BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
861 
Jas. L. Robertson, 409 Ninth avenue, New York City, ex-officio. 
Chairman, W. B. E. Miller, 527 Penn street, Camden, N. J.; S. 
Stewart, 7 j 4 St. James street, Kansas City, Kan.; Jno. M. Par¬ 
ker, 24 Essex street, Haverhill, Mass. 
Resident State Secretaries .—C. A. Cary, Auburn, Ala ; R. 
R. Dinwiddie, Fayetteville, Ark.; J. K. Thompson, Pueblo, Col.; 
H. P. Eves, 507 West Ninth street, Wilmington, Del.; F. H. P. 
Edwards, Iowa City, la.; R. H. Harrison, Atchison, Kan.; Jas. 
B. Paige, Amherst, Mass.; R. A. Ramsey, Mexico, Mo.; W. 
L. Williams, Bozeman, Mon.; H. J. McClellan, Landsdowne, Pa. 
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
Veterinary Therapeutics and Pharmacology. By E. Wallis 
Hoare, F.R.C.V.S. (Bailliere, Tindall and Cox, London.) 
English veterinarians are at last awakening to the deficiency 
of English veterinary literature, and of late we have been 
gratified with a small number of good classical and practical 
works, which deserve a good place in the libraries of all veterin¬ 
arians. This last work of Mr. E. W. Hoare, is one amongst 
them. Heretofore, Finlay, Dunn, Mortan, Gamgu, Creswell, 
Armatage, and a few others, were the only works on therapeu¬ 
tics that one could consult. “Veterinary Therapeutics and 
Pharmacology ” comes to share part in the result of the good 
work intended, as an introduction to these important subjects. 
The work is divided into three parts, and each one into a 
number of chapters, the whole of it covering ovor 500 pages of 
valuable readings and interesting references. 
The appendix is a concise description of the prescribing and 
dispensing of drugs, with quite a number of valuable prescrip¬ 
tions, which cannot help but be of the greatest assistance to the 
young veterinarian and the every day busy practitioner. 
