WHAT REVIEW SUBSCRIBERS SAY. 
85 
by the State Appraiser, the Commissioner of Agriculture and 
the State Controller. (7) That no cattle shall be examined and 
condemned under this act after the money appropriated for the 
indemnifying of owners of such cattle shall have been ex¬ 
hausted, until another appropriation shall have been made. 
WHAT REVIEW SUBSCRIBERS SAY. 
—Allow me to compliment you for having the moral cour¬ 
age to take this course, as it is the only business like manner to 
run a subscription list.— Wm. R. Howe , V. S., New York City. 
—Enclosed please find $3 for the Review for another year ; 
must have it ; cannot afford to be without it. Wishing the 
Review a long and prosperous life, I am as ever.— A. D. Gal¬ 
braith , D. V A, Greensburg , Indiana. 
—Although I have been out of the profession for six years, 
I enclose my subscription, as I like to know all that is going on 
in the veterinary world.— E. H. Humphrey , Agent U. S. Ex. 
Co ., Cortland , N. Y. 
—All I ask is that you let me know if you find my account 
out of balance on your books. I look longingly for my Review 
after the first of each month, and would be lost without it.— T. 
S. Childs , V. A., Saratoga Springs , N. Y. 
—I am in full sympathy with the position you have taken 
in the March editorial in regard to delinquents. Make them 
pay or cut off their supply. What is the use of carrying such 
people?— Wm. Herbert Lowe , D. V. A., Paterson , N. J. 
—Enclosed find check for $3 to renew my subscription for 
the Review, a paper that I could not think of having stopped. 
I think you have taken a very wise course in placing the jour¬ 
nal on a cash basis. I trust you will lose no subscriptions, but 
if you do lose a few it will leave you with a good substantial 
list of true lovers of the profession.— J. H. Conover , 
D. V. A, Fleming ton ^ N. J. 
—I very cheerfully enclose my check for $3 in payment for 
the Review from April, 1900, to April, 1901, and thank you 
for publishing so good a paper for so little money. The records 
will show that I have been a subscriber for many years, so I am 
in a position to say that the Review gets better as the years 
go by and the March number of 1900 is the brightest jewel of 
them all.— Dr. A. W. Axford , Naughright , N. J. 
