BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
521 
New York . 17 
New Jersey. 16 
Massachusetts. 11 
South Carolina. 5 
Texas.. 5 
Connecticut. 3 
Maryland. 2 
Missouri. 2 
Ohio. 1 
North Carolina. 
Michigan. 
Pennsylvania. 
Rhode Island. . 
Arkansas. 
Virginia. 
Mexico. 
West Indies (Curacoa). 
, 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
DEATH BY HYDROPHOBIA AFTER TREATMENT. 
Miriam Adams, five years old, of South Framingham, Mass. ; 
badly bitten July 14th last, in nineteen places by a dog recog¬ 
nized to be mad. Treated from July 15th to August 1st. 
Symptoms of hydrophobia appeared six days later (Aug. 6). 
Died Aug. 9th. 
Three other persons (two sisters of the above patient), and 
a man, bitten by the same dog, who received the same course 
of treatment, are now enjoying good health. 
This, so fa^r, is the only death by hydrophobia out of the 
255 cases treated at the Institute to date. 
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
A TREATISE ON PRACTICAL ANATOMY. By H. C. Boenning, M.D., 
with one hundred and ninety-eight wood engravings. F. A. Davis, Pub¬ 
lisher. 1891 . $ 2 . 50 . 
Although the study of human anatomy is well provided 
for so far as a multiplicity of books of every degree of merit 
can accomplish it, and nothing needed by the student of that 
branch of science is lacking, the student of equine anato¬ 
my is far from being so fortunate, and must be content for 
the present with comparatively little help from the writers 
of books in his quest after the knowledge which is so indis¬ 
pensable a part of his equipment. With the exception of a 
few works which are little better than brief compilations, 
such as Chauveau’s, or perhaps Strangeway’s, in our English 
literature, we know of none written on a plan resembling that 
of this treatise of Dr. Boenning, and yet we can easily un- 
