102 
PlRLlOGRAFHV. 
Trajan A. Shipley. 
Marcus W. Stark. 
Francis E. Stone. 
Nathan I. Stringer. 
John C. Tasche. 
William A. Waite-- 
Nathaniel P. Whitmore 
.Ada, O. 
East Lemon, Pa. 
.Burlington, Wis. 
.Fairbury, Ill. 
Sheboygan, Wis. 
.Racine, Wis. 
.Mazon, Ill. 
The junior class of 1889 and 1890 was a large one, and as 
a rule the examinations for the first year’s course were most 
satisfactory. 
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
A NEW MEDICAL DICTIONARY. By George N. Gould, A.B., M.D. (P. 
Blakiston, Son, & Co., Philadelphia, Pa.) 
As medical science advances, and as new medical terms 
are introduced in scientific phraseology, the publication of 
such a work as the New Medical Dictionary of Dr. Gould 
becomes a necessity, and this new work will no doubt, there¬ 
fore, find its way in all medical libraries. Including numer¬ 
ous new words and phrases, which have been created within 
the last ten years, especially in the study of bacteriology, 
ptomaines, leucomaines, electro-therapeutics, embryology and 
so op, it is claimed that two principal objects have been kept 
in view, viz., to make the dictionary both scientific and prac¬ 
tical. A valuable feature of this work is found in the inser¬ 
tion of sundry tables, which add largely to its usefulness. 
Amongst these are: abbreviations used in medicine ; one of 
the arteries, with the name, origin, distribution and branches ; 
of the bacilli with their habits, characters, cultures, etc.; of 
the ganglia ; of the leucomaines; of the micrococci; of the 
muscles; nerves ; plexuses and ptomaines. The work con¬ 
cludes with several appendices, treating of the mineral 
springs of the United States, vital statistics, etc. It forms a 
neat volume of over five hundred pages, and both the busy 
practitioner and the medical student will find in it abundance 
of valuable information. 
