VIII CONTENTS. 



DAIRY FARMING DAIRYING. 



Page. 



[History of dairying in the United States] 580 



Dairying in Jamaica, Pengelley 580 



Cattle and dairying in the Punjab, 1910, Stow 580 



Dairying map of New South Wales 580 



Report on milk records for season 1909, Howie 580 



Cow testing, Singleton 580 



Half a ton of butter per cow per year, Van Pelt 580 



Cost of producing milk, Whitaker 580 



A comparison of soy-bean cake and linseed cake rations, Ott de Vries 581 



Yohimbine, Hasak 581 



The absorption of drugs by milk in the mammary glands, Koldewijn 581 



Composition of milk, Pape 581 



The increase of the fat-free dry substance in milk by creaming, Formenti 581 



Influence of amount of rennet and temperature on milk, Brauler 581 



A note on an organism producing a burnt-milk taste, Sadler 582 



The bacillus of long life, Douglas 582 



The practical value of bacterial examinations of milk and cream, Jordan 582 



The microscope in the dairy, Scott 582 



Clean milk: Requirements from production to consumption, Yates and Brand. . 582 



The modern milk pail, Harding, Wilson, and Smith 582 



Covered pails mean cleaner milk. Hall 583 



Milk legislation 583 



Further observations of the milk supply of Washington, D. C, Magruder 583 



Certified milk in New York State 583 



The cream supply. Hopper 583 



Notice of judgment 583 



Modern butter making and dairy arithmetic, Meyer 583 



A visit to the Riitti-Zollikofen Dairy School, Farrington 583 



Theory and practice of cheese making. Maze 583 



Fancy cheese in America, Publow 584 



VETERINARY MEDICINE. 



Biology, general and medical, McFarland 584 



Lectures in regard to infection and immunity, Miiller 584 



General register for Zeitschrift fur Immunitdtsforschung und experimentelle 



Thcrapie, Friedberger and Ungermann 584 



Toxicity of heterologous sera and criteria of anaphylaxis, Biedl and Kraus 584 



The antitryptic, isolytic, and heterolytic power of the blood serum, Finzi 585 



Immunizing agents and therapeutic sera in veterinary practice, Dalrymple 585 



About a method of drying serum, Frankel and Elfer 585 



The part played by chemical synthesis in the development of chemotherapy. . . 585 



Ehrlich's chemotherapy — a new science, Schweitzer 585 



A description of the Ehrlich-Hata preparation 606 585 



About an endotoxin of the Micrococcus melitensis, Bernard 585 



The precipitin reaction in erysipelas, Vanney 585 



Contagiousness of Malta fever 586 



"Muhinyo," a disease of natives in Uganda, Bruce et al 586 



Combating tetanus in animals with specific tetanus antitoxin, Holterbach 586 



Experiments to ascertain if cattle may act as a reservoir of the virus of sleeping 



sickness ( Trypanosoma gambiense), Bruce et al 586 



Trypanosome diseases of domestic animals in Uganda, I-III, Bruce et al 586 



Contribution to experimental tuberculosis in sea fishes, von Betegh 586 



Conversion of the human type of tubercle bacillus into the bovine type, Eber. 587 



Absence of living tubercle bacilli from old tuberculous lesions in man, Cobbett. 587 



Transference of tuberculin hypersensitiveness, Onaka 587 



The significance of the tuberculin titer for diagnosis, Erlandsen and Petersen . . 587 



The inconstancy of the diazo reaction in the urine of the tuberculous, Weiss. . . 587 



Report on combating bo\'ine tuberculosis in Sweden up to 1909, Regner 587 



Vaccinating against hemoglobinuria in bovines, Schultze 588 



The cause of "apoplexy " in winter-fed lambs. Wing 588 



Linguatulosis fatal to the goat, Moussu 588 



Sarcocysts in the camel in Egypt, Mason 588 



Krafft's vaccination against swine plague, von Lojewski 589 



Bacteria resembling paratyphoid B in the intestinal tract of the horse, Huber.. 589 



Vaccination against equine influenza, Pommrich 589 



