TYPHOID FEVER-Continued. New Jersey-Perth Amboy. Acting Asst. Surg. Naulty, of the Public Health Service, reported by telegraph September 19, 1913, that 20 cases of typhoid fever had been notified at Perth Amboy, N. J. Cases and Deaths Reported by Cities for Week Ended Sept. 6, 1913. POLIOMYELITIS (INFANTILE PARALYSIS)-Continued. Cases and Deaths Reported by Cities for Week Ended Sept. 6, 1913. Cases and Deaths Reported by Cities for Week Ended Sept. 6, 1913. During the week ended September 6, 1913, pellagra was reported by cities as follows: Nashville, Tenn., 1 case; New Orleans, La., 1 death. California-Squirrels Collected and Examined. During the week ended September 6, 1913, there were examined for plague infection 55 squirrels from Alameda County, Cal. Plague-Infected Squirrels Found. None of the squirrels from Alameda County examined during the week ended September 6, 1913, was found plague infected, but one squirrel from Contra Costa County, which was shot during the prerious week, was plague infected. PNEUMONIA. Cases and Deaths Reported by Cities for Week Ended Sept. 6, 1913. California-Oakland and San Francisco-Rabies in Animals. Surg. Long, of the Public Health Service, reported by telegraph that during the week ended September 20, 1913, 12 cases of rabies in dogs had been notified in Oakland, and 1 case in San Francisco, Cal. TETANUS. During the week ended September 6, 1913, tetanus was reported by cities as follows: Baltimore, Md., 1 death; Boston, Mass., 1 death; Bridgeport, Conn., 1 case. SCARLET FEVER, MEASLES, DIPHTHERIA, AND TUBERCULOSIS. Cases and Deaths Reported by Cities for Week Ended Sept. 6, 1913. |