532 
PHARMACEUTICAL MEETING. 
REGISTERED APPRENTICES. 
NAME. RESIDING WITH ADDRESS. 
Anderson, John Brown.Mr. Rogerson.Bradford. 
Cowle, Thomas Wright .Mr. Mays .South Shields. 
Jones, Cynric.Mr. Ellis.Abergele. 
Kingerley, William Strickland .Messrs. Shadford & Co. ...Spalding. 
Pierce, William George .Mr. Dresser.York. 
Sharpe, Leonard George .Mr. Sharpe.London. 
Solomons, Francis.Mr. Lamplough .London. 
Woodstock, Charles Edward .Mr. Hawkins .Southampton. 
EXAMINATION IN EDINBURGH, April 12th , 1864. 
MAJOR (Registered as Pharmaceutical Chemists). 
Buchanan, James...Edinburgh. 
Buck, Jonathan Marsden.Liverpool. 
Macdonald, John.Lasswade, N.B. 
Macfarlane, Andrew Y.Edinburgh. 
Thomson, Charles .Elie, N.B. 
Watson, Richard Thomas .Bishopwearmouth. 
PHARMACEUTICAL MEETING. 
Wednesday, April 6, 1864. 
MR. SANDFORD, PRESIDENT, IN THE CHAIR. 
The following 
DONATIONS TO THE LIBRARY AND MUSEUM 
were announced, and the thanks of the meeting given to the donors thereof:— 
The Chemical News. 
- The Chemist and Druggist. 
The British Journal of Dental Science. 
The Photographic Journal. 
The Educational Times. 
The Technologist. 
The Veterinarian. 
The Medical Circular.. 
The Journal of the Society of Arts. 
The Journal of the Chemical Society. 
Bulletin de la Societe de Chimie de Paris. 
Kaiserliche Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien; die Procedural. Nos. 6-8. From 
the respective Editors. 
Detailed Catalogue of Commercial Products and Specimens in the Trade Museum oj 
Mr. P. L. Simmonds. From the Author. 
A Description of the Symptoms and Treatment of Poisons principally used in the 
Punjab. By T. E. B. Brown, M.D. From Mr. C. Hewlett. 
Tlandbuch der Pharmacognosie, von Dr. A. Wiggers. From the Author. 
Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association for 1863. From the Asso¬ 
ciation. 
The President wished to correct an error which had occurred regarding 
the last meeting, not in the minutes which had just been read, but in the 
report published in the Journal. He was therein reported to have said that 
Barth’s apparatus for the administration of oxygen was “ clumsy, difficult to 
use, and very expensive .” This was entirely contrary to his opinion. It would 
be remembered by gentlemen present, that when Mr. Robbins had read his 
paper on Oxygennesis, some mention w r as made of the difficulties which had 
hitherto attended the administration of oxygen; and he (the President) had 
