![[Canadian Naval Jack]](/image.pl?url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.gwpda.org%2fnaval%2fcdnjack.jpg&f=jpg&w=240)
It is not commonly known that the first casualties in the RoyalCanadian Navy were four midshipmen, doing their "big ship time"in the armoured cruiser HMSGood Hope. They perished alongwith the rest of their shipmates at the Battle of Coronel, 1 November 1914.

(fromCrowsnest, November 1964)
They were:
Marc Milner has recently pointed out (inCanada's Navy: the FirstCentury, page 43) that Rear-Admiral Craddock specifically requestedthat Silver and Palmer joinGood Hope and that the other twowere drawn by lot.
Three can be seen in the following photograph:
Officers Aboard HMSGood Hope, Falkland Islands, 18 October 1914
Back row, Left - Right
Surgeon de Verteuil, MD (see below); Ass. PayM. S. W. Watson; Lt. J. Fisher; Cdr. A. T. Darley;Capt. Partridge, RMLI; PayM. J. E. Tizard; Cdr.(N) W. Scott; LCdr. G. B. Gaskell;S-Lt. J. A. Cotter.
Middle row, L-R
PayM. J. Egremont; (behind) Lt. G. E. E. Gray and (unknown); Lt. H. S. Walker, RMLI;Lt.(T) L. A. Montgomery; Surgeon F. C. Searle; Flt. PayM. A. H. Veitch; Lt. A. G. Smith.
Front row, L-R
Mid. G. Trounson, RNR; Mid. M. Dowding, RNR;Mid. A. W. Silver, RCN;Mid. M. Cann,RCN;Lt. E. J. French, RNR; Clerk E. C. Webber;Mid. W. A. Palmer, RCN; Mid. K. D. Cuthbert,RNR.
HMSGood Hope, Halifax, 15 August 1914
The big smudge on the forcastle is damage to the original photo, not the ship.
This was the occasion on which seven Canadian midshipmen went aboardGood Hope's consort,HMSSuffolk. When the admiral transferred his flag to the bigger ship, he took four of theCanadian midshipmen with him. They were still inGood Hope when she met her end offCoronel on 1 November 1914.
The above two photographs and accompanying captions are courtesy ofJ. D. Perkins.
Radium and the Retired Naval Surgeon
by Dr. Stewart Jackson (sandjjackson@home.com), (c) 2001
On August 31st 1911, Dr Fernand L de Verteuil, MD(Edin), MRCS(Eng), LRCP(Lond), SurgRN(ret), read a paper entitled "Radium in the Treatment of Disease" to the Annual Meeting of theBC Medical Association in Vancouver. In it, he describes his own use of radium in Vancouver anddescribes some of the patients treated. He reported,"I shall briefly refer to one.Male, Age 65,Rodent Ulcer of left side of nose of several years duration, had eaten away lower part of noseexposing nasal cavity. The patient was completely cured after five applications of radium varyingfrom 1 to 3 hours".
In describing the effects of radium on rodent ulcer he said,"it acts like a charm, for whichcondition it may be practically classified as a dead certain cure. The scar left is almost invisible,being far superior to any scar I have yet seen. In rodent ulcer it might be said that radium fulfilsall the necessary conditions of an ideal prescription; it cures with certainty, safely, rapidly andpleasantly".
Dr de Verteuil went on to describe treatment in 1910 of an extensive "epithelioma" of theface, but regretted that he did not have enough radium to treat more serious conditions. He describeshaving two apparatuses, one containing 80 mg of radium bromide and the other 20 mg. The radiumbromide was mixed with inert barium salt in a proportion of one to four and distributed at the rateof 1mg per sq cm dissolved in a special varnish spread out in a small metal receptacle. The lengthof application "varies from 10 minutes to 48 hours depending on the use of suitable screens of leador platinum".
De Verteuil concluded with comments of Sir Frederick Treves from two years previously,"Radium is a new remedy, and one must exercise the greatest caution in speaking of thepotentialities of a new remedy. A new remedy is a thing of great expectations and very readypromises, but sooner or later it must be associated with a measure of disappointment".
Dr de Verteuil, a retired Naval Surgeon, returned to sea at the outset of the Great War butwas drowned in the sinking of HMSGood Hope at the Battle of Coronel off the coast of Chile onNovember 1st 1914.
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