954 ANALYSIS OF CONTINENTAL JOURNALS. 
with the wool on is to be immersed in lime water (1 part in 
100) for the space of ten hours, and then to be hung up 
to dry in an isolated room or spot, not in the stables or places 
where hay, straw, or other fodder is kept. 
23. Depasturing on places where carcases have been 
interred must be carefully avoided. 
24. Drovers of cattle which have died of the malady should 
keep from the road for a time, and should obtain from the 
nearest village the means of disposing of the skins and car- 
cases of the animals that have died under their care. 
25. Skins of spleno-apoplectic sheep are not to be removed 
unless disinfected ; drovers are not allowed to carry infected 
skinswith them; such skins should be left with the slaughterers 
at the nearest place. 
26. Blood, &c., should be covered forthwith with lime 
water. 
27. All other animals, such as poultry, &c,, must be kept 
away from the infected localities, and also from the emanations 
of them, such as dung, &c. 
28. All localities where horses and cattle have been located, 
or only contain a few head of sheep and pigs, must be daily, 
or after the animals have been removed, cleared of all 
manure, &c., and well sprinkled with a solution of chloride 
of lime. 
29. The dung is forthwith to be removed to the fields, and 
sprinkled with a strong solution of chlorinated lime, also a 
warning post is to be put on the heap. 
These instructions are to be freely distributed, and put up 
in sheds, stables, and other localities when spleno-apoplexy 
prevails in the country . — Magazin fur die gesammte Thierheil - 
hunde . Berlin, 1870. 
