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JAMES WALLACE

... Another account says : I saw to-day his own doctor, very able professor in our university. He told they feared that the typhoid fever would degenerate into Jifvre pemicioue (if I mistake not what you call putrid fever). ' The Count.,’ said informant ...

Published: Wednesday 12 June 1861
Newspaper: Belfast Mercury
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1564 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

WIND AND WEA'

... expected painfully by every English p who read and belicved—as we fear it is to be | —that, being anover-worked man ill of typhoid f had been condemned to six full bleedings within Perhaps there is not an educated physician in | who would not have recoiled ...

Published: Tuesday 11 June 1861
Newspaper: Northern Whig
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 1066 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

LONDON CORRESPONDENCE

... shtaken ofl on former occasions, without being con- fined to his bed for more than a day or two. The j Count's illness was typhoid fever, tile modern name for congestive gastric fever. For this discase, whicil an English or French physician would treat ...

Published: Tuesday 11 June 1861
Newspaper: Belfast News-Letter
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2029 | Page: 2 | Tags: News 

BELEAS T

... ordered six bleedings and at the end of these, on the second day, the symptoms were already announced in the bulletins to be typhoid' —that is, weak and asthenic. The true origin of the fever was now clearly seen, for there were marked acressot* and remiaaioDa ...

Published: Thursday 20 June 1861
Newspaper: Belfast Mercury
County: Antrim, Northern Ireland
Type: Article | Words: 2648 | Page: 3 | Tags: none