401 
ON WARRANTY, &C. 
sion will gradually be gathered, in which the opinions of the ge¬ 
neral body of practitioners will be expressed, and the bond of 
union among all who have the improvement of the profession at 
heart.” 
Then, gentlemen, go on and prosper. Many good wishes, 
depend upon it, attend you ; but do not lose future good by at¬ 
tempting that which is at present beyond your reach. Improve 
the profession ; improve the education of the student; render it 
less easy for those to creep in among us, who, by unjustifiable 
management, have been the cause of our debasement; be the 
uncompromising foes of corruption ; the stern but not the 
factious enemies to all that is unfriendly to our profession ; and 
if you do not succeed in the full accomplishment of your pur¬ 
pose, others, treading in your steps, will obtain all for which 
you are contending, and your labours will be held in grateful 
recollection. 
I can truly subscribe myself, 
Your sincere well-wisher, 
A Stander-by. 
ttrlurllD. 
Quid sit pulchrum, quid turpe, quid utile, quid non.—H or. 
Of Warranty, and the Defects constituting Unsoundness in Do¬ 
mestic Animals- By J. B. Huzard, Jun . V. S. 
(Continued from page, 355.) 
M. Huzard follows up these observations with saying—how 
difficult and obscure our investigations after the seat and nature 
of lameness often prove; and how very necessary it becomes, in 
almost all cases, to remove the shoe and examine the foot; “even 
in cases,” he adds, “ where the cause and seat seem both ap¬ 
parent.” Nothing,” continues our author, “ is more insidious 
than the symptoms of lameness: although no heat may be dis¬ 
coverable in the foot, although one might swear the lameness had 
its seat any w r here else, yet how often, after all, is one surprised 
to find the lesion in the foot.” This sensible remark, the too 
sure fruit of experience, we beg to stamp with the humble seal 
of our own past practice, regarding (as we ever have done) a* 
VOL. III. 3 H 
