1890.] MICKOSCOPICAL JOURNAL. 119 



Dr. Stickler then gave a list of the different bacteria which had been 

 found in pus. It included : 



r. A streptococcus (in pus from acute abscesses, which, upon inocu- 

 lation, will cause the death of lower animals in from two to ten days). 



2. Micrococcus pyogenus aureus found in pus fi'om puerperal fever, 

 boils, osteo-myelitis, etc., and is very poisonous. 



3. Strephalococcus, not as poisonous as the last. 



4. Bacillus of fetid pus; very poisonous. 



Following the paper a specimen of urine from a patient sutl'ering 

 with cystitis, was exhibited by Dr. Runyon, and the pus cells examined. 



BOOK NOTICES. 



The Modern Theory of Heat^ and the Sun as a Storehouse of Eti- 

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 This work is equally as interesting as the preceding one by the same 



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Upon the Origin of Alpine and Italian Lakes^ and upon Glacial 

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The rapid progress of the science of Geology at the present da}- justi- 

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Chemical Reagents a?id Spectroscope. By Chas. O. Curtman, M. D. 



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It was to obviate the difficulty experienced bv all engaged in analyt- 

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In most cases the tests for the absence of all impurities are given, and 

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