Venomous: Snakes
Venomous: Snakes
Venomous: Snakes
SERPENT-WORSHIP
AND ON
INDIA.
AUTHOR’S COPY.
ON SERPENT-WORSmP AND ON THE VENOMOUS
SNAKES OF INDIA AND THE MORTALITY
CAUSED BY THEM. By Sir Joseph Fayrer,
K.C.SJ., LL.D., M.D., F.R.S.
he serpent is the ancient enemy of the human race, and
T it is stillheld in antipathy, not only by man, but by the
lower animals. In man, this is probably due as much or more
to the lethal properties of some forms, as to the repulsiveness of
their aspect generally while animals seem to be instinctively
;
the Gnostic sect of the Ophites points to the fact that the
notion was not extinct. “ A wondrous blending of the
ancient rites of Ophiolatry with mystic conceptions of
Gnosticism appears in the cultus which tradition (in truth or
slander) declares the semi-Christian sect of Ophites to have
rendered to their tame snake, enticing it out of its- chest, to
coil round the sacramental bread, and worshipping it as repre-
senting the great king from heaven, who in the beginning
gave to the man and woman the knowledge of the mysteries ”
(“ Primitive Culture,” Tylor).
Serpent-worship, according to Fergusson, has prevailed to
a greater or less extent nearly all over the world.
In America it was known in Peru, Mexico, and among the Red
Indians, according to ancient records of the United States.
Its prevalence in Western Asia seems doubtful, except in
Judaea, to a slight extent in Phoenicia, and in the Troad,
among the so-called Ophiogones.
As regards Europe, there are next to no traces of its
prevalence among the Germans, though Tylor refers to the
“ Prussian serpent-v/orship and offering of food to the house-
hold snakes,” nor among the Gauls nor Britons. Ophiolatry
is said to have been practised by the Druids according to
;
* To Fergusson’s “
Tree and Serpent- Worelii}),” and Tylor’s “ Primitive
Culture,” I am indebted for much information.
—
ON SERPENT-WORSHIP AND VENOMOUS SNAKES. 3
Eostral. Prse
1- Orbitals.
Anterior "I „ , , Post
Posterior Upper
Labials.
Vertical. Lower
Supra-ciliary. Temponils.
Occipital. Mental.
Nasals. Chin-sliields,
Loreal.
said to coil itself round the eggs until they are hatched.
The female of all snakes is said to be larger than the male ;
—
some -will eat eggs the cobra robs the ben roosts, or devours
insects, molluscs, and even, it is said, vegetable matter; and
—
some are cannibals the opbiophagus and callopbis live on
snakes. In captivity they will, it is said, drink milk.
Snakes differ in their habits and modes of life, and are
grouped accordingly. Tree and grass snakes live in the
trees, bushes, and grass, and are often coloured like the
vegetation they frequent their tails are prehensile. AVhen
;
A Maxillary bone.
B Intermaxillary bone.
E Maxillary teeth.
E' Ecto-ptcrygoid bone.
E Poison fang.
Q- Palatine bone.
H Pterygoid bone.
L Frontal bone.
M Mastoid bone.
N Mandible.
T Tympanic.
O Palatine teeth.
P Parietal bone.
R Pterygoid teeth.
.
recurved teeth hold the prey firmly, as each side of the jaw
alternately advances or relaxes its gi’asp, aiid it is thus
gradually but inevitably engulfed.
Ihe maxillary bones in the venomous snakes are much
shorter, and provided with fewer teeth than in the innocent.
In the latter, they are elongated slips of bone set with small
recurved teeth. In the poisonous colubrine snakes they are
less elongated and have a fixed, large poison fang, several
loose, reserve fangs, and one, two, or more fixed smaller
teeth,^not_ directly connected with the poison apparatus. In
the Viperidae the maxillary bone is a short, triangular,
movable wedge, furnished with a poison fang lying hidden
in the mucous sheath. The movements of the fang are due
to the rotation of the maxillary bone. This mobility is great
in vipers, whilst it is slight in the colubrines.
When the fang is reclined or erected, the maxillary bone
into which it is inserted is jjushed by the external pterygoid
bone, a movement which is effected by muscular action.
The muscular arrangement for opening and closing the mouth
at the same time compresses the poison gland, thereby inject-
ing the venom through the tubular fang. The fangs are shed
at intervals, and to supply the loss, the reserves are pro-
vided. These lie in the capsule of mucous membrane which
ensheathes the fang. The fang is, during development
II.
A Poison gland.
B Duct.
C I'nng.
.
A D.
there is no loreal shield, the nostrils are lateral and the pupil
is round. The colour generally is from a light chocolate,
speckled, to a dark brown or even black. The head is short,
and not very distinctly separated from the neck the fangs
;
12 SIR JOSEPH EAYRER, K.C.S.I., ETC.,
a wound may have been inflicted and yet but little of the
poison inoculated or in the third place, the snake may be
;
poisou into man or beast, it is almost surely fatal, and all the
vaunted antidotes are futile.
Cobras are frequently exliibited by the so-called snake
charmers. Their g-raceful attitudes, with raised heads and
distended necks, as they sway from side to side Avatching the
movements of their keeper, and frequently striking at him,
and the ease with which they are handled, make them general
favourites. I may here remark that the cobra depicted in
Hindoo legends or old j^aintings is the gokiuTah, or spectacled
snake. They are generally depiaved of tlieir fangs (which
is done by cutting them out Avith a coarse knife), but the
snake charmers knoAv the habits of the creature so AA-ell that
they handle them without fear, even Avhen armed, though
Avith great caution, ahvays grasping them tightly beloAV the
head AAutli one hand and holding the tail Avith the other.
They knoAV that a neAv fang is soon produced, and to prevent
this they sometimes reraoAm the capsule and reserve fangs,
thus makijig the snake permanently harmless. The sole
secret of th'^se men lies in their dexterity and fearlessness.
Their mantras, their antidotes, and the pipes Avith Avhich they
pretend to charm are as devoid of real poAver over the snake
as are the snake-stones, roots, and other nostrums OAmr its
poison. They knoAv that dexterity is their real security.
The snake-charmers occasionally exhibit tlie ophiophagus,
— which, like the cobra, dilates the hood Avhen excited also —
the bungarus, daboia, and some of the innocent snakes, such
as Chrysopelia, Passerita, Ptyas, and Erix. AAdiich ai'e remark-
able for the beauty of their colours, their activity, or their
peculiarity of form. These exhibitions are ahvays accom-
panied by the music of the pipes.
The cobra is an object of superstitious aAve to the Hindus.
Should fear or the death of some inmate of the house in
Avhich the cobi-a has taken up its abode prove stronger than
superstition, it may be caught and deported in an earthen
jar to some field, where it is alloAved to escape, but not
destroyed. Still the cobra has many enemies. Besides by
its natural foes, such as the mongoose (^Iierpestes\ pigs,
rapacious birds, and other creatures, numbers are destroyed
by loAv caste people for the sake of reAAarrd. But still the loss
of human life is great.
The Ophiophayas daps (Hamadryad, Sunkerchor) is one of
the largest venomous snakes. It attains a length of ten or
tAvelve feet, is very poAverful and active, and is said to be
aggressive it is hooded like the cobra, and resembles it in
;
14 SIR JOSEPH FAYRER, K.C.S.I., ETC.,
neck, hinder part of the body and tail are edged with black ;
the body and hood are marked with black obhque bands.
There are several varieties with modifications of colouration,
but the general characters are essentially the same. The
young differ considerably from the old, and might be mis-
taken for another genus ;
they are black, with numerous
white, equidistant, narrow cross bands. The shields surround-
ing the occipital are large, and give a distinctive character
to the adult snake. This snake, though widely distributed
throughout India and in the Andaman Islands, is not common
and probably does not destroy many human lives but it is
;
common all over India. The fangs are smaller than those
of the cobra, and the poison is not so rapid in its action, but
it is very dangerous and destructive. It is found in the fields,
in grassy plains, rice fields, low, scrubby jungle, and among
ON SERl'ENT-VVORSHIP AND VENOMOUS SNAKES. 15
to human life.
The_ genus has several species in different parts
of India, which are all more or less brilliantly coloured.
They
are not aggressive, and bite reluctantly, so it is sufficient
to
enumerate some of the species Callophis intestinalis, C. Mae-
:
scales are keeled those on the lateral series have their tips
;
Rs. 7,136.
In Bengal in 1889, 10,681 human beings, and 480 cattle
were killed; 41,189 snakes were destroyed at a cost of
Rs. 3,439. In 1890, 10,534 human beings, and 538 cattle
Avere killed; 41,115 snakes were destroyed at a cost of
Rs. 3,742,
In the North-West ProA^inces and Oudh, in 1889, 6,445
human beings, and 221 cattle were killed; 25,663 snakes
were destroyed at a cost of Rs. 3,137. In 1890, 5,798
human beings, and 247 cattle were killed; 24,083 snakes
Avere destroyed at a cost of Rs. 2,902.
In the Punjab, in 1889, 915 human beings, and 87 cattle
Avere killed 68,501 snakes Avere destroyed at a cost of Rs.
;
1890, 214 human beings, and 257 cattle were killed; 478
snakes were destroyed at a cost of Rs. 14.
In Coorg in 1889, 1 person Avas killed; 14 snakes were
B 2
20 SIK JOSEPH PAYRER, K.C.S.I.j ETC.,
IIAEEI80K & Sons, Printers in Ordinary to Her Majesty, St. Martin’s lane.
Brief Address, delivered on the occasion of the
Centenaio di Galileo.
ON
ON
J. ON DON ;
“She will be the pioneer for good in more directions than one.
“ The sanitary authorities will find that their hands are strength-
“ened by the practical dealing of the nurse, who will teach the
“ poor how to find out what is wrong about the place, and how
“ to set it right . . the ministers of religion will find that
.
;
“heart which they have long wanted to get at, but could not,
“and, if the hearts of Englishmen and Englishwomen will allow
“themselves to catch warmth from the gracious act of the So-
“vereign, and will endeavour to see how they can best help to
“give an impulse to her beneficent intentions, they will find that
“their effort is not unrequited, for .... there are none
“who more value the work, and are more grateful for what is
“done lor them, than the sick poor themselves.”
f uch are some of the concluding words of the lecture referred
to, and I could hardly find a better introduction to the
remarks
which I am about to offer you at the President’s request, on the
4
knowing that you are doing that which experience has proved to
be the best.
the case that British and Indian authorities, basing their
It is
measures for protection on ascertained facts, and not on theories
of causation oir on coercive measures, have come to rely on in-
spection and sanitation as the real and sufficient means of safety.
It is satisfactory to know that this view is becoming more gene-
rally accepted by other nations, and that the tendency to combat
the inroads and diffusion of disease by sanitary measures alone is
becoming general.
The panic produced by the dread of contagion was well ex-
emplified by the state of the South of Europe, which, during the
cholera of 1887 was pitiable, and the measures of fumigation,
isolation, and general interference with personal liberty which
would have been ridiculous had they not been so pernicious.
The same feeling still prevails in other parts of the world, and I
quote an example (from the of January 22, 1886) “Two
“Japanese sailors died from cholera during the short journey
“ trom Kobe to Nagasaki. Their dead bodies were thrown over-
“ board. The Japanese authorities immediately forbade fishing
—
“along the coast .’’ Sanitavy Review. It would not be difficult to
adduce others almost, equally absurd.
Up to the present date the belief is maintained by foreign
powers that epidemic diseases, and especially cholera, can be
arrested in their progress and debarred from entering a country
by quarantine. This, as you are probably aware, originally
meant seclusion and isolation for a period of forty days, of per-
sons either affected by a disease or coming from a locality where
it prevailed. Quarantine is based on the assumption that the
disease is communicable from person to person, either by means
of the individual himself or of his effects. This view, however,
has been modified considerably in its application of late years,
and the period of isolation has been much diminished, even by
those who, holding the doctrine of contagion, should therefore
logically concede the theoretical efficacy of quarantine, but say
with De Chaumont;
“Whatever may be the final opinion respecting the portability
“ of the disease, we are bound to act as if it was perfectly ascer-
“tained. It is usually impossible to have rigid quarantine, for
“nothing short of absolute non-communication would be useful,
“and this is impossible, except in exceptional cases
“Then as the incubative stage can certainly last for ten
or twelve
“days, and there are cases on record where it has lasted for
“more than twenty, it is clear that quarantine, unless enforced
“for at least the last period of time, may be useless. The con-
“ stant evasions, also,
of the most strict cordon, renders such
“plans always useless.”
13
and the number of sick was so great as to render the usual duties
impracticable.
“The waywardness on board the British ships
of the disease
“was extraordinary; it spared the officers, who, partly by kind-
“ ness and sympathy, partly by remedies, seemed often able to
“fight the disease, or make the men think they did so.”
“ Almost suddenly the cholera ceased on board ship, the sur-
“vivors returned to their duties, all mention of the terrible tra-
“ gedy was dropped, and in a few days from the time when
“cholera had been at its height, the crews were ready to embark
“the troops and land them in the Crimea.”*
The great epidemic which broke out among the troops of the
army of Lord Hastings in India began on November the 7th,
1817, was in all parts of the camp on the gth, and reached its
height on the 17th. During the week in which it raged most
violently, 764 soldiers and 8000 camp followers died; the epide-
mic had ceased by the 22nd or 23rd of November.
An outbreak occurred in May, 1818, among the Nagpore subsi-
diary force. Between 70 and 80 cases were admitted the first
day, and many were found dead and dying about the camp.f
Another instance is the great outbreak at Kurrachee in 1846.
On Sunday evening, June 14th, there was a sudden change in
the atmosphere, the wind veered from south-west to north-east,
and a thick, lurid cloud darkened the air. Later on in the even-
ing cholera appeared in thirteen corps of the troops stationed
there; it increased in violence till the i6th, when 227 cases were
admitted, of which 186 died; after that date it gradually de-
clined, 814 cases and 442 deaths having occurred between the
15th and i8th (inclusive).
Without any premonitary symptoms, cholera appeared at
Peshawur, at five o'clock in the morning of May 17th, 1867;
from that day till the 23rd, the number of cases increased daily,
and after that date decreased gradually, the last case being ad-
mitted to hospital on the 3ist.f
*Kiiiglake ‘-Invasion of tlio Crimea.'’ N’ol. viii.
t <Juoted from Bryden. Cholera in the Bengal Presidency from 1817 to 1872.
14
body, and other measures that may tend to alleviate the suffer-
ings, moderate the symptoms, sustain the rapidly failing vital
energy, and give intelligent effect to the physician’s directions
generally.
I cannot here pretend to indicate the remedies or nutriment
that should be administered, or the local applications that should
be made. In all this you must be guided by the medical officer
under whose direction you work; but I can assure you that on
your watchful, skilful care and intelligent interpretation and ful-
lilment of his behests, the life of the patient may depend.
— ;
i6
5.
—
better chance of escape.
'I o change the localit\ is the bt.st o au se to pursue when
cholera attacks a body of men, such. lor example, as a regiment.
y.
—
That attendants on the sick do not sulier more than others.
g. —
I'hat irritating articles of diet, imripe fruit, tainted animal
footl, fish, fiesh or fowl, and saline aperients are liable, during
cholera prevalence, to liring on diarrhtea which may rapidly
pass into cholera.
g. — That fatigue, exhaustion, inteinpci. nee in alcoholic drinks,
—
ence extends when cholera threatens or has actually made its
appearance ?
worn in India.
Do all you can to secure personal cleanliness of body and
clothing. Avoid fatigue or exhaustion.
Be careful that all excreta are freely disinfected and re-
moved; the drain or sink into which they are thrown should be
well flushed with carbolic acid water. Use disinfectants freely
for clothing, rooms, and houses.
Whenever you detect any breach of these directions, do your
best by persuasion and advice, or by the intervention of sanitary
executive authority, to rectify them.
Endeavour to keep a good heart and a cool head be hopeful
;
hoods, it may not be possible for you to observe to the letter all
these directions; but at any rate remember and observe them as
nearly as you can. You must, under such circumstances, neces-
sarily be exposed to many hardships and risks, but it is a noble
Avork, worthy of your highest aspirations, and twice blessed, fur
it will, like mercy, bless those who give as well as those Avho
receive.
The Superintendents are emphatically to caution the Nurses
as to any neglect on their own part or on that of others of perfect
cleanliness of person and clothing, which should be carefully dis-
infected. This again, under the circumstances, will often be
very difficult, but do your best to ensure it, as far as possible.
You will, no doubt, see much that to your instructed eye is
suggestive of danger from insanitary conditions, which, alas, you
are unable to prevent. But jou may do a good deal, and what-
ever warning, advice and remonstrance can effect, you should
insist on. Do not wait for the actual advent of cholera, but try
and accomplish this before it comes.
I have already referred to the need for personal cleanliness,
and on this the Nurses should strenuously insist. The houses
should also be kept as clean and well-ventilated as possible; dust-
bins emptied frequently no decaying matter or dirt of any kind
;
21
is most desirable that all persons should know where to find it;
but in anticipation, the Nurse will do well to administer a dose of
some astringent such as the following, whenever diarrhoea appears
Pulv. aromat three drachms.
Sat volatile three drachms.
Tr. Catechu ten drachms.
Tr. Card. Co sixdrachms.
Tr. Opii one drachm.
Mist. Cret twent}'^ ounces.
Dose, —
loz. for an adult, ^oz. for a child 12 years, ^oz. for a
child 7 years, less for a younger child in proportion to age, after
each liquid motion.
Professor Notter says: —
“For the diarrhoea which precedes
“cholera, and for the early stages, to check it, I found nothing
“better than:
“Acid Sulp. dil fifteen minims.
“Tr. Opii.. five minims.
“Aq. menth. pip one ounce.
“and this might be safely left with a nursing sister.
“ If the comma bacillus is the cause, we know that it will not
“live in acid media. So there is good reason for prescribing that
“form of astringent.
“For like reason, acid drinks should be given, ad lib., to make
“up for the water passed off in the discharge from the bowels,
“and to relieve the kidneys, which become early involved.
“ found this the best treatment in the early stages myself.
I
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‘s.
CARLSBAD
AND
y old friend,
M Surgeon-Colonel Harvey,
President of the Calcutta Congress, having re-
quested me to contribute a paper on the advantages of
a visit to Carlsbad by Anglo-Indians who are suffering
from the effects of climate and tropical disease, 1 have
much pleasure in complying with his request, know-
ing from personal experience and observation of the
results to many who have gone there on my recom-
mendation that great benefit is often conferred, not
only on those who have had to leave India on sick
furlough, but on others who have retired from the service
and still suffer from the consequences of prolonged
sojourn in a hot and malarial climate.
It has always appeared to me that this most valu-
able of health resorts is neither sufficiently known nor
appreciated, and that erroneous impressions as to the
depressing and debilitating effects of the waters and
diet exist which better knowledge would probably
remove.
Carlsbad, like other health resorts, is not suitable to
all complaints, but for a large number of chronic
functional disorders, to which old Indians especially
are liable, it is often of great and enduring value. I
2 CABLSBAD AND ITS THERMAL WATERS
mer 66’5° F.; but in July and August there are days
of great heat as there are in many other places. In
the spring and autumn it is 47° F. in the winter
27° F. The prevailing winds are from the west
and north, the latter being cool and bracing in
summer.
FOR ANGLO-INDIANS. 3
1- 1-
Sprudel. Muhl. Schloss.
2- 2-
Sulphate of Potash 2564 7172 1-4645
Sulphate of Soda 18 216 17-961 17 2453
Chloride of Sodium 7-9156 7-869 7-5282
Carbonate of Soda 10-4593 10-868 9-6620
Carbonate of Lime 2870 0236 3-0668
Carbonate of Magnesia 0-9532 0-2641 0-3870
Carbonate of Prntoxyd. Iron ... 0-0215 0-0230 0-0176
Carbonate of Protoxyd. Mangan, 0-0046 0-0053 0 0053
Carbonate of Strontia 0-0061 0-0069 0-0046
Phosphate of Aluminium 0 0030 0-0025 0-0023
Phosphate of Lime 0-0015 0-0016 0-0030
Fluoride of Potassium ... 0-0276 0-0268 0-0291
Silicious Earth ... 0-5590 0-6190 0-7365
dilatation the
of stomach. In those forms of
albuminuria which take place as the result of abdominal
plethora and changes in the blood due to malarial
poisoning. In renal and vesical gravel in lithiasis ; ;
condi-
of the prostate gland, and in some hypersemic
In gouty condi-
tions of the womb and its appendages.
tions, whether expressed in affections of the
abdominal
or other viscera ; in arthritic effusions and in thickening
of the tissues and sheaths of the tendons
surrounding
in excema, and in fact, in any of the other
the joints ;
authorities, that
doubt, from the testimony of eminent
benefit may be derived.
But Carlsbad is to be especially^ recommended to
India or other
those who, after protracted residence in
recurrences
malarial climate, suffer frcm occasional
derangement ot
of malarial fever, with consequent
function and even alteration in the
normal condition
of liver, spleen and other
abdominal viscera ; who?
are tailing
without suffering from any positive disease,
distended condition
in health, have impaired digestion,
fatty deposit in the
of the abdomen, increasing
degeneration ot the
turn and a tendency to fatty
themselves 1 an-
muscular system generally, who find
much physical or meiffal
guid and depressed, unequal to
anaemia, suffer
exertion, shew indications of incipient
or gouty pains,
from dyspnoea, from rheumatic
congestion of the portal
irregular action of the bowels,
vessels— a state
system and distended hsemorrhoidal
aggravated by excesses
of thino-s, perhaps in some cases
of diet, or the neglect of
due precau-
or irregularities
of alcoholic stimulants.
tions as to the quantity or kind
early recourse
Such are the conditions in which an
selection of some inter-
to Carlsbad and a judicious
to the ordinary
mediate health resort before returning
benefit. Indeed,
mode of life are likely to confer organic
almost every European not the subject of
years in Bidia would do
disease, who has spent many
resources of Carlsbad before
well to avail himself of the
life which lies before
he enters upon the new course of
FOR ANGLO-INDIANS. 11
Sir William Aitken was born at Dundee on April 23, 1825, and
received bis early education in the Higb School of that town. He
commenced the study of medicine under his father, a medical man
inDundee, and by attendance in the wards of the Dundee Royal
Infirmary. In November, 1842, he matriculated in the University of
Edinburgh, where, after attending lectures in the faculty of arts,
and having complied with the requirements of the medical curriculum,
he took the degree of Doctor of Medicine in 1848, his thesis on a
pathological subject on that occasion gaining for him a gold medal.
He also became a Licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons of
Edinburgh in the same year. Thence he appears to have proceeded
to the University of Glasgow as Demonstrator of Anatomy under
Dr. Allen Thomson. This office he continued to fill in conjunction
with that of Pathologist to the Royal Infirmary of Glasgow up to
1855. Here he laid the foundation of that knowledge of disease
which procured for him the appointment as Pathologist to the
Hospitals of the Bosphorus, which were then filled by sufEerers
from the army in the Crimea. In association with the late Dr.
Lyon he published a report on the diseases of the Crimea, which
appeared in a Blue-book in 1856, and it is, and always will be, a
valuable work of reference in regard to the maladies which were
so fatal to the troops in that campaign.
On the foundation of the Army Medical School, which commenced
its existence in 1860 at Chatham (afterwards transferred to Netley),
and was an outcome of the experience of the Crimean War, Dr.
Aitken was made Professor of Pathology, an appointment for which
his early training and matured experience in the military hospitals
in the East peculiarly fitted him, and which his subsequent career at
Netley has abundantly justified. This duty he continued to perform
until April, 1892, when failing health compelled him to rest from
work. His final resignation of the chair had been fixed for the close
of the session in July, 1892 but renal disease, from which he had
;
for some time suffered, to the profound regret of his colleagues and
numerous friends, terminated his valuable life on June 25, 1892.
Of the value of Aitken’s work at the ikrmy Medical School, as well
as to medicine generally, it would be difficult to speak too highly. As
a teacher he was pre-eminently successful in his method of imparting
—
XV
knowledge ;
was scientific and practical, his demonstra-
his reasoning
tions lucid and convincing, and he must be gratefully remembered by
hundreds of medical oflBcers who owe much of their knowledge of
disease, its causes and results, to his teaching.
—
A friend and colleague of Dr. .Aitken writes “In the post-mortem,
:
room he was facile princeps. I never saw any one to compare with
him at work of this kind. It was a lesson none could forget to see
him conduct a post-mortem and hear his exposition of what he saw.
He had great powers of work, and was a student in his own way all
his life. His book held the field for many years as a student’s text-
book.” And, again, “ He was scrupulously honest as a writer strove ;
x\n
“
Medicine,” 1858 [this has reached its seventh edition], (15) On
the Growth of the Recruit and the Young Soldier ” [now in its
second edition]. (16) “ On the Doctrine of Evolution in its Applica-
tion to Pathology,” 1885-86. (17) “ On the Animal Alkaloids.”
Aitken was a man of somewhat reserved and reticent speech, but
what he said was pregnant with science and common-sense. He was
of a most kindly, genial nature, loyal to his profession, devoted to
his friends, and just to all. His pei’sonal character endeared him to
every one. His frank, straightforward mode of expressing his
opinions, tempered as they were by sound judgment and discretion,
made him respected and esteemed, and contributed, in no s ma ll
measure, to the formation of the reputation of one of that small but
remarkable group of men to whom the great Army Medical School
owes its rise, development, and success. Regretted universally by
friends and colleagues, it is in the great School of Military Medicine,
which owes him so much, that his loss will be most keenly felt.
His merits have not escaped some recognition. He was made a
Fellow of the Royal Society in 1873. In 1887 he received the honour
of knighthood. The Universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow, in
1888, conferred on him the degree of LL.D., whilst on the walls of
the ante-room at Netley is an excellent portrait presented by his
numerous friends, admirers, and pupils.
May his memory long continue to influence coming generations of
medical officers in the School he loved so well
J. F.
UAEEISON AND SONS, PEINTBBS IN OEDINAET TO HEE MAJESTY, ST. MAETIN’s LANE.
AVe are indebted to Sir Joseph Fayrer, a life-Iohg friend
of
Professor Huxley, for the following note on his life
character:
and
“It was with profound grief that I heard of the death
of
my old and much respected friend, T. H. Huxley. The loss
of the foremost biologist of this or any other country
will be
universally deplored, for he has for many years had a
pre-
dominant influence on the progress of biological science and
the expansion of scientific teaching which was not
surpassed
by even that of his friends, Darwin and Tyndall, and has con-
tributed beyond all others to the advancement of
natural
knowledge and the promotion of the scientific methods
of
investigation of the problems of life. To this end, indeed,
the whole strength of his surpassing intellect was
stead-
fastly, through good and evil report, devoted, and
the results
have been recorded in language so incisive and convincing
as to leave on all who have followed his teaching the
impres-
sion of incontrovertible truth, and the conviction that
in this
department of knowledge he was maestro di color die sanno. I
have always felt it to be a great privilege to have known him
so well during early life. The friendship and affection
in
which I held him never diminished, though after his de-
parture m 1846 I had no opportunity of seeing him again
until my return from India in 1872, when I had the gratlfica-
tion of finding that on his part the feeling was unchanged,
whilst on mine it was enhanced by the admiration with which
I regarded his great natural powers and the
unwearying
labour in scientific research which had raised him to the
pre-
eminent position he has since occupied.
“We were fellow students from 1844 until he joined the
fiiavy in 1846, and it was during that time
that I learnt to
recognise his great intellectual power and the keen interest
be took m the physiological lessons of Wharton Jones and
other teachers. It was not surprising that he took honours
at the London University, and it was with a feeling of
confi-
dence that I looked forward to a distinguished career for him
when he departed with Captain Owen Stanley in the Rattle-
snake on his scientific mission.
entered the naval service I have always felt proud
to think was due to my persuasion, for after
consultation one
day I urged him to apply to the Director-General of the Navy.
He did so, and the result was an appointment to Haslar, and
subsequently to the Rattlesnake. Doubtless had he selected
any oth^_ career the result would have been the same, but as
some of his earliest contributions to science arose out of the
expedition to the South Seas, one cannot but regard that as
haying in some degree determined the course and direction
of his future work.
,
inculcate veracity of thought and action, to subordi-
nate to It reasonable or unreasonable ambition for
scientific
fame, to develop and organise true scientific
education, and
to combat whatever might oppose it, were
his aspirations,
and that by which he hoped to be remembered by posterity,
io quote his own words : I should not count these things as
‘
that possibly the difficulties did not all arise from outside,
and that to a certain extent, perhaps, the obstacles might be
found within the Service itself, and that, if it were so, it
behoved the medical officers to see to it that such internal
causes should be removed. I reminded the young officers that
the social and educational influences of a great institution like
Netley are calculated to foster and develop (amongst other
things) that esprit de corps which so greatly conduces to
real stability in any department of the public services.
I pointed out also that the position of the military and
Indian medical officer offers such advantages as ought to
command a supply of the elite of our Universities and medical
schools. All this I repeat to-day ; and I am glad to think
that as time advances there has been, on the whole, a favour-
able change. Many men of high culture are competing for
the appointments, but indications are even now not wanting
of a doubting confidence, for I am told that the competition
is less keen than it has been still, the general tone and
;
upon him. This view, it would seem, could only have arisen
from a misconception of the true nature of a commission.
The idea that the title of Lieutenant, Captain, Major, or
Colonel could only he held by that particular branch of the
Service whose duty it is to direct the combative energies of
the soldier was surely a mistaken one, for it is in the power
of the Sovereign to confer such distinction on anyone, and it
is conferred on officers of the military service who have no
immediate connexion with mere combatant action, as is
amply demonstrated by the fact that the officers who control
the Commissariat, the Army Service Corps, nay, even the
band master, now can and do, hold substantive commissions
in one or other of those ranks. If it be considered necessary
and possible that these officers should be so commissioned, it
is difficult to understand why the same advantages should
have been withheld from the medical officers, who, being so
closely connected with all that concerns the health, disci-
pline, the well-being and effective condition generally of the
Army, need such warrant for their authority as much as do
those of any other department. The concessions that have
been made doubtless conduce to the interests of the Service by
placing the medical officer in a more assm’ed position and by
defining more clearly the substantive rank and authority which
he holds, though I must confess one has difficulty in appreciat-
ing the advantage of such a cumbrous title as that of
“Brigade-Surgeon-Lieutenant-Colonel.” Time, however,
will probably modify such complex designations. Invidious
distinctions implied in the terms “combatant” and “ non-
combatant ” can have but little real significance in these
days, when the records of almost every action fought or
position defended show how equally risks are shared by the
medical and the other officers, whilst the number of Victoria
Crosses worn by them is a curious comment on the use of the
term “ non-combatant ” (with its present meaning) as applied
to the medical officer. But let me repeat what I said on a
former occasion, which is that your military rank gives you
no title, nor does it call upon you in ordinary cases to assume
the place or duties of the combatant officer, and I hope I
need not even hint at the impropriety and bad taste of
assuming any position to which your own, as members of a
learned profession, should make you indifferent, for, what-
ever your military rank 7uay be, you are first of all meilical
men. Still, withal, you are soldiers, and it may happen, as it
often has done, that you have in an emergency to take the
place of your combatant brethren. Should it fall to your lot
—
this almost general rule has not been without exception. The
severance of my official relation with the school in no way
diminishes the interest I take in it and I look forward with
;
Winter
the
for
Observatory
Falmouth
at
other health resorts in England, the range in all these places
being much greater than it is in Falmouth. The mean aver-
age differenee of day and night temperature for the last three
winters was 8.6°, and, as Sir E. Sieveking has pointed out in
the British Medical Journal of December 14th, 1889, “To
those who wish to escape from the summer heat of other
localities, and to those who wish for an equable temperature
during the winter months, Falmouth offers attractions not
readily found elsewhere.” It is often urged that, admitting
its mildness and equability, the climate of Falmouth is
necessarily relaxing and enervating, but from my personal ex-
perience, which extends through the winter months, this is not
the case as compared with other places on the south coast.
With regard to moisture generally, the very conditions that
induce the mildness, that is, the proximity of the Gulf Stream
and the condensation resulting from the raised backbone of the
peninsula, naturally produce a greater rainfall, but the rain
when it does fall rarely continues for long, and the greater
part of most days is fine, while the water runs off or is
quickly absorbed by the porous and gravelly soil. As to
mists, those that occurred during my stay there were rare
and were sea mists. On no occasion did snow fall during
that winter, only twice was there hoar frost on the ground in
the early morning, whilst on only four occasions did the
thermometer fall below the freezing point. I am well aware
that this winter was a peculiarly mild one all over Great
Britain, but the relative equability claimed for the climate
of Falmouth will be shown by reference to the statistics of
other years of which two are given on the preceding page.
As an illustration of this continuous mildness of the
climate throughout the winter, I may say that with few
exceptions I was able to spend the greater part of the day out
at sea in an open sailing boat. Strong breezes, even
amounting to gales of wind, were not infrequent, but they
were rarely ever so severe as to prevent my going out, whilst
three or four miles from the shore it was quite perceptible
that not only was the sea water warmer than the air, but that
the air itself was warmer than that on shore. Throughout
the whole of this time, notwithstanding frequent exposure to
strong winds and to wetting by sea water, my health steadily
— —
improved, and by the time I left early in April traces of
bronchitis had almost entirely disappeared.
Walking down to the boat in the morning, passing
gardens in which rhododendrons and camellias were bloom-
ing in the depth of winter, one forgot that one was still in
England, and it was a subject of congratulation to find that
such conditions existed in our own islands.
Amidst all these advantages it must be admitted that the
east wind, when it did blow, was not exempt from the evils
which generally characterise it, but even these seemed to be
somewhat tempered, and, though unpleasant enough, making
it sometimes desirable that an invalid should remain in
the
house, it was by no means the prevalent wind, as will be seen
from the preceding tables, which I owe to the kindness of Mr.
Kitto, the director of the Observatory, and which also indi-
cate the chief climatic conditions which prove the fitness of
lalmouth for a winter residence.
he noted that in the winter of 1894-95, cold year,
uie lowest point attained by the thermometer was 21.8° in
J? ebruary and the mean minimum in February, the coldest
,
8
month, was 30.8°, and the mean maximum 38.6°; while
in
1895-96, a mild winter, the lowest temperature reached
was
30.2 in January, and the mean minimum in January,
the
coldest month, was 41.1°, and the mean maximum 48.5°.
th® winter of 1894-95 the east wind blew for five
days in
November, 3 in December, 6 in January, 13 in February, and
3 in March while in 1895-96 it blew i day in November, in
;
Falmouth 47 8 -
°
44 3
°
44 1
° °
4 S'i°
' -
Penzance ° 44 7
-
Soilly “
49 8 - 46.7° 46-3° 46.9° 46.4°
Cannes S2.6° 46.3° 48.0° 48.8° °
Montpellier ° ° 57 0
-
... SO' 7 45 7
- 42.1° 44.8° 48-9°
Mentone 54 - 0° 49.1° 48.7° 49.1° 52-8°
Nice 53 8
°
- 48.5° 47.1° 46.2° °
Pau 51 8
-
“It was with most profound I'egret that I heard of the death
of my dear and much valued friend and colleague, George D.
Pollock. I had seen him a few days previously, when, though
he made no complaint about his health, I was struck with
the marked change in his appearance still I little thought I
;
DELIVERlil) BY
IN
^riglxtoii
THE SOUTHERN PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED.
130, North Street.—85,809
ADDRE55
TO PRIZE WINNERS OF MUNICIPAL SCHOOLS OF
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, AND ART,
IIEUVEUEP IIV
meet the wants of tliose wlin wish tf» supplement the prac-
tical side of their daily occupation by a scientific knowledge
of the theory on wliich it is based. The programme, how-
ever, is so wide and varied, that to all over 14 years of a^e,
Avhose time, means, and opportunities are limited, the oc-
casion is offered of improving' their general education and
of acquiring knowledge of such subjects as n ay be specially
Sind that in so doing it will promote not only the moral,, but
the physical welfare of the people.
To those who have tried for but not won prizes^ I wonh'l
pay, be not discouraged ;
your next efforts will probably be
more successful, and, at any rate, the real prize is the know-
ledge you are attaining and will continue to attain, if you
persevere. The possibilities at your age are gi*eat. Study,
perseverance, and determination are sure in the end to pro-
duce their natural result, success.
important.
me refer to some
But in further illustration of this let
in 1858, when he was
remarks made by Charles Dickeais
Association of Lanca-
o-ivinp:the prizes at the Institutional
Manchester. After certain depre-
sliire^and Cheshire, in
comments upon Literaiy Societies and Mechanics
ciatory
he led to express his admiration and
Institutes in general, is
‘
Those' twin gaolers of the daring heart.
Low birth and iron fortune.’
not by
‘•That the questions, in fact, had been replied to,
life was -with
persons like himself, the business of whose
of whose life
writing and with liooks, but men the business
was vdth tools and machinery.” He then goes on to illus-
“ There
trate this by describing some of the prize-winners.
not read at eighteen,
isa piecer at mule-frames, who could
in which
who is now Arithmetic teacher in the Institution
12
the outcome ol the necessities of the age and the demand for
the principle that success will depend rather upon your own
personal exertions than ujion your environment, though
13
-—so much for you and equipped you with means of main-
taining — I trust with success— ^the struggle for existence,
14
', f
Js'.. -
] A - .V ^ "•^y
'-'J!^^^'-
. ? ^ '
-
•
••'
W' -
^
*1 \'
''
!^Co: ; .
>
.-
' • 1
ww*-
/
.
Dbputy-Surgeon-Gehekal S. B. partridge,
C.I.E., Q.H.S.
Bengal Medical Service (retired).
On May nth, In the presence of relatives, brother officers,
and friends, the mortal remains of Samuel Bowen Partridge
were laid to rest in the cemetery at Norwood.
This distinguished medical officer was born at Cardiff in
1828 and was educated at King’s College, London, where he
had a most brilliant career, during which he gained many
prizes. After passing the Royal College of Surgeons he
entered the East India Company’s service on the Bengal es-
tablishment as an assistant surgeon in the year 1852. Shortly
after his arrival in India he was ordered to Burmah to join
the Bengal Field Force, and after performing excellent service
in a variety of ways, on his return to Bengal he served as
civil surgeon and also with a cavalry regiment. On the out-
break of the mutiny in 1857 he served with a cavalry regiment
in Oude, and when the siege of the Residency of Lucknow
commenced he served throughout the whole of that eventful
period in Dr. Fayrer’s house in the garrison, where his energy,
activity, and professional knowledge were of the greatest
benefit. He was present with the expedition under Colonel
Burmester, in which several officers were killed, and he also
accompanied the ill-fated expedition to Chinhut, where he
had a narrow escape of losing his life. Subsequently he dis-
tinguished himself as field-surgeon in the operations under
the Commander-in-Chief at the recapture of Lucknow. For
these services he received the brevet promotion of surgeon,
was allowed to count a year’s service, and received the thanks
of Government In general orders.
The state of his health after all these exceptional services
rendered it necessary for him to return to England. After a
short stay, during which he became a Fellow of the Royal
College of Surgeons, he resumed his duties :n India, and was
then appointed to the Medical College of Calcutta, in which
he had on a former occasion officiated for a short time, as
Professor of Anatomy and Surgeon of the Medical College
Hospital. He was also an Examiner in the University of
Calcutta, a member of the Senate, and for a short time
President of the Medical Faculty of the University. Subse-
quently, on the retirement of Dr. Fayrer, he succeeded to his
appointment as First Surgeon and Professor of Surgery in
the Medici College Hospital, which appointment he con-
tinued to hold with the greatest distinction. In addition he
had an extensive practice in Calcutta until 1880, when he
retired from the service.
After his return to England Deputy Surgeon-General Part-
ridge was appointed member of the India Medical Board at
the India Office, where he rendered most valuable service,
until loss of sight made his resignation of that appointment
necessary, to the deep regret of his colleagues and friends.
The news of his death will be received in India, as it has
been in this country, with the greatest sorrow. He was held
in the highest esteem by everyone who knew him ; no
man was ever more deservedly loved and respected than he
was. His intellectual powers were great, and he was as much
characterised by the breadth as by tlie accuracy of his know-
ledge most laborious in his studies, most persevering in
;
Richard Quain, wlio died on March 13, 1898, at the age of 81, was
born on October 30, 1816, at Mallow-on-the-Blackwater, co. Cork, in
which county his family was one of the best known and most
respected. His father, John Quain, was a younger brother of
Richard Quain, of Ratheahy, whose sons, Jones and Richard, were
distinguished for their knowledge of anatomy and surgery, and John
Richard as a lawyer and judge in the Court of Queen’s Bench. The
father of the subject of this notice married, in 1815, Mary, daughter
of Michael Burke, of Mallow, a member of an ancient and honoured
Irish family.
After early education at Cloyne, Richard Quain was apprenticed to
a medical practitioner in Limerick, where he acquired a knowledge of
many of the essentials of medical practice. In 1837 he entered the
University College of London, where his two cousins were, the one
Demonstrator, the other Professor of Descriptive and Practical
Anatomy, from whom he seems to have received much sympathy and
valuable instruction. In this School of Medicine he studied with
much diligence, and his perseverance and keen powers of observation
obtained for him many distinctions.
In 1840 he graduated as M.B. of the University of London, obtain-
ing high honours in physiology, surgery, and midwifery. He con-
tinued to gain much experience in the appointments of Resident
Surgeon or Physician at the hospital, and in 1842 he obtained the
degree of M.D. at the Loudon University, receiving a gold medal and
certificate of special proficiency. He was soon afterwards elected a
Fellow of University College.
^U
Burrows, Sir George Edward Paget, Sir Henry Acland, and John
Marshall, none of them more devoted to the duties or more efficient
as President of the Council than himself.
Sir Richard Quain’s literary work and his researches into various
departments of medical science were, if not numerotis, very important.
As a member of the Royal Commission appointed in 1865 to con-
sider the question of rinderpest or cattle plague, in which he was
associated with Lord Spencer, Lord Cranborne (now Marquess of
Salisbury), Lord Sherbrook, Dr. Lyon (now Lord) Playfair, Dr.
Edmund Parkes, and Dr. Bence Jones, he took a prominent part,
and was an earnest advocate of the stamping-out measures recom-
mended by the Commission, which, though strongly opposed at the
time, subsequent events have proved to have had the result of saving
large sums of money to the nation. He w'as a frequent contributor
to the ‘
Saturday Review,’ to the ‘
Lancet,’ and other medical
”
journals ;
whilst his treatise on “ Fatty Degeneration of the Heart
in the ‘
Transactions of the Medical and Chirurgical Society ’
for
vm
1850, expanded into a more elaborate article in bis Dictionary of ‘
IIaubison and Sons, Printers in Ordinary to Her Majesty, St. Martin’s lane.
;
ox:
INAUGURAL ADDRESS,
By Sir JOSEPH FAYRER, Bart., K.C.S.I., LL.D.Edin.
& St. And., M.D.Edin., F.R.C.P.Eng., Q.H.P., F.R.S.
(Fellow.)
Provincial Examinations.
8 Examinations Sanitary Inspectors and Practical
Sanitary Science ... ... ... ... ... 316
Congress and Exhibition at Leeds.
6 Sectional Meetings ... ... ... ... ... 706
8 Conferences ... ... ... ... ... ... 850
3 Addresses and Lectures ... ... ... ... 956
Exhibition open for 23 days, at which a number of
Lectures and Demonstrations were given ... 75,790
ance, and vested interests stood in the way of progress, and but
little effort was made to correct the one or remove the others
government looked on with indifference the people knew little
;
and thought less of the efficacy of pure air, pure water, cleanly
and uncrowded dwellings, temperance, and other conditions
which are now well known to be essential to health. They had
no idea that infective disease is but too frequently the scourge
of uncleanliness, overcrowding, and disregard of simple laws of
health.
Under the influence of such reformers as Chadwick, Parkes,
Richardson, Sitnon, Southwood Smith, Sutherland, Bristow,
Buchanan, Netten Radcliff, De Chaumont, Corfield, Thorne,
Notter, Seaton, L. Parkes, Ballard, Power, A. Hill, Armstrong,
Russell, Littlejohn, Cameron, Smith, Ransom, and others, to
say nothing of Sanitary Engineers such as Rawlinson, Galton,
Rogers Field, Hawkesley, Mansergh, etc., measures which were
regarded as mere theories or fads of no practical value, are now
accepted as of cardinal importance. Statesmen have learnt
to realise that Sanitary Science comes well within the sphere
of practical politics, and that it is an important part of
the duty of executive governments, whether general or local,
to protect the people fx’om disease which may be prevented or
controlled.
Numerous Acts of Parliament have been passed, such as
the Public Health Act of 1875, Rivers Pollution Prevention
Act 1876, Public Health (Water) Act 1878, Acts for Housing
342 INAUGUEAL ADDRESS.
*
health matters is still under the control of the Vestries. * *
In the district of for example, in this year of the
Diamond Jubilee (wherein the greatness and majesty of the
British Empire has been so convincingly exhibited,) the streets
of one of the wealthiest portions of London are left unswept
and uncared for from Saturday to Monday in each week. No
matter how high the temperature, or how filthy the streets may
be, the streets- of probably the wealthiest disti’ict in the Metro-
* * * *
polis of the Empire are made dangerous to health.
Some of the most influential of the residents have entreated
and protested in vain. The intelligent foreigner, to his sur-
prise and disgust, may see in the streets of on any
Sunday when the principal residents are at home all day,
fermenting filth and even dead cats, dirty papers and various
kinds of offal, which offend the senses and infect the atmosphere
to the danger of the inhabitants. Such a state of affairs is as
shameful as it is unaccountable.’'
He might have added a paragraph upon the abominable
and insanitary practice of sending out the vestry dust-carts
to take away the house refuse at all times of the day. This
to the Native Army and jail and civil population. The enquiry
having to deal with a large body of men the conditions of
whose lives were Avell known, a vast amount of reliable infor-
mation was obtained and it Avas ascertained as one result of
;
1886 ... 15-8 per 1000 1891 ... 15-89 per 1000
1887 ... 14-20 1892 ... 17-07 99
1890 . 13-54 99
1895 ... 15-26 99
„ 1891 35 35
15*44 55
„ 1892 33 33
14*97 35
,, 1893 53 35
10*29 53
„ 1894 35 35
10*76 35
„ 1895 33 33
11*60 53
„ 1891 31*89 53
„ 1892 36*83 55
„ 1893 25*01 55
„ 1894 31*87 55
„ 1895 91
27*61 55
—
more importance that we should know the conditions
all
under which this cause becomes effective. It is not enough
that we know the seed, but it is necessary that we should also
know the nature of the soil, the meteorological and other con-
ditions which determine whether it is to grow and multiply or
to x’emain inert and harmless. If one can learn how to destroy
the seed or sterilize the soil in which it attains its full develop-
ment, or if we can neutralise the favouring conditions and so
prevent or impede its growth, then we shall have solved a great
problem, and conferred a lasting benefit on mankind.
Much of this has already been done, and the splendid work
of Pasteur, Davaine, Koch, Lister, B. Saunderson, Sims Wood-
head, and their followers, has added and is almost daily adding
to the knowledge which confirms the hope that the consumma-
tion so devoutly to be desired will be achieved, that zymotic
disease will be minimised, that life will be prolonged nearer to
the natural term of human existence, and that man, in short,
will no longer be subject to the curse of dying before he has
reached the prime of life.
It cannot be doubted that The Sanitary Institute has already
done excellent work, and has contributed its share to the
advance^ which public health has made since its foundation.
Tlie Spii’it of Hygeia is abroad, and measures for preserving
health and preventing disease, which at no very distant period
in the past were looked on as mere hypotheses, are now, thanks
to the teaching of this Institute and others of a similar
character, and notwithstanding the obstacles to research arising
out of ill-considered sentimental opposition, regai'ded as of vital
importance,^ and an integral part of the basis of the system of
administration on which the public health depends.
I cannot conclude this address without expressing a hope
that the proceedings of this Congress now assembled may add
largely to the influence of the work of The Sanitary Institute,
and widely diffuse the opinions and teaching of the numerous
men of science who are associated here and elsewhere in the
crusade against insanitation, and in the great humanitarian
project of furthering not only the health, bnt the moral and
material welfare of our own country and of all the world.
S[R Joseph FayRer said: Having com- £ would postpone it until the boy’s
pitted the most intere.sting and important mental culture has been so far advanced by
part ot the duty conlided to me, that of other well-known and accepted means, such
ilistributing the prizes, I will now, with your Classics and Mathematics, as to fit him to
jiermission, make a few remarks which seem assimilate and make proper use of them and
to me appropriate to the occasion which has other technical branches of knowledge. Let
brought us together to-day, I desire to oie now say a few words to the younger
—
thank the governing body for the distinction portion of my audience a very few, but, as
—
conferred on me by inviting me to preside £ think, important words which I trust they
over this meeting, to assure them that it has -^vill lay to heart and ponder over, not only
given me great pleasm’e to do so, and that it now or when their thoughts revert to their
is a source of sincere gratihcation to offer my schooldays, but always, as they make their
hearty congratulations on the marked pro- way in life, whatever conditions that life
gress and success of the School, results may assume. I especi.ally congratulate those
which, it is well known, are due not only to to whom I have had the pleasure of handing
t'.ie judicious administratiou of the govern- prizes. I syni£3athise with the feelings
ing body, but also to the earnest, zealous, naturally aroused by success, but I trust that
and able tuition and m.anagement of the these will not beget over-confidence or an
Head Master and his colleagues. No one undue sense of superiority, or involve relasa-
can have watched the progress of the College tion of effort, but rather prove an incentive
for the last few years, during which it has to further exertion. A clever writer has
made such rapid strides, without feeling a quite recently said, “strength is shewn by
deep sense of obligation to them for their self-suppression rather than by self-glorifica-
.admirable work, which has not only re-' tion,” and let me add that the winning of
established the ancient prestige of the School, prizes, though most commendable, is not an
l)ut justifies the feeling of confidence with infallible proof of possession of the qualities
which its future is. anticipated. This must, which lead to success in after life. You all
be a subject of gratification not only to; know the fable of the hare and the tortoise,
Leamington and to the parents of the boys! and can appreciate the moral ! I do not in
who are educated in the College, but to all the least undervalue the efforts of those who
— —
M ho are interested and who is not ? in the £iave distinguished themselves on the con-
;
welfare of that most important of our trary, I applaud them, and regard the win-
national institutions, a public school. W e ning of a prize in open competition as a
have heard with great interest and satisfac- subject for legitimate pride. Bat I would
tion the report of the Head Master, and the remind you, in the words of the writer
•
results of the Oxford and Cambridge Exam- already referred to, “that the man who tries
ination, which prove that the boys have and succeeds is one degree less of a hero
attained not only a high standard of know- than the man who fails and yet goes on try-
ledge, but that they have been well taught, ing ” — words of consolation and encourage-
and that the moral and intellectual training ment for those who, though doing their best,
has been of a high order. The curriculum, have for the present failed to win prizes,
moreover, shews that education in the truest The unsuccessful competitors have no reason
sense is the object aimed at, rather than the to be discouraged. The prizes missed this
accumulation of facts which, however useful year may be won the next, and failure may
t rey may be in other ways, are of little value do good by inciting to increased effort and
as a means of general culture, of disciplining to the recognition and correction of defects
the mind, of preparing it for higher objects, which are remediable by introspection and
or of making that most desirable of all self-discipline. The m.ain object of your
things, a gentleman, and of fitting the young life here is education. This does not mean
for the emergencies of life, and, above all, cr imming or the winning of prizes, but that
of teaching them how to learn. I, for one, training whicli cultivates alike mind and
confess that in these days of competition, body, and fits you for the duties and respon-
Avhen subjects are apt to be selected and sibilitios of life. And this, though a£jjjlicable
tauglit rather with reference to their com- generally, is so specially in the formation of
mercial value than their fitness as a means of the .attributes, character and qualification
mental discipline, I sympathise with those which make an Englisli gentleman, a title
who stearlily oppose and resist the growing which I trust you all not only claim now,
tendency to disregard or depreciate the tried but will maintain .and do justice to in the
and aj)proved system of education which is future. Lord Salisbury recently made the
well known to have been so elfectual and fallowing remarks when doing honour to the
successful in times past in our public schools, ac'.iievements of one who has greatly distin-
Such,. I ,am glad to see, is the spirit of this gushed himself — “The Egyptian Army,”
school, and such I trust it m.ay continue to s ai 1 the Prime Minister, “as it has issued
be. No one, I hope, will for a moment think from the hands of Sir Evelyn Wood, Sir
that I undervalue the teaching of Natural fi'rancis Hrenfell and the Sirdar, is a magni-
Science and other kindred subjects. On thedi3ent specimen of the creative power of the
contrary 1 value it highly, in its right ])lace,l English leader. We do not reflect on it.
—
awards,
Sir Joseph Fayrer having distributed the
in
remarked that the school commenced its career
o
and
1824 under the designation of the Classical
at all. ’
On the other hand, they should not
I I
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X3 (?r 5
I- . ObCi
Falmouth High School.
SIR JOSEPH FAYRER ON EDUCATION.
FKIZK DISTlilBUTION.
Sir Joseph Fayrer, who received a cordial
welcome, said It has given Lady Fayrer and
myself much pleasure to be present on this
occasion, and to assist at the interesting ceremony,
which, whilst it marks the conclusion of a year's
work, commemorates the progress made in this
school during that period. It has also afforded us
an opportunity of becoming acquainted with the
methods of teaching, and also of estirhating by the
results the satisfactory character of the adminis-
tration of the school. It is very gratifying to hear
so encouraging a report of its success, to know
that the school is steadily increasing in public
confidence, and that within the last three or four
yearsits numbers have nearly doubled. — (Applause.)
This is a subject for congratulation, not only to
the teachers and the taught, but to the community
of 'Falmouth generally, and especially to the
parents and friends, who must naturally feel a
deep sense of obligation to the accomplished lady
and her colleagues, whose earnest, increasing, and
skilful labours have contributed so largely to
develop its present high state of eflSoiency to infuse
confidence into all who are interested in its welfare
and to justify the anticipation of still further
success. I observe that, notwithstanding its com-
paratively recent establishment, the school has
given marked evidence of its capabilities, Students
are prepared for the Cambridge local examinations,
and some have already passed the higher local with
honours. Till now, outside examiners have not
examined except in drawing, when the results were
most creditable but it is to be hoped that as the
;
Q 9
<
k ;
is
i
Speech at the Adult school at Falmouth March 27 1899
ted that I should visit the school and see for myself
what it is doing.
1. -n ‘
-’t
j.
depend
year.
might have done for many who never had such oppor-
I
Institutions as this.
hope that you will in the future look back with gra-
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4.
CASTLE-DOUGLAS
COTTAGE HOSPITAL.
THE OPENING CEREMONY.
SPEECH BY SIR JOSEPH FAYRER.
Sir Joseph Fajrer, who was accorded a very like the quality of mercy, it is twice
hearty reception, said it gave him great pleasure ‘it blesseth lum that gives, and him that
takes,
giving to
to be permitted to take part in the proceedings of They might q^uestion the e.vpedieiicy ot
that meeting, and assist on, that interesting occa^some of the objects good enough in themselves — but he
sion of the inauguration of an institution which submitted to them as worthy of support,
was calculated to be of so much benefit to the thought he was not wrong in saying that no mis-
people of this district. (Applause.) He had to giving need either stint or limit nieir generosity
congratulate the founders and supporters of the i'^re. Let thein hope that the patriotic and
p^hil-
by the progressive increase of such institutions as j^gg jfg significance. (Laughter.) Most cottage
hospitals were for severe surgical and medical
w juld have to rencrt to Egypf 4000 y^rs a^, gJ^ggg^ though there were a few for infectious
7 I
later to Greece, Rc me, and so downwards to the diseases, and a few were special and for children,
crusades and through the iniddle ages, when they bnf children might well be admitted to all. As
associated with religious in- finance, Mr vacher, an English surgeon, in a
stitutions; but this would be impossible on the p^pcj. read at the Chicago Congress in 1893, said
present occasion. If they took up the thread of
^bat whilst most were dependent on voluntary
their history about the period of the Reformation contributions or endowments, a few were wholly
it would bring them to the time when hospitals supported by local rates, and nearly all
began to exist ^separate fro™, independent charged for the maintenance of the patients, gen-
of, though quite in sympathy with, the Church, gj.gUy from 2s 6d to lOs weekly. It was well, he
and it was then they would find the great en- gJ^icb that half the income should be derived from
dowed hospitals beginiung to perform their irn- jQcal subscriptions, in order to keep up interest
portant services to suffering humanRy. Jo^t R ^bg hospital, and a well-managed one should
was not till a much later period that they saw h Lf w get about two-thirds of its X- 4- 4-
i4-ei
income from
T YiirxTVi
r\ 4"
thisa
T
differed from i
p „j should be .a reception room, bath room, operating
this period also lhE>t, ®°^*^®°®,.^®®P
g t room, dispensary, matron's sitting-room, two bed-
.
V'
L- medical attendance, seemed to be all that
fats, without stmt or scrap e, to |men ot every „„gj.v
.
iOtiituarp
recommended
No medical officer in the service has been more strongly benefit of your
than yourself, and I am truly desirous of obtaining the
services and your skill. . . . y-t i
<2 , I i*~cy
look, in one direction at least, for impulses which should absolute necessity of giving practical effect to these reforms,
give impetus and continuity to further advance in working
for without them, whatever they cost, and whatever efforts
might be made in other directions, no ultim.ite success
out that which would enable Falmoutfa to fulfil purposes
would accrue. Difficulties might stand in the way,'but they
for which by nature it was so admirably designed. were only such as had existed and been dealt with satis-
Although one might not feci justified in anticipating iactorily in places less favoured by nature than Falmouth,
bet it be hoped that the spirit of jirogrcss and
iny great revival of the shipping and commercial pros- enterprise
would be no less potent here than it had been elsewhere
perity, everything jointed the direction of The inhabitants might rest assured that the money ex-
that for which nature had so admirably designed Fal- pended on it would be a sound investment and certain of
mouth, a health resort of undoubted m.erit, which might
;
Its reward. (Hear, hear.) He went on to express his
oe favourably contrasted with places abroad, now so latistaction at the fact that the State, while recognising
^
HEALTH RESORTS.
BY
LONDON
Printed at the Office of the British Medical Journal,
429, Strand, W.C.
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THE HILL STATIONS OF INDIA AS
HEALTH RESORTS.
I TH,TNK I can hardly better fulfil the mandate of your
esteemed President, Dr. Ivor Murray, to give an address to
this Society than by inviting your attention to those moun-
tain regions which play so important a part in the social and
physical economy and well-being of our countrymen in India,
and which, under the designation of hill stations, are familiar,
by name at least, to all who have any knowledge of the con-
ditions of life in that country.
Possibilities of Acclimatisation.
on the east and the Arabian Sea on the west, its physical
characters, comprising lofty mountain ranges rising in the
north to the abodes of eternal snow, elevated plateaux and
deserts, noble rivers and estuaries, vast plains formed by their
basins and deltas, extensive forest tracts, jungles, and swamps
invest it with peculiar interest from climatic and hygienic
points of view, especially as regards the alien race who now
control its destinies and to whom its future development and
welfare seem to be committed.
India proper is a vast triangle with its apex at Cape Comorin
and its base in the Himalayas. Its extreme length is 1,900
miles, its breadth at the base about 2,000 miles. It is situated
between the 66th and 104th meridian of East longitude and
the 8th and 35th parallel of North latitude. It is over 1,250,000
square miles in extent, contained within a coast line of about
4,000 miles and a land boundary of over 5,000 miles. The
natural divisions are
1. The Himalayan and Sub- Himalayan
region.
2. The Indo-Gangetic basin and deltas.
3. The peninsula pi’oper formed by the elevated'plateau of the
Deccan
bounded on each side by the Ghauts and the littorals between them and
the ocean.
The Himalayan range extends for about 1,750 miles, cres-
centially,N.W. and S.E., with a breadth of from >50 to 250
miles. The mean height is from 16,000 to 20,000 feet, and
there are several high points, amongst them Kinchinjunga
28,176 feet, and Everest 29,002 feet, the highest measured
peak in the world. The Sub-Himalayan region consists of
ranges separated by broad valleys, bounded in part on the
south by the Siwalik range and the Terai. It is in the lower
ridges of this range of hills, at elevations up to 7,000 feet, that
many of the hill stations lie.
The Inio Gangetie plain or Hindostan proper which
separates the Himalayas from Southern India, forms the
richest and most populous parts of the empire.
The great
rivers Indus, Ganges, and Brahmaputra water this
region and
contribute to its formation.
Tropical or Peninsular India is bounded on the north
by the
Vindhyan system of hills, consisting of various ranges from
1,500 to 4,000 feet, which extend for nearly 800
miles from east
to west, and indude also the Aravalli,
Kaimoor, Satpura, and
other ranges. The Eastern Ghauts form
rather a descent
littoral than a distinct mountain
range. They extend along part of the
east coast with an
average elevation of 1,500 feet and occasional
high peaks, with
ground between them and the ocean,
ihe Western Ghauts extend from near the Tapti
river on the
^8 own tlie coast to Cape Comorin, with an average height
<-0 between 4,000 and 5,000 feetfas
fit Mahableshwar.
at Between these three ranges the peninsula
IS raised into the plateau of
the Deccan. It has an
3.000 feet, a region of open valleys
isolated peaks here and there, and
raimes^of ’ the most important are the Nilgiris,
whose
wboflP highestf point is
Dodabetta, 8,760 feet.
great slopes of drainage, into the Bay of
Benpn^i^ n^n®+b'^®
®“® Arabian Sea on the other.
TW® B f
receives the Ganges, Brahmaputra,
MahaJartdi
^^“'''‘'ry, and others, whilst
the Arabian ^ "^«c«*ves the Indus, Nerbudda, Tapti, and
some Sheri
3
feet, the large amount of 600 inches falls, the largest rainfall
known in the world whilst at the corresponding latitude on
;
Hill Colonies.
In such a variety and different elevations, with
of climates
great swamps and deltas on the one hand, and arid, dry,
sandy plains on the other, with an almost universal presence
of malaria and great solar heat, all those conditions exist
which give rise to the well-known forms of tropical disease,
render the plains of India unsuitable to be the permanent
home of the European, and emphasise the expediency of seek-
ing sites in the more elevated regions where Europeans may
find immunity from them. Many such stations have now
become health resorts, of which the advantages are very
great, not only in preserving the health of those yet unaffected
by the climate of the plains, but for invalids who, without
being the subjects of organic disease, have suffered from the
wearing effects of climate and work, and in some cases for
those convalescent from certain tropical diseases, thus ob-
viating the necessity for long and extensive voyages and pro-
longed absence from duties.
In considering the question of hill stations, it is to be re-
membered that the welfare of upwards of 100,000 Europeans
4
l8 concerned. A ve^ large number of these are destined
to
spend a great part but not the whole of their lives in
India,
the utmost importance for the preservation
fu of
their health and vigour to utilise those localities in
this object may be to so great an extent attained.
which
for and adoption of others and the
The search
endeavour to improve bv
sanitation or by any other means the condition
of those now
existing, have always seemed to me worthy
of the
and consideration of all interested in the welfare of attention
the com-
munity.
In some of the hill stations, more especially those
to the
south, at e^vations between 4,000 and 7,000
feet, a certain
number of Europeans have settled but sufficient time has
;
not elapsed to show how far this commencement of
colonisa-
tion may develop and ultimately succeed. For those who
have assured means of living and who are not solely dependent
professions or labours it seems probable enough
that the results may be satisfactory. It also seems
possible
that the various industries connected with tea, coffee
and
cinchona planting and minerals may afford the means of
sub-
sistence, notwithstanding the competition of native
labour,
and so in time European communities of considerable extent
may arise and flourish, producing men fltted to carry on work
in the plains, returning at intervals to their
homes in the
more elevated regions. But this remains to be proved.
The great proportion, however, of Europeans who live in
India conduct the commerce, government, and other
arffi
would still have to be imported from Europe,
^d I do not say that the necessity for occasional
return to
ever be entirely obviated, for cases must occur in
which this will be necessary, not only for recovery from
disease or for the re-establishment of perfect health, but for
moral and social reasons. Still, I am under the impression
that full advantage has never been taken of these hill stations,
and it is satisfactory to know that they are capable of consider-
able extension. I may here express a hope that those who are
in a position to do so will endeavour to bring about the reali-
sation of that which would certainly be of beneflt to our race
m Iiidia. I can hardly, indeed, imagine a more profltable
subject for the consideration of a Society such as this, whose
opinion would carry so much weight.
_
One obstacle to the progress and success of such colonisa-
tion would be found in the limited area of the elevated table-
lands and their intersection by deep valleys, but this is not
universal. There are regions more promising in this respect
example, the Khasia and Jyntea Hills, between Bengal
andj
Assam, where_ the elevated plateaux are broader and
more extensive, with undulating ground, at a height that
would be favourable to the European constitution. The late
Inspector-General Maclelland, an observer of great scientifle
acumen, in discussing this subject, writes of these hills :
The elevations,more about the centre of the tablelands, are broad and
extensive downs, with favourable soil and plentiful supplies of water, with
coal and other resources at hand suitable to the enterprise of Europeans,
which seem to leave nothing to be wished for in regard to this locality,
but greater facilities of communication in order to render it all to be
desired.
In this I thoroughly concur, having known this part of the
country, and being much struck with the general character of
that between Cherra and Shillong, and its aptitude for this
purpose. The greater facilities for communication in these
days by rail and steam are gradually diminishing the objec-
tions at that time considered to be inseparable from its re-
mote position. He says of another region :
Hill Stations.
Considering, however, how little was known of the hill
climates of India half a century ago, it is interesting to note
the number of instances in which they are now resorted to, and
to learn what service they have rendered both to the civil
and military population. Since the late Sir Eanald Martin
urged the attention of Government to the matter, and pointed
out the importance of locating the European troops as much
as possible at elevated regions, the number of hill sites at
which the British army is stationed has greatly increased, and
their vital statistics contrast favourably with those of India
generally, the death-rates being respectively about 14 and 23
per 1,000 in 1897, an unusually sickly year, the latest
officially reported. According to the last report of the Sani-
tary Commissioner with the Government of India, of the
68,000 European soldiers now in India, there are 3,000 in con-
valescent dep6ts and hill sanatoria, and 7,000 are stationed in
the hills. I am inclined to think this number might be in-
creased. The facilities of communication are now so much
R
greater than they were, say, at the time of the Mutiny, that
there would be little difficulty in getting at them in any
sudden emergency.
Time does not permit me to do more than a brief descrip-
tion of a few of the typical hill stations of the Himalayas, of
the Ghauts and Vindhyan range, and of those more, southern
regions where the two systems of the Ghauts unite, forming
the great mass of the Nilgiri hills. The chief hill stations of
—
popular resort are in the extra-tropical districts that is, the
Himalayas, Dalhousie, Dharmsala, Marri, Abbottabad,
Thandiana, Simla, Missouri, Landour, Rainkhet, Naini Tal,
Almorah, Darjeeling, CherraPunh, Shillong, at heights of from
4,000 to 7,000 feet ;
in the Nilgiris, Utacamand, Conoor,
Wellington, Kotagherri ;
Pachmarhi, in the Central Pro-
vinces Mount Abu in Southern Rajputana, in the Aravallis ;
;
Matheran, and the Nilgiris, for what is said of those applies tO’
a great extent to the others.
2 he Tableland of MahablesMoar, latitude 17° 58' N., longi-
tude 73° 42' E., in the Western Ghauts, about 290 miles via
Poona from Bombay, is of considerable extent. Its mean
elevation is 4,500 feet above the sea ;
it is rugged and un-
dulating. It varies from eight to fifteen miles in breadth,
and is seventeen miles from N.E. to S.W. The station
occupies the north-westerly region of this tableland, having
a south-west aspect, and is densely wooded there are excel-
;
and the latter cold the atmosphere after that becomes dry.
;
the one hand, some with rivers flowing through them, and on
the other hand range upon range of snow-clad mountains from
15,000 feet up to 28,000 are exceedingly picturesque and mag-
10
other side of the Sutlej valley are covered with dense vegeta-
tion, whilst in the distance is the magnificent panorama of
the snowy range. The valleys to the north and south are
also beautifully wooded, whilst the Kussouli and Sabathu
hills, at a lower level, which are military sanatoria, are seen,
with the plains of Umbala, extending far in the distance.
The hills generally about Simla are well wooded by oak,
deodar, and rhododendrons, which are very beautiful. These
mountain ridges are composed chiefly of metamorphic rocks,
shale and conglomerate, limestone and mica. The average
height of the station is 7,100 feet, the fir-clad peak of Jakko
rising to 8,000 feet. The average rainfall is 76 inches, but it
varies, ranging from 50 to 100 inches, and during the rainy
season there is much mist. The mean annual temperature is
60° in the hot season it frequently attains to 85° or 90°,
;
13
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THE SANITARY INSTITUTE.
IDictovia
BY
SECBETAllY:
E. WHITE WALLIS, F.S.S.
OFFICES:
(Vice-Pkesident.)
INCE the issue of the last number of this Journal, not only the
British Empire but the world generally, has been plunged into
mourning by the death of the great and good Queen under whose bene-
ficent sway a vast population has advanced beyond previous record in the
evolution of those material, moral and intellectual qualities on which the
welfare and happiness of mankind depend. The Victorian age has passed
into the domain of history, and we gratefully acknowledge the benefits it
has conferred; at the same time we hail the inauguration of a new era in
which the promise and potency of continuity and further progress of the
work of its predecessor are clearly foreshadowed.
It seems fitting that on such an occasion some brief retros])ect of the
has never been greater, scientific research never more profound or far-
reaching, nor the practical application of the discoveries of science more
remarkable. Among many subjects of import which have characterised
the reign of the late gracious Sovei’eign, few afford greater cause for
congratulation than the improvement in vital statistics, as evidenced by
reduced death-rate, enhanced expectation of life, decline of some potential
causes of death and the almost total extinction of others. The Sanitary
Institute,which has now existed for twenty-five years, has taken no
unimportant part in effecting these changes. It was the outcome of an
impulse given to Sanitary Science by the Public Health Act of 1875,
which was itself one of many beneficial enactments of the late Queen’s reign.
Up to the time of Queen Victoria’s accession the great mass of the
population of our islands lived and died under conditions which violated
the now well-known principles upon which health depends. Prejudice
and ignorance obstructed progress. Government looked on with indifference,
the people knew little and thought less of the importance of pure air, pure
water, cleanly and uncrowded dwellings, temperance, and other conditions
which are now known to be essential to health. But under the influence
of such Chadwick, Parkes, Simon, Buchanan, Corfield,
reformers as
Kawlinson, Galton, Rogers Field, and many others, measures formerly
regarded as mere theories of no practical value, are now accepted and
acted upon. Statesmen have learnt to realise that Sanitary Science is an
important element in practical politics, and that it is the duty of executive
governments to protect the people from disease which may and can be
prevented or controlled, and the ministrations of officers of health, sanitary
engineers and inspectors, consequently provide that the poor shall no
longer be a law to themselves. Public health, in short, is cared for to a
degree utterly unknown in the past, as evidenced by the reduction of the
general death-rate from 22-4 in 1841 to 18'7 in 1895 ;
houses are better
built, sewerage, drainage and ventilation, are insisted on, the land is better
cultivated, the subsoil better drained, the importance of pure drinking
water is fully recognised, food is better, clothing more adapted to the
climate, and, were Acts which are in existence compulsory and not per-
missive, little would remain to be desired.
If we turn to the public services, i.e., to those who live under the
control of the State, we find that, not only in respect of the duration of
life,but also the prevention and cure of disease, the influence of sanitary
science has been remarkable. For example, for some time after the Queen’s
accession, the death-rate of the British Soldier in India stood at about
56 per 1,000, but has now declined to 15 per 1,000, and has been as low
Sir Joseph Fayrer. 5
his influence to its further development, and that the efforts of the British
Congress on Tuberculosis, which His Majesty has graciously consented
to patronise, will afford another signal example of the beneficial results
of the alliance of power with science.
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THE SANITARY INSTITUTE.
BY
SECBETABT:
E. WHITE WALLTS, F.S.S.
OFFICES:
PARKES MUSEUM, MARGARET STREET,
LONDON, W.
H.K.H. TIIK DUKE OF CAMBRIDGE, K.G.
OBITL^AEY.
(V ice-President.)
did so much, should place on record a separate notice of His Royal High-
ness’s services on its behalf.
The Duke Cambridge became a member of the Parkes Museum
of
in July, 1883, when the Duke of Albany was President. On the incor-
poration of the Museum with The Sanitary Institute in 1888 he joined
147 Obituary.
the amalgamated society, in 1895 was elected President, and from that
time onwards his efforts had been strenuously devoted to its development.
He was present at the Congress of The Sanitary Institute at Newcastle-
on-Tyne where he evinced the greatest interest in the proceed-
in 1896,
ings, spoke at several of the meetings, and opened the Exhibition held in
connection with the Congress. He presided at the twenty-first com-
memorative dinner of the Institute in July, 1897, which occurred during
the busy period of the Jubilee celebrations, and on several occasions since
then has taken the chair at the annual dinners.
Especially to be remembered, however, are the signal services that
His Royal Highness rendered during the early history of the Institute.
In 1885 the Museum was in serious difficulties for want of funds, and
Sir Douglas Galton wrote a letter to the Times calling attention to its
need of support. On seeing this letter the Duke of Cambridge wrote to
Sir Douglas Galton, asking he could help in any way to reinstate the
if
men, and bis name will be associated with those of other great leaders in
hygiene-work, which has resulted in the prolongation of life, the enhance-
ment of the physical and, with it, the moral well-being of the human
race. The Duke conferred great benefits on the nation, not only in his
military capacity, but as a supporter of all those departments of science
and art which contribute to human progress.
It was well said in Westminster Abbey by Canon Henson, “It is a
Obituary. 148
llaat preaititnta.
THE DUKE OP CAMBRIDGE, K.G.
H.R.H.
HIS GRACE THE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND, K.G.
D.C.L., LL.D. '
{Decemfiil.
HIS GRACE THE DUKE OP WESTMINSTER, K.G.
ITicr= 13 rtsiljmts.
CTreasurer.
T. W. Cutler, f.r.i.b.a.
Council.
Wm. Whitaker, b.a., f.r.s., f.g.s Chairman.
Prof. Henry Adams, m.inst.c.e. Prof. H. R. Kenwood, m.b., d.p.h.
T. W. ALDWINCKLE, F.R.I.B.A. Henry Herbert Law, m.inst.c.e.
Bcjshell Anningbon, m.a.,m.d, Arthur Nkwsholmk, m.d., f.r.c.p.,
Philip Boobbybr, m.b. m.r.c.s. D.P.H.
H. Percy Boulnois, m.inst.c.e. Col. J. Lane Notter, m.a., m.d.
Christopher Childs, m.a., m.d., Louis Parkes.
C. m.d., d.p.h.
M.R.C.S., D.P.H., F.c.s. W. Kaye Parry, m.a., m.inst.c.e.
W. COLLINGRIDGE, m.a., M.D., LL.M., F.R.I.B.A.
H. H. Collins, F.R.I.B.A. [d.p.h. George Reid, m.d., d.p.h.
Liedt.-Col. R. H. Firth, r.a.m.c ,
Samuel Ride a l, d.sc., f.i.c.
F.R.C.8., D.P.H. Prof. II. Robinson, m.inst.c.e.
J. Glaister, m.d., d.p.h. H. D. Searles-Wood, f.r.i.b.a.
Edwin T. Hall, f.r.i.b.a. J. O.sBORNE Smith, f.r.i.b.a.
A.Wellesley Harris, m.r.c.s., l.s. a., A. Saxon Snell, f.r.i.b.a.
D.P.H. W. C. Tyndale, m.inst.c.e.
Prof. A. Bostock Hill, m.d., m.sc., J. B. WiLLCOX. A880C.M.INST.C.K.
C DP m
T* I H. Williams, m.d., d.p.h., m.r.c.s.,
Lieut.-Col. a. S. Jones, P.C., assoc, L.R.C.P.
m.inst.c.e. John Edward Worth, m.inst.c.e.
auliitars.
W. COLI.INGRIDGK, M.A. , M.D., LL.M., D.P.H. |
WOOD, DrEW, & CO.
ISanhtrs.
The Union of London & Smiths Bank, Regent St. Branch.
OPPICES-PARKES museum, MARGARET STREET, LONDON, W.
Ku.nny a (JO., PrlutoTS, 2S Camdon Road, London, N. W,