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JAMA. 1939;113(1):62. doi:10.1001/jama.1939.02800260064019.
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FOURTH OF JULY INJURIES  For the past two years the American Medical Association has resumed its annual summaries of the injuries from fireworks resulting from the celebration of the Fourth of July. In 1938, eighteen deaths were directly attributable to fireworks and seven were indirectly due to the same cause. Two cases of tetanus were reported in 1938, as in the previous year. Last year there were 7,933 injuries recorded, as compared with 7,205 in the preceding year. Since last year a few of the states with the worst records of deaths and injuries from fireworks have enacted legislation aimed at the prevention of this unnecessary source of danger. Again the cooperation of hospitals throughout the country has been requested to assist in carrying to the public consciousness the unnecessary hazard of allowing fireworks to be sold indiscriminately to the public.

INFECTIOUS MONONUCLEOSIS  The diagnosis of infectious mononucleosis is often

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