The exhibition record, a descriptive account of the principal exhibits, compiled from special suppl. issued with the 'Sanitary record'. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 93
Page 1
... direct line of cast - iron drain pipe , 5 inches diameter and 99 feet in length , with a fall of 1 in with a Kemyon air chamber floor and manhole . At 33. The end nearest the street sewer is provided the other extremity of the length of ...
... direct line of cast - iron drain pipe , 5 inches diameter and 99 feet in length , with a fall of 1 in with a Kemyon air chamber floor and manhole . At 33. The end nearest the street sewer is provided the other extremity of the length of ...
Page 7
... direct from the gutter by a pipe , not outside the house , but inside the house , passing down through one or two storeys , inside the rooms , per- haps through the best bedroom in front of the house , through the drawing - room ...
... direct from the gutter by a pipe , not outside the house , but inside the house , passing down through one or two storeys , inside the rooms , per- haps through the best bedroom in front of the house , through the drawing - room ...
Page 8
... direct . It is better to lay down a right principle , and abide by it , than to see how you can avoid it . The best rule is that water - closets should not , for the reasons I have stated , under any circumstances be supplied direct ...
... direct . It is better to lay down a right principle , and abide by it , than to see how you can avoid it . The best rule is that water - closets should not , for the reasons I have stated , under any circumstances be supplied direct ...
Page 11
... direct supply of the closet from the drinking cistern water . The first thing I have to mention in connection with the bath - room is that the inlet and outlet open- ings for the water should not be the same . Very frequently in a bath ...
... direct supply of the closet from the drinking cistern water . The first thing I have to mention in connection with the bath - room is that the inlet and outlet open- ings for the water should not be the same . Very frequently in a bath ...
Page 15
... direct the closing of the house for such period as the Court may deem neces- sary . Where the person by whose act or default the nuisance arises , or the owner or occupier of the pre- mises , is not known or cannot be found , the order ...
... direct the closing of the house for such period as the Court may deem neces- sary . Where the person by whose act or default the nuisance arises , or the owner or occupier of the pre- mises , is not known or cannot be found , the order ...
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Common terms and phrases
abatement ammonia annum apparatus appliances appointed arrangements average Board and Urban bricks building by-laws carried cause cent cesspool cholera cistern cleansing closet Committee condition connection cost death-rate deaths diarrhoea diphtheria disinfection drainage dwellings epidemic erection Exhibition feet foul Glasgow Government Board heat hospital improvement infectious disease Inspector of Nuisances John labour Liverpool Local Government Board London matter measles Medal ment Messrs Metropolitan Board milk months mortality Newcastle-upon-Tyne notice Nuisances Removal Officer of Health owner pail patent persons pipe population premises present privy Public Health Act removal Rural Sanitary Authority Rural Sanitary District SANITARY RECORD scarlet fever Sect sewage sewers sink small-pox smoke soil-pipe Southport stone Street surveyor tion trap twenty-eight towns twenty-seven provincial towns typhoid fever Urban Sanitary Authority Urban Sanitary District valve ventilation Vestry vice water supply water-closets William zymotic diseases
Popular passages
Page 106 - means any drain of and used for the drainage of one building only, or premises within the same curtilage, and made merely for the purpose of communicating therefrom with a cesspool or other like receptacle for drainage, or with a sewer into which the drainage of two or more buildings or premises occupied by different persons is conveyed : "Sewer" includes sewers and drains of every description, except drains to which the word
Page 12 - Any house or part of a house so overcrowded as to be dangerous or injurious to the health of the inmates, whether or not members of the same family:
Page 268 - For the purposes of this act, 1. any premises in such a state as to be a nuisance or injurious to health; 2.
Page 14 - means the person for the time being receiving the rack rent of the lands or premises in connection with which the word is used, whether on his own account or as agent or trustee for any other person, or who would so re• ceive the same if such lands or premises were let at a rack rent (as in the case of unoccupied property).
Page 338 - For fixing and from time to time varying the number of persons who may occupy a house or part of a house which is let in lodgings or occupied by members of more than one family...
Page 13 - Any factory, workshop, or workplace (not already under the operation of any general Act for the regulation of factories or bakehouses), not kept in a cleanly state, or not ventilated in such a manner as to render harmless as far as practicable any gases vapours dust or other impurities generated in the course of the work...
Page 297 - A complete specification, whether left on application or subsequently, must particularly describe and ascertain the nature of the invention, and in what manner it is to be performed, and must be accompanied by drawings, if required.
Page 369 - This series is intended to meet the demand for accessible information on the ordinary conditions and the current terms of our political life. The...
Page 13 - Any fireplace or furnace which does not as far as practicable consume the smoke arising from the combustible used therein, and which is used for working engines by steam, or in any mill factory dyehouse brewery bakehouse or gaswork, or in any manufacturing or trade process whatsoever ; and Any chimney (not being the chimney of a private dwellinghouse) sending forth black smoke in such quantity as to be a nuisance...
Page 303 - habitual drunkard ' is defined to be ' a person who, not being amenable to any jurisdiction in lunacy, is, notwithstanding, by reason of habitual intemperate drinking of intoxicating liquor, at times dangerous to himself or herself or to others, or incapable of managing himself or herself, and his or her affairs.