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The historic Jenner Inn offers a spectacular opportunity to enjoy the romance and unique beauty of the Sonoma Coast.
Many of our rooms and cottages have balconies over the river. Jenner is a place of incredible natural beauty and extraordinary recreational opportunities, just 90 minutes north of the Golden Gate Bridge.
The many activities available at the Jenner Inn include: kayaking, hiking, bicycling, fishing, birding, abalone diving, whale watching, mushroom hunting, wine tasting, star gazing.
Daily sightings of eagles, hawks, river otters, bobcats, deer, dozens of seals and over 200 specifies of birds.
Our Jenner Inn Restaurant has become a popular Highway 1 destination, featuring “Coastal Comfort Food”.
Steps leading up the abandoned Jenner school.
Jenner is a small little hamlet located at the mouth of the Russian River in California.
Go to Page with image in the Internet Archive
Title: History and pathology of vaccination, Vol. 1
Creator: Crookshank, Edgar M. (Edgar March), 1858-1928. no2003076894
Publisher: London : H.K. Lewis
Sponsor: Wellcome Library
Contributor: Wellcome Library
Date: 1889
Vol: Vol. 1
Language: eng
Description: Vol. 2 contains reproductions of original title pages of ten of the essays
Reviewed in: Asclepiad, v. 7 (1890)
Includes bibliographic footnotes
I. A critical inquiry.--II. Selected essays, edited by E. M. Crookshank: An inquiry into the causes and effects of the variolæ vaccinæ, by E. Jenner. An inquiry concerning the history of the cow pox, by G. Pearson. Reports of a series of inoculations for the variolæ vaccinæ, or cow-pox, by W. Woodville. Further observations on the variolæ vaccinæ, or cow pox, by E. Jenner. An address to the public on the advantages of vaccine inoculation, by H. Jenner. A conscious view of circumstances and proceedings respecting vaccine inoculation (anonymous). A continuation of facts and observations relative to the variolæ vaccinæ, by E. Jenner. The origin of the vaccine inoculation, by E. Jenner. An account of some experiments on the origin of the cow-pox, by J. G. Loy. An examination of that part of the evidence relative to cow-pox, &c., by W. R. Rogers. A letter occasioned by the many failures of cow-pox, by J. Birch
(Cont.) On cow pox discovered at Passy (near Paris), by M. Bousquet. Account of a supply of fresh vaccine virus from the cow, by J. B. Estlin. Observations on the variolæ vaccinæ, by R. Ceely. Report of the vaccination section of the Provincial medical and surgical association. Further observations on the variolæ vaccinæ, by R. Ceely. A detail of experiments confirming the power of cow pox to protect the constitution from a subsequent attack of small pox, by proving the identity of the two diseases, by J. Badcock. Correspondence from the members of the medical profession, relative to recent supplies of variolæ vaccinæ, or modified small pox. Small pox and cow pox, by Auzias-Turenne. Cow pox at Eysines (Laforêt) (first outbreak), 1881, by C. Dubreuilh. Cow pox at Eysines (second outbreak), 1883, and at Cérons, 1884, by A. Layet. Outbreak of cow pox near Cricklade (Wiltshire), 1887, by E. M. Crookshank
GM 5435
If you have questions concerning reproductions, please contact the Contributing Library.
Note: The colors, contrast and appearance of these illustrations are unlikely to be true to life. They are derived from scanned images that have been enhanced for machine interpretation and have been altered from their originals.
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Known as the Harrods of the North, it was founded in 1838 by two Leith drapers. It was rebuilt in 1893 after a fire - around 25,000 people turned out for the unveiling of the elaborate frontage, which was inspired by Oxford's Bodleian LIbrary. It was Scotland's oldest independent department store until it was bought by House of Fraser in 2005.