EXTRACTS FROM EXCHANGES. 
273 
Patient recovered completely ; none of other dogs showed 
any symptoms, though all the time exposed. Hair was not 
destroyed. One of the members of the N. E. Kennel Club to 
whom I 1 elated the case informs me he has seen similar cases 
It is so unusual I cite it here. 
EXTRACTS FROM EXCHANGES. 
FRENCH REVIEW. 
Triorchidy in the Horse [By M. Feres '],—At the a^e 
of one >eai, this horse was castrated by the author, who resorted 
to the method by covered testicle. The horse did well and was 
so d several months after. During the following year the 
owner called on Mr. F. to obtain from him some information in 
relation to the horse and find out if he had been really altered. 
He had seen some symptoms which made him suspicious_ 
neighing when mares passed by him and presenting in the in¬ 
guinal region a swelling of peculiar aspect. Was it a cham¬ 
pignon or a testicle ? . After waiting a few months longer, the 
animal becoming decidedly vicious, an operation was decided 
upon and from the right side another testicle was amputated 
also by covered operation. The testicle was as big as a fist 
rounded in form and about as large in front as behind ; the epi¬ 
didymis was very short and covered the gland only partly. Its 
internal appearance presented nothing particular nor different 
from that of any normal testicle.— (Bee. de Med. Vet.) 
Uterine Gestation with Rabid Symptoms [By M. 
Bar.off -]. A little bitch having bitten a child was brought to 
the author. She had always been very good natured, but that 
morning was very irritable and looked angry. She did not 
answer to a call and preferred lying down in dark places. She 
had a good appetite and was quite fat. She was placed under 
observation, but nothing developed. She was kept six days, 
carefully watched, and on the seventh was destroyed, the owner 
being unwilling to wait any longer. At the post-mortem a 
tumor as big as a large egg was found attached on the mesen¬ 
tery and surrounded by several envelopes. A longitudinal sec¬ 
tion made through it exposed a foetus : the section passed pre¬ 
cisely through the spine; the head and paws were well formed. 
. was a case °f ultra-uterine gestation, in which the foetus, ar¬ 
rived at its term of development, had given rise to the symp- 
