Pharmacy]]> Incapacitated Returned Soldier]]> Pharmacy]]> Book of Handy Hints. Aunt Daisy also had a radio show and people would write down recipes she talked about and take them to a pharmacist. Some people would also buy the individual ingredients from the pharmacist and concoct the remedy at home.]]> Incapacitated Returned Soldier]]> Pharmacy]]> Victorian Pharmacy which is based on the British television series of the same name. For this historical documentary, a complete and working Victorian pharmacy was recreated, allowing for a range of full colour photographs to be taken.]]> Jane Eastoe]]> Medical Library]]> Materia Medica, was the first great English work on what we now call pharmacology.]]> Jonathan Pereira]]> Medical Library]]> Femme d’apoticaire/eine apoteckerin, Artist unknown c.1700. This caricature from 1700 represents pharmacy’s past. Towards the end of the seventeenth century the various professions were sometimes represented allegorically showing characters consisting of, or covered with, instruments of their business.]]> Kate Arnold-Forster and Nigel Tallis]]> Medical Library]]> One of the Advantages of Oil over Gas, etching by Richard Dighton (February, 1822). This print, originally an etching, shows a woman who has been thrown violently backwards by an explosion from a chemist’s shop. It demonstrates some of the wariness people still had for gas lighting in 1822 but also shows a great array of items commonly used by, and associated with, chemists. Richard Dighton, an English artist in the early decades of nineteenth century, produced this work, the third print of a six part series published under the name of A London Nuisance. The series also included an etching titled: One of the Advantages of Oil over Gas.]]> Kate Arnold-Forster and Nigel Tallis]]> Medical Library]]> Morison’s Pills/The True Lifepreserver, c. 1838. This caricature parodies patent medicines and some of the health claims made in advertising. The sailor is being kept afloat by Morison’s Pills while other figures, representing various well known medicines, are floundering in the sea. Many patent medicines (also known as proprietary or popular medicines; most of these medicines were trademarked but not actually patented) were advertised as cure-alls which could cure a great range of ailments. Morison’s Pills was the invention of quasi-physician James Morison who claimed his pills would ‘make every man his own doctor’. The pills were widely distributed in England and all over the world. These types of medicines have a long association with pharmacy as they were sold in pharmacy stores and some were invented by pharmacists.]]> Kate Arnold-Forster and Nigel Tallis]]> Pharmacy]]> Louise Shaw]]> Pharmacy]]> Murray R. Frost]]> Pharmacy]]> Murray R. Frost]]> Pharmacy]]> New Zealand Association of Pharmacy Students Otago]]> Pharmacy]]> New Zealand Association of Pharmacy Students Otago]]> Pharmacy]]> New Zealand Association of Pharmacy Students Otago]]> Pharmacy]]> New Zealand Association of Pharmacy Students Otago]]> Pharmacy]]> Otago University Pharmacy Students Association]]> Central Library]]> P. M. E. Williams]]> Medical Library]]> De Materia Medica, the ‘precursor to all modern pharmacopeaias’. Originally written in Greek, Dioscorides’s work was consulted as a medical text for the next fifteen centuries. Surprisingly it was only published in English for the first time in 1934 from a translation rendered by John Goodyer in 1665. This page explains, amongst other things, a remedy for a shrew-mouse bite. Slice said animal open and apply directly to the wound. Don’t try this at home!]]> Pedanius Dioscorides (Englished by John Goodyer, 1655)]]> Pharmacy]]> Pharmaceutical Society of New Zealand]]> Medical Library]]> Sharland’s Journal which ran from 1892 to 1911. It was adopted by the Pharmacy Board as their official journal in 1899. In 1927, pharmacist C. B. McDougall wrote a letter to the Pharmaceutical Society Conference and argued that New Zealand pharmacists needed their own journal. McDougall and two others formed a committee and, with a bank overdraft guaranteed by the Pharmaceutical Society and the Chemists’ Defence Association, established the Pharmaceutical Journal of New Zealand. It was not until 1952 that the Pharmaceutical Society recognised the publication as its official journal.]]> Pharmaceutical Society of New Zealand]]> Medical Library]]> Sharland’s Journal which ran from 1892 to 1911. It was adopted by the Pharmacy Board as their official journal in 1899. In 1927, pharmacist C. B. McDougall wrote a letter to the Pharmaceutical Society Conference and argued that New Zealand pharmacists needed their own journal. McDougall and two others formed a committee and, with a bank overdraft guaranteed by the Pharmaceutical Society and the Chemists’ Defence Association, established the Pharmaceutical Journal of New Zealand. It was not until 1952 that the Pharmaceutical Society recognised the publication as its official journal.]]> Pharmaceutical Society of New Zealand]]> Pharmacy]]> Pharmacy Board of New Zealand]]> Pharmacy]]> Pharmacy Board of New Zealand]]> Pharmacy]]> Pharmacy Board of New Zealand]]> Pharmacy]]> Pharmacy Board of New Zealand]]> Pharmacy]]> ]]> Pharmacy Guild of New Zealand]]>