When tuberculous sores and fistulæ occur in the region of the throat or elsewhere, the evidence is patent and the bacilli can easily be found in the discharges.

In cats the course and symptoms do not materially differ. In both animals the history usually shows the connection of house life and the habit of eating after tuberculous persons.

SYMPTOMS OF TUBERCULOSIS IN BIRDS.

In the gallinaceæ there may be inappetence, vomiting, diarrhœa, with hurried breathing, sneezing, and the general phenomena of debility, weakness, advancing emaciation and anæmia, the comb and wattles becoming pale and flaccid and the visible mucosæ bloodless. The eyes are sunken and lack lustre, the head sinks, the wings and tail droop, and weight is steadily lost. When the bones and joints of the legs and wings are involved the local swellings and distortions are visible indications of the trouble.

In parrots these local swellings and particularly the horn-covered vegetations on the face and around the beak are characteristic.

Canary. Tuberculosis is common in the canary, contracted, as in the parrot, from man, with whom alone the caged bird comes into dangerous contact. The interchange of the disease between pet birds and their owners would demand the exclusion of such from the rooms of consumptives, and a careful watch for indications of disease of the air passages with marasmus, that the bird may be disposed of before it has become a source of danger.

DIAGNOSIS OF TUBERCULOSIS.

It is needless to repeat the various symptoms of tuberculosis according to its different seats and the degree of its extension in the animal body. In cases in which the indications are slight, greater importance may be given to them through the knowledge of the existence of more advanced or decided cases in the same herd, or the necropsies of animals taken from it. Yet in the average herd it is safely within bounds to say that three fourths of the affected cattle will escape condemnation if we employ objective symptoms alone. In one herd of seventy head, in which the tuberculin test condemned twenty-four head (being 50 per cent. of the mature animals), I left the examination after slaughter to the veterinarian of the A. J. C. C. who was at the time skeptical as to the value of the tuberculin test. He wrote me afterward of his surprise at finding every one of the twenty-four condemned animals tuberculous, when not one of them had shown symptoms by which he could recognize the disease in life. This is no exceptional case, and may be advanced rather as a typical example of the ordinary infected country herd.

Microscopic detection of the bacillus in the expectoration may be successful in the horse with pharyngeal or pulmonary tuberculosis, but fails in those forms that affect the other internal organs. It is all but useless for the expectoration of cattle and dogs. When there is cutaneous tuberculosis or a tuberculous fistula this is much more valuable, and it is especially useful in dogs and parrots.

The precipitate in the centrifuge will often show the bacilli that are present in milk, but in very many cases of tuberculosis the bacilli are not present in the milk.