208 AGEICULTUKAL REPORT. 



Ou November 1 it reached Kingston, on the west side of the Hudson, 

 and Washington County, ]S"ew York, attacking first the livery and canal 

 horses, contrary to vvhat occurred at Buffalo, where canal horses escaped 

 until October 22. Is this difference to be accounted for by the fact that 

 the canal did not extend into Canada '? 



At the same date it was reported at Germantown and Lancaster, 

 Pennsj'lvania; Cincinnati, Bucyrus, and Etna, Ohio; Romeo, Michigan ; 

 Portsmouth and Chuckatuck, Virginia, and Newark, Delaware, starting 

 in the last case with a horse j'ust arrived from Baltimore, Maryland. 



Ou November 2 it appeared at Adams, Massachusetts ; on the 4th at 

 Pittstield ; on the 5th at Great Barrington, and on the Gth at Eichraond ; 

 all in the Hoosac Valley. On the same date it was observed at Charles- 

 ton, South Carolina, in town and country at once. 



On November 3 it broke out at Elyria, Ohio, confining itself for five 

 days to teams which had been driven to Cleveland ; at Goldsborough, 

 North Carolina, and Columbia, South Carolina. 



On November 4 it was reported at Springfield, Illinois, and in Lehigh 

 County, Pennsylvania, where " it spread like fire along the canal and 

 into the surrounding country." 



On November o it Avas reported in Tioga, Elk, Chester, and Wyoming 

 Counties, Pennsylvania, and at Grand Eapids, Michigan. 



On November V) it reached Cooperstown, Otsego County, New York ; 

 Greensburgh, Pennsylvania, and Eichmond and Campbell County, Vir- 

 ginia ; and on November 7 Butler County, Pennsylvania. 



Ou November 8 it had attacked Montcalm, Livingston, and Ottawa 

 Counties, and Lincoln and Tuscola, Michigan ; Eavena, Ohio, and Dan- 

 ville, Virginia, where it prostrated 75 per cent, of the horses in twenty- 

 four hours. 



It Avas reported, November 0, in Hampton, Virginia, and two severe 

 cases at Johnstown, Cambria County, Pennsylvania, where, however, it 

 did not become general till the 24th, so that these must be considered 

 questionable. 



November 10 it existed in Saiidusky, Ohio, on November 11, at Mar- 

 shall, Michigan, Indianapolis, Indiana, and Savannah, Georgia. 



November 13 it reached Scranton and Forest County, Pennsylvania, 

 Hamilton and Marion, Ohio, and Wilmington and Tarborough, North 

 Carolina, while it had reached its height at Louisville, Kentucky, and 

 Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and was merging into dropsical and other fatal 

 complications in Buffalo, New York, Baltimore, Washington, Philadel- 

 phia, and Raleigh, North Carolina. 



November 14 it existed at Toledo, Ohio, and Lynchburgh, Virginia, and 

 was nearly universal in Buckingham County and at Wheeling, West 

 Virginia. November 15 it was reported in Mechanicsburg, Grampian 

 Hills, and in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, in Defiance, Ohio, and 

 Madison, Wisconsin. 



November IG, in Beaver County, Pennsylvania, and 17th at Cedar 

 Springs, Clinton County, having traveled northward along the Susque- 

 hanna River. It had existed to the southeast and west for several days 

 previously. 



November IS it broke out at Atlanta, Georgia, and Chattanooga, 

 Tennessee. At Nashville, Tennessee, it broke out between the 15th and 

 20th, and spread slowly, so that exact figures are difficult to arrive it. 

 At this time it prevailed in Giles, Rutlierford, Maury, Davidson, and 

 Sumner Counties, at points recently vi.sited by a circus, which came 

 from an infected district. At Memi>his, Tennessee, it existed in a mild 

 form on the 19th. 



