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Mechanical appliances for dust extraction in cotton mills. (Cassier, Nov. 1911, v. 40: 579-596. Illustrated.)

With 21 illustrations of respirators, dust extractors and exhaust fans. Crum, Frederick S. Health and mortality of the cotton mill operatives of Blackburn, England. 23 p. (Medical record, Aug. 11, 1906, v. 70: 207213. Also reprint.)

..Occupation mortality statistics of Sheffield, England. 18901907. (Publications of the American statistical association, Dec. 1908, v. 11:309-318.)

Two reviews of English reports. Statistics.

...The mortality from consumption in small cities. (Quarterly publications American statistical association, Boston, Dec. 1907, v. 10: 448479.)

Influence of occupations, with statistics, p. 463-466.

Curtis, Josiah. Public hygiene of Massachusetts; but more particularly of the cities of Boston and Lowell. (Transactions of American medical association, 1849, v. 2: 487-554. Summary quoted in Documentary history of American industrial society, v. 8: 187.)

On lack of ventilation in mills and boarding houses of Lowell (p. 513-519). Dana, Charles Loomis. Text-book of nervous diseases and psychiatry, for the use of students and practitioners of medicine. 7th ed. New York, W. Wood and company, 1908, xii, 782 p. "Professional neuroses, occupation neuroses": p. 609-617.

Excellent treatment of occupational

cramps.

Occupational nervous and mental diseases. (American labor legislation review, June 1912, v. 2, no. 2: 217-222.)

Occupational neuroses. (Medical record, Feb. 3, 1912, v. 81, no. 10: 451-459. Illustrated.)

Elaborate clinical study of 100 cases, giving occupations of patients. Darlington, T. The effect of the products of high explosives, dynamite, and nitro-glycerine, on the human system. (Medical record, N. Y., 1890, v. 38: 661-662. Also reprint.)

Based on experience as surgeon of the Croton Aqueduct and of Arizona mining and railroad companies.

Darwall, J. Diseases of artisans. (In Ziemssen's Cyclopedia of practical medicine, Phila., 1845, v. 1: 170182.)

Davis, I. P. Diseases occurring in manufacture of rubber boots and shoes. (Tenth annual report of the board of health of New Jersey, 1886, Trenton, 1887, p. 195-200.)

Describes processes of manufacture, conditions of work and danger of lead poisoning, etc.

Dennis, L. Hatting as affecting the health of operatives. (Report of the New Jersey State board of health. 1878, p. 67-85. Also Report of the Connecticut board of health, 1882, Hartford, 1883, p. 41-59.)

Description of processes and statistics of 168 cases of mercury poisoning among 1546 hatters.

Detmold, W. The physiological effect of highly condensed air on the human body. (New York journal of medicine, 1843, v. 1: 185-189.)

Description of the use of compressed air in mining and its effect on the miners, based on German article. Interesting as the first American article on caisson disease.

Dickey, John L. "Nailers' consumption" and other diseases peculiar to workers in iron and glass. (West Virginia State board of health reports, 1881-1884. p. 149-154.)

Describes briefly work and its dangers, with typical case of "nailers' consumption". Diseases of occupation. (Report of the Chicago industrial exhibit, March, 1908.)

Diseases and disease tendencies of occupations. (New Jersey bureau of statistics of labor and industries, twenty-fourth annual report, 1901, P. 347-354.)

General discussion.

Dock, George, Bass, Charles C. Hookdisease. St. Louis, 1910.

worm

250 p.

Describes briefly St. Gothard Tunnel epidemic, the anemia of brick workers, miners, etc. p. 22-23, 33-37. Hookworm disease in the United States, p. 37-45, etc. Doehring, C. F. W. Factory sanitation and labor protection. (U. S. Bureau of labor, Bulletin no. 44, Jan. 1903, p. 1-131.)

Extended treatise on factory conditions and industrial processes injurious to health, with lists of injurious dusts and poisons and descriptions of the lead manufacturing and using industries, and of dangerous processes in the manufacture of oilcloth and linoleum, linseed oil, tallow, and fertilizers. Describes

methods of safeguarding workmen. Based mainly on European experience and inves tigations in a few factories in the United States.

Donaldson, Frank. The influence of city life and occupation in developing pulmonary consumption. (American public health association. Reports and papers, v. 2:95-114. New York, 1876.)

Mainly on general influence of city life, but shows briefly influence of sedentary and indoor occupations (p. 106-7).

Drake, Daniel. The principal diseases of the interior valley of North America. "Cotton ginning,” v. 2: 799-801.

Draper, Frank W. Arsenic in certain green colors. (Massachusetts State board of health report, 1872, p. 1857.)

Effects on workmen, with specific instances, p. 52-56.

Dudley, P. The metal worker's occupation and his health. (Report of the board of health, etc., of Pennsylvania, 1888-9, fifth annual. Harrisburg, 1891, p. 374-377.)

Brief general discussion of the effects of dust, especially as a cause of consumption. Dust and its relation to disease. (Iowa State board of health report, 1906, p. 105. Illustrated.)

Pictures of lungs of coal miners, lead miners, steel grinders, etc. Dusty occupations and the dust problem. (See reports of state factory inspection departments and of state labor bureaus.)

Dusty trades in Massachusetts. (Monthly bulletin of the Massachusetts State board of health, Aug. 1910, v. 5:316-379. Illustrated.)

Mainly illustrations, with brief descriptions. List of processes declared injurious to the health of minors by State Board of Health, July 7, 1910, p. 378-9. Dutton, Walton Forest. Vanadiumism. (Journal of American medical association, June 3, 1911, v. 56: 1648.)

Brief description of the poisoning to which employees are subject in establishments where vanadium is produced. Eads, James B. Report to the president and directors of the Illinois and St. Louis bridge co., 1870.

On compressed-air illness in employees. Edsall, David L. Diseases due to chemical agents. (In Osler's Modern medicine, 1907, v. 1: 83-155.)

Authoritative treatise on chronic poisonings, with special reference to occupational

causes.

. Industrial poisoning. (American labor legislation review, June 1912, v. 2, no. 2: 231-234.)

Some of the relations of occupations to medicine. (Journal of American medical association, Dec. 4, 1909, v. 53: 1873-81. Wisconsin medical journal, Jan. 1910, v. 8: 425447.)

Good general discussion of the disease tendencies of occupations. Elliott, E.

Leavenworth.

Factory lighting: topical criticism of existing laws. (American labor legislation review, June 1911, v. 1, no. 2: 110-112.)

Brief criticism of existing laws, with suggestions for improvements.

Elliott, W. C. Measures to protect workers in factories and elsewhere from noxious dust and fumes. (Transactions of the Medical society of Wisconsin, Madison, 1896, v. 30: 360-362.)

Brief plea for the protection of the metal polisher. Emerson, Nathaniel B., Tracy, Roger S. On the manufacture of cigars in tenement houses. (New York city board of health report, 1874-75, p. 649-656.)

Results of personal investigation of air, light, ventilation, etc., with special reference to the effects on the health of workers and their families.

Endemann, H. The operations of cleansing hair and manufacturing felt. (New York city board of health report, 1872, p. 305.)

Brief account of dust conditions, advocating use of respirators by working people. Erdman, Seward. Aeropathy or compressed-air illness among tunnel workers. American (Journal of medical association, Nov. 16, 1907, v. 49: 1665-1670.)

General review of history, theories, etc. Exline, J. W. The sanitation of mines. (Transactions of the Colorado medical society, Denver, 1896, p. 235-242. Also Medical age, Detroit, 1897, v. 15:99-102.)

General discussion, with special reference to the prevention of disease in Colorado mines. Fantus, B. The diagnosis and treatment of plumbism. (Illinois medical journal, Springfield, 1910, v. 17: 616621.)

Mainly technical, but names trades which are most likely to produce plumbism, and gives special attention to symptoms.

Farrar, J. N. Importance of direct sunlight in the workroom; usefulness in art, and its bearing upon the general health. (In American dental association. Transactions, 1877. Elgin, 1878, v. 17: 77-85.)

General argument applied mainly to health of dentists, but using as illustrations Waltham and Elgin watch factories (p. 83-84). Favill, Henry Baird. Importance of industrial hygiene. (American association for labor legislation, 1910. Publication no. 10:9-11.)

Brief remarks as presiding officer at First National Conference on Industrial Diseases. ....Industrial hygiene and the police power. A reprint of a paper, prepared for the American association for labor legislation, on the Legitimate exercise of the police power for the protection of health. (From the Thirteenth biennial report of the Wisconsin bureau of labor and industrial statistics. Madison, Wisconsin, 1908, p. 479-486. Also in Transactions of the Sixth international congress on tuberculosis, Washington, 1908.)

Shows the necessity for extensive regulation of unhealthful trades, based on scientific research.

The toxin of fatigue. (Proceedings, Thirty-seventh annual session of the National conference of charities and corrections, p. 405-414.)

On fatigue as a factor in standardizing hours of labor.

Female health, Special effects of certain forms of employment_upon. (Sixth annual report of the Massachusetts bureau of statistics of labor, 1875, part II, p. 67-112.)

Describes especially the manufacture of textile fabrics, typesetting, telegraphy, and sewing machine labor.

Fisher, Irving. Industrial hygiene as a factor in human conservation. (Academy of political science, New York, v. 2, no. 2: 1-9.)

Relates primarily to women and children. Fitch, John A. The steel workers. The Pittsburgh survey. Charities publication committee, N. Y., 1911. "Health and accidents in steel making", p. 57-75.

Effects of heat, dust, noise, nervous strain, and long hours. Foley, J. L. The influence of occupation in skin diseases. (Journal of cutaneous and genito-urinary diseases, N. Y., 1889, v. 7: 170-178.)

General discussion and classification of

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eases among hatters. (Transactions New Jersey state medical society, 1860, p. 61-64.)

One hundred cases in Orange and cases in other New Jersey cities. French, John Marshall. Occupation in relation to longevity. (Medical examiner and practitioner, N. Y., Jan. 1904, v. 14: 26-28.)

Statistical study based on Massachusetts registration report for 1886.

.....

...Occupation and

longevity. (Annals of hygiene, Phila., 1896, v. 11: 80-82.)

Brief, general discussion. Freudenthal, Wolff. In what relation does occupation stand to tuberculosis? (Medical news, Philadelphia, Sept. 15, 1900, v. 77: 402-404.)

Results of investigation of 1,576 cases, with statistics of occupations and special discussion of tuberculosis among tailors. Furey, G. W. Obesity among locomotive engineers. (Medical bulletin, Philadelphia, 1889, v. II: 211212.)

With table showing weight of 19 men on becoming engineers and "present weight." Gallivan, J. V. The etiology of caisson disease; theories based on clinical observations of the disease. (Long Island medical journal, April 1907, v. 1: 181-183.)

Account of a case, and theories of causes of the disease. Gardner, A. K. Hygiene of the sewing machine. (American medical times, Dec. 15, 22, 1860, v. 1:420421, 435-437. Also Bulletin of the New York academy of medicine, 1860-62, v. 1: 100-108.)

Argument that use of sewing machines is not injurious to health of women. Garvin, L. F. C. Sanitary requirements in factories: injurious effects of cotton factories upon the health of operatives. (Transactions of the American public health association, N. Y., 1877, v. 3: 69-78.)

An argument, based on several years' medical practice in a Rhode Island factory village, for child labor legislation, regulation of hours, and medical factory inspection. George, H. The poisons of the manufactory. (Popular science monthly, N. Y., 1882, v. 21: 663-667.)

Brief general article on industrial poisons, lead, mercury, phosphorus, etc. Getchell, Albert C. The relation of the industries of Worcester to tuberculosis. (In Tuberculosis in Massachusetts, ed. by Edwin A. Locke, p. 187-192.)

Based on personal observation of 1000

cases.

Gibson, Harold K. Medical inspection of factories in Illinois. (American labor legislation review, June 1912, v. 2, no. 2: 346-349.) Gilbert, G. R. Effects of gases and powder smoke upon coal miners' eyes, and the treatment to be used. (Therapeutical gazette, Detroit, 1903, 3. s. v. 19:529-532.)

Based on experience as surgeon of a coal mining company in Wyoming. Gilchrist, T. C. Erysipeloid, with a record of 329 cases, of which 323 were caused by crab bites or lesions produced by crabs. (Journal of cutaneous diseases, 1904, v. 22: 507-519.)

Description of disease and cases, some of them due to occupational causes. Gilliam, D. T. Miner's wrist. (Ohio medical recorder, Columbus, 1878, v. 2: 542-543.)

Based on personal observations. Glass industry. (Report on condition

of woman and child wage-earners in the United States, 61st Cong., 2d sess., Senate doc. 645. Prepared unIder the direction of Chas. P. Neill, commissioner of labor. v. 3. "Difficulty and physical strain of the work", p. 47-59; "Dust and fumes" and "Heat conditions", p. 65-80; "Causes of death of glass blowers and diseases of glass workers", p. 237-277; "Light, ventilation, and overcrowding", p. 341, 342; "Relation of the work to health", p. 433447; "Special features of the work" of making incandescent electric lamps, and "Ventilation", p. 477-487, 500, 501.)

Results of extensive, official investigations. Diseases incident to the glass industry. Diseases and disease tendencies of occupations. (New Jer

sey bureau of statistics of labor and industries, twenty-fourth annual report, Trenton, 1902, p. 355-363; 373391.)

Description of unhealthful occupations, statistics of sickness and death, and schedules from 24 establishments, filled in by employers. Goldmark, Josephine. Fatigue and efficiency: a study in industry. Charities publication committee for the Russell Sage foundation, New York, 1912, 890 p.

Thorough, scientific, and authoritative study based on European and American experiments and experience, and on European authorities. Part II consists of material used in four briefs for the regulation of the hours of women.

Goltman, A. A case of occupation neurosis. (New York medical journal, 1898, v. 68: 625-626.)

In a cigarette roller.

Gonley, John W. S. Excision and disarticulation of the entire inferior maxillary bone for phosphorus necrosis. Philadelphia, 1877, 6 p.

History of interesting case and operation in 1864.

Gordon, John A. Tuberculosis among the granite workers of Quincy. (In Tuberculosis in Massachusetts, ed. by Edwin A. Locke, p. 193-200.)

Based on analysis of death records of Quincy, Mass. Graham-Rogers, C. T. Protection from gases, fumes and vapors: topical criticism of existing laws. (American labor legislation review, June 1911, v. I, no. 2: 110-112.)

.... Medical inspection of industrial plants. (Proceedings of the eighth annual conference of sanitary officers of the state of New York, Albany, Dec. 1-3, 1908. Twenty-ninth annual report of the N. Y. state department of health, Albany, 1909, p. 726-736. Discussion, p. 736742. Also North American journal of homoeopathy, 3. s. v. 24: 386-395.)

General description of the work of the sanitary inspector of factories, with remarks on physical condition of the working child.

... Report of medical inspector of factories, New York. (Eighth annual report of the commissioner of labor, for the year ended Sept. 30, 1908. Appendix II, p. 65-94, Albany, 1909.)

. (Ninth annual report of the commissioner of labor for the year ended Sept. 30, 1909. Appendix

II, p. 68-91. Albany, 1910.) Includes special investigation of the calico print industry, bakeries in Manhattan borough, and potteries.

(Eleventh annual report

of the commissioner of labor for the year ended Sept. 30, 1911. Appendix II, p. 69-133. Albany, 1912.)

Includes special investigation of ventilation of a department store and of the cloak and suit industry in New York City.

...(Tenth annual report of the commissioner of labor for the year ended Sept. 30, 1910. Appendix II, p. 62-111. Albany, 1911.)

Includes special investigation of the phosphorus match industry and the pearl button industry.

These reports contain valuable data concerning the sanitation and ventilation of factories, the results of air analyses, etc.

Ventilation of industrial establishments. (American journal of public hygiene, Boston, June 1910, v. 20: 245-251.)

Brief description of the work of the Medical Inspector of Factories of New York, with special reference to air analyses.

.... Medical inspection of industrial plants. (North American journal of homoeopathy, N. Y., 1909, v. 57:386--395.)

Medical examination for life insurance. "Occupation", Phila., 1900 ed. p. 147; 2nd ed., Phila., 1905, p. 155-157.)

Green, Charles Lyman.

Brief discussion from point of view of life insurance risks, of occupations involv ing injurious exercise.

Green, J. O. The factory system in its hygienic relations. (Medical communications, Massachusetts medical society, Boston, 1842-8, v. 7: 217-248. Also reprint.)

Extended discussion of Lowell factory system and its effects on the health of operatives, with mortality statistics, and brief account of English factory system, especially hours and child labor.

Griswold, S. Case of poisoning by ar

senic from working in Scheel's green. (New York journal of medicine, 1858, 3. s. v. 5:64-77.)

Death of a fourteen year old boy who had been working in an establishment for the manufacture of paper hangings, with account of proceedings of the coroner's jury. Guilford, Paul. Will certain occupations in time affect the cylindrical curvature of the eyeball? (Ophthalmic record, Chicago, Sept. 1903, n. S., v. 12: 426-428.)

Results of examination of 22 locomotive engineers over 50 years of age.

Gulick, Luther. The effects of mental

fatigue. (World's work, Sept. 1907, v. 14: 9345-9349. Also in his Mind and work, N. Y., 1908, p. 89-109.) Hackley, Chas. E., Walter, Emma E. Caisson disease. (In Reference handbook of the medical sciences, Albert H. Buck, ed. v. 2: 547-8.)

Brief general discussion.

Haines, Walter S., Karasek, Mathew, Apfelbach, George L. Carbon monoxide poisoning. (Report of Illinois commission on occupational diseases, Jan. 1911, p. 88-98.)

Based on original investigations in Illinois steel and illuminating gas industries, with suggestions for prevention and treatment. Hall, H. N. Preventive medicine among the working classes. (Medical news, Philadelphia, 1891, v. 58: 462-465.)

Based on experience as physician of the Crane Company, Chicago, and covering occupational and other diseases.

Hall, J. N. Trainman's back. (National association of railway surgeons. Official report of the fifth annual meeting. Chicago, 1892, p. 88-91.)

Based on experience among employees of the Union Pacific Railway. Hamilton, Alice.

White-lead industry in the United States, with an appendix on the lead-oxide industry. (U. S. Bureau of labor, Bulletin no. 95, July 1911, p. 189-259.)

Based on personal investigation of 22 out of 25 factories manufacturing white lead in the United States.

.... Report on investigations of the lead troubles in Illinois from the hygienic standpoint. (Report of Illinois commission on occupational diseases, Jan. 1911, p. 21-49.)

Covers some fifteen different industries. Report on arsenic (p. 47-48).

.... Lead poisoning in Illinois. (American association for labor legislation, 1910. Publication no. IO: 27-35.)

Brief general discussion based on preliminary investigations for her report to Illinois Commission on Occupational Diseases (q. v.).

Lead poisoning in Illinois. (American labor legislation review, Jan. 1911, v. 1, no. 1: 17-26. Bulletin of the American economic association, fourth series, no. 2: 257-264.) .....Lead poisoning in Illinois. (Journal of the American medical association, April 29, 1911, v. 56. 1240-1244.)

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