop Tragedy - Vaughan, O. P. H. J., Feb., 1915.

The Housefly: Carrier of Disease -L. O. Howard.

The Importance of Complete Birth Registration - Holland, Mo. Bu., July. 1912.

The Lessons from a Smallpox Epidemic La Mont. Mo. Bu., Sept., 1914. The Menace of Inherited Defects Arner, O. P. H. J., Nov., 1915.

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The Mode of Procedure in the Study of Epidemics - Boudreau, Mo. Bu., Sept., 1914.

The Movement to Lengthen LifeMcCampbell, O. P. H. J., Oct., 1915.

The Necessity for Child Welfare Work in the Smaller Communities Hollingshead, O. P. H. J., Sept.-Oct.,

1916.

The Necessity of Plumbing Inspection in Rural Districts - Groeniger, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1913.

The Necessity of Sanitary Plumbing Groeniger.

The Notification of Reportable Diseases Bauman, Mo. Bu., April, 1914. The Ohio Institute for Public Efficiency; Its Relation to the Health Department Croxton, O. P. H. J., Feb., 1917.

The Operation of Sewage Treatment Plants for Public Buildings - O. P. H. J., Jan., 1917.

The Present Status of Milk Supervision in the Cities of Ohio - Boudreau, O. P. H. J., Feb., 1917.

The Prevalence and Control of Typhoid Fever in Ohio - Boudreau, O. P. H. J., May, 1916.

The Prevalence of Occupational Factors in Disease and Suggestions for Their Elimination.

The Prevention of Infantile Paralysis - Millikin, Mo. Bu., Feb., 1911.

The Prevention of Smallpox in Townships and Villages Boudreau, Mo. Bu, Sept., 1913.

The Poisons Secreted by Animals -McCampbell, O. P. H. J., Feb., 1915.

The Pollution of the Streams of Ohio and the Effects of the Pollution on the Public Health, Livestock and FishMcCampbell and Dittoe, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1912.

The Problem of Infant Mortality in Cities Boudreau and Kerr, O. P. H. J., May, 1915.

The Protection of Food Products Exposed for Sale - Way, Mo. Bu, Aug., 1911.

The Protection of Food Supplies McCune, O. P. H. J., Nov., 1916.

The Relation of Carriers to the Spread of Disease McCampbell, O. P. H. J., Sept., 1915.

The Relation of Industry to the Health Department - Selby, O. P. H. J., Feb., 1917.

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The Relation of Milk to the Infant Industry - Probst, Mo. Bu., April, 1911. The Relation of Plumbing Inspection to Preventive Medicine Groeniger, Mo. Bu., Mar., 1914.

The Relation of Private and Munici pal Anti-Tuberculosis Activities - Lowman, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1914.

The Relation of the Municipality and the Physician to Infant MortalityHelmick, Mo. Bu., July, 1912.

The Responsibility of the Health Officer in Controlling Epidemics - Obetz. O. P. H. J., October, 1915.

The Sanitary Survey; What It Is Van Buskirk, O. P. H. J., Aug., 1915.

The Service of Medicine to Civilization Vaughan, Mo. Bu., Sept., 1914.

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The Tuberculosis Problem - Landis. The Unventilated Gas Stove as Menace to Health - Warner, Mo. Bu., Feb., 1911.

The Uses of a Public Health Laboratory Berry, Mo. Bu., April, 1913.

The Value of the Public Health Nurse to Local Health Authorities Paterson, Mo. Bu., Sept., 1914.

Transit Permit-Regulations Governing Transportation of Dead Bodies.

Tuberculosis in State Institutions Cadwallader, Mo. Bu., June, 1914. Tuberculosis What You Should Know About It (20 p. pamphlet).

The War, Hygiene and Public Health Boudreau, O. P. H. J., Sept., 1915. The Water Supply for Country Schools Clisly, Mo. Bu., Sept., 1911. The Work of the County Sanitary Engineer - Boulay, O. P. H. J., Sept.Oct., 1916.

Typhoid Fever in Cleveland in 1912Ellis and Perkins, Mo. Bu., Dec., 1913. Typhoid Fever, Its Restriction and Prevention (Revised 1918).

Typhus Fever, Its Etiology and Methods of Its Prevention Anderson, O. P. H. J., May, 1915.

Unsanitary Bakeshops - Kearns, Mo. Bu., Feb., 1911.

Unsanitary Housing Conditions-Davis, Mo. Bu., May, 1911.

Water Purification at Columbus Hoover, O. P. H. J., June, 1915.

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When Doctors Disagree, Who Shall Decide? Hegner, Mo. Bu., Dec., 1911. Whooping Cough, Its Restriction and Prevention (4 p. leaflet, 1916).

What Cleveland Has Done for Its Milk Supply-Eddy, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1912.

What May Be Done During Fall and Winter to Promote Child Hygiene Hollingshead, O. P. H. J., Dec., 1915.

Your Baby's Eyes - How to Save Them (4 p. leaflet, 3rd ed., 1918).

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infection have arrived carelessly tied up in paper.

Postoffice employees, clerks in this Department, laboratory assistants all persons in short, who have occasion to handle material mailed in this manner are subjected to grave danger, and nobody. should know this better than the physicians who are guilty of such negligence.

If senders of these specimens would only use the containers provided free by the Department, all trouble would be avoided, for these outfits, available at distributing stations throughout the state, comply fully with the postal regulations and the demands of safety.

The postal regulations declare all infectious material non-mailable, except when prepared in accordance with rules which the postmaster general is empowered to make, and provide the penalty mentioned for violations. The regulations which the postmaster general has promulgated under this section are as follows:

POSTAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS.

Sec. 473. Specimens of diseased tissues may be admitted to the mail for transmission to the United States, state, municipal or other laboratories in possession of permits referred to in paragraph 3 of this section only when inclosed in mailing cases constructed in accordance with this regulation, provided that bacteriologic and pathologic specimens of plague and cholera shall under no circumstances be admitted to the mails.

2. Liquid cultures, or cultures of micro-organisms in media that are fluid at the ordinary temperature, (below 45° C. or 113° F.) are unmailable. Such specimens may be sent in media that remain solid at ordinary temperatures.

3. No package containing diseased tissue shall be delivered to any representative of any of said laboratories until a permit shall have first been issued by the Postmaster General, certifying

that said institution has been found to be entitled, in accordance with the requirements of this regulation, to receive such specimens.

4. (a) Specimens of tubercular sputum (whether disinfected with carbolic acid or not disinfected) shall be transmitted in a solid glass vial with a mouth not less than one inch in diameter and capacity of not less than two ounces, closed by a cork stopper or by a metallic screw top protected by a rubber or felt washer. Specimens of diphtheria, typhoid, or other infectious or communicable diseases or diseased tissues, shall be placed in a test tube made of tough glass, not over three-fourths of an inch in diameter and not over 7 inches in length, closed with a stopper of rubber or cotton and sealed with paraffin or covered with a tightly fitting rubber cap.

(b) The glass vial or test tube shall then be placed in a cylindrical tin box. with soldered joints, closed by a metal Screw cover with a rubber or felt washer. The vial or test tube in this tin box shall be completely and evenly surrounded by absorbent cotton closely packed.

(c) The tin box with its contents must then be inclosed in a closely fitting metal, wooden, or papier-mache block or tube, at least three-sixteenths of an inch thick in its thinnest part, of sufficient strength to resist rough handling and to support the weight of the mails piled in bags. This last tube shall be tightly closed with a screw top cover with sufficient screw threads to require at least one and one-half full turns before it will come off, and fitted with a felt or rubber washer.

5. Specimens of blood dried on glass microscopic slides for the diagnosis of malaria or typhoid fever by the Widal test may be sent in any strong mailing case which is not liable to breakage or loss of the specimen in transit.

6. Upon the outside of every package of diseased tissues admitted to the mails shall be written or printed the words, "Specimen for bacteriological examination. This package to be pouched with letter mail."

Under Paragraph 3 of the foregoing section a permit has been issued to the laboratories of the State Department of Health "to receive by mail specimens of diseased tissue and micro-organisms."

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