Although Arthur knew that this was a drug that could greatly change humanity, he could not make a decision without sufficient convincing experimental results.
After all, the current casualties in Australasia were not significant, and the demand for mass production of penicillin was not so high.
Since penicillin had already been discovered, purifying and mass-producing penicillin was not so difficult.
Under the massive funding of the Royal Financial Group, it was not difficult to accelerate the progress of penicillin mass production.
And now, Arthur was already considering what rewards to give to Flemington.
A Victoria Memorial Medal was certainly indispensable. This medal often represented an honorary knight's title and a yearly subsidy of 5200 Australian dollars.
In addition to a reward of 500,000 Australian dollars, a villa in the Sydney City Centre, and improvements in employment treatment, these were pretty much the rewards Arthur planned for Flemington.