4*4 PA THOGENIC BACTERIA. gluing the lids together. The breathing is rapid, and there may be cough. Occasionally there is an eruption with crusts or scabs of various sizes on the skin, which is often congested. The animal becomes weak, stands with arched back and drawn abdomen, and walks with a weak, tottering gait. The course of this disease varies from one or two days to two or three weeks. At post-mortem examination petechiae, ecchymoses, and extravasations of blood into the tissues are found to be com- mon and form one of the principal changes in the acute FIG. 113.—Bacillus of hog-cholera, showing flagella. form of the disease. The spleen is enlarged to two or four times its normal size, and is soft and engorged with blood. The extravasations of blood are common in the lym- phatic glands, beneath the serous membranes of the thorax and abdomen, and particularly along the intes- tines; on the surface of the lungs and kidneys and in their substance. The contents of the intestine are some- times covered with clotted blood. In the subacute form of the disease the principal changes are fcmnd in the large intestine, and consist of ulcers which appear as circular, slightly projecting masses varying in color from