851-853 Si\vth Avenue {cor. iSth St.), New YorJc. 15 



ONOCABD. "The Animal Tuberculoses, and llieir 

 Relation to Human Tuberculosis." By Ed. Nocaid, 

 Professor of the Alfort Veterinary College. Trans- 

 lated by H. Scurfield, M.D. Ed., Ph. Camb. 



Perhaps the chief interest to doctors of hunaan 

 medicine in Professor Nocard's book lies in the 

 demonstration of the small part played by heredity, 

 and the great part played by contagion in the propa- 

 gation of bovine tuberculosis. It seems not unreason- 

 able to suppose that the same is the case for human 

 tuberculosis, and that, if the children of tuberculosis 

 parents were protected from infection by cohabitation 

 or ingestion, the importance of heredity as a cause of 

 the disease, or even of the predisposition to it, would 

 dwindle away into insignificance. 12mo, cloth. 143 

 pages .1 f'O 



PEGLEU, "The Book of the Goaf 12mo, cloth.l 75 



rELEEBJK, "Median Neurotomy in the Treatment 

 of Chronic Tendinitis and Periostosis of the Fetlock." 



By C. Pellerin, late repetitor of Clinic and Surgery to 

 the Alfort Veterinary School. Translated, with Addi- 

 tional Facts Relaling to It, by Prof. A. Liautard, M.D., 

 V.M. 8vo, boards, illustrated 1 00 



rnOCTOn, " The Management and Treatment of 

 the Horse "' in the Stable, Field and on the Eoad. 

 By William Proctor. 8vo 2 40 



rETERS, "A Tuberculous Herd -Test with Tuber- 

 culin." By Austin Peters, M. R. C. V. S., Chief 

 Inspector of Cattle for the New York State Board of 

 Health during the winter of 1892-93. Pamphlet. . . .25 



