1920
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. — Dr. Leo L. Stanley, resident physician of San Quentin penitentiary, who has attained recognition for successfully transplanting interstitial glands, has succeeded in restoring lost memory with a new serum.
According to Dr. Stanley, a man was committed to the penitentiary on Sept. 14, 1919, under the name of Robert Lockwood. Lockwood was suffering from aphasia. A spinal injection of the serum resulted in the young man regaining his mind and asserting that he was Fred Bruley of Plattsburg, N. Y.
Bruley said he left New York for Chicago in January, 1917, and that from time to time his mind has been a blank until he awakened in the prison here. He has a wife and child.
Memorials to James Watt
Permanent and practical memorials to James Watt, who died a century ago this year, are planned by a number of British scientific and engineering organizations.
Tests Air Above Towns
By means of an instrument invented by Dr. J. S. Owens, secretary of the British committee for investigation of atmospheric pollution, it is possible to measure and record the dirt in the air over a town at any and every hour.
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