STREPTOCOCCI IN COMPARATIVE PATHOLOGY. 
849 
Review cannot afford to lose you. Don’t ignore this noti¬ 
fication, and then ask why you have not received your April 
number. Send a postal order or check now while it’s fresh in 
your mind. Volume XXIV will be the best the Review ever 
gave its readers. We know it, because our plans are well 
matured. 
The Minnesota State Veterinary Medical Associa¬ 
tion met in St. Paul, January n and 12, with an attendance of 
about thirty members. The association gained eight new 
members at this meeting. The programme was thoroughly 
enjoyed. This was a record breaker for Minnesota, but they 
say the next annual meeting will surpass this record. 
The activity of the committees of veterinary medical associ¬ 
ations and State Secretaries in behalf of the Bill to establish a vet¬ 
erinary Army Corps is most gratifying, and with such influences 
working all over the country there can be no such word as “fail.” 
ORIGINAL ARTICLES. 
OBSERVATIONS CONCERNING THE SIGNIFICANCE OF 
STREPTOCOCCI IN COMPARATIVE PATHOLOGY. 
By Veranus a. Moore, B. S., M. D. 
Professor of Comparative Pathology and Bacteriology, New York State Veterinary 
College, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. 
(Continued from page 787.) 
STREPTOCOCCI IN DISEASES OF DOGS. 
Distemper, rabies, and chronic pneumonia are the only dis¬ 
eases of dogs which I have examined bacteriologically. In the 
examination of cases of rabies I have never met with strepto¬ 
cocci in the organs, and the same is true of the few cases of 
broncho pneumonia which have come to my attention. In dis¬ 
temper, the results have been quite different but not constant. 
