26 
Rhesus Macaque 147 was received July 10, 1911, 
injected twice during the next three months and finally 
passed to the bandstand where it remained twelve 
months. It was then separated because it was droopy, 
reinjected, passed to the monkey house and then trans- 
ferred to the bandstand in June 1913. Here it remained 
until March 1914 when a young one was born; then the 
two were transferred to the monkey house. The two were 
in the main exhibition house for a year when the mother 
was retested and put in an outdoor cage; another test 
was made in October, 1915. The last two tests w^ere not 
very satisfactory so the animal was kept by herself. 
She died of general tuberculosis in February, 1916. 
During the first three years of her stay in the garden she 
was exposed to eleven macaques and three baboons 
but for the past year she has been either alone or with her 
baby. It does not seem that she contracted the disease 
from any of the monkeys; more likely it was a visitor 
infection. Her young one is dead of rickets and failed 
to show any tuberculosis. 
It is gratifjdng to note that there is a further reduction 
of tuberculosis among the other animals, during the past 
year. In 1914 there were thirty scattered cases, in 
1915, 16 cases and this year only eleven. It is es- 
pecially satisfying to know that this disease is practically 
stamped out among the psittaci, one death having oc- 
curred last year and none this year. The list comprises 
Ungulata, 3; Galli, 2; Accipitres, 2; Columbse, 1; 
Anseres, 1; Striges, 1; Struthiones, 1. 
Tumors. 
The following tumors are placed on record, without 
giving histological structure, since no features unusual 
to these tumors were noted: 
3525. Undulated Grass Parrakeet (Melopsittacus un- 
dulatus), Hypernephroma of adrenal. 
3562. Lioness (Felts leo), Malignant adenoma of cervix 
uteri. 
