CATALOGUE OF VETERINARY BOOKS. 



Important and Recent Publications 



FLEMING- PRICE 



"Veterinary Obstetrics "- By Geo. Fleming. F.K.C.V.S. Including the Acci- 

 dents and Diseases incident to Pregnancy, Parturition, and the early age in 



Domesticated Animals. New English edition, revised, 226 illus., 7">8 pp 



It is impossible for us in our limited space to review this valuable work so fully as 

 we should like to do. There is not an English-speaking or English-reading 

 practitioner but will find on perusal of the work a very large amount of sound 

 information, and we specially recommend it to practitioners and to students as 

 a valuable work of reference. Dr. Fleming has been an earnest and brilliant 

 contributor to veterinary literature for many years past, and this, his latest 

 production, is perhaps his greatest. The Veterinary Journal. 



HOARE 



"A Manual of Veterinary Therapeutics & Pharmacology "By F. 



Wallis Hoare, F.R.C.V.S. This work is intended as an introduction to the 

 important and extensive subject of veterinary therapeutics and pharmacology, 

 and it is divided into three parts. Part I. is introductory, and deals in a con- 

 cise manner with the subjects of diagnosis and the general symptoms of 

 disease in relation to therapeutics ; the actions and uses of medicinal agents 

 are also briefly noticed in a general manner. Part II. is devoted to general 

 therapeutics ; and Part III, deals with special therapeutics. A special chapter 

 has been devoted to " Anaesthetics " in consequence of the importance of this 

 subject in the present day, and in it the author has given the results of practi- 

 cal observation with reference to the employment of chloroform in veterinary 

 surgery. In the appendix, some practical information is given on the subject 

 of prescribing and dispensing, together with examples of prescriptions, which 

 it is hoped will prove of some assistance to the student. 12mo., cloth. 560 pp. '1 7" 



MOLLER- 



" Operative Veterinary Surgery" Translated and edited from the 

 second enlarged and improved edition. By J. A. W. Moller, M.R.C.V.S. 

 Prof. Moller's work represents the most recent and complete exposi- 

 tion of the Principles and Practice of Veterinary Surgery, and is the 

 standard text-book on the subject throughout Germany. Many subjects 

 ignored in previous treatises on Veterinary Surgery here receive full consider- 

 ation, while the better known are presented under new and suggestive aspects. 

 As Prof. Moller's work represents not only his own opinions and practice, but 

 those of the best Veterinary Surgeons of various countries, the translation 

 cannot fail to be of signal service tc American and British Veterinarians, and 

 to Students of Veterinary and Comparative Surgery. In one 8vo. volume 

 of 722 pages, with 142 illustrations 5 00 



Moller's surgery will prove of advantage to American veterinarians; it will fill for 

 them an important space which, up to this date, has been comparatively 

 empty, as, leaving out Williams and some few others of smaller dimensions, 

 the subject of surgery proper had no representative in English literature. 

 American Veterinary Review. 



SMITH- 



"A Manual Of Veterinary Physiology ' By Veterinary Captain F. Smith, 

 M.R.C.V.S. Author of a " Manual ot Veterinary Hygiene." Second edition, 

 revised and enlarged, with additional illustrations. Throughout this manual, 

 the object has been to condense the information as much as possible. The 

 broad facts of the sciences are stated so as to render them of use to the 

 student and practitioner. In this second edition rewritten the whole of the 

 Nervous System has been revised, a new chapter dealing with the Develop- 

 ment of the Ovum has been added, together with many additional facts and 

 illustrations. About one hundred additional pages are given. 8vo., 573 pp . . 3 50 



The fact that a second edition of this work has become necessary, in little more 

 than three years, should be as encouraging to the veterinary profession as it 

 unquestionably is to the author. The volume now before us not only repre- 

 sents a new edition, however, but practically a new book, and Captain Smith 

 deserves our warmest thanks for his efforts to bring this exceptionally difficult 

 subject up to date. The Veterinarian. 



