EDITORIAL. 
277 
where excellent meals are served, presents an ideal meeting-place 
to look forward to. Clinics can be arranged for to good advan¬ 
tage at the veterinary college amphitheatre, and a hearty wel¬ 
come awaits the attendants of the A. V. M. A. meeting at In¬ 
dianapolis, and the ladies will be well looked after. 
In Memoriam—Leonard Pearson.— This is the title of a 
clearly printed, neatly bound little volume from the Lippincott 
press, bearing as a frontispiece a striking likeness of the late 
Leonard Pearson, and containing, in addition to a biographical 
sketch of his life and eight addresses in connection with the 
memorial exercises, forty-seven tributes to his name from great 
men all over the world, from veterinary journals and from scien¬ 
tific and veterinary organizations. It was a happy thought that 
prompted the grouping together of all these expressions of appre¬ 
ciation of the greatness, the nobility and worthiness of this gentle, 
unassuming American veterinarian in one volume; a volume that 
will be cherished by the present generation of veterinarians and 
handed down to future generations tenderly and reverently. 
Discussion of Breeding Problems Opened.— In our May 
issue we referred editorially to the advantages to veterinarians 
to be gained by a careful study of breeding problems, offering 
the pages of the Review for their discussion by the veterinary 
profession and promising to have the subject opened by Prof. 
L. L. Lewis, of the Oklahoma Agricultural Experiment Station. 
Prof. Lewis’ paper, entitled “ Artificial Insemination,” appears 
on page 278 of this issue and will prove interesting and in¬ 
structive reading. A series of papers on breeding problems will 
follow in subsequent issues. 
Dr. John F. Planz, of Akron, Ohio, has accepted the posi¬ 
tion in veterinary surgery and obstetrics made vacant by the 
resignation of Dr. J. H. McNeil at the College of Veterinary 
Medicine, Ohio State University. 
