THE HONGKONG GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, 13TH APRIL, 1895.
no sign of any fracture at the base of the skull. The only thing that was remarked, when she was admitted, was the extreme difficulty in stopping the hæmorrhage and even after the wound had been stitched up a considerable amount of oczing took place. Her stupid condition for the first twenty- four hours was attributed to the loss of blood, but as undoubted symptoms of plague developed on the evening of the 9th the falling down stairs, the fainting-fit and the copious hemorrhage were all explained.
Case IX.--Parsee. Æt. 22.
JUNE, 1891.
11 12 13
14
15
106-
105-
104-
103-1
102-
101-
100-
99-
:
98-
P'ulse
Resp.
This chart is an exception to the rule as here it took four days at least for the temperature to reach the primary maximum. Such a long time was very rare indeed during the epidemic, almost every other case reaching the primary maximum within forty-eight hours,
Case X--Chinese. Et. 28.
Admitted 17th June, 1894 with fever and vomiting during the previous twenty-four hours. Right femoral bubo, no headache.
JUNE, 1894.
JULY.
17 18 19 20 21
106-
22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
1 2 3
105-
104-
103-
102-
101-
100-
99-
934
413
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