Nygaard reports that a bull from a healthy herd, but which had been allowed to serve some cows from a neighboring infected herd, was sold to go on a previously healthy farm, where he was put to 14 cows only. Of these 12 aborted, and the complement of the herd, beyond the 14 cows, put to another bull, remained well.

In each of these cases the environment of the animals and the conditions remained the same, the one appreciable cause of the outbreak being the contact with an animal from an aborting herd.

Experimental Infection. Braüer led the way by transferring in 11 instances the vaginal mucus of aborting cows to the vagina of healthy ones. The resulting abortions occurred from the 9th to the 21st day after inoculation. Lehnert repeated this on two cows, the abortions taking place on the twelfth and twentieth days respectively. Trinchera transferred the purulent vaginal mucus of an aborting cow to the vaginæ of healthy ones, determining in the latter, in 9 to 13 days, abortion attended by suppurating vaginal catarrh. He secured similar results by using the material scraped from the surface of the chorion of an immature fœtus.

The Scottish Commission (Woodhead, McFadyean and Aitkin) placed a healthy pregnant cow in an aborting herd, and on two successive days lodged in her vagina for twenty minutes a piece of cotton wool soaked in the vaginal mucus of a recently aborted cow. Within a month abortion threatened, and on the seventieth day a seven months calf was dropped.

In a second experiment a cow, six months in calf, was taken from a healthy herd and placed in an aborting dairy herd and a quantity of vaginal mucus from a cow that had recently aborted was injected under the skin of the vagina. She calved prematurely at the end of the eighth month of gestation.

Williamsen, while treating a herd for abortion, took a piece of the afterbirth of one of the aborting cows and rubbed it on the vagina of a healthy cow of his own, which had a habit of carrying her calf fourteen days over time. Five days after she had premature parturition.

He took a fragment of the fœtal membrane from the cow just named and rubbed it on the vagina of a pregnant cow condemned for tuberculosis. In seventeen days the cow aborted.

Though not started as an experiment, the writer may name the general extension of abortion from one or two cows in a tuberculous herd after they had been tested with tuberculin. Cases of this kind are doubtless much more common than has been supposed.

Kilborne and Smith developed suppurating vaginal catarrh in cows and mares by inoculating them with the artificial cultures of bacilli obtained from the vaginal secretions of aborting mares.

Turner made cultures from the ovaries of aborting mares, and others from the genital organs of foals suffering from omphalitis, and produced abortions in pregnant mares by injecting with the same.