750 
REPORTS OF CASES 
check the flow of milk, but kept the case under observation for 
several months, often seeing her milked by the Cuban, as per 
photograph, and she would freely milk four quarts at a milking 
of good rich-looking milk, of which my dog often drank while 
warm and foaming; but I never sampled it myself. Her abdo¬ 
men never changed in volume as time went on, and she event¬ 
ually proved herself not in foal , nor do I believe she ever had 
been. I believe her to be a virgin mule. As such, the case is 
interesting; if I am wrong, and she has had a foal, it is by no 
means any less interesting in the case of a mule. In addition 
to the photo showing the mule being milked, I send one in 
which I endeavored to show the mammary glands filled with 
milk, but despite my requests for the Cuban boy to defer milk¬ 
ing her until I could take a photograph of her in the forenoon, 
he invariably forgot, and milked her as usual ; so getting tired 
of taking my camera there with me, I finally took the enclosed 
photo one morning after she had been milked, and if the cut re¬ 
produces those black glands, situated as they are in the shadow 
formed by the sides of the region in which they are located 
(which is somewhat doubtful), you will be able to see to what 
extent they are developed even when not distended by the pres¬ 
ence of milk in this hybrid animal. 
INVERSION OF UTERUS IN A MARE—RECOVERY. 
By R. J. Michener, V. S., Lebanon, Ohio. 
I was called at 2 a. m. May 2, 1900, to see a mare in the 
country, eleven miles distant. On arriving, found her lying 
down in the corner of a grass field, unable to rise on account of 
