NEW VETERINARY COLLEGE. 
367 
tiie pathological, physiological, historical and pharmaceutical 
laboratories, which are fitted with desks, tables, microscopes and 
all other conveniences necessary for the work to be done in these 
departments. The Hospital Department is not yet built; it is 
intended to accommodate about 50 head of horses, also a dairy for 
about 50 head of milch cows, which is expected to be self-sup¬ 
porting. Those buildings when finished will be so arranged that 
only the first or ground floors will be used for hospital and dairy 
purposes. The second and third floors will befitted as dormitories 
for the use of students. Taking into consideration the favorable 
circumstances attending the birth of this new school, leaning on 
the reputation of one of the noblest institutions of learning in 
this country, it seems to me almost impossible for even the shadow 
of failure to fall across its pathway. Therefore, there is but one 
thing for it to do, and that is to stride onward and upward in 
the victorious course it has laid out for itself, and thus to aid in 
the elevation of a noble and honorable calling to the plane oc¬ 
cupied by its sister profession. 
REVIEWS, 
ANATOMY OF THE HORSE, by Prof. MoFadyeau, of the Royal Veteri. 
nary College of Edinburgh. 
We have enjoyed the opportunity, through the kindness of 
W. R. Jenkins, our popular veterinary publisher, of examining 
some of the advance sheets of this new work. This examination 
warrants the opinion that it will prove to be a good book for the 
veterinary student, though probably not so much a book on 
descriptive anatomy as a practical guide to the proper dissection 
of parts. The work will form a volume of about 350 pages, and 
is to be extensively illustrated with colored lithographic plates 
and wood cuts. 
A TEXT-BOOK OF OPERATIVE VETERINARY SURGERY, by G. 
Fleming, LL.D., F.R.C.V.S. Part I. (W. R. Jenkins.) 
Dr. Fleming has once more placed his name on record in 
