Full text: Hospitals (Vol. 1, nr. 16)

568; part pay nursing days, 4,846; free nursing days 9,819; 
dispensary visits, 12,552; emergency cases, 1,611. 
The hospital and the training school are found on the 
accredited list of those belonging to the state of Pennsylvania. 
The board of directors are: L. H. Gethoefer, president; 
William Steinmeyer, secretary; L. H. Kerr, Jas. W. Henry, 
A. B. Sheets, M. Schreiber and J. B. Tonkin. F. R. Babcock, 
president and chairman of the board of directors, died 
December 8, 1927, and Mr. Gethoefer was elected president. 
There are at present three Lutheran deaconesses from the 
Milwaukee Deaconess Motherhouse stationed at the hospital, 
but the service rendered is the same as at the time of its begin- 
ning, nonsectarian, a place of refuge for the sick and needy 
regardless of creed, color or race. 
THE PASTEUR INSTITUTE 
The following brief history of the Pasteur Institute was 
prepared by Dr. A. Leteve, director of the Pasteur Insti- 
tute and French Consular Agent in Pittsburgh. Much has 
been omitted, which, if included, would necessitate more ex- 
tensive explanations, and thus call for the preparation of a 
book or set of books, dealing with the Pasteur Institute 
alone, which is known and recognized throughout the world. 
When in 1884 it was announced to the world that a pre- 
ventive treatment against rabies (hydrophobia) had been 
obtained, astonishment and delight succeeded. For this 
announcement was made by a man who proved that his 
theories and practice were absolutely true and correct. The 
theory of the oxidation by air had been beaten to pieces by 
the scientists of the times and the fermentation theory was 
recognized. As soon as we knew that rabies could be pre- 
vented by an attenuated virus (vaccine), the followers of 
this man, with his authorization, went throughout the world 
to apply his method to attenuate the sufferings of humanity 
Many other methods have been established but none as 
successful as his. 
A Pasteur Institute is not only for the treatment of 
rabies but for the preparations of vaccines and anti-toxins 
against the disease infections of the human race. The human
	        
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