794 
EDITORIAL. 
this number of the REVIEW, entitled “ REVIEWS Wanted,” as 
the publishers are very much in earnest in their efforts to se¬ 
cure the numbers sought, since it is to fill orders for many 
highly-esteemed members of the profession who are anxious to 
have their volumes bound. We trust, therefore, that those 
readers who may have duplicate copies of certain numbers of 
1900 and 1901 will send them in to the office of publication, 
and we shall be only too glad to forward the amount offered in 
the notice referred to. 
“Society Meetings” is a well-filled department of the 
Review this month, and the secretaries have vied with each 
other in making their reports of value to the reader, since they 
have summarized the proceedings in such a manner that the 
valuable scientific and practical points stand out in a compre¬ 
hensive manner. If we can only keep this good work up, a 
bound volume of the Review will constitute a perfect history 
of the work of the associations of the country for the year. The 
secretaries are asked to regard the pages of this journal as their 
property, and to remember that they are largely the makers of 
contemporaneous veterinary literature. 
Dr. J. V. Raddey, of Arlington, N. J., will present an im¬ 
portant communication to the Veterinary Medical Association 
of New Jersey, at the meeting which occurs at Trenton, on the 
9th inst., entitled “ The X-Ray as an Aid in the Diagnosis of 
Tuberculosis in Cattle.” The doctor has done considerable ex¬ 
perimentation along this line, and has met with very satisfactory 
results, the story of which is told in a series of photographs and 
radiagraphs. The Review will publish the paper, with full il¬ 
lustrations, in the February number. 
The Swine Breeder’s Association of Nebraska an¬ 
nounce a paper for its annual meeting to be held in January, by 
Dr. S. Stewart, of Kansas City. 
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