500 Canadian Becord of Science. 



and the names of the collectors are given, and we are glad 

 to see some of the names of members of the Geological Survey- 

 staff honoured by being chosen to designate species, — Richard- 

 son, Bell, Dawson, Whiteaves and Macoun, — as well as" those 

 of foreign geologists. The work is illustrated by eighteen 

 admirable plates, in which sixty-nine of the species are 

 described in side views and sections. 



Addresses.— By D. C. MacCallum, M.D., M.R.C.S. Eng., 

 Emeritus Professor of Midwifery and Diseases of Women and 

 Children, McGill University. Montreal, Desbarats & Co., 

 Printers, 1901. 



This tastefully got up volume of 170 pages contains seven 

 addresses delivered at different times by Dr. MacCallum 

 during the course of his long and honoured career as a Profes- 

 sor in McGill College, and a practising physician in this city. 

 It is dedicated to the memory of two of his former colleagues. 

 Dr. George W. Campbell and Dr. R. P. Howard. All old time 

 citizens and friends of McGill will be glad to possess a copy 

 of this book. One feature of interest in it is that it carries 

 the memory back to the days when the Medical Faculty had 

 its quarters in the modest building which it occupied in Cote 

 Street, but when it laid the foundations of that high reputa- 

 tion as a school of medicine which it still maintains in a more 

 commodious and impressive environment. All who knew 

 Doctors Campbell and Howard will appreciate the desire of 

 Dr. MacCallum to do them honour ; for they were professional 

 gentlemen of the highest mark, whose name is held in loving 

 remembrance both by their former patients and by those who 

 were students under them. And Dr. MacCallum was worthy 

 to be associated with men of their eminence, as these 

 addresses amply prove. They bear evidence of the widest 

 culture. While Dr. MacCallum has clearly done a great deal 

 of thinking of his own, this volume shows that he has been 

 at great pains to familiarize himself with what other great 

 thinkers have said and written, and he has given his students 

 the benefit of the whole. Dr. MacCallum's outlook for medical 

 men is a very wide one. The loftiest ideals were held up 

 before the young men both entering upon tlieir studies and 

 commencing their professional career. Truth, honour, human- 

 ity, self-sacrifice, devoutness, loyalty, these were the senti- 

 ments appealed to as those which befitted men practising the 

 noble healing art. 



