BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
737 
(parotiditis, calculi, fistula, etc.) The third studies the maxil¬ 
lary and the lingulal salivary glands. The pharynx covers 
the fourth chapter. The fifth occupies the guttural pouches . 
In the sixth we find oesophagitis, dilatation, structure, obliter¬ 
ation, rupture, etc., as diseases met with in the oesophagus , 
though a special chapter is given to jabot. The three fol¬ 
lowing chapters are considering the diseases of the three first 
compartments of the stomach of ruminants (rumen, reticu¬ 
lum, omasum). The eleventh chapter treats of stomach (gas¬ 
tritis, ulceration, dilatation, laceration, twisting, indiges¬ 
tion, etc.) 
This first part forms a very important addition to the 
series of the so neatly published encyclopedia' of the house 
J. B. Bailliere & fils, 19 rue Hautefeuille, Paris. 
The Dog in Health and in Disease.— By Wesley Mills, M.A., MD., D.V.S., 
etc. Second edition, revised and enlarged. D. Appleton & Co., New York. 
The number of editions a book is published does not al¬ 
ways indicate its value, but this thought cannot apply to this 
second edition of Dog , in Health and in Disease. It is but a 
few years since we were able to welcome the first edition, and 
it is with pleasure that we welcome the second—so well said 
to be revised and enlarged, and with an increase in the illus¬ 
trations, colored plates, wood cuts, etc. 
The general plan adopted by the author in the original 
book has been kept up in this, and before considering abnor¬ 
mal or diseased condition, a general opportunity to study 
dogs in their normal state is given. The additions made in 
the book will be found advantageous; the glossary of terms 
in common use by dog fanciers will prove useful. 
Altogether, it is quite certain that Dr. Mills will find that 
this edition will receive, at the hands of the profession, as kind 
reception as the first. 
The Veterinarians’ Call-Book (Perpetual): A visiting list which can be 
commenced at any time and used until full, containing much useful information 
for the student and busy practitioner. By Roscoe R. Bell, D.V.S., Professor 
of Materia Medica. Therapeutics and Hygiene in the American Veterinary Col¬ 
lege, New York. 
After a dormant period of eight months, in which this 
useful little book has been entangled in the affairs of the de- 
