TUBERCULOSIS OF ANIMALS. 
61 
cnce of the statistics to which we have referred in now sug¬ 
gesting, and with emphasis, that it is a proper time for us to 
refresh the memories of the officers of the United States Vet- 
erinary Medical Association, and to urge upon them that 
active steps may be taken for the discussion of the subject 
at the next meeting in Boston. 
Notice.— Among the reasons by which we have been in¬ 
fluenced in our decision to transfer the business management 
of the Review from our own hands to those of Messrs. Sabis- 
ton & Murray, was, among others, that all complaints should 
be always directed to the same parties. Yet business letters 
are still sometimes directed to us personally, and although 
we refer them to our publishers, they sometimes remain un¬ 
answered or neglected. Whose is the fault, we do not know. 
But as of late, and especially at the present time, when some 
of our subscribers are changing their addresses, some of them 
leaving college, and some returning home, and for other 
reasons, errors may take place in the publishing office, and 
we would once again ask our friends to direct all their com¬ 
munications relating to new subscriptions, or to renewals, or 
the payment of dues, or to the loss of numbers of the Review, 
etc., to Sabiston & Murray, 916 Sixth Avenue, New York 
City, but continue to mail to our own office, 141 West 54th 
St., all papers and communications designed for publication. 
ORIGINAL ARTICLES. 
TUBERCULOSIS OF ANIMALS IN ITS RELATION TO HUMAN 
ALIMENTARY HYGIENE, 
By M. S. Aeloing.* 
Gentlemen : 
At the Congress of 1888 you were invited to consider the 
question of the prevention of the transmission of tuberculosis 
from animals to mankind, and the committee of the present 
* A lecture delivered before the Congress for the Study of Tuberculosis, 
July 27, 1891. Translated from the Journal of Zootechnic. 
