480 
NEWS AND SUNDRIES. 
NEWS AND SUNDRIES. 
American Veterinary Review For Sale. —Vols. 8, 9, 
10, 12, newly bound in half sheep; Vol. n unbound except 
Nos. 5, 10, 11 ; Journal of Comparative Medicine and Sur¬ 
gery, Vols. 7, 8, 9 bound, vol. 10 unbound. For price and 
further information address R. F. B., Box 37, Rochester, 
New Hampshire. 
Wanted.— One copy of July American Veterinary 
Review, 1886—by Dr. T. Butler, V.S., of Davenport, Iowa, 
who will pay one dollar. 
Rabies Among Deer. —The deer of Ickworth Park, Eng¬ 
land, having become diseased, Mr. Adami, the demonstrator 
of pathology at the University of Cambridge, was invited to 
study the causes of the trouble. An inquiry by the agents of 
the Privy Council had already been made, which had de¬ 
clared the disease to be anthrax. Mr. Adami was not able to 
confirm this decision, but after a thorough study reported 
the cause to be rabies, a disease that has not often been found 
among deer. The British Medical Journal states further that 
Mr. Adartfi was so unfortunate as to inoculate himself. On 
the seventeenth day after this accident he resorted to Pas¬ 
teur’s Institute at Paris, and was treated for inoculated hy¬ 
drophobia. On the ninth day after the beginning of the 
treatment he had premonitions of the disease, but these did 
not progress, and the unfortunate pathologist now considers 
himself cured and protected.— N. Y. Medical Record. 
Cornell University’s Medical Aspirations.—A recent 
report by President Adams, of Cornell University, seems to 
put forth a “ feeler ” after a medical department, in order that 
Ithaca may have a full-orbed university, tot us, teres atque ro¬ 
tundas. President Adams is reported to have expressed the 
wish that such a department, with a large endowment, might 
be established in New York or Brooklyn, which might very 
properly be styled “the College of Medicine of the Cornell 
University.” Is this a bid to the Bellevue Hospital or the 
Long Island school to come in under the segis of Cornell ? 
They are about the only ones remaining that have not a placen¬ 
tal attachment; but neither of them can be said to enjoy “a 
large endowment.”— N. Y. Medical Record. 
