THE CENTRAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. 55 
with regard to our forage. The water of the river was brought 
to the barracks ; but the stables — no, their symmetry must not 
be destroyed, and they are now what they were on the 28th of 
April, 1828, when the commission pronounced them bad ; and 
glanders is as prevalent as ever. 
[To be continued.] 
PUPILS WHO HAVE PASSED THEIR EXAMINATION 
AND OBTAINED DIPLOMAS AT THE ROYAL 
VETERINARY COLLEGE. 
1835. 
Nov. 24th — Mr. G. Draper, Stanton-by-bridge, Derbyshire 
Mr. W. Charnley, Liverpool, Lancashire 
Mr. W. Riddall, Launceston, Cornwall 
Dec. 8th — Mr. W. Richardson, Stixwould, Lincoln 
Mr. T. Ktng, Newcastle, Northumberland 
Mr. R. Bell, Chippenham, Wilts 
Mr. J. G. Philips 
Dec. 14th — Mr. W. Taylor, Belfast, Ireland 
Mr. R. Lucas, Jun., Liverpool, Lancashire 
Mr. W. McDermott, Jun., Calcutta. 
THE VETERINARIAN , JANUARY 1, 1836. 
Ne quid falsi dicere audeat, ne quid veri non audeat.— C icero. 
It is doubtless well known to our readers that, in the pre- 
ceding month, delegates from many of the Agricultural Societies 
of the United Kingdom assembled in London, in order to take 
into consideration the depressed state of the agricultural inte- 
rest, the causes of this depression, and, as far as the case would 
admit of it, the remedy. With regard to the existence of un- 
exampled distress among the occupiers of land, there cannot be a 
moment’s doubt. One gentleman, who stated that he had not 
raised his rents since 1792, assured the meeting, that every 
successive tenant of his during the last fifteen years, had become 
a bankrupt. 
The deputies and the other assembled agriculturists having 
