170 
EXCHANGES, ETC., RECEIVED. 
and found healthy. A fifth pig fed for fifteen days with the 
same milk died also of tuberculosis. 
Out of a lot of six other pigs, two received cooked milk, two 
raw milk, and two were kept as means of comparison. At the 
autopsy, the first two proved tuberculous, the second showed in¬ 
testinal inflammation; the glands of the neck and of the abdomen 
in a caseous condition. In the other two the glands were healthy. 
Two other experiments made on monkeys, one on a goat, and 
one on a guinea-pig, were negative. 
According to Bollinger, the milk of tuberculous cows, given 
for a long time as food, must always produce miliary tuberculosis 
and tuberculous degenerations. However, one must admit that 
the danger of the transmission is not as great as generally be¬ 
lieved. If it were otherwise, the disease would be more common 
in swine, while it is exceptional to meet it, though those animals 
are often fed with the milk of phthisical cows.— Wochenschrift far 
Thierheilkunde. 
(We would be thankful to Dr. Peabody, of Providence, for a 
report of his observation of tuberculous meningitis in a child fed 
with the milk of a phthisical cow, which was placed under his 
care.— Ed.) 
EXCHANGES. ETC, RECEIVED. 
EXCHANGES—Revue d’Hygiene, Revue Dosimetrique,|Clinica Veteriuaria, 
Veterinary Journal, Veterinarian, Recueil de Medecine Veterinaire, Archives 
Veterinaires, Aunales de Belgique, Gazette Medicale, Revue fur Thierheilkunde 
und Thierzucht, Scientific American, Prairie Farmer, American Agriculturist, 
Turf, Field and Farm, Country Gentlemau, National Live Stock Journal, Medi¬ 
cal and Surgical Reporter, Iowa Farmer. 
PAMPHLETS.—Betail de l’Amerique du Nord, by F. Dele. 
JOURNALS.—Philadelphia Record, American Cultivator. 
