three years the dental feature was dropped and the name changed to "Cini-
cinnati Medical Journal." It appeared as a monthly and was abandoned
in 1896.

    The Obstetric Gazette (monthly) was started in 1878 by E. B. Stevens. In
 1885 J. C. Culbertson became the editor. In 1890 it was discontinued.

    In 1890 the faculty of the Medical College of Ohio began the publica-
tion of a monthly called "Journal of the Medical College of Ohio," J. A.
French, editor. In 1892 it became the "Ohio Medical Journal." It did not
survive long.

    The "Woman's Medical Journal" is, in a way, a Cincinnati product. Its
owner and managing editor is Margaret Hackedorn Rockhill, wife of Dr.
Chas. S. Rockhill. The journal, a very high-class periodical, is published in
Toledo, Ohio. It was started in 1891.

   The "Journal of Comparative Neurology" was edited and published by
C. L. Herrick. It appeared in 1891. After the first year the place of pub-
lication was Granville, Ohio.

  Homceopathic journalism in Cincinnati began in 1851 when B. Ehrmann.
Adam Miller and G. W. Bigler established the "Cincinnati Journal of Homoeo-
pathy." In 1852 Joseph H. Pulte and H. P. Gatchell undertook the publica-
tion of the "American Magazine of Homceopathy and Hydropathy." Neither
journal was long-lived.

   In 1864 the "American Homceopathist" made its appearance under the
editorial management of Charles Cropper. In 1868 it was merged into the
"Ohio Medical and Surgical Reporter" (T. P. Wilson, editor). Doctor
Wilson, in 1873, undertook the publication of the "Cincinnati Medical Ad-
vance" which in 1886 was moved to Ann Arbor and continued under the
title of the "Ann Arbor Medical Advance."

   The "Pulte Quarterly" was started in 1890, Thomas M. Stewart, editor.
It was a college journel and ran through three and a half volumes.

   The beginning of Eclectic journalism in Cincinnati was coincident with
the founding of the Eclectic Medical Institute. When Thomas V. Morrow
came to Cincinnati in 1842 he brought with him the "Western Medical Re-
former," which had been published for a number of years at Worthington,
Ohio, by the professors of the Worthington Medical School, the predecessor
of the Cincinnati Eclectic Medical Institute. In 1845 the name of the "Re-
corder" was changed to that of the "Eclectic Medical Journal." Since that
time it has been published under the new name, and is still being issued
every month. Its editors have been the teachers of the institute. In the
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