426 
CORRECTIONS-NEWS AND SUNDRIES. 
CORRECTIONS, 
Our friend and worthy correspondent Dr. G. Archie Stock- 
well calls onr attention to a number of errors which have found 
their way into the publication of his article on Comparative Les¬ 
sons of Brain Wounds, and asks us to correct them. 
Page 306, for “naucrede” read Nancredc. 
“ 307, eighth line from top, for “ also succeeded” read has succeeded . 
“ 358, in title, for “lesions” read lessons. 
“ 358, fourth line, for “occurred,” read accrued. 
“ 358, ninth line, for “festiche” read fetich. 
“ 360, “ for compression ” read of compression. 
“ 361, twelfth line from bottom, for “just began” read began just. 
NEWS AND SUNDRIES. 
Testimonial to Prof. Walley of Dick Veterinary Coll¬ 
ege.— A testimonial was presented to Principal Walley from the 
127 alumni of the college as an appreciation of the confidence they 
had in the gentleman as a teacher, and of the sympathy they had 
with him in the recent difficulty existing between the Dick College 
and the College of Veterinary Surgeons of London. 
Danger from Glanders. —It is stated in the New England 
Farmer , Boston, that u two men have lost their lives, one in Massa¬ 
chusetts, the other in Connecticut, during the present year from 
the loathsome disease known as glanders. In both cases the dis¬ 
ease was contracted while the men were attempting to cure the 
horses by treatment.” And the comment is added that ‘ £ the sooner 
horse men learn that this disease is incurable, and that a glandered 
horse is an unsafe animal to have around, the sooner the news¬ 
papers will cease to record of loss of human life from treating or 
handling such horses”.— Nat . Live Stock Jour. 
Prof. McCall on Inoculation of Pleuro-Pneumonia. — Un¬ 
fortunately the same holds equally good with the inoculated an¬ 
imal, if it should have contracted the seeds of the disease by the 
natural method prior to or at the time of its inoculation, and as 
