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The Health Bulletin » 13 Men who would walk a mile to pick up a nickel in the road will suffer a free clinic to be held within a hundred yards of their door, and unless some public worker urges them to take advantage of thirty dollars worth of free work for their children's teeth (and it will be worth that many thousands to the children later in life), they passively fail to take advantage of the opportunity. This we find to be the prime need for educational work. Our press is interesting enough to pass on: "I want to tell you about a specialist in this State ^knocking' State work while operating on patients who were found and examined by the State School Nurse and who persuaded them to have the operations done. They paid forty dollars apiece, besides railroad fare, a little over one hundred miles, hotel bills, etc." In the first place this specialist is lonesome, and in the second ''there's a reason*' for his knocks, and the reason Some of the negro school children appearing at the Free Dental Clinic at Durham during the week in September, 1919. idea is to get the little fellow^s of six years old into the dental chair, and therefore make a dental patient for some dentist at regular intervals for life. _ would be very interesting to all the general practitioners of medicine and most of the people in his section. LONESOME? A BIG COUNTY SUPERIN-TENDENT OF SCHOOLS As a rule we pay no attention to One of our dentists at work in one knocking, seldom ever read the lam- great county in July wrote that "the bastings we get, and never worry about two people in this county who seem less it. But the following little extract from interested in this movement than any- a letter received just before going to body in it are ........................" (here he
Object Description
Rating | |
Fixed Title * | NCHH-04: The Health Bulletin [1914-1973] |
Document Title | The Health Bulletin [1914-1973] |
Subject Topical | Public health -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Subject Topical Other | Public Health -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Contributor | North Carolina. State Board of Health. |
Publisher | Raleigh, North Carolina State Board of Health. |
Repository | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Health Sciences Library. |
Host | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Date | 1919 |
Identifier | NCHH-04-034 |
Form General | Periodicals |
Language | English |
Rights | This item is part of the North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection. Some materials in the Collection are protected by U.S. copyright law. This item is presented by the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for research and educational purposes. It may not be republished or distributed without permission of the Health Sciences Library. |
Digital Collection | North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection |
Sponsor | The North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection is an open access publishing initiative of the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Financial support for the initiative was provided in part by a multi-year NC ECHO (Exploring Cultural Heritage Online) digitization grant, awarded by the State Library of North Carolina, and funded through the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA). |
Volume Number | 34 |
Health Discipline | Medicine |
Digital Format | JPEG 2000 |
Print / Download PDF Version | http://archives.hsl.unc.edu/nchh/nchh-04/nchh-04-034.pdf |
Document Sort | all; group-b; nchh-04 |
Volume Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/identi/searchterm/NCHH-04-034 |
Title Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/documa/searchterm/NCHH-04 |
Catalog Record link | http://search.lib.unc.edu/search?R=UNCb1296443 |
Description
Fixed Title * | Page 13 (image) |
Document Title | The Health Bulletin [1914-1973] |
Subject Topical | Public health -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Subject Topical Other | Public Health -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Contributor | North Carolina. State Board of Health. |
Publisher | Raleigh, North Carolina State Board of Health. |
Repository | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Health Sciences Library. |
Host | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Date | 1919 |
Identifier | NCHH-04-034-0099 |
Form General | Periodicals |
Page Type | all; all images; photo; editorial |
Language | English |
Rights | This item is part of the North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection. Some materials in the Collection are protected by U.S. copyright law. This item is presented by the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for research and educational purposes. It may not be republished or distributed without permission of the Health Sciences Library. |
Filename | healthbulletinse34nort_0099.jp2 |
Digital Collection | North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection |
Sponsor | The North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection is an open access publishing initiative of the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Financial support for the initiative was provided in part by a multi-year NC ECHO (Exploring Cultural Heritage Online) digitization grant, awarded by the State Library of North Carolina, and funded through the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA). |
Volume Number | 34 |
Issue Number | 11 |
Page Number | 13 |
Health Discipline | Medicine |
Full Text | The Health Bulletin » 13 Men who would walk a mile to pick up a nickel in the road will suffer a free clinic to be held within a hundred yards of their door, and unless some public worker urges them to take advantage of thirty dollars worth of free work for their children's teeth (and it will be worth that many thousands to the children later in life), they passively fail to take advantage of the opportunity. This we find to be the prime need for educational work. Our press is interesting enough to pass on: "I want to tell you about a specialist in this State ^knocking' State work while operating on patients who were found and examined by the State School Nurse and who persuaded them to have the operations done. They paid forty dollars apiece, besides railroad fare, a little over one hundred miles, hotel bills, etc." In the first place this specialist is lonesome, and in the second ''there's a reason*' for his knocks, and the reason Some of the negro school children appearing at the Free Dental Clinic at Durham during the week in September, 1919. idea is to get the little fellow^s of six years old into the dental chair, and therefore make a dental patient for some dentist at regular intervals for life. _ would be very interesting to all the general practitioners of medicine and most of the people in his section. LONESOME? A BIG COUNTY SUPERIN-TENDENT OF SCHOOLS As a rule we pay no attention to One of our dentists at work in one knocking, seldom ever read the lam- great county in July wrote that "the bastings we get, and never worry about two people in this county who seem less it. But the following little extract from interested in this movement than any- a letter received just before going to body in it are ........................" (here he |
Digital Format | JPEG 2000 |
Print / Download PDF Version | http://archives.hsl.unc.edu/nchh/nchh-04/nchh-04-034.pdf |
Document Sort | all; group-b; nchh-04 |
Volume Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/identi/searchterm/NCHH-04-034 |
Title Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/documa/searchterm/NCHH-04 |
Catalog Record link | http://search.lib.unc.edu/search?R=UNCb1296443 |
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