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MILLIONS SAVED

RONALD ROSS’ GREAT WORK

Sir Ronald Ross, the man who revolutionised life in the tropics by the discovery that malaria is transmitted through the agency of mosquiroes, has left £7,403. He died last 'September. This great doctor, who had blazed a trail of discovery which has made habitable areas aggregating in size to a third of the world, has left this pitiful fortune, says the Sunday Express He lias also left behind him, a document setting out his experiences as a pioneer in medical research of the difficulties and ingratitude he had to fight. Late in life, Ronald Ross was honoured by scientific societies all over the world. But these honours did net come in the form or early enough to save his health, as he had saved millions, or provide him with means enough to- do what lie wanted. This man who made life safe in districts where previously white men oould not live, and who had saved millions of pounds for Britain, was so poor in his last years that he was forced to sell the manscript of his epoch-making work to obtain money.

Koch, the German scientist who followed in Ross’ footsteps, ivas given a pension for life by the German Government. Ronald Ross, the pioneer, the man who self-sacrificeingly did not spare his health or his money all his long life, was given a belated knighthood by the British Government. Bitterly, during the last thirty years Ross had complained of the povertywhich crippled him in his great work. In 1902 he was awarded the Nobel prize. That helped him for a short while, for he did not spent it upon anything but his work. For years after that he was forced to take editorships of scientific papers and go on lecture tours to raise money to continue his work for the relief of others. Just after the Avar, the late Earl of Oxford and others raised money to endow a Ross Institute of Research in Putney, and there, still terribly short of money, he worked to his dying day. For five years prior to his death die had been paralysed’, yet every day lie AAAent to the Institute to * speryise the work of his laboratory. •: u'

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19330516.2.8

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 16 May 1933, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
372

MILLIONS SAVED Hokitika Guardian, 16 May 1933, Page 2

MILLIONS SAVED Hokitika Guardian, 16 May 1933, Page 2

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