Ruminants. All animals which chew the cud, or regurgitate a por- 
tion of their food for a second mastication before finally swallowing 
it, such as cattle, sheep, goats, deer, antelopes of all varieties, camels, 
dromedaries, alpacas, llamas, giraffes, and buffaloes of various kinds. 
Cattle. Domestic animals of the bovine species, including bisons 
and various kinds of buffaloes. 
Other ruminants. All animals defined above under " Ruminants," 
except such as are embraced in the foregoing definition for " Cattle." 
Swine. The domestic hog, the wart hog, the water hog, and other 
varieties of wild hogs prized by owners of menageries and zoological 
collections. 
Contagious diseases. Glanders and farcy, dourine, distemper or 
strangles, epizootic lymphangitis, anthrax, contagious pleuropneu- 
monia, splenetic or Texas fever, tuberculosis, foot-and-mouth disease, 
rinderpest, surra, variola, foot rot, scabies, hog cholera, swine plague, 
swine erysipelas, and other contagious or infectious diseases of cattle, 
sheep, or other ruminants, and swine. 
Cattle ticks. Cattle ticks that are carriers of the infection of sple- 
netic, southern, or Texas fever. 
Inspector. The word " inspector," unqualified, shall mean the vet- 
erinary inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, in charge of the 
quarantine station. 
HORSES AND ACCOMPANYING FORAGE. 
Regulation 3. — Paragraph 1. All horses imported into the United 
States from any part of the world except the countries of North 
America and except as provided in paragraph 6 of this regulation 
shall be accompanied by a certificate from a duly qualified veterina- 
rian giving a description and the distinctive markings of each animal, 
the name and address of the exporter, the proposed date of exporta- 
tion, the proposed port of shipment, the name and address of the 
consignee in the United States, and stating that the horse or horses 
to be exported have received a careful veterinary examination, and 
are apparently in good health and free from dourine and any other 
disease contagious to horses. 
Paragraph 2. All horses imported into the United States from any 
part of the world except the countries of North America and except 
as provided in paragraph 6 of this regulation shall also be accom- 
panied by an affidavit of the owner or owners, or person or persons in 
charge of the horse or horses for the six months preceding the date 
of their shipment, to the effect that during that period the animal or 
animals have not been exposed to any disease contagious to horses, 
and that during the six weeks immediately preceding shipment the 
