421 
EXCHANGES, ETC., RECEIVED. 
blood), then moisten a little piece of the paper with the dried 
blood on and stick it on the chicken’s leg where you scratched it, 
then let the fowl run, and you need have no fear of chicken 
cholera. As the result of my many experiments I have dried 
blood enough, l would suppose, to vaccinate 10,000 fowls, for 
which I have no use, as 1 do not sell patent medicines. If any 
of your readers are enough interested in poultry to try this pre¬ 
ventive, by writing to me I will send free of any charge enough 
dried blood to start with. All I ask is that they send immedi¬ 
ately, before blood loses its strength, and report the result of 
their experiments to your many readers. 
EXCHANGES, ETC., RECEIVED. 
HOME.—Medical Record, National Live Stock Journal, Proceedings of the 
Medical Society of the County of Kings, Home Farm, Minnesota Farmer, College 
and Clinical Record, City and Country, Practical Farmer, Rural New Yorker, 
Ohio Practical Farmer, Medical and Surgical Reporter, American Agriculturist, 
Breeders’ Gazette, Country Gentlemen, Turf, Field andiFarm, American Culti¬ 
vator, &c. 
FOREIGN.—Recueil de Medecine Veterinaire, Archives Veterinaires, Presse 
Vsterinaire, Anuales de Bruxelles, Clinica Veterinaria, Journal de Zootechnie, 
Review d’Hygiene, Veterinary Journal, Veterinarian, Australian Veterinary 
Journal, Revue fur Thierheilkunde und Thierzucht. 
JOURNALS.—Medical IJerold, Midland Farmer, American Grange Bulletin, 
Our Dumb Animals, Farmers’ Magazine, Quarterly Journal of Veterinary Science 
in India, &c. 
BOOKS.—Animal Plagues, Principles and Practice of Veterinary Medicine, 
Chart of the Muscles of the Horse. 
COMMUNICATIONS.—J. Rogers, C. Myers, Jr., A. A. Holcombe, G. Faville, 
C. Peabody. 
