AT LEAVENWORTH THERE WERE MANY SOURCES OE THE TYPHOID EEVER EPIDEMIC; 

 ONE OF THE MOST POTENT OE THESE WAS THE MILK AND ICE-CREAM SUPPLIES 



This picture shows the dairy inspector and an official of the U. S. Public Health Service 

 in the act of taking a sample of cream, from one of the largest ice-cream factories in the city. 



the Public Health Service was detailed 

 in charge of the extra-cantonment zone. 

 Most of the States requesting this co- 

 operation created in the extra-cantonment 

 zone a civil sanitary district, and dele- 

 gated to the representative of the Public 

 Health Service sanitary police power in 

 that area. 



THE AREAS AROUND THE CAMPS UNDER 

 PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE CONTROL 



At the time of writing this article the 

 following National Army extra-canton- 

 ment zones have been surveyed and 

 turned over to the administrative control 

 of the Public Health Service : Camp Lee, 

 Petersburg, Va. ; Camp Jackson, Colum- 

 bia, S. C. ; Camp Gordon, Atlanta, Ga. ; 

 Camp Pike, Little Rock, Ark. ; Camp 

 Zachary Taylor, Louisville, Ky. ; Camp 

 Dodge. Des Moines, Iowa ; Camp Fun- 

 ston, Fort Riley, Kans. ; Camp Lewis, 

 American Lake, Wash. ; Camp Sherman, 

 Chillicothe, Ohio, and Camp Travis, Fort 

 Sam Houston, Tex. The following Na- 



tional Guard camps have been surveyed 

 and turned over to the administrative 

 control of the Public Health Service : 

 Camp Greene, Charlotte, N. C. ; Camp 

 Wads worth, Spartanburg, S. C. ; Camp 

 McClellan, Anniston, Ala. ; Camp Sevier, 

 Greenville, S. C. ; Camp Wheeler, Macon, 

 Ga. ; Camp Sheridan, Montgomery, Ala. ; 

 Camp Shelby, Hattiesburg, Miss. ; Camp 

 Mc Arthur, Waco, Tex. ; Camp Logan. 

 Houston, Tex. ; Camp Bowie, Fort 

 Worth, Tex. ; Camp Beauregard, Alex- 

 andria, La., and Camp Hancock, Augusta, 

 Ga. 



In addition, similar arrangements have 

 been made at Leavenworth, Kans., at 

 which exists Fort Leavenworth, a large 

 army post; Chattanooga, Tenn., near 

 which Fort Oglethorpe is situated, and in 

 Elizabeth City and Warwick counties, 

 Virginia, lying between the York and the 

 James rivers. The last named situation 

 is one of great military importance, be- 

 cause of its relation to the army, the 

 navy, and the large ship-building indus- 



26.3 



