Journal of the Chemical Society

j, 0,1g their most ardent votaries some prominent British chemists. s-?r Various reasons other branches of the science of chemistry have in Cy ?resen^e(^ superior attractions, and medical chemistry has been (jj aisfavour. It is, then, scarcely to the pages of the journal of our f ,,einical Society of London that we should turn expecting to find a 01 ?eco{d of chemistry in its relations to medicine. But though fi uUntinental confreres have been of late the chief workers in the us of physiological and pathological chemistry, no completer