South African Medical Record, Bind 2Record Publishing Company, 1904 |
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Side 2
... deal of diversity of opinion about them . A great many Australian practitioners were of opinion that they were really not of so much value as people make out . Dr. Hartley concluded by saying that although he did not want to throw cold ...
... deal of diversity of opinion about them . A great many Australian practitioners were of opinion that they were really not of so much value as people make out . Dr. Hartley concluded by saying that although he did not want to throw cold ...
Side 4
... deal to be said for that view . Why should we in this colony go out of our way , apparently to our own detriment , to extend a liberty which was not conceded to us ? He might at once be met with the argument that this country was not ...
... deal to be said for that view . Why should we in this colony go out of our way , apparently to our own detriment , to extend a liberty which was not conceded to us ? He might at once be met with the argument that this country was not ...
Side 5
... deal of drainage work had been done . He himself could see a great deal of improvement in the streets of Cape Town , but he did not suppose there was one of them , not even the Mayor , who would not be ready to admit that there was ...
... deal of drainage work had been done . He himself could see a great deal of improvement in the streets of Cape Town , but he did not suppose there was one of them , not even the Mayor , who would not be ready to admit that there was ...
Side 11
... deal of trouble through political boycotting , which has been the subject of comment in this and the lay papers , he rapidly secured a good connec- tion . Hæmorrhage as a complication of enteric was the cause of death . We feel it right ...
... deal of trouble through political boycotting , which has been the subject of comment in this and the lay papers , he rapidly secured a good connec- tion . Hæmorrhage as a complication of enteric was the cause of death . We feel it right ...
Side 16
... deal with an outbreak of plague , he early demonstrated his unsuitability for the more important post , by establishing relationships with some of the general practitioners and District Surgeons , which came to be seriously considered ...
... deal with an outbreak of plague , he early demonstrated his unsuitability for the more important post , by establishing relationships with some of the general practitioners and District Surgeons , which came to be seriously considered ...
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abdominal AFRICAN MEDICAL RECORD amendment amongst appointed asked Assistant asthenopia attendance Board body Branch British Medical Association Cape Colony Cape Town charge Colonial Secretary Committee condition confrere consider cornea course Court Darley-Hartley death Dental dentist disease District Surgeon doctor drug Durban dysentery Edin Editor epidemic Eucain examination fact favour fees fever Government Grahamstown hæmorrhage Health Officer Hewatt Johannesburg Kimberley large number leprosy locum London Maritzburg matter Medical Congress Medical Council Medical Officer medical practitioners medical profession medical school Medical Society medicine meeting ment Messrs months Natal Natal Medical Council native notice nurses obtain operation opinion Orange River Colony paper passed patient plague Port Elizabeth present President Pretoria professional question recently reference registered regulations resolution sanitary shewed Somerset Hospital South Africa South African Medical Street subscriptions surgical symptoms thing thought tion Transvaal treatment uterus veins whilst
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Side 38 - Thou shalt have a place also without the camp, whither thou shalt go forth abroad: And thou shalt have a paddle upon thy weapon; and it shall be, when thou wilt ease thyself abroad, thou shalt dig therewith, and shalt turn back and cover that which cometh from thee...
Side 73 - With what anguish of mind I remember my childhood, Recalled in the light of a knowledge since gained ; The malarious farm, the wet, fungus-grown wild-wood ; The chills then contracted that since have remained ; The scum-covered...
Side 73 - I shudder to think it— I considered that water uncommonly clear, And often at noon, when I went there to drink it, I enjoyed it as much as I now enjoy beer. How ardent I seized it with hands that were grimy And quick to the mud-covered bottom it fell ; Then reeking with nitrates and nitrites, and slimy With matter organic, it rose from the well.
Side 73 - I enjoyed it as much as I now enjoy beer. How ardent I seized it with hands that were grimy ! And quick to the mud-covered bottom it fell : Then soon, with its nitrates and nitrites, and slimy With matter organic, it rose from the well.
Side 189 - Court considers it likely that the transaction was at that time fresh in his memory. The witness may also refer to any such writing made by any other person and read by the witness within the time aforesaid, if when he read it he knew it to be correct.
Side 110 - OF THE DUTIES OF PHYSICIANS TO EACH OTHER, AND TO THE PROFESSION AT LARGE.
Side 73 - And the old oaken bucket, the mould-crusted bucket, The moss-covered bucket that hung in the well. Just think of it ! Moss on the vessel that lifted The water I drank in the days called to mind, Ere I knew what professors and scientists gifted In the water of wells by analysis find.
Side 73 - And to tell the sad truth — though I shudder to think it— I considered that water uncommonly clear, And often at noon, when I went there to drink it, I enjoyed it as much as I now enjoy beer. How ardent I seized it with hands that were grimy, And quick...
Side 73 - How little I knew of the dread typhoid fever Which lurked in the water I ventured to drink ; But since I've become a devoted believer In the teachings of science I shudder to think. And now, far removed from the scenes I'm describing, The story for warning to others I tell, As memory reverts to my youthful imbibing And I gag at the thought of that horrible well, And the old oaken bucket, the fungus-grown bucket — In fact, the slop bucket — that hung in the'well.
Side 111 - God and the doctor we alike adore When on the brink of danger, not before. The danger past, both are alike requited. God is forgotten, and the doctor slighted.