It is significant of the growing status of the auxiliary language, Esperanto, that the “Lancet,” the important medical organ, should publish in detail a report of the Special Congress of Esperanto doctors held at Cracow in August last, on the occasion of the Eighth Universal Esperanto Congress. Among the items reported is a reference to a special committee, cons-st-ing of Professor Jameson Johnston (lecturer on surgery to Dublin University). Dr George Johnston, of Lot dan, and Dr Rothschuh, of Aachen, be ng ap pointed at the second sess : on to work for the inclusion of Esperanto among the official tongues at the forthcoming Seventeenth International Medical Congress in London. Papers were presented by Dr Sos. of Vienna, on “New Methods in Dentistry”; by Dr Dabroivicz, of Warsaw, on “Salvarsan’’: by Dr Fischer, of Tiflis, on “Extra-Uter-ine Pregnancy”; and by Dr Moser, of Switzerland, on “Atinomycosis”; and were thoroughly discussed in Esperanto by all present. All of- wheh is further' evidence—if further evidence be needed-—that Esperanto has. “come
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New Zealand Times, Volume XXXVII, Issue 8355, 15 February 1913, Page 9
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167Page 9 Advertisements Column 4 New Zealand Times, Volume XXXVII, Issue 8355, 15 February 1913, Page 9
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