Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887.

Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887.

In the country we can never think of disinfecting houses with sulphurous acid, as the peasants often have but a single room, in which the beds of the entire family are congregated.  Every one knows that the agglomerations that compose the same department are often distant from each other and the chief town by from two to three miles or more.  This is usually the case in the departments of Vienne, Haute Vienne, Indre, etc.  To find a disinfecting place in the chief town of the department is still difficult, and to find one in each of the hamlets is absolutely impossible.  Families in which there are invalids are obliged to carry clothing and bedding to the chief town to be disinfected, and to go after them after the expiration of twenty-four hours.  This is not an easy thing to do.

It is easy to understand what difficulties must be met with in many cases, and so one has to be content to prescribe merely washing, and bleaching with lime—­something that is simple and everywhere accepted, but insufficient.  So, then, disinfection with sulphurous acid, which is easy in large cities, as was taught by the cholera epidemics of last year, is often difficult in the country.  The objection has always be made to it, too, that it is of doubtful efficacy.  It is not for us to examine this question here, but there is no doubt that damp steam alone, under pressure, effects a perfect disinfection, and that if this mode of disinfection could be applied in the rural districts (as it can be easily done in cities), the public health would be better protected in case of an epidemic.

In cities one or more stationary steam stoves can always be arranged; but in the country movable ones are necessary.  From instructions given by Prof.  Brouardel, Messrs. Geneste & Herscher have solved the problem of constructing such stoves in a few days, and four have been put at the disposal of the mission.

Dr. Thoinot, who directed this mission, in order to make an experiment with these apparatus, selected two points in which cases of sudor were still numerous, and in which the conditions were entirely different, and permitted of studying the working of the service and apparatus under various phases.  One of these points was Dorat, chief town of Haute Vienne, a locality with a crowded population and presenting every desirable resource; and the other was the commune of Mauvieres, in Indre, where the population was scattered through several hamlets.

The first stove was operated at Dorat, on the 29th of June, and the second at Mauvieres, on the 1st of July.  A gendarme accompanied the stove in all its movements and remained with it during the disinfecting experiments.  The Dorat stove was operated on the 29th of June and the 1st, 2d, and 3d of July.  On the 30th of June it proceeded to disinfect the commune of Darnac.  The Mauvieres stove, in the first place, disinfected the chief town of this commune on the 1st of July, and on the next day it was taken to Poulets, a small hamlet, and a dependent of the commune of Mauvieres.  All the linen and all the clothing of the sick of this locality, which had been the seat of sudor, especially infantile, was disinfected.  On the 4th of July, the stove went to Concremiers, a commune about three miles distant, and there finished up the disinfection that until then had been performed in the ordinary way.

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Scientific American Supplement, No. 623, December 10, 1887 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.