Veterinary Catalogue of William ti. Jenkins 



(*)DE BR UIN, " Bovine Obstetrics." By M. G. De Bruin, 



Instructor of Obotetrics at the State Veterinary 

 School in Utrecht. Translated by W. E. A. Wyman, 

 formerly Professor of Veterinary Science at Clemson 

 A. & M. College, and Veterinarian to the South 

 Carolina Experiment Station. 

 8vo, cloth, 382 pages, 77 illustrations 5 00 



Synopsis of the Essential Features of the Work 



I. Authorized translation. 



i. The only obstetrical work whicli is up to date. 



3. Written by Europe's leading authority on the subject. 



4. Written by a man who has practiced the art a lifetime. 



5. Written by a man who, on account of bis eminence as 

 bovine practitioner and teacher of obstetrics, was selected 

 by Prof. Dr. Frohner and Prof. Dr. Bayer (Berlin and 

 Vienna), to discuss bovine obstetrics, both practically and 

 scientifically. 



0. The only work containing a thorough differential diag- 

 nosis of ante and post partum diseases. 



7. The only work doing justice to modern obstetrical 

 siirgery and therapeutics. 



8. Written by a man whose practical suggestions revolu- 

 tionized the teaching of veterinary obstetrics even in the 

 gi-eat schools of Europe. 



9. The only work dealing fully with the now no longer 

 obscure contagious and infectious diseases of calves. 



10. Absolutely original and no compilation. 



II. The only work dealing fully with" the difficult problem 

 of teaching obstetrics in the colleges. 



12. The only work where the practical part is not over- 

 shadowed by theory. 



... A veterinarian, particularly if his location brings him in 

 contact with obstetrical practice, who makes any pretence toward 

 being scientific and in possession of modern knowledge upon this 

 subject, will not be without this excellent work, as it is really a very 

 valuable treatise. It contains nearly 400 pages, numerous illustrations, 

 and is put together in Jenkins' best style. — Pro/. Boscoe R. Bell, in the 

 American Veterinary Review. 



In translating into English Professor De Bruin's excellent text- 

 book on Bovine Obstetrics, Dr. Wyman has laid British and American 

 veterinary surgeons and students under a debt of gratitude. The 

 work represents the happy medium between the booklets which are 

 adapted for cramming purposes by the student, and the ponderous 

 tomes which, although useful to the teacher, are not exactly suited 

 to the requirements of the everyday practitioner . . . It contains 

 seventy-seven excellent illusti-ations . . . Both translator and pu- 

 blisher have done their work in a way that deserves praise, and we 

 can strongly recommend the work to veterinary students and practi- 

 tioners.— T/fe Journal of Comparative Pathology and TJierapeutics. 



This grand volume, written by Europe's leading authority on the 

 subject, who has practiced the art for a lifetime, is the most recent and 

 up-to-date ob-^tetrical work. It discusses bovine obstetrics, both prac- 

 tically and scientifically, and contains thorough difterential diagnoses 

 of ante and post mortem diseases. It deals fully with the now no 

 longer obscure contagious and infectious diseases of calves, and is the 

 only work of the kind in which the practical part is not overshadowed 

 Ijy theory.— American AyriculturM, Aug., 1903. 



*See ateo ** TTj/wan," 



