eee ee ee ee ee ee an i ee i a ee a ee 
oS =e ws ee 
A Bee ed a =™ — yy SS _ indie > = wa 2: > — 
+ ~ _ 
598 
were found in the blood and organs of all the fatal cases so that it is pos- 
sible that death was the result of a combination of rinderpest and Texas 
fever and was not due to the former disease alone. These records seem 
to show the curative value of serum, even in the advanced stages of 
the disease ; however, all the treatments were by the intravenous method. 
If the serum is to be used beneath the skin, then the injection must 
be given as early as possible. Kolle and Turner, Verney, Maberly, and 
others, have also spoken of the curative value of serum. 
A LIST OF THE MOST IMPORTANT ARTICLES ON THE SUBJECT OF RINDERPEST. 
Gamgee: The Cattle Plague (1866), London. 
Dieckerhoff: Geschichte der Rinderpest (1890), Berlin. 
Kolle and Turner: Zeitsch, fiir Hygiene (1898), XXIX, 309. 
Koch: Reiseberichte (1898), Berlin. 
Kolle: Hrgebnisse d. Allg. Pathologie, Lubarsch u. Ostertag (1899), VI, 470. 
Rogers: Zeitsch. fiir Hygiene (1900), XXXV, 59. 
Hutcheon: Journ, Comp. Path. (1902), XV, 300. 
Dieckerhoff: Lehrbuch der Specielle Pathologie und Therapie fiir Tiertirzte (1903), 
II, Berlin. 
Nocard et Leclainche: Les Maladies microbiennes des Animauw (1903), Paris, I. 
Jobling: Publications of the Serum Laboratory, No. 1V, Bureau of Government 
Laboratories (1903), Manila. 
Plehn: Der Staatliche Schutz gegen Viehseuchen, Berlin (1903). 
Sobernheim: Handbuch d. Path. Organismen, Kolle u. Wassermann (1904), TV. 
1246. 
Arloing: Journ. Méd. Vétér. et Zodtech. (1905), LVII, 321. 
Haedicke: Berl. Tier. Woch. (1904), L. 
Littlewood: Journ. Comp. Path. and Ther. (1905), XVIII, 312. 
