862 
SOCIETY MEETINGS. 
Finance Committee. —Dr. R. O. Hasbrouck, Passaic, Chair¬ 
man ; Drs. Ernest Buckley, Orange, and D. J. Dixon, Hoboken. 
Publication Committee. —Dr. Geo. W. Pope, Garfield, Chair¬ 
man ; Drs. S. Lockwood, Woodbridge, and M. M. Stage, Dover. 
Clinic Committee Newark Meeting. —Dr. Werner Runge, 
Newark, Chairman ; Drs. James McDonough, Montclair, and E. 
A. Hogan, Newark. 
Delegates to Pennsylvania State Veterinary Medical As¬ 
sociation. —Drs. L. P. Hurley, Hopewell; Win. B. E. Miller, 
Camden ; Edgar L. Landers, Camden ; Clias. E. Magill, Haddon- 
field, and H. W. Read, Freehold. 
Delegates to New York State Veterinary Medical Society .— 
Drs. E. Mathews, Jersey City ; A. H. McIntosh, Summit; James 
McDonough, Montclair; James D. Hopkins, Newark, and John 
Kehoe, Lyndhurst. 
Delegates to the American Veterinary Medical Association. 
—Drs. J. M. Everitt, Hackettstown ; A. W. Axford, Naugh- 
right ; Wm. J. Fredericks, Delawanna ; William Gall, Mata- 
wan, and S. S. Treadwell, Englewood. 
Delegates to the New Jersey State Sanitary Association .— 
Drs. J. V. Laddey, Arlington ; James C. Corlies, Newark, and 
G. P. Harker, Trenton. 
ONTARIO VETERINARY ASSOCIATION. 
The annual meeting of this association was held in the 
Veterinary College, Toronto, Canada, on Friday, December 
21, 1900. 
The President, Mr. W. J. Wilson, V. S., of London, opened 
the meeting with a short address, the substance of which was 
as follows : u The assembling of ourselves together to-day in an¬ 
nual convention is worthy of more than a passing notice. It 
marks the closing of the 19th century, which has been one of 
wonderful advancement in veterinary science. At the begin¬ 
ning of the century veterinary surgeons were almost unheard 
of, and our literature was very limited. Whereas to-day we hold 
an honorable position among the professions of the world and 
our literature is very extensive. I am proud to say that the 
Ontario Veterinary College has kept well to the front. I be¬ 
lieve it to be equal in its facilities for instruction to any veteri¬ 
nary college on the continent of America. I am also proud to 
say that its graduates as a body have well sustained the repu¬ 
tation of their alma mater. This association was organized in 
the year 1874. It has continued to meet periodically ever since 
