American Veterinary Review. 
NOVEMBER, 1895. 
EDITORIAL. 
LOU8S PA SI 
The sad event of the death of t 
took place in the latter part of S 
l’Etang, after a long- sickness. A f( 
death, it had been made public tha' 
mer ailment had made its appear; 
friends began to fear that the end w 
feeling which was, unfortunately, to 
It is not only a French savant, 
French nation, who has disappear* 
humanity. Both the Old and the 
Pasteur’s death as sincerely as Fram 
a country, no matter how far it may 
in some degree by the discoveries n 
and this universal acknowledgemen 
merited that the work of Pasteur is 
a new era in medical science, which 
increase for the greatest glory of the 
relief of humanity. 
Almost every branch of science 1 
of Pasteur, and if among them hu 
the head, her sister (veterinary medi 
the benefits that she has derived and 
by the application ol the discoveries 
If veterinarians will bear in mil 
through these discoveries in the inve< 
of such diseases of our domestic anin 
era, chicken cholera, rabies, etc., the 
ward to them the name of Pasteur a 
most honored of veterinary scientists 
veterinarians, the representatives oJ 
schools among the numerous attenc 
funeral of Pasteur are evidences of th 
veterinary medicine of the value of t 
