In the field we almost never had sheets and white pillow cases, but made use of army blankets that were made of the coarsest, roughest fiber imaginable. In warm weather the walls of the tent were raised, which made it much more pleasant for the occupants.... Muskets and Medicine: Or, Army Life in the Sixties - Seite 129von Charles Beneulyn Johnson - 1917 - 276 SeitenVollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| 2003 - 418 Seiten
[ Der Inhalt dieser Seite ist beschränkt. ] | |
| Michael Flannery - 2004 - 384 Seiten
...policy that obtained was to send those who were not likely to recover quickly to the base [general] hospitals, though this was not always to the patient's...one kind or another, especially of hospital gangrene [pyemia], which seldom attacked the wounded in the field.8 Johnson went on to describe the medicine... | |
| |