OCR VETERINARY REGISTER. 
541 
2d. They should be examined after death, also, and before 
being skinned. 
3d. These inspections ought to be made by a veterinarian. 
4th. In doubtful cases the opinion of a veterinarian is essential. 
5th. Animals affected with inflammatory diseases, in the first 
stage, may be given to the public, so long as they have been bled 
to death. 
6th. Animals affected with cachexia, contagious pleuro¬ 
pneumonia, tuberculosis, small-pox, measles, trichinosis, rabies, 
glanders or farcy, typhoid affections, carbuncular diseases, hog 
cholera, septicaemia, as well as those which have been poisoned, 
must not be allowed for public use. 
7th. Animals that have died from disease must also be ex¬ 
cluded. 
8th. Animals that die by hemorrhage, without organic 
lesions, by apoplexy or by accidents, cannot be used for consump¬ 
tion unless an inspection has been made and a certificate given 
by a veterinarian to that effect. 
Glanders or Farcy.— Sixty-two cases are recorded in the sec¬ 
ond against sixty-eight in the first trimester of the year. 
Foot and Mouth Disease. —The second trimester shows 
a great improvement, fourteen cases only being recorded. 
Contagious Pleuro-Pneumonia.— This affection seems to be 
well under control, the number of animals affected having de¬ 
clined from 318 in the last three months of 1883, to 200 in the 
first three of 1884, and to 184 in the second trimester. 
Foot Pot in sheep has been quite extensive, nearly 500 cases 
being recorded. 
Mange in Sheep has also been observed in a small number 
of animals of that specie. 
OUR VETERINARY REGISTER. 
LIST OF MEMBERS OF THE NEW YORK COUNTY VETERINARY 
MEDICAL SOCIETY. 
New York College Veterinary Surgeons 
<< a u u 
<< ii n n 
R. W. Finlay, V.S. 
R. A. Finlay, V.S. 
P. Peters, V.S. 
