348 
LESIONS OF THE PAROTID DUCT. 
At the sitting of the section of the Board for Scotland, on the 
27th April, 1846, the following pupils of the Edinburgh School 
received their diplomas, and were admitted members of the Royal 
College of Veterinary Surgeons: — 
Extracts from Domestic & Foreign Journals, Veterinary, 
Medical, Agricultural, Sporting, <Stc. 
The Treatment of Fistula of the Parotid Duct in the 
Horse, followed by some practical Considerations 
relative to the Means of Cure employed in Human 
Surgery. 
By M. Reynal, First VS. to the Sixth Lancers. 
" S’il est vrai que, pour se constituer, la m6decine v6t6rinaire a en recours a la 
m6decine humaine, si journellement encore elle lui fait de nombreux emprunts, 
elle lui a toujours offert et livre en retour, le fruit de ses observations, de ses r6- 
chSrches, et de ses experiences.” — BartMlemy. 
Practical Facts — Description of Morbid Lesions — Results of 
some Experiments tried on Wounds of the Parotid Duct. 
It is not our intention to narrate in this chapter all the cases 
that have come under our own observation or been communicated 
to us ; that would be useless, a cure having invariably been ob- 
tained by means of the treatment we adopted. 
Mr. Robert Ord 
- — Thomas Gray 
— Thomas Murray 
— Alexander Caldwell 
— William Gavin 
— James Robinson 
— William Elam 
— William Waugh 
— • John Goude 
— ■ James Crombie 
— • Stephen Constant 
— George Knox 
Mr. Edward M'Naughton 
— William Mayor 
— • John Simpson 
— George Stewart 
— James Kay 
— Archibald Turnbull 
— Robert Lorley 
— • Mari H. Cuming 
— William Baxter 
— John White 
— George Bodington 
■ — John Barth. Murphey. 
[Continued from page 282 .] 
CHAPTER III. 
