[38] De Stramonio, Hyoscyamo et Aconito, Vindob. 1762.
[39] Pharm. Journ. 1875 to 1878, also Yearbook of Pharmacy, the results being summarized in the Yearbook for 1877, 466.—Comparative qualitative reactions of Aconitine, Aconine, Pseudaconitine, and Pseudaconine, see Yearbook (1877) 459.
[40] Thus the continental druggists are able to offer it in quantity as low as 4d. to 5d. per lb., and a pound, we find, contains fully 150 roots!
[41] See figure in Berg’s Atlas zur pharm. Waarenkunde (1865) fig. 24.
[42] Hanbury, Science Papers (1876) 258, with figure. See also Pharm. Journ. ix. (1879) 615, where the drug is derived from Aconitum Fischeri.
[43] Their microscopic structure is figured in the paper of Dr. Dunin (quoted farther on, in our article on Aconitum heterophyllum at p. 14) 217-225.
[44] Pharm. Journ. vii. (1877) 749.
[45] Gmelin, Chemistry, xi. (1857) 402.
[46] Wittstein’s Vierteljahresschrift, xviii. (1869) 82, also Jahresbericht of Wiggers and Husemann (1869) 12.
[47] Pharm. Journ. viii. (1867) 118.