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British Medical Journal SUPPLAElMENT TO THE BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL. LONDON: SATURDAY, JUNE 6TH, 1903. rimftAstz** BRITISH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION: SEVENTY-FIRST FRIDAY, MAY 29TH, T903.- Discinary, Cases.-The New MEETING ... lxxxi Northern Universities.-Inspection of tbe Examinations ANNUAL (IUu8frated) ... ... of the Apothecaries' Hall, Dublin. Spe6jal Session for the General and Sectional Arrangements ... ... ... lxxxi Consideration of Reports on Examinations.-Appointment The Town of Swansea ... ... ... ... lxxxi of Committees.-Report of Pharmacopoeia Con 'mittee.- The Immediate Neighbourhood ... ... ... lxxxiii Report of Public Health Committee .. ;. ... Ixxxviii "Longer Excursions:" SATURDAY MAY 3 I9Q3-Reports of Proceedings.-Re- Tenby ... ... ... lxxxiv ports of B. tion Committee or Finl EZamatiqs. The Valley of the Towy ... lxxxvi -Report o ile Examination Committee on the Primay Llanwrtyd ... ... ... ... ... lxxxvi Examinatiaa Btthb Society of Apothee.riesbofjLondop;. , Castell Coch ... ... ... lxxxvi port by the ialnotal,Relitions ConrttE--port t tI Caerphilly and Finance Comnixittee.-Reciprocity,,*with, %na4fL Dental GENERAL MEDICAL COUNCIL: Business.-,$tuden.ts' Registration Qoittje.-Ili4ioi Minutes-Reappoinitmie fojegistrar,-2Vote of, TP i THURSDAY MAY 28TH, 1903.-Disciplinory Cases.-The Pre- to President * Drf Rkof t .u ,. ... xci liminary Examination of the Cotnjoint Board in England... lxxxvi ENGLISH -BRANCH,: DraftBRuleaof, the Mifdwit4ve AB,ar,d>_' xciii paralysis, alcohol in its relation to Ipe ntal the SEVENTY-FIRST ANNUAL MEETING -care and. treatment of incipient sanit' ,4Xe4`r-6andi 3tion of OF THE Pathology there will be a discussiQn on ple qaaieoic. In that of, OphthalmolQgy the subjects 'tel d,ye.changesi in- relation. to renal dioease, conical corneAidAR441i treatment of. strabismus. In the Section .of Diseases of Children the subjects,. chosen are chorea, cog0nitaldIslocation of the hip, SWANSEA, 1903. and the relation 'of tuberculosis it childrXstoIpvrine tuber- culosis. In the, Section ..of :Larypgologr' d boIogy there GENERAL AND SECOTONAL ARRANGEMENTS. will be discussions.on malignant diseaserof 'the larynx, on HE seventy-first annual meeting of the British operations on the temporal bone in suppurative middle-ear Medical Association will be held at Swansea on disease, and on the upper respiratory tract as a source of Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, systemic infections,. Among other subjects set. down for July 28th, 29th 30th, and 31st. At this meeting discussion in the Section of Navy, Army, and Ambulance are iMr. Walter Whitehead of Manchester, will be the causes of invaliding in the navy, the training of ambulance succeeded in the office of President by Dr, men for the yeomanry, of volunteer brigade bearer companies, Thomas Dryslwyn Griffiths of Swansea, who will and of volujqteer regimental medical officers. The subjects deliver an address on the first day of the meeting. The chosen in the Section of Tropical Diseases are the disposal of address in Medicine will be delivered by Dr. Frederick T. excreta in the tropics, trypanosomiasis, and the etiology Roberts, and that in Surgery by Mr. A. W. Mayo Robson, histology, and treatment of leprosy. F.R.C.S. The scientific business of the meeting will be conducted in eleven Sections : A, Medicine-President, Sir Isambald TH.E TOWN OF SWANSEA. Owen (London). B Surgery-President, Mr. Edmund In a former article it was remarked that Swansea is a natural Owen F.R.C.S. (Lonaon). C, Obstetrics and Gynaecology starting point for excursions that appeal alike to the lover of President, Professor William Stephenson, M.D. (Aberdeen). Nature, the archaeologist, and the geologist, and standing as it does in the southern of the largest undeveloped D, State Medicine-President, Dr. John C. McVail (C*lasgow). outcrop E, Psychology-President, Dr. Robert Jones (Woodford coalfield of Great Britain, and in possession of 140 works Bridge). F, Pathology-President, Professor D. J. Hamilton, dealing with every variety of metal, the town appeals to the M.B. (Aberdeen). G, Ophthalmology-President, Mr. H. E.' man of science as well as to the man of commerce, the Juler, F.R.C.S. (London). H, Diseases of Children-Presi- student of the past, and the practical utilitarian. It claims dent, Mr. W. Arbuthnot Lane, F.R.C.S. (London). I, Laryng- to be the metallurgical metropolis of the world, and is making ology and Otology-President, Dr. P. ,Watson Williams every effort to fulfil the prophecy of the late Lord Swansea: (Bristol). J, Navy, Army, and Ambulance-President, "Depend upon it Swansea is destined to become the ocean Inspector-General H. C. Woods, R.N., C.B. (London). port of England." The visitor must not look for much that is K, Tropical Diseases-President, Dr. G. H. T. Nuttall beautiful in Swansea itself. The town is ancient, and suffers (Cambridge). from the defects of old age, so that arc lights illuminate, and In the Section of Surgery the subjects selected for discussion electric trams traverse narrow streets, which twist and turn in are: (i) The methods of intra-abdominal anastomosis, and mediaeval fashion. Even the Castle, first built in io09 by (2) the treatment of advanced tuberculous disease of the Henry Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, restored by Henry knee-joint. In the Section of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Gower, Bishop of St. Davids, in the fourteenth century, and also two discussions will be held, one on the management of damaged in the fifteenth century during the rebellion of Owen pregnancy complicated with uterine fibroids, and the other Glyndwr-the Glendower of Shakespeare-is all but hidden on the diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis of the uterus away, so that its beautiful parapet wall, pierced alternately and adnexa. In the Section of State Medicine the subjects in pointed and circular Norman arches, has to be sought. It selected are the Vaccination Acts and small-pox prevention, is the one structure left within the borough reminiscent of the prevention of river pollution and of sea-shore pollution, the days when the Normans held Swanzey against the and food poisoning and adulteration. The subjects selected marauding Welsh, who occasionally got their blow in with in the Section of Psychology are the pathology of general deadly effectiveness, as when Rhys Vychan did ther5]deeds lxxxii SUPPLEMENT TO THE v lJUNB THE SEVENTY-FIRST ANNUAL MEETING. 6, ]BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL THE SEVENTY-FIRST 1903.~~~~~~~~~~1903. Copyright, John Walker and Co., Ltd. J. E. Arnett, The Library, Tenby. View of Swansea showing Free Library where the Reception Room will be opened on Monday afternoon, July 2th, 1903. wIhich were celebrated in a panegyrical ode by Llywarch in hand with most satisfactoryresults the remedying of the LI ewelyn, one of the most famouat of Cymric bard-, who evils arising from contract practice. debcribed how " in Swansea, that peaceless town, the towers The traveller who enters Swansea by the Great Western are rent, and no peace reigns there; in strongly fortified Railway will be apt to receive an unfavourable impression, wansea, the key of England, all the women are widows." and be disposed to endorse the verdict of Carlyle. The town SiSwansea Parish Church is new, but the old structure which as seen through the smoky atmosphere appears in its most it replaced dated back to the thirteenth century, and was unlovely aspect, the architecture is mean, and the buildings auLpposed to have been built by Henry de Gower, whose in which the metal industries are carried on, the patent fuel etitigy in monastic garb is still preserved. The only remnant factories, coal tips, and the other out-buildings of the seaport of the original building is the old Herbert Chapter, which do not make for beauty. The valley of the Tawe, once pos- coontains the Gothic altar tomb, amongst others, of Sir sessed of great natural charms, is now scarified and dis- Matthew Cradock, who married Lady Katherine Gordon, the figured by industries the poisonous vapours from which have wiidow of Perkin Warbeck, the Pretender. One object of eaten the greenness out of the surface, and the waste pro- ecial interest in the. church is a fine oil painting by ducts of which rising in hills of slag tell of the price paid for SaLssaferrato, presented by Thomas Bowdler, whose editing of industrial prosperity. SEiakespeare's works added a word to the English language. A few miles away, however, beyond the long lines of tall Ainother building calls for a passing reference by reason of its chimneys and broken pantiled roofs and beyond the smoke architectural merits and its close association with scientific and the bustling crowds of Swansea itself, the country pre- anid art pursuits in Swansea. This is the Royal Institution sents as fair and tranquil an aspect as the holiday-making near the South Dock, built in the Ionic style. It is the head- country lover can desire. It is here that the Queen of Song quiarters of the Swansea Scientific Society, and contains a has fixed her home at "C raig y Nos," to which place Baron litbrary which includes the best collection extant of books re- and Baroness Cederstrom have kindly invited the members of lalting to Wales, and a museum of geology, mineralogy, natural the Association. history, and antiquities, to which, amongst others, Lord Swansea, by reason of its advantageous position giving reafell of Kilvey, a native of Swansea, and Sir Henry M. upon the sea in one of the few inlets affording shelter from Stanley, a resident of the neighbourhood, have contributed. the prevalent westerly gales, must have been of considerable Miembers of the medical profession are prominently identi- strategical importance from the earliest days. The Romans, lie,d with the work of the Royal Institution, and in addition however, appear to have made no use of it; their road skirts haLve two organizations exclusively for themselves. The the coast some miles inland. Swansea is supposed to have 5vansea Medical Society meets twice a month between derived its name from the circumstance that the bay served Nc)vember and May, and the meetings are alternately clinical as a base of operations for Sweyn, the Danish chieftain, in his anLd for the reading and discussion of papers.
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