352 APPENDIX. 



days; then furor or delirium appears: the bullocks 

 stare, roar, stamp with their feet, are prepared to 

 attack people who approach them, and seem to be 

 dizzy at intervals. They shiver, their muscles twitch, 

 the eyes soon begin to discharge, and the mucus 

 which flows from the mouth foams. The pulse is at 

 first slower than usual, until all the fever symptoms 

 appear. There is more constipation than diarrhoea, 

 though, on examination, the mucous membranes are 

 all found to be affected precisely in the manner so 

 often observed in England during the present out- 

 break. The differences in the symptoms are accounted 

 for by peculiarities of breed, the condition of stalls, 

 the food the animals have lived on, and similar cir- 

 cumstances. We may hear more of these Hungarian 

 outbreaks, but the chances are we shall not witness in 

 any part of Austria the wholesale devastation now 

 going on in Great Britain. International Veterinary 

 Congress. 



NOTE G. 



At present the cowkeepers send off the infected beasts 

 to the market, or to some slaughter-house, where they 

 might be killed. There was believed to be great 

 danger in allowing the infected cows to be driven 

 through the streets. If the good could be separated 

 from the bad animals, and if the latter could be 

 conveyed to sanitoriums, where the medical men 

 could operate upon them, then much benefit would 

 result ; and then, too, if the animals died, they would 

 be buried on the spot. All the professors were agreed 

 in this, that if a compensation fund were raised, and 



