do 
HHiscellanca* 
Veterinary Surgeons newly graduated. 
We have great pleasure in inserting the following list of new 
graduates in our profession. Of the thirteen, nine of them, 
Messrs. Wheatley, Templar, Cowie, Duncalf, Jackson, May, 
Naylor, Simpson, and Bean, belonged to the school of one of 
us, as well as to that of the Veterinary College, and we well know 
the worth of several of them. 
The admission of such men among us, as we know the ma¬ 
jority of them to be, betokens the rapid improvement of our pro¬ 
fession, and the approach of that time when medical men will not 
blush to acknowledge as brethren those who practise our branch 
of the healing art. 
We shall continue the list so far as we are enabled, that is, so 
far as we are favoured with the names of the successful candi¬ 
dates for the College diploma. If omissions should occasionally 
occur, as we have reason to believe they may in the present in¬ 
stance, the fault shall never rest with us. 
Graduated November 16, 1831. 
Mr. Samuel Wheatley, of Newmarket. 
Mr. Robert Byers, of Northallerton, Yorkshire. 
Mr. Richard Templar, of Bally Gunge, Calcutta. 
Mr. James Cowie, Hackerton, Lawrence Kirk, N. B. 
Graduated November 22. 
Mr. Thomas Duncalf. 
Mr. Charles Jackson, Guildford, Surrey. 
Mr. C harles May, Maldon, Essex. 
Mr. M. E. Naylor, Wakefield, Yorkshire. 
Graduated December 6. 
Mr. William Simpson, Lancaster, now of London. 
Mr. Richard Saunders, Spilsby, Lincolnshire. 
Mr. Barrington Bean, Stockton on Tees, Durham. 
Mr. John Child, Swafl ham, Norfolk. 
Graduated December 15. 
Mr. John Phillips, Son of Lieutenant Phillips, 12th Royal Lancers. 
Examination of the Horse by a Blind Man. 
The author of Waverley happened to be standing by with 
another gentleman, while the captain of the Selkirk Yeomanry 
