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printed on it in large letters the words "WHOOPING COUGH WITHIN. All Persons Who Have Not Had Whooping Cough Are Forbidden To Enter." This card shall remain in place until removed by the health officer.

RULE 4. Isolation of Patient. The person who has whooping cough shall be isolated for at least four weeks from the beginning of the cough. Isolation shall consist of confinement to the house, rooms or apartment, except that the patient may be permitted to go into the street when under the observation of a responsible person, provided the patient does not come within five feet of any child under 15 years of age and is provided with and wears in plain view around the upper left arm a band on which there shall be the words "Whooping Cough" printed in letters not less than one-half inch in height.

RULE 5. Quarantine of Non-immunes. — Children in a family in which there is a case of whooping cough, if they have not had the disease, are prohibited from going to school, Sunday-school or attending public gatherings. Children in the family who have had whooping cough may be permitted to attend school and public gatherings at the discretion of the local health officer. Children who have been exposed to whooping cough and have not had the disease shall be quarantined for a period of fourteen days from date of last exposure; provided such child or children shall not necessarily be confined to the house if kept under supervision by a competent physician.

RULE 6. Exposing Child in Public Place. No parent or other person having charge of or being responsible for a child having whooping cough or a non-immune child who has been exposed to whooping cough, shall permit such child to attend school or to mingle with other children or permit such child to enter a street car, school wagon, bus or other public conveyance.

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RULE 7. Penalty. Whoever is guilty of a violation of these regulations shall be punished as provided by law.

The above regulations for the prevention and control of whooping cough (Rules 1-7 inclusive) shall take effect and be in force on and after July 1, 1918. Adopted by the Public Health Council of the State Department of Health, May 29, 1918.

Filed with the Secretary of State, June 20, 1918.

ATTEST: JAMES E. BAUMAN,

Secretary Public Health Council.

NURSES OF COUNTRY

MEET IN CLEVELAND Nearly 1,500 nurses from Ohio and other states attended the joint convention of the American Nurses' Association, the National Organization for Public Health Nursing, the National League for Nursing Education and the Ohio State State Nurses' Association in Cleveland, May 6 to 11.

War topics occupied most of the discussion. Encouragement was given to the efforts of the Red Cross to enroll nurses for war service. A service flag honoring 11,000 American nurses was dedicated.

Miss Helena R. Stewart, direc

tor of public health nursing service in the Ohio State Department of Health, was chosen second vice president of the National Organization for Public Health Nursing. Other officers elected by this organization are: Honorary president, Lillian D. Wald, New York; president, Mary Beard, New York; first vice president, Katherine Tucker, Philadelphia; secretary, Maud Reeder, Dubuque, Ia.; treasurer, Samuel Sloan Colt, New York; executive secretary, Ella Phillips Crandall, New York; associate secretary, Mary E. Lent, New York; educational secretary, Mrs. Bessie A. Haasis, New York: publicity secretary, Helen F. Boyd, New York.

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PAMPHLETS, LEAFLETS, AND REPRINTS

Acute Poliomyelitis: With Special Reference to the Disease in Ohio-Boudreau, Brain and McCampbell, Mo. Bu., March, 1914.

A Collection of Aphorisms on Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases, Suitable for Exhibit Displays.

A Constructive Program for Housing Reform Chadsy, Mo. Bu., March, 1913.

Address of the State Inspector of Plumbing - Groeniger, Mo. Bu., June, 1912.

Advantages of the Use of Lime in Water Purification - Hoover and Scott, Mo. Bu., December, 1914.

A Few Dont's for Plumbers - Mo. Bu., March, 1914.

An Ideal Organization of City Health Agencies Landis, Mo. Bu., April, 1914.

An Outbreak of Typhoid Fever Due to Contamination of the Water Supply Through a Private Connection - Dittoe and Boudreau, Mo. Bu., July, 1914. Are You in Business Health?-4 p. leaflet.

for Your

A Summary of Occupational Diseases and Diseases Partly Occupational Reported to the State Board of Health in the First Six Months of the Year 1915 in Accordance with Section 1234-1-3 (O. L. 103, 1913), and According to U. S. Census Symbols.

A Survey of the Hygiene of Mixing Chemicals, etc.

A Survey of the Hygiene of Storage Batteries, etc.

A Survey of the Hygiene of Enameling, etc.

A Survey of the Industrial Hygiene of Furnacing, etc.

A Survey of the Industrial Hygiene of Laundry Listing, Sorting, etc.

A Survey of the Industrial Hygiene of Machine Shopping, etc.

A Survey of the Industrial Hygiene of Pottery, Slip-making, etc.

A Survey of the Industrial Hygiene of Printing, Composing Room, etc.

A Survey of the Industrial Hygiene of Pickling, Galvanizing, etc.

A Survey of the Industrial Hygiene of Rubber-Calendering, etc.

A Survey of the Industrial Hygiene of Rubber Specialty Making, etc.

Cause and Prevention of Furunculosis and Wound Infections Among Machinists O. P. H. J., April, 1918(8 pp.).

Certain Foods and Their Relation to Disease Koehne, O. P. H. J., April, 1915.

Certificate for Readmission to School (sample blank form).

Certificate of Birth (facsimile of official certificate of birth).

Certificate of Industrial (blank form).

Diseases

Collection and Disposal of Municipal Wastes Osborn, Mo. Bu., September, 1912.

Compulsory Notification of Tuberculosis Ford, Mo. Bu., April, 1911. Consumption and Preventable Deaths in American Occupations.

Critical Examination of One Hundred Painters for Evidences of Lead Poisoning.

Danger of Polluting the Public Water Supply by an Industrial Connection Van Buskirk, O. P. H. J., March, 1915. Dangers from Bacilli Carriers - Tate. Mo. Bu., August, 1911.

Deterioration of Public Water Supply and Sewerage Improvements - Van Buskirk, Mo. Bu., March, 1913.

Diphtheria and Membranous Croup; Their Restriction and Prevention (8 p. pamphlet), 1913, 8th ed.

Diphtheria: With Special Reference to the Bacteriology of this Disease Berry, Mo. Bu., January, 1914.

Diseases Notifiable in Ohio; Regulations Governing Reports.

Disinfection and Disinfectants (8 p. pamphlet).

Disposal of Wastes from the Dairy Industry-Kimberley, O. P. H. J., July,

1914.

Domestic Sanitary Engineering (31 p. pamphlet).

Employment Health Data (blank form).

Foot Strain-An Occupational Disease Among Nurses-Osmond, O. P. H. J., Oct., 1915.

Four Cases of Sudden Death in a Silo.

Gasoline Engine Exhaust Gas Poisoning.

Health Improvements Needed in Ohio Sutton, O. P. H. J., Feb., 1915. Health of Children in Institutions Boudreau, O. P. H. J., Dec., 1917.

Health Warning to Motorists and Garage Workers.

How a Health Officer Can Be More Useful to His Community - Van Buskirk, O. P. H. J., Dec., 1915.

How Any Boy Can Develop His Health and Strength (8 pp.).

How Shall We Combat Measles and Whooping Cough? Mo. Bu., May, 1911.

How Shall We Discover and Deal with Typhoid Carriers? - Landis, Mo. Bu., Nov., 1911.

How Shall We Guard Against Bacillus Carriers? - Welch, Mo. Bu., March, 1911.

How the Rural Health Officer Can be of Assistance to a City Health Department Landis, Mo. Bu., Dec., 1914.

How to Avoid Consumption (6 pp.). How to Control Nuisances Arising from Offensive Trades - Dittoe, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1911.

Hygienic Factory Construction-Russ, Mo. Bu., Jan. and Feb., 1912.

Industrial Poisons.

Immunity and Susceptibility - McCampbell, O. P. H. J., March-May, 1915. Important Facts About Common Transmissible Diseases (28 p. pamphlet).

Instructing Your Child in the Facts of Sex (12 pp.).

Instructions for Patients (8 pp.). Instructions to Employes in Dusty Trades (1 p. leaflet).

Is Physical Supervision in the Public Schools Justifiable? (4 p. leaflet).

Laws of Ohio Relating to Occupational Diseases and Industrial Hygiene. Laws of Ohio Relating to the Control of Tuberculosis.

Lead Poisoning - Its Chief Causes With Observations on Its Diagnosis and Prevention.

Legal Powers of Boards of HealthBauman, Mo. Bu., Nov., 1912.

Legal Procedures a Nurse Should Know - Bauman, Mo. Bu., June, 1915.

Legislation and Prescribed Procedure for Enforcing Correction of Stream Pollution and Improvement of Public Water Supplies, O. P. H. J., Sept.-Oct., 1916.

Limitations of Prevention of Communicable Diseases - Frederick, O. P. H. J., June, 1915.

Location of Distributing Stations (4) p. leaflet).

Machinists, Avoid Boils and Infections (1 p.).

Market Milk Boudreau, Mo. Bu, Aug., 1914.

Maternity

Hospitals and Infant

Boarding Homes - Hollingshead, O. P. H. J., Nov., 1916.

Maternity Hospitals as a Rural Need Hollingshead,

1918 — (4 pp.).

O. P. H. J.,

April,

Measles in Ohio - Boudreau, O. P. H. J., Jan., 1917.

Medical Education in Hygiene and Public Health - McCampbell, Mo. Bu., Nov., 1914.

Medical Inspection Bu., June, 1911.

Patterson, Mo.

Methods and Channels of InfectionMcCampbell, O. P. H. J., Jan.-Feb., 1915.

Modern Conveniences in Rural Communities — Groeniger, Mo. Bu., Aug.. 1914.

Modern Plumbing and Its Relation to the Rural Health Officer Groeniger, Mo. Bu., Jan., 1914.

Mr. Garage Worker! Mr. Motorist! Municipal Meat Inspection - White, Mo. Bu., Feb., 1913.

Municipal Sanitation Dittoe, O. P. H. J., June, 1915.

Municipal Sanitation in Columbus Dittoe, O. P. H. J., Jan., 1915.

Notes on the Hypochlorite Treatment of Public Water Supplies in the United States and Canada Dittoe and McDowell, Mo. Bu., Oct., 1912.

Notice Instructions to Employes How to Prevent Lead Poisoning.

Notice to Abate Nuisance (sample blank card).

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 ProblemPaterson, 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. Aug., 1914.

Orders and Regulations

Bu.,

Recom

mended for Adoption by Township Boards of Health.

Orders and Regulations

Recom

mended for Adoption by Village Boards of Health.

Recom

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 BlindCampbell, 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.

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

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Pathological Oral Conditions as 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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Preventable Mo. Bu., Aug., 1913.

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McCampbell,

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.

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 OhioStewart, 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

Public

Hospital and 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).

Mc

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

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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.

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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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 StatisticsFord, Mo. Bu., April, 1914.

State Program for Child WelfareHollingshead, 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 Bauman, Mo. Bu., Sept., 1913.

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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