290 
PHARMACEUTICAL MEETING. 
NAME. 
Hopper, Charles Barton . 
Janies, Thomas Burvill . 
Jones, John. 
Lake, John Hinton. 
Loggin, Leyton . 
Palmer, William Francis 
Phillips, Thomas. 
Kay, William Herbert .. 
Saw don, Frederick John, 
RESIDING WITH 
..Mr. Brearey . 
..Dr. A. Gill . 
..Mr. Evans _ 
..Mr. Tighe .... 
..Mr. Loggin. 
..Mr. Woodward 
..Mr. Davies .... 
.Mr. Holman_ 
..Mr. Coulson . 
ADDRESS. 
.Douglas, Isle of Man. 
Dover. 
Cardigan. 
.Exeter. 
Stratford-on-Avon. 
.Nottingham. 
.Cardigan. 
.Barnet. 
.Scarborough. 
Erratum. —Page 241 line 7, for “ Galashiels ” read “ Musselburgh.” 
PHARMACEUTICAL MEETING, 
December 2nd) 1863 ; 
MR. G. \V. SANDFORD, PRESIDENT, IN THE CHAIR. 
The following 
DONATIONS TO THE LIBRARY AND MUSEUM 
were announced, and the thanks of the meeting given to the respective donors 
thereof:— 
The Chemical Neivs. 
The Chemist and Druggist. 
The Dental Review. 
The British Journal of Dental Science. 
The Photographic Journal. 
The Educational Times. 
The Technologist. 
The Journal of the Society of Arts. 
The Veterinarian. 
The Medical Circular. From the respective Editors. 
Bulletin de la Societe de France. 
The Journal of the Chemical Society. 
The Journal of the Institute of Actuaries. 
Transactions of the Medical and Chirurgical Society. From the respective 
Societies. 
Beitrdge zur Materia Medica China's. Yon Daniel Hanbury. Uebersetzt von 
Dr. Theo. W. Martius. 
A Manual of Ophthalmoscopic Surgery. By Jabez Hogg. From the respective 
Authors. 
Specimen of Root Baric of Calisaya. From Mr. John Eliot Howard. 
Specimen of Calabar Beans. From Mr. T. IL. Hills. 
Specimen of a New Kind of Matico. From Professor Bentley. 
The following papers were then read :— 
ON A NEW KIND OF MATICO, WITH SOME REMARKS ON 
OFFICINAL MATICO. 
BY PROFESSOR BENTLEY, M.R.C.S. ENG., F.L.S., ETC. 
PROFESSOR OF MATERIA MEDICA AND EOTANY TO THE PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY OF 
GREAT BRITAIN, ETC. 
PIistory.— Under the name of matico , mateco , or matica , the leaves of several 
plants are employed by the inhabitants of Central and South America, for arrest¬ 
ing both external and internal haemorrhages, and for other purposes. A nearly 
similar story is told throughout America, as to the discovery of the styptic pro- 
