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226 NORTHERN COUNTIES NOTES.-SCOTLAND.-IRELAND.
use of this hospital for the treatment of patients sufferingfrom small-pox. In the course of the present epidemic ofsmall-pox, which, it is hoped, is now drawing to a close,the Salford corporation have made temporary provision forcases in the neighbourhood of Modewheel, a series of
corrugated iron hospital huts having been erected there,which have, it is believed, answered the purpose to the satis-faction both of the medical attendants and the corporation.July 19th.
NORTHERN COUNTIES NOTES.(FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT.)
The Ambulanee Review at Gosforth Park, Newcastle-on-Tyne.THE arrangements for the great ambulance review which is
to be held at Gosforth Park on the first Saturday in August arenow nearly completed. The men taking part in the reviewwill be mustered in companies of 100, each company beingunder the command of a Volunteer surgeon-captain, and it isexpected that at least eight companies will be placed in thefield. An interesting item of the programme will be an exhi-bition of life-saving by about 100 members of the TynemouthVolunteer Life Brigade under the command of AldermanJ. Foster Spence, mayor of Tynemouth. A party representingshipwrecked mariners will be rescued from the island in themiddle of the lake by means of the rocket apparatus. A
good feature of the day’s proceedings will be that the pro-ceeds of the review will be devoted to local charities.
Durham College of Science.Much regret is felt in the north by the announcement that
Professor Garnett has resigned his chair as principal in theDurham College of Science, Newcastle-on-Tyne. He has.accepted the post of Technical Adviser to the TechnicalEducation Board of the London County Council. It isneedless to say that the council of the College have receivedhis resignation with deep regret-regret which will be sharedby all the professors, teachers and students, and by allconnected with the higher education in the north. Owingto the fact that some of the medical lectures are givenat the Durham College, Professor Garnett has been in fre-
quent touch with medical students, who feel that they willsustain a loss in his removal. Professor Garnett, however,will not leave before the College is in full working order ;and as regards the success of the College it may be mentionedthat on some occasions more than one thousand pupils havebeen in attendance on one day.
Small-pox in the County of Durham.At the last meeting of the Leadgate local board Dr. G.
Renton, the medical officer of health, reported that five casesof small-pox had appeared. The patients had been removedto the Fever Hospital and were progressing satisfactorily.
The late Rainfall in the City of Durham.Mr. Carpenter of the Durham Observatory, in reference
to the rainfall at Durham on July 8th, says that it wasthe largest fall with one exception that has been recordedfor any one day for at least forty years. During thethunderstorm in the afternoon 2 052 in. of rain fell, and0.365 in. fell during the storm in the evening, makingtogether 2’417 in., whilst as regards heaviness of down-pour there has been none to equal it in the period abovementioned.
Stinderland.The Local Government Board has suggested the erection
of a new workhouse infirmary, the estimated cost of which is£ 20,000, The matter is still under the consideration of theguardians. The new infirmary will be built on the pavilionsystem-in blocks-with separate administrative department- and lying-in and isolation wards. The committee have visitedvarious workhouse hospitals in different parts of the countryand seem to be most favourably impressed with the principleof that at Dewsbury.
Newcastle-on-Tyne, July 19th.
MEDICAL MAGISTRATES.—Mr. John R. Thomson,M.D., L.R.C.S. Edin., F.RC.P. Lond., has been placed onthe Commission of the Peace for the county of Hampshire.Mr. Frederick H. Tinker, L.R.C.P., L.M. Edin., M.R.C.S.,Q1as been placed upon the Commission of the Peace for theborough of Hyde.
SCOTLAND.
(FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT.)
The Medical Education of Women in Edinburgh.I mentioned some weeks ago that the managers of the
Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh had decided to withdrawfrom women the privilege of obtaining clinical instructionin the infirmary, as it was expected that the authorities ofLeith Hospital would so enlarge and rearrange that hospitaithat it would be available for the’ purposes of clinicalstudy to all the women students. The Leith Hospitdauthorities, after considering the question, have decided.however, that they could not afford to make the requisiteextension. This necessarily reopened the matter at the
Royal Infirmary and much public feeling has been arousedrespecting it. The question was practically whether Edin-burgh was or was not to take part in the medical educationof women, and, indeed, some of the students had alreadybegun to contemplate going elsewhere. Yesterday, at themeeting of the managers, it was decided to continue thepresent arrangements for women students at the infirmaryand also to furnish the number of additional beds necessaryto satisfy the examining boards. The Scottish Associationfor the Medical Education of Women have undertaken to
supply money for. furnishing the additional beds and it isexpected that the hospital fees will soon cover the additionalannual outlay. Hitherto the infirmary has only been opento one of the two medical schools for women in Edinburgh,but under the new arrangements the students of both schoolswill be received and they will be under the authority ofthe infirmary management and not of the authorities of theschools.
The Professional Examinations in Edinb2crgh.On Monday the first professional examination commenced
and the second will begin on Thursday. The session willend this week.July l8th.
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IRELAND.
(FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT.)
Local Government Board.THE annual report of the Local Government Board has not
yet been issued, but I am able to state that for the yearending March 31st last the number of persons in receipt ofout-door relief and in workhouses in Ireland was less by3359 than during the previous year. The number of thosewho emigrated from Ireland, assisted by the unions, wasonly 237, costing £ 371, this being the lowest number soassisted since 1851, with the exception of the year 1862, whenonly 122 persons were aided to emigrate. The cost, however,in that year was £ 528.
Board of Superintendence of Dubl’in Hospitals.The thirty-fifth annual report on the condition and
management of the city of Dublin hospitals receiving Par-liamentary grants has been issued this week. The hospitalsinspected by the Board of Superintendence number nine andshare between them £ 15,722 15s. 9d., of which the House ofIndustry hospitals alone get C7472 15s. 9d. The board, con-sidering the necessity of special or invalid cooking in order topromote recovery in a certain class of cases, have endeavouredto impress on the authorities the importance of having properly
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qualified cooks in hospitals to prepare such food; but theyregret to state that in several institutions scarcely sufficientcare is bestowed on this subj ect, which is in some cases even moreimportant than the administration of medicine. An epidemicof cholera having prevailed during the year on the continentof Europe, and as several alleged cases had occurred in
England, the board made inquiries to ascertain that due pro-vision could be made for the reception and treatment of thefirst cases that might appear should the epidemic reattDublin, and several institutions promised that a total oj150 beds could be allocated for the purpose required. Theboard point out the necessity of having an institution in cornexion with the city hospitals endowed and equipped ?pathological, chemical and bacteriological research and alsoremark on the advisability of having post-mortem examinationmade under the supervision of skilled pathologists connectedwith the proposed institution. In the interests of justice all
227BERLIN.—EGYPT.
necropsies in medico-legal cases should be specially conductedbv these officers, and an ample supply of material would beavailable for systematic pathological teaching. During therear there were 10,371 patients under treatment in the wards,of whom 9072 left either cured or relieved and 462 died. Ex-
ÙsÎrely of the Hospital for Incurables the mortality was 4 61per cent. as regards cases treated to a termination. Thesrerage annual cost per bed for maintenance was lowest inthe Westmorland Lock Hospital (£14 3s. 11 3/4d.) and highestinthe Coombe Lying-in Hospital (.E22 5s. 11¼d.), whilst theaverage annual cost per bed for maintenance and for estab-lishment charges was lowest in the Hospital for Incurables(£31 7s. 9½d.) and highest in the Rotunda Lying-in Hospital( £ 71 17s. 9¼d). I shall defer any further observations on the
report until next week.Compared with the corresponding quarter of 1892 the
returns of pauperism for the March quarter show a decreaseof 384 in the average number of workhouse inmates on
Saturdays during the quarter and a decrease of 3674, or
5’8 per cent., in the average number of persons on out-doorrelief.
Society of Public Analysts.The annual summer meeting of the Society of Public
Analysts was held on the 18th inst. at the Royal College ofSurgeons, Sir Charles Cameron, President, in the chair. ThePresident said this was the third occasion on which the summermeeting of the Society had been held in Ireland. On behalfof the local members he offered a cordial welcome to themembers from the other side of St. George’s Channel. The
out-going President, Mr. Hehner, then took the chair to permitSir Charles Cameron to read a paper entitled " The Results ofthe Working of the Adulteration Acts in Dublin." " The first
year after his appointment as city analyst 50 per cent. of the articles examined were adulterated ; but after the passingof the Acts of 1872 the adulteration of many articles offood died out. Tea, flour, bread, mustard and whiskywere now never found to be adulterated, and, with the
exception of milk and butter, the food sold in Dublin was,with rare exceptions, pure-a fact which undoubtedly wasattributable to the working of the Anti-adulteration Acts.Professor Tichborne read a paper on " Some Recent Improve-ments in the Babcock Machine, " an instrument for estimatingthe butter-fat in milk analyses. Mr. A. W. Allen read acommurication on "Vinegar, its Nature and Manufacture. " Inthe evening a banquet, presided over by Sir Charles Cameron,took place in the Shelbourne Hotel.
Royal Hospital for hrcnrables.Having regard to the large number of candidates who seek
admission, the governors have decided to build another
pavilion, to comprise two wards, for the accommodation offifty additional patients. It is now in course of erection andit is expected to be completed in the spring of next year.
July 18th.
BERLIN.(FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT.)
Heatstroke.IN spite of the high temperature of the last few weeks
there have been few or no cases of heatstroke in Berlin. Inthe Deutsche Medicinische Wochenschrift of July 13th Dr.Kœfer writes on the subject of Heatstroke in which he speakshighly of the effects of chloroform, a treatment which, headds, was recommended long ago by Dr. Barclay in theMadras Medical Journal.
The Water-supply of Berlin.The new waterworks on the llluggelsee are now in full
work. This allows the proper rate of filtration in the oldworks at the Stralauer Thor to be maintained, and, so far asany danger of infecting the water-supply is concerned, Berlinmay be considered to be safe from an epidemic of cholera.The new filter beds are all covered in to protect them fromfrost and to prevent the occurrence of such an interferencewith the filtration as that which caused an outbreak of cholera,in Altona in the early part of this year.
Scecret Remedies.Dr. Aronson’s refusal to communicate the method of pre-
paring the extract from serum by which he hopes to be able tocure diphtheria was the occasion of some further discussionat the meeting of the Berliner Medicinische Gesellschaft on
June 14th. The Society did not enter upon any considera-tion of the merits of the preparation, and the President,Professor Virohow, repeated his previous declaration that,had he been aware of the object of the paper, he would nothave allowed it to be read.
Acute Rheumatic Arthritis.Dr. Salili, in the Deutsches Archiv fiir I7anere Medicin for
July, discusses this disease in an interesting paper. Heconsiders that it is probably an infectious disease, and inthis connexion he remarks upon its acute febrile course andthe difficulty of diagnosis between it and septic or pyæmicaffections of the joints or even osteo-myelitis, and alsocomments on the frequent detection of staphylococcus in thevegetations in cases of post-rheumatic endocarditis (Birch-Hirschfeld, Mantel and others). He then describes a case ofrheumatic fever in a girl of sixteen, being the second attack,which ended fatally, and how after death a yellow staphylo-coccus was found in the endocardial excrescences, synoviatmembrane, pericardium, pleura, swollen bronchial glands andin the blood of the left ventricle. Dr. Sahli has in severalother cases cultivated a similar staphylococcus from fluidtaken during life from inflamed joints and also from the bloodof rheumatic patients.
Foot-and-Moutk Disease.So many English medical men are more or less personally
interested in agriculture that it may be allowable to noticehere that in a publication which has just appeared Dr. Kurthof Bremen states his opinion that in a micro-organism whichhe calls "streptococcus involutus " he has discovered thecause of foot-and-mouth disease. This does not appear to beidentical with the streptococcus described by Dr. Klein in thefifteenth annual report of the Local Government Board, 1885.July l7th.
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EGYPT.
(FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT.)
Ainhum.Until now ainhum has not been reported from Egypt, but.
Mr. Milton has seen one case in Cairo and Dr. Creswell haafound a second at Suez. The latter is that of a negro slave fromSuakin aged forty who has the disease well-marked in bothlittle toes, having anaesthesia in one of them. He has beenaffected for three years and believes himself that it is dueto working barefooted in salt. His general health is good, but.his feet are worse in winter than in summer, though a fewdays’ rest in bed are sufficient to relieve his pain.
Pellagra,This well-known skin disease occurs every spring in Egypt,
though it is only lately that it has been looked for and noted.The desquamation on the back of the neck and over a triangularpatch on the chest uncovered by the collarless dress worn bythe peasants is easily recognised, though the changes on thehands and feet may be somewhat masked by dirt. Pellagrahas been seen in both sexes, but chiefly in men, and so faralways in those from the villages of Lower Egypt. This is ofinterest because the peasantry of the Upper Nile live chieflyon the great millet or guinea corn, which is a cane-like corn-grass with a dense head of spikes bearing numerous smalbgrains. This has no sheath and therefore can be dried easily.The natives of Lower Egypt, in addition to this, live duringthe early months of the year on the maize or Indian corn (wellknown in England) which is imported here from Syria,being originally a native of South America. The heads of
closely packed grains the size of peas are enclosed in a sheathcalled the "cob," " which prevents perfect drying and aidsthe formation of the fungus, which alone is necessary for theproduction of pellagra amongst the ill-nourished. It oftenhappens in Egypt that a man is at the same time the prey ofpellagra, farus, anchylostomiasis and bilharzia.
Veterinary Departntertt.Onlynine years ago the Egyptian Government was so anxious.
to avoid multiplying the number of English officials that it
actually paid a veterinary surgeon to return to England!within a few days of his arrival here by special invitation but matters have now so far improved that a second" vet."has now been imported in addition to the one who has donegood work here since 1886. A project has also been submittedto the Council of Ministers for attaching a small veterinaryclass to the medical school. As many of the subjects to be