Title |
Date |
Publication |
T. B. And Flu (How To Keep Well) |
1919 |
— |
Tabernacle Service Postponed By 'Flu' |
1918 |
— |
Table #17 - Continued, Showing Cases And Deaths From Contagious Diseases For Thirty Years |
[1919] |
— |
Table #20: Showing Work Done In Vaccination And Inspection Department, 1918 - 1919 |
[1919] |
— |
Table #33: Showing Appropriations, Expenditures, Unexpected Balances, Etc., For The Fiscal Year 1918 - 1919 |
[1919] |
— |
Table #6: Showing Cases And Deaths From Influenza By Districts, 1918 - 1919 |
[1919] |
— |
Taboo On Halloween In Force As Plague Rages Thruout City |
1918 |
— |
Tack Up Epidemic Cards On Homes |
1918 |
— |
Take Care |
1918 |
— |
Take Off The Flu Ban |
1918 |
— |
Take Precautions and Conquer the Plague |
1918 |
— |
Take Shot In Arm, City Plea |
1918 |
— |
Take Steps To Prevent "Flu" |
1918 |
— |
Taken Suddenly Ill On Street |
1918 |
— |
Takes A Fling At Sure Cures |
1918 |
— |
Takes Step To Check Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Takes Up Burdens Of Grip Victims |
1919 |
— |
Taking No Chances With Influenza At University of Utah |
1919 |
— |
Taking Steps To Fight Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Tale Of How Whole City Does Nothing |
1918 |
— |
Taliaferro Field Is Put Under Quarantine |
1918 |
— |
Taliaferro Field Quarantined To Guard Against Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Talked to Death |
1918 |
— |
Talks Explaining Influenza Prepared for the Schools |
1918 |
— |
Talks Help Fight On "Flu" |
1918 |
— |
Tall Weeds Must Be Cut |
1918 |
— |
Taps Sounded On Influenza In This State |
1918 |
— |
Tars Are Joyful; Quarantine Is Off |
1918 |
— |
Tea for Tchernoff, Magies Back in Town, Mrs. Robert E. Ross Ill, Influenza Is Rife |
1918 |
— |
Teach Public Health |
1919 |
— |
Teachers Canvass Homes To Search Influenza Cases |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Co-operate With Health Officers |
1919 |
— |
Teachers Do Heroic Work At Buckner Orphans' Home |
1918 |
— |
Teachers End Epidemic Work |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Entitled To Continuous Pay |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Entitled To Full Pay While Schools Closed |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Entitled To Pay While Schools Are Closed |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Help In Grip Battle |
1918 |
— |
Teachers' Heroic Work Saves Lives of Orphans |
1918 |
— |
Teachers In Great Army Against Flu |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Instructed As To How To Make Up Time Lost By Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Make Survey |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Meet For Institute Work |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Mobilized To Fight Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Must Work Despite Closed Schools |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Not Required To Report Today; Must Report Friday at 9 A. M. |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Not To Lose Pay Through Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Of Cooking Help In Hospitals |
1918 |
— |
Teachers of Sycamore Street School, Equipped With Gauze Masks, Starting Out on Health Tour |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Plan To Fight Against Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Praised for Work against Flu |
1918 |
— |
Teachers' Salaries Will Be Continued |
1918 |
— |
Teachers To Get Pay For Epidemic Season |
1918 |
— |
Teachers To Help Combat Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Teachers To Meet For Session Today |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Volunteer Services As Nurses |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Will Be Paid Full Salaries |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Will Fight Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Will Get Checks At Schools |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Will Help Nurse; Call Is Issued For Meeting |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Will Meet Today; Call Is Issued By Red Cross |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Will Not Report |
1918 |
— |
Teachers Will Receive Pay During Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Teaching Students By Correspondence |
1918 |
— |
Tech Night School Classes to Reopen |
1918 |
— |
Tech Prepares To Open |
1918 |
— |
Telegram |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, addressed to Braisted |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, addressed to Braisted |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, addressed to Doctor Henry Suzzallo, University of Washington |
1918 |
— |
Telegram addressed to Kempf, from Rupert Blue |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, addressed to Surgeon General Blue, from Roy E. Cubbage, President of the Iowa Board of Education |
1918 |
— |
Telegram addressed to Surgeon General of the Navy, from W. B. Collins |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, addressed to University of Washington, regarding instructions for U. S. Naval Training Camp during influenza epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, addressed to W. C. Braisted, "Cannot something be done to prohibit unnecessary travel..." |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, "All restrictions placed upon uniformed men coming to Detroit have been removed..." |
1918 |
— |
Telegram (American Red Cross - Official Telegram), to: James Jackson, from: S. M. Greer |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, "Because of increasing gravity influenza situation in Louisville...," December 12, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, "Copy of Day Letter Sent To Fourteen Chapters" |
1918 |
— |
Telegram (copy), to: George Holden Tinkham, from: Eugene R. Kelley |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, "For safety of public and for their own good" |
1918 |
— |
Telegram from Commandant US Naval Training Camp, "Bucher requests detail...", November 16, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Telegram from George Holden Tinkham, with synopsis |
1918 |
— |
Telegram from Governors Island New York to: Senior Army Officer SATC Princeton 10/10/18 |
1918 |
— |
Telegram from Mare Island Navy Yard, "Have established temporary hospital..." |
1919 |
— |
Telegram from Mare Island, "Influenza in Vallejo serious and fast approaching epidemic" |
1919 |
— |
Telegram from Mare Island, California, "Influenza situation serious in Vallejo" |
1919 |
— |
Telegram from Mare Island, California, "Vallejo, California calls for help..." |
1919 |
— |
Telegram, from Oscar Dowling, to W. C. Braisted |
1918 |
— |
Telegram from Yard Dispensary, Navy Yard, Puget Sound, Washington, re: medical supply |
1920 |
— |
Telegram, from: Assistant Secretary of War Crowell, to: George Holden Tinkham |
1918 |
— |
Telegram from: Col. Chas. M. O'Connor Assistant to Adjutant, Adjutant to: Senior Army Officer, S.A.T.C., Princeton University, Princeton, N.J. subject: Influenza 10/8/18 |
1918 |
— |
Telegram from: Col. Chas. M. O'Connor Assistant to Adjutant, Adjutant to: Senior Army Officer, S.A.T.C., Princeton University, Princeton, N.J. subject: Influenza, 10/7/18 |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, from: Commandant Fourth Naval District, "Commander Plummer Is Worked Nearly To Death With Present Epidemic Period" |
1918 |
— |
Telegram from: Committee Education to Commanding Officer SATC Princeton Univy, September 25, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, from: G.M. Corput, "Indications Are Influenza Will Become Epidemic Here," January 10, 1919 |
1919 |
— |
Telegram, from: J.W. Inches, to: Surgeon General |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, from: W.H. Kellogg, to: Surgeon General Blue, February 3, 1920 |
1920 |
— |
Telegram, "Hospital to full capacity..." |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, "Influenza appeared in this camp yesterday...," September 30, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, "Intrastate Quarantine Spanish Influenza Under Consideration," September 25, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, "Ninety percent of the population San Francisco wearing gauze masks by proclamation" |
[1918] |
— |
Telegram, "No report new cases Influenza Pneumonia...", October 4, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, "Please discontinue sending escort from infected camps..." |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, Re: "Necessary Action" During Influenza Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to Blue, from Tuttle, 2:33 PM |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to Blue, from Tuttle, 2:42 PM |
1918 |
— |
Telegram to Blue, from W. C. Witte |
1918 |
— |
Telegram to Public Health Service, care of Dr. Adolph Koenig |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to Secretary of the Navy, from W H Garlord |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: Bishop Sarrelly, from: Archbishop Moeller |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: Blue, from: Fricks |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: Chairman, Grand Theater, From: Board of Motion Picture Exchange Managers |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: Governor W. L. Harding, From: Charles W. Flint |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: Governor W. L. Harding, From: F. A. Hoyt |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: Governor W. L. Harding, From: V. E. Miller |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: J. H. Moyle, from: T. B. Beatty, with attached note from Moyle |
1919 |
— |
Telegram, To: James Jackson, From: W. Frank Persons |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: James L. Fieser, From: Deacon |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: James Rolph, Jr., From: Homer G. Brown |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy, From: J. W. Powell |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: Mayor George L. Baker (Portland, OR), From: Mayor James Rolph, Jr. (San Francisco, CA) |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: Professor Charles-Edward Amory Winslow, From: Hermann M. Biggs |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: Rear-Admiral J. L. Jayne, U. S. Navy, From: Mayor James Rolph, Jr. |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: S. M. Greer, from: James Jackson |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: Surgeon General Blue, from: Dr. A. C. Page |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: Surgeon General Blue, from: Dr. C. A. Huntoon |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: Surgeon General Blue, from: Dr. E. B. Winnett |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: Surgeon General Blue, from: Dr. J. W. Brooks |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: Surgeon General Blue, from: Dr. M. A. Royal |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: Surgeon General Blue, from: Fred Moore |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: Surgeon General Blue, from: G. M. Corput |
1919 |
— |
Telegram, to: Surgeon General Blue, from: T. B. Beatty |
1919 |
— |
Telegram, To: Surgeon General, From: Commanding Officer, U. S. Naval Training Camp, Seattle, Washington |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: W. Frank Parsons, From: James Jackson |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: W. Frank Persons, Civilian Relief Director, American Red Cross, from: Pittsburgh Chapter, American Red Cross |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: W. Frank Persons, from: Alfred Fairbank |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: W. Frank Persons, From: Alfred Fairbanks |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: W. Frank Persons, from: Harry L. Hopkins |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, To: W. Frank Persons, From: James Jackson |
1918 |
— |
Telegram, to: W. Frank Persons, from: W. J. Leppert |
1918 |
— |
Telephone Calls Almost Doubled by 'Flu' Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Telephone Mouthpieces Need to Be Disinfected Regularly |
1918 |
— |
Telephone Operating Force Hit By Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Telephone Service Hit |
1918 |
— |
Telephone Service Seriously Disturbed |
1918 |
— |
Telephone Users Asked To Curtail City Calls |
1918 |
— |
Telephone Wires Needed To Help In Influenza Fight, Says Officials |
1918 |
— |
Tell Of Ways To Fight Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Tells Feeling Of "Dying" |
1918 |
— |
Tells How To Guard Against Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Tells How To Stop Spread Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Tells of vaccine to stop influenza |
1918 |
— |
Temperance and Influenza |
1919 |
— |
Temporary Flu Hospital |
1918 |
— |
Ten Cases Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Ten Churches Decide To Hold No Services |
1918 |
— |
Ten Commandments For Fighting "Flu" |
1918 |
— |
Ten Counties Have Full Ban |
1918 |
— |
Ten Deaths Are Reported From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Ten Deaths At Chillicothe |
1918 |
— |
Ten Deaths Day's Toll Of Influenza Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Ten deaths from influenza |
1918 |
— |
Ten Deaths In Day Is Toll Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Ten Deaths Is Toll In City's Scourge |
1918 |
— |
Ten Die from Flu at Camp Meade |
1918 |
— |
Ten Influenza Deaths And 136 Cases Reported |
1918 |
— |
Ten Latest Toll |
1918 |
— |
Ten Mask Slackers Get 10-Day Sentences |
1918 |
— |
Ten more dead of "flu" |
1919 |
— |
Ten New Bills Are Introduced In House |
1919 |
— |
Ten New Cases Of Influenza |
1919 |
— |
Ten New Cases; Two Deaths From Influenza Reported |
1919 |
— |
Ten New Influenza Cases Are Reported |
1918 |
— |
Ten Patients at Boulder Are Dismissed as Cured |
1918 |
— |
Ten Physicians Cited For Drug Law Violations |
1918 |
— |
Ten Rules Framed to Protect Children Endangered by Flu |
1918 |
— |
Ten Volunteer Nurses Are Given Certificates |
1918 |
— |
Tension Is Eased In Hospitals as Scourge Lessens |
1918 |
— |
Tented City Arising At Local Sanitarium |
1918 |
— |
Tenth Biennial Report Being The Thirty-Fifth And Thirty-Sixth Annual Reports Of The State Board of Health Of The State of Kansas, June 30, 1918, to July 1, 1920 |
1920 |
— |
Tenth Biennial Report Of The Montana State Board of Health For The Years 1919 - 1920 |
1920 |
— |
Tenth Biennial Report Of The State Board Of Health July 1, 1920, to June 30, 1922 |
1923 |
— |
Tents Now Housing U. C. Flu Patients |
1918 |
— |
Terpischore to have flu until Monday evening |
1918 |
— |
The Terrible Mr. Bang Does Not Wish to Take the Slightest Chance of Catching the Spanish Influenza |
1918 |
— |
The Terrible Tempered Mr. Bang Does Not Wish to Take the Slightest Chance of Catching the Spanish Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Terror Of Flu Hampers Work Of Aiding Sick |
1918 |
— |
Texas Death Rate Jumps 257 Per Cent |
1918 |
— |
Texas Public Health Commission Convenes |
1918 |
— |
Text Of Law For Influenza Mask Wearing |
1918 |
— |
Text Of Law For Influenza Mask Wearing |
1918 |
— |
Thank Nurses For Flu Work |
1919 |
— |
Thanksgiving Day Impressively Observed |
1918 |
— |
Thanksgiving for Epidemic Passes |
1918 |
— |
That Guiltiest Feeling |
1918 |
— |
That Guiltiest Feeling |
1918 |
— |
That Guiltiest Feeling |
1918 |
— |
Of the First Importance |
1918 |
— |
Theater Ban May Last Five Weeks |
1918 |
— |
Theater Manager Says He Loses By Short Notice |
1918 |
— |
Theater Managers Cheerfully Obey Order Of Closing To Combat Influenza Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Theater Managers Hopeful That Houses Will Soon Be Open |
1918 |
— |
Theater Men Propose, but Health Officer Disposes Opening Plans |
1918 |
— |
Theater Men Protest Ban |
1918 |
— |
Theater Men Protest On New Order |
1918 |
— |
Theater Opening To Be Discussed By Health Board |
1918 |
— |
Theater Owners May Carry Fight On Ban To Court |
1918 |
— |
Theater Owners Would Lift Ban |
1918 |
— |
Theater Row Is Darkened On Account Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Theater Workers Protest Closing of Amusements |
1918 |
— |
Theaters And Churches Filled To Capacity Show Fear Of Epidemic Is Over |
1918 |
— |
Theaters and movies closed by "flu" order |
1918 |
— |
Theaters And Schools Will Open Nov. 16 |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Back Mayor's Stand |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Begin Fourth Week Of Idleness Due To Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Cancel Engagements |
1918 |
— |
Theaters, Churches Are Closed By Mayor |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Close Doors |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Close Elsewhere; St. Paul Now Rialto |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Closed By Authorities |
1918 |
— |
Theaters closed to stay influenza |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Closed, But Vaudeville Improvised |
1918 |
— |
Theaters, Fair Defer Opening |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Hard Hit By Closing Order |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Join Fight On "Flu" Infection |
1918 |
— |
Theaters' Loss Heavy By Closing Proviso |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Make Plans To Reopen Saturday |
1918 |
— |
Theaters May Be Closed To Check Serious Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Theaters May Hit Ventilation Snag |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Must Remain Closed Another Week |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Must Remain Shut 10 Days Longer |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Open Today; To Run 6 Hours Daily |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Ordered Closed |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Ordered Closed as Epidemic Tights Its Grip on City and State |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Ordered To Close As Precautionary Measure |
1918 |
— |
Theaters' Plea Is Turned Down By Health Head |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Prepared To Resume As Soon As Quarantine Is Raised |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Refunded 'Flu' Period Taxes |
1919 |
— |
Theaters Remain Closed Even If Flu Ban's Lifted |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Remain Closed Next Week |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Reopen Tomorrow After Five Weeks Of Darkness |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Save Michigan From New 'Flu' Ban |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Tell of Opening Bills; Masks Still Have to Be Worn |
1918 |
— |
Theaters To Open Doors On Monday |
1918 |
— |
Theaters Will Close At Next Flu Flareup |
1919 |
— |
Theatre Managers Preparing To Open |
1918 |
— |
Theatre Men Hope To Be Open Soon |
1918 |
— |
Theatre Men Name "Fighting Committee" On "Flu" Situation |
1918 |
— |
Theatre Patrons Find Doors Shut |
1918 |
— |
Theatres And Churches Are To Be Closed |
1918 |
— |
Theatres And Schools May Close Doors |
1918 |
— |
Theatres are Opened |
1918 |
— |
Theatres Closed |
1918 |
— |
Theatres In Berkeley Are Closed |
1918 |
— |
Theatres Meet The Requirements |
1918 |
— |
Theatres Open Monday, Tip Passed Out |
1918 |
— |
Theatres Petition For Refund Of License |
1919 |
— |
Theatres Quit Fight Against State Official |
1918 |
— |
Theatres, Saloons In Penna. Closed to Halt Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Theatres Throw Doors Wide Open |
1918 |
— |
Theatres To Close If Grip Inroads Grow |
1918 |
— |
Theatres Will Open On Monday |
1918 |
— |
Theatrical Folk Back Up Health Officials |
1918 |
— |
Theatrical Man Pleads Against Closing Plan |
1918 |
— |
Theatrical Managers Issue Statement |
1918 |
— |
Theatrical Men Act On Situation |
1918 |
— |
Theatrical People Hit By Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
The theory advanced by Dr. Albert J. Croft of Chicago |
1918 |
— |
These Meetings Called Off Account of the Flu |
1918 |
— |
These Regulations to Combat Disease Are Still in Force |
1918 |
— |
They Cheated the Graveyards |
1918 |
— |
They Enjoy 'Flu' |
1918 |
— |
They'll Race Today |
1918 |
— |
They Now Carry It On Their Hip |
1918 |
— |
They Receive Back Pay |
1918 |
— |
They Were Needed And They Responded |
1918 |
— |
Think Albany Safe From New Malady |
1919 |
— |
Think Disease Is Now In Control |
1918 |
— |
Think Flu Crest Over In County |
1918 |
— |
Think Good Weather Will Allay Grippe |
1919 |
— |
Think Influenza Is On The Wane |
1918 |
— |
Think Influenza Is On The Wane |
1918 |
— |
Think Influenza Is Receding Here |
1918 |
— |
Think "Spanish Flu" Has Appeared Here |
1918 |
— |
Thinks Churches Should Open |
1918 |
— |
Thinks Crest Of Flu Passed |
1918 |
— |
Thinks Epidemic Is Under Control |
1918 |
— |
Thinks High Tide Of "Flu" Is Near |
1918 |
— |
Thinks Influenza Crisis Now Past |
1918 |
— |
Third Annual Report Of The Department of Public Health, July 1, 1919 To June 30, 1920 |
1920 |
— |
Third Annual Report Of The State Department of Health Of Maine And The Twenty-Eighth Annual Report Upon The Births, Marriages, Divorces and Deaths For The Year Ending December 31, 1919 |
1919 |
— |
The Third Biennial Report of the State Board of Health and Medical Examiners Including Reports of the Department of Health and Department of Medical Examiners, County Boards of Health and State Health Laboratory This report includes the period July 1st, 1916 to June 30th, 1918. |
1918 |
— |
Third Meeting of the Governor's Influenza Commission, Held At The Academy of Medicine, Friday, December 20, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Thirteen Deaths at Camp Meade |
1918 |
— |
Thirteen Deaths In City; Others To Be Expected |
1918 |
— |
Thirteen Deaths In Plague's Wake |
1918 |
— |
Thirteen More Die From Flu |
1918 |
— |
Thirteen New Grippe Cases Reported Monday |
1918 |
— |
Thirtieth Annual Report Of The State Board of Health of Florida 1918, Approved By The Board In Annual Session, February ____, 1919 |
1918 |
— |
Thirtieth Annual Report Upon The Births, Marriages, Divorces and Deaths In The State Of Maine For The Year Ending December 31, 1921 |
1921 |
— |
Thirtieth Report Of The State Board Of Health Of Wisconsin For The Term Ending June 30, 1924 With Report of the State Bureau of Vital Statistics for the Calendar Years of 1922 and 1923. |
1923 |
— |
Thirty-Eighth Annual Report Of The State Board of Health Of South Carolina For The Fiscal Year, 1917 To The Legislature Of South Carolina |
1917 |
— |
Thirty-Eighth Annual Report Of The State Department Of Health Of New York For the Year Ending December 31, 1917, Volume 1 |
1917 |
— |
Thirty-Fifth Annual Report Of The State Board of Health Of Missouri, 1917 |
1917 |
— |
Thirty-First Annual Report Of The State Board of Health of Florida 1920 |
1920 |
— |
Thirty-Five Cases Of Influenza Reported |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Five More Succumb To Pneumonia at Camp Dix |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Four 'Flu' Cases Are Reported |
1919 |
— |
Thirty-Four Deaths From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Four Die from Pneumonia |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Fourth To Fortieth Annual Reports Of The Superintendent of Health Of The City Of Providence For The Years 1916 - 1922 |
1923 |
— |
Thirty New "Flu" Cases in Evanston |
1918 |
— |
Thirty New Cases Of Influenza, But Only Single Death |
1919 |
— |
Thirty New Flu Cases Are Reported In City |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Nine Cases Of Flu Reported |
1919 |
— |
Thirty-nine Cases Of Influenza Reported |
1919 |
— |
Thirty-Ninth Annual Report Of The State Board of Health Of South Carolina For The Fiscal Year, 1918 To The Legislature of South Carolina |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-One Cases, Influenza Report |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-One Die From Influenza Here In 11 Hours |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-One New Cases Are Reported to Local Board |
1918 |
— |
Thirty Patients Being Treated at Seminary |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Second Annual Report of the Childrens Free Hospital Association, For The Year 1918, Detroit, Michigan |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Second Biennial Report of the State Board of Health of Florida 1921 - 1922 |
1922 |
— |
Thirty-Seven New Cases Found In S. F. |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Seventh Annual Report of the Children's Aid Society of Pennsylvania for the year 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Six Influenza Cases Reported Tuesday |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Sixth Annual Report Of The State Board Of Health Of Missouri, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Sixth Report (42nd And 43rd Years) Of The State Department Of Health For Two Years Ending June 30, 1920 [July 1, 1918 - June 30, 1920] |
1920 |
— |
Thirty-Two Flu Cases Reported |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-Two Flu Cases Reported |
1918 |
— |
Thirty-two influenza cases |
1918 |
— |
This City Is So Far Free Of Disease |
1918 |
— |
This "Flu" Scare |
1918 |
— |
This Is What To Do If You Get Influenza |
1918 |
— |
This Pastor Lauds Closing Churches |
1918 |
— |
This time Julia hurrahs guard and gets away |
1918 |
— |
This Week's Death Toll Record For City |
1918 |
— |
Those Extra School Hours |
1919 |
— |
Those Who Cough In Theater Must Leave, Is Ruling |
1919 |
— |
Though Improved, Epidemic Serious |
1918 |
— |
Thousand Cases Of Influenza Is Estimated Here |
1918 |
— |
Thousand Kicks On Flu Fees |
1919 |
— |
Thousand Recruits Aid Red Cross Fight |
1918 |
— |
Thousands Attend Protest Meeting |
1919 |
— |
Thousands In Pandemonium Over Peace |
1918 |
— |
Thousands in Plants to Wear Gauze Masks at Work Tomorrow |
1918 |
— |
Thousands Made Orphans By Epidemic In Indiana |
1919 |
— |
Thousands Of New Influenza Victims In Capitol District |
1918 |
— |
Thousands Pray That Scourge Be Banished |
1918 |
— |
Thousands Take Anti-Flu Serum As A Precaution |
1918 |
— |
Threatens Tighter Influenza Rules |
1918 |
— |
Three Albany Boys Today's Victims of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Three Army Officers Attacked by Grippe |
1918 |
— |
Three Boards Hold Physical Examinations |
1918 |
— |
Three Colorado Men Die in Day From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Three Deaths And 47 New 'Flu' Cases Reported Friday |
1918 |
— |
Three Deaths And 55 New "Flu" Cases Reported Thursday |
1918 |
— |
Three Deaths And Three New Cases Of Influenza Here |
1918 |
— |
Three Deaths At Camp |
1918 |
— |
Three Deaths At Wright Field, 450 Influenza Cases |
1918 |
— |
Three Deaths From Flu |
1919 |
— |
Three Deaths From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Three deaths from influenza |
1918 |
— |
Three Deaths In One Family |
1918 |
— |
Three Deaths Of Flu At Fort As Cases Wane |
1918 |
— |
Three Deaths Of Influenza Are Reported In 48 Hours |
1919 |
— |
Three Deaths Of Influenza Reported In City Yesterday |
1919 |
— |
Three Deaths, Toll Of Influenza Here |
1919 |
— |
Three Die From "Flu" |
1919 |
— |
Three Die from Flu |
1919 |
— |
Three "Flu" Deaths Are Reported At Hospital |
1918 |
— |
Three Football Games For War Work Fund Here |
1918 |
— |
Three Grand Rapids Boys Ill At Custer With Spanish "Flu" |
1918 |
— |
Three Hundred Given Send-off |
1918 |
— |
Three Influenza Deaths |
1918 |
— |
Three Influenza Deaths |
1918 |
— |
Three Influenza Don'ts Announced By Dr. Hassler |
1918 |
— |
Three Milwaukeeans Die Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Three Months' "Flu" Campaign Planned |
1919 |
— |
Three More Cases Of Grip Reported |
1918 |
— |
Three More Deaths Caused By Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Three More Deaths in Federalsburg |
1918 |
— |
Three More Down With Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Three More Flu Victims |
1918 |
— |
Three More Influenza Cases In Schenectady |
1918 |
— |
Three More Soldiers Die Of Epidemic Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Three New "Flu" Cases; Forty-Seven in All in City |
1919 |
— |
Three New Influ Cases Reported |
1918 |
— |
Three Rhode Island Communities Close Schools During Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Three Shot In Row Over "Flu" Mask |
1918 |
— |
Three Shot In Struggle With Mask Slacker |
1918 |
— |
Three Shots, Two Bits, Price Of Anti-Flu Dope |
1918 |
— |
Throat of Driver Slashed |
1918 |
— |
Throngs Attend City Churches |
1918 |
— |
Throngs Jam Theaters When Ban Is Lifted |
1918 |
— |
"Throw Out the Life Line" |
1918 |
— |
Tide Of Epidemic Still Unsettled |
1918 |
— |
Tide Of Flu On Ebb Now |
1918 |
— |
Tightening Up On Quarantine Web |
1918 |
— |
Time Extended For Induction Into S. A. T. C. |
1918 |
— |
Time For Caution, Not Alarm |
1918 |
— |
A Time To Stand Pat |
1918 |
— |
Timely Precaution |
1918 |
— |
Timely Topics In Health Bulletin |
1918 |
— |
Tipplers Fined For Disobeying Mayor's Orders |
1918 |
— |
Title of Mr. And Mrs. Santa Claus Is Given Base Hospital Visitors |
1918 |
— |
To Aid Families Of Epidemic Victims |
1919 |
— |
To Aid In Hospitals |
1918 |
— |
To All Telephone Users |
1918 |
— |
To Ask Arrest, Says Pomeroy |
1918 |
— |
To Avoid Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Avoid Spanish Influenza, Which Is Like Grippe |
1918 |
— |
To Bar Children With Colds From Schools |
1918 |
— |
To Be No Let Up In Restrictions |
1918 |
— |
To Be No More Recruiting Here by British Museum |
1918 |
— |
To Begin Payment of Teachers' Pay for "Flu" Period |
1918 |
— |
To Care For Flu Victims |
1918 |
— |
To Carry Flu Facts To All |
1918 |
— |
To Change Workers' Hours As Influenza Preventative |
1918 |
— |
To Chapter Home Service Sections |
1918 |
— |
To Check Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Check Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Check Influenza Stay At Home And Call A Physician |
1918 |
— |
To Clamp Down Flu Lid |
1919 |
— |
To Close "Flu" Hospital |
1918 |
— |
To Close Red Cross Hospital Nov. 13 |
1918 |
— |
To Close Schools And Theaters To Check Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Combat Flu By Saving Coal |
1918 |
— |
To Combat Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Combat Influenza with a New Serum |
1918 |
— |
To Confer On Spanish Flu |
1918 |
— |
To Confer On Spanish Influenza Fight |
1918 |
— |
To Consider Closing of All Churches |
1918 |
— |
To Consider Closing Schools of Dallas |
1918 |
— |
To Consider Opening Of L. D. S. University |
1919 |
— |
To Continue Flu Work |
1918 |
— |
To Control Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Cover Up Each Cough And Sneeze |
1918 |
— |
To Cut Christmas Holiday |
1918 |
— |
To Decide on "Flu" Ban |
1918 |
— |
To Decide On "Flu" Ban |
1918 |
— |
To Decide On School Re-Opening |
1918 |
— |
To defend city's health |
1918 |
— |
To Destroy Books |
1918 |
— |
To Enforce Strictly Store Opening Order |
1918 |
— |
To Enlarge Scope Of Red Cross Work |
1918 |
— |
To Escape Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Establish Influenza Hospital For City |
1918 |
— |
To Every Woman in Oakland The Red Cross Needs You! |
1918 |
— |
To Extend School Day After Jan. 6 |
1918 |
— |
To fight Spanish grip |
1918 |
— |
To Fight the Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
To Furnish Record For The Red Cross |
1918 |
— |
To Guard against Future Epidemics |
1918 |
— |
To Guard against Spanish Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Guard Shipbuilding |
1918 |
— |
To Help Crush Fly Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
To Help Fight Scourge |
1918 |
— |
To Help Food Inspector |
1918 |
— |
To Help State Fight Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
To Hold School Friday |
1918 |
— |
To Honor Memory Of Dead At Camp |
1918 |
— |
To Isolate Sufferers From Fluie |
1918 |
— |
To Keep Schools Closed |
1918 |
— |
To Keep Schools Open For Children's Safety |
1918 |
— |
To Keep the Influenza Away |
1918 |
— |
To Kiss or Not to Kiss (Through the Periscope) |
1918 |
— |
To Lift Kansas Side Ban |
1918 |
— |
To Lift The Ban |
1918 |
— |
To Limit Civilian Visiting In Camp |
1918 |
— |
To List Cases At "U" |
1919 |
— |
To Mask Or Not To Mask |
1918 |
— |
To Mask Or Not To Mask, Now Agitating Police |
1918 |
— |
To Nurses And Other Red Cross Workers |
[1918] |
— |
To Open Battle On Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Open Churches And Schools Here Despite Dr. Royer |
1918 |
— |
To Open Circulation Department of Library |
1918 |
— |
To Open Hospital In Greendale Park |
1918 |
— |
To Open Public Serum Stations |
1918 |
— |
To Organize Flying Squad To Probe Flu |
1918 |
— |
To Organize Health Boards in School Districts of State |
1918 |
— |
To Our Subscribers |
1919 |
— |
To Pasteurize All Milk |
1918 |
— |
To Pinch Hosts Who Break City Influenza Rule |
1918 |
— |
To Preserve Order When Ban Is Raised |
1918 |
— |
To Prevent Congestion |
1918 |
— |
To Prevent Epidemic Of Spanish Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Prevent Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Prevent Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Prevent Pneumonia |
1919 |
— |
To Quarantine All Flu Cases |
1918 |
— |
To Quarantine All Suspects |
1918 |
— |
To Quarantine Flu |
1918 |
— |
To Reopen 17 Of City Schools Monday |
1919 |
— |
To School New Year's Day |
1918 |
— |
To Sell Flu Masks Preceding Services |
1918 |
— |
To Shut Schools Three Days For Thanksgiving |
1918 |
— |
To Stop Influenza |
1919 |
— |
To Study Influenza |
1919 |
— |
To Study Influenza In Houston |
1918 |
— |
To: Surgeon General Blue, Re: Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Tell Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To The Chairman Of The Chapter, Subject: Influenza Preparedness |
1919 |
— |
To The Chairman Of The Chapter, Subject: Red Cross Plan of Preparedness For A Recurrence of an Influenza Epidemic |
1919 |
— |
To The Chairmen of the Chapter and Chapter Committee on Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To The Owners Of Automobiles |
1918 |
— |
To The People of Iowa, Re: Spanish Influenza |
1918 |
— |
"To The People of San Francisco," Letter from Mayor James Rolph, Jr. |
1918 |
— |
To the Physicians of Oakland |
1918 |
— |
To Use Detention Hospital |
1918 |
— |
To Wage War On Influenza |
1918 |
— |
To Watch School Children For Influenza Symptoms |
1918 |
— |
To Wear Masks At Drill |
1918 |
— |
To Wear Masks at Red Cross Meetings |
1918 |
— |
Tobacco Auction Closed |
1918 |
— |
Today 1st With No Flu Cases, No Deaths |
1919 |
— |
Today's Report Shows Total Of 143 Cases |
1918 |
— |
Toledo Chapter, American Red Cross, Report of A. L. Spitzer, Chairman At Adjourned Annual Meeting at Memorial Hall, November fifteenth, nineteen hundred and eighteen |
1918 |
— |
The Toledo City Journal 1921 Health Report |
1921 |
— |
Toledo Doctors Let Out To Help Fight "Flu" |
1918 |
— |
Toledo Doctors To Come Home |
1918 |
— |
Toledo Is Warned Of Influnza |
1918 |
— |
Toledo Will Have Doctors To Fight Flu |
1918 |
— |
Toll of 'Flu' at Meade Increases |
1918 |
— |
Toll Of Death From Epidemic Larger In City |
1918 |
— |
Toll Of Deaths From Influenza Continues; New Cases Decreasing |
1918 |
— |
Toll Passes 1,000 Mark |
1918 |
— |
Toll Taken By Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Tomorrow Circus Comes To Town |
1918 |
— |
Tomorrow Last Day For Canteen Work Directed By House Of Allies |
1918 |
— |
Tomorrow To See End Of Ban In City |
1918 |
— |
Too Many Clothes—And Often Too Few—Will Give IT to You! |
1918 |
— |
Too Much Typhoid Here, He Declares |
1918 |
— |
Too Much Visiting Of Sick People |
1918 |
— |
Too Much Visiting Over The Telephone |
1918 |
— |
Total 670 Cases in Two Days |
1918 |
— |
Total Cases Of Influenza Here Now 267 |
1918 |
— |
Total Flu Cases In County Over Twelve Hundred |
1918 |
— |
Total Flu Cases Now Nearly 1,100 |
1918 |
— |
Total Flu Toll At Camp Is 575 |
1918 |
— |
Total Influenza Cases For The Past Week Was 1816 |
1918 |
— |
Total Influenza Cases For The Past Week Was 1818 |
1918 |
— |
Total Of 1000 Grip Cases In City |
1918 |
— |
Total Of Week's Deaths Was 250 |
1918 |
— |
Tots Barred From Crowds |
1918 |
— |
Tots Made Orphans by Ravages of "Flu" Come as Christmas Gifts to New Homes |
1918 |
— |
Tourist Service In Tabernacle Sunday |
1918 |
— |
Towels and Kerchiefs |
1918 |
— |
Towels Authorized For Public Schools |
1918 |
— |
A 'Town and Country' Practice with the Flu |
1919 |
— |
Towns' Influenza Bans Being Lifted |
1918 |
— |
Towns Report Fewer Cases Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Tracking Influenza Germ |
1919 |
— |
Trade and travel back to old hours |
1918 |
— |
Trade Hours Set to Stem Spanish Influenza Here |
1918 |
— |
Traeger aid and woman held for flu nurse farce |
1918 |
— |
Train Teachers To Guard Health Of Children |
1918 |
— |
Trained Nurse In Charge |
1918 |
— |
The Training and Use of Attendants: A Letter To The Editor |
1919 |
— |
Training Corps Placed under Quarantine |
1918 |
— |
Training Detachment Is Under Quarantine |
1918 |
— |
Training School Cases Decrease |
1918 |
— |
Transfer of Patients from Clarke and Lewis Halls, University of Washington |
1918 |
— |
Travis Reports Fourteen Deaths From Pneumonia |
1918 |
— |
Treasurer Planning To Avoid Crowding |
1918 |
— |
Treasury Hit By Epidemic Of "Flu" |
1919 |
— |
Treating and Mistreating the Flu |
1919 |
— |
The Treatment of Influenza |
1919 |
— |
The Treatment of Influenza in Children |
1920 |
— |
Treatment of Influenzal Pneumonia With Plasma of Convalescent Patients |
1918 |
— |
The Treatment of Lobar Pneumonia with an Anti-Pneumococcus Serum |
1918 |
— |
Treatment of Pneumonia |
1918 |
— |
Trenton, December, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Trenton, February, 1919 |
1919 |
— |
Tries To Get Ban Lifted |
1918 |
— |
Trip Halted by Grippe |
1918 |
— |
Triple Campaign To Stamp Out 'Flu' |
1918 |
— |
Triple Force On Monday To Quarantine Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Trojan Service Is Done In Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Troops Guard North Shore In Influenza Quarantine |
1918 |
— |
The Truth About Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Try To Avert Closing Of Theatres |
1918 |
— |
Try Vaccination For Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Trying to Check Grippe |
1918 |
— |
Tuberculosis and Influenza |
1920 |
— |
Tuberculosis and Influenza: Necessity of a Sane Conclusion in Reference to the Incidence of Pulmonary Tuberculosis as a Sequel to the Late Epidemic of Influenza |
1919 |
— |
Tuberculosis Society Tells Of Its Anti-Influenza Work |
1919 |
— |
Tuesday Reports Show Increase Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Tuesday's Toll The Lowest During Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Tulane Classes, Except Drill, Are Off 'Till Oct. 17 |
1918 |
— |
Tulane Quarantine Lifted And All Classes Resume |
1918 |
— |
Tulane's Football Program Cancelled; Will Play, However |
1918 |
— |
Tuohey And Cardell May Be First To Enter Ring After "Flu" Ban Is Lifted |
1918 |
— |
Turn in the Flu Tide |
1918 |
— |
Turn Schools Into Grip Hospitals; Soda Founts Closed |
1918 |
— |
Turns Down Plea To Open Schools Before Monday |
1918 |
— |
Twelfth Convict Is "Flu" Victim |
1919 |
— |
Twelve Albany Nurses Leave To Assist Boston |
1918 |
— |
Twelve Cases Of Influenza Listed |
1918 |
— |
Twelve Cases Only Of 'Flu,' Is Report |
1919 |
— |
Twelve Deaths and 100 Plague Cases |
1918 |
— |
Twelve Deaths At Frederick |
1918 |
— |
Twelve Deaths From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Twelve Deaths In Past 24 Hours |
1918 |
— |
Twelve Deaths On South Side Of Spanish Flu |
1918 |
— |
Twelve Firemen Have Flu |
1919 |
— |
Twelve 'Flu' Cases In Daily Report |
1919 |
— |
Twelve 'Flu' Cases In Report Of Day |
1919 |
— |
Twelve Ill at Simmons |
1918 |
— |
Twelve Influenza Cases Are Reported Wednesday |
1918 |
— |
Twelve More Dead From Pneumonia In City-Wide Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Twelve New Cases Of Flu; Three Die |
1919 |
— |
Twelve Persons Die Of Influenza In Two Days |
1918 |
— |
Twentieth Annual Report Of The Commissioner, November 1, 1919 |
1919 |
— |
Twentieth Report Of The Board Of Health Of The State Of Delaware For the Two Years ending December 31, 1920 [1919 - 1920] |
1920 |
— |
Twenty Added To Death List From Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Twenty Cases Of New Influenza In Birmingham Now |
1918 |
— |
Twenty Coal Mines Shut Down Account Influenza Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Twenty Deaths From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Twenty Deaths Influenza Toll |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Eight Cases Of 'Flu' Reported |
1919 |
— |
Twenty-eight Cases Reported Today |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-eight New Cases of Influenza Reported |
1919 |
— |
Twenty-Eighth Report Of The State Board Of Health Of Wisconsin For The Term Ending June 30, 1920 With Report of the State Bureau of Vital Statistics for the Calendar Years of 1918 and 1919 |
1919 |
— |
Twenty-Fifth Biennial Report Of The State Board Of Health Of California For The Fiscal Years from July 1, 1916, to June 30, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-First Annual Report Of The Commissioner, November 1, 1920 |
1920 |
— |
Twenty-First Report Of The Board Of Health Of The State Of Delaware For the Two Years Ending December 31, 1922 [1921 - 1922] |
1922 |
— |
Twenty "Flu" Cases At Lynchburg |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Four Cases Of 'Flu' Reported |
1919 |
— |
Twenty-Four Die From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Four New Cases Reported |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Fourth (Fourteen Biennial) Report Of The State Board of Health Of The State Of Vermont From January 1, 1922 To December 31, 1923 Being The First Biennial Report Of The Department Of Public Health |
1923 |
— |
Twenty Influenza Cases Reported |
1919 |
— |
Twenty Influenza Deaths Reported |
1918 |
— |
Twenty Influenza Deaths Reported |
1918 |
— |
Twenty More Cases Of Influenza Found |
1918 |
— |
Twenty New Cases of Influenza Reported |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Ninth Annual Report for Year Ending December 31, 1918, The Visiting Nurse Association of Chicago |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Ninth Annual Report Of The State Board of Health of Florida 1917, Approved By The Board In Annual Session, April 18, 1918 |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Ninth Annual Report Upon The Births, Marriages, Divorces and Deaths In The State Of Maine For The Year Ending December 31, 1920 |
1920 |
— |
Twenty-One Deaths, Toll Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-One Flu Cases Reported |
1919 |
— |
Twenty-Second {Twelfth Biennial} Report Of The State Board Of Health Of The State Of Vermont From January 1, 1918 to December 31, 1919 |
1919 |
— |
Twenty-seventh Biennial Report Of The State Board of Health of California for the Fiscal Years from July 1, 1920, to June 30, 1922 |
1922 |
— |
Twenty-Seventh Report (Thirteenth Biennial) Of The State Board of Health Of The State Of New Hampshire For The Fiscal Period Ending June 30, 1922 |
1922 |
— |
Twenty-Seventh Report (Thirteenth Biennial) Relating To The Registration And Return of Births, Marriages, Divorces and Deaths In New Hampshire For The Years 1918 And 1919 |
1919 |
— |
Twenty-Seventh Report Of The State Board Of Health Of Wisconsin For The Term Ending June 30, 1918 With Report of the State Bureau of Vital Statistics for the Calendar Years of 1916 and 1917 |
1917 |
— |
Twenty-Six Die From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Six Grippe Deaths in Boston |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Sixth Annual Report Upon The Births, Marriages, Divorces and Deaths In The State Of Maine For The Year Ending December 31, 1917 |
1917 |
— |
Twenty-Sixth Biennial Report Of The State Board Of Health Of California For The Fiscal Years from July 1, 1918, to June 30, 1920 |
1920 |
— |
Twenty-Sixth Report (Twelfth Biennial) Relating To The Registration And Return Of Births, Marriages, Divorces And Deaths In New Hampshire For The Years 1916 And 1917 |
1917 |
— |
Twenty-Sixth Report (Twelfth Biennial) Of The State Board of Health Of The State Of New Hampshire For The Fiscal Period Ending August 31, 1920 |
1920 |
— |
Twenty-Third {Thirteenth Biennial} Report Of The State Board of Health Of The State Of Vermont From January 1, 1920 To December 31, 1921 |
1921 |
— |
Twenty-Three Cases Of 'Flu' Reported |
1919 |
— |
Twenty-three Influenza Cases Are Reported |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Two Cases Of Flu Reported |
1919 |
— |
Twenty-Two Families Being Cared For By Relief Committee At House Of Allies |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Two Is Late Toll Of Epidemic |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-two New Cases of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Twenty-Two New Influenza Cases And Three Deaths |
1918 |
— |
Twin Cities Epidemic Now Appears Checked |
1918 |
— |
Twins Succumb To Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Two Buffalo Boys Die of Pneumonia in Camp |
1918 |
— |
Two Cases Are Postponed |
1918 |
— |
Two City Courts Resume Sessions |
1918 |
— |
Two-Day Influenza Total 89, With Death Rate High |
1918 |
— |
Two-Day Report On Flu Epidemic Runs Up Figures |
1918 |
— |
Two Days' Report Shows Over 170 Cases Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Two Dead Of "Flu;" Seven Ill |
1918 |
— |
Two Deaths At Camp |
1918 |
— |
Two Deaths From "Flu" |
1919 |
— |
Two Deaths From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Two Deaths From Influenza |
1919 |
— |
Two Deaths From Influenza In Day |
1918 |
— |
Two Deaths From Influenza Reported |
1919 |
— |
Two Deaths From Influenza, Report |
1918 |
— |
Two Deaths Of Influenza Reported In City For Day |
1919 |
— |
Two Deaths Reported |
1919 |
— |
Two Deaths Reported Due To Influenza |
1919 |
— |
Two Deaths Result From Pneumonia |
1918 |
— |
Two Deaths Toll; 50 New Cases |
1918 |
— |
Two Deaths Wednesday Result From Influenza; 28 New Cases Reported |
1918 |
— |
Two Deaths, 13 Cases Of Influenza Reported |
1919 |
— |
Two Deaths, 52 New "Flu" Cases Saturday |
1918 |
— |
Two Deaths, 58 New Cases |
1918 |
— |
Two Die and 23 New Plague Cases |
1918 |
— |
Two Die From Influenza |
1919 |
— |
Two Die In Brookline |
1918 |
— |
Two Die of Flu |
1919 |
— |
Two Die Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Two Die Of Plague In 24-Hour Period |
1919 |
— |
Two Die Suddenly; Influenza Victims |
1919 |
— |
Two District Men Die |
1918 |
— |
Two Dormitories Closed On Account Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Two Engagements Are Cancelled |
1918 |
— |
Two Flu Cases; 2 Deaths Reported |
1919 |
— |
The Two-Foot Rule |
1918 |
— |
Two Hospitals Will Be Closed This Week |
1918 |
— |
Two Hotels And A Dry Goods Store Violate 'Flu' Quarantine Rule |
1918 |
— |
Two Hundred and Eightieth Meeting, Johns Hopkins Medical Faculty Minutes |
1918 |
— |
Two Hundred New Flu Cases Show In Last Two Days |
1918 |
— |
Two In Family Die From Grip |
1918 |
— |
Two Influenza Deaths At Camp Zachary Taylor |
1918 |
— |
Two Influenza Fighters Jailed And Their Booze Goes to Sick |
1918 |
— |
Two letters, To: J. A. A. Burnquist, From: H. M. Bracken |
1918 |
— |
Two Men Die At Training School No. 2 Of Pneumonia |
1918 |
— |
Two More Cases Of Influenza Reported |
1919 |
— |
Two More Deaths At Annapolis |
1918 |
— |
Two More Deaths In City |
1918 |
— |
Two More Die From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Two More Die From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Two More Soldiers Died at Syracuse |
1918 |
— |
Two More Soldiers from Albany Died of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Two More Soldiers Succumb to Plague |
1918 |
— |
Two More St. Louisans In Navy Dead From Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Two More St. Louisans In Navy Die Of Influenza |
1918 |
— |
Two More Unite With Elks' Staff Of Medical Men |
1918 |
— |
Two More Victims |
1918 |
— |
Two New "Flu" Cases In Report Of Day |
1919 |
— |
Two New Cases |
1918 |
— |
Two Protests Against Closing of Churches |
1918 |
— |
Two "Recess" Periods A Day For War Clerks |
1918 |
— |
Two Regulations Left On Influenza Ban |
1919 |
— |
Two Schools Close Because Of Lack Of Heat |
1918 |
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Two Schools Closed By "Flu" |
1918 |
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Two Soldiers Are Influenza Victims |
1918 |
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Two Soldiers Die At State College |
1918 |
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Two Soldiers Here May Have Influenza |
1918 |
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Two Soldiers Seriously Ill With Influenza |
1918 |
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Two State Draft Quotas Withheld By Influenza Ban |
1918 |
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Two Suspected Cases Influenza Are Found in S. F. |
1918 |
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Two Upper High Schools Without Influenza Cases |
1918 |
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Ty Cobb Will Be Seen At Boulevard Park Oct. 14, Influenza Situation Permitting |
1918 |
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Typhoid Caused By Milk |
1918 |
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Typhoid Fever Follows "Flu" |
1918 |
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Typhoid Fever in the New Extension |
1919 |
— |
Typhoid Fever Is on Decrease Here |
1919 |
— |
Typhoid Inoculations |
1918 |
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