62 THE JOURNAI, OF PHARMACOLOGY. 



Moved and seconded that this communication be received, carried. 



A communication was received from Lawrence Jorgenson, Secretary of the Kappa 

 Psi, thanking the Association for the use of one of the boxes at the Alumni Ball. 



Moved and seconded that the communication be received and placed on file, carried. 



Messrs Charles Oats, '99 ; George C. Roux, '99, and Edward K. Ross, '99, having 

 qualified their membership in this Association, by the payment of the usual fee, their 

 names were ordered to be placed on the regular membership roll. 



Moved, seconded and carried that the Association hold an outing at Donnelly's, 

 College Point, on Wednesday, June 13, 1900, and that the Secretary be instructed to 

 notify Mr. Donnelly to hold said date. 



Moved, seconded and carried, that the Association hold a "stag" on Wednesday, 

 March 7, 1900, and accept Dr. Coblentz's offer to deliver an illustrated lecture on 

 Foreign Postal Cards on that date, the same to be in charge of the Conimitte on 

 Papers and Queries. 



Dr. C. H. Bjorkwall's haivng resigned from the Editorship of the Journai, OF 

 Pharmacology, it was moved, seconded and carried, that the same be accepted, and 

 that Dr. H. B. Ferguson be appointed Editor of the Journal of Pharmacology in 

 the place of Dr. C. H. Bjorkwall, resigned. 



The following bills having been found correct by an auditing committee consisting of 

 Messrs. F. Hohethal and H. M. Herold, Ihey were ordered paid : Shwebbke & Knerr, 

 printing 2co postal cards, I1.25 ; C. S. Erb, 200 postal cards, |2.oo. 



On motion it was ordered that The New Era Printing Co. be notified that Dr. H. B. 

 Ferguson was now Editor, and Charles S. Erb Business Manager of the Journal of 

 Pharmacology. 



Moved, seconded and carried to adjourn, subject to the call of the chair. 



•93 Xotes. 



The Ball is a thing of the past. So is the little surplus cash we have been hoarding 

 up for months. Some of you kept on hoarding even that night, and wouldn't come 

 and put some of it in circulation. You will find a better and more detailed account of 

 the festivities elsewhere in this number. We will give those of our boys whom we saw, 

 although we fear we missed some of them: W. H. Ihmels, Sarsse, F. M. Stage, Frees, 

 Hoburg, Tanny, and Schaaf. 



Walter Huber has not as yet made up his mind which is worse, Brooklyn or Jersey. 



Speaking of Brooklyn, since Tanny has left the town, the police force has been 

 reduced and those remaining don't know how to kill time. If he should ever try to 

 come back, the tax payer would combine and bribe him to stay away. 



Eugene Webb is swallowing dust and watching out for Indians, at some Western 

 army post. 



The Press Committee looked real cute with their badges. The color was so subdued 

 and modest that our illustrious colleague, Mr. Duerr, did not like them at first, butwhen 

 everyone told him how well the color set off his type of beauty, you couldn't hold 

 him. 



The Golden Text for next week will be " get a gait on, and show up." 



Eugene F. Lohr. 



'94 Notes. 



Schaeflfer has recently become proprietor of anew Pharmacy on Nassau Avenue near 

 Kingsland Avenue, Brooklyn, in addition to his Driggs Avenue store. The '94 boys 

 always prosper. 



We saw Cook the other day. He is located now on " the Bowery " in Harry Miner's 

 handsome pharmacy next to the theatre. 



