. Notable Londoners, an illustrated who's who of professional and business men. SIR ST. CLAIR THOMSOX, ., , Professor of Laryngology and Physician for Diseases of theThroat and Xose in Kings College Hospital; LaryngologistKing Edward \TI Sanatorium. Sir St. Clair received hismedical training at Kings College, Vienna, Paris andLausanne. He was formerly physician at the ThroatHospital, Golden Square, and Surgeon for diseases of thethroat and ear, Dreadnought Hospital. He is a corre-sponding member of French, Italian, American, Austrianand German .Medical Societies, and a Fel
. Notable Londoners, an illustrated who's who of professional and business men. SIR ST. CLAIR THOMSOX, ., , Professor of Laryngology and Physician for Diseases of theThroat and Xose in Kings College Hospital; LaryngologistKing Edward \TI Sanatorium. Sir St. Clair received hismedical training at Kings College, Vienna, Paris andLausanne. He was formerly physician at the ThroatHospital, Golden Square, and Surgeon for diseases of thethroat and ear, Dreadnought Hospital. He is a corre-sponding member of French, Italian, American, Austrianand German .Medical Societies, and a Fellow of the RoyalSociety of Medicine. He is the European Editor forthe Laryngoscope. Sir St. Clair is a Chevalier de la LegiondHonneur and a Commander of the Order of Leopold.{Photo: Elliott & Fry). DAVID THOMSOX, , , , Hon. Director of the Laboratory, St. Pauls Hospital, Endell Street,London. Throughout his career Dr. Thomson has beenengaged in research. He was Research Assistant to SirRonald Ross at the Liverpool Tropical School, afterwardsgoing to Panama to investigate malarial fever. He wasGrocers Research Scholar at the Marcus Beck Laboratory,devoting himself to cancer research, and being the firstto cultivate human cancer tissue. During the late war hecarried out valuable researches in Egypt on diseosered the method of removing the poisons fromgerms and produced thereby the first detoxicated has invented several machines, the most ingenious ofwhich is the Thomson-Macfie apparatus for disintegratinggerms. This machine simultaneously grinds, smashes andcuts. It is capable of giving fifty million cuts per minute,and can sever particles measuring one-three-thousandthpart of an inch in diamete
Size: 1307px × 1911px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookidnotablelondo, bookyear1922