EDITORIAL REMARKS. 
47 
b g 
that (turned over) position by the screw at e being turned twice or 
thrice, to make its point enter the small hole through the shield 
at f Thus will the instrument be held in the neck by stops 
rising, both upwards and downwards, within the cavity of the 
windpipe, abutting upon the back fronts of the cartilaginous rings. 
g, g, g , The shield of the instrument, intended to cover the 
opening made, in bronchotomy, through the skin. 
h, The external aperture of the breathing tube, through the 
centre of the shield. 
THE VETERINARIAN, JANUARY 1, 1849. 
Ne quid falsi dicere audeat, ne quid veri non audeat.— Cicero. 
The lecture Mr. Cherry was somewhat unexpectedly called on 
to deliver to the Farmers’ Club on the occasion of their meeting, 
on the 6th November last—as transcribed in an abridged form into 
our Journal for last month from a lengthened report in “ The Mark 
Lane Express”—on the disease which has proved so destructive to 
cattle life, under the appellation of “ Pleuro-pneumonia,” and 
which is said also to have proved the opprobrium of veterinary 
science, together with the discussion to which the lecture on the 
