NEWS AND SUNDRIES. 
245 
Dr. A. L. Brown was not present to read his paper on Aryoturia, but had 
idly forwarded it to the Secretary to be read at the meeting. 
Although the essayist did not advance anything that might be considered 
w, still, the subject was treated in the minntest detail. After due discussion a 
te of thanks was proposed the essayist. 
Dr. A. A. Tuttle will read a paper at next meeting, to be held August 3d. 
Thos. Bland, Secretary. 
NEWS AND SUNDRIES. 
i 
Subscription to Pasteur Institute. —The total amount sub- 
ribed to date to sustain the Pasteur Institute in France is $113,- 
9. The Sultan has presented Pasteur with the grand order of 
edjidie, and $2,000, and will send a commission to Paris to study 
3 methods of rabies prevention. 
A Good Result. —Sixteen of the wolf-bitten Russians who 
3re treated by Pasteur have reached Smolensk on their way 
*me, and being in perfect health, have telegraphed their grati- 
de to their preserver. 
Pasteur’s Laboratory. —The Evening Post quotes as follows 
am the Pall Mall Gazette: u A most extraordinary museum 
I is just been opened in the Rue Yauguelin. It is difficult to say 
aether it should be called a museum, or a factory, or a farm, or 
menagerie. It is in fact all four combined, and grouped to- 
ther for a purpose hitherto untried, and presenting an appear- 
ce hitherto unparalleled. These are the new headquarters of M. 
isteur, and here are to be found cow-houses, sheep-folds, fowl- 
ilks, rabbit-hutches, and dog-kennels. They are all, moreover, 
lly occupied. On one floor is a laboratory, where the vaccine 
ups and preparations are made up. Above it a museum, where 
ecimens connected with the new cure are exhibited. There are 
erating-rooms and rooms for post-mortem investigations and 
meeting purposes. Two of the kennels are devoted to dogs in 
rious interesting stages of early or advanced rabies. ‘ Hen 
olera’ is communicated, watched, and cured in the fowl-house, 
le cattle exhibit various stages of vaccination. Human beings 
ve also their provided quarter. A spacious waiting-room is set 
art for patients, who troop in daily in picturesque groups—ac~ 
