776 
INDKX. 
Webl), Mr., his case of larynptis in a horse, 584 
Welsh, Dr., on the immortality of brutes, 516 
Werner, his opinion of the fiirmtions of tliebile, 19.9 
Wesley, Rev. J., on the immortality of brutes, 616 
Wheat and wheat-straw, their etFect on the horse, 62—their destructive effect 
on sheep, 60 
Wheatley, Mr., his case of atrophy of the lung’s, 251—on the proper quantity 
and management of water and food, 189—his account of a calf of extraor¬ 
dinary size, 190 
Wheezers, what horses are so called, 2 
Whistlers, what horses are so called, 1—the connexion between it and roar¬ 
ings, 451 
Whitlaw, Dr., on the epidemic of cattle, 468 
Windpipe, auscultation of the, 119 
Womb, inflammation of, complicated with founder, 2/4 
Wombat, the brain of, 296 
Wood, Mr., his essay on abortion in cattle, 688 
Worms, the cause of sudden death in a dog, 42—description of those between 
the tunics of the stomach and intestines, 42—worms, the, which are the 
cause of hoose in cattle, 228—these worms taken up in the form of ova, in 
the animal’s drink, 229—in the intestines of poultry, 648, 649 
Xenophon, account of him as a veterinary writer, 305 
Youatt, Mr., on the effects of strychnia, 29—on the necessity of a longer re¬ 
sidence at the College by the pupil who had no previous advantages, 30— 
his account of the Association dinner, 31—on an examining committee 
composed of human surgeons, 32—the proper nature of the examination 
of the student, 33—description of the proper lecturer on the diseases 
of cattle, 33—on the worms between the tunics of the stomach and intes¬ 
tines, 44—his account of the Caesarean operation in foreign eountries, 123 
—his account of the opinions of the French on dropping after calving, 165 
—his observations on the memorial of the veterinary profession, 19/—on 
friendly associations among the members of the profession, 272—his ob¬ 
jections to the circular of the English Agricultural Society, 315—his health 
proposed at the dinner of the Edinburgh Veterinary School, 372—on ceso- 
phagotomy in the cow, 398—on the use of calomel in hepatitis, 417—re¬ 
view of Percivall’s Hippo-pathology, 431—Do. Morton’s Toxicological 
Chart, 433—review of Low’s Illustrations of the different Breeds of Animals, 
210, 435, 755—on the improvement of the Cornish horse, 478—his reply to 
Mr. Carmichael on the attempted improvements in the Veterinarv College, 
555—his observations on the present state of veterinary politics, 557— 
his cases of superfoetation in the cow, 579—his singular case of the disap¬ 
pearance of the symptoms of rabies, 585—on the non-immortality of brutes, 
624—advice on a case of rabies, 701—on Professor Sewell’s introductory 
lecture, 746—his account of the deficiency of the fees and lectures, 747— 
on the appearance of the veterinary surgeon at the examiners’ board, 751— 
on the standing committee of veterinary surgeons, 751 
Zetland breed of cattle, account of the, 758 
