10 
IMPORTANT PUBLICATIONS DURING 1897 
EIERGISEI! Ill EPIRE SVBGEBY. 
By P. J. CADIOT, 
Professor of the Alfort Veterinary School. 
Translated by A. W. BITTING, D.V.M., 
Formerly Veterinarian in the Florida Agricultural College and 
Experiment Station ; Veterinarian to Purdue University and 
Agricultural Experiment Station. 
Edited by A. LIAUTARD, M.D., V.M., 
Principal and Professor of Anatomy, Surgery, Sanitary Medicine and 
Jurisprudence, of the American Veterinary College, 
New York, etc., etc. 
ONE VOL., 8vo, OVER 50 ILLUSTRATIONS, $ 2.50 
This work, so well known and highly appreciated among the students 
and busy practitioners of France and many parts of Europe, is so complete and so 
valuable in the field it covers, that no American veterinary surgeon will want to 
take up any of the many of the equine surgical operations without reviewing for a 
moment the ever-thoughtful suggestions and reminders contained in this book. 
Fully illustrated, and added to by the editor, Prof. A. Liautard, it comes to us in a 
thoroughly acceptable style and attractive form, made so by that long experienced 
veterinary publishing house of W. R. Jenkins, of New York, that has produced from 
Its presses so many valuable contributions to veterinary literature. We are sure 
this will prove one of the most sought-for books ever issued by this house.—JoM?'naf 
ef Comparative Medicine and Veterinary Archives. 
It is a first-class guide for practitioners as well as students. All the operations 
Ere clearly and concisely treated.the best way of restraining the horse, the requisite 
Instruments, and each step of the operation being described. In many cases the 
procedure is made more plain by well executed drawings. The work is translated 
by Dr. A. W. Bitting, and edited by Professor Liautard, both of whom deserve the- 
thanks of English speaking readers for putting at their disposal a reliable guide to 
operative surgery.—YTie Veterinary JRecord. 
It is needless to say that everything given is of the best, the character of the 
learned author vouching for the standard of the work; the illustrations are good 
and helpful; the printing and binding are first-class. We advise all students and 
practitioners to purchase the work,—it will be money well invested, and we are 
convinced that it will be constantly referred to with advantage.—The Veterinarian. 
Every page of this small book contains valuable information, not only in the 
letter-press, but in an equal degree in the well executed drawings which are 
employed to illustrate all the important and many of the minor operations. 
All the directions are given in the most simple and exact terms, and each step 
Is separately indicated with ^o much precision, that even a tyro in the use of sur¬ 
gical instruments would hardly fail in an operation which he might be called upon 
to perform for the first time .—The Field. 
The illustrations, mostly from the pencil of M. Nicolet, are of a very high 
order, and help most materially to render the t^xt clear. The translator. Dr. 
Bitting, has done his work faithfully. The editor. Dr, Liautard. contributes a pre¬ 
face, and there is little doubt that the hope therein expressed by him will bo¬ 
real ized, that ‘'this little work will not fail to prove of some value and advantage 
o the veterinary student and practitioner .”—British Medical Journal. 
