422 DOURINE 



under police supervision, whether private or Government 

 property. 



"(7) Affected animals to be separated from healthy, to 

 have their own attendants, and no interchange of clothing, 

 utensils, etc., to take place. Those deemed curable to be 

 treated, those incurable to be destroyed. 



"(8) All horses attacked to be castrated, as well as those 

 which, notwithstanding their apparent good health, have 

 transmitted it to mares they have served, and also those which 

 have been put to infected mares. 



"(9) Mares that have been in the least affected and 

 apparently cured not'to be covered the following year, or until 

 certified by a veterinar}' surgeon as cured. It is even better 

 to exclude all such mares entirely, and brand them as having 

 had the disease." 



REFERENCES. 



1. Baldrky. Dourine. Jour. Camp. Path, and T/icra., Vol. 

 XVIII (1905), p. I. 



2. BuFFARD AND Schneider. Prophylaxie de la dourine et 

 exposede fails nouveaux interessant cette maladie. Jour, de Med. Vei. 

 et de ZooicJi, 1901. 



3. Faville. Extirpation of maladie du coil. Annual Report, 

 Bureau of Animal Industry, 1895-6, p. 13 and 62. 



4. MoHLER. Cultivation of Trypanosoma Equiperditm. Pro- 

 ceedings Ant. Vet. Med. Asso., 1905, p. 363. 



5. RouoET. Contribution a 1' etude du trypanosome des mammi- 

 feres. Amer. de P lust. Pasteur. \'o\. X ( 1896), p. 716. 



6. Thanhoffer. ijber Ziichilahme. Wien. 1888. 



7. Williams. Maladie-du-Coit, or equine syphilis. Annual 

 Report of the Board of Live Stock Comtnissioners, for the State of 

 Illinois Fiscal Year ending Oct. 31, 1887. (A full report of the disease 

 and its eradication in Illinois.) 



8. Williams. Benign venereal disease — equine chancroid. Ibid. 

 p. 84. 



9. Wilson-Barker. Maladie du coit in Nebraska. Vet. Jour. 

 Lond., Vol. XXXV (1892). Vol. XXXVI, (1893). 



