Report, Volume 81881/82-1882/83, 1936/38- include also the registration reports for 1881-1882, 1936/37- |
From inside the book
Page 224
Now let it stand and partly cool , then pour off into cups to become cold ; it smells as sweet as butter and can in many cases be used instead of it . The fat still left in the pieces may be pressed out for less particular uses .
Now let it stand and partly cool , then pour off into cups to become cold ; it smells as sweet as butter and can in many cases be used instead of it . The fat still left in the pieces may be pressed out for less particular uses .
Page 225
Before your steak is put over ( unless it be very well streaked with fat ) , cover both sides with melted suet , and after- wards , as it dries , spread on a little butter or beef fat ...
Before your steak is put over ( unless it be very well streaked with fat ) , cover both sides with melted suet , and after- wards , as it dries , spread on a little butter or beef fat ...
Page 228
Potato crust : One cup mashed potatoes , one egg , two table- spoonfuls butter , one cup of milk , salt . Beat together till smooth , and then work in enough flour so that you can roll it out . It should be half an inch thick , and as ...
Potato crust : One cup mashed potatoes , one egg , two table- spoonfuls butter , one cup of milk , salt . Beat together till smooth , and then work in enough flour so that you can roll it out . It should be half an inch thick , and as ...
Page 232
Steaks and chops are broiled , but the surface must be kept well moistened with butter or beef fat , they will be dry and tasteless . Stew of pork . or Fresh pork is seldom boiled and it is too fat for a stew , though the lean may be ...
Steaks and chops are broiled , but the surface must be kept well moistened with butter or beef fat , they will be dry and tasteless . Stew of pork . or Fresh pork is seldom boiled and it is too fat for a stew , though the lean may be ...
Page 235
Cook one tablespoonful of flour in one tablespoonful of butter . Add one and one half quarts of milk , or milk and water , and when it boils stir in one teacupful of cold boiled cod- fish that has been freed from skin and bones and then ...
Cook one tablespoonful of flour in one tablespoonful of butter . Add one and one half quarts of milk , or milk and water , and when it boils stir in one teacupful of cold boiled cod- fish that has been freed from skin and bones and then ...
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added addition albuminoid ammonia amount animal baked beef believe Board Board of Health body boiling bread building butter cause cent cheese coffee cold consider consumption contains cooked corn covered cows danger death Diphtheria disease dish dried effect eggs examination experience fact fatal feet five flavor flour four fruit germ give given half hand heat importance improvements infectious institution iron keep less Loss on ignition M. D. Typhoid Fever matter means meat methods milk nearly nitrous acid observed opinion past patient person piece pint polluted possible potatoes pound practice present proteid pudding quantity quart Required residue rooms salt sanitary soup sugar supply tablespoonful taken teaspoonful tion town tuberculosis unsanitary conditions vegetable
Popular passages
Page 105 - Every dead body must be accompanied by a person in charge, who must be provided with a passage ticket and also present a full first-class ticket marked "Corpse...
Page 140 - Precious time is wasted, and the patient may be fatally chilled by exposure of the naked body, even in summer. Give all your attention and effort to restore breathing by forcing air into, and out of, the lungs. If the breathing has just ceased, a smart slap on the face, or a vigorous twist of the hair will sometimes start it again, and may be tried incidentally, as may, also, pressing the finger upon the root of the tongue.
Page 105 - ... a strong coffin or casket encased in a hermetically sealed (soldered) zinc, copper, or tin case, and all enclosed in a strong outside wooden box of material not less than one inch thick. In all cases the outside box must be provided with four iron chest handles.
Page 142 - Do NOT GIVE UP TOO SOON. You are working for life. Any time within two hours you may be on the very threshold of success without there being any sign of it.
Page 141 - ... the root of the tongue. Before natural breathing is fully restored, do not let the patient lie on his back unless some person holds the tongue forward. The tongue, by falling back, may close the windpipe, and cause fatal choking.
Page 165 - It is during childhood, however, that the greatest successes of physical culture are to be noted, and it is not difficult to understand why this should be the case. All the conditions are at that time favorable for development. The bones and cartilages forming the framework of the chest contain a minimum amount of earthy material, and consequently are extremely pliable. The muscles are undergoing a formative process, and consequently are readily responsive to stimulus and capable of attaining a higher...
Page 349 - The following conclusions were presented: 1, and emphatically, that milk from cows affected with tuberculosis in any part of the body may contain the virus of the disease ; 2, that the virus is present, whether there is disease of the udder or not; 3, that there is no ground for the assertion that there must be a lesion of the udder...
Page 105 - RULE 2. The bodies of those who have died of Diphtheria, Anthrax, Scarlet Fever, Puerperal Fever, Typhoid Fever, Erysipelas, Measles, and other contagious, infectious, or communicable diseases must be wrapped in a sheet thoroughly saturated with a strong solution of bi-chloride of mercury, in the proportion of one ounce of bi-chloride of mercury to a gallon of water ; and encased in an air-tight zinc...
Page 196 - Whoever may read it can have confidence in the soundness of its teachings, and cannot fail to be instructed in the art of cooking by its plain precepts, founded as they are upon the correct application of the scientific principles of chemistry and physiology to the proper preparation of food for man.
Page 105 - RULE 4. The bodies of persons dead of diseases that are not contagious, infectious or communicable may be received for transportation to local points in same...