26o Modern Fishculture in Fresh and Salt Watir. 



shad will have the nuclei of several successive spawn- 

 ing seasons behind the eggs to be laid when she is 

 caught, and it taxes our credulity to believe tht these 

 are not to be used. Our domestic fowls show _iuclei 

 for many settings of eggs ; and there the case rests, as 

 lawyers say. 



AN EPIDEMIC. 



One year I had an epidemic among the trout at Cold 

 Spring Harbor, N. Y. Great sores appeared on the 

 trout and they died by the hundred every day. The 

 Biological Section of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts 

 and Sciences had a summer laboratory there, with stu- 

 dents from many parts of the country, and they took 

 the dead fish for study. It worried me into loss of ap- 

 petite and sleep to see from fifty to a hundred great 

 brook and brown trout, from one to five pounds weight, 

 laid out in the "morgue" every morning for burial, with 

 no idea of the cause of their death. The scientists could 

 make nothing of it, and it was not the fungus called 

 Saprolegnia. There was merely a cancer-like sore 

 with broken-down tissue which flowed out of the sores 

 in a pinkish fluid, and that was all. 



After a careful investigation I found that some beef 

 livers which came from New York were affected with 

 tuberculosis. I had forbidden the use of any livers 

 which appeared to be diseased, and a year or two be- 

 fore had entertained the idea of complaining to the 

 Board of Health about the tuberculous beef which was 

 being slaughtered, but at that time the problem was. 

 where to get good livers. I finally contracted with a 

 Mr. Abrams to furnish livers that were sound, and 

 after that the disease disappeared. It was not possible 



