CONFORMATION.

It was formerly held that cows with heads narrow between the horns, small thin necks, narrow chests defective also in depth and length, loose projecting shoulders and elbows, pendent, pot bellies, with hollow flanks, and a general laxity of the frame were especially predisposed to tubercle. In many such cases the suspected animal was already the victim of the affection, which had brought out these characteristic features of weakness and emaciation. In other cases the unthrifty appearance was due to poor feeding and care or to chronic disease, which in robbing the system of vigor and hardihood laid it open to the attack of the tubercle bacillus whenever it was introduced. Even when there was no such depressing influence affecting the individual, the inheritance of such a frame, betokened a constitution lacking in vigor, and with little power of resistance to the invading microbe. Some milking breeds which tend to the above conformation, show an unusual development of the lymph glands and plexuses, and as tuberculosis attacks the lymphatic system preëminently, the bacillus finds an especially favorable field for development in such systems. It would, however, be an error to assume that the compact, rounded frame, with circular chest and abdomen, and full, firm neck and shoulders, with a great disposition to fat and little to milk, is in any degree immune. Under the presence of the tubercle bacillus, and close stabling, they often succumb quite as rapidly as the most susceptible milking breeds. The meat producing breeds with a strong propensity to fatten, have an extraordinary development of lymph spaces and plexus in the intermuscular and subcutaneous connective tissue, and the microbe finds a welcome home in their sluggish, inactive and atonic systems as well as in the typical dairy cows.