22 



•• oxygenized, oxidized and oxonized, (a 

 •• thing- more important than any. by 

 " the dews of each morning. 



" On the other hand, the dejections 

 " dropped in the fielcK do not long- re- 

 " main noxious, neither can the bacillus 

 " develop itself in the water of the drin- 

 '• king places in the broad sunlit fields 

 " nor can they preserve their virulence 

 •' long. 



" To turn a tuberculose animal out to 

 " grass is perhaps the most simple man- 

 " ner of rendering it harmless to those 

 " near, as the bacilli which it ejects are 

 " in that way very wide spread, and 

 " destroyed by natural agents, before they 

 " have been able to do any harm. 



This opinion, (an authorized one co- 

 ming from whom it comes), agrees with 

 the remarkable report of Professor Ca- 

 deac. He marie six experiment- adminis- 

 tering from 25 miligrams t<» 10 centigrams 

 <»r dust from the sputa dissecated in the 

 dark, mixed with the food of 30 sucking 



