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SOCIETIES AND COLLEGES.

referred the thesis and credentials of such candidate.

Article 11. All candidates shall be elected by ballot. Three black balls shall reject a candidate.

Article 12. Any fellow necessarily absent from a meeting at which an election, or by-law, or constitutional amendment shall take place may, by writing, instruct the secretary to cast his ballot.

Article 13. The same rules shall govern the election of honorary fellows, and not more than five of whom shall be nominated at any one time.

Article 14. Every fellow of the Chicago Academy of Medicine shall affix to all contributions to medical literature "Fellow of the Chicago Academy of Medicine."

Article 15. One-fourth of the entire fellowship shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at any meeting.

Article 16. This Constitution may be amended at any regular meeting by a vote of two-thirds of the entire fellowship, provided that notice of such proposed amendments shall have been given at the meeting preceding the last meeting of the Academy, and have been mailed to said fellows.

Article 17. Any fellow who has absented himself from three consecutive meetings or shall be four months in arrears without a reasonable cause, shall be considered as having resigned his fellowship. The directors shall decide as to the validity of the excuse. From these penalties the honorary fellows shall be exempt, as well as from the presentation of a thesis, but shall have no voice in the elections or business of the Academy.

Article 18. All charges and specifications against fellows shall be in writing and shall be preferred to the board of directors. If, in the judgment of the directors, the charges are sustained, such fellow shall, by a vote of two-thirds of the fellowship, be expelled; and the same rules shall govern the ballot as in the election of fellows.

Article 19. No rejected candidate for admission to the Academy shall be again eligible to fellowship under one year from the date of rejection.

By-laws.-I. The order of exercise at each meeting shall be reading of the minutes; reports of committees on proposed fellows; election of fellows; proposal of fellows; constitutional and by law changes; reading of papers and discussion; miscellaneous business; announcement of programme for the next meeting; adjournment.

II. The Academy shall meet on the second Friday in each month at the time and place designated at the last meeting.

III. After Ootober, 1894, all annual dues shall be abolished and applicants shall pay an admission fee of $15.

IV. Each session shall be presided over by the elected chairman, whose duty shall be to preside

*Honorary.

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over the Academy in the transaction of scientific business or such matters as legally come efore it.

V. The secretary shall perform all secretarial and treasury duties, subject to the approval of the directors.

The fellows of the Chicago Academy of Medicine are: Drs. Harriet C. B. Alexander, Chicago; J. B. Bacon, Chicago; H. M. Bannister, Chicago; W. L. Baum, Chicago; B. M. Behrens, Chicago; A. D. Bevan, Chicago; F. S. Billings*, New York; D. R. Brower, Chicago; Sanger Brown, Chicago; H. T. Byford, Chicago; C. G. Chaddock*, St. Louis; F. S. Coolidge, Chicago; J. C. Culbertson*, Cincinnati; W. Cuthbertson, Chicago; S. C. Deveny, Chicago; R. Dewey, Chicago; E. T. Dickerman, Chicago; E. C. Dudley, Chicago; Havelock Ellis*, London, Eng.; Rosa Engleman, Chicago; W. A. Evans, Chicago; M. D. Ewell, Chicago; A. Gehrmann, Chicago; W. Goodell*, Philadelphia; H. Gradle, Chicago; C. S. Hallberg, Chicago; L. Hektoen, Chicago; C. H. Hughes*, St. Louis; J. G. Kiernan, Chicago; H. Knapp*, New York; R. Krafft-Ebing*, Vienna, Austria; A. Lagorio; Chicago; M. M. Leahy, Chicago; C. Lombroso*, Turin, Italy; G. F. Lydston, Chicago; J. A. Lydston, Chicago; Hunter McGuire*, Richmond, Va.; H. N. Moyer, Chicago; J. B. Murphy, Chicago; J. F. Oaks, Chicago; C. A. Oliver*, Philadelphia; W. Osler, Baltimore; F. Owsley, Chicago; G. C. Paoli, Chicago; C. P. Pinckard, Chicago; W. H. Pusey, Chicago; F. W. Reilly*, Springfield, Ill.; J. Ridlon, Chicago; W. L. Rumpf, Chicago; O. L. Schmidt, Chicago; N. Senn, Chicago; E. C. Spitzka*, New York; L. Starr*, Philadelphia; E. S. Talbott, Chicago; H. M. Thomas, Chicago; W. P. Verity, Chicago; I. J. Watkins, Chicago; E. W. Weiss, Ottawa, Ill.; C. D. Wescott, Chicago; J. T. Whittaker, Cincinnati; W. H. Wilder, Chicago; R. J. Withers, California; H. F. Wood, Chicago; J. A. Wyeth, New York; J. Zeissler, Chicago.

20.

THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION will meet at Hot Springs, Ark., November Dr. Xenophen C. Scott, Cleveland, Ohio, is president; Dr. F. C. Woodburn, Indianapolis, secretary. The general committee of arrangement is as follows:

Dr. T. E. Holland, Hot Springs, Ark., chairman; Dr.J.T. Jelks, Hot Springs, Ark., assistant secretary; Drs. C. A. L. Reed, Cincinnati, Ohio; I. N. Love, St. Louis, Mo.; O. P. McCarty, St. Louis, Mo.; F. Chandler, St. Louis, Mo.; H. C. Townsend, St. Louis, Mo.; Chas. E. Ware, St. Louis, Mo.; M. A. Eisele, Hot Springs, Ark., chairman pharmaceutical exhibit.

THE OHIO PEDIATRIC SOCIETY at its May 17 meeting elected the following officers:

President Dr. S. L. McCurdy, Dennison; vicepresident, Dr. J. P. West, Bellaire; secretary-treas. urer, Dr. G. M. Clouse, Columbus. The next meeting will be held at Columbus May 15, 1895.

NANCREDE'S ESSENTIALS OF ANATOMY.*-The changes from the preceding edition are few. It follows the arrangement of the last edition of Gray's Anatomy, omitting, however, the long introductory chapter on general anatomy, histology, and embryology, and beginning at once with osteology. Like Saunder's other question compends, it seeks to bring out the important points of its subject by a series of pertinent questions and clear, concise answers; and the choice of both is exceedingly happy, fully warranting the success that the book has enjoyed. The demand for it has necessitated a fifth edition in as many years. The book is not intended to replace the larger anatomical works, but to aid the student in the use of them, and to refresh the practitioner's memory after the subject has once been mastered in student days. The descriptions are usually sufficiently long and clear to accomplish this purpose, with the possible exception of that of the lymphatic system, and make the book far more than the mere classification of names that anatomy compends so frequently are. In the last two editions sixty-three of the more important of Gray's osteological plates have been added as an appendix, with a special index. These plates have almost all been reduced from the original size and yet as a rule are clearly cut, but the indications of the special features in the plates have naturally suffered somewhat by the diminution.

FORT'S TREATMENT OF STRICTURES.*-The treatment of urethral strictures by means of electrolysis has gained a large number of adherents within the past few years. There has been no more determined worker in the field of this method of treatment of urethral stricture than Dr. Fort. His frequent communications on this subject in the "Revue Chirurgicale" have attracted widespread attention not only in France, but also among European and American surgeons. The method, as employed by Dr. Fort, is very much on the principle of that previously practiced by Jardin. His electrode is constructed somewhat upon the principle of the urethrotome of Maisonneuve, the electrolytic contact being composed of a V-shaped electrode, which is carried down to the point of the stricture and the current turned on, the principle involved being the chemical destruction, by means of a strong galvanic current, of the stricture proper. In this country, where physicians are accustomed to use a current of a strength of from three to seven

*Essentials of Anatomy, by W. B. Nancrede, M. D. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders. 1894.

*Traitment des Retrecissements. Par le Dr. J. A. Fort, Ancien Interne des Hopitaux. Professeur libre d' Anatomie a l'Ecole Pratique de la Faculti de Medecine de Paris. Paris: G. Masson. 1894. Pp., 1-549.

milliamperes, it hardly seems reasonable that a current, even though applied for only three minutes, as given in case No. 159, as published in this work, should prove effective without causing a more serious destructive action of the surrounding tissues. In the case in question 14 elements, generating a current of 44 milliamperes, were used. The experiments made by Dr. Fort have convinced him that from one to four or five applications are all that is necessary to cure the most difficult forms of stricture. We are, however, not in a position to either substantiate or criticize this method of linear electrolysis, for this particular method is almost unknown in this country. A book, however, written by such an eminent authority as Dr. Fort must necessarily attract a great deal of attention, and the method is certainly worthy the serious consideration of all those physicians who are interested in the treatment of urethral stricture.

RIBOT'S PSYCHOLOGY OF ATTENTION.*-Ribot, the famous French psychologist, in this brochure makes an attempt to explain the nature of attention upon lines not ordinarily followed by writers upon this subject. While much is said of the effects of attention, little attention is paid to its mechanism. This want the author essays to supply.

Every intellectual state is accompanied by physical manifestations; there is no thought without expression; thought is a word or an act in a nascent state, a commencement of muscular activity. The normal condition is plurality of states of consciousness, or polyideism. Attention is the momentary inhibition, to the exclusive benefit of a single state of this perpetual progression; it is monoideism. But only relative monoideism, presupposing a master idea which draws to itself all that relates to it and excluding all unrelated ideas brought forth by association.

There are two forms of attention: spontaneous and voluntary, the former the true, the other only a product of training, and deriving its whole being from spontaneous attention. In these two forms attention is not, as we love to think, a "pure act of spirit," but is essentially motory, that is, it always acts upon the muscles, and through these under the form of inhibition. Hence Maudsley is right in saying that "the person who is unable to control his own muscles is incapable of attention. The physical concomitants of attention are vasomotor phenomena (quickened circulation), respiratory phenomena (slackening and arrest of breathing), motory phenomena (movements of the body expressive of

*The Psychology of Attention. By Th. Ribot. Chicago: Open Court Publishing Company. 1894. Pp. 115. Paper, $0.25; Cloth, $0.75.

BOOK NOTICES AND REVIEWS.

attention). In spontaneous attention the whole body converges toward its object-the eyes, ears, sometimes arms, and all motions are arrested. In voluntary attention this adaptation is incomplete, intermittent, without solidity. But these physical expressions are not, as generally assumed, simply outward effects, but they are the necessary conditions, the constituent elements, the indispensable factors of attention-totally suppress movements and you totally suppress attention. The motor manifestations are neither effects nor causes, but elements; together with the state of consciousness, which constitutes their subjective side, they are attention.

Contrary to generally accredited notions, pleasure and pain are not the basis of our emotional life, but the effects, results, indications, signs, which show that certain tendencies are satisfied or thwarted, and represent only the final part of the phenomenon entering into consciousness. The true causes of emotional life must be sought in the innermost recesses of the organism. Feelings, emotions, passions have their primordial source in the organic, vegetative activity. Whatsoever comes from the vascular, digestive, respiratory, sexual organs, constitutes the primal subject-matter of sensibility. The states recognized as appetites, cravings, desires, etc., and which may be grouped as "tendencies," are the direct and immediate results of every animal organism. They constitute the true basis of emotional life. "Appetite is the very essence of man." Desire is appetite with consciousness of self. Sensibility is not, as many psychologists express it, "the faculty of experiencing pleasure and pain," but it is the faculty of desiring and consequently of experiencing pleasure and pain, while these tendencies are the immediate expression of the modes of being of the organism.

The foundation of emotional life rests in tendencies, and these we must represent to ourselves as movements (or inhibitions of movements), real or nascent, always implying motor innervation. Thus tendency is not some mysterious "state of soul," but the words, desires, appetites, etc., signify a nascent or miscarried movement, according to conditions.

Spontaneous attention is the only existing form until education has come into play. It is a gift of nature, and always is caused by emotional states. Man, like animals, lends his attention spontaneously only to what concerns him; to what produces in him an agreeable, disagreeable, or mixed state. As pleasure and pain are only signs of tendencies satisfied or crossed, and as our tendencies express the very depths of our personality, it follows that spontaneous attention has its roots in the very basis of our being. The nature of spontaneous attention tells us whether a person is frivolous, vulgar, narrow, open, or deep. Spontaneous attention without

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an anterior emotional state would be an effect without a cause. Any being incapable of experiencing pleasure or pain would be incapable of attention.

Voluntary attention is reduced by the author to the following formula: To render attractive by artifice what is not so by nature; to give an artificial interest to things that have not a natural interest. And this is a product of civilization, originating under the pressure of need.

In addition to the foregoing normal there are morbid states of attention, those of increasing and decreasing intensity. The totality of these manifestations of the state of mind characterized as attention may be represented by a straight line dividing it at its two extremities into two branches. Putting ordinary spontaneous attention at the center, then, following our line to the right, in the direction of increasing attention, we find strong spontaneous attention, then pre occupation, then the weak fixed idea; the line thereupon branches in the two directions to represent the two extreme degrees the confirmed fixed idea, and ecstasy. Following our line towards the left, in the direction of decreasing attention, we find voluntary attention as an organized habit, then in its ordinary form, then vacillating, and coming to the dividing point there are the two extremes of temporary failure, and utter impossibility of attention.

The author sums up the result of his arguments in the following conclusion: Attention depends upon emotional states; emotional states are reducible to tendencies; tendencies are fundamentally movements (or arrested movements) and may be conscious or unconscious. Attention, both spontaneous and voluntary, is accordingly, from its origin on, bound up in motory conditions.

V.

JACKSON'S ESSENTIALS OF OPHTHALMOLOGY, OTOLOGY, AND RHINOLOGY*.-The second edition of this well-known work has just made its appearance. There are but few essential changes from the first edition, although the work has been carefully revised. The work of both authors is certainly remarkably concise and complete, and it is surprising what an amount of information can be compressed into such a few pages. The work is heartily recommended to those students and practitioners who have not the time for larger works.

DOTY'S PROMPT AID TO THE INJURED* is a manual written in plain, clear style. It would be of value in the hands of the police of large cities. The instructions are good, and particularly those of the chapter on hæmorrhage. The chapter on hygiene is a desirable addition.

*Essentials of Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Saunder's Question Compends Series. By Edward Jackson, A. M., M. D., and E. B. Gleason, S. B., M. D., Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders. 1893. Chicago: W. T. Keener Co.

*Prompt Aid to the Injured. By Dr. A. H. Doty. New York: D. Appleton & Co. 1894. Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co. $1.50.

State Items.

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CALIFORNIA.-Drs. Rixford and Gassford of the San Francisco City and County Hospital recently opened several abscesses from a patient which were found to contain mercury. He gave the following history: He for some time before coming to the hospital had been employed around the quicksilver mines. One day he fell over a cliff and landed in a cictus plant. The sharp thorns had pierced him in many places, and for several days he was very sore from his wounds. One of his companions told him to apply quicksilver to the places where the thorns had penetrated, and it would relieve the pain. He pulled a loose pair of gloves on his hands and filled them up with the liquid, to see if it would have the desired effect with the wounds in his fingers. It acted splendidly, and he made bandages for his arms and legs and fairly used a poultice of quicksilver for a day. The soreness was gone and the miner went back to work. In a few days the swelling commenced at every place the thorns had pricked him and where the mercury had been applied.-Dr. R. McLord of San Diego and Dr. J. W. Hood of Haywards died recently.-Dr. E. von Adelung of Oakland recently married Miss Barland.-Dr. S. C. Newton of Los Angeles died June 1.

COLORADO.-Dr. Geo. P. Powell of Grand Island, Neb., has removed to Grand Junction.— Denver-"Dr." W. H. Hale, the "Gunwa" "Chinese Doctor" inventor, has been brought back here to answer for misuse of the mail.

CONNECTICUT.-Dr. M. C. Williams of Cheshire died recently.

DAKOTA, SOUTH.-Dr. G. H. Dickson of Sioux Falls married Miss G. C. Dunham June 7.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.-Washington—Dr. E. Jaisohn married Miss M. J. Armstrong June 20.

GEORGIA. Dr. Stapler of Macon recently removed a beetle from an ear, where it had been five weeks. Dr. W. Sterling of Atlanta died June 1.

ILLINOIS.-Dr. J. M. Bello of Decatur died June 19. Dr. Jas. Wilson married Miss C. Ebbinghouse. Dr. S. D. Low has located at Pekin.-Dr. A. J. Sayler of La Place died June 10.-The state board has licensed Drs. L. C. Pardee, Ignatz Mayer, G. S. Culver, E. I. Bradley, J. G. Burne, M. H. Rosenberg, J. M. Schleicker, J. J. Temple, H. L. Armsdale, E. L. Brown, K. B. Klapp, H. Evensen, C. A. Wean of Chicago; J. T. Blackman,

Hicks; H. L. Day, Wellington; C. W. Rinehart, Lemont; J. L. Taylor, Libertyville; A. F. E. Schierbaum, Grant Fork; M. A. Hart, Decatur; A. F. Stewart, E. B. Taylor, W. A. Tichenor, George Mueller, W. C. Allen, C. R. Moore, T. Tomasek, J. L. Walker, C. M. Chapman, R. S. Dubs, C. W. Klinetop, F. J. Laibe, F. W. R. Lapsley, E. C. Maas, J. T. Manierre, W. P. Cary, and R. Sexton, Chicago; G. P. Doyle, Watseka; C. P. Knot, Morris; L. H. Neville, Meredosia; J. W. RendleMan, Mead; E. Windmueller, Woodstock; U. A. Bedard, St. Anne; E. E. Buckner, Hidalgo; C. W. Hunter, Hampton; C. H. Ives, Dixon; Jesse Rowe, Abington; N. Seidlitz, Keokuk, Iowa.-Dr. R. Tobey of Blue Mound died recently.-Dr. W. H. D. Noyes of Carthage died June 12.-Dr. J. L. Hallam of Centralia June 15, and Dr. Jas. Loar of Bloomington June 14.-Chicago-Dr. J. M. H. Brown was drowned June 18.-The local "physiomedical" institute is attempting enforcing recognition of its certificates by mandamus.-Dr. B. Clarke married Miss M. Martin May 31.

INDIANA.-Dr. J. S. Flora of Russelville has been appointed pension examiner.-Dr. Jonas Wiest of Portland died June 9.

IOWA.-Dr. C. F. Kellogg of Clinton has been appointed pension examiner.

KANSAS.-Dr. J. T. Rees has located at Potwin. -Dr. Green Graves is the name of a practitioner of Kensington.

KENTUCKY.-Dr. Joseph P. Thomas of Hopkinsville died June 26, at the age of 64.

LOUISIANA.-New Orleans-Dr. W. G. Austin died June 15, and Dr. M. F. Bonzano recently. MAINE. Dr. A. W. Smith of Bangor has removed to Caribou.

MARYLAND.-Dr. J. D. Butts of Telghman's Neck died recently.-Baltimore-Dr. Isaiah Dowling died recently.-Drs. J. F. Mommvier and J. C. Brown died June 8.

MASSACHUSETTS.-Dr. J. E. Walker of Brookline died June 15.-Boston-Dr. C. A. Greene died June 17, and Dr. C. E. Briggs June 18.

MICHIGAN.-Dr. J. H. Innis of Jackson has located in Grand Rapids.-Dr. T. Wilkinson of Ann Arbor died recently in his 95th year.-Detroit -Dr. Jane Frear of Buffalo has been appointed junior physician to the Woman's Hospital.

MINNESOTA. Dr. Hefften of Minneapolis has removed to Good Thunder, and Dr. Roy Baker of Fergus Falls to Wadena.-Dr. E. S. Muir of Minneapolis has located at Plainview, and Dr. Johnson of LaCrosse, Wis., in Long Prairie, Dr. G. H. Geer

THE MEDICAL STANDARD.

of Roseville died recently.-Dr. R. E. Moon of Cleveland, Ohio, has located in Lake Benton, and Dr. E. O. Giere of Madison at Hayfield.

MISSOURI.-Dr. Woodson has been reappointed superintendent of St. Joseph insane-hospital.-Dr. W. G. Cowan has located at Sedalia.-St. LouisDr. Sarah Hunter died June 18, at the age of 62, Dr. G. S. Walker June 3, and Dr. M. C. Farrar June 1.

MONTANA.-The Supreme Court has reversed the finding of the state board against "Dr." Kellogg, on the grounds that the acts alleged did not constitute unprofessional conduct. Among one of the counts was the charge that Kellogg threw into a furnace, with intent to destroy it, a prematurely born infant seven months advanced. In the course of his business, says the court, the physician must become possessed of such things. It is professional that he should, and it is not immoral or dishonorable. "Nor," says the court, "can it be contended that the simple fact of destroying such a thing is unprofessional, immoral, or dishonorable In fact it must be destroyed. Sanitary rules demand its destruction; and incineration is certainly as proper as inhumation or any other method of destruction. No reason is discoverable why the physician may not properly destroy such waste human substance, as that he may destroy the amputated leg or arm of another of his patients."' If the doctor had been charged with performing a criminal operation, the concealment of the product, says the court, might be evidence tending to prove his guilt. But in this case the complainant does not make any such charge. The court cannot presume, in the absence of a charge, that the body came from a criminal act, instead of an innocent one. "We unhesitatingly say," continues the Opinion, "that it is not immoral, dishonorable, or unprofessional for a physician to conceal the fact of such an innocent action. Publicity would work no good. Concealment works no harm."

NEBRASKA. Dr. Blythin of Omaha has been elected city physician.

NEW JERSEY.-Dr. Quinton Gibbon of Salem died June 13 in his 81st year, after sixty years' practice.-Dr. G. H. Tyrrell has been elected Perth Amboy health inspector.-Dr. S. M. Desbrow of Farmingdale died June 2, in his 81st year.-Jersey City-Dr. W. A. Greenleaf died June 11.

NEW YORK.-Dr. J. P. Wilson of Poughkeepsie has been suspended from the Dutchess County Medical Society for fomenting a malpractice suit against a fellow member, Dr. J. W. Poucher.-Dr. E. J. Morgan of Ithica died June 14.-Dr. Burns of Honesdale removed a hair-pin from the bladder of a 6-year-old girl, which had been there for several months and was covered with a calcareou

deposit. Dr. I. H. Cotter has located at 39 South Clover street, Poughkeepsie.-Dr. J. Quentel of Rondout died June 10.-Brooklyn-Dr. G. F. Grover committed suicide June 20.-Dr. J. W. E. Roby has been appointed medical examiner of public schools.-Dr. P. H. Pfarr died June 9.Buffalo-Dr. W. Somerville, Sr., died June 18.New York City-Dr. Roger S. Tracy reports to the board of health that the total tenement house population in New York is 1,332,773. The total number of tenement houses is 39,138. Of this number there are 2.346 rear houses. There are living in tenement houses 1,152,414 persons who are 5 years of age and over. Under 5 the total is 180,359. There is a total population of 56,130 in rear tenement houses. Of this number 47,346 are 5 years and over, and 8,784 under 5 years. The Twelfth ward contains the largest tenement-house population. The number is 252,331, living in 7.702 houses. The smallest number is in the Second ward, where there are only 175 persons living in eight tenements.-Dr. I. F. Erdmann married Miss G. T. Wright June 20.-Dr. L. Cherburg claims to have made fifty-three visits to one prisoner daily at the Eldridge street jail.-Dr. J. A. Burk married Miss Bessie Cleveland June 12. -Dr. S. T. Hubbard died June 1 in his 87th year. -Dr. Woodcock of New York married Miss E. Tracy recently.-Dr. W. N. King died June 2, and Dr. J. R. Cypert June 14, Dr. F. W. Carmon June 12, and Dr. J. Gannon died recently. Dr. Applegate has had under care a patient who had been stabbed thrice (in the abdomen and breast) who was injured six hours before he found it out, though all that time a large knifecut in his abdomen exposed his vermiform appendix, the doctors allege, until it protruded 21⁄2 inches.-Dr. N. Eleazarin married Miss M. R. Bugbee June 6.-Dr. A. M. Burt of Ft. Plain has removed to Glen.-Dr. E. P, Hallenbeck of Bethlehem Center died recently.-Dr. M. E. Fisher has located at Delavan.-Dr. Dubigg located at Fourth avenue and One Hundredth street, Ft. Hamilton. -The "Rag Doctor" is a new female charlatan divinity of Syracuse. No patient is admitted to her presence destitute of a bandage. If the bandage be sent without the patient it answers equally well for diagnosis and treatment.-Dr. E. G. Clark of Sandy Hill died June 1 at the age of 86.-Dr. L. W. Terry of Patchogue, L. I., died May 30.Dr. R. P. Bush has been appointed superintendent of the Elmira Reformatory.-Dr. H. J. Shelley has located at Ridgebury.-Dr. W. A. Allen has resigned as Flushing, L. I., health officer.-Dr. J. R. Killelea succeeds him.

OHIO.-Dr. W. Black of Columbus died June 15, Dr. J. H. Campbell of Galion June 4. Dr. C. M. Reed of Delphos June 15, and Dr. Redenoue of Toledo June 15.-Dr. A. D. Rood of Toledo married Miss H. Beck June 16.-Dr. J. A. Still

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