Abstract

The Josephine Milligan School began as an enterprise of the Anti-Tuberculosis League. The work has gradually been taken over by the public schools until now it is entirely under the control of the board of education. The only connection which the AntiTuberculosis League has with the school is through paying for the noonday lunches of the indigent pupils. The accommodations consist of an old residence which has been worked over and equipped as a clinic and a one-story rectangular open-air building about 25 X 60 feet in size. On the first floor of the clinic building are the principal's office, dining-room, toilet rooms, and shower baths. On the second floor are a waiting room and three special clinic rooms, one for the general physical examinations, one for the dental examinations, and one for the eye, ear, nose, and throat examinations.

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