INTERNATIONAL HYGIENE EXHIBITION 



127 



H. Carriere, W. Kolle, Ost and Schaffer were members. Of quite special 

 interest to military men was a new and quite well-adapted wheeled army 

 field-litter, 



Spain. — Spain had erected a neat-looking pavilion, the exhibits 

 consisting for the most part of graphic and pictorial wall charts, statis- 

 tical tables, etc., very artisticall}^ arranged. Drs. Pulido and Chicote, 

 the Spanish representatives, received their commissions too late to 

 enable them to collect a more representative exhibit. The exhibits 

 nevertheless showed that Spain is awake to the progress in all depart- 

 ments of hygiene, plainly demonstrating its keen interest by its parti- 

 cipation in the exposition in Dresden. 



Hungary. — The visitor to the exposition would hardly have looked 

 for a special pavilion representing Hungary after having seen the one 

 erected by Austria. But so great was the interest of the Hungarian 

 government in the exposition and its high aims at Dresden, so much 

 had been done thei'e in recent years to improve the hygienic conditions 

 of its people and its institutions and so different from those of other 

 countries were the hygienic requirements of Hungary, that the Hun- 

 garian exhibits, many of which were quite original, aroused and sus- 

 tained the interest which they so well deserved. The special catalogue 

 and guide, by Professor Emil von Grosz, covering 48 pages, must be 

 allowed to speak for the rich collection seen in this pavilion. Special 

 sympathy was aroused with the visitor on the subject of those institu- 

 tions which were devoted to the governmental care of abandoned 

 children. The Hungarian people believe that every abandoned child has 

 a right to be cared for by the community. 



United States. — If absence, ever before, was conspicuous anywhere, 

 it was the absence of a United States pavilion at the exposition at 



The Russian Pavilion. 



