3°8 
REVIEW OF BIOLOGY, 
Tuberailine is without'apparent action upon the sudoriferous 
apparatus. 
Malleine , on the contrary, produces in these animal’s a dia¬ 
phoresis varying, more or less, according to the dose injected, 
and so much more abundant that the injection is larger. 
The sudation cannot be attributed to the hyperthemia; it is 
due to an action produced by the microbic product upon the 
nervous centres; proof of it is, that a section of the sciatic nerve 
in the cat, done previous to the injection, will prevent the man¬ 
ifestation of sudation of the unnerved extremity.— Ibid. 
PNEUMO-BACILLINE AS A REACTIVE AGENT IN GLANDERS. 
By M. S. Aroling. 
It has been shown that the products of cultures of some mi¬ 
crobes, besides the bacilli of Koch, would give strong reaction 
in tuberculous subjects. The author has thought what would 
be the effect of the products of cultures of the pneumo-bacillus 
liquefaciens bovis , or the pneumo-bacilhne , in the diagnosis of 
glanders, and whether its effects would not be similar to those 
of malleine, taking into consideration the pyogenic effects it has 
in healthy cattle as well as on those affected with chronic pleuro¬ 
pneumonia. 
Eight horses affected or suspicious of glanders, received 
comparative inoculations of malleine and of pneumo-bacilline. 
The thermical reactions were much the same, much higher in 
really glanderous patients, less in suspicious. In one case only, 
which proved glanderous at post-mortem, was there any notable 
difference. Pneumo-bacilline may, therefore, be used in place 
of malleine.— Rev. de Biol. 
SOME NEW EXAMPLES OF TUBERCULOUS VACCINATION IN DOGS. 
By M. M. J. Hericourt and Ch. Ricfiet. 
Confirming previous experiments already published, the 
authors reported some new cases which bring them to the con¬ 
clusion that: First, vaccination can be obtained, in the dog at 
