42 
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
Diseases of the Blood and General Diseases—Diseases of the Kidnevs.— 
(Maladies du s ang, Maladies Generales et Maladies des Reins.) By C. Cadeac, 
Professor of Clinical Medicine at the Veterinary School of Lyon. One volume, 
i6mo, 323 pages. Illustrated. Published by J. B. Bailliere & Sons. 
With remarkable regularity, Prof. Cadeac keeps on with the 
publication of his work on the special pathology of domestic 
animals. The first three volumes treated of the diseases of the 
digestive apparatus. The fourth considered the affections of the 
respiratory system. The fifth presented the diseases of the or¬ 
gans of circulation. The present volume treats: (1) Diseases of 
the blood and of general diseases (progressive pernicious anaemia, 
lymphademia, paludism, surra, parasites, haemorrhagic septicae¬ 
mias, cholera, haemoglobinemia, infectious paraplegia, canine 
distemper, strangles, gangrenous coryza, anasarca); and (2) dis¬ 
eases of the kidneys (renal congestion, infarction of the kidneys, 
nephritis). 
Prof. Cadeac studies diseases apparatus after apparatus; 
each organs forms a chapter which in its turn contains a series 
of articles covering all types of alteration that the organ may 
have gone through. This adopted order of classification for all 
diseases is the anatomical order. 
Domestic animals, differing in the anatomical point of view, 
there must be correlative differences in their pathogeny. Each 
animal species has its own diseases. It was necessary to adopt 
one pathology for each animal. This is the excellent method 
adopted by Prof. Cadeac. 
There is no work that has been wanted more than a treat¬ 
ise of internal pathology of the domestic animals. After gather¬ 
ing for ten years all the necessary material, the author has made 
it a thorough work. A convinced advocate of the microbian 
theory, it is from the work of Pasteur and his followers that 
Prof. Cadeac has taken the enthusiasm and the spirit with 
which he carries his work to the end. 
Papers and Addressfs. New York State Veterinary College. Being a collec¬ 
tion of the literary contributions by the members of the instructing staff of the New 
York State Veterinary College, for the years 1896-1898. 
Since the organization of the present faculty of the State Col¬ 
lege the members have contributed quite generously to the profes¬ 
sional periodicals, as well as to the programmes of the National 
and State Veterinary Medical Associations, and as these have 
reached the pages of the various publications, reprints of uni- 
