MISCELLANEA. 
580 
(Dtntuarm 
On the 9th ultimo, died Mr. George Moneyment, of Norwich. 
He succeeded Mr. Stevenson, still remembered as a very able 
practitioner, and for many years he conducted one of the most 
extensive veterinary establishments in Norfolk. He is known to 
the readers of The Veterinarian, as the author of a very 
satisfactory account of a case of rabies in a pony, and as the 
author of an able essay on the late epidemic, in which he advo- 
cated the propriety of bleeding to a limited extent, and laid down 
certain excellent rules, by the observance of which the practi- 
tioner would rarely err in the abstraction of blood. We have 
reason to know, that, had Mr. Moneyment lived, The Veteri- 
narian would often have been enriched by his contributions. 
Mr. Moneyment was respected by all to whom he was known, 
as a good and affectionate husband and father, a sincere and a 
warm friend, a scientific practitioner, and ardently devoted to 
the improvement of his profession. 
J. S. 
[Will our friends kindly favour us with an account of losses 
like these, when they occur? The record of departed worth is 
a duty which we equally owe to those who have laboured in a good 
cause, and to posterity. — Y.J 
TO CORRESPONDENTS. 
We did not receive the parcel to which Mr. S. alludes. 
Mr. Morton, the able chemical lecturer at the Veterinary College, has 
kindly analyzed for us the medicine which our Hertfordshire friend sent. It 
contained a considerable proportion of sulphate of copper, a drug that 
must be absolutely poisonous in such a case. 
We beg to apologize to Mr. Cartwright for not having sooner inserted the 
following corrections : 
In vol. 9 of The Veterinarian, 
Page 20, line 4, for fixed,. read fired 
.. 94 .. 32 .. Cross and Jagger .. Mr* Cross, a Jagger or Carrier 
. . 495 . . 5 . . slightly . . slyly 
. . 496 . . 3 . . Mannoir . . Maunoir 
.. 496 .. 16 . . Terron .. Tenon. 
