Pharmacy]]> Betty Shaw-Lawrence]]> Text]]> Pharmacy]]> Susan Heydon and Stephen Duffull]]> Pharmacy]]> Susan Heydon and Stephen Duffull]]> ]]> Pharmacy]]> Pharmacy Guild of New Zealand]]> Pharmacy]]> Text-Book of Pharmaceutics was first published in 1926 and was intended to be an adequate and complete substitute for college lectures in England. The book has been adapted as recently as 2012.]]> Arthur Owen Bentley]]> Pharmacy]]> Pharmacy Guild of New Zealand]]> Medical Library]]> Daniel Vangroenweghe]]> ]]> ___]]> ___]]> ]]> ___]]> ]]> ___]]> Pharmacy]]> Pharmacy Guild of New Zealand]]> ___]]> Pharmacy]]> Pharmacy Guild of New Zealand ]]> Medical Library]]> Auckland Pharmaceutical Students’ Association]]> Pharmacy]]> Society of Apothecaries of London]]> Pharmacy]]> Arthur Owen Bentley]]> Pharmacy]]> Pharmacy Today was published at a time when pharmacists were still lobbying for pharmacist prescribing to become a reality. Legislative change is still pending.]]> Rajesh Kumar]]> Medical Library]]> Reg Combes]]> Pharmacy]]> University of Otago, School of Pharmacy]]> Pharmacy]]> ___]]> 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 Guild of New Zealand]]> 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]]> SPY]]> Central Institute of Technology [C.I.T] Pharmacy Students]]>