M 
Dr. D. Francisco Vinas, of Gerona, Spain. My own specimen 
was sent me by Dr. J. Brettauer, of Trieste. 
41. Obverse. Bust of H., to right. (Head like preceding, 
though facing differently.) Beneath, BRENET 
Reverse. * | SOCIETE DE MEDECINE | DE BOR¬ 
DEAUX Beneath, crossed laurel branches. 
Edges beaded. Lead. 18. 27 mm. 
In my collection. 
42. Obverse. Bust of H., to left. Beneath, E. FAROCHON 
Inscription: HIPPOCRATE-DE COS. 
Reverse. Pelican feeding its young. Inscription : AD- 
MISTRATION GENERALE DE I/ASSISTANCE PUB- 
LIQUE Exergue: * PARIS* 
Silver. 22. 34 mm. 
In the Fisher Collection. I owe the above description to Dr. 
Fisher. 
Bust, with name, HIPPO | CRATES | COIO, upon the medal 
of Dr. Wedel, of Jena, already mentioned, No. 26, under Galen. 
43. Obverse. Veiled head, bearded, to right. Beneath, S. 
SCHMIDT. | N. O. (New Orleans.) Exergue : S. M.-C. L. 
(In full, upon reverse.) 
Reverse. SOCIETAS | MEDICO- | CHIRURGICA | 
LUDOVICENSIS (of Louisville). 
Silver. 20. 31 mm. Excessively rare. 
In the Government (Lee) and Fisher Collections, and my 
own. Though no name appears upon the obverse, and the type 
is different from those previously described, Surgeon Billings of 
the U. S. Surgeon-General’s Office, after comparison with many 
pictorial representations of Hippocrates in the Government Med¬ 
ical Library, is inclined to think that it is he who is represented, 
rather than Aesculapius. 
44. 45. The name, merely, of H. appears upon two of the 
