326 The Management and Diseases of the Dog. 
but beyond presenting, in some cases, symptoms and 
pathological lesions analogous to stomatitis, the disease is 
one and the same as that already discussed. 
That, as with human vaccination, there has been 
opposition to inoculation might be expected, but to such 
an infinitesimal degree in connection with the latter that it 
is unworthy of serious notice. The testimony of success’is, 
indeed, overwhelming, but were it otherwise, if only a small 
percentage could be saved from the fatality of distemper, it 
would be surely policy to adopt the means of doing so, 
INOCULATED DOG, SHEWING THREAD INSERTED IN THE EAR: 
