ae OF CONSULTING VETERINARIAN. 
t 0 be miasmatic, or caused by some poison in the air. Some 
experiments were conducted along the line of inoculation and 
Berm culture, but all results, however, were decidedly negative. 
_ Another item of interest in the past year’s work is the ex- _ 
periment in the treatment of milk fever (parturient apoplexy ) 
with oxygen gas injected into the udder. But one case was 
treated. This one, however, gave such evident good results 
from the treatment that it is our opinion that here is a positive 
remedy for this fatal disease. 
USeSeeeen ni) Snares: 
E. H. LEHNERT, D. V. S. 

