GOVERNMENTAL INSPECTION 193 
providing that no part shall be kept for food or 
sterilization unless the final inspection has been 
made by natural light. 
Carcasses giving off the odor of wrine or a sea- 
ual odor must be condemned. If the final decision 
is made after chilling the disposal must be made 
by the heating test. 
Mange or scab. Careasses showing advanced 
mange or scab, or with emaciation, or extension of 
inflammation are condemned. Slight lesions may 
be removed and the carcass passed. 
Carcasses of hogs, otherwise fit for food, may be 
passed after excising parts affected with urticaria, 
Tinea tonsurans, Demodex folliculorum, or 
erythema. 
Tapeworm. Carcasses of cattle infested with 
Cysticercus bovis must be condemned if the infes- 
tation is general, or if the meat is watery or dis- 
colored. Carcasses showing slight infestation may 
be passed after removing infested parts. Car- 
casses showing moderate infestation may be 
passed for sterilization. Fats of animals passed, 
or passed for sterilization, may be passed for food 
provided that they are heated to a temperature 
of not less than 140° F. Inspection for Cysticer- 
cus bovis may be omitted in case of calves less 
than six weeks old. 
Carcasses of hogs affected with tapeworm cysts 
(Cysticercus cellulosae) may be passed for steril- 
ization unless the infestation be excessive, when 
they must be condemned. 
Parasites Not Affecting Man. Where animals 
are affected by parasites which do not affect man, 
the entire body may be nevertheless condemned if 
