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416 OBITUARY. Obituary. EDWARD STANMORE BISHOP, F.R.C.S.ENG., HONORARY SURGEON TO ANCOATS HOSPITAL AND SURGEON TO THE JEWISH MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, MANCHESTER; PRESIDENT OF THE MANCHESTER CLINICAL SOCIETY. WE regret to announce the death of Mr. Stanmore Bishop, which took place at his house in Manchester on July 25th at the age of 64, the result of an internal complaint from which he had suffered for some months. Mr. Bishop studied in Manchester at what was known as Mr. Turner’s School, or the Pine-street Royal School of Medicine, and also at the London Hospital. He took the Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1871 and the Fellowship in 1884. He settled in the Ardwick district of Manchester, and for several years he devoted himself to general practice. He was elected an honorary surgeon to the Ancoats Hos- pital, and having resolved to devote himself to surgery he gradually relinquished general practice. At first general surgery was his field, but as the years wore on he limited his work more especially to abdominal surgery, and latterly to the field of the gynaecologist. He was the author of many papers on the subject which he had made his own. His resources in the technique of operations were very con- siderable. To the columns of THE LANCET Mr. Bishop was a frequent contributor, and both his original papers and addresses, the last of which latter to appear in our columns was the ’’ Address on Surgical Gastric Disorders," delivered before the Blackburn Medical Society in the early autumn of last year, were marked by clear and vigorous thinking. Of his books, he published in 1901 11 Uterine Fibromyomata, their Pathology, Diagnosis, and Treatment," which, as might be expected from his predilection for surgery, was somewhat coloured by bias towards operative treatment ; but it was replete with information in a form that made reference a pleasure. "The Essentials of Pelvic Diagnosis with Illus- trative Cases," was published two years later, and in this work he showed not only his desire to smooth the path of the student, but also his ability as a teacher, for it was an admirable attempt to clarify the mental processes necessary in deducing disease from the absence or presence of sym- ptoms. In 1909 he published I I Lectures on Surgical Nursing." " A "New Operation for Vesico-vaginal Fistula," contributed to the Medical Society’s Transactions in 1897 ; ’’ Changes Observed in Uteri, the Seat of Fibromyoma," published in the British Gynæcological Journal in 1902 ; I I Evolution of ::Modern Operations for Hysterectomy" in the Prccctitior2er in 1908 ; and Addresses on Cholelithiasis," British Mediacl Jo2trnaZ "Points in Gastric Surgery," Surgery, C’ryrtceeo- logy, and Obstetrics, and Gastroenterostomy," Transac- tions of the Royal Society of Medicine in 1909, were among his other numerous contributions to the literature of his profession. In addition to his appointments of honorary surgeon to ’Ancoats Hospital and surgeon for diseases of women at the Jewish Memorial Hospital, Manchester, he was a member of the council of the Royal Society of Medicine, president of the Manchester Clinical Society, and vice-president of the Manchester Medical Society. A man of determined purpose who overcame in his career many obstacles, he was devotedly attached to Ancoats Hos- pital. He was widely known as a surgeon in connexion with the hospital, and did much to place it in that position .of importance both as a hospital and a teaching school which it occupies. He had strong aspirations to become .a teacher in the medical school, but his desires were not realised. He was a man of great energy, somewhat reserved in manner, a great lover of music, and one who will be much missed by his friends. His remains were cremated at the crematorium on Saturday, July 27th. WILLIAM JEFFREY, M. D. EDIN., L. R. C. S. EDIN. Dr. William Jeffrey died on July 16th in Jedburgh, where he had practised for more than 40 years. He was born about 70 years ago in Berwickshire, the son of a well-known ’and highly respected practitioner of medicine, and received his professional education at the University of Edinburgh, graduating as M.D. in 1863 and taking the Licence of the .Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in the same year. He distinguished himself as a student, and as resident physician at the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary to Dr. Warburton Begbie. He was one of a group of whom several rose to distinction in their profession, but of whom few survive. Sir Dyce Duckworth (one of the group), in his introduction to the published works of Dr. Warburton Begbie, speaks very highly of Dr. Jeffrey, who preferred to the lure of city practice, with its possibilities of distinction, the arduous but more simple life of the country doctor. He was a man of fine physique and striking presence, with notable musical gifts, a lover of literature, and the possessor of a strong clinical instinct. Dr. J. A. MacDougall writes : An adept in his pro- fession in all its branches, Jeffrey possessed in full measure the knowledge which comes from wide and constant reading and most carefully garnered practical experience, and as a result he had that well-founded self-confidence and quick and ready judgment which, to a man placed as he ofttimes was far from professional help, is of paramount and inestimable value-a value demonstrated by his sole and successful management of many a grievously hard labour and the performance of not a few of the major operations of surgery, his coachman acting at times the part of anaesthetist 1 To-day the Scottish Border mourns his loss. In the days to come the name of William Jeffrey will there be honoured and cherished, for he was one of those of whom it may be said, in the words of one of his own favourite authors, that ’the best part of a good man’s life are his little un- remembered acts of love.’ Jeffrey’s life was-as are, indeed, the lives of many doctors-full of’them: acts the thought and remembrance of which drew forth from a great Scottish thinker and divine this belief: ’The evil that men do lives after them, but I do not believe the good is often buried with their bones. It rises from their graves and walks the earth until the resurrection morning.’ Of many a doctor of Jeffrey’s type this belief must ever hold good." " - ALBERT BLECKLY CLARKE, L. S. A., L.R.C.S. EDIN. Mr. Albert Bleckly Clarke, who had been for 26 years in practice in Shebbear, died on July 25th at his home, The Lawn, Shebbear. His death occurred, so far as the imme- diate present is concerned, unexpectedly, though he had been for some time in failing health, and had quite recently been in London to obtain special medical advice. On returning to Shebbear he resigned his appointments and disposed of his practice, in view of his approaching end, which it was foreseen could not long be delayed Mr. Clarke was born in 1860 at Chatteris, Cambs., and was the youngest son of the late Mr. William Clarke, a member of the Society of Friends. He received his early education at a private school at Harrogate, and his pro- fessional education at Charing Cross Hospital, taking the L.S.A. in 1881 and the L.R.C.S. Edin. in 1883. He settled in Shebbear in the " eighties," where he acquired an exten- sive practice covering a large territory. He was medical officer for the Shebbear and Marland districts of the : Torrington Union. He was very highly esteemed, and his genial manner made him very popular. Mr. Clarke leaves a widow and four children, for whom ’ much sympathy is felt. His eldest son is a student of medicine at the University of Aberdeen. The Vicar of Shebbear, in his sermon on’ July 28th, in alluding to the ideceased, said that Albert Bleckly Clarke "was a deeply religious man, but did not proclaim it to the world. ; Throughout his professional career we respected him for his j quiet, unostentatious, honourable dealings, and the filled church at the funeral testified of their sorrow at the loss of one who had by night and day attended to their needs whether rich or poor." Mr. Kenneth W. Millican writes : "Albert Bleckly Clarke was one of the most single-hearted men I have ever met. He was assistant to me in Warwickshire in the early eighties,’ and the close friendship then established continued un- broken until his death, notwithstanding that for 20 years the i Atlantic Ocean divided us. Mr. Clarke was a man of the a highest ideals and the most scrupulous honour, poetical in temperament-he was a keen student of poetry and wrote , verses of more than average merit--yet strongly practical. e His intense appreciation of the humorous side of things . no doubt contributed largely to his great geniality. He lived
Transcript
Page 1: Obituary

416 OBITUARY.

Obituary.EDWARD STANMORE BISHOP, F.R.C.S.ENG.,

HONORARY SURGEON TO ANCOATS HOSPITAL AND SURGEON TO THE JEWISHMEMORIAL HOSPITAL, MANCHESTER; PRESIDENT OF THE

MANCHESTER CLINICAL SOCIETY.

WE regret to announce the death of Mr. Stanmore Bishop,which took place at his house in Manchester on July 25th atthe age of 64, the result of an internal complaint from whichhe had suffered for some months.

Mr. Bishop studied in Manchester at what was known as Mr.Turner’s School, or the Pine-street Royal School of Medicine,and also at the London Hospital. He took the Membership ofthe Royal College of Surgeons in 1871 and the Fellowship in1884. He settled in the Ardwick district of Manchester,and for several years he devoted himself to general practice.He was elected an honorary surgeon to the Ancoats Hos-pital, and having resolved to devote himself to surgery hegradually relinquished general practice. At first generalsurgery was his field, but as the years wore on he limited hiswork more especially to abdominal surgery, and latterly tothe field of the gynaecologist. He was the author of manypapers on the subject which he had made his own. Hisresources in the technique of operations were very con-siderable.To the columns of THE LANCET Mr. Bishop was a frequent

contributor, and both his original papers and addresses, thelast of which latter to appear in our columns was the’’ Address on Surgical Gastric Disorders," delivered beforethe Blackburn Medical Society in the early autumn of lastyear, were marked by clear and vigorous thinking. Of hisbooks, he published in 1901 11 Uterine Fibromyomata, theirPathology, Diagnosis, and Treatment," which, as might beexpected from his predilection for surgery, was somewhatcoloured by bias towards operative treatment ; but it was

replete with information in a form that made reference apleasure. "The Essentials of Pelvic Diagnosis with Illus-trative Cases," was published two years later, and in thiswork he showed not only his desire to smooth the path ofthe student, but also his ability as a teacher, for it was anadmirable attempt to clarify the mental processes necessaryin deducing disease from the absence or presence of sym-ptoms. In 1909 he published I I Lectures on Surgical Nursing." "A "New Operation for Vesico-vaginal Fistula," contributedto the Medical Society’s Transactions in 1897 ; ’’ ChangesObserved in Uteri, the Seat of Fibromyoma," published inthe British Gynæcological Journal in 1902 ; I I Evolution of::Modern Operations for Hysterectomy" in the Prccctitior2erin 1908 ; and Addresses on Cholelithiasis," British MediaclJo2trnaZ "Points in Gastric Surgery," Surgery, C’ryrtceeo-logy, and Obstetrics, and Gastroenterostomy," Transac-tions of the Royal Society of Medicine in 1909, were amonghis other numerous contributions to the literature of his

profession. In addition to his appointments of honorarysurgeon to ’Ancoats Hospital and surgeon for diseases ofwomen at the Jewish Memorial Hospital, Manchester, hewas a member of the council of the Royal Society ofMedicine, president of the Manchester Clinical Society, andvice-president of the Manchester Medical Society.A man of determined purpose who overcame in his career

many obstacles, he was devotedly attached to Ancoats Hos-pital. He was widely known as a surgeon in connexionwith the hospital, and did much to place it in that position.of importance both as a hospital and a teaching schoolwhich it occupies. He had strong aspirations to become.a teacher in the medical school, but his desires were notrealised. He was a man of great energy, somewhat reservedin manner, a great lover of music, and one who will bemuch missed by his friends. His remains were cremated atthe crematorium on Saturday, July 27th.

WILLIAM JEFFREY, M. D. EDIN., L. R. C. S. EDIN.

Dr. William Jeffrey died on July 16th in Jedburgh, wherehe had practised for more than 40 years. He was bornabout 70 years ago in Berwickshire, the son of a well-known’and highly respected practitioner of medicine, and receivedhis professional education at the University of Edinburgh,graduating as M.D. in 1863 and taking the Licence of the.Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in the same year.

He distinguished himself as a student, and as resident

physician at the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary to Dr.Warburton Begbie. He was one of a group of whomseveral rose to distinction in their profession, but of whomfew survive. Sir Dyce Duckworth (one of the group),in his introduction to the published works of Dr. WarburtonBegbie, speaks very highly of Dr. Jeffrey, who preferred tothe lure of city practice, with its possibilities of distinction,the arduous but more simple life of the country doctor. Hewas a man of fine physique and striking presence, withnotable musical gifts, a lover of literature, and the possessorof a strong clinical instinct.

Dr. J. A. MacDougall writes : An adept in his pro-fession in all its branches, Jeffrey possessed in full measurethe knowledge which comes from wide and constant readingand most carefully garnered practical experience, andas a result he had that well-founded self-confidence andquick and ready judgment which, to a man placedas he ofttimes was far from professional help, is ofparamount and inestimable value-a value demonstratedby his sole and successful management of many a

grievously hard labour and the performance of not a

few of the major operations of surgery, his coachmanacting at times the part of anaesthetist 1 To-day theScottish Border mourns his loss. In the days to come thename of William Jeffrey will there be honoured andcherished, for he was one of those of whom it may besaid, in the words of one of his own favourite authors,that ’the best part of a good man’s life are his little un-remembered acts of love.’ Jeffrey’s life was-as are,indeed, the lives of many doctors-full of’them: acts the

thought and remembrance of which drew forth from a

great Scottish thinker and divine this belief: ’The evilthat men do lives after them, but I do not believe the

good is often buried with their bones. It rises from their

graves and walks the earth until the resurrection morning.’Of many a doctor of Jeffrey’s type this belief must ever

hold good." " -

ALBERT BLECKLY CLARKE, L. S. A., L.R.C.S. EDIN.Mr. Albert Bleckly Clarke, who had been for 26 years in

practice in Shebbear, died on July 25th at his home, TheLawn, Shebbear. His death occurred, so far as the imme-diate present is concerned, unexpectedly, though he hadbeen for some time in failing health, and had quite recentlybeen in London to obtain special medical advice. On

returning to Shebbear he resigned his appointments anddisposed of his practice, in view of his approaching end,which it was foreseen could not long be delayed

Mr. Clarke was born in 1860 at Chatteris, Cambs., andwas the youngest son of the late Mr. William Clarke, amember of the Society of Friends. He received his earlyeducation at a private school at Harrogate, and his pro-fessional education at Charing Cross Hospital, taking theL.S.A. in 1881 and the L.R.C.S. Edin. in 1883. He settled

- in Shebbear in the " eighties," where he acquired an exten-sive practice covering a large territory. He was medicalofficer for the Shebbear and Marland districts of the

: Torrington Union. He was very highly esteemed, and hisgenial manner made him very popular.

Mr. Clarke leaves a widow and four children, for whom’ much sympathy is felt. His eldest son is a student ofmedicine at the University of Aberdeen. The Vicar ofShebbear, in his sermon on’ July 28th, in alluding to theideceased, said that Albert Bleckly Clarke "was a deeplyreligious man, but did not proclaim it to the world.; Throughout his professional career we respected him for hisj quiet, unostentatious, honourable dealings, and the filledchurch at the funeral testified of their sorrow at the loss of

one who had by night and day attended to their needswhether rich or poor."

Mr. Kenneth W. Millican writes : "Albert Bleckly Clarkewas one of the most single-hearted men I have ever met. Hewas assistant to me in Warwickshire in the early eighties,’and the close friendship then established continued un-

broken until his death, notwithstanding that for 20 years thei Atlantic Ocean divided us. Mr. Clarke was a man of thea highest ideals and the most scrupulous honour, poetical in

temperament-he was a keen student of poetry and wrote, verses of more than average merit--yet strongly practical.e His intense appreciation of the humorous side of things. no doubt contributed largely to his great geniality. He lived

Page 2: Obituary

417MEDICAL NEWS.

a simple life, but one rendered full by conscientiotis atten-tion to the duty that lay nearest to hand ; a course that,though it might not lead to eminence, gained for him theadmiration and affection of all who knew him intimately."

DEATHS OF EMINENT FOREIGN MEDICAL MEN. - Thedeaths of the following eminent foreign medical men areannounced :-Dr. K. Neidhart, late medical referee of theHessian Government, aged 76.-Dr. Emilian Kaufmann, pro-fessor of laryngology and otology in the Bohemian Universityof Prague.-Dr. Hecker, physician to the municipal asylum,St. Petersburg, being attacked with a knife by a patient.-Dr. Carlo Platschick, privat-docent of odontology in theUniversity of Pavia.—Dr. Josef Disse, honorary professorof anatomy in the University of Marburg, aged 60. He was

professor of anatomy in the University of Tokyo from 1880to 1887. Afterwards he worked with Waldeyer in Berlin.He subsequently held chairs in Gottingen and Halle, goingto Marburg in 1895. His published papers dealt mainlywith histology.

_______

Medical News.ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND.-

At the Preliminary Science Examination for the Licence inDental Surgery the following candidates were approved inthe undermentioned subjects, viz. :-

Chemistry and Physics.-Harold Paxton Baylis, Brighten MunicipalCollege; Vernon Wilfrid Ayres Bell-Bonnett, Royal DentalHospital; James Arthur Carson, Cardiff and Royal Dental Hos-pital ; -Basil Clothier, Holt School of Science, Birkenhead ; WilliamHenry Cooper, Sheffield University ; Arthur Cyril Dean, BirkbeckCollege ; George Dee, Guy’s Hospital; Richard John Spaull Ellis,Royal Dental Hospital ; Robert William Fyffe, Sheffield University ;Julius Gillis, Royal Dental Hospital ; Arthur Donald Gregg, Uni-versity College, Nottingham; Ralph Hawksworth, Sheffield Uni-versity ; Gawin Herdman, Wandsworth Technical Institute ;Francis William Holgreaves, Liverpool University; ThomasCharles Stretton Jones, Royal Dental Hospital; Eric WilliamJoyner, Bristol University; Ralph Lea Klosz, Royal Dental Hos-pital ; George Francis Maguire, Leeds University; Philip ThomasPearce, Royal Albert Memorial College, Exeter; Leonard MontaguePeberdy, Technical School, Leicester; Ernest Russell Ray, RoyalDental Hospital; Joseph Walter Royston, Oundle School; CharlesShelton, Royal Dental Hospital; Robert Augustus Waters, DerbyTechnical College; James Thomson Wood, Royal Dental Hospital;Trevor Corry Woodhouse, Middlesex Hospital; and Sydney MoleroWright, Middlesex Hospital.

Chemistry.-Howarcl Bates, Liverpool University; Ellis LarnerCooke, Battersea Polytechnic; Wilfrid George Hollands, Poly-technic Institute ; George Douglas Moore, Middlesex Hospital ;Cecil Murray-Shirreff, Bristol University ; William DouglasPenfold, Brighton Municipal Technical College ; Alfred EdwardPool, Sheffield University; Kenneth Stanley Roberts, BrightonMunicipal Technical College; Cecil Alexander Wilson, TechnicalSchool, Southend; and Robert Aloysius Worsley, LiverpoolUniversity.

Physics.-Reginald James Robinson Baker, Liverpool University ;Charles Alfred Ernest Cook, Norwich Technical Institute; AlfredKenneth Ince Jones, Middlesex Hospital; Stephen AlphonsusMcCormack and Ronald Harold Vyvyan Whybro, Royal DentalHospital; and William Cochrane Woodall, Salford Royal TechnicalInstitute.

ROYAL COLLEGES OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONSOF EDINBURGH AND ROYAL FACULTY OF PHYSICIANS ANDSURGEONS OF GLASGOW.-The following is a list of the

triple qualification passes of the Royal Colleges of Physiciansand Surgeons of Edinburgh and the Royal Faculty of

Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow, the examinations forwhich were held in Glasgow from July 10th-27th:-

FIRST EXAMINATION.

Catherine Mitchell Anderson, Broughty Ferry; William CampbellBorrie, Birnam; John Stewart Marshall Conner, Glasgow; EdwardDias, Goa; William O’Gorman Donoghue, Glasgow; Peter FraserFairley, Hamilton; Charles Harris, Greenock; Thomas JacksonWishaw ; William Paterson Hay Lightbody, Glasgow; RonaldMacKinnon, Skye; Duncan Reid Nicol, Banchory; AlexanderArthur Balfour Noble. Belfast; George Lynn Pillans, Glasgow;John Robert Beith RoLb, Glasgow.

SECOND EXAMINATION.Luckhimonie Ghose, India ; Charles Clouston Irvine, Arran ; Harold

Oliver Martin, Nottingham ; William M’Alpine, Wishaw; JamesM’Farlane, Paisley; Sauthosham Swaminathan, India; and JohnWalker, Blantyre.

THIRD EXAMINATION.Andrew Crawford, Glasgow; Robert John Croxford, Gloucester;George Boyle Hanna, Antrim ; James MacRae, Caithness ; WilliamArthur Rees, Ilfracombe; James Remers,. Manchester; ClaudAldous Slaughter, India; and Babu Singh Thakur, India.

FINAL EXAMINATION.James Grant Morrin, Glasgow; Frank Walter White, Gosfortli ;.Hormazd Ardeshir Topalia, Bombay; George William Mason,Pontypool, Mon. ; Thomas Nicholson Wilthew, Hexham ; JohnPeter Carroll, co. Cork ; Joseph Moses Coplans, London; Leopoldo-Cajitano Mascarenhas, India ; Kul Want, India ; Edward Charles.Hamilton, Edinburgh; Furdon Framji Keravalla, India; and;Patrick.Walsh, Kilfinane, co. Limerick.

UNIVERSITY OF LONDON.-At examinations-held in July the following candidates were successful :-_

FIRST EXAMINATION FOR MEDICAL DEGREESEric Miles Atkinson, Epsom College; John Anthony’Birretl,"’Uni--

versity College, Cardiff ; Alethea Josephine Bolton, UniversityCollege, Nottingham ; Marian Noel Bostock, London (Royal Free-Hospital) School of Medicine for Women; William Wallace Brown,.St. Thomas’s Hospital; Leslie James Forman Bull, St. Bartholo-mew’s Hospital; Albert William Buchan Carless, King’s College ;:.Louis Arthur Celestin, University Tutorial College; John D’ArcyChampney and Clement Clapton Chesterman, University ofBristol; Allwyn Herbert Clarke, St. Thomas’s Hospital; Doris MayCollins, London (Royal Free Hospital) School of Medicine for,Women;. ;,

Philip Nield Cook, St. Bartholomew’s Hospital; Joseph Monlas.Courtney, St. Mary’s Hospital; Ralph Coyte, St. Bartholomew’sHospital; Dorothy Trevor Daintree, London (Royal Free Hospital)School of Medicine for Women; Thomas Morris Davies, St. Mary’s.Hospital; Mahmoud Abu Bakr Demerdash, University College;,Hilda Margaret Denton, London (Royal Free Hospital) School ofMedicine for Women; Evariste de Robillard, Guy’s Hospital ;.Kingsley Dykes, Dulwich College; Thomas Gray Dykes, UniversityCollege, Cardiff, and University of Liverpool; Thomas StennerEvans, University College, Cardiff ; Guy Fehrsen, London Hos-pital ; Jean Louis Roger Fortier, St. Bartholomew’s Hospital;. ;."Andrew Radburne Fuller, St. Mary’s Hospital; William Bashall’Gabriel, Epsom College ; Lawrence Gill, Guy’s Hospital; tWilIiamGover, Dulwich College; Arthur Reginald Hart, King’s Collegeand Westminster Hospital; Richard Brunel Hawes, St. Thomas’s,Hospital; Nathan Norris Haysom and William Broke Heywood-Waddington, St. Bartholomew s Hospital; Eric Blandford Hickson,University College; Frederick George Edward Hill, University ofSheffield ; Joseph Christopher Campbell Howe, Guy’s Hospital;.John Francis Howells, Swansea Technical College ; Patrick Hughes,St. Mary’s Hospital; John Basil Hume, St. Bartholomew’s Hos-pital ; James Wynn Hyatt, London Hospital; Helen Ingleby,London (Royal Free Hospital) School of Medicine for Women;Stewart Russell Johnston, University College; Thomas John-Thomas, King’s College; Charles Ainger Kirton, UniversityCollege; Victor John Frederick Lack, London Hospital :Harold’Warburton Lewis, Middlesex Hospital ; Naunton Morgan.Lewis, Cardiff High School; Rhys Thomas Lewis,’, Univer-sity College, Cardiff ; Adrian Lyell-Tayler, St. Mary’ ! ihos-pital ; Malcolm Henry MacKeith, Hartley University College;Francis Courtenay Mason, B.A., Birkbeck College; Cecily MargaretEvadne Maude, London (Royal Free Hospital) School of Medicinefor Women and University Tutorial College; *†Ralph George Mayer,Guy’s Hospital; ’41.Maurice William Holt Miles, St. Thomas’s Hos-pital ; Leslie Clifford Moore, University of Liverpool; GeoffreyMoulson, St. Thomas’s Hospital; Ray Verner Norton, London(Royal Free Hospital) School of Medicine for Women ; JehangirHormusji Oonvala, Grant Medical College, Bombay, and Universityof Glasgow; Margaret Stuart Palmer, London (Royal Free Hospital)..School of Medicine for Women; Eric Finch Peck, University ofLiverpool; John William Glanmor Phillips, St. Mary’s Hospital;Bertram Henzell Pidcock, St. Bartholomew’s Hospital !CyrilValentine Pink, St. Thomas’s Hospital; Hywel Tegid Prys-Jones,University College, Cardiff; Walter Murad Abdul Rahman, Uni-versity College; Kenneth Mackinnon Ross, London Hospital;William Richard Rowlands, University of Liverpool, Morris,Schwartz, University College; Alan Selby-Green, Middlesex Hos-pital ; Ahmad Shafeek, St. Thomas’s Hospital; Robert Gordon.Simpson, Plymouth Science Art and Technical Schools; GeorgeHarold Sims, Derby Technical College ; Lily Dorothea Taylor, Uni-versity College, Nottingham; Aubrey Leonard Telling, Universityof Leeds ; Rustam Navroji Vakil, University College; LottyWeihermann, University Tutorial College; John Prichard Williams,Cardiff High School; †‡Oscar Williams, University College, Cardiff;Thomas Pearse Williams, Plymouth Technical Schools; AlfredWilliams-Walker, University of Birmingham; and William Yeoman.Unversity College.

* Distinguished in General Biology.t Distinguished in Inorganic Chemistry. Distinguished in’ Physics..

SECOND EXAMINATION FOR MEDICAL DEGREES, PART I.John Struan Alexander, University College; Frank Macdonald

Allehin, Hannah Katherine Alton, and Robert Townly Bailey,King’s College ; Geoffrey Thomas Baker, Middlesex Hospital; Ruth.Balfour, Newnham College ; Gordon Eric Barker, St. Mary’s Hos-pital ; Walter Ralph Barrett. London Hospital; Richard VincentBevan, Charing Cross Hospital and King’s College; JosephWarwick Bigger, Trinity College, Dublin; John ArchibaldLBinning, University College; Edgar Scott Bowes, Guy’sHospital ; Harold George Broadbridge, London Hospital;. ;.Oliver St. Leger Campion, Guy’s Hospital; Louis Abel Celestin,.University College; Hester Mary Church, London (Royal FreeHospital) School of Medicine for Women; Altred Wilkinson Cocking,Guy’s Hospital; Walter Herbert Coldwell, King’s College ; RonaldCampbell Cooke, St. Thomas’s Hospital; Thomas Reginald Davies,St. Mary’s Hospital; "Leonard Snowden Debenham, Guy’s Hos-pital ; Allen Roy Dingley, St. Bartholomew’s Hospital; Reginald’Oliver Fades, University College; Charles Yarrow Eccles, St.Thomas’s Hospital; Stanley Harold Edgar, University College,Nottingham; Langdon Percival Lorimer Edwards, WhitgiftGrammar School; Leonard Wynne Evans, University College,Bangor; Roy Fazan, Middlesex Hospital; Marjorie Ellen Franklin,.London (Royal Free Hospital) School of Medicine for Women ;.William Lawson Mabson Gabriel, University of Leeds; JohnWilliam Hawksley Grice. Guy’s Hospital; Grace Mary Gulston,University College, Cardiff ; Arnold Guy Harsant, London (Royal


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