ANOTHER DEATH IN THE ROYAL FAMILY OF PORTUGAL
... Joao is dead. An examination of his body has been made the physicians, who have certified that the cause of his death w|» typhoid fever. ...
... Joao is dead. An examination of his body has been made the physicians, who have certified that the cause of his death w|» typhoid fever. ...
... do weO to know the fact that blooding b just frightfully carried on Rome or Naples at Turin. Count Cavour’s illness was 4> typhoid fever, the modem name congestive gastric. Typhus b different disease altogether. A chesnnt horse and horse cheennt are not ...
... some days expected, has expired. The cause death, like that of his elder brother, is officially ascertained to have been typhoid fever. ...
... Alexander Sinclair, aged 40 years, commander of the ship Lady Anne, of the Ann Messrs. D. Dunbar and Sons. Smyth—March of typhoid fever, on board the school frigate Conway, at Rock Ferry, aged years and 8 months, William Nassau Smyth, youngest son of the ...
... the bowel, a well-known complication of typhoid fever. But are unaware any facts which sufficiently uphold this belief. The melancholy occurrence must induce the profession to revert the former epidemic of typhoid fever which raged severely in Windsor two ...
... half-dozen diseases dwindle into the self-same one. He tells of typhus; but this was the invention of the telegrams—a mistake for typhoid (the common name for gastric). He tells “pernicious fever: this the Frenck term for the same disease. So we are thus rid ...
... that too much reliance was placed upon the previously sound constitution and temperate habits of the sufferer. With fever of typhoid character the ordinary practitioner well acquainted, and, under the modem treatment, generally yields in the course eight ...
... Britain, end declare* that the seizure might, with equal propriety, her* been mad* in the •ireeU of London. A violent type of typhoid lever and the black meaale* has been prevailing to great extent among the troop* near bowling Green, end large numben them ...
... which may these later day*, poisoning the atmosphere It is well known that disease in any form at Windsor is apt to take on a typhoid type.—-Aferficaf Circular. The Rev. J. Hall Kilkemvt. —On Monday the Rer. John Hall, of Dublin, preached in this city, two ...
... are uncertain, for there may be no interval whatever —the fever may begin immediately on the receipt of the poison. In the typhoid the period of incubation is probably about week, and the source the fatal poison must have been at some place which the Prince ...
... the Windsor district. The informant was the of Wales, described as present his death, and the fatal disease is recorded was typhoid fever during twenty - “‘‘'cardinal Wiseman has issned pastoral letter, in which he feelingly alludes the death of the Prince ...
... well-managed district school for pauper children, nobody ever meets with a case of typhoid fever native to the spot. It is nothing but bad management that can keep death typhoid or other diseases of its kind busy upon one spot year after year, and maintain ...