736 
ONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE—BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
ONTARIO VETERINARY COLLEGE. 
This institution held its Christmas examinations on Dec. 
20th. The usual Board of Examiners, which is composed of 
practicing veterinary surgeons, officiated. The following 
gentlemen, after being subjected to a rigid examination, were 
awarded graduation diplomas: 
Donald Currie, Stayner; Francis Duncan, Unionville; 
John M. Farquhar, Greenock, Scotland; Truman Farl Gore, 
Clarksburgh, W. Va., U. S.; Cecil Howell, London, Ont. ; 
John S. Jones, Poland, N. Y. ; R. L. Kann, Lisburn, Pa. ; 
Archie A. McArthur, Stayner; Allan McDonald, Erin; An¬ 
gus McDonald, Teeswater; John J. McGregor, Carleton 
Place; Arthur E. Miller, Myersville, Ohio; James H. Powers, 
Providence, R. I.; David D. Reed, Teeswater; William J. 
Rouse, Mitchell Square ; Daniel Henry Super, Warrensville, 
Pa. ; Jacob W. Wagner, Tavistock; E. C. Wisman, Bryan, 
Ohio. 
Primary Examination, Anatomy.—Geo. Hamilton Leslie. 
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
Pathologie Interne des Animaux Domestiques —(Internal Pathology of Domes¬ 
tic Animals.)—By C. Cadeac, professor at the Veterinary School of Lyons, i. 
Diseases of the Digestive Apparatus . The first of sixteen volumes, with 478 
pages and 16 plates. This volume is part of the Veterinary Encyclopedia. 
A work of the internal pathology of the domestic animals 
was much wanted, and after ten years of careful gathering 
of important material, Mr. Cadeac made of the whole minute 
selections, which form the basis of his new work. Convinced 
adept of the microbian theory, he inspired himself of the 
work of Pasteur and of his students in the arrangement and 
adaptation of the material he had collected. 
He studies the diseases by apparatus ; each organ forming 
a chapter, each containing a series of articles which cover the 
history of all the ailments that this organ may be subject to. 
The order of classification adopted for all the diseases is the 
anatomical order. 
This volume treats of the digestive apparatus. In the 
first chapter the mouth is treated (stomatitis, glossitis, paraly¬ 
sis of the tongue). The second considers the parotid gland 
