در راه را به دیدار به یاد دار مرده
with Lord Kimberley's instructions,
directed the Board to place itself in communication with the Medical Council in England, as to secure
uniformity of
t
80
practice between the Colony and the Mother-country.
4.
On the second reading of this Bill, on motion made and carried in the terms of the Standing Orders, Mr. Francis, one of the leading Barristers in Hongkong, was heard as Counsel on behalf of Dr. Fisher, who, it will be recollected, was the sole dissentient from the original Memorial by the medical practitioners of the Colony, praying that a Medical Register should be established here. The grounds of Dr. Fisher's objections to the Bill are fully set forth in Mr. Francis' speech, a report of which is appended; also the statement of the Attorney General. The second reading of the Bill, however, was carried unanimously, and it finally passed with only one dissentient voice, and that from one.
*See No 254 of 1882
578
Enclosure 5