Jem. 2, iy08.] Agricultural Gazette of N.S.TF. 



55 



duriii"- chickeiiliood, and air thus innmuie fi-om further attacks. Ill- 

 effects rarely result to adult birds, hut niauy instances occur of chickens, 

 when better of the disease, having during its course acquired roup or 

 other ailment. 



The first noticeable symptoms are small pale eruptions or warts appear- 

 ing about the eves, head, and nostrils, gradually extending over the comb, 



From Bulletin No. 161. Berkeley, California. 



Intestines and Mesentery of a Fowl affected with tuberculosis. 



(See page 922, December, 1907.; 



and eyes, some specimens becoming actually Idind, when they have to be 

 hand "fed till the eruption or scab ripens and falls off, while sometimes the 

 case is so severe that one or both eyes are totally destroyed. 



Mrs. Lance Rawson, the authoress of the "Australian Poultry Book," 

 1893, then residing in Queensland, told the writer that warts were the most 



