The Microscope. 130 



be cut short can but till us with the deepest regret. His studies in 

 microscopy having extended over a period of but fifteen years, and 

 •been productive of such rich and valuable results, inspired his 

 fi-iends, and he had no acquaintances who were not such, with such 

 high anticipations for his future usefulness and prominence that 

 their bereavement by his death is a most crushing blow. 



For some years Dr. Moore had held the chair of Microscopy 

 and Histology in the Cleveland Homoepathic Hospital College, which 

 he filled with exceptional ability and success, his teachings, like all 

 his work, being markedly thorough and complete. Although a 

 regularly graduated physician he had never entered into the general 

 practice of his profession, but had taken up as a specialty analytical 

 microscopy, with special application to pathology, in which he had 

 a large and rapidly increasing practice among physicians of Ohio 

 and adjoining States. 



Dr. Moore left a widow, and, his nearest relatives surviving him, 

 a father. Col, Moore, of the U. S. Army, and a married sister resid- 

 ing at Coldwater, Mich. 



RESOLUTIONS OF THE CLEVELAND MICROSCOPICAL SOCIETY IN REGARD TO 

 THE DEATH OF ALLEN Y. MOORE, M. D. 



Whereas, For the second time in the history of this Society 

 the visitation of Providence has removed from our midst by death 

 one of our most valued members and personal friends, in the 

 person of Allen Y. Moore, M. D., who died April l6th, after a 

 brief illness ; and 



Whereas, We, the members of the Cleveland Microscopical 

 Society, desire to express our heartfelt sorrow at the decease of 

 our esteemed fellow member and our sympathy with the bereavement 

 of his relatives and friends ; therefore 



Resolved, That in the death of our lamented fi-iend and mem- 

 ber, Allen Y. Moore, M, D., this society has suffered the loss of one 

 of its most earnest and valued members, whose labors and studies 

 in microscopical science, and whose unwearied interest and efforts 

 in the work of this Society have contributed largely to its success, 

 and greatly sustained and encouraged the interest of his fellow 

 members. And the science of microscopy has lost an earnest, 

 devoted and an energetic and original investigator, whose researches 

 have advanced in no small degree the store of knowledge upon 

 which the useful and reliable use of the microscope depends. 



