“From the fifth to the eighth day the points of inoculation become distinctly papular. As far as about the tenth day, the papules encrease, and become more prominent, taking the form of an extremely wide cone, with a base of ⅓ to ½ inch. During this period these large conical papules are resistant and painful on pressure, but show no elevation nor change in the epidermis, save a slightly reddish reflection in animals with white skins. Afterward supervenes a new stage which may be called the period of secretion. This commences from the ninth to the twelfth day. The epidermis, slightly raised upon all the papule, sweats out numerous drops of a limpid, very slightly yellow serosity. These drops soon concrete into yellowish, transparent crusts covering the whole surface of the pustule:—a species of characteristic crystallization, very different from the crusts that succeed the vaccine pustules in mare and cow. The secretion, which continues several days, is terminated from the thirteenth to the seventeenth day after inoculation. If then the crust is raised there is exposed a humid, pink, granular surface not projecting beyond the surrounding skin. This surface is hollowed out by a very deep central cavity, a sort of umbilicus, in which is inserted, like a nail, a projection from the deep surface of the crust.”

I would add that after recovery the hair in the seats of the nodules has a lighter color and, on the shanks and higher, remains dappled for the season.

No treatment is demanded. The application of a solution of sodium bisulphite once or twice a day, or continuously on a bandage, will greatly modify the intensity of the inflammation, and ward off complex infections. If the skin is left tender or with a disposition to crack, treat it as advised under chapped heels.

COWPOX. VARIOLA VACCINÆ.

This is manifestly the same disease, and due to the same microbe as horse pox. The disease of the one genus is easily transmitted to the other and the lesions and symptoms are the same, as if the virus were derived from an animal of the same species. Differences in the local manifestations appear to be due rather to the varying conditions of the skin and hair follicles, than to any material distinction in the virus.

Causes. Aside from the germ (Sporidium vaccinale) the conditions which favor infection are: the milking of susceptible cows with imperfectly washed hands, after dressing legs, the seat of horse pox eruption; the milking of healthy cows after those affected with cowpox; and the milking with hands contaminated with the exudate in cases of vaccination of man. That susceptible cows may also be inoculated successfully from smallpox patients, under given conditions appears to be true, but in Western Europe and America this is very uncommon, and would be much more so if vaccination were universally carried out. Among those who claim the identity of small pox and cow pox may be named Ceely, Reiter, Babcock, Thiele, Voigt and Klein.

Ceely alleges the infection of five cows and one heifer, in 1839, in England, from chewing the flock of a bed on which a small pox patient had died. In 12 or 14 days they had tender congested udders, with hard pimples imbedded in the skin, followed by blisters, and brownish scabs. The milk diminished, saliva drivelled from the mouth, the cheeks were inflated and retracted, the coat stared, their feet were drawn together, and the back was arched. The disease was communicated to the owner. This was clearly an outbreak of aphthous fever, which invaded England in that year, and was still an unknown disease to medical men. The implication of the heifer which would not have been inoculated with variola through the hands of the milker, and the salivation which is unknown in cow pox, but points directly to the buccal vesicles of foot and mouth disease, are conclusive on this point.

Ceely later, after many fruitless attempts to convey smallpox to the cow, at last met with results which indicated cowpox, and which he thereafter passed from cow to cow with the characteristic cowpox eruption.

Fletcher further reports the transmission of smallpox through the horse to the cow, and thence to the child in the form of cowpox.

In 1836, Thiele, Kasan, S. Russia inoculated some cows on the udder with smallpox lymph, and conveyed the lymph of the resulting vesicles back to man, and from man to man for seventy-five generations of the virus without finding any variation from the type of the true vaccine disease. He repeated the experiment with equal success in 1838.