TRANSLATIONS FROM FOREION JOURNALS. 
19 
of the rabbit, without giving rise to anatomical lesions* except 
at the points of the termination of inoculation. 
It has been said that a first attack of glanders gave to the 
dog immunity after recovery. 
From my experiments, it results that dogs can take glanders 
repeatedly, two, three, four, five and, perhaps, a greater number 
of times. But little by little, after a series of successive inocula¬ 
tions, its receptivity, already comparatively so slight compared 
to that of volipeds, diminishes. Glanders transmitted to dogs is 
characterised by lesions less and less marked, and there is reason 
to think that through the influence of repeated inoculations, their 
receptivity will disappear. 
Another fact observed during my experiments tends to de¬ 
monstrate that the power of the virus diminishes when cultivated 
in the organism of the dog already inoculated a first, second, 
third or fourth time; donkeys inoculated with the virus of a 
third, fourth or fifth glander have had a disease more latent and 
less acute ; they ordinarily live from three weeks to a month 
after inoculation, and have presented less acute lesions than do 
those inoculated with the virus of horses, or that of a first dog- 
sdander.— Gazette, Medicate. 
PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY. 
ON THE PRESENCE OF A FUNGUS IN THE PULMONARY TISSUE IN 
PLEURO-PNEUMONIA. 
By M. Poincare. 
After relating the principal researches relating to the micro¬ 
bes, which, according to some authors, constitute the virulent 
agent of the disease, the author says: 
I have had thus far the opportunity of examining the lungs of 
eight cows which had died from pleuro-pneumonia. In all, with 
ittle variation, I have found the following facts : 
