Dr. John Bailey Mullins, class of 1887, of Washington, D. C., a member of the American Medical Association and the American Society of Laryngology and Otology, formerly of Norfolk, Va., died at his home, in Washington, D. C., from cerebral hemorrhage, February 11, 1909, aged 42.

Resolutions on the death of Dr. John Bailey Mullins:

Whereas, It has been God's purpose to suddenly call hence one of our most useful and beloved members; be it

Resolved, By the Washington Branch of the General Alumni Association of the University of Maryland, that we are deeply grieved by the premature death of our honored associate. By his death the public, especially those worthy of charity, whom he was ever ready to serve, have lost a most useful citizen, the medical profession a skilled and painstaking physician and surgeon, and the University of Maryland an able and active worker. And be it further

Resolved, That the sympathy of this Association be extended to his daughter, whom he loved before all else on earth, and to whom he was ever a dutiful father. And be it further

Resolved, That these resolutions be spread upon the minutes of our Association and a copy of the same be sent to the parent Alumni Association in Baltimore.

Committee--I. S. Stone, William L. Robbins, Harry Hurtt, Monte Griffith, president; W. M. Simpkins, secretary.


Dr. Samuel Groome Fisher, class of 1854, of Port Deposit, Md., died at the home of his son, in Port Deposit, February 22, 1909, aged 77. For more than 50 years Dr. Fisher was a practitioner of Chestertown, Md.