Dr. Edward Moore, a prominent veterinary surgeon of Albany, N. Y., published in the last two issues of the N. Y. Medical Journal, a rather long article on human and bovine tuberculosis. In this he takes a position directly in opposition to that of leading sanitarians of the day, in that he holds that bovine tuberculosis is not transmittable to men, and vice versa, and that the bacillus has become so modified by habitat as to become specifically distinct. In support of this view, besides his own experience and observation for many years, he quotes Dr. Theobald Smith, certainly no mean authority, who has expressed himself as recognizing, at least provisionally, a distinction between the respective germs of human and bovine tuberculosis. Dr. Moore denies that there has been any positive or satisfactory evidence of the transmission of bovine tuberculosis to man, or from man to cattle. Dr. Cooper Curtice,