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ARTICLE |

THE TUBERCULOUS OSCULATION.

JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(1):46. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450530052011.
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ABSTRACT

By following the rule of going away from home to get the news, we learn from one of our English contemporaries that "it has been found necessary in some parts of the United States to direct the attention of the legislatures to the desirability of prohibiting indiscriminate kissing, not, it would appear, in the interests of public morality or in deference to the susceptibility of the American Mrs. Grundy, but with a view of checking the spread of tuberculosis." The journal goes on to say that either the tubercle bacillus must possess unaccustomed virulence in the Western hemisphere or else kissing must be unduly and indeed unnecessarily prolonged. We have read somewhere a saying, apparently English in origin, that a thorough and complete kiss must last seven minutes by Shrewsbury clock, but have not heard of this being put in practice in this country. It is certain, however, as our

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