many obligations to him for having given to his profession such 

 a complete treatise, and they may now feel that their literature 

 has a system which will compare favorably with any in the domain 

 of human medicine." — American Veterinary Review, New York. 



"Of Professor I,aw's latest volume we can speak in terms of 

 warm praise. Not only does it cover a wide field, but its infor- 

 mation is accurate and recent. The work can fairly claim to rep- 

 resent the present state of clinical knowledge regarding infectious 

 diseases of animals. The preparation of so important a volume 

 must have involved an amount of reading and translation which 

 few veterinary surgeons could accomplish, and the selection and 

 collection of the vast amount of information here gathered to- 

 gether must have been a work of great difiiculty. . . Even 

 with the cooperation of numerous disciplined assistants, few writ- 

 ers could hope to better his performance. Professor I^aw has 

 read, marked, learned and inwardly digested most of the recent 

 utterances of the best EngUsh, French, German and Italian 

 authorities. Adding to these the experience gained during a long 

 period of practice and teaching in the United States, he has 

 moulded the information into a harmonious whole. . . As a 

 work of reference it will be highly valued and . . with its 

 three companion volumes will form a valuable addition to the 

 Uterature of veterinary medicine."— /oar of Comp. Path, and 

 Therapeutics, London, Eng. 



