Ti/phoid Fever in Pigs. 



479 



in tlie drawing, and three small chocolate-coloured circular spots, 

 without breach of surface, in the stomach, were the only discernible 

 morbid changes above the ileo-cfecal valve. (Fig. 3, p. 481.) The 

 colon, on the contrary, in the same pig, was so extensively diseased 



Stomach of Pig, shewing Vegetative Outgrowths^connectcd witli'^Ukcis 



that, from this valve to the anus, there was scarcely a square inch of 

 membrane that was not beset by the characteristic patches. 



If we put aside the cases in which the lower end of the ileum is in 

 a dysenteric condition, the stomach is the part which, next to the 

 colon, suffers most. The alterations which this organ presents in some 

 cases are, as we have seen, as severe as they are remarkable. 



VOL. I. — S. S. 2 I 



