MALADIE DU COIT-DOURINE. 
243 
third Tuesday of the month, in New York city. The place of 
meeting has not yet been selected, but will be made known by 
the special notices sent by the Secretary of the Association as 
soon as he has been informed by the committee of arrangements. 
From what we hear, an interesting meeting may be antici¬ 
pated, several gentlemen of the Association having been person¬ 
ally requested to prepare papers for the occasion. With these 
and the reports of the various committees, and principally that 
of the Prize Committee, the chances are that no disappointment 
will befall those who will attend. 
Another Paper for the Prize .—In referring to the report of 
the Prize Committee, we will call the attention of our friends 
and members of the Association to the fact that the paper on 
“ Glanders ” which has been printed in the Review will not be 
the only one placed in competition. We print another to-day. 
The manuscript was received at a rather late hour, but we hope 
that even at this time the committee will find opportunity for ex¬ 
amination into its merits. 
ORIGINAL ARTICLES. 
MALADIE DU COIT-DOURINE, 
By A. Liaijtard. * 
('Continued from page 203.) 
IY. Diagnosis .—It is difficult to mistake this disease for any 
other when its progress and the succession of its symptoms are 
carefully followed; still, if in the consideration of a case the 
local symptoms alone are taken into account, error is possible. 
For example, it is possible, in its inception, to mistake it for a 
simple exanthemous eruption of the genital organs, the seat of 
both lesions being the same, and the effect similar upon the vis¬ 
ible parts of generation. The exanthematous disease, however, 
- is of a benignant character, and it is followed by radical recovery 
after two or three weeks. 
* Translated from A. Zundel. 
