BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
781 
shall serve without compensation, but their actual traveling and 
incidental expenses necessary to the performance of their duties 
shall be paid out of the fund received under the provisions of 
this act, and under no circumstances shall any expenses be paid 
out of the State Treasury. 
Sec. 15. All moneys received by the treasurer of said Board 
of Examiners shall be put into one fund, and all expenses of 
said board shall be paid out of this fund upon warrants drawn 
by the secretary and duly countersigned by the president. The 
treasurer shall give to the State a standard surety bond in double 
the amount of the fund entrusted to his care. 
Sec. 16. Said board shall meet as a Board of Examiners in 
Jefferson City, Missouri, on the second Monday in January of 
each year, and special meetings may be called by the president 
on a written request signed by at least two members of said 
board, at any time and place designated by the president. At 
each meeting the secretary shall lay before the board all appli¬ 
cations received, and if the board finds said applicant or appli¬ 
cants to be entitled to a certificate under the provisions of this 
act, certificates shall be issued thereto in accordance with the 
provisions of section 8 of this act, provided that each applica¬ 
tion shall be accompanied with the fee provided for in section 9 
of this act, but if any application be rejected by the board, the 
secretary shall notify the applicant by mail of such rejection. 
Sec. 17. At the end of each official year of the Board of 
Examiners created under this act, the treasurer thereof shaB 
make a report of the receipts and distribution of funds in his 
hands during the year to the board, and the president of the 
board shall forward a copy of the same, with a brief report of 
the work of the board during the year, to the Governor of the 
State. ^ .... 
Sec. 18. All acts or parts of acts in conflict with this act 
are hereby repealed. _ 
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
Practice of Equine Medicine; a Manual for Students and Practitioners of Veterinary 
Medicine, Arranged with Questions and Answers, with an Appendix Containing 
Prescriptions for the Horse and Dog. By Harry D. Hanson, D. V. S., Associate 
Professor of Theory and Practice in the American Veterinary College. New York ; 
H. D. Hanson & Bro. 
This important addition to English veterinary literature has 
reached us, and presents itself in the shape of a very neatly 
printed and bound volume of some 250 a comprehensive 
