JOHN A. SE AVERNS THE VETERINARY SCIENCE THE ANATOMY, DISEASES AND TREATMENT or Domestic (Jnimal^ ALSO CONTAINING A FULL DESCRIPTION OF MEDICINES AND RECEIPTS. J. E. HODGINS, V. S., (Honorary Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary C^Ueg*) Kim T. H. HASKETT, (S^crttmry tf the Veterinary Science Company J FIFTY. SIXTH EDITION. DETROIT, MICH. : The Veterinary Science Company 1905. Entered according to Act of the Parliament of Canada, in the year 1896, by J. E. Hodgins, V. S., and T. H. Haskett, at the Department of Agriculture. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1896, by J. E. Hodgins, V. S., and T. H. Haskett, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Wash- ington, D. C. Entered according to Act of Parliament of the United King- dom of Great Britian and Ireland, in the year 1897, at the Office of the Registrar of Copyright at Stationers' Hall. Copyrights applied for in the following countries Germany, Australia and South Africa. France, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, PREFACE. aT THE request of some of the leading stockowners and prominent farmers of Canada and the United States, and believing that a work of this kind has long been wanted by those interested in domestic animals, the authors have undertaken the publication of The Veterinary Science in the simplest English language. They have endeavored to make it a profitable and interesting study for stockowners and their sons, who, by carefully consulting the pages of this book, will find it to contain information of untold value. The first fifty-eight pages contain the practical anatomy or conformation of the horse, and should be carefully studied. The diseases and treatment of the horse follow these, and Chapter I. lays the plan of how to examine a sick horse, and as r.he reader proceeds it will be found to be simple in the extreme. Mistakes in doctoring can hardly be made, as the causes, symptoms and treatment of the diseases are so fully explained that the stockowner has but to follow the directions laid down in this book. The comparative anatomy, diseases and treatment of cattle, .beginning at page 243, will likewise be found to be as simple and satisfactorily explained as that of the horse. The diseases and treatment of sheep, found between pages 316 and 337 of the book, are fully dealt with, and it will be found by persons who read and study this part of the book that sheep are as easy to doctor as any of the other animals. The same may be said of the diseases and treatment of pigs, dogs aad poultry, found at page 337 and following pages. The medicines and receipts constitute Part V. of the book, and are a very important part of the stady; they are fully and practically explained. The receipts for making liniments, lotions, powders, blisters, etc, are very valuable to everybody, especially )hose interested in stock, which it may now be said is what the and pours it into the blood. This long bowel is found to be attached on the upper side to what is known as the ri:esentery, which is attached above to the back-bone, and can be seen in any of the smaller animals upon examination. About six inches from the stomach, in the bowels, are found two openings, one for the hepatic duct, which is a tube used to carry the bile from the liver to be poured in on the food as it passes through the bowels. The other hole is for the duct of the gland known as the pancreas. It secretes a clear fluid known as the pancreatic juice, these act on the food in the first part of the small bowels, changing it into chyle. After this, the action of the rest of the bowels is to absorb the nourishment out of the food as it is passing back. The email bowels and stomach, when in a healthy condition, should be found empty one hour after food has been eaten. The small bowels are situated mostly on the left side just behind the stomach. Large bowels have three coats the same as the small ones The first part of the large bowels is known as the blind gut ar d is about three feet long ; this is generally the first thing to fly out in opening a horse's belly. Its use is to act as a reservoir to hold the water and fluid parts of the food ; this is where the water and fluid parts are mostly taken up into the system. The next part of the Inrge boWels is known as the large colon ; it la\ s along the* door of the belly, is about nine feet long, and is doubled on itself three times. In this bowel the solid part of the food is found. TflE ANATOMY OF THE HOUSE. 33 where ii K w-ji k^u uduui uy la^ ^-^....^^Li,.^ ^» l.^c uov.iii auu li^k nourishment taken out. After the food is worked back out of this bowel, and the nourishment taken out of it, it enters into what in known as the floating- colon, which is ten feet long and about t^o inches in diameter, or double the size of the small bowels, l* i« thrown into folds or pleats, and, as that part of the food that has no nourishment in it passes through, it is worked- into balls which pass back and arfe emptied into the rectum or back gut. Thiaf part of the bowels, same as the small intestines, is suspended by a sheet or fold from the back bones, and is situated at the back part of the belly, on the left side, behind the small bowels. Rectum or Back Gut. — It is sometimes known as the straight bowel, which is the last part of the intestines, and is about eighteen inches long. The coats of this bowel are a continuation of the large bowels, but each coat is thicker and heavier. Above this bowel, are the bones of the rump ; below it, in the horse, we find the bladder and other small glands. In the mare we find what is known as the womb and the vagina, which is the passage into the womb from the outside, and at the sides we find the bones which help to form the hip cavity. At the back part is found what is known as the anus, which is situated immediately under the tail. The use of the rectum is to hold the balls as they pass back from the floating colon and empty in here. When the rectum gets full and presses on the sides of the wall, it stimulates the nerves, which cause the muscular Toat of the rectum to contract, while the muscle of the anus dialates or opens out, causing the faeces or manure to pass out. The Glands, which assist in digestion, are the liver, pancreas and the spleen. The Liver is the largest gland in the body; it weighs from ten to twelve pounds in the horse, and is situated between tlv# stomach and diaphragm or curtain which separates the cav*t»'5», and is held to its place by several Rtrong ligaments ; it h» of a dark brown color, and its use is to secrete the fluid called bile, which is a greenish color and very bitter to the taste. There is no gall bladder in the horse, simply a tube which passes down from the liver to the small bowel emptying six inches behind the stomach- It is along this tube where gall stones are sometimes situated The liver is largely supplied with blood vessels and nerves. The Pancreas is another very important gland situated behln(' the liver and in front of the kidneys, lying along near the b^f.^ 34 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. bone. This g'lauU is ot a ^ra)i>h, itxny coior auU i,aii be found by examining closely in front of ihe kidneys, its use is to secrete a clear, colorless fluid known as the Pancreatic juice. This is an important fluid in connection with digesting' the fooi and entem the bowel )uey become chilled anJ get inflamed and set up inflammation. Infl.immation of the pleura rnemhrat^e inentioned is called pleurisy, and the membrane in connection with the bowels THE ANATOMY OF THE HORSE. 85 called the peritoneum which w-neii iadunieU i!> called peritonitis, a very dangerous disease, more so than pleurisy. PROCESS OF DIGESTION. In tracing the food from the mouth to where it nourishes the muscles in different parts of the body, we first find the food taken into the mouth by the use of the lips and front teeth where it is masticated or chewed by means of the tongue and teeth, and while it is being rolled around and chewed the salivary glands keep pouring in the saliva, mixing the food and preparing it for digestion. After it is thoroughly chewed it is rolled into a ball at the back part of the tongue, where by the action of the muscles of the gullet it is grasped and forced down into the tube which, by the action of its muscular fibres, is forced down into the stomach where it is rolled about and becomes thoroughly mixed with the gastric and pepsine juices which act chemically on the food and changes it into what is known as chyme. From the stomach it passes up into the front part of the small bowels where there is the secretion from the liver and pancreas which also act chemically and changes the chyme into what is called chyle. After this the rest of the bowels by the action of these little villi and lacteals, which are in the coats of the bowels, absorbs the chyle or nourishment from the food, these vessels empty the chyle or nourishment into the veins of the body which is then carried to the heart, where it is forced out from the heart through the arteries down into the capillaries which are all through the body, the nourishment is given through the walls of these small thin vessels and gives life and strength to the body. CHAPTER VIII. ORGANS OF RESPIRATION. THESE are commonally known as the organs of breathings, they comprise the nostrils, chambers in the head or nasal chambers, larynx or sometimes called Adam's apple, trachea or windpipe, bronchial tubes and the lungs. The Nostrils are two openings, one on each side of the nose; these are held open by the aid of cartilage or gristle, and muscles. About one and one-half inches up the nostril on the under side is a small opening about the size of a grain of shot, this is where the tube or duct which carries the tears down from the eyes empty into the nose. The nostril is lined with a thin delicate skin which after* 36 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. w^iu:> changes into the mucouM membrane as it passes up into tlM chambers of the head. Nasal Chambers or Chambers of the Head.— These give pa«- ■agfe to the air from the nostril into the larynx or Adam's apple. There are two of these chambers divided in the center by a thin partition of cartilage called the septum nasi, these communicate with the sinuses of the head. The horse cannot breathe through the mouth on account of the formation of the throat, and this compels him to always breathe through the nostrils. This is a point which should be remembered. Larynx or Adam's Apple.— It is a box made of cartilage, or gristle, gives passage to the air and is also the organ of voice ; it is situated in the floor of the gullet. This box has an opening on its upper side, which is guarded by a valve, this valve is always open except when the animal is swallowing food or water. When the food is being swallowed it passes over the valve which closes the opening while the food passes over it. This is important, for if the valve does not close properly and either food or water drop into the windpipe it causes the animal to have a fit of coughing, and is spoken of as the animal to have the food going the wrong way. On the outside of this box of cartilage is found several small muscles attached which help to hold it in its place, it is lined inside by a continuation of the same membrane, as in the chambers of the head. Along the inside of this box is found what is called the vocal chords which come into play when the animal is whinnying. These chords are not nearly 80 well marked as in the human being, and if they or the cartilage of the larynx become affected by dise«ee It fenerally gfives rise to the disease called roaring. Trachea or Windpipe. — This ia a tube which oarriet the air down from the larynx to the bronchial tubes in the lungs. Thia tube la made up of forty or fifty rings of cartilage which are united to each other by strong elastic ligaments which gives the windpipe its flexibility, that is, it can be bent in any direction almost like a piece (^ elastic. In tracing the windpipe from Adam's apple it is found to enter the chest where it terminates into two small tubes, one going to the right lung and one to the left lung ; these are called the bronchial tubes. Bronchial Tubes and Air Cells. — These are made up of the same material as that of the windpipe, but are only about half the THE ANATOMY OF THE HORSE. 37 size. These tubes after they pass into the substance of the lungs they break up into other small tubes which pass all through the lungs and terminate into what is known as the air cells. These small tubes and air cells are lined inside by a very thin mucous membrane which is a continuation of the membraiie lining the other organs already mentioned. Just inside this thin raucous membrane is found the capillary network of the lungs, and while the blood is slowly passing through this network of vessels it gives off to the air in the air cells carbonic acid gas and takes in the oxygen from the pure air while it is in the lungs. The LungfS are the most important organs in connection with breathing, they are spongy, yellowish organs, two in number, one situated on the right side and the other on the left; the right lung is the largest on account of the left one having a hollow in its side for the heart. The lungs are separated by a partition known as the mediastinum, also by the heart which is in the folds of this partition and also by the large blood vessels and oesophagus or tube which passes on its way to the stomach. The lungs are made up of light elastic tissue and are full of air cells and tvtbes, they are very large while the animal is alive and fills up nearly the whole chest cavity, but after death they collapse and are not nearly so large. Between the lungs and the ribs is found a serous membrane called the pleura or the lining membrane of the chest. It is made up of two folds, one being attached around the outer part of the lungs w^hile the other is attached to the ribs at the side and at the back to the large curtain which separates the lungs from the bowels. The little glands situated in this membrane secretes an oily fluid which serves to lubricate these parts while the lungs are working in the chest so as not to cause friction. When this membrane becomes inflamed from a chill or injury it sets up the disease called pleurisy. The trachea, or windpipe, bronchial tubes and air cells are sometimes compared to a tree, the windpipe being the trunk while the bronchial tubes and air cells represent the branches and leaves of the tree. The lungs are largely supplied by blood vessels and nerves. Breathing in the horse consists of first drawing the pure air in and then forcing the impure air out. These two acts are performed by the muscles of the chest, part of them in contracting in such a manner as to dilate or enlarge the chest civity and on 38 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. account of the space between the lung's and chest being air tight the lungs themselves enlarge and the air rushes in to fill up space. The act of forcing the air out is performed by these muscles which relax while others contract in such a manner as to close the chest cavity and makes it smaller, thus the lungs also become smaller and forces the air out. The act of breathing is performed in a horse in perfect health sixteen times a minute. CHAPTER IX. URINARY SYSTEM. THIS system consists of the kidneys, ureters, bladder and urethra. The action of these organs is to deal with the urine or what is commonly called the water of the animal, which is a watery fluid secreted by the kidneys. It varies in color, according to the condition of the animal's blood. The Kidneys are two in number — one on the right side and one on the left side, and are situated just, below the small of the back — the right one being the furthest ahead. In shape, they are long and narrow, and resemble the liver in color. In cutting one of these kidneys open, it is found to be full of glands and tubes, which secrete the urine from the blood while it is passing through the kidneys. These tubes pass to the centre of the kidneys, where they empty the urine into what is called the pelvis of the kidneys. The glands are largely supplied with blood vessels and nerves. In examining the kidneys, one will generally find a large quantity of fat, which help to hold them to their place. The use of the kidneys are to secrete the urine from the blood, which contains a large amount of what is known as ureaic acid, and if not taken out of the blood by these glands, acts as poison to the system. The Ureters are the tubes which carry the urine down from the pelvis of the kidney to the bladder. They are two in number — one situated on the right side of the pelvic or hip cavity and the other on the left side close to the walls — and they enter one on each side at tha upper part of the bladder. They are only about the size of an ordinary straw. The Bladder is situated in the pelvic or hip cavity. When it is full it sometimes stretches out into the abdominal or belly cavity. It consists of a body and neck. The bodv THE ANATOMY OF THE HORSE. 39 Is the large pari, and is placed in front; the neck being ta the back part of the bladder. This is where the urine or water passes out of the bladder. The bladder is made up of three coats, somewhat similar to that of the bowels. The serous coat is just a continuation of the serous coat found in the belly cavity lining the bowels. The inside of the bladder is lined with mucous membrane similar to that of the bowels, and when the bladder is empty this is all thrown into folds. Another coat is found, between the two membranes above mentioned, called the muscular coat, and is made up of muscular fibres. Its action is when the bladder is full and presses on the nerves of the coat, these nerves causing the fibres in the coat to contract, thus contracting- the bladder, forcing the urine out. The bladder is held to its place by ligaments attached to the wall of the pelvic cavity, and above the bladder is found the rectum. The bladder in the horse rests on the floor of the pelvic cavity. The position of the bladder in the mare differs from that of the horse. Instead of the rectum or back bowel being immediately above it, as it is in the horse, the womb is found just above the bladder or between it and the rectum. The use of the bladder is to act as a reservoir to store up the water until the bladder is full ; when it is full it presses on the walls and nerves, giving a peculiar sensation to these parts, and causing the walls of the bladder to contract forcing the water into a tube which carries it from the body; this tube is called the urethra. The neck of the bladder is simply an opening at the back part of the bladder, and is guarded by a valve which prevents the urine from dribbling out except when the animal is passing its water. The Urethra is the tube which carries the water from tht bladder out of the body, and is situated much differently in the mare from that of the horse. In the mare it is very short, passing from the neck of the bladder along below the womb and vagina, which is the passage from the outside into the neck of the womb, it opens up into the underside of this passage about four inches in from the outside. This opening is guarded by a small thin valve, and can be felt by passing the finger along the under side of tlie passage v\hich leads into the womb. In the horse this tube is a great deal longer than in the mare, it commences at the bladder, passes along below the rectum or back bowel to just below the anus, her< 40 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. this tube bends downwards and forwards passing- into the penis of the horse and passes down to the end of the penis, where it terminates. This tube is used to carry the urine from the bladder out of the body and is also used in connection with the genital organs, these are the organs which bring forth the young animals. This tube is lined with a continuation of the membrane of the bladder. CHAPTER X. GENITAL ORGANS. THESE organs in the horse are those which reproduce the young animals. To bring forth the young there must be two animals, one the horse or male animal, the other the mare or female animal, or in other words, there must be one of each sex, male and female. These organs are different in each sex or in the horse and mare and require to be considered separately. Genital Orgfans in the Horse are as follows: Scrotum or bag, ;esticles, spermatic cord, vesiculae seminales or the pouches which holds the semen of the horse, urethra, penis and the sheath. The Scrotum is the sac or bag which contains the testicles and is situated between the hind legs, and is covered on the outside by a very fine soft skin. Passing up in the center under the sheath and scrotum or bag is a well marked line in the skin called median raphe, this can be plainly seen when the horse is on his back, and is found to be continued up gradually getting fainter until it reaches under the anus. Under the skin is found layers of white fascia or tissue, which can be seen on cutting through the scrotum. There is found to be a partition in the scrotum separating the two testicles. The size of the scrotum is affected very much by the weather, the cold weather contracts the fibres in the scrotum causing it to get very much smaller, while in warm weather the fibres relax causing the scrotum to get very much larger. The use of the scrotum is to contain, support and protect the testicles. The Testicles are two in number, one situated on the left side the other on the right, they are oval in shape, and are attached above to thfi. spermatic cord. Before the animal is born the testicles are situated in the abdominal or belly cavity and attached to the serous membrane which has already been spoken of in connection with this cavity. At or about the time of birth, there is what is known as the descent of the testicles into the THE ANATOMY OF THE H©JRSE. 41 scrotum; in their downward course, they pass through a slit or small opening at the back part of the muscles of the belly, where they are attached to the under part of the hip bones. These slits or openings are known as the inguinal rings, these rings can be felt in the horse by pressing the fingers well up into the groins. The descent of the testicle is an important point to be remembered for, if it does not come down into the scrotum he is then called what is known as a rig or ridgeling horse, in this case the testicle is not found in the scrotum. At the front part of the testicle is found a small ridge called the globus major, and at the back of it is found another small ridge called the globus minor. Passing between these two ridges there is another well marked ridge called the epididymis, these points can be easily seen upon exam- ining the testicle after the animal is altered or castrated. The substance of the testicle is made up of small glands and fine tubes, these tubes, as they pass towards the back of the testicle, form into larger tubes and finally unite to form one tube, which is used to carry the semen up the back part of the spermatic cord, which these glands in the testicle secrete. Spermatic Cords, or the cords of the testicles, are attached above to the inguinal rings or openings mentioned before, they are about five or six inches long and have the testicles attached to them below. In each cord is found a small muscle which goes by the name of the spermatic muscle, the rest of the cord is made up of the spermatic artery, veins and nerves. Running up at the back of these cords is found a tube about the size of a straw, which upon examination is found to be hard and has a small opening passing up through the centre where the semen passes up through it. This tube is called the vas deferens. Around the spermatic cords and testicles is a serous membrane, one layer being attached to the testicle and cord, while the other is closely attached around the inside of the scrotum or bag. In this mem- brane are small glands which secrete an oily fluid to lubricate the parts, so as not to cause friction when they are jolted around in the scrotum, this fluid will be noticed to fly out as soon as the scrotum is cut. This is an important point to remember, because sometimes from a slight injury the glands will secrete a large amount of this fluid mentioned, which causes the scrotum to look large and swollen, this disease is known as hydrocele or water in scrotum or bag. 42 THE VETERINAEY SCIENCE. VaS Deferens. -1 hese are tlie tubes winch carrv flie >.tMnfn up the back part of the cord thrmii^h the ins^aiinal ring-j^ t-.cuue mentioned. They then pass backw.irds and upwards, O've on each side, to the upper part of the bladder, where they empty into two small pouches or sacs, called tlie vesiculae seminales, which store up the semen as i4^ is secreted by the testicles, and when full present the appearance of a pear, Vesiculae Seminales. — These sacs or pouches are situated at the upper side, over the neck of the bladder, one on each side, and have the tube which carries the semen emptying into it at the front end, while at the back end of them is a small openini^ in each one that leads out into another small tube which passes backward and empties into the urethra, which has been mentioned before as carrying the water out from the bladder. The use of these sacs or pouches is to store up the semen or seed of the horse. While the horse is performing sexual intercourse, these sacs or pouches contract, forcing the semen through these little tubes mentioned out into the urethra, whjch is a tube leading down to the penis. The Penis is the main organ connected in sexual lOlercourse ; its substance is formed of what is known as erectile tissue, which, under certain circumstances, becomes enormously distended with blood. Passing up the under side, there is what has already been mentioned, the urethra, or the tube, which carries the water or urine out of the body; and also in the act of intercourse, it carries the semen, thus it is noticed this tube is used for two purposes, as we have already mentioned. The Sheath is a loose process of skin which passes down- wards from the scrotum or bag, generally from about four to six inches, according to the size of the animal, and is attached to each side, leaving a hole or opening in the centre through which the penis comes down. The outside of the sheath is covered by a thin, delicate skin, same as that of the scrotum ; inside it is lined by a membrane having a lot of small glands, which secrete a thick dark fluid to lubricate this passage. Sometimes this fluid sollects in here and has the appearance of tar. This is an important point to remember, for when it collects to a lar^« •xtent the sheath has to be washed out. The Semen or seed of the horse, when examined under a vioroscope, is found to contain *;mall objects called spermatOMMU THE ANATOMY OF THE HORSE. 43 wliich move around, and wlK'n in the womb it there meets the ovum of the female, which is secreted by a g-land called the ovary. When these two small objects unite, they form the foetus, oi what might be called the animal in its first stage. The Female Genital Orgfans, or organs of the mare. — These are very different from those in the horse, and are named as follows: Ovaries, fallopian tubes, or the tubes which carry the ovum from the ovaries to the uterus or womb, uterus or womb, vagina, and the vulva. The Ovaries in the mare represent the testicles in the horse. They are about the size of a pigeon's egg, and resemble it much in shape. They are held to their place by ligaments, and at the back part have a tube leading from them called the fallopiaii tubes. The use of the ovaries are to secrete the ovum or egg. This is a very minute body, which has to be examined under Jie microscope, being only r7^ of an inch in diameter. The Fallopian Tubes are two canals, one on each side, which pass backwards and upwards, and enter into the front part of the uterui or womb. The use of these small tubes are simply to carry the ovum or egg up from the ovaries and empty it into the womb or uterus. The uterus or Womb is a muscular sac situated in the hip cavity, bounded above by the rectum, below by the bladder, and on the sides by the walls of the hip cavity. It .is divided into what is known as a body and a neck. The body of the womb is very small, only about four to six inches long and a couple of inches in diameter when the animal is not pregnant, and near the front end, at the upper side, there are openings where the ovum enters in. When the animal becomes pregnant, the body of "iht womb becomes enlarged and passes forward and to the left side of the belly or abdominal cavity, getting larger as the time of pregnancy passes on, until the foetus, or young, has attained its full size. After the mare has had her young the womb begins to get smaller until it attains its natural size again. The womb is very largely supplied with blood vessels and nerves, especially so when the animal is pregnant, as it takes a large amount of blood to nourish the foetus, or young animal, before birth. The womb is made up of three coats; the inner one is called mucous membrane, and is found to be in the mare, uh'ie pregnant, covered over with numerous small processes about the size of peas, to which the 44 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. placenta or cleaning of the foal is attached. The muscular coat is next to that of the mucous coat, and lies between the outer and itiner coats of the womb. It is made up of muscular fibres, and is strong and thick in the womb, much thicker than it is in the bowels or othefr organs already mentioned. The use of this coat is to support and protect the foetus or young while it is being carried in the womb, and at the time of parturition, or what is commonly known as foaling, this coat then comes into use, as it contracts the womb very forcibly on the foal, while the neck of womb lies open, helping to force the foal out of the womb. This is important to note as the contraction of this coat is known as labour pains. Lying outside, and covering around the womb, is found a serous coat, which is a continuation of the serous coat of the bowels. The womb is held to its place by strong ligaments attached to the sides of it, and from there to the hip bones, these are called broad ligaments. At the back part of the womb is found the neck. It consists of an opening, formed by a projection, which is about the size of an egg and has a hard, gritty feeling when the animal is not in season and the neck is closed. The neck of the womb is under control of the muscle around it, and this muscle is under control of the nerves of the womb. When the mare comes in season, this muscle is relaxed to a certain extent, thus allowing the neck to open large enough for the passage of a couple of fingers into it ; but upon working around it with the fingers it can be forced large enough for a man's hand to pass into it at this period. If the mare is put to the horse at this time, and becomes pregnant or with foal, the .muscie in the neck of the womb contracts, firmly closing it, which remains closed until the time of foaling. When, at the time of foaling, the labour pains com.e on, the muscle in the neck dilates, allowing the neck of the womb to open large enough for the foal to pass out The neck of the womb can be felt easily by oiling the hand and passing it into the passage to the womb, and it will be noticed that the neck spoken of projects into the passage. Vagina and Vulva. — These two organs together make up tiie passage which leads into the womb from the outside. In the young mare they are separated by a thin curtain, or partitioi', made up ot' mucous membrane. This curtain is found about four inches from the outside, and is known as the hymen. This membrane is destroyed, or should he, when the mare is ^;r^.*^ pui to the horse, THE ANATOMY OF THE HORSE. 4S althoug'h w« often have tl broken down in other ways, and in 8ome cases it will disappear of its own accofd. The part ot the passag-e In front of the hymen is called the vagina. This passage, in structure,^'resembles the womb, but is not so strong. There are numerous glands situated along the inner coat or lining of this passage which secrete a fluid to lubricate it. The principal use of this organ is to guide the penis when the animals are performing sexual intercourse, and also serves at the time of foaling as a passage for the foal to come out through. The part of the pas- sage behind the hymen is known as the vulva. It is about four inches long and about two or three inches high, varying according to the size of the mare. In front it is separated from the vagina by the hymen membrane. It resembles the vagina in structure, and also has little glands in its inner coat to secrete a fluid to lubricate the passage. At the back part of the vulva, or around the outside, is what is known as the lips of the vulva, one on each side of the opening. The outside of the lips are covered by a very fine skin, and, just below the skin, they are made up of erectile tissue, which is the same kind of tissue as is found in the penis of the horse. This tissue is found more abundantly in the lips of the vulva of the young mare than in the lips of the vulva of the old mare. The opening between these lips is situated just below the anus, or the opening where the back bowel ends. At the back part of the vulva, on the under side, is an opening, or hole, about large enough to allow a man's finger to pass in ; this hole is where the tube leading from the bladder comes up into the passage and allows the urine, or water, to pass into the vulva, where it runs out of the body. The clitoris is situated on the under side of this passage, just inside the lips, and can be seen in the mare after passing water when she works the vulva. Just below the clitoris are found two or three small glandi which secrete th« fluid that passes away when the mare is horsing. Mammary Glands, or what is known as the mare's bag, are two glands situated between the thighs, the use of which is to secrete the milk after birth to feed the youn|f animal. In Ihe yrnng mare they are vc^-y small, but after the mare is V 111 'iO-A a few months these glands begin to get large, and at ii aling time they attain their largest size. These g'lands are Q\j\ ijre^ p-^tside by a thin, smooth skin. The subst^noe ai tfaeai tre 46 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. made up ot t.niall glajius ana tubes — the glauus secrete the milk from the blood, while the tubes retain or hold the milk until it is drawn away from the bag- either by milkingf or the young animal sucking;. During- the time of suckling the young, the glands are largely supplied with blood, from which the milk is secreted. On the under sside of each gland is found the teat, or the part the young animal takes hold of in sucking. The end of the teat is pierced by several small holes, where the milk comes out. THE FOETUS, OR YOUNG ANIMAL BEFORE BIRTH. In considering this we must first speak of the ovum, or egg, which is secreted by the ovary of the mare. Every time she comes in season (which occurs every three weeks during the hot weather) this ovum, or egg, passes down the tubes before mentioned into the womb, where it remains a few days and then dies if she is not put to the horse ; but, if during the time this ovum is in the womb she is put to the horse and one of the little bodies which is found in the semen of the horse comes in contact with it the ovum and this little body unites together, the rest of the. semen dies and passes away, while the neck of the womb gradually contracts until it is perfectly tight. These two little bodies begin to grow when united and forms the fcetus, or foal. The three parts connected with the foetus, are the foetus, navel string, and cleanings, or placenta. The cleaning, or placenta, is the part which is found covering the foal and is attached to the little pea-like elevations on the inside of the womb. This covering is found to be full of small blood vessels which run to one point where they unite to form two larger vessels, known as the navel veins, which carry the blood up through the navel opening of the foal where it passes up to its heart ; by the action of the* heart it is forced out all through the body of the foal and returned to the heart and then forced down another artery which passes it down to the navel opening, along the navel cord, into the cleaning or placenta again, where it is distributed through the small blood vessels. As the blood comes down this cord from the foal it is in its impure state, and while it is passing through these small vessels in the cleaning it comes very close to the small blood vessels in the womb. The blood is cleansed and nourished from the blood of its mother by a process similar to that which was spoken of in con- nection with the luniks. The foetus, or foal, does not grow so fast the first month as it does later on ; at the age of seventeen weeks THE ANATOMY OF THE HORSE. 47 (ht: first h. Incisors or Front Teeth. Molars or Grinder*. ^MXxe^h!'" Pe'->"anent. '^MTlkTee^h?'' Permanent The foal at or soon after birth 4 0 12 0 " nine weeks 8 0 12 0 " nine months 12 0 12 0 The colt at one year 12 0 12 4 " two " 12 0. 12 8 •• three " 8 4 4 16 " fouc " 4 8 0 24 " five " 0 12 0 24 At five years old he gets his bridle, or canine teeth, which are four in number ; thus at the age of five years a horse has a full mouth of teeth, numbering forty in all. How to tell the age of a horse by his teeth is fully explained hereafter in this book in connection with examination for soundness of horses. It is advisable for everyone to become familiar with the anatomy, or structure of the horse, which lias been explained in very simple language, for the better the anatomy is understood the easier diseases and treatments are to understand. <^l^ ■7/^ PART IL DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. CHAPTER I. QUESTIONS TO ASK AND HOW TO EXAMINE A SICK HORSE. IT IS always well to inquire into the history of the case by • asking the following questions before making an examination, as it will help to tell what is wrong with the horse as well as giving an idea as to what part is affected. First — find out how long the animal has been sick. Second — find out how he has been acting. Third — find out the cause of the trouble if you can. If you find that the animal has been standing with his head hanging down, eating very little, breathing heavily, and coughing, you may come to the conclusion it is some trouble of the breathing organs. Again, if you find out the animal is in severe pain, get- ting up and down and rolling about in the stall, and slightly bloated, you may conclude it is some trouble of the stomach or bowels. Again, if you find out the animal has a straddling gait, attempting to make water often, and allowing the penis to pass out and then draw it in, and sometimes stamping with the hind legs, you may then come to the conclusion it is some trouble of the urinary organs, such as the kidneys or bladder. This will give you an idea, after hearing the history of the case, what set of organs to examine first. In all cases try the pulse ; it is generally taken on the small artery which crosses the under side of the jaw about the middle ; when the animal is in good health it should beat from 88 to 40 times per minute, or, in other words, this is the number of times the heart beats per minute. The oftener the pulse beats above its regular beat the more serious the case is. It will be necessary to examine closely the org'ans which you have come to the conclusion ar« aff»ot*d. 60 THEIVETERINARY SCIENCE. CHAPTER II. DISEASES OF THE RESPIRATORY OR BREATHING ORGANS. SIMPLE CATARRH OR COLD IN THE HEAD. T^TTHIS disease means a running- or discharg-e from the nose j and sinuses of the head. It first commences with conges- tion of the mucous membrane, or what is commonly known as the lining membrane, of the nose and head. Then this conges- tion is followed by an inflammation and dryness of the membrane, and in a few days this is followed by a discharge of a watery nature, which later on in the disease turns to a thicker fluid of a whitish or yellowish color, varying according to the severity of the case. Causes. — The most common, perhaps, is exposure or sudden changes in the weather, such as we have in the fall and spring ; or standing in a draft, while warm, after driving. It is generally found in horses that are in poor condition, the system being run down by poor feeding" or over work. Symptoms. — The animal is noticed to be dull and not eating very well. The hair is standing out and looks rough ; pulse not much affected ; throat shows soreness when you press on it ; also discharges freely at the nostrils. The breathing is about natural, and usually the animal does not make quite so much urine, or water. Treatment. — As a general thing the treatment is quite simple. Make the horse as comfortable as possible in his stable ; see that plenty of pure air can get in, and that his stall is kept nice and clean. Feed him plenty of soft food such as warm bran mashes, boiled oats, or scalded chopped oats, and it is a good plan to boil up some flax seed and put a teacupful of the juice and boiled flax seed in with his food two or three times a day, according to how much it seems to loosen the bowels. In all cases of this kind it is well to keep the bowels open with soft food. In bad cases it is best not to work the animal very much — ^just enough for good exercise. Give him a teaspoonful of the following mixture, three times a day in his food, and if he will not take it in his food put it on his tongue with a large spoon, which can be done by drawing the tongue out with one hand and putting the spoon well back DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. (Jl into the mouth with the other and turning it over ; then hold the mouth shut until the medicine get» wet, so that h« cannot ■pit it out. 8»ltp«tr« or Nitrat« of Potaah i ponnd. Sulphur I " Oronnd 0«nti»D Root J ** Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful thr«« timei • day, morning, noon and night. In some cases where the discharge continue* very long it it well to change the treatment and give a teaspoonful of ground sulphate oi iron twice a day, night and morning, in hl^ frrd until the discharge stops. If his tTiroat it sore rub il well two or three times a day with white liniment. In cases where this discharge ii not checked it terminates in what is known as chronic catarrh, or nasal gleet. NASAL GLEET OR CHRONIC CATARRH. In this disease there is a glary discharge fiom om or both nostr Is. • It is a chronic innammation of the sinuses of the head, and the discharge varies much according to where the disease is situated and the length of time it has been going on. Causes. — First, neglected catarrn, especially if the animal has not been treated properly and allowed to run out in the cold without being properly fed, such as being allowed to run out at a straw stack. It may be caused by a severe blow on the bones of the head over the sinuses, and also from a bad tooth. Sometimes a tumor will cause it or some foreign substance, surb as food or a piece of stick becoming worked up through the no** into the sinuses ; or it might be caused by coughing and the food fly up into the sinuses in this way. Symptoms. — This disease Is sometimes mistaken for flanders. The animal at first may be in pretty |food spirits, but if the disease is allowed to run oa he will soon get thin and run down on account oi the constant discharge from the noee. There la s discharge from one or both nostrlU of a yellowish color, the lining oi the nose will be slightly reddened and in some cases is of a yellowish color. The way to tell if the sinuses are much affected is to tap on the bone over the sinuses with the finger, if it gives a dull sound like as though the sinuses were full, you may con- clude that they are diseased, but if it gives a hollow drum- like sound, you mav come to the conclusion that the sinuses are not much affected and there is more hope of recovery. As the 62 ' THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. disease runs on, the animal gets very much weaker, the discharg-* has a very bad smell; this shows that the bones of the head are becomings affected. If it is a bad tooth that is causing the trouble, the discharge will only come from one nostril; the animal will not eat very well ; sometimes he will be noticed, after taking a bite, to throw the food out of his mouth. The breath has a very bad smell and the horse will soon run down in condition. 7*he way to distinguish this disease from glanders is first, that the discharge in glanders is of a greenish color and will sink in water, while the discharge in nasal gleet will float on water; second, by examining the lining inside the nose which, if the animal has glanders, will be found to be covered with small ulcers. Treatment. — This disease is not, as a general thing, easily treated. If the animal is thin and run down in condition, it is well to build him up with good food, regular exercise, pure air and the following mixture: Ground Sulphate of Iron J pound. Ground Sulphate of Copper , J pound. Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful twice a day, night and morning, on his tongue or in his feed. Wash the nostrils twice a day with warm water. If you conclude that the sinuses are much affected or that some food or foreign substance is causing the trouble, the treatment will then be different. The animal will have to be thrown down and tied with a rope, securely, then strip a piece of skin as large as a copper off the bone with a knife, and take a trephine or an inch auger and bore a hole through the bone into the sinuses, which can be easily done for the bone is soft and thin and does not cause much pain to the animal, and can be done with very little risk. When the hole is through the discharge will come out of it, and with it will g-enerally come th« seat of th« trouble Keep the hole open as long as you can by passing your finger into it,' and ald it g-ivfru tb» hor«# Immediate relief for he art^* th# air through th* fuS* »n*T*»<1 <»f the nostrils. The way to r*i) w-hwn to t*ke the tub* out i* re p(;Ace your hand over th# tu^» which makes him breathe throust'h rhe nose. When he breathe* cSear cnoujfh throtijt'h hi» noi^t to suit you, take the tube out of the wmdpipe and draw the skin together over the wound by a couple of stitches and then treat as an ordinary wound; of course, this operation is seldom needed except in ex- treme cases. DISlASESjANDiTillATMSNT OF THE HORSfi. 63 It is CAll«d this wh*a ao othar dia«a3« cam h« s««n. Causes It may rwiult from laryngitis, or inflammation of th« throat. Sometime* a horse is noticed to have this kind of cough for some time before he takes heaves, or broken wind. A cough of this kind is generally worse during changeable weather and is sometimes shown more after eating and drinking or after being brought out of the stable. Treatment. — Give the following powder t Tarter Emetio i pound. Camphor i " Ground Digitelit i " Mix thoroughly and give one teaspoonful night and morning In feed or on tongue with a spoon. A teaspoonful of oil of tar in his feed three times a day is also recommended. ROARING. This disease is breathing with a loud and unnatural sound upon any violent exertion. More air passes into the nostrils than can pass into the lungs, and this is due to the wasting of th# muscles of the larnyx, or Adam's apple ; this condition causes th« passage through the larynx to be smaller than natural. The air rushing through this small passage into the lungs acts on th« vocal cords ; this is what causes the peculiar sound. * Causes. — This disease sometimes follows laryngitis, distemper and influenza by being put to work too soon after recovering from them. It may also be hereditary, that is where the sire or dam of the horse has been affected with roars. It may come on from tight reining. Horses with very long necks and narrow jaws ar» apt to become roarers. Symptoms. — As long as you do not excite the animal he is almost free from it, but if he is worked or driven hard he will show it quickly. Treatment. — If this disease is once well established it is Incurable, but in cases where the disease is just coming on giv* Iodide of Poteeh | pound. Nltrata of Pot&sh or Saltpetre I " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful twic« a day, nigbi and morning, in his feed, and blister the throat with Grr.unrl }>!p>».niBh F1i»»«. or CanthariHee i dram, Kefl Precipitate, or Biniodid of Mercury if " Vaseiiue, or Lard ) ouno«, _6— 66 THEBVETERINARY SCIENCE. Mix thorouf^hly together aiitd uppiy around the cnruHt, rub tt In well and grease in three days afterwards. If he is not better m A month, blister agfain. SPASMS OF THE MUSCLES OP THE LARYNX OR ARAM'S APPLE. This disease is not very often met with but we find it som^ times affecting old horses. Causes of this disease are not known. Symptoms. — The animal may appear in perfect health when all at once he will be seized with a violent fit o( coughing, will reel, stagger, and sometimes even fall to the ground ; after a few minutes it will pass off and the animal will seem as well as ever. Treatment. — Give the animal a good dose of physic: Bitter Aloes 1 ounce. Ginger 1 teaspoonfuL Soda 1 Dissolve in a pint of lukewarm water and give as a drench, and allow the animal to stand quiet the next day after giving this drench ; follow up after this with a teaspoonful of bromide of potash every morning in his feed. BLEEDING FROM NOSE (EPISTAXIS), This disease is not so commonly met with in horses as it Is in man. Causes. — It is generally the result of some injury, or. in running or fast trotting horses when they are put to violent exertion, rupturing some of the blood vessels in the nose ; it is also more frequently met with in horses in high condition. Symptoms. — How to tell whether the blood just comes from the nose or from the lungs. If the blood comes from both nostrils it is generally from the lungs, while if the bleeding is from the nose it is usually only from one nostril. You can also tell by putting your ear to the windpipe and listening, if it is coming from the lung's you can tell by the gurgling sound heard in the lungs ; if it is in the nose you will not hear this sound in the lungs. When the blood is coming from the lungs the breathing is affected, which is not the case when bleeding from the nose. Treatment. — If not bleeding very much bathe with cold water until it stops, but if bleeding much plug the no-^triN with cotton batting saturated with white lotion and remove in twelve hours, BLEEDING OP THE LUNGS (H/EMOPTYSIS). This is generally a symptom of some other disease, but it may ootne on, in a horse in high condition and not v-td to work, by DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 67 putting; him to severe exertion when he is not used to it. It if mostly found in trotting and racing horses when they are not properly taken care of. The blood may come from the lining of the air cells or from the lining of the tubes of the lungs. Symptoms. — As a usual thing it is not very hard to find out where the blood is coming from. It comes out of both nostrils ; the animal also coughs, b.-eathes quickly, and is generally very weak, and in taking the pulse you will find it beats very quick, but weak. By applying the ear to the windpipe you will hear that peculiar gurgling sound every time the animal breathes. Treatment. — Keep the animal standing very quietly. Apply cold water or ice to the sides and chest. Be very careful how you drench the animal in this disease for they are so easily choked in diseases of the lungs. Give as a drench — Turpentine 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfnls, Raw Linseed Oil i pint, which acts as a styptic to stop the bleeding ; or you might giv» Tincture of Chloride of Iron 1 dram, or 1 teaepoonful. Mix in a pint of cold water, shake well, and give as a drench every night and morning. If the legs are cold rub well and bandage them. Allow plenty of fresh air to get to the animal and blanket according to the season of the year. In some cases thh disease is treated by giving Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce, or 4 tableapoonfula, iia a pint of cold water, three times a day, morning, noon and night, until the animal has relief. This disease is sometimea followed by inflammation of the lungs. CONGESTION OF THE LUNGS. This is where the blood rushes to the lungs from a diiH mt some other cause, filling up the arteries and veins in the lungpa and causing them to become gorged with blood. This disease la always found before inflammation of the lungs, that is, if Um congestion is not relieved it terminates in inflammation. Causes of this disease are standing in a draft while warm, getting a cold drink of water while the animal is warm, or hj putting the horse to severe exertion, such as running;, trotting, or drawing heavy loads, when the system is not in proper shape to stand ii. It sometimes follows other diseases such as catarrh or influenza. Symptoms vary much according to the cause. If from fast or hard work the symptom's are well marked. The animal 68 f HS vaf IRINaEY soiengs. kNMcrotnas «iug;g'tdh, u^mbimm ut ut« nxnti., breaches heavy, nostrtla ar« dllat«d or •nlarg'ed, pulse is quick and weak, the Hningf around the •yee and nose becomes very much reddened ; by placing your ear to th« aides of the chest or to the windpipe there is ^ ^peculiar gnrgling noise ; the leg's and ears will be cold. If the disease follows a case of catarrh or influenza he then will be noticed to refuse his food, tremble all over the body, ears and legs cold, mouth hot, pulse quick and weak, and by placing your ear at the sides you will hear the peculiar sounds. The animal stands, as he is g'enerally found to do in all lung troubles, and if he does go to lie down will get up immediately. If the animal does not soon gfet relief the disease will run into inflammation of the lungs. Treatment. — The treatment must be quick. This is not a very fatal disease, but a simple one to treat if taken in time. Keep him well supplied with good, fresh air, and always be careful he does not stand in a draft. Keep the body well covered according to the time of the year, and give Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce, or' 4 tablespoonfula. Laadanum ^ •' 2 " Put in a pint of cold water, shake well and give as a drench. being careful not to choke the animal in giving it. Have the legs well hand rubbed, if cold, and bandaged ; and if the animal is in high condition and full of blood it is well to give, with the above drench, Fleming's Tinoture of Aoonite 10 to 16 drops. Also put a mustard plaster on the sides over the lungs. Take ^ lb. of mustard, with 3 or 4 tablespoonfuls of flour and enough vinegar or warm water to make it into the form of a paste. Rub this well •▼•r the sides of the chest with the hand, and in some cases it if wen t* mb the front of the chest as well as the sides. In some •asM we find great benefit in having* cloths wrung out of warm water held up to the sides. If he is not relieved in a couple of hours give, another drench, same as the one mentioned above ; nptLt the drench every two hours until the animal has relief. It It also w^ to give him only a mouthful of cold water at a time, but gfrt It to kim often. Feed him soft food, and after he begins to get better, exercise him a little by walking around ; also giva the following mixture : Ground Gentian Root ^ pound. Nitrate of Potash, or Saltpetre } " Ms thoroughly together and give a teaspoonful three timw • DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 69 day in his feed, and gradually bring him back to his natural feed and work again. INFLAMMATION OF THE LUNGS (PNEUMONIA). This disease is inflammation of the lung substance itself and is quite a common disease. The lungs in their natural state will float on water. In the first stag^e of this disease the lungs are filled with blood and serum, and they are of a dull reddish color ; at this stage, if the animal dies, the lungs will still float on water. As the disease runs on, if not cured, the lungs change to a dark, grayish appearance ; if the animal dies and the lungs are put in water they will sink. Causes — Are much the same as those of congestion of the lungs and generally come on horses kept in a poorly ventilated stable, which has a tendency to weaken the lungs ; sudden changes in the weather, such as we have in the fall and spring, are liable to bring the disease on. It is also sometimes caused by keeping a horse in a warm stable and then turning him out to pasture to lie on the cold ground ; or, if while he is out, a cold rain storm comes on and he gets wet and is chilled through ; or, if a horse is clipped and exposed to the cold ; standing in a draft while warm ; inhaling smoke ; also by driving against a cold wind too soon after he has had influenza, distemper, or any of those weakening diseases. It also frequently follows congestion of the lungs. Symptoms. — Are much the same as congestion of the lungs, only plainer. There is, generally, very little trouble in telling the disease. It commences first by the animal shivering, after the shivering ceases heat takes place ; the ears and legs will first be hot and then cold ; the mouth is sticky and the breathing aff'ected, but not so much as in a pure case of congestion of the lungs ; the pulse is quick, ranging from fifty to seventy-five beats to the minute, which is stronger than in a case of congestion ; the horse does not care to eat ; stands up all the time, with head hanging down and ears lopped over, and in hot weather perspires freely around the chest ; the eyes have a glossy appearance and, around the inside of the evelids, are very red. As the disease passes on the horse breathes heavier and sometimes is noticed to sigh, as if in distress ; the bowels become costive, ana the manure has a glossy appearance; placing your ear to tne side of the chest you will hear a grating sound similar to that prouuced by taking some bair of *'our head, just above the ear. ancJ grating it between th« 70 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. thumb and finger. If the horse is loose in a stall he will work around till he gets his head to a door or window, which shows that he wants fresh air. By tapping the finger on the chest over the lungs it will produce a dull sound, which, if the lungs were not affected, should give more of a hollow sound. If the disease is going to terminate fatally the pulse runs up to 100 beats per minute and is so weak you can hardly feel it; he will breathe very heavy ; the nostrils make a flapping noise, and his flank draws in and out almost like a heavy horse ; the appetite is entirely gone ; the breath smells very bad ; he still persists in standing, and notices nothing. As death approaches the mouth becomes cold, the pulse cannot be felt ; he may, near the last, lie down, which will cause him to breathe very much heavier ; he again staggers to his feet, breaks out into a cold, clammy sweat all over the body, and finally staggers, falls, and dies. If the case, on the other hand, is more favorable, the animal eats a little and notices things around him, and the above symptoms gradually disappear. It generally takes from 9 to 12 days to run its course, and, as a usual thing, is treated with satisfaction if taken in time. Treatment. — Clothe the body according to the season of the year. If the animal aff"ected is in high condition use sedatives, such as Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 8 to 10 drops. Laudanum i oz. or 2 tahlespoonfuls. Mix in a pint of cold water and give as a drench every three hours until the distressing symptoms have ceased and inflammation seems pretty well checked. If the animal seems weak after this give Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tahlespoonfuls. Whisky 1 wine glass full Mix with pint of new milk or gruel and give three times a day, morning, noon and night, until the animal seems stronger. After this, when the animal is getting better and he needs a tonic to build up his system and to keep his kidneys in good action so as to relieve his lungs as much as possible, give Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre i pound. Ground Gentian Root i " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day. While the animal is sick feed on soft food, mixing a little boiled flax seed with it to keep the bowels regular. If the animal is very thin in condition it is best not to use much of the aconite and laudanum, but commence the stimulants sooner than if the horse was in high DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. ^71 condition. Apply mustard to the sides and chest and edso clothf wrung" out of hot water, and be sure to allow the horse ♦it have plenty of fresh air by having the stable well ventilated, k^* do not allow any draft to strike him. ^^ PLEURISY. This disease is inflam.mation of the lining found inside the ribs and over tiie lungs. This is a serious disease if not taken in time and allowed to run on. Causes are similar to those of inflammation of the lungs, and we often find this disease and inflammation of the lungs coming togfether. The chief causes are exposure to cold, standing in a draft, washing the body and not properly drying it, iniuries to the ribs in any way. Symptoms. — The animal is first noticed to shiver, the pulse quick and strong — much stronger than with congesC^bn or inflam- mation of the lungs — and is sometimes called a wiry pulse. He seems in great pain, breaths heavily, which is noticed very much at the flanks. At the commencement of the disease he will lie down, but, as a general thing, he will stand up most oi cne time ; if ^'ou make him cough he will suppress it as much as possible, and instead of coughing out loud, as in other lung troubles, it will be more like a long, heavy groan. The idea of Cms is he tries to keep from moving his chest as much as he can. The ears and legs are cold, but sometimes you will Tmd one ear hot and the other cold ; he has a tucked up appearance, and there m\\ be a hollow line right along the bottom of the false ribs and up towards the point of the hip ; if you press on his sides it causes him great pain, and in turning him around short he will groan with pain. If this disease is not soon checked it will terminate in what is known as hydrothorax, which means a filling up of the chest cavity with a watery fluid. Treatment. — This disease is treated very much similar to that of inflammation of the lungs. Apply cloths wrung out or hot water to the sides if in warm weather, but if in cold weather mustard is best and easiest kept on. Clothe the body well and lee that he is allowed plenty of fresh air without being it\ a araft. At the commencement of the disease, if the horse seems to be in much pain, give Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 8 to 10 drops. Flu d Extract of Belladonna ^ drHin, or 30 drof* Tinoturo of Laudanum ^ ouu(,e, or 2 tablespooufiH* 72 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Mix In a pint of cold water and g-ive as a drench. Continue the above drench every two hours until the horse is relieved of the pain. If the horse seems weak after this give Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfuls. Whifcky 1 wine glass full. Mix. in a pint , of gruel and give as a drench three times a day, morning, noon and night, until the animal begins to recover nicely, then use the following medicine to keep the kidneys work- ing- freely, as this will have a tendency to keep water from forming in his chest : Saltpetre, or Nitrate of Potash i pound. Ground (ientian Root i " Mix well and give a teaspoonful three times a day. During ■Ickness it is well to feed the animal with soft foods, with a little boiled flax seed in it to keep the bowels free, give a little cold water to drink in small quantities, and give it often — every hour or two. WATER IN THE CHEST (HYDROTHORAX). This generally follows a case of pleurisy. In some cases you will find several pails of a watery fluid around the lungs in the chest cavity. When there is such a large quantity as this it qi'enerally ends fatally. Causes.— Pleurisy. Symptoms. — After the pain and soreness from pleurisy has passed off the fluid then commences to collect around the chest, which causes him to breathe very heavily, the nostrils becoming large, and sometimes make a flapping noise. He breathes quick, and draws in and out at at the flank worse than he does in a bad case of heaves ; the pulse becomes quicker than in pleurisy, and very weak, beating from 75 to 100 beats per minute ; the blood in the jugular vein seems to flow back towards the head instead of flowing down, causing the vein to move every time he breathes. By putting your ear to the chest you cannot hear anything except above the water. If the animal is loose he will be noticed to try to get to the door or window to get the pure air. In some cases the animal will go on like this for several days, not eating very much, a. id gradually getting worse. Near the last his ears and legs get very cold, and all the other symptoms keep getting worse, and the animal tries to stand on his feet to the very last. Treatment. — if the animal will take food give him good, •trong food, such as oats and hay, and it would be well to mix a DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 73 little of the boiled linseed along with the oats to keep the bowcli regular ; keep the animal quiet ; blister the sides well with a strong mustard plaster ; give him of the following ' Saltpetre or Nitrate of Potash J pound. Ground Gentian Root 4 •• - Ground Sulphite of Iron J '* Mix thoroughly and give him a teaspoonful every five hours. It is also recommended in some works to puncture near the bottom of the chest, between the eighth and ninth rib, with a small trocar and cannula, and let the fluid out of the chest, but this operation is not very successful in the horse, and we would not advise it to be done, although it is sometimes successfully per- formed in human beings. If the horse dies and you ^ut into the chest you will find a great quantity of the fluid collected around the lungs, in some cases as much as three pailfuls. BRONCHITIS. This disease is inflammation of the lining of the bronchial tubes. Causes. — This disease is sometimes caused by driving a horse fast when he is in a weak condition, inhaling smoke, or from a sudden change in the temperature, choking from food passing down the windpipe, and sometimes it is caused from giving a drench which, instead of passing dowiv into the stomach, some of it goes down the windpipe. This disease is oftener seen in the city than in the country. Symptoms are a peculiar dryness of the throat, increased breathing, and if you place your ear to the windpipe, you will hear a wheezing noise. The animal seems quite dull, and does not eat as well as he should. If the disease is allowed to run on the pulse becomes quick and weak, and the legs and ears, after a time, become cold ; he seems very much depressed and weak, and if the weather is warm perspires freely around the chest and flanks ; on account of not eating very much he will become very gaunt, and it will be noticed that he does not lie down, and if you- make him stir around it will start him to cough. Treatment. — If the animal is in good condition and strong, give the following mixture : Fleming's Tiucture of Aconite 5 to 8 d.'ops. Laudanum i ounce or.2 tablespoonfult. Bweet Spirits of Nitre I ouuc% oi- 4 tAbl«>ipooai»l«. 74 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Mix in a pint of cold water, shake well and give as a drench. Olve a drench every two or three hours until he seems relieved- If the animal is very weak, instead of this, it is best to give Whiflky 1 wine glass fulL Ale or Beer i pint. Give every three hours until he seems relieved, then proceed with the following : Saltpetre or Nitrate of Potash J pound. Tartar Emetio J pound. Ground Gentian Root i pound. Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day. Feed soft feed with a little boiled flax seed to keep the bowels free, give cold water in small quantities, but often, which will have a good effect on the throat; apply mustard or hot cloths wrung out of hot water to the chest, clothe the body well, accord- ing to the season of the year, and see that the animal has pure air to breathe without being in a draft. In all lung diseases be care- ful in drenching so as not to choke the animal. BROKEN WIND OR HEATES. It is similar to asthma in man. CilUSCS. — It is generally seen in horses that are ravenous feeders and overload the stomach and are inclined to carry a large belly. This affects the stomach, and the same nerve that helps to supply the stomach with nerve power also helps to supply the lungs; this is how we account for it affecting the lungs when the stomach is affected. The kinds of '^ood that are apt to produce it are inferior foods, such as musty hay (clover hay being the worst), or musty oats, or it may be caused from a neglected cold. This disease is rarely found in cavalry horses as they are fed on the very best of food. Symptoms. — This disease is easily detected when it is well established. There is a peculiar way of breathing, a long Inspiration followed by ^ short expiration and a jerking motion at the flank ; the nostrils are enlarged and the muscles of che belly come into play greatly in this disease. On a damp, hot, sultry day the symptoms are greatly increased, and may become very alarming, and you might be led to think that the animal was •uffering from inflammation of the lungs ; but wheti you examine the pulse you will find it beating about natural. In heaves there is a loud, hacking, painful, internal cough which feem."; to come from the lung^s ; this is noticed more alter eating: o> DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 75 drinking, and is noticed particularly after bein^ brought out of the stable in the morning, but after working a while will not be so bad. If you suspect this disease when you are examining him for soundness give him a good feed, a pail of water and a good gallop. If affected with this disease you can then notice it plainly. In some cases it can be relieved for a short time by giving a large dose of Fleming's tincture of aconite, 10 to 15 drops in a drench, mixed with a pint of raw linseed oil. This is sometimes done by horse traders to relieve the animal while trading, and in some cases they even pour shot into the animal, which relieves him for a time. Treatment. — Where heaves once get well established it is incurable, but it can be helped by careful feeding". By feeding him regularly, and giving him lots of oats to eat and very little hay, so as to keep him gaunt ; water him often — four or five times a day — not more than a pail at a time, and never allow him to get a large feed of hay or a large drink of water at a time. The best treatment of medicine is give first a physic of from 8 to 10 drams of bitter aloes dissolved in a pint of water, with a tablespoonful of ginger and soda given as a drench, and allow him to stand in the stable for a day. This will clean his bowels and stomach out ; after this feed him carefully and give of the follow- ing mixture : Ground Gum Camphor J poand. Powdered Nux Vomica | •' Common Soda | '* Nitrate of Potaah or Saltpetre | " Mix well and give a teaspoonful three times a day in his feed, or on the tongue with a spoon. PLEURODYNIA. This disease is a rheumatic condition of the muscles around the chest. This is not a very common disease. Causes. — Exposure to cold when the animal is recovering from pleurisy or other weakening lung diseases. Symptoms. — There is great pain and difficulty in breathing and shows symptoms somewhat similar to pleurisy. In pressing on the sides he shows even more pain than he does in pleurisy, and when you examine his pluse you will find that they are about regular, whereas in pleurisy they would be beating quick and hard. By putting the ear to the animal's side you cannot hear thegratinj^ •ound heard in pleurisy. 76 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Treatment. — If it is warm weather, or In a warm stable, wring a woolen blanket out of hot water, wrap it around his chest and cover up with a dry blanket to keep the heat in. This blanket would be better heated up by wringing it out of the hot water every hour. While the blanket is being changed rub the sides well with white liniment. Give him Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 onnoe, or 4 tablespoonfnls. In a pint of cold water three times a day, morning, noon and night, until the soreness has passed off pretty well, then follow up with a diuretic to act on the kidneys. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre i pound. Qround Gentian Root | " Mix thoroughly and give a large teaspoonftil three tifnes a day in his feed or on his tongue with a spoon. SPilSMS OF THB DIAPHRAGM. This disease is sometimes called Thumps on aecount of the peculiar thumping noise the animal makes in breathing. Causes. — It generally results from an animal being put to very severe exertion, such as in running, trotting, heavy drawing, or any thing of that kind too soon after eating. It is also said to be caused by buckling the girth of a saddle too tight. This disease is more liable to be noticed shortly after the animal has recovered from some weakening disease. Symptoms.^ It gives rise to a thumping noise which is plainly heard by listening at the back part of the lungs. In most cases you can hear the noise while standing near the animal. This disease is often mistaken for palpitation of the heart, but by examining with the ear along the side you will find that the noise made is too far back to be affecting the heart, and you would \lmost think by the peculiar noise made that some person was 'jiside tapping with a hammer. The animal has difficulty in breathing, sweats freely and seems in pain. Treatment. — In an ordinary case give an anti-spasmodic. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfuls. Tincture of Laudanum 1 " " " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench every two hours until the animal is relieved of the thumping noise. If warm weather, apply a woolen blanket wrung out of hot water to the chest, with a dry one outside of it. If cold weather it is better to apply a mustard plaster around the back part of the oheet and cover the body well. In 9^m» <»ff\ss, after giving a few DISEASES ANDITREaTMSNT OF THE HOBSE. T? «# Um ab«va mlstur*, If h« do«d not get relief, It would b« wan to fir* Sptrite Torpentln*, 1 otinoe, or 4 tablespoonfuU. lUw Liiuewl OU 1 pint. Mix and give as a drench. After the animal is getting better fo«d well and give regular exercise, and bring the animal gradu- ally back to his regular work. RUPTURE OF THE DIAPHRAGM. This is rupture of the curtain which separates the lungs from the bowels, and if the rupture is large enough to let the bowels pass through in on the lungs and heart death soon relieves the animal. Causes. — Pulling a heavy load up a steep hill, or by high jumping. Sometimes it occurs when the animal is suffering from acute indigestion, when the stomach is full of gas, and in getting up and down sometimes lies down a little too heavy, causing a great strain on the curtain, which causes it to become ruptured. Symptoms. — There is a frothy spume comes from the nostrils, breathes very heavy and quick, breaks out in sweat over the body, the pulse runs up very high — sometimes as high as 100 beats per minute — and gets very weak, the animal appears as though it was suffocating, and if the rupture is to any great extent the symptoms gradually get worse, the legs and ears get cold, when death relieves him. Treatment. — Not much can be done rn this case, only give Laad&num 1 ounce, or 4 tablespooniula. Mix in a pint of water and give as a drench. T4Me may be given once in a while just to relieve the j;>aia. 78 THE VETERINARY SCHENOE. CHAFFER III. -DISEASES OF THE MOUTH, TEETH, SAUV- ARY GLANDS AND GULLET. IRRITATION OF SHEDDING THE MILK TEETH. This trouble is generally at its worst when the hors« b between three and four years old. Symptoms. — The horse seems weak at work, sweats easily, his hair is standing* and looks rough, he does not feel well and he gets gaunt and thin, his bowels get costive and the oats come through almost whole. Treatment, — In a case of this kind always examine the teeth — both front and back — for shells or caps, and if there is any remove them with a pincers or forceps. Give a mild laxative, such as Raw Linseed Oil •• | pint in a drench. After this feed on soft foo4» and follow up with the following tonic powders : Ground Gentian Root i ponad. Ground Sulphate of Iron J •* Mix thoroughly and give a tablespoonful twice a day in Us feed or on his tongue. LAMPAS. This is very common in young horses. It is not realty a disease itself, but simply an irritation of the gums caused bj shedding his front teeth. Symptoms. — This swelling is found in the fums behind the front teeth in the upper part of the mouth. The ^m looks red, and if you press your finger on it it seems sora. Treatment. — Do not use any harsh treatment fer, aftar tiia horse gets all his teeth shed and hit new ones ia, tka •welliaf g'enerally disappears of its own accord. It b wall eometimat t» take a sharp knife and cut the gum in a few plaeea, whioh raliarai the congestion and soreness, then rub the gums a eoupla af timaa A day with alum water — about two teaspoonfuls of alum !• a plat of water. Be careful in cutting the gum not to cut baok of the third bar or ridge in the roof of the mouth, for there is danger of cutting the larg-e artery in the roof, which, if cut, will bleed Freely. If by accident you should cut this artery, the way to itop it is : Take a large piece of cotton batting, place it in thm DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. rocf -• the mouth over the cut and have it held firmly by w* bandage through the mouth and over the nose, tie the »tZ3\ai up so he cannot eat, and leave the bandage on for twenty-four hours, when it can be safely taken off. PARROT MOUTH. This is not a disease, but simply a deformed mouth, vher% the upper jaw is longer than the lower jaw, and the teeth in tne upper jaw projects out over the teeth in the lower jaw which gener- ally get very long. It is always well to examine a horse's teeth before buying him for fear of his having some trouble like this. These horses should never be turned out to pasture for they cannot graze as their front teeth do not come together. But in som* cases they make very good work horses if they are kept in the stable and fed on hay and oats. This is considered an unsouna- ness in horses. WOLF TEETH. These are two small teeth found in the upper jaw in front ot the grinders, one on each side. These teeth have an affect on the horse's eyes, causing them to run water and look dull, and, iu some cases, if they are very large, will interfere with the animals feeding. Treatment. — Sometimes the teeth are knocked out with a punch, but they are best removed by putting a twitch on th,* horse's nose and pulling them out with a forceps. SHARP EDGES ALONG THE TEETH. The grinders on the upper jaw are wider than those of the under jaw, and pointed to the outside, while those of the under jaw are narrower than those of the upper jaw and pointed in towards the tongue. You will notice these points about the teeth by opening the horse's mouth and drawing his tongue out to one side. From the continual grinding the outer edges of the upper teeth become sharp, and will sometimes cut the cheek, while tho.«ie of the under side will become sharp on the inside and cut the tongfu©. If you suspect the teeth are sharp the best way to examine them is to place a twitch on the horse's nose, have an essistant to hold the twitch, and hold his head up slightly while you take- the tongue out with one hand and hold the cheek out will) "lie other, then look back and see if the cheek or tonp'e is c'ir. and also if the edges of the teeth are very sharp, if the" are, the horde's mouth needs what is called floating or tiiing tKc ilO THR VKTRRINARY ROTENOF. teeth, which can be easily done by leaving^ the twitch on and rua^ ning a float or tooth rasp along the outer edge of the upper. row of teeth and the inner edge of the lower row of teeth. It is not best to file them too much, just enough to take off the sharp edge of the teeth so they will not cut the tongue and cheeks, for if you file them too much the horse cannot grind his hay so well. DECAYED TEETH (CARIES). You do not find decayed teeth so often in the horse as you do In the human being. Horses rarely, if ever, suffer from tooth ache. CsiUSeS. — It generally comes from biting some hard substance and either breaking or cracking the tooth, which then begins to decay. Symptoms. — ^The horse in eating his feed will be noticed, all of a sudden, to throw his food out of his mouth, fumble his tongue around a little and then commence to eat again. If in drinking •ometimes if the water is cold it takes him a long time to drink, having to stop several times in drinking a pailful. In driving he is noticed to hold his head to one side, favoring the side that has the decayed tooth in it. His breath smells bad, and he falls off in condition. If the tooth is in the upper jaw, and the roots affected, there is sometimes a running from the nostril over the tooth. Treatment. — Open the mouth with a speculum or any iron that will answer the purpose, pass the hand back and examine the teeth and find out which tooth it is. Always in examining the mouth it is best to put a twitch on the horse's nose as it assists in holding him quiet. When you are sure which tooth is affected take a large forceps and remove the tooth. After pulling the tooth out keep the tooth opposite the one pulled out filed down so it will not irritate the gum on the opposite jaw. After the tooth has been removed feed on soft food for a few days until the gum g:ets healed up. If the horse is run down in condition it would be well to give some of the following tonic powders t« build him up: Ground Gentian Root , ... ^ .^ . . , , i pound, Ground Sulphate Iron ..,,,,,.... i " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful twice a day in hi? (fe4 Qr on his tongue. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 81 SPLIT TEETH. I The teeth that become split are generally th« mstara ot grinders on the upper side of the mouth, though, in some cas**, it might occur in the lower jaw. If the split tooth occurs in tha under jaw the split part is generally found on the insida of the tooth ani turned in against the tongue. If it is one of the grinders on the upper jaw the split part is on the outside and turns out and cuts the cheek. Causes. — Generally from getting some hard substance into the mouth and grinding heavily on it, such as a nail or stone. Symptoms. — The animal can scarcely eat, seems very much afraid when you go to handle his mouth, and will sometimes jerk back. If you run your hand along the upper jaw on the outside where the tooth is split and turned out it will be very sore, and the animal will jerk his head away when you press over the tooth. In eating he is noticed to fumble his food around in his mouth, and after having it in a few minutes he will throw it out half chewed, stop a few minutes, and then try to eat some again. Place a twitch on the horse's nose and proceed to examine the mouth by drawing the tongue out with one hand and holding the cheek back with the other and look carefully back along the grinders, and if the split is in the upper side of the jaw you will see it worked out, and, in some cases, stuck into the cheek. If the split tooth is in the under jaw you will find the split part stuck into the tongue. Treatment. — After you have found where the split tooth is, it is easily treated by taking hold of the split piece with the forceps and pulling it out, which is not hard to do in most cases. Tbea take a float or tooth rasp and run it along' that side, and if there is any sharp teeth smooth them off. If the horse is verjr ikin foUow up with tonic powders. HAIfQIIfG THB TONQUB OUT OF TBB MOUTE. This is not a disease, but a miserable habit, and if it is e«— formed you cannot cure it. Cause is generally from the teeth getting sharp and cuttiB|f the tongue, or from some injury to the tongue. Symptoms. — At the first start of this habit the horse just holds the end of the tongue between his teeth while he is at his work. After a time it becomes worse,, and while the bit is in his mouth the horse hangs his tongue out three or four Laches on either smU. —6— 82 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Irea.liiiCilL — ti-atnine the mouth as to the state of the teeth, il they are found sharp, float or file them so as to stop them from cutting the tongue. If the cause is a soreness on the tongue dress il with alum water — two teaspoonfuls of alum to one pint of water. This will gfenerally eflfect a cure if the case is taken in time. There are certain kinds of bits recommended for this habit, but aa a general thing" they prove a failure. CRIB SUCKERS. This Is where a horse takes hold of the manger or anything around him and sucks wind. Causes. — Sometimes a colt will learn this habit from seeing its motlier or other horses doing it. It is also caused by soreness of the front teeth at first, and he commences biting at the manger to relieve him, when afterwards it becomes a regular habit. Symptoms. — In examining the front teeth you will find them worn off from biting, and the horse, if you watch him, is continu- ally hanging on to the manger. In some cases he will suck him- self full of wind, and sometimes will take severe colic from sucking so much, while in other cases he will simply hang on to the manger with his teeth. Treatment. — When first noticed it is best to put the animal in a box stall and feed him his hay off the floor, and his gram in a pail, which should be removed as soon as the animal is through eating so he has nothing to take hold of with his teeth. Examine the teeth and see if there is anything wrong with them, If they are sharp, causing, soreness, file them down, or if It Is a milk tooth not properly shed. It is well to remove It. If it Is In the spring, and the grass good, he will sometimes get over it by turning him out to pasture. If the animal is old and has been a cribber for some time the best thing; to do ii to get a muzzle for him, and •oly leave it off while he it eating;. PttREIGH SUBSTANCES UK TBB MOUTB. Sometimes we And a piece of stick caught across the roof of ,Chc mouth, which will be noticed by the animal not feeding and he will be continually working the tongue around in his mouth, and If this obstruction be not removed the animal will fall off in flesh. In this case examine the mouth well and remove any sub- stance found caught in the mouth with the fingers or with a pincers. Barley or Wheat Beards.— Wh'fen horses are fed on barley or wheat straw, or chaff that has beards In it the mouth «:hould be DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 83 examined every week or two, for in a g^reat many cases the beardi get so lodged in the mouth that the animal cannot remove them with his tongue. Symptoms. — The horse does not feed well, his breath is bad and his mouth seems sore when you handle it ; he becomes gaunt and thin. Treatment. — In all cases where you are feeding this kind of food examine the mouth carefully, and if you find any beards remove them with the finger and wash the sore place with alum water twice a day until it heals up. Use two teaspoonfuls of alum to a pint of water. INJURIES TO THE TONGUE. The tongue is sometimes injured by a person puUlngf too hard on it when it is drawn out of the mouth, which pa«a.\\ zes the tongue. There cannot he much done for this, only give very soft foods, which he can almost drink down, and give him a tea- spoonful of powdered nux vomica three times a day on his tongue with a spoon. The tongue is often injured by the horse pulling back when tied by the bit. In some cases the tongue is almost cut off. If you think there is no chance of the tongue healing it is best to remove it with a knife and apply Monsel's solution of iron to stop the bleeding, if any. Afterward bathe the tongue with a little alum water three or four limes a day for a few days, until the tongue heals up. Use one teaspoonful of alum to one pint of water ; also feed the horse on soft food for a few days, while the tongue is healing. If the tongue is not cut enough to remove, treat it same as treatment after removal. WFLAJyiMATION OP THE TONGUE (GLOSSITIS). Thla ii not a very common disease. Causes, — It is aometimes caused by handlingf th« tong'ut rough, by pulling' too hard when taking it out of the mouth, or by giving irritating medicines which are not diluted aoough «rith water; by eating poisonous grassea and sometimes by a thorn stick- ing in the tongue. Symptoms. — There is a flow of saliva from the mouth { the animal cannot chew his food well, and there is difficulty in swallowing and breathing, the tongue gets red and is painful when pressed upon, is very much swollen, and in some cases sticks out ■>{ the mouth, the horse seems generally feverish, and after a few days there will be seen small boils forming around 84 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. the tong-ue which have matter in them, the lining covering the tongue becomes dry and cracked in several places. If the animal <4oes not get relief he cannot eat nor drink, and will soon die of starvation. Treatment. — If it is a thorn or any foreign substance, remove it and give a dose of laxative medicine, such as one pint of raw linseed oil. Bathe and gargle the tongue with the following i Tincture of Laudanum 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfulB. Pulverized Alum 1 tea?poonf ul. Water 1 pint. Gargle or bathe the tongue three or four times a day, and blister him in the space under the jaws with a mustard plaster. If the tongue is swollen very much it is well to lance it with a knife and allow the watery matter to escape, also open the little boils that have matter in them and let it escape. Feed the horse soft food with lots of boiled flax seed in it, as it has a soothing effect on the tongue. Follow up with the following powder: Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre ^ pound. Sulphur I " Pulverized Alum ^ '* Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful on his tongue three times a day. These are to gargle and heal the tongue, as well as help the animal to thrive. APHTH/E OR THRUSH. At certain times this is a very common disease. Causes. — Certain kinds of food will cause one kind of aphthae, but the kind we usually see is the infectious kind. This is where the disease is communicated from one horse to another throug'h the air, from stable to stable. Symptoms. — The horse is usually first noticed to be dull aad not feeding well, has a slight cough, runs down In oonditioc^ and sweats easily when he is working. Upon opening his mouth to exanvlne It you will find a lot of little pimples, like smaH blisters, all over the tongue and the insides of the lips and cheeks, these pimples or blisters are found all the way through the lining of the gullet, stomach and intestines, and in some cases the animal gets quite feverish and unable to do any work. Treatment. — Give a half pint of raw linseed oil in a drench to itart on. This will loosen up the bowels and help to carry off the disease. A tablespoonful of ginger is a good thing to give with >km oil, then give the following : DISEASES ANDgTREATMENT (JF THE HORSE. 85 Ooinrium Uodft J pound. Sulphur - ^ " NiLiaie of Potash or Sal'petre | " Mix thoroufjhly and j. ^cvcfc cases «pplv • mustard plaster to th« bowels, »nd also have one-half pail of hot *alt i.i a bagf placed over the animal's kidneys; this will have a tendency to move the gas In the bowels and helps to keep down Inflammation. After the animal has been relieved, if it has been a bad case, it is best to follow up with a dose of physic, con- f isting of: Bitter Aloea 8 drams. Common Soda 1 tablespoonful. Ginger 1 * ' Dissolve in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, and allow him to stand in the stable the next day; Feed on soft, light feed. This will generally prevent him from having another attack of colic. INFLAMMATION OP THE BOWELS (ENTERITIS.) This is a very common disease in the horse and is, perhaps, one of the most fatal. Causes. — The disease sometimes follows a severe case of colic, where tne animal does not sooii get relief. It may be caused from eating food which has clay or sand in it, which causes an irritation of the bowels. Eating pea straw will cause the disease some- times ; drinking stagnant water^ exposure to cold after a long, exhausting drive, the animal getting a chill which rushes the blood in upon the bowels and sets up congestion, which is followed by inflammation. SymptDms. — The horse is attacked very suddenly, begins to tremble, paws with one foot and then with the other, and turns the head around to the side, cringes and lies down, and does not get a minute's ease as he does in colic, but will get up, walk around, look at his side, and if his pulse is taken at this stage o' the disease, it will be found about 4B beats per minute, full ami bounding. His legs and ears will be hotter than natural. lU passes manure in small quantities, which looks slimy. The pain keeps on increasing, the symptoms g^ct worse, and h« does not gti a minute's peaca : his pulse is up td about ?& bsaiiat ^nd it U stiU fu}l and bounding- and doe& not v&fy m it doda in coliu, bui keeps getting hig-her aa thd disease advaneea. Ht sweats frscly, and the lining in hl^ eyes* becomes very much reddened an^i t^r'^ii looking ; his legs and ears change from hot to cold, and the pain keeps on increasi..g. At this stage his ears begin to lop over and DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 99 he g'ets a very ntiggtjrd look on his fAC«, as it in extreme m.gony. After a few hours he Is a pityinf^ aif^ht to see. If you sound his bowels at this stage there It not the slig'htest movement to be heard, only a jerking and trembling all through his insides. He begins to breathe heavy, and his ears and legs have a cold, clammy feeling. He keeps on in very great pain, lying down, getting up, and walking around his box, and, if seen to make water, it will be red and bloody looking, and if there is any passage from the bowels, it will be mostly slime. If he does not get relief in the course of eight or ten liours, mortification then sets in, and the animal becomes quiet and easy, but he still keeps sweating and breathing heavy, and in some cases will try to eat and once in a while he will be noticed to walk around his box. In this stage he does not lie down. The surface of his body, his ears, his nose, his lips and legs get colder and have a death-like feeling. If you take his pulse now, it will be up to 100 beats per minute, and so weak you can hardly feel it, showing that his heart is just fluttering, and that was all ; the haggard look on his face becomes more marked ; he will be noticed to strain a few times, as if trying to pass something, but nothing comes. He will keep on his feet as long as he can, but will finally stagger, fall and die. This disease generally runs a course of from 10 to 15 hours, but in some cases we have known them to live as long as two or three days, where there was not much of the bowels affected. Treatment. — This disease, if taken as soon as the animal is noticed sick, may be sometimes cured, but the treatment must be quick and careful, for, if the disease once gets a couple of hours the start, it is then a hopeless case. Give the following i Tlaotor* of LAodakaam 8 owtoea or t tabl— pooafnk. pMBiiqiV^MfUu* el AmmbM*. |0 to If 4rop^ C^'-antna nuuit 1 tebleapeoafmL Ouag*? 1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water, and give as a drench. Thia drench is to relieve the pain and try and check the inflam- mation. This drench may be repeated every hour until the animal ^eta relief. Apply lots of heat to the body in the form of large woolen blankets, wrung out of hot Wftt«r and held up to the belly, gnd h^jf pall fsf hot salt in a grain bag: *© ^^e back. In tvery cas^, „fter you' are through losing the hot blankets, apply a mustard jjlaster, consisting rf ; idaatArd k pound. ViBeg&r kaoufh to aaake U like pastor 100 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Rub this well uver me beliy. Do not give any physic or in- jection in a case of this kind, for they only irritate the bowels and make the case worse. It is always best to keep the bowels quiet in this disease. Where the animal is in higfh condition it is well to take a half pail of blood, if in the first stage of the disease, but if you do this, do not give so much aconite. If the animal gets relief, it is best to feed him on soft feed with flax seed in it, which has a soothing effect on the bowels. The horse's bowels will be found, after death, to be black and thickened and full of watery fluid. CONSTIPATION OF THE BOWELS. This is where the bowels become sluggish and loaded witK . food and manure. Causes. — This disease is often a symptom of another disease, as in liver trouble, or where the stomach is not doing its work properly. It also may come after distemper or influenza, where the bowels become weak and cannot do their work ; also paralysis of the bowels, where the bowels are paralyzed ; sometimes from eating over ripe and inferior food, such as pea straw or barley straw. In some cases it is caused from a large tumor growing on the inside and pressing on the bowels, not allowing them to act. Symptoms. — There will be very little manure pass, and what comes will be in little hard balls. The animal will look unnaturally full and show signs of pain, but not much. He is sometimes noticed to lie down and roll, and look around at his sides. His pulse is not much changed, and when listening at his side there will be very little movement in the bowels. He does not eat much and looks dull and dumpy, and his water is of a thick, yellow color. If you examine his rectum or back bowel by oiling your hand and passing it in through the anus, which can be easily done without any danger, you will find it full of hard, dry manure. Treatment. — To start with give him a good dose of physic, oonaisttng' of ; Bittkr Aloea. ,, ,, ,, 8 to 10 drams, Bw««t Spirits oi Nitre . . . , , 1 ouQoe or 4 tableapoonfult. Powdered Nux Vomio* 1 teaapocuf ul. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, ihea follow up with the following drenches ; Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ouo'-e or 4 tnbleapoonfula. ^ovydered Nux Vomica 1 teaspo<ie ol > OU^KSIUIU I ^ xt^A. N itr»te of PoSanh or flaltp«tre ^ ** Mix thoroughly together and g-tve a teaspoonful three timei m day in his feed or on his tongue with a spoon. In cases wher« the cause is from high feeding and little exercise, feed light, soft food and give regular exercise. YELLOWS (JAUNDICE.) This is, perhaps, the most common disease of the liver. Causes. — From inflammation of the liver, from gall stone* stopping up the tube which leads from the liver to the bowels, from weakening diseases, such as influenza or distemper, from an abscess forming in the liver or from any other disorder of the liver, where the bile is not taken from the blood. Symptoms. — The bowels become constipated and the manurt is of a dark clay color, the animal is dull and does not feed well, the lining of the mouth and around the eyes is of a yelfow color, from which it gets the name, jaundice. Treatment.— If it is in the spring of the year, by turning him out on the grass it will often effect a cure itself, if not, and the unimal is in fair condition, give Bitter Aloea 4 drama. ~ Calomel | dram. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, or it Is sometimes mixed in the form of a ball (as to how to make a ball refer to the receipts in the back of this book). After this follow up with the following powder: Iodide of Potassium , ^ pound. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre ^ " Mix together and give a teaspoonful three times a day. Feed the animal on soft, nourishing food, such as boiled oat«, •calded chop stuff and bran, with plenty of boiled flaxseed, «n4 ftUow him gentle exercise every day, this will i^entrally effect » enjrt. BILB SYONE5 (BILUaiT CALCKTU.) This dS««j&se is not so eammon in horses *a it is in man, bvt irhcy fn^y f^ist in great numbers, and if th^X do thty stop the Po\\' pr »h@ hiie out of the liver and caqse th? bilp tp be i^bsorbe^ iiji^U again into the blood, then it sets up Jaundice- Porsono li^- 'og high and taking little exercise ^re lii^bl^ tp th#ee atoim$. ) (lis same rule holds good in horsef. , 132 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. TrcuiXUCUl. — Orive eiiiici a pint ui iaw iiiiiteecl oil, or 8 drams of bitter aloes dissolved in a pint of luke warm water to physic th« bowels, and give the following : Diluted Hydroohlorio Acid \ dram, or \ teaspoonfuL Mix in a pint of water and give as a drench two or three times a day. The action of this acid is to dissolve the stones and get rid of them. Feed the horse light and give regular exercise ENLARGEMENT OP THE LIVER (HYPERTROPHY) This is usually seen in old horses, and is caused by faulty feeding. This disease is also seen in man, which is generally caused from taking intoxicating liquors. Symptoms. — The animal falls off in condition, sometimes has diarrhoea, while again he is costive. This continues changing from one to the other. There will also be yellowness of the lin- ing of the mouth and eyes, and the animal will die a lingering death. Treatment. — There is no cure, but it may be helped sometimes by regular feeding and regular exercise. INFLAMMATION OF THE SPLEEN. This disease is chiefly found in the southern parts of the United States, where it is very warm. Causes are unknown. Symptoms. — Similar to colic, the animal is dull and languid «nd has a tendency to hang the head and lop the ears. He will lie down and roll, get up, stand easy for a while, will not eat much, and the pulse runs up and is quick and weak. This is a hard disease to form a positive opinion before death. Treatment. — If you suspect it is inflammation of the spleen, five the following- : RftW LiaseedOU 1 pint. Tiootur* of Lftttdumm 1 ouno«, or 4 tftbletpooafali. Shake well, and (five as a drench. Apply a mustard platter #ver the left side of the belly, opposite the stomach and spleen. Clothe the body well to keep him warna, and grive the follow*^ ingf drenches \ Tincture of Laudanaio 1 oano« or 4 t«ble«poonf ala. Bweet Spirit* of Nitre 1 "4 " Mix in a pint of water and give every two hours untO tbe •ninial gtXM relief. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 113 CHAPTER VI. DISEASES OF THE URINARY ORGANS DfFLiJUfATTON OP THE KI&NETS (NEPHRITIS). This disease is divided into two kinds — acute inflammation and chronic inflammation. ACUTE mPLAMMAnON OF THE KIDRBTt, Causes. — Exposure to cold or standing; out in cold rain storms, such as we have in the fall and spring ; lying on the ground when it is cold and damp ; by giving large quantities of medicine which acts on the kidneys; from carrying a heavy weight on the back; or in running horses, from violent exertion in racing. Symptoms. — The animal seems feverish, the pulse is full »»nd bounding and runs from 60 to 80 beats per minute, the mouti is hot and dry, he sweats freely and breathes heavy, he looks arou.id to the sides, and, in some cases, puts his nose right upon the side opposite the kidneys ; the animal will sometimes cringe and lie down easy, stretch out, and will be heard moaning, as if in great distress ; sometimes he will lie for half an hour at a time, but will lie quiet and will not try to roll on his back as he does in bowel diseases ; also, by pressing over the loins it causes him more pain. If you listen at the bowels you do not hear much movement or rumbling in them, and there is very little passage from the bowels. He will try and make water often, but passes very little at a time, and it is generally of a red color and tinged with blood. If the animal do*s not get r«iief after two or three days, all the symptoms gradually grow worse, and when he tries to make water he passes nothing but Stood ; be this case he generally dies in a day or so. TreatmCTlt. — The treatment must be quick i/ you vr^nt t« tare the life of the animal. Give the following dranck t lUw Un*«>Mi on 1 pint. Xinotorc of I.>«n«d method of removing them is to cut them off with a knife and burn the spot with a stick of caustic potash. Warts, as a g^eneral thing do not bleed much. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 121 CHAPTER VIII. DISEASES OF THE GENITAL ORGANS OF THE MARE. DISEASES OP THE OT ARIES. Enlargement of the ovaries is the most common disease w« have to deal with in connection with the ovaries. Causes. — The cause is not known. Symptoms. — The animal is noticed to be very irritable, falls off in condition, and is continually in season, and if put to a horse does not get with foal, and this is one cause of a mare being bar ren. Treatment. — If the mare is in good condition give her a physic drench consisting of the following : Bitter Aloes 8 to 10 drams. Ginger 1 tablespoonf ul. Common Soda 1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, allow the animal to stand in the stable a couple of days after the drench, and follow up with the following powder : Iodide of Potassium i pound. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre J " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day. WHITES (LEUCORRH(EA.) This disease is met with mostly in old mares that are poor in condition and that have ceased to breed. There is a white glary "••sr.harg^e from the vulva behind, which looks like curdled milk, 'tmis discharge has a bad smell, the animal falls off in condition becoming thin and weak. Treatment. — Oil your hand and pass it in behind with a cloth or sponge saturated with hot water and soap, wash out the passage thoroughly clean, or this can be done with an injection pump and several pails of luke warm water and wash it out that way. After bathing, wash the womb with the following lotion i Sulphate of Zino 1 teaspoonful. Sugar of Lead 1 " Powdered Alum 1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water, and with a sponge rub th« Inside of the womb with this lotion every second day till the di»* charge stops, and give the following powders t 122 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Balphata of Coppar i pound. Sulphate of Iron \ " Mix and give a teaspoontul twice a day in her feed ; feed her on rich food And give regular exercise, and, as a general thing, she will soon be all right. It is a very dangerous thing to put the mare to ahorse while she has this disease, as the horse is apt to catch it. If she is, and the horse catches, it is called clap or gonorrhoea. CLAP (GONORRHCEA.) Causes. — From a horse being put to a mare that is diseased in some way. Symptoms. — The horse's penis becomes sore and swollen, and there is a slight discharge of a mattery appearance. If the horse is put to the mare while in this way, he will give the disease to the mare he is put to. Treatment. — See that the horse is put to no mares until he recovers from this disease. Wash the penis off with luke warm water and a little castile soap and dry with a soft, cotton cloth, then apply the following : Sulphate of Zino 2 drama or 1 teaepoonf ul. Sugar of Lead 2 " 1 " Dissolve in a pint and a half of luke warm water and shake well ; saturate the penis well with the lotion by the use of a iponge. Bathe and apply every day for a week or so until the animal is all right. Also give the following powder : Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre i pound. Salphate of Iron J " Ground Qentian Root i " Mix and give a teaspoonful three times a day in his feed. BARRENNESS IN THE MARE. This is when the mare will not breed. Causes. — From enlarged or diseased ovaries ; from a contrac- tion or closure of the neck of the womb, or from the neck of the womb being twisted off to one side. Symptoms. — The mare may be repeatedly put to the horse without becoming in foal. Treatment. — In a case of this, examine the neck of the womb by passing your hand into the passage to the neck of the womb, and, if you find it contracted, or closed, open it by working your fingers around in it until it dilates or opens. If it is a fittie hard to dilate, saturate a sponge with extract of belladonna and carry DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 123 Che sponge into the neck of the womb with your hand and squeeze out the medicine around the neck of the womb. Leave the mare quiet for an hour after this, then pass in your hand and you will find that the medicine has relaxed the fibres in the neck of the womb and you can easily open it wiih your fing-ers. After the neck of the womb is dilated, or opened, put the mare to the horse, and you will generally find she ^ets in foal. If it is a case where the neck of the womb is turned off to one side, try and straighten it with your hand and have the mare immediately put to the horse. If it is a case where the ovaries are diseased, there can be nothing done. Sometimes after you have put the mare to one horse several times, and she does not get in foal, by chang- ing the horse will often catch her. Mares will start to breed as young as two years old and will breed as old as twenty years. Some have been known to breed older than this. CHAPTER IX. FOALING (PARTURITION) AND THE DISEASES FOLLOWING IT. The mare, after being put to the horse and-gets in foal, usually carries her foal eleven months, but some vary a few days lens, while others may go as long as twelve months. The covering around the foal is called the cleaning, placenta, or after-birth, and is attached to the inside of the womb to the little processes called villi, connecting the after-birth, and the foal is the navel string or umbilical cord. Between the foal and the after-birth is a fluid (the use of which is to protect the foal from being injured while its mother is moving around). This fluid is called the amoniotic fluid. HOW TO TELL WHEN A MARE IS WITH FOAL. The mare becomes quieter in disposition, and thrives better ; the belly gradually becomes distended, and at the end of the sixth or seventh month, after the mare has taken a drink of cold water, the foal will move around. On account of the foal lying to the left side, the moving of it can be noticed plainer on that side of the mare than it can be on the right side. Also, anotiier wav to tell is by oiling the hand and passing- it into the passage and find out if the neck of the womb is sealed and tig-ht. In some cases 124 . THE VETER1NARY|SCIENCE. you can feel the foal In the womb, at th« same time you are ex- amining- the neck. This is the surest method of telling, especially if the mare is only in foal a short time and it is very small. During the time of carrying the loal the mare does not come in season every three weeks, although mares have been known to take the horse and still be with foal. THE WAY TO USE A MARE WHEN WITH FOAL. Keep her in her natural condition as nearly as possible. Feed fairly well, although it is not well to have her too fat. Keep her out running around every day if it is fine, so as to have good exercise. It does not hurt a mare to work her as long as the work is light and steady, but never pull her too heavy or back her up suddenly, for mares often lose their foal by doing this. SIGNS OF IMMEDIATE FOALING. There is a falling away at each side of the tail very noticeable, and, as a general thing, wax or milk will run from the teats for a day or so before foaling. A few hours before foaling the mare seems to be very uneasy ; labor pains come on, and with the pains she is noticed to strain. Very soon the water bag appears, and as it comes the pains become worse; she strains and lies down. If the foal is coming as it should, the head and front feet will make their appearance, after this the mare should be delivered of it in a very few minutes. If the mare has much difficulty, it is well to pull upon the legs while she is straining. Generally the cleaning comes away with the foal. The foal has known to be smothered when the cleaning comes away without being broken, so it is better for someone to be around during the time the mare is foaling, and if anything should occur like this, break the clean- ing, or after-birth, and save the foal from smothering^. NAVEL STRING (UMBILICAL CORD). If this cord does not break immediately after foaling, take a piece of cord and tie it very tightly one inch from the belly, then cut the navel string off an inch below where it is tied and leave the string on until it drops off ; this is to keep it from bleeding. THE NATURAL WAY FOR THE FOAL TO COME. The foal should come with front end first, with the front feet and head coming together. No. 1. iK PLATE IV.— POSITION OF FOAL IN WOMB. ,:L-^w.'.w"i'j.' ..'-■~~ ' — ' ■ ■ ~-\- A No. 2. EXPLANATION OF PLATE IV. POSITION OF FOAL IN WOMB. No. I. This cut shows the natural position of the foal \v\ng in th< womb, showing the natural way it should come out — frjn. .egs and head first — when the mare is foaling. 1. Navel string'. 2. Rump bones. 3. Back bowel, or rectum. 4. Neck of womb. 5. Vagina, or passage out from womb. 6. Vulva. 7. Tail. 8. Bladder. 9. Mare's milk bag, or Mammary glands. 10. Cleaning, placenta c ftnerb!-»h. 11. Fluid, or water aiound the fo;il. This is what comes out wner the water-bag breaks. 12. Navel. 13. Womb. 14. Foal, or foetus. 15. Cleaning, placenta or afterbinl;. 16. Womb. POSITION OF FOAL IN WOMB. No. 2. This cut shows the position of what is known as a br«ch presentation ; or, in other words, where the mare is foaling and the foal is coming- backwards. This is important to note, for If a mare is foaling and the foal coming backwards, always straighten the hind legs out first, and the foal will come awa> all right. When the foal is coming backwards, it is not wise to try to turn It, but bring it away as shown in this cut. SPECIAL NOTICE.— Every place where Tablespoonful ia mentioned in this book should read: Small, or DBsmnt Tablespoonful, which is equal to two TeaspoonfuU^ Wf«iCUJ.tiJBik Mfilr WiT« iH A J*AXS fOAUfti*, Sometirties the labor paints como on and ths mard wants t* foal, but the neck of the womb remains closed. In this case, oU your hand, enter it into the passage to the womb and, in som« cases, you can open the neck of the womb very easily by pressing it open with your fingers. If it is hard to open, saturate a spongf* with extract of belladonna and rub it around the neck of the womb, leave it for a little while and you will soon find it easily opened. In a case where the front legs and head appear, and the foal does not seem to come any further with her straining, use gentle force by pulling on the legs and head, and if this does not bring th» foal you may come to the conclusion there is something wrong. In this case, oil your arm, or take warm water and soap, so as to make your hand and arm slippery, shove the foal back into th« womb and give it a thorough examination and find out whM ia wrong. If it is a case where there is dropsy of the belly (that is where the belly is swollen up with water), take a sharp knife and pass it back in (guarded by the hand so as not to injure the mare) to the foal's belly and then cut a small hole, large enough for th« water to run out, start the legs and head again into the passage and she will soon foal if she is given a little assistance. Sometimes the foal's head is enlarged with water on the brain In this case the foal will come out so far that only the legs anO the point of the nose will be seen. After using a little force, and it will not come, shove the foal back and feel the state of the head. If it is enlarged take a sharp knife and cut a hole in the softest part of the enlargement and allow the water to escape from th« brain. Now, by giving the mare a Uttle assistance, you will find it to come all right. The foal may come in various positions. We sometimes have a case where the head and one front leg comes out and the mare cannot foal. In this case shove the foal back and bring the leg that is not up, forward, and you will find she will foal aU right The front legs sometimes come without the head, the head being turned back. In this case shove the foal back, take a small piece of rope, four or five feet long, make a noose and slip it over the foal's head onto his neck, have an assistant to pull on th* rope while you use your arm and hand in helping to straightea the neck and head, when this is straight, have the assistant t» pull on the rope while you pull on the legs, and you will Aiid ttr 130 THE VETERINARY 8CIKN0K. and th« front Uj^a are turned back. |,j ,his ca^e ahuve iht fo»l wall back and catch the front le^!> and brin^ them tur^ard, then pull on the lag's and the foal wUi come ail right. Sometimes ita four legs will come tog-ether and the head turned back. In this case sihove the front legs back into the womb as f.ir as you can with your hand and arm, and then bring the foal out backwards by pulling on the hind legs. Never, under any consideration, attempt to bring the foal head first in tbis case. The foal sometimes comes backwards, and if the hind legs come out first, tke foal generally comes out all right. When the foal is coming backwards, and the legs do not come out as they •bould, and you feel nothing but the tail, rump and hips of the f»al, the hind legs being turned in under, it is a rather difficult )ob, but it can be done all right by shoving the hind end of the foal upwards and towards the front of the womb, then slipping the hand down and getting hold of the foot of the hind leg and lifting upward and backward until you can bring the leg out into the passage, then reach down the hand and get hold of the other leg and bring it out as you did the first one, then the foal will come away backwards all right. As well as different positions, we meet with what are known aa deforaiities, or fraaks of nature. In cases of this kind, on M«ount of nerer meeting hardly two cases of the same kind, you arfil haT« to anake a thorough examination and use your judgment M to tba ba«t way of gating out, and act on the plans given in ibo differant positions. la «as« of having difHculty with twin foals always examine tlw oaaa thoroughly, and which ever foal is the nearest to the back ddiv«r him first, and as well as this, before pulling on the li^gs, always be sure you are not pulling on a leg of each foal. Khar dslivering the first foal the last one comes very easily. In any cause where fOM have to shove the foal back into the womb it is well to raise the mare's hind end up by making her stand on manure or boards, as this has a tendency to help the foal to go forwards. Avoid using hooks and knives, as you are %pt to injure tke womb. It is always best to use your hands and pieces of tins rope> You may always make up your mind that if a mare is not de- liyere^ of h^r ^osrl in half an hour, or thereabouts, after the water DISXAgSS AND TREATMENT OF THE|HORB£. Ul Wig um» uuitie wut. inr, or sucking the mother while she is hot, after working. 138 THE VETEBINARY SCIENCE. Symptoms. — The colt is noticed to pass a thin, watery dis- charge from the anus which sticks around his tail and legs. He does not suck much and soon becomes gaunt and dull, and bo some cases he will be griped. Treatment. — Remove the cause if you can find it. Keep th« mare and foal very quiet, and if it is from the milk being poor, feed the mare a little heavier, or if you think it too rich, feed the mare a little lighter. Give the foal: Whisky 1 teaspoonfuL Tineture of L'*udinum 20 drops. Flour 1 teaspoonfuL Mix with a little of the mother's milk and give every four or five hours until the foal is relieved. In all cases of this kind keep the body warm, as it has a tendency to relieve the congested state of the bowels. This is a dose for a small foal two or three days old, so you must use your judgment in giving it to an older colt. LEAKING OF THE NAVEL AND RHEUMATISM IN YOUNG FOALS. Causes. — It is supposed to be due to a germ getting in at the navel string, while others say it is caused from a cold, a chill or an injury. Symptoms. — The foal will be first noticed to be lame in one hind leg, and some of the joints will be swollen and sore to handle; when he goes to make water it will come out through the navel string. The next day the swelling in that leg may be moved into one of the other legs. After the rheumatism has moved around from leg to leg for a few days it will be noticed to settle in one of the joints, then it will fester and break, and the matter that runs away will smell very bad and seems to come from the bone. After it ceases to run where it festered and broke, and is healing up, it will be noticed to settle in another joint, break and run, and will keep on breaking and running in different places until the colt is so weak that he dies. In other cases the joints swell and do not break, but there is a continual running from the navel, and on account of this running so much he gets weak and soon dies. Treatment. — When the leaking is first noticed, if treated properly it can be cured. Apply Monsell's solution of iron to the navel with a feather four or five times a day, this will stop the leaking; and rub the swollen joints four or five times a day with white liniment, and give the foal half a teaspoonful of salicylic acid on the tongue three times a day. If this is taken in time, DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 131) before the joints begin to run, this will invariably eflFect a cure. After the joints break, bathe with warm water three or four times t day, ,d i& u«ed in i>om« places, tind is p«ft'orni«d b; letting- thtft tMticIes out and putting on an iron clamp in th* earn* placa aa a wooden on«. Cut the cord off closa to tha ciamp, and have a hot iron, dip it in oil, and burn the end of the cord and artery ; this sears it and prevents it from bleeding. Now remove the iron clamp and operate on the other testicle in the same way. By oiling the hot iron it keeps it from sticking to the cord and pulling off the scab. OPERATmG WITH UGATURES. This way is not much used for horses, but is a very good method for bulls and boars. In this method the testicles are let out in the same manner as in the other ways, and the cords are tied with a strong piece of twine to prevent bleeding, and cut off just below where they are tied. But of all these methods of castrating we think the safest and best is the clamps. If the colt is ruptured it requires a more careful operation, which will be fully described in connection with scrotal hernia. HOW TO TREAT THE COLT AFTER CASTRATION. If the weather is chilly, damp or east winds, keep the colt in at nights, in a box stall, clean and well bedded, turn him out every day that is fine and let him have nothing but grass to eat. Ii the operation was done with the clamps remove them the second day, and in cutting them off cut the string on the front end, spread the clamp well apart in the front so as to allow it to drop off the cord ; in doing this be very careful not to pull down the cord out of its place. If the colt swells very much bathe the cuts with warm water until you soften them, then take butter on your fingers and insert it into the cuts and open them up, allowing the discharge to run out A little swelling on the point of the sheath, as long as it is not too large and the animal feeds well and has a whitish discharge from the cuts, is not considered serious and need not alarm you. These are natural results of castration. BLEEDING. FROM THE CORDS (HEMORRHAGE.) The blood may come from the veins of the scrotum or from the arteries of the cords. If it is coming from the veins you can tell it by its dribbling away from the cuts and its dark color. If it is from the artery of the cord it comes out in spurts, and is of a bright red color. DlSfiASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 148 XrcaiUUeiiU — «i it is frdm tho veins of the scruluin tsit&i lit* «Almal and plug the out with cotton battlnsf saturated with MonaaU's solution of iron Attd leave the plug in twenty-four houre when it will be safe to remove without danger of bleeding. The batting can be removed by placing a twitch on the animal's nose and take it out without throwing him down. Bleeding from the artery of the cord is generally after the operation has been performed with the ecraseur and it has failed to close the artery of the cord, and when the animal gets up he will be bleeding. In other cases it occurs from the horse pulling a clamp off by jumping a fence or catching it with his teeth. Treatment. — Throw the animal and secure him, get hold of the cord and place a clamp on the end of it good and tight, this will stop the bleeding, then allow the animal to get up. The question has often been asked if a one-year old colt would bleed to death by bleeding from the artery of the cord ? The answer is : Yes, cases have been known where animals have bled to death by bleeding from this artery. The animal generally bleeds some after castration, but so long as it does not bleed very freely it need not alarm you, and by keeping the animal quia tit will generally stop bleeding of its own accord. RUPTURE (HERNIA). This is where the animal has a small rupture that was not noticed before the operation was performed; or, in some cases the animal will rupture himself at the time of operation. Symptoms. — The bowels will be noticed to be hanging out of the cut; there may be only a little — two or three inches, or a foot, and it has been known to be so much that the animal would tramp it under his feet. If the bowel is out very far, and becomes strangulated aad inflamed, the animal will be in great pain and aet a« if he had inflammation of the bowels. The bowel will be of a blulsh-red color, and after a time, if left out, will become mortified. The way thia generally occurs is: There will be no sl|pi of the rupture during operation, but In a few hours the owner will go back to see the colt and find him in the above- mentioned state. Treatment. — If the bowels are out, and inflamed and bruised with the hind feet, and he seems in great pain, there can be nothing done but to destroy the animal. In cases where there is only a •mall amount of the bowel* out, throw the animal and secure him, ot H4 tm fM'SMmtfiAm amm»vM. >Jur H«M with i«ri«i »u Mtd }oni« Uie »ti.^»i« ^stfii Ok^ucIi ^ li«l« taca thslJr Mitarsl mtf*f, m^ «^ tli» frat th«t wu dbd* to 1*« th« Uttlcle out and this will k««p th« bowel* from coming dowai keep the animal very quiet and feed on eoft food to keep Mm bowels loosi^ Swelling will take place, and between the .^welling and the stitches it will keep the bowels in their place and the hole will heal up, and there will be no more trouble with the rupture. In a case of this kind it is best to keep the clamp on a day or tw« longer than you would if the animal was all right. ■ THB PATTY UNHIG OP THB BOWBLS COMWG DOWN AFIBfc CASTRAnOIf. In some cases where there is a very slight rupture which is not noticed during castration, and after the animal is let up and walks around, in a few hours the fatty lining of the bowels comes out — it may be out from six inches to two feet. Symptoms. — When you go to see the colt there will be something hanging from the cut, generally of red color, and when you feel it, it is of a fatty feeling and the animal does not seem to take any notice of it at all ; he feeds away and seems m perfect health. Treatment.— Take a scissors and cut it off; there is n« danger of bleeding or any trouble, and watch that there is «• more comes out. ABSCESSES PORHIBD IN SCROTUM AFTER CASTRATION. This generally comes in a case where the animal is all healed up and seems to be doing very nicely. Caases. — Some dried matter; a dead piece of the cord or a sliver being left in the scrotum after it is healed. This causes mi irritation, ttarti it to fester and forms an abscess. Symptoms* — ^Th«re will be heat, pain and swelling around tkm •erotum or bag:, luad the animal will walk very stiff in his hiai Trettmentr— Foultice and bathe well, rub with weak whUe flnlment. This will brinf the abscess to a head, then lance it mmi allow the matter to run out, or in some cases the poultice wtt briaf it to a bead an4 H will break of its own accord. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 145 SWELLUfO AFTER CASTRATIOW. Aa we mentioned before, a small amount of swelling is not a bad sign, but when he begins to swell up very bad, especially around the scrotum and cuts as well as in the sheath, the animal seems very stiff and does not want to move nor care to eat ; and if the discharge from the cuts is of a red waterish color, the case becomes more serious and needs immediate attention. Causes. — From lying on cold, damp ground or standing out In cold east winds or a cold rain and he gets cold in the cuts, which sets up inflammation and swelling; or allowing the cuts to heal up too soon and dam back the natural discharge; or it may be from the cuts being poisoned from dirt on the hands of the operator or on some of the instruments, or standing in a dirty stable, or it may be from the colt's blood being very bad. Treatment. — Keep the bowels loose by giving small doses of raw linseed oil, bathe the cuts well with warm water and tap the point of the sheath in a few places with a sharp penknife, allowing the watery stuff to keep dropping out; this will help to relieve the swelling. After you give him a good bathing and get the swelling down some, put salty butter on your finger and open the cuts well, this will allow any discharge that is formed above to run out. After the bathing and the opening of the cuts, then apply a poultice of hot linseed and bran, hold this poultice to the cuts by means of strings over the back. It will not be necessary to tap the sheath and open up the cut every time you dress the swelling — once a day will be all that is necessary; but bathe and put on hot poultices three or four times a day, this will allay the Inflammation, and if there is poison in the cut, the poultice and hot water will draw it out. Feed the animal on soft food and give gentle exercise, which has a tendency to take down the swelling. As soon as the colt begins to eat, and there is a good healthy white discharge from the cuts, you may then consider him as going to come all right. SCIRRHUS CORD. This is a growth on the end of the cord. Causes. — From the cord being pulled down in taking off the clarrfp, or from the colt when it is itching from healing, biting it and pulling it down. The cord is pulled down through the cut and if not noticed at the time and put back into the bag, the cut heals tight around it and holds it down, and the cord bein|^ —10— . 146 THE.VETERINARY SCIENCE. exposed to the air becomes irritated and diseased, and a growth is formed on the end of it. Treatment. — If this is noticed right at the time it is very easily checked by bathing it with warm water, which softens the cut, then take your finger with some butter on it, break the cord loose from the skin, shove it back into the bag and it will soon get all right. If it has not been noticed in time, and gets very large, it will soon have to be operated on. Cast the animal and secure him, break the skin from the cord, where it is healed to it, with your finger and thumb, as much as you can ; the parts you cannot break with your finger and thumb cut with a knife until you get the cord all loose, place a clamp on the cord so you will be able to cut all the diseased part off below the clamp, leave the clamp on two or three days and remove it, same as after castration, open one end and spread it. The cord may also be taken off with the ecraseur instead of putting on a clamp, and in some cases it works better than the clamp. After the operation, if the animal swells much, bathe with luke warm water three or four times aday, and after each bathing apply the white lotion. If the point of the sheath '.tt swollen much it is well to tap it in a few places with a sharp penknife to let the watery stuff keep dropping out. Feed lots of soft food with boiled flaxseed in it, and give the animal gentle exercise every day. If the case has been allowed to run on until the cord becomes diseased up through the ring in the rim of the belly it is then a hopeless case. PERITONITIS FOLLOWING CASTRAHON. This is inflammation of the lining of the scrotum and the lining of the abdominal or belly cavity. This disease is more fully described in connection with the diseases of the bowels. Causes. — From too severe medicine being used In the clamps ; or from a bungling operation; from the animal standing out in cold east winds or rains; or lying on the damp ground. The inflammation first commences in the lining of the bag or scrotum, and extends up through the ring in the rim of tbj belly and spreads all over the serous membrane lining — the belly cavity. This generally comes on about the third or fourth day after castration. Symptoms. — The animal is very dull, will stand around with- out eating, and seems as if he was cold. The cuts are a«l DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 147 ■wollen, but there is a bloody, watery fluid keeps droppm^^ away. Ag the symptoms gradually get worse the animal seeins in pain, will lay down, and keep getting up and down, breathes very heavy, as if he had lung trouble. If in warm weatlier, he sweats freely, his pulse is weak and fast — from 60 to 70 beats per minute ; if he passes anything from the bowels it will be covered with slime, and his water will have a reddish appearance. This is a very weakening disease, the animal gradually gets worse for a couple days, then he dies. Treatment. — For a yearling colt give the following : Tincture of Laudanum J ounce, or 2 tableepoonfuli. Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 5 drops. Raw Linseed Oil 1 pint. Mix thoroughly and give as a drench. If this does not give relief in three hours follow up with the following : Tincture of Laudanum J ounce, or 2 tableepoonfuls. Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 6 drops. Mix in half pint of luke warm water and give as a drench every three hours until he seems better. If he seems weak after recovery give a wine glassful of whisky in a pint of oatmeal gruel three times a day for a few days until he gains his strength. Keep him good and warm by blanketing him, and apply a mustard plaster over the bowels until he seems relieved, poultice the cuts with a hot poultice of linseed meal and bran, which will start a healthy discharge to run from the cuts. Warm his drinking water and feed on soft food. When once this disease gets well started it generally proves fatal. LOCKJAW (TETANUS) AFTER CASTRATIOW. This disease usually comes on from the ninth to the twenty- first day after castration, and generally follows a case that you think is doing extra well. Causes. — The real cause is not known, but it is liable to follow any kind of an operation, or even a very slight injury. It is frequently noticed in colts that are exposed to the cold, walk- ing or standing in a river for any length of time after being castrated; or allowed to run in a wet, marshy pasture. For treat- ment and further particulars of this disease turn to " Lockjaw or Tetanus," which is dealt with more fully in the diseases of the nerv- ous ajBtmok. 148 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. BLWDNESS (AMAUROSIS) OCCURRING AFTER CASTRATION. This disease is sometimes noticed to come on an animal after he has been castrated, especially if he bleeds freely at the time. This disease is mentioned more fully in connection with the dis- eases of li>^ eye. CASTRATING ORIGINALS OR RIGS. This IS where the testicles do not come down into the scrotum or bagf, but remains up in the abdominal or belly cavity. The cause of this is not fully understood. In a case of castrating- a rig- it is advisable to have an expert who pays special attention to this branch of castration to do it. If the testicles are not down at a yearling it is best to let the animal run over for a year or so, for the testicles often come down themselves. In some cases one testicle will be down and the other up, while again neither of the testicles will be down. THE DIFFERENT MEDICINES USED IN LOADING THE CLAMPS. Some use biniodid of mercury or red precipitate — 2 grains to an ounce of lard or vaseline, but the green salve, the receipt of which is at the back of the book, is what we recommend and use. CHAPTER Xn. RUPTURES (HERNIAS) AND THE MODES OF TREATING THEM. NAVEL OR UMBILICAL RUPTURE. This is where the navel opening does not become properly closed at the time of birth, and the bowels come down througn the opening in the rim of the belly and forms a pouch or sack in the skin, the size of which varies from the size of a hen's egg to yarger than a goose egg. This is a miserable blemish and is best to be treated in the spring of the year, when the colt is a year or two old. Treatment. — Prepare the animal by starving it twenty-four hours, then throw and secure him, shove the bowel well back and draw the skin well up and put a heavy stiff clamp on it, secure both ends ot the clamp with stout cord and run a few darning needles through the skin below the clamp, this will keep the clamp DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 149 from hlipping ort, break, oit the poim vl lue iiccdle:» so tiicy will not catch in anything ; let the animal up and leave the clamp on until it falls off of its own accord, which is generally from nine to twelve days, by this time the hole will be healed up and the rup- ture will not be seen any more. After the clamp falls off the^e will be a raw spot which will need to be watched in warm weather so that maggots do not get into it. In case they do wash it off well with warm water and soap and apply the creolin lotion a few times. Warning'. — Be careful not to catch the bowel in the clamp with the skin. RUPTURE (VENTRAL HERNIA.) This is a rupture anywhere in the rim of the belly, and may vary from the size of a hen's egg to that of a man's head. It is generally due to an injury from a kick of an animal, or an injury of any kind which strikes and bursts the rim of the belly, or it may be caused from an animal pulling very heavy. Treatment. — The way to be sure if it is hernia is that you can shove it up through the hole in the rim of the belly, and as soon as you let go it vvill come out again; you also can feel the hole in the rim of the belly. These ruptures have often been tried to be treated with the clamp and cutting in and sewing them up, but the best plan is to leave them alone and get as much work out ot the anim:il as you can. RUPTURE IN THE BAG (SCROTAL HERNIA). This is where the bowel and the fatty covering of the bowel comes down along with the testicle. Causes. — Some colts are ruptured at birth and they never get all right. It is also caused by the colt running, jumping or any Dther such violent exercise, or it may result at the time of castra- tion in severe struggling. Symptoms. — The scrotum has a swollen and enlarged appear- ance, and you can press the bowel and covering up through the hole into the belly, and when you let it go it will come down again. Treatment.— If it is in a colt that is not castrated, you can g^et rid of this very easily while you are castrating him. In a case where you are going to castrate and fix the rupture at the same time, have the animal well prepared by starving him a day or so before the operation, then throw and secure him, shove the bowel and fatty lining back into the belly, and in taking up the J 50 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. testicle with your left hand, also allow the hand to reat on tha hole where the bowel comes out ; make a small cut large enough to allow the testicle to slip out, and slip the clamp on over the cord ; also draw up the white covering or tunics you cut through in letting the testicle out, and fasten this tight in the clamp as well as the cord ; this will prevent the rupture from coming down. A day or so after the operation it will swell some and fill up the hole where the rupture comes down and the rupture will entirely disappear. After four or five days it will be all right to remove the clamp, and there will be no danger of the rupture coming down. In the stallion it cannot be treated except by castrating in th« same method as is mentioned above. CHAPTER XIII. DISEASES OF THE EAR DEAFNESS. If it is of long standing nothing can be done for it, and it is hard to detect it in some cases. Causes. — It generally comes on horses that are used where there is a great deal of noise, such as artillery horses, or it may be caused by a diseased state of the drum of the ear or nerve. Symptoms. — The animal seems stubborn and cannot be taught to obey the word. Treatment. — There connot be very much done to the horse but place a twitch on his nose and pour a little sweet oil in his ear every day; this sometimes helps them. INJURIES OR CUTS AROUND THE EAR. If the skin or cartilage is torn, put a twitch on the horse's nose and take a needle used for sewing skin cuts and draw the wound together with stitches of carriage trimmers' twine, bathe it well with warm water twice a day and apply the white lotion until it is healed. DISEASES OP THE CARTILAGE OF THE EAR. Causes. — This disease is generally caused from an injury of some kind. Symptoms. — it will keep festering and breaking every month or so at the place the cartilage is diseased. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 151 Treatment. — Place a twitch on the animal's nose and with • •harp knife split the skin and tissues open to the diseased part of the cartilage, scrape the diseased part out and burn around \vher« the diseased cartilage is with caustic potash, which will generally set up a healthy action, and it will heal up all right. FROST BITES OF THE EAR. This is generally caused by keeping the animal in a cold place and allowing the ear to become frozen. This is not so common in horses as it is in young cattle. Treatment. — Bathe with cold water, and apply the white lotion after bathing, three or four times a day. If it is taken in time it will save the ear from dropping off. If the ear becomes dead, and drops off, treat the same until it heals up. If you notice the ear just at the time it is frozen, apply snow to it to draw out the frost. CHAPTER XIV. DISEASES OF THE EYE. Before studying the diseases of the eye it is advisable to study the anatomy of the eye, found in Part I. of this book. SIMPLE OPHTHALMIA. This is inflammation of the outside covering of the eyes and the lining of the lids. Causes. — This is often the result of an injury of some kind, such as being struck with a whip in the eye; or extreme heat or cold will cause it ; being kept in a dark stable, or where there is foul air around the stable, or from chaff or any other substance getting into the eye. SymptomS.^The eye is very dull and partly closed, and some- times the eyelids will be swollen, and water running from the corner of the eye. The eye is sore to handle and it hurts when the animal is brought into the light, and on account of this he will keep it closed. After a day or so there will be a scum gradually come over the eye and it presents a very irritated appearance. Treatment. — Examine the eye carefully and try and find out the cause of the trouble. If it is a piece of chaff, or any substance in the eye, remove it ; if it is the fault of the stable, get it fixed. Bathe the eye well with new milk, just from the cow, twice a day and, after bathing it, each time apply the eye wash, mentioned in 152 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. lh« rffccipts at the back of this book, in ano around the eye. K.ecp on with this tfeatment unti. the animal is relieved. In cases where the eyelids are much swollen it is well to bleed ; this is done by takinj^- a sharp pen knife and raisinjj the vein below the eye by pressing" your fing-ers on it, then cut it and allow it to bleed until It slops of its own accord, which takes about half an hour. MOON BLINDNESS (PERIODIC OPHTHALMIA). This is inflammation of the inner structures of the eye. Causes. — Extreme heat and cold, poorly ventilated stables or 'Jji'k stables ; all these have a tendency to bring this disease on. 1 1 also comes on hereditary, that is, where the dam or sire has had this disease. It is very apt to follow up in his or her colts. Symptoms. — They are generally well marked, and together with the history of the case, you will have little difficulty in telling if it is this trouble that is affecting the «ye. The animal may be put in the stable apparently all right at night, and in the morning you notice the eyes to be running water, seems very weak, and the eye partially closed. It generally affects one eye at a time, although it may affect both eyes at once. It is also noticed to change from one eye to the other. The disease gradually gets worse for two or three days, the eye gets weaker and assumes a yellowish or reddish appearance. The animal can see but very little out of the eye. In two or three days more the eye will return back to almost its natural state, but may look a little bluer than usual. It will appear all right again, but after the course of from three to six months it will show again with the same symptoms. This time it may be in the opposite eye, or in the same one. It will keep coming on in spells like this from time to time, each time leaving the eye a little more blurred, until in time it will completely blind the animal. In some cases the animal will go blind in a year from repeated attacks, while in others it takes as long as three years. The first time the disease attacks the eye you may think it a simple case of inflammation of the eye, but after it comes back a few times you may make up your mind it is a case of periodic ophthalmia. Treatment. — The treatment generally terminates very unsatis- factorily in the end, as the animal goes blind, and when once you have made up your mind it is this disease it is best to part with the animal, but you can help to keep back the disease, when every time the eye is noticed to be sore, to bathe them well with new DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 15:5 milk twice a day and apply the eye wash in and around the eye. This will help to check the inflammation and keep the sight in the eye longfer, but it finally terminates in cataract of the eyes, that is, blindness. In some cases where the eye looks very irritated it is well to bleed from the vein below the eye, but it does not gen- erally do so much good as it does in simple ophthalmia. CATARACT OF THE FYE. Cataract is a pearly white deposit across the sight of the eye, and it may be what is known as a complete cataract, that is where it covers all the sight, or it may be a partial cataract, that is where the animal can see a little. Causes. — It is caused by repeated attacks of inflammation of the eye, the same as we have in ophthalmia; or foals have been born with cataracts on their eyes. This disease may eff"ect one or both eyes. There is a white deposit over the sight of the eye. Symptoms. — If it is only partial cataract the animal can see a little, but if it is a complete cataract the animal cannot see at all. Treatment. — Very little, if anything, can be done, unless by an operation, and such an operation is not attended with much success in the horse because you cannot regulate his sight with glasses as is done in people. As for medicine, when the cataract is well formed there can be nothing given to help him. The only thing we can advise you is when you are buying a liorse be sure he is not affected with this disease. STAR GAZER (AMAUROSIS). This is paralysis of the optic nerve which gives sight to the eye. Causes. — Standing in a stable that is dark, or by striking the head against something. In severe cases of bleeding, horses have been known to go blind, but as the blood returns he gains his sight. Symptoms. — The eye has a large, glassy appearance, and the pupil of the eye is very much enlarged, and if he is taken out of a dark stable into the light the pupil of the eye does not close up the same as if it was all right, but remains large all the time. The animal generally carries his head high and steps high. Treatment. —If the case is of long standing nothing can be done for it ; if it comes on from injury by striking the head against something, or from bleeding, it can be treated all right. 154 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Give the animal « leaspoonful of nux vomica in his feed three times a day, this acts as a stimulant to the nerve ; wash the eye with eye wash twice a day for a few days. In buying horses be particular and watch the eyes closely for unsoundness, for some of the best buyers have been nipped in this disease. CANCEROUS GROWTH IN THE EYE. It first commences with an inflammation in the eye, after this there will be a growth noticed to be coming out of the ball of the eye, which gradually keeps on growing until it hangs out over on the cheek, it looks red and angry, and the least little injury will cause it to bleed freely, and gives the animal an unsightly appearance. In some cases the bones around the eye become diseased, and then it smells very bad. This disease is more often met with in the cow than in the horse. Causes. — The causes of this are like all other cancerous growths — from cancer germs getting into the blood and settling in the eye. Treatment. — You may effect a cure in the first stages of the disease by removing the eye, growth and all. Cast the animal and secure him, and have his head held solid, cut around the eye between the eye and the eyelid, and lift the eye up by sticking a hook into it, then out the structures off at the back part of the eye and have a hot iron to sear it, to stop the bleeding, then allow the animal to get up, and dress it the same as you would an ordinary wound by bathing it with warm water and applying white lotion three times a day. After applying the lotion, if the cut looks angry, apply compound tincture of benzoin, or what is called Frier's balsam, with a feather to keep it from growing again. FILARIA OCULL This is a small worm, about the size of a pin, found in the humors of the eye, moving around. It is liable to be found in any part of the body; they have been found around the testicles and bowels. Causes. — From a microbe, and is mostly seen in horses that pasture on low, wet land ; it is taken into the system through water and feed, and from the bowels it gets into the blood and is carried into the eye or various parts of the body through the blood. Symptoms. — This worm may grow from the size of one half inch to two inches long, and it sets up considerable irritation in DISEASES AND TREATMENT OP THE HORSE. 155 the eye. The eye has a hazy appearance and seems very weak, and by watching- it you can see the worm sometimes in the front, then it will move around to the back. If the worm is allowed to remain in the eye it will keep the eye irritated. Treatment. — The only thing- that can be done to save the ey« is an operation. Cast the animal and secure him, have his head held solid so that he cannot move, take a small lance or sharp pen- knife and make a small incision or cut across the sight of the eye, which will let the humors of the eye run out, and with it the worm generally comes. Keep the animal quiet after the operation and put him in a clean, dark box stall for a few days. Bathe the eye with new milk twice a day and apply the eye wash after bathing until the eye is healed. It generally takes a weelj^ or so for the eye to heal and the fluid to form in the eye. After the course of two or three weeks all that will be noticed is a slight scar, which will gradually absorb away in time and the eye will get all right. GLAUCOMA. This is a hardening of the back humor of the eye. Causes. — From a severe injury to the eye, or where the eye is pierced by a stick or anything, and it injures the back part of the eye ; or sometimes from natural decay in old animals. Symptoms. — The horse gradually gets blind, and has high, peculiar action in front, the same as seen in all blind animals. If you look into the eye through the pupil j'ou will see that the eye has become hardened and is of a grayish color. Treatment. — In a case where it comes on from an injury, bathe with new milk three or four times a day, and apply, after bathing, the eye wash. It is more frequently noticed in gray horses than in others, and if it comes on in old ag-e nothing can be done to cure it. mFLAMMATION OF THE HAW OP THE EYE (MEMBRANA NICTITANS). This is the diseased or enlarged state of the ct^rtilage in the corner of the eye. Causes. — Generally from chaff or something getting into the eye and irritating it. This causes it to enlarge and stick out of the corne^ of the eye and gives the animal a great deal of trouble, and also looks very bad. Treatment.^When it is first noticed remove the irritation, if it can be found, and bathe with new milk or luke warm water two irx; THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. or threi times a day, aiiU alter bathing apply the eye wash. Th* cartilage will generally return to its natural size in a few days. If this fails to remove the enlargement, place a twitch on the animal's nose to keep him quiet, take a small pincers and catch hold of the cartilage and draw It out of the eye some, then take a scissors and cut it off. This is a very simple thing to do, for it will not bleed and does not hurt the animal very much, for it is only a piece of cartilage. After you cut the cartilage off treat the eye the same way as mentioned above, and in a few days you will hardly be able to tell there was anything wrong with the eye. INJURIES TO THE EYELIDS. This Is where the eyelid becomes torn or bruised. Causes. — It may be caused in various ways. Treatment — If the eyelids are torn, draw the edges of it together by putting a few stitches in it with a needle that is used for sewing up wounds, and use the carriage trimmers' twine. It is not always necessary to throw the animal for this, but just put a twitch on his nose, but if the animal is very wild it is best to throw him down ; bathe the wound with new milk or warm water three or four times a day; after bathing apply the eye wash, in a few days the stitches will come out and the wound may open up some and look worse, but keep on treating It and it will heal up in a short time. In some cases, where the eyelid is torn and the eye injured, the eye will fall out on the cheek, this may be caused in a runaway. Wash the eye off and set it back to its place and sew up and dress the wound as mentioned above. INJURIES TO THE DUCTS OF THE EYE WHICH CARRY THE TEARS DOWN TO THE NO: B. When this tube becomes injured the tears will flow out over the cheek. It is recommended to take a small syringe and inject this tube or passage with warm water. The best way to inject this is from below by putting the point of the syringe in the small hole found in the bottom part of the nose and force the water up tliiough this until it runs out at the corner of the eye, this will clear the passage out, and sometimes effect a complete cure, but if the case is of long standing it is best to leave it alone, for the horse might be able to work for years,. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 157 NEAR SIGTHEDNESS (inYOPIA). This trouble is generally found in horses with very full eyes. Cause. — There is no particular cause for this ; the animal was foaled with this disease. Symptoms. — The horse has a very full eye, with enlarged pupils, and will thy very much, as he cannot see objects along the road at any distance. Treatment. — There is none, but always be careful In buying a horse that be is not a shyer for it is a miserable thing. CHAPTER XV. CONTAGIOUS DISEASES AND FEVERS OF THE HORSE. 1. CONTAGIOUS DISEASES. SMALLPOX IN THE HORSE (VARIOLA EQUINA). This disease is not very often met with in America, but is quite common in Europe. Causes. — They are same as smallpox in people, it is con- tagious, and spreads from one horse to the other by germs. The way the disease is carried from one horse to the other is from the scales, which contain the germs, getting on the groom's clothes, the saddle or harness, and in this way it is communicated to another horse, where it gets into the blood and sets up the disease. This disease has to run a course, and it generally takes from nine days to two weeks before the animal begins to recover. This diseass may be communicated from the horse to the man, cows or other animals, so it is well to b« careful when around a case of this kind and not allow the scales or scabs, which fall off the horse, to g"et onto you. Symptoms. — There is more or less fever, the pulse quick and weak, the animal is thirsty and does not care to eat much, red patches appear upon the skin, with a small hole in the center of each blotch, from which oozes a watery serum. These patches vary in size and are apt to be found on any part of the body, the skin becomes very sore and tender, the mouth is sore and saliva keeps running away from it, the throat also seems sore and it appears difficult for him to swallow. In the course of nine tm 158 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. fifteen days the red spots dry up and the scales fall off and the animal gradually recovers. It is these scales which fall off^ that, when they are carried to other animals, spread the disease. Treatment. — ^The treatment is simple : Keep the animal from other horses, feed on soft food with lots of boiled flaxseed in it, if in the spring of the year, grass is best. Give Sulphiir I pound. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre | '* Mix thoroughly together and give a teaspoonful three times a day on his tongue, which is all the medicine he will need internally. Attend to the animal's general comfort, keep him warm and do not expose him to the cold, for this would be liable to kill the animal if it drove the rash in from the skin. Wash him all over where the scabs are once a day with the following mixture. Creolin 1 ounce, or 4 tauiespoonfuls. Rain Witer 1 quart. .Shake well together and apply with a sponge or cloth and this will kill all the germs of the disease as they come out on the scabs; rub him once a day and this will keep the disease from spreading. The only danger in this disease is letting the animal get cold and driving the rash in from the skin, which poisons the blood. After the animal gets better it is best to gather all the straw and manure out of the stall he has been in and burn it, then close the stable up and burn sulphur in a dish, which will kill all the germs left in the stable. GLANDERS. This is a very contagious or catching disease in the horse, and one of the most serious and loathsome diseases the horse is liable to. It occurrs in two forms, chronic glanders and acute glanders. This disease has existed for thousands of years, and has been treated by every kind of medicine known, and nothing has ever effected a cure. CHRONIC GLANDERS. This disease was common in this country when it was being cleared up, and is now sometimes found in back townships. Causes. — It is due to germs poisoning the blood, and it is thought that cases of catarrh and nasal gleet have terminated in a case of glanders. Sometimes it has broke out in a severe form while horses are on shipboard during the time of a storm, when tkm hatches ara shut down, but in a case of this kind there must DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 169 have been one of the animals aflFected, and when closed up tig-ht the disease began to show itself. If it gets into large, crowded cities where there are large numbers of horses kept in one stable it is very troublesome. Symptoms. — It is most often seen in old and debilitated animals. In the chronic form of the disease it may exist for a long time without showing severe symptoms, and might be mistaken for nasal gleet ; but if you take the temperature of the animal, you will find it up to from 103 to 105 degrees, while in nasal gleet the temperature will be normal — about 98 or 99 degrees. There is a discharge from the nose; at first it is rather watery, but afterwards it is of a greenish-yellow color and very sticky; it sticks around the nose, and has no smell — differing from nasal gleet. The discharge in tliis case will sink in water, while in other diseases it will float. The eyes will have a discharge from them. After the disease has gone on for some time, the inside of the nose becomes full of patches of ulcers which have very little tendency to heal. The lymphatic glands around the head and neck become swollen and hard. The animal falls off greatly in condition; becomes thin and hide-bound, and generally pines away in a lingering death. Man and dogs will take this disease from horses, but other animals are not subjected to it. When it attacks man, it is a terrible disease; so you see the necessity of handling the disease with very great caution. Treatment. — As soon as there is any suspicion of this disease, put him some place where other animals will not come in contact with him; have only one pail and feed box for him, and allow no other animal to eat or drink out of it ; also handle him with care yourself, and be sure there are no cuts on your hands, or do not allow your clothes to touch him, as you might carry the disease to other animals. It is best to send for the veterinary government inspector, and if he pronounces it a case of glanders, have the animal immediately destroyed and burned, and have the stable disinfected. ACUTE GLANDERS. This disease is mostly noticed in Euorpean countries. And not often met with in this country. Causes. — This is caused from germs getting in and poisoning the blood, the same as in chronic glanders, only that it runs its course very much more quickly than the chronic form. ICO THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Symptoms. — Four or five days after the germs have entered the system the animal will be noticed to tremble; his temperature win run up as hio^h as 105 degrees or more, and he will run freely at the nose, the discharge being similar to that of chronic glanders, only it is sometimes streaked with blood. The lungs become aftected and inflamed, which frequently causes death. All the other --ymptoms are the same as in the chronic form. Ireatnient and precautions are the same as in chronic glanders. II. — FEVERS OP THB HORSE. They are four in number, as follows: Influenza, purpura hemorrhagica (or what is commonly called button farcy), strangles or distemper, epizootic cellulitis or pink eye. INFLUENZA. This disease received its name when, at one time, it was thought it was influenced by the stars. It is very common among the horses in America, and is a disease that is liable to aflfect any organ of the body. Causes. — It is caused from germs floating in the air; this is how it spreads so quickly from one horse to another. It is more common in the spring and fafl» when the horses are shedding their coats, than at any other time of the year. In 1874 and 1878 this disease broke out in the form of a regular epizootic, and spread all over the country and caused a great deal of trouble. Horses that are kept in badly-ventilated stables, especially those that are underground, are more likely to catch this disease. Symptoms, — The first symptoms are a dull, languid appear- ance ; sweats freely on the slightest exertion ; the coat starry and dirty looking; the mouth hot and dry, and there is a slight coug'h. After these well-marked symptoms set in, by pressing on hit throat it seems very sore and causes him to cough. The pulse will be quick and weak, and in some cases will go as high as 80 beats per minute. The horse will hang his head, and seems to be suffering from severe headache and nervous depression; and he gets so weak you would imagine you could shove him over. At this stage of the disease, he will breathe heavy and have • peculiar rattling noise in the throat, which you can hear by putting you ear to the side of his throat. His eyes look heavy and red ; his bowels become costive ; and if you take his temperii* DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 161 lure ll wUl be up as tiign as lOJ dc juices, liicic <.\ui De a discharg'e from the nostrils, and if it is of a yellowish vviiiie color, it is a favorable sign. At this stage of the disease it is apt to settle on the bowels, and cause inflammation and death ; or, it may settle on the liver, when the symptoms will vary — sometimes it will be diarrhoea and then costiveness ; or, it may settle on the lungs and set up inflammation ot the lungs; so you see the necessity of careful nursing, net allowing the animal to get cold during the disease. The animal generally persists in standing all through this disease. The legs and sheath become swollen, which is considered rather a good sign as long as it not swollen to any great extent. Treatment. — Clothe and attend to the genera! comfort of the animal according to the season of the year. If the legs are cold, hand-rub and bandage them, and allow the animal to have p'enty of fresh air in the stable as long as he does not stand in a draft. Support the system and assist nature to throw off the disease, for influenza will run its course in spite of medicine. Keep the bowels loose by feeding on soft food with plenty of boiled flax seed in it, but never, under any circumstances, give the animal a physic drench. Give him the following medicine: Chlorate of Potash ^ P'luud. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre , ^ " Powdered Digitalis ^ " Mix thoroughly together and give a teaspoonful every six hours on his tongue with a spoon. In feeding, give the animal small quantities, so he will be able to eat it all without leaving any in his manger; but give it to him often. Allow the animal cold water to drink in small quantities but often. Rub his throat well with the white liniment four or five times a day, and if his lungs become affected, apply a light mustard plaster over the sides of the chest every day; continue this treatment until the animal seems relieved. In cases where the animal is very weak, give a wine glassful of whisky in a pint of oatmeal gruel three or four times a day as a drench, being careful not to choke th» animal ; this is a ^reat thing to keep up the strength. When th^ dnlmal Is getting better, the eye gets clear; he will takd notice of things about himj th^ pulss gets mora natural — slower and KtFonger-^and the appetits gets better. After the disease ha« passed off, and the animal seems very weak and thin, give t^^ following mixture I 162 THE VETERINARY ?3rTENCl!. SuIphetM oi lion J p.-uisd, Gi'omiil Geutiau Iloot i " Mix thoroughly and jjfive a large teaspoonful three times a day in his feed. Feed well and give gentle exercise every day. This disease, if treated this way, and allowed to run its course without getting cold, will terminate favorably. But above all ' things never bleed, or give aconite or a physic in this disease, for it only tends to make the animal weaker and the disease worse. BUTTON FARCY (PURPURA HEMORRHAGICA). This disease is not contagious or does not spread Irom one animal to another. It is defined to be some putrid condition or charbonous affection of the blood. The disease mostly affects the capillary blood vessels of the skin, but in some cases it will affect the lining of the lungs and air passages. Causes. — It generally comes after some other disease, such as influenza, distemper or any other weakening ailment, also in horses that are overworked, thin and run down in condition. When the system is in this state by turning the animal out cold nights or allowing him to be out in a cold rain, and he gets a chill, you need not be surprised to see this disease come on. It is noticed mostly in the spring and fall. The blood gets very thin, almost like water, when the animal is suffering' from this disease. Symptoms. — -The disease generally comes on very suddenly, the horse may be apparently all right at night, and in the morning he will be literally covered with patches of swelling all over the skin. In some cases it affects the animal more in some parts than in others, for instance, we have seen cases where the eyelids were so swollen the animal could not see out of them, his lips will also be swollen so much he cannot eat, in other cases his •h«ath and legs will be badly swollen, or little spots may be seen u^ ^ver the skin, especially on the sides d thd necir and thighs and ssfvar the back. The peculiarities about these swellings are that th«y eome on so quickly, and sometimes disappear from one part ctf th« body and come on in another. 3y gfiving- the (inimai exer^ 0}m it will taks tham down, but afterwards th; lumps will €;oni§ back worse than ever. Examine the lining pf the noss, ^r,d if it i« affected watch out for lung disease. The general symptpmg »rf the animal will seem dull and breathe a little heavier than natural, puis* not much chang'ed, but weak, and he will generally try and DI81SA8BB AND TBEATMSNT OF THE HOESE. 163 •at soiiic. Caiics have been known where the swoiiiug gut no btul that patches of the skin would drop off and leave raw sores. Treatment. — it runs its course in three to thirty days. Place the animal in a comfortable box stall, attend to his generai comforts and keep him warm. Give him the following drench t Raw linseed Oil ^ pint. Spirits of Turpentind 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfuls. Mix together and give as a drench, repeat this drench every three days until the animal is relieved. Give him a teaspoonful of chlorate of potash three times a day on his tongue with a spoon until he is better. Feed on good, light, soft food with plenty of boiled flaxseed in it to keep the bowels loose. Do not apply any- thing externally unless the swelling breaks out ; if it does, bathe three times a day, and after bathing apply the white lotion. Never, in any case, attempt to open any of these lumps, for it only does harm. Bleeding is good in the early stages of the dis- ease if the animal is strong enough to stand it. Be very careful in nursing him that he doe? not get a relapse, for it is liable to cause death. There are cases known where the mouth and nose have swollen so badly that the animal died from suffocation. The after treatment is to build the animal up by regular exercise and good food. Give him the following tonic mixture : Sulphate of Iron J pound. Ground Gentian Root J " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day in his feed. DISTEMPER (STRANGLES.) This is very common among Canadian and American horses. It receives the name of strangles from the peculiar suffocating noise he makes in breathing. It generally attacks young animals from the time they are foals until they are five or six years old, but it may be found in older horses. CtUSes. — It is due to germs in the blood, and all ccAU are liable to be afTected with it. It is seen most in the spring and summer months of the year. These germs float in the air add are taken into the system by the animal breathing. Syniptuins«~The animal is dull and languid, and a small amount «»f work fatigues hio^. Ha will probably have a cough and sore throat at first, and there will be saliva running away from the mouth, the bowels are inclined to be a little costive or dry looking, then there will be a little lump begin to form around thf 164 THE VETERINARY 8CIBNC*. throai, surnetinies under the throat and sometimes at the sides. This lump gradually gets larger and causes the animal to havt difficulty in breathing, he is dull, hangs his head and soon becomei very gaunt. The disease generally runs its course in from six to twelve days, the abscess or lump around the throat generally breaks and runs, and he nearly always runs at the nose, which is a good sign, in some cases there is more than one lump or abscess forms, and if the poison is in the system it is best to have them brought to a head and let the discharge out for this gets the poison out of the blood. Treatment. — This is very satisfactory in most cases : Always allow the disease to run its course, give plenty of pure air, clothe the body according to the season of the year, feed on good food, such as boiled oats or chop stuff with plenty of boiled flaxseed in it to keep the bowels loose. This is a disease that does not re- quire much medicine. Give the following powder : Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre i pound. Sulphur J " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day on his tongue with a spoon. Rub the throat and lumps well with white liniment three times a day, apply a hot poultice of half lin- seed meal and bran to the throat every night, this will draw the abscess or swelling to a head and cause it to break, which is better than lancing. In cold weather it is best to apply a mustard plaster to the swelling instead of a poultice, for after the poultice is taken off the animal is apt to catch cold. Never, in any case, burn sulphur under the animal's nose, because it is apt to set up inflammation of the lungs. In case the lump gets so large around the throat that the animal's life is threatened by choking, you may then perform the operation of tracheotomy, which is per- formed by cutting into the windpipe on the underside about nine inches down the neck from the larynx (Adam's apple). About thi part of the neck you will find that the windpipe is almost bare— just covered with the skin — cut a hole througfh the skin about two and one-half inches long, then cut across three of the rings of the windpipe and have the regular tracheotomy tubs X& put in the hole and keep the rings open so the horse can hrsath© through this opening until the abscess or lump breaks and the swelling goes down so he can breathe through his throats when this occurs take the tube out and 4faw the skin back to it« DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 165 place by putting two or three stitches across it, then treat it as a common cut by bathing two or three times a day, and after bath- ing, each time apply the white lotion, and the hole will soon heal up. During the time the tube is in the throat it is best to take it out and clean it once a day. BASTARD STRANGLES. This generally follows simple strangles or distemper. Causes. — Is from the matter in the abscess or lump being absorbed into the system and poisoning the blood. Symptoms. — Abscesses of the same nature as the one which forms in the throat from distemper are liable to form and break out in any part of the body, sometimes around the shoulder, flank, neck or hips, but the rest of the general symptoms are the same as in simple strangles. These abscesses will keep forming until the poison is out of the blood. Treatment. — The treatment is the same as in a simple casj of strangles. Give the same medicine, bathe, poultice and rub thfc abscesses with white liniment and try and bring them to a head so that thev will break themselves, or lance them to get the poison out of the blood, for thiii is the only way to get rid of the disease. The danger in this disease is that the abscesses may form mside on the lungs or bowels and cause the animal's death. We have known of some cases where the animal would break out forty or fifty times, depending upon the amount of poison in the blood. PINK EYE (EPIZOOTIC CELLULITIS). The disease aflfects the cellular tissue under the skin, and like the other fevers of the horse, runs a course which takes from six to nine days, and, as a general thing, if treated properly, runs its course favorably. Causes. — This disease is due to germs in the air, and when once it starts it spreads all over the country from one horse to another. There was a great outbreak of this disease between 1875 and 1880, which spread all over the country. S^/mptoms. — The animal becomes dull and feverish, and his eyes are red and swollen, and afterwards turns to a pinkish color, from which the disease receives its name — pink eye. The animal does not eat well; his temperature runs from a 103 to 105 degrees; his mouth is hot and dry, and he falls off greatly in condition ; his manure is hard and dry; there is a discharge from the eyes and b 166 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. swelling of the limbs and belly, and in some cases he has a cough. Treatment.— This disease is a very simple one to treat, in most cases, if there is not too much medicine used, f Allow the disease to run its course ; keep the body warm ; have the stable clean, and allow the animal to have plenty of fresh air. Feed on soft food with plenty of boiled flax seed to keep the bowels loose, and give the following simple medicine to act on the blood : Chlorate of Potash ^ pound. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre J " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day on his tongue with a spoon. Never mix chlorate of potash and sulphur together, as it will explode and is very dangerous. Give the animal plenty of cold water to drink in small quantities. In cases where the animal is very weak give as a stimulant a wine glassful of whisky in a pint of gruel three times a day, and never, under any circumstances, give a physic in this disease. It is well to wash out the nostrils and eyes twice a day with luke warm water. After a few days you will see the animal began to take notice of things around him and gradually gets better. CHAPTER XVI. DISEASES OF THE SKIN. CRACKED HEELS (SCRATCHES). This disease is common among horses, and affects the heels, the heels of the hind legs being oftener affected than the front. Causes. — Anything that will irritate the skin tends to produce this disease. In the fall and spring, when there is wet and muddy roads, washing and not properly drying the legs, standing in badly kept stables, or by wearing boots on the legs. Heavy, hairy-legged horses are more subject to it than light horses. SyBlptomS. — The affected legs have a tendency to swell and are stiff and sore about the heels, the skin becomes cracked and scaly-looking at the back of the heels, and in some cases, when you are driving him, the heels will bleed. Treatment. — The first thing to do is to feed on soft food and give a physic drench consisting of the following: Bitter Aloes 8 drarns. Ginger 1 tablespoonful. Common Soda 1 " DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 167 Dissolve in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, allowing the animal to stand in the stable the next day. After this give him the following powder: Nitratf of Potash or Saltpetre i pound. Sulphur i *' Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoon ful twice a day in his feed, this will cool his blood and get him in good condition. Bathe the heels with luke warm water and a little castile soap ni^ht and morning, after bathing wipe dry with a soft cloth and apply the white lotion. Before you take him out to work rub his heels with vaseline or lard to keep the heels soft and protect them from the d rt and water while you are working him. In ca^es where the heels are very sore and swollen apply a hot poultice of hah Iinse"ed meal and bran to them every night for a while until he seems better. MUD FEVER. This is inflammatioi of ihe skin of the legs and the under part of the belly. Causes are similar to that of scratches, and the disease is seen mostly in the fall and spring during the wet weather, when the cold, muddy water splashes over the legs and belly, or wash- ing the legs with cold water and not drying them properly. Symptoms. — The legs are swollen and stiff, the skin is hot and tender, and the hair falls off in patches. Treatment. — Give the same medicine internally as that given for scratches to cool and clean the blood. If the legs are dirty bathe them off with luke warm water and a little castile soap and dry them with a soft cloth ; after this don't bathe, but brush off with a soft brush and apply the white lotion twice a day, which is sooth- ing and healing to the skin. Keep the animal out of the wet and mud as much as possible. If you have to work him, each time before you take him out, rub the parts affected with vaseline or lard, which will soften and protect the affected skin. GREASE. This disease generally follows cases of scratches that are neg-lected. It affects the glands of the legs, as well as the skin, and is more common in heavy, hairy-legged horses that have round, fleshy legs. It may be caused from bad blood and swollen legs, and is more often seen in the hind legs than in the front cues. It is also brought on by clipping horse's legs in cold, wet weather. 168 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Symptoms* — ^There b a thickening and swellliig of th« Left, the hair stands out on the legs, and they are hot and tender, and there is an oily discharge from around the heels, which has a bad smell in some cases. This is how the disease got its name, grease. When the animal is working the swelling goes down, but comes back again during the night. Treatment. — It is hard to effect a complete cure, but you can relieve the animal to a certain extent by giving a physic drench, and powders, same as are mentioned in scratches, to cool and clean the blood, feed on soft food, bathe the legs with warm water and castile soap twice a day ; after bathing rub dry and apply the white lotion with a few drops of carbolic acid in it to destroy the smell, poultice the legs every night with hot bran and linseed meal to soothe and draw the oily stuff out of them. This will generally fix the legs up in good shape for some time. In cases where it is very bad and in the *'grapous" stage, and there is little red growths around the heel, which look like a bunch of grapes, burn them off with caustic potash or chlorate of zinc, which is in the form of little sticks. SIMPLE ECZEMA. This disease is sometimes mistaken for mange, but unlike mange, it is not caused by germs or parasites working in the skin. It is mostly noticed in hot weather, when the animal is fed on very hot food, which heats the blood, such as barley and other hot foods. Symptoms. — First there is a dryness in the skin around the head, neck and tail, then little pimples will form, which will break and run a watery-looking fluid. After the animal is brought in from work he will be very itchy and rub himself against the manger until the skin is almost raw. Treatment. — You can relieve the disease at the time, but when a horse once becomes affected with this disease it will gen- erally break out every summer afterwards during hot weather. Give the animal a physic drench and powders the same as are mentioned for the treatment of scratches to clean and cool the blood, and rub him twice a day with any of the following washes : Corrosive sublimate, one dram to the pint of rainwater, mix together and shake well before using ; creolin may be used, two tablespoonfuls to the pint of water, mix together and shake well before using ; tincture of iodine may be used, two drams to the pint of water and shake well belore using, Ol the three receipts DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HOESE. 169 mentioned, the cheapest and favorite one, and the one we use mostly is the creolin, which will cost about two or three cents, and acts as well as any. The way to apply the lotion is first to take a fine brush and brush all the dust out of the skin and then apply the wash by rubbing it all over the affected skin \yith a sponge or cloth. Do this twice a day until he stops rubbing himself. NETTLE RASH (SURFEIT). Causes. — This is generally caused from feeding hot and over- ripe food, or giving a drink of cold water when the animal is heated, or from overheating the animal by driving him too fast. Symptoms. — Small pimples will appear in the skin around the head, neck and shoulders, but may affect the skin in other parts of the body. This disease is noticed at all times of the year. Treatment. — Give the animal a physic drench consisting of Bitter Aloes 8 to 10 drams. Ginger 1 tablespoonful. Common Soda 1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, allow the animal to stand in the stable the next day, feed on soft food, and follow up after this with the following powder : Ground Gentian Root J pound. Sulphur I " Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre J "* Mix thoroughly together and give a teaspoonful twice a day on his tongue with a spoon until the pimples disappear. WARTS. Warts are thickenings or growths on the skin. Causes. — It is difficult to say what is the cause, but some animals seem to be more inclined to warts than others, and they may be found on any part of the body. Treatment. — If the warts have a neck to them they are easy got rid of by what is known as cording them, that is tying a small, strong cord on the wart as close to the skin as you can tie it ; by tying it very light it will stop the circulation of the blood in the wart and cause it to die and fall off in a short time. If they have a large neck and you cannot cord them cut them off with a gharp knife or scissors, and burn them a little with caustic potash, which will kill the roots and stop them from growing again. They are also nicely taken off with an ecraseur, if you have one. 170 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. MELAKOTIC TUWORS. These tumors only aflFect gray horses, and are found mosL'y to be around the tail, sheath, lips and ears, but may be found on other parts of the body. C2.USCS. — The exact cause is not known. Symptoms. — These tumors are generally small, varying vrom the size of a bean up to the size of a pigeon's egg, and are in bunches. They are not sore to handle, nor do they break ou', but simply grow until they cause trouble to the parts they are in Treatment. — As long as they do not interfere with the anima' in any way it is best to leave them alone, but as soon as you fear the\ are going to cause trouble it is best to cut them off by using a sharp knife and putting Monsell's solution of iron on them to stop the bleeding ; or tie a tight cord around them allowing them to drop off themselves the same as a wart; or take them off with an ecrasure, which is an instrument for that purpose. After they are off treat the part as a common wound by bathing twice a day with luke warm water and applying white lotion each time after bathmg. MANGE. Causes* — ^This is caused from a germ or parasite working down into the skin and j-ct ing up the disease. One horse will . catch the disease from another, also men and other animals will take the disease from the horse, so you see it is best to be careful if you think the animal has mange. It is most seen in animals that are in poor condition, with long, dirty hair, but it will affect animals that are in good condition. The disease is generally car- ried from one horse to another by the groom's clothes, harness or brushes. Symptoms. — The insects burrow down into the skin and set up an irritation which breaks and runs a watery discharge, the hair falls off in patches, and the animal is extremely itchy. The dis- ease generally commences around the mane and tail, and gradually spreads over the body. To make sure of the disease being mange examine a few of the scales under the microscope, and if you find the small germs or parasites in it you will know that it is a case of mane'* Vou have to deal with. i reatment. — Apply something that will destroy the germs or parasites in the skin. If the horse's hair is long, clip him, and wash the body off with luke warm water and a little soap ; th«n apply any of th« (oUowing washes i DISEASES AND TREATMENT 0¥ THE HORSE. 171 Carbolic Acid ^ ounce or 1 tablespoonful. Sweet Oil 1 pint. Mix and shake well together; rub it around bis liead, neck and shoulders the first day; the second rub it around the chest, belly and over the back; and the third day put it over his hind quarters and legs. It is best not to gfo over the whole body the same day, as too much of the carbolic acid would be absorbed into the system and might cause poisoning. Another very good wash, and one we think better than the above, is: Creolin 2 ounces or 8 tablespoonfuU. Rain Water 1 quart. Shake well and rub in thoroughly all over the skin twice a week until the parasites are killed. This is by far the cheapest and best remedy known ; you can cure a case for ten cents. To prevent the disease from spreading to other animais, wash with carbolic water,, everything that he has come in contact with, that is, a few drops of carbolic acid in warm water; this will kill the germs or parasites and prevent the disease from spreading. Feed on soft food and give a teaspoonful of sulphur in his food twice a day. RINGWORM ON HORi;ES. Causes. — It is caused from germs or parasites working In the skin, but is not so co.Timon in horses as in cattle. Symptoms. — It often attacks the animal around the eyes and nose. The germs or parasites work in circles, which causes the hair to fall off and leaves round, bald spots. If not checked, it will soon spread over the body. Men are liable to take this disease from horses and cattle, and horses and cattle are liable to take it from men. Treatment. — The best and cheapest remedy, and never known to fail in our experience, is crude petroleum oil as it comes out of the ground. This can be bought at almost any store in the country or city. The way to use this is to paint it over the spot where the ringworm is working, and let it go a half-inch over the edge of ringworm on to the good skin so as to check the disease from spreading, Apply this once a day until the ringworm is gone. If it blisters the skin, stop using it for a day or so and tiien continue again. Another very good remedy is to paint the spot where the ringworm is with tincture of iodine every two or three days until the ringworm is gone. 172 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. LICE ON HORSES. The lice may be common horse Wee or hen lice. The hen lice are very small and reddish looking-, and travel very fast. They get on the horse from being" too near a lousj hen house, or from hens roosting- in the stable. The horse lice are larger than the hen lice; they have a long-, brownish body and travel very slowly, and they are generally found on horses that are turned out and have long-, dirty hair. Symptoms. — The horse's coat looks rough ; he does not thrive well, and keeps rubbing his sides, neck and tail until he has the hair worn off, an.! he seems in perfect misery. By examining the hair closelv you will see there is lice on him. Treatment. — Kill the lice by washing the body off well with luke warm water and soap, then dry him off by rubbing him with cloths, and''apply the following wash: Creoline 2 ounces or 8 tableapoonfuls. Rain Water 1 quart. Shake well and apply all over the body every third day by rubbing it well into the skin. Keep the treatment up until you have all the lice killed. Another very good remedy is a plug of " black-strap" chewing tobacco well cut up and steeped in a gallon of rain water and rub well in all over the body every third day until the lice are killed. CHAPTER XVII. DISEASES OF THE BRAIN AND NERVOUS SYSTEM IN GENERAL. INFLAMMATION OF THE BRAIN AND ITS COVERINGS (PHRENITIS). This is not a very common disease, but is sometimes met with. Congestion first sets up, which is followed by inflammation. Causes. — From a tumor growing around the brain ; or a severe injury to the skull, with or without fracture; or continued exposure to the heat by being out in the hot sun will cause it; it is also sometimes caused after a case of distemper or strangles, where there is an abscess formed in the brain; also from other causes we cannot account for. Symptoms. — The first symptoms are marked dullness. If the animal is standing in the stall, he will rest his head against the manger; the pupil of the eye will be very large; his pulse will be DISBASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HOBSB. 173 beating quite strong, but will beat slow somciiiues — only twenty times per nninute — and there will be a peculiar snoring noise made in breathing. After this dullness passes off, then there will be the reverse takw place. The animal will be greatly excited — seems perfectly mad, and acts like a mad horse; the pulse, in this stage, becomes a great deal quicker, and the breathing louder; the animal reels around in his box with his head very high, and in some cases will rear up and put his front feet in the manger; and at times he moves like a piece of machinery. Sometimes he will be noticed to be walking around in his box with his head to one side; this is caused from the brain being affected on that side. In some cases, if you try to lead him he will fall down; but at times he will have quiet spells, after which the exciting symptoms will again return and be more alarming than at first. We have seen cases where the animal would twist his head down between his front legs and hold it in that position. Treatment. — It is dangerous treating an animal with this disease, and you have to be careful in going around him. Give him a good physic drench consisting of: Bitter Aloes 10 to 12 drams. Ginger 1 tablespoonf ul. Common Soda 1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench. One hour after the above drench give the following : Bromide of Potassium 2 drams or 1 teasponnful. Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 10 drops. Mix in a pint of cold water and give as a drench every two hours, and apply cold water cloths and ice to his head until he gets relief ; cover his body up nice and warm with blankets. In a case where the animal is in good condition, and you notice the disease coming on, bleed him ; take a half or three-quarters of a pail of blood from him. If you bleed him, follow up with the above treatment, but only g^ve him about eight to ten drams o' bitter aloe* and not so much aconite. SUNSTROKE, This disease is common to all animals, and more especial!) 'i man. It generally attacks hard-working horses in the hot monrtis fjf summei. It is a congested statg of th? hlpod vessels pf th? prain, with lass of power and feeling, Causes, — Exposure to the hot sun, as a goneral thingf, and I specially so if the horse has been high fed and kept in a poorly 1T4 THE VETERINARY SOIENOH. ventilated stable, it is often seen in taking a horse out of m pasture field and giving him a hard day's work in the sun when he is not used to it. Symptoms. — The first symptoms are dullness and dryness of the skin, and if the horse is working he will not be sweating as much as he should ; he will also be noticed not to take his food very well, and have a staggering gait when he is walking. These symptoms may be noticed two or three days before the disease sets in. If he is working he will finally stagger and fall down, he may then struggle for a short time, but, finally, will lie quiet, with complete loss of power and feeling ; if you prick him with a pin or knife he does not feel it, the pupil of the eye is very much enlarged, the pulse quick and weak, he breathes heavy, and when you try to get him up he will not be able to help himself at all. Treatment — Apply cold, wet cloths and ice bags to the head around the brain, and keep these on until he gets relief, and also give Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonf ula. Whisky 1 wineglasaf ul. Mix in a half pint of cold water and give as a drench. Repeat this every hour and a half or two hours until he gets relief. Be careful in drenching him while in this state for fear of choking him. As well as the above drench give a dose of physic consisting of Bitter Aloes 8 to 10 drams. Common Soda. 1 teaspoonful. Ginger 1 " Mix in half pint of luke warm water and give as a drench. If the animal seems to take notice to things around him and wants to eat, give him soft food with boiled flaxseed in it, and give plenty of cold water to drink, in small quantities at a time, but often. If the horse lays for any length of time turn him over two or three times every day, this will prevent his lungs from becom- ing affected, and he will lie easier. Keep the body very warm with plenty of blankets, this will have a tendency to draw the bloed away from his head. In this case, as in othen irheis thu animal is down keep plenty of dry bedding under him. As ^doa (^ he wants to g-at up, and geems abla, help him to his feet. CONCUSSION OF im mAiK Causes.—It generally ocpurs in a hors^ when he is punning- g^way an4 strikes bis head ^g^lnst something, pr In rearing up ^ud falling back and striking the pple of the head. In some gases he gets better quickly, while in other cases he may die very Quddenlj. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 176 Sjiupiums. — In a pure case of this the animal looses all motion and feeling-, he becomes completely paralyzed, and may lie vv'hout much signs of life. The pupils of the eyes will be very large, his pulse will be very weak. If there is no sign of fracture of the skull bones there is hopes of recovery. He will first begin to show signs of consciousness by trying to get up, but will rise on his hind legs first, and it may be some time before he will be able to rise on his front legs. In some cases the animal gets better Cjdicker than in others, according to the amount of injury to the brain. Treatment. — Same as that given for sunstroke. STOMACH STAGGERS (MEGRIMS). Causes. — It may be caused in various ways. Anything that will interfere with the flow of blood to the brain, such as heart disease ; from indigestion ; from horses working in a tight collar; or from a small tumor growing and pressing on the brain. Very nervous animals are more subject to this than others of the opposite temperament. Symptoms. -The horse will be attacked suddenly; he staggers and becomes unmanageable and falls to the ground. These symptoms may pass off in a few minutes, and the animal apparently seems as well as ever. A horse once affected with this disea-e is unfit to use for single driving, for he may take one of these fits at any time and fall down without showing the slight- est sign before it. Treatment. — Dash cold water on his head until he comes to, and afterwards give him a physic drench consisting of Bitter Aloes 8 to 10 drams. Common Soda 1 tablespoonfuL Ginger 1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench. If there is anything wrongs with his stomach this will generally re- lieve him, and it might be he would never have another attack of it. I r' it is from a tight collar, put A large one on him. In some cases it is recommended to give after the physic a teaspoonful of bromidt of potaei^ium in his feed twice a day, for a while, to act on his nerves, UfiPLA^ftAATlON OP TBS SFINAL CGRd AKD COYBKlHaS (SPIKITIS). Q§U£es,-t-It is sometimes caused from the animal injuring itt^ ^^cU by falling Gv^r ^ banl? whilp running ^vvay, by severe pxer. fion from nervous eifpitement. We have seen a case v.'here a colt^ funning in a pasture field, fell and hurt himself. It may also b« brought on by throwing an animal. 176 THE VKTKRINARY SOIBHOB. i>\ Uipl<)i:i^. — Al first the synipionis may not be bO well marked, but they gradually come on. The animal seems very feverish and weak, has a staggering gait, and will sometimes be noticed to strike his hind fetlocks in walking, and, in some cases, if you go to turn him around he will fall down, and, as a general thing, if the disease is allowed to run on, it soon causes paralysis and death. Treatment. — Give a physic drench of Bitter Aloes 8 drams. Common Soda 1 teaspoonf ul. Ginger 1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench ; also, give the following powder ; Powdered Nux Vomica J pound. Ground Gentian Root J •• Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre J " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful in his feed or on his tongue with a spoon every night and morning. Keep the animal very quiet in a comfortable place and blister him along the back with a mustard plaster — quarter of a pound of mustard and enough vinegar to make it into a paste, put this plaster on every day for a few days. When tht horse is getting better and his back very sore where you blistered him, oil his back with sweet oil, lard or goose oil. Feed the animal on soft food with plenty of boiled flaxseed in it to keep his bowels loose. If the animal gets down always assist him in getting up, for when once he gets off of his feet entirely there is very little hopes of recovery. PARALYSIS. Paralysis may be in the complete or partial form. Complete paralysis is when there is loss of motion and feeling all over the body, and in cases of this kind death soon comes on. Partial paralysis is where there will be one part of the body affected, such as the hind quarters, or he may be paralyzed in one side. If the spine is affected all of the parts behind the affected part viUI be paralyzed. Causes. — From ftn injury to the brain or from tumors g^row- [ng around the brain or spinal cord. Nervous excitement and intoxicating liquors cause this disease in man< In stallicns; it ie caused by being put to too many mares, or from a horse get' ting cast w the stall and hurting his back ; throwing an animal for an operation may hurt him j in hunting horses, or other horses^ It may be caused from slipping and straining the muscles under the spine, or from a fracturs of the spinal bone. Sometimes, DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 177 when a horse has fractured his ribs he cannot g-et up. This disease is more often seen in cows than in horses. Symptoms. — if it is a case where the paralysis affects the one side of the body, the animal cannot walk straight, but goes around in a circle, and has not the proper use of that side. In a case where it affects the hind quarters, the animal, when he lies down, cannot get up ; he will raise on his front legs, but canno* get up on his hind legs, and if you do not help him onto his feet, ha seems very uneasy; but during the time he is down he will eat and drink fairly well. If you prick him with a pin in his hind part he cannot feel it. In cases of complete paralysis, when ha cannot move at all, he soon dies. Treatment. — if you think that he could bear his weight oo his legs if he was up, raise him with pulleys or slings. Apply a mustard plaster over his back if the weather is warm, but if the weather is very cold, instead of applying mustard, put a half-pail of hot salt in a bag over his kidneys and blanket him so he will be hot, for what you need is heat to the back in these cases. In cases where the animal can stand fairly well, when he is up, keep him on his feet as much as you can, for a horse can stand a couple of weeks without hurting him. If you allow him to get down, and he cannot get up, he will only flounder around an^ may hurt himself. Give the following drench : Bitter Aloea 8 drains. 8weet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfuls. Common Soda 1 tableapoonf uL Ginger 1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench; thi# will get the bowels and kidneys acting; then give him the folloir \ng powders to strengthen the nerves : Povrdered Nui Vomioa i poosi Nitrate of Potash, or Saltpetre \ " Oroond Gentian Root ] " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day oa his tongue with a spoon, or in soft food with plenty of boiled fla» seed in it, and if he is able to walk give him gentle exercise every day raFLAMMATION OF THE BRAIN AWD SPINAL CORD AND THEIR COVERINGS (CEREBRO-SPINAL MENINGITIS). This is congestion of the brain and spinal cord and their coverings, and if, in this state, they do not soon get relief, h turns into inflammation. This is, comparatively, a new diseasci and is not known in any other country but on tht9 continent. _12— 178 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Caases. — From horses being kept in a crowded stable that Is poorly ventilated and badly drained, or from eating certain kinds of grasses «hat contam too much narcotic properties, such as are grown in swamps. Symptoms. — They vary accordin^^ to the parts most affected. There will be trembling noticed in the different parts of the body; the animal seems very dull and does not feed. As the disease goes on, the animal will have a peculiar jerking in the limbs, and then he will stagger, fall down and be unable to rise; the pulse will be quick and weak; the bowels usually costive, and his water is of a dark brown color. At first he generally lies in a dull, stupid manner, breathing heavy, and sweats freely if it is very warm. Aiier a time tiie dullness passes off and the animal becomes delirious. If you give him water to drink, he will try, but he cannot, as there is paralysis of the gullet. These symptoms gradually get worse until he dies. Wherever you see one horse affected there is apt to be more affected, for the same cause that brought it on him will bring it on the others. Treatment. — If noticed before the animal is too had, there is hope of recovery; but if the animal is down and cannot swallow before he is noticed to be sick, the chances are against him. As soon as the disease is noticed, take one half-pail of blood from him and give the following drench : Bitter Aloes .' 8 drams. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfuU. Commou Soda 1 tablespoonful. Ginger 1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, then follow up with the following powder: Powdered Nux Vomioa i pound. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre I " Hyposulphite of RoHa. t " Mix well together and give a teaspoonful on his tongue every three hours until he gets relief. Apply a mustard plaster and hot cloths along his back and cover the body warm. If the animal gets down turn hnn over trom side to side three times a day, and be very careful while drenching for fear of choking him. Feed on soft food, with plenty ol boiled llax seed in it, and give plenty of cold water to drink. CHOREA. This is an affection of the nervous system, where the horM loses the power to back up. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 179 Causes. — It is due to some injury to the spinal cord, and sometitnes comes on a colt after castration, but we think he must have be^n injured while throwing him. Symptoms. — The horse will be useful, and as long as he is going ahead he will be all right. He can pull or do anything in the shape of work until you go to back him up; as soon as you try to, you will find that he cannot back ; the muscles of the hind quarters will begin to shiver, his tail will rise up, and, no matter how much you force him, he cannot back up. This disease is more common in nervous animals. Treatment. — If you notice it when it is coming on, give i Powdered Nux Vomica J pound. Nitrate of Potaah or Saltpetre i " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day in soft food. Rub him over the back and hips with the white liniment twice a day. If he is in good condition, give him a physic drench of Bitter Aloes 8 drams. Ginger 1 tablespoonfuL Common Soda 1 *' STRINGHALT. This receives its name from the way the animal acts. Causes. — This is caused from some affection of the nerves which go to supply the part affected, but really what parts of the nerves affected has never been found out. This disease is more often seen in highly nervous animals, and is caused from applying severe blisters to the legs, which irritates the nerves, or clipping the legs and having him out In the cold. It is noticed to follow after castration, either from the burning of the rope on the fetlock or the irritation of the cutting. Treatment — If this disease is once well established It is incurable, but if noticed at the time it Is starting give the animal a physic of Bitter Alo«8 8 to IM draouL Coinmuu Soda 1 tablespoonfuL Ginger 1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench. Leave the animal in the stable the next day, and follow up with the following powder, which acts on the nerves: Bromide of Potassium, two drams or a teaspoonful, twice a day in his food, or on hisi "^ongue with a spoon. 180 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. HYDROPHOBIA (RABIBS) D! BOKSES. This disease never occurs In a horse unless he has 1»ettr blMHi by a mad dog or cat. Symptoms, — He shows restlessness, will bite and rub where, he was bitten. These symptlSms are followed by brain distur- bance, and the animal' will act somewhat as if he was suffering from inflammation of the brain ; but in this disease the animal is wicked, and will bite at you in a peculiar way, just like a vicious dog. The animal becomes more excited, turns round and round in his stall until he gets weak and falls down, and gradually keeps getting worse until he is relieved by death. Treatment. — if the horse is showing the above symptoms, and he has been bitten by a dog, have him destroyed at once ; but if you were called to see a horse after he was bitten by a mad dog, and before he shows the above symptoms, take a sharp knife and cut away the flesh around the bite, then burn it with a stick of caustic, potash or nitrate of silver. If you have not these, burn it well with a red hot iron or anything to destroy the poison. LOCKJAW (TETANUS). This is purely a disease of the nerves and receives its name by the way it acts on the muscles of the jaw. Sometimes they become so set that you could not pry the animal's mouth open. There are two forms of this disease, one is known as the trau- matic form, this is where the disease follows an injury or opera- tion, which can be seen ; the diopathic form of the disease comes on the animal without any visible injury or operation. In this case it is thought to be broug^ht on from worms or bots in the stomach or from being exposed to extrem* cold. CflUSes. — The gfeneral causes of this disease are when a naH runs in the horse's foot, It may follow a stake or cut just about the time the wound is healed up, and comet on from eight to twenty-one days after being injured. It may also come after wounds which seem to be healing extra fast. It follows opera- tions, such as docking, nicking a horse's tail or castration ; it sometimes occurs after very severe blistering. In referring to the disease following castration, it is more apt to come on when a horse is allowed to run through a river or spring creek, or being left out in cold winds. As an example, twenty-four horses were castrated and bathed In cold water a few days after, and sixteen DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 181 •ttt af the twenty-four died of lockjaw. This shows you th* ■•cessity of having the operation done in fine weather and the colt kept away from damp places. The disease is noticed to come on just about the time the colt is healed up, the same as in other wounds. Symptoms. — There is not much difficulty in telling- a case of this kind. At first there is a peculiar stiffness of the body, and he walks with his neck high and his head stuck out as if he. was suffering from sore throat, he has a peculiarly high action, and if he is on pasture he cannot get his head down to eat, except in a very mild case of the disease. The horse, in most cases, will try to eat if he can, especially at the commencement of the disease. If you walk up to him and suddenly excite him he will almost groan, as if in pain, his head will fly up and the haw of the eye will fly over the eye so that you can hardly see it. When he is excited his tail will raise up and the muscles all over his body seem hard, drawn and set, and the animal will almost fall down. In a case of this kind examine the mouth and you will find that ii can only be opened a little. If it is a severe case these symptoms will gradually grow worse, and in a few days he will get off his feet and will be unable to raise them ; he will have fits of severe struggling and be in terrible agony, and the only thing that gives him relief is death, which soon comes. Treatment. — In a very light case of the disease, if in the spring and the animal is able to get down and eat grass, it is best to leave him out in a level pasture field where there is nothing to disturb him. In a case of this kind do not go near him to give him medicine, but watch him to see that nothing turns up that you are not expecting, because catching a wild colt in the pa.sture to give him medicine would only excite him so much that it would do more harm than good. There has been all kinds of treatment tried for this disease, but the best is to give the animal, as soon AS noticed, a dose of physic consisting of Bitter Aloes 8 drams. Common Soda 1 tablespoonful. Ginger. 1 " Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfuls. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, being careful not to excite the animal much while giving it to him. In case it is caused from a nail in the foot, pare the hole out well wher* the nail went in and p. for it stops the circulation in the system. In some cases the horse may be subjected to weak spells before rupture takes place, while other times this symptom will not be noticed. Treatment. —There is none ; and the only way to tell if this caused death is to examine the heart, which will be clotted with 186 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. blood, ca..;sed from the rupture of one of the valves in the heart, and also you will see the ruptured valve. PALPITATION OF THE HEART. This is weakness of the heart. Causes. — It generally comes after weakening diseases, such as the fevers of the horse, lung troubles, or dropsy of the heart. Symptoms.— The animal will be very weak, and you can hear the heart thumping in its cavity; the symptoms will be greatly increased when the animal is excited. His pulse will be very quick and weak, and in this state the animal will be unable to do any work. Treatment. — Keep the animal quiet and strengthen the system as much as you can by good food, and give him the following tonic medicine which acts as a tonic to the heart and system in general : Pulverized Digitalis ^ pound. Ground Gentian Root A " Powdered Nux Vomica | " Ground Sulphate of Iron J " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day in his feed or on his tongue with a spoon. II. — DISEASES OF THE ARTERIES. TUMOR (ANEURISM). This is a diseased state of the walls of an artery. Causes. — The causes are unknown. Symptoms. — This disease often goes on in the artery unknown until the diseased part of the artery will give way ; if it is intern- ally, and a large artery, he will bleed to death very quickly ; if it is a small artery in the muscles he will not bleed to death, but you will notice a large swelling appear suddenly around the diseased part of the artery, and the artery will bleed until it is stopped by clotting and pressure from the muscles and skin. The animal will be a little weak, but the swelling will not be sore, and pressing on it you can tell there is a fluid in it. Treatment. — Allow the fluid to remain in th« swelling two or three days^ until you are sure the artery has stopped bleeding, .nen, with ft sharp knife, open into the lower part of the swelling ; make a big cut into it, and remove all the clotted blood, then take a large syringe and wash out all the blood with luke warm water with a few drops of carbolic acid in it. After this, bathe DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 187 the parts well with luke warm water iwico a Ua^, anU inject in me hole each time, after bathing, with tlie white lotion. Keep the animal quiet and it will heal up in the course of two or ilirec weeks all right. RUPTURE OP AN ARTERY. Causes. — It is sometimes caused from sti-aining while the mare is foaling; drawing heavy; severe exertion of any kind; or a severe bruise. Symptoms. — Same as a tumor or aneurism of an artery, only you \v:ll not find the artery diseased. Treatment — This disease is treated the same as tumor or aneurism of an artery. III. — DISEASES OF THE VEINS. INFLAMMATION OF A VEIN (PHLEBITIS). This disease is mostly noticed in connection with the jugular veins. Causes. — Usually from bleeding a horse with a rusty fleam ; using a rusty pin or your hands having dirt on them while putting in the pin (so you see the necessity of having everything clean when bleeding); sometimes from a horse rubbing his neck against something after bleeding; from turning the horse out to grass right after bleeding and allowing him to have his head down, this interferes with the circulation of the blood, causes swelling and clotting of the blood, which sets up inflammation. Symptoms. — There is swelling along that side of the neck you bled him from, and if he is allowed to have his head down that side of his head will also be swollen. The swelling will be hard and painful when you touch it, and, in a few days, the clotted blood tormed in the swelling will start to fester and break out in little boils or abscesses along the side of the neck. Treatment. — Keep the animal's head well tied up and bathe the sides of the neck with warm water and vinegar four times a day for half an hour at a time, and each time, after bathing apply white liniment. If the neck beals or festers, open the places up with a knife and allow the matter to escape. When \ou do this, change the treatment to white lotion instead of lini- ment. Do this until you get all the swelling and inflammation out and the healing places all healed up, then blister, using the following' t 1H8 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. T»*«ltik«, or Imjrd 1 ooiio*. PtilTerlied Ciith«nd««, or SpaniBh Fly 1 J drams. Mix well together and rub the blister along the swollen part of the neclc Tie the horse's head short so he can not rub it. Rub the blister in well and grease the place where you blistered in three days after ; allow it to remain two or three weeks, or until it heals up, and if the swelling is not down, blister again and follow out the same directions in this as in the first blister. In after treatment do not turn the animal out to pasture for a year or so, for his head will swell up on account of his not having the use of this vein ; keep him in the stable and feed him out of a high manger, and by doing this he will be just as useful as ever, for after a while the other jugular vein will enlarge so it will do the work of both the veins. In buying a horse look at both sides of his neck to see that the veins are all right. rV. DISEASES OF THE BLOOD. BAD BLOOD. This is when the blood giets very impure and the horse does not thrive well. Causes. — From working very hard and feeding very high, or from turning the animal out to a. straw stack and allowing the system to run down. Symptoms. — The animal will get weak, and will not thrive well, and gets hide bound. The hair will be rough, dry and scruffy; and, if the blood is hot, there will be pimples form over the body; and when he stands in the stable over night his legs will swell; and if he is out in wet weather scratches will come on; and the animal is dull and unfit for work, and no matter how much you feed him he will not thrive. Treatment. — Get his blood in good shape by giving a physic drench to start on, consisting of: Bitter Aloes 8 drams. Ginger 1 tablespoonful. Common Soda .1 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench. Allow the animal to stand in the stable a couple of days, and feed on soft food with plenty of flaxseed in it to keep the bowels loos*, then give the following powder: Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre i pound. Sulphur k " DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 189 Mix and g-ive a lar^e tea«poonful twice a day in his feed, after you have gfiven him this, follow up with the followingf tonic powder to make him strong". Ground Gentian R^ot J'pound. Sulphata of Iron J " Mix well together and give a teaspoonful twice a day in his feed; if in the springs of the year and you can turn the horse on grass, bleed him, taking half a pail of blood, then turn him out, and this will cure him as quick as anything. When you are treating a horse fop bad blood, if you have him in the stable, give him a little exercise every day. AZOTURIA. This disease, at one time, was not very common, but is getting more so all the time. Causes. — F^rom allowing a horse to stand in the stable and feeding him well for a few days without any exercise, the blood gets too full of albumen, and then, by taking him out and driving him, brings on the disease. When you drive the horse the blood gets heated and he takes in a great deal of oxygen from the air into the blooJ, which unites with the albumen in the blood and changes it into acids, which are known as hippuric and urea acids; these acids stop the action of the kidneys and then act on the muscular system, and cause the muscles of the back and hips to become swollen and paralyzed. This is the only disease that is noticed to come on a horse very soon after starting on a drive. It is more common in th« winter months, on account of the animal standing in the stable more, but U liable to come on at any time of the year. Symptoms. — On taking a horse out of the stable, he will go off full of life for a quarter of a mile to a mile, or even a longer distance in some cases, then you will notice him break out into a sweat; he becomes stiff in the hind quarters and not able to trot. If you examine him he will be breathing heavy, his pulse quick and weak, and will be trembling about the flanks. Look over the back and hips and you will notice the muscles swollen and as hard as a board. If you attempt to drive him still further, ne will get so stiff he will not be able to go, and will fall down and not be able to rise, and all the symptoms mentioned above will be increased greatly. His urine will be of a dark red color and very little at a time, for the kidneyt are not acting much. It you 190 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. catch some in a dish, and allow it to stand, th« acids will coma t0 the top. In severe cases the legfs and ears are very cold. Treatment. — As soon as the symptoms are noticed, stop driving him and take him to the nearest place, for if you keep on driving him he will only fall down and be a great deal more bother to you. When you get him into the stable, cover him well with blankets and let him have a good sweating; this will relieve the kidneys, give him a good rubbing all over the back and hips with white liniment; if you have not got the liniment along with you apply a coat of mustard and vinegar over the back, or even a half pail of hot salt in a bag would be good, for you must get heat to the kidneys to start them to act. Give the following : Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfuU. Bitter Aloes 8 drams. Common Soda 1 teospoonfuL Ginger 1 " Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 10 drops. Mix in a pint of lake warm water and give as a drench ; this is to get the bowels and kidneys acting. As a general thing, if this treatment is given as soon as noticed, he will be able to work in three or four hours. If it is a severe case, and the horse does not get relief in three or four hours, follow up with the following drench : Sweet Spirits of Nitre I ounce, or 4 tablespoon fuls. Common Soda 1 tablespoonful. Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 10 drops. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give every three hours until the animal gets relief ; also, keep the heat applied to the back. If the animal is so bad he gets down, turn him over from side to side, twice a day, and as soon as he able to get up, help him to his feet. It is well to use slings for a short time every day after he begins to get strong. We saw one case where a horse had lain nine day^ and afterwards got up and was all right again by means of the above treatment without the slings. Feed on soft food and give all the luke warm water he can drink ; tend to his general comfort, such as a comfortable stall with good bedding. Watch if he makes water, and if he does not, take it away with a catheter. When the animal is getting better give the following powders to get his kidneys working: Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre ^ pound. Ground Gentian HodL i " Mix and give a leaspoonful twice a day in his feed. After an «nimal has suffered from this disease once he is more apt to b« DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 191 troubled again. Watch that his kidneys are in good shape, and have the animal exercised every day. If you have fear of a horse becoming attacked with this disease when you are going to drive him let him walk easy for the first mile or bo, and then he will b« all right CHAPTER XX. DISEASES OF THE BONES. BIG HEAD (OSTBO-POROSIS). This disease is more common in some localities than others ; it is not met with much in Canada or Great Britain, but is frr quently seen in the United States and Mexico. It is a disease which attacks horses from one to four years old, and rarely attacks old horses, and it gradually comes on as the animal grows, without any signs of soreness, only the bones of the head and legs get larger and lighter and become very brittle, that is, easy to break. Thus it gets the name "big." It more often affecti the bones of the head than tho^e of any other part of the body. Causes. — It is difficuU *t- cay what is the real cause of thl« disease, but it is suppos>"»'^ f» b« caused from an animal feeding on pasture land deficient io the salts of lime. Some think it is wholly c»'Ss'^'i from animals grazing on low-lying, swampy land, where the ^rass grows long and does not contain the full amount of nouri.ide the fracture is on. If you go to straighten his neck he will almost fall dou-n. 204 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE, ireatment. — Keep the animal as quiet as you can and feed him out of a hig^h manger. Bathe the parts well with warm water twice a day and apply the white liniment each time after bathing, and the bones, after a time, will unite together. If it does not heal together the part broken will fester and form matter in it, then open up the parts with a sharp knife and remove the piece of broken bone, then treat as a common wound and you will find it will soon heal up. SORE ON THE TOP OP THE NECK FROM THE COLLAR. Causes. — Are from a bad fitting collar irritating the neck, or from sometimes taking a horse that is not used to a collar and working him too hard before his neck is hardened to the collar, causing his neck to become scalded and sore. Symptoms. — Are very plain, the top of the neck becomes sore and raw looking, and the horse is afraid to let you handle thivt part of his neck. Treatment. — Is to wear a nice fitting collar on him and ha\'e a regular pad for the top of the neck ; dry and clean it every time after using it; clip oflF the mane around the sore and wash it every night with cold water and salt, then dry it well and apply the white lotion, also apply the lotion every morning, without washing, before you take him out to work; sometimes it is necessary to lay him of! work for a few days to get it healed. II. INJURIES AND DISEASES AROUND THE SHOULDERS AND WITHERS. FISTULOUS WITHERS. This disease resembles poll evil, and also gets its name from the part it affects. Causes. — Are from riding a horse with a poor-fitting saddle, wliich bruises the withers; from a horse rolling or getting cast on his back, and in this way bruise the withers and bring on this disease. SymptcniS. — Are swelling and soreness of the withers, and if allowed to nm on without being treated soon forms matter, which will burrow uown around the bones; if it is not attended to soon after it affeiTus the bones the matter that comes from it will have a very bad smell, and little pipes will form which will run down to the bones. ND TREATMBNTiOF THE HORSE. 205 DISEASES A Treatment. — if you notice it as soon as it beg^ins to form matter, bathe well two or three times a day, and each time after bathing- rub the parts with white liniment ; if matter forms, open the swelling- up at the very lowest part so as to let the matter run out, then bathe, as above mentioned, and pour hot green .salve right into the hole. In a case where the discharge of mattf»r smells very bad, and you think the bone is diseased, throw the animal, cut down to the diseased bone and scrape it, then treat with green salve by pouring it into the cut twice a day after bathing. Both this disease and poll evil, in bad cases, are tedious to treat. In dressing the wound always put a twitch on the horse's nose if he is very ugly. If there is a thickening after you have the parts healed up, rub the parts with acid liniment ; apply the linimerit every third day after bathing with luke warm water and salt until the thickening is all gone down. SWEENY (SHOULPER SLIP). This is a common occurrence in young horses. Causes. — It is more likely to occur in young horses than in old ones. It may be caused in ploughing, when the plouijh strikes solid against anything, causing a sudden jerk ; or in horses that are used on a tongue and the wheel passes ov er a stone or rough piece of ground, swinging the end of the toni^ue around, causing the neckyoke to jerk and bruise the shouUier. Anything that will bruise the muscle of the shoulder viill brin^ it on. Symptoms. — They are well marked. As soon as the hor^e receives the injury there will be a slight swelling and sorer es*- of the part, afterwards there is a wasting away of the muscles that are injured. It is generally the muscles lying over the shoukU r blade that become affected with this disease, and in some cases the muscles fall away until there is a large hollow over the lihoulder blade. In some cases the horse is not very lame, but fross a little stiif. Treatmsat. — If the animal is at very heavy work, cha.i^^ U to light work, and if you can allow him to run without wprk so fnuch the better, pathe thp parts well with cold wj^ter and salt ^very night if i.-. the sunimer| after bathing, wipe pry find han'4 fub and pull the skin OMt on the hpUpwj this is to gel \\\s -ikir, ipose trorn the muscle. Every third day after bath'njj; apply ihj 200 THE VETERINARY SCIENOB. la th« beat remedy known. Continue this trc&tment untH th« muscle becomes its natural size and the shoulder is filled out. It sometimes takes the muscles a long time to fill out to theit natural size, but, as a general thing, it gets all right in the course of time. If you can, turn him out to pasture, then blister in andl around the hollow place with the following: Pulverized Cantharides or Spanish Fly 1^ drams. Vaseline or Lard 1 oanoe. Mix well together and rub it all in to the parts, and grease three days after with lard, and repeat blister every three weeks until cured. SCALDED OR GALLED SHOULDERS. Causes. — Generally from the collar getting hard from the sweat drying on it ; or from a bad-fitting collar — either too big or too small. Sometimes, in the spring of the year, when the horse's shoulders are tender and not used to work ; by putting the horse to hard work scalds and makes the shoulders sore. Treatment. — Use a good-fitting collar, and keep it clean by brushing or scraping the dirt off it before using. While you are working your horses, if you are going to allow them to stand a few minutes, raise the collars so as to allow the air to get to the shoulders, also keep the mane from getting under the collar. Every night, after working, bathe with cold water and salt, and after wiping dry, if they are sore, apply the white lotion ; this will heal and harden the skin. BRUISES OF THE SHOULDER. Causes. — This is caused from a bruise of any kind. Symptoms. — A swelling appears around the bruised part soon after it is done, and when you come to examine it, it is found to contain water, or serum. Treatment — Cut into th« swellingf at the bottom part of it and allow the water to run out; make a hole large enough for you to put in your fingfer; after openings, bathe well with luke warm Qvater twice a day; after bathing;, wipe dry, and apply the whits liniment i&round the swelling-, £nd, &s well as doing this, dr&&s t\i9 inside of the swelling, to gat it to heal from tha Jnside, wkh pjxmpo^nd tincture of benaoln or Friar's balsam, or yoa might usg green salve instead of the bensoin to put in th@ wound ; insert it '4P into the hole with a feather. DZSEASSia AND TBSAIMBNI OF THB HORSB. fi07 TLKOHS OK LUaPS 0« THS SHOULDfilt. Causes. — From the animal receiving a bruise of any kind on rhe shouiJi-r, and not being properly tre£ited afterwards, it turni into a han! callous lump. Treatment. — The best treatment is to take a sharp knife and skin the lumps rij^ht out; after this, sew up the skin with a needle and twine, and treat them as a lacerated wound. There is not ji'uch danger in cutting around the shoulder, for there are no large vessels where these lumps are generally found. SHOULDER JOINT LAMENESS. This is a very bad lameness, and the seat of the trouble is generally situated where the large muscle of the shoulder passes down through the pulley-shaped part on the bones on the front of the shoulder joint. Causes. — Fi om a severe sprain of the joint, and is generally caused by a horse becoming cast in his stall ; or from going through deep snow; or from falling on his shoulder; or from a kick from another horse ; and sometimes it is caused from a kind of rheumatic ' iflanimation settling in the joint. SymptoniS. — When the animal is trotting he will step short on the affected leg, and will often strike the toe and stumble, on account of not being able to lift the leg up properly. In standing, he will bring the foot well under him, resting ©n the toe, allowing the knee to bend forward ; this is to give the shoulder a rest. If you pinch him around the shoulder, he will flinch from soreness. Treatment. — if the case is allowed to run on for a long time, and the bone becomes diseased, it is incurable ; but if taken in time, you may effect a cure by bathing the shoulder with luke warm water and salt twice a day. After bathing, wipe dry and rub well with white liniment. Keep the animal in the stable and keep the ihoulder as quiet as you can. After the soreness is pretty well »ut, blister with the following blister t Pdwd«nKi CiutthftridM oi SpMaUih ¥lf , I| dirMne. VMi«Ii&« oar Leurd ,..,.,»... 1 ooa««. Mis: and apply h.i^li of this mixture around the front and side if the shoulder joint ; rub in well and allow it to stand for thr*« 4ays, then grestse with lard. After two or three weeks, if th« ftRimal does net seem better, wash the shoiilder off and blister ^ain, following the same ins^tructions as given befora. 208 THE VBTERINARY SOIENCK. SORE BACK. Causes. — From a bad-fitting harness ; or from the backings of the harness rubbing- on it. Treatment.- — In all cases remove the cause, and, if in the summer time, bathe with cold water and soap; if in the winter, use warm water and soap; do this twice a day. After bathing each time, wipe dry and apply the white lotion. CHRONIC SORES ON BACK OR SHOULDERS (SIT-FAST). Causes. — From working and neglecting a sore shoulder or back. Symptoms. — The sore spot has no tendency to heal and keeps raw all the time while working. Treatment. — Burn the sore with caustic potash and afterward treat by keeping the animal from work, bathe with luke warm water, and, after bathing, apply the white lotion twice a day until it is healed. BROKEN BACK. Causes. — From an an.imal receiving a fall of some kind. Syniptoms.— If the break is near the front of the bones of tlie back it will cause instant death, but if it occurs further back it will cause paralysis of the hind quarters. Treatment. — There is none but to destroy the animal. INJURIES TO THE MUSCLES OF THE BELLY. Causes. — Sometimes when a horse steps on a sharp piece of stick it turns up and catches the muscles of the belly, or from the hook of a cow, or from the kick of another horse. Treatment. — If it is a lacerated wound, stitch it up, and treat it same as given for lacerated wounds ; if it is a punctured wound, and only has a small hole in the skin, examine to see that there is nothing in it, and then use the same treatment as that given for punctured wounds. If the wound is severe enough to allow the bowels to come out, then it is a more serious case, if the bowels are out to any grant extentj and are injured by the horse trar.pisig' an them, it i* beat to destroy him at once, but if the bpwela gr§ only ovit 9^ little, and ar$ not injured or blackened, thrci-.y ans^ «gpij('e the ar-irnali s^x^d wash the bowels off' with a littis iuk-? warnr^ vy^ter anjj shovg X\\en} bacj? intp their pl^cg, then stitch >,".p thg WPund good aqd tight, afterward bath§ the WPynd twics ft Jay with luke war i.i water and apply the white lotion each time aftfc? bathing. If the opening iS very large it is well to wrap a bandage . DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 209 of factory cotton around the body to help to support the 8t!tch«a. Keep the animal quiet and feed on soft food until the wountf heals up. STAKED. This is a very common occurrence among horses. Causes. — The animal steps upon a piece of stick and U turns up and catches him, or from jumping a fence and getting caught, or running against a stake sticking up in a field, or a plow handle or anything that the animal will run against. Treatment.— Pull the stake out if it is still stuck in th« horse, and examine it to see that there is no pieces of the wood left in the wound. There is never much bleeding in a case of this kind, but if it does, stuff the hole with cotton batting and leave It in for twenty-four hours ; after this time it will be safe to take it out, then treat same as for punctured wound. Keep the animal quiet until it begins to heal, and feed on soft food witb plenty of flaxseed in it to keep his bowels loose. HIPPED. This is when the point of the hip bone is knocked down. Causes. — From running through a narrow doorway And striking the side of it, or from falling on hard ground, or anything that will strike the point of the hip hard enough to break a piece off the bone. Symptoms. — At the time it happens there will be swelling and soreness around the point of the hip. After It gets well you wiM notice that the injured hip is not as larg^e as th« other, and it is t nasty eye-sore on a horse. Treatment — The only thing to be done after It is tcnocked down Is to bathe and apply the white liniment after bathing unti) you get the swelling and soreness out, then leava it alone. If \t is a case where the hip swells up and begins to fester around tbt broken piece of bone, cut into it and take the piece out, then treat same as lacerated wound. FRACTURE OF THE HIP BONES. This is generally caused from a horse slipping and falling' en ice, or may be done in any other way when the animal receive* injury enough to fracture the bones. Symptoms. — There is severe lameness, and If you examtat closely by twisting on the bones you vQl hear the broken eade ^ —14— 210 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. the bones grind on each other. In a short time the parts around the fracture become greatly swollen. Treatment. — if the fracture is very bad it is best to destroy the animal, but if you want to try to save it, all that can be done is to keep the animal very quiet and bathe the parts well with luke warm water and vinegar, after rubbing dry, rub well with white liniment twice a day, and in some cases this will affect a cure in the course of a few weeks. ROLLING AWAY OF THE MUSCLES OF THE HIP AFTER FOALING. Causes. — The muscles become injured, while the mare is foal- ing-, by throwing herself down or striking herself against any- thing and bruising the muscles on either hip. Symptoms. — The mare will be noticed to be stiff and sore after foaling, and after a few days there will be a failing away of the muscles of whichever hip was injured. The lameness varies, in some cases it is worse than others. Treatment. — The best and only treatment for this is to let the mare run out and apply a fly-blister to the wasted muscles. Use the following blister : Pulverized Cantharides or Spanish Fly 1|| drama. Vaseline or Lard 1 ounce. Mix well and apply all over the wasted muscles, rub in well and tie the mare so she cannot bite or rub the blistered parts for a few hours, then turn her out and grease in three days afterward, allow it to go for a month, and if she is not better blister ftofain, and keep on blistering every month until she is better. SORB TAIL FROM THE CRUPPER. Causes. — From reining the horse too high, which draws the crupper too tight, or from the horse sweating' and allowing' h to get dry and hard on the crupper, or anything that will irritate the tail. Treatment. — By not using the crupper under his tail for a few days you will have removed the cause, and to heal it wash the parts off with luke warm water and soap ; after bathing it once apply the white lotion twice a day, without bathing, until it It healed up. .FRACTURES OF THE BONES OP THE TAIL. Causes. — Usually from a horse rearing up and fallings baclc mi his haunches. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 211 Treatment. — Keep the animal quiet, and If it \n th« season for flies, cover the animal so it will not have to use its tail in trying to keep them off; if the tail Is much swollen rub with white lini- ment twice a day until the swelling- is gfone down, then leave the , animal quiet until the bones unite. If there is not much swelling bandage moderately tight and leave the bandage on a few days at a time, while the bones are uniting. HIP JOINT LAMENESS. This is a sprain of the round ligament in the hip joint. Causes. — The way this disease generally occurs is from a hof^e stepping on a small, round stone, and the stone turns and throws the leg forward, or from slipping on ice, or falling in other ^ ways and striking the hip. Symptoms. — The horse steps short on the affected side, and in trotting he goes kind of three-cornered, and every time the horse raises his leg the hip raises with it, showing that he is try- ing to keep the hip quiet ; he will also flinch when you press around the hip joint. If the disease is allowed to run on for some time there is a wasting of the muscles around the part. Treatment. — If it is an old standing case, and the joint is dis- eased, it is incurable, but if taken in time the animal may be cured by keeping him quiet and bathing the parts well with luke warm water and salt twice a day; after bathing, each time, wipe dry and apply the white liniment. Keep on with this treatment until you get the soreness and swelling out, then blister with the fol- lowing : Pulverized CuitharldM or SpuiUh Flj \\ dranu. Vaaelin* or Lard 1 oanoo. Mix well and there will be enough to blister the hip three times, each time rub the blister in well, allow it to go for three days, then grease with lard ; let it go for three or four weeks, then blister again ; repeat the blister thii way uatil the animal ia over the lameness. SPRAIN OF THE MUSCLES OP THE HIP. This is more common than hip joint lameness, and is usually caused in heavy horses by slipping while pulling a heavy load; or while driving light horses, you pull them up suddenly, causing; them to slip, and in this way they sometimes sprain the muscle* of the hip. 212 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Symptoms. — There Is swelling and soreness of th« muscl«a, which will be best noticed while standing behind the animal, and there will be great difHculty in bringing the leg forward. Treatment.— Keep the animal quiet ; bathe well with luke warm water and sail two or three times a day; after bathing, wipe dry and rub the parts well with white liniment. Follow up thi.-. treatment until the animal is better. CHAPTER XXIII. DISEASES OF THE FRONT AND HIND LEGS. CAPPED ELBOW. This is a thickening at the back of the elbow joint. Causes. — From shoeing and leaving a long heel on the shoe, which catches the animal in that part while he is lying down ; or from wearing a heavy belly band on the harness, which rubs against and irritates the elbow. Treatment. — If it is caused by the shoe, have him shod with a short-heeled shoe, and, for a time, tie an old bag around the foot, so when he is lying down the foot will not irritate the elbow. Treat with the following as oon as noticed ' Bathe well with luke warm water and vinegar twice a day. n it is not raw, only swollen, use the whit? liniment after bathing ; but if it is raw, use the white lotion ; this will generally bring it all right. In some cases it festers and matter forms in it ; in this case open it up with a knife at the lowest part of the "swelling, and treat it the same as above mentioned, only melt a little green salve and put it in the hole each time after dressing it until it heals. If it is of long standing, and there is a large, hard lump formed on the cap of the elbow, the only treatment is to throw the animal and secure him, and skin the lump out carefully, which can be done without much bleeding. After you cut the lump out, draw the skin together with a few stitches and treat the same as a lacerated wound, by bathing with luke warm water and applying the white lotion twice a day until it heals up. FRACTURE OF THE BONES IN THE- SHOULDER. Causes. — Generally from falling, or from running against nomethi' g. Symptoms. — There will be swelling and soreness of the parts, and the animal will be very lame, and, on moving the shoulder, vou will hear the ands of the bones grating on each other. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 218 ireaiment. — In most cases k is best to destroy the animal, but if you attempt to treat it, keep the animal quiet and bathe with luke warm water twice a day. After bathin^, apply the white liniment ; this is to keep down the swelling and inflamma' tion. The treatment in this case is of very little success. Tha parts become badly swollen and the animal is in severe pain, and it is best to have him destroyed. INJURIES AND SPRAINS OF THE KNEE. Causes. — Generally from the animal falling and hurting the knees. Symptoms, — Tfce animal cannot bend the knee in walking, and when you Viandle it, it seems very sore. Treatment. — Keep the animal quiet, and bathe twice a day with luke warm water and salt, and after bathing apply the white liniment; but if the knee is cut, use the white lotion after bathing If the cut is large, put a few stitches in it, and treat as above mentioned. STRIKING THE KNEE (SPEEDY CUT). This is where the animal strikes the knee with the opposite foot. Causes. — This is caused generally by bad shoeing, or using too heavy a shoe on colts ; some horses with high action have a tendency to strike the knees. Symptoms. — There is swelling on the inside of the knee ; it is very painful, and as soon as you go to handle it the animal will jerk his knee away from you. In some cases it becomes very much swollen and forms matter in it. When the horse is walking, in bringing his leg forward he will swing it out and can hardly get along, it being so sore ; while in other cases, where he does not strike it so severe, the inside of the knee becomes thickened and hard. Treatment. — Leave the animal off work, and bathe the parti well with luke warm water and salt two or three times a day; the more bathing the better. Each time after bathing, rub dry and apply the white liniment. If there is matter formed, open it up with a sharp knife to allow the matter to run out, then treat as above mentioned. After it is healed up, if there is a thickening:, blister the thickening with the following: Pulverized Cantharides or Spaaiah Fly 2 drams. Vaseline or Lard 1 dram. Mix well and rub what you can nicely get on over the ■welling ; rub in well and grease the third day; let it go for a ;ouple of weeks, then blister a^faia, and repeat the blistaring 2U THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. until the thickening is gone. After this, be careful how you have the animal shod, and if he is inclined to strike, wear a knee booi on him. FRACTURE OF THE BONES OF THE KNEE. Causes. — From falling on the knees. Symptoms. — The animal will be very lame, the knees become 'swollen and is hot and tender. Treatment. — Keep the animal quiet and bathe well with luke warm water — the more the better — after bathing, each time apply while liniment. It generally takes a case of this kind four or five weeks to get better. After the soreness and swelling has gone down it is well to blister a few times with the fly blister to get the soreness and thickening out of the knee. PUFFY ENLARGEMENTS AROUND THE KNEES AND FETLOCKS (BURSAL ENLARGEMENTS). Causes. — From striking the knee against the manger while pawing, or from lying on the hard floor, or anything that will bruise the knee or fetlock. Symptoms. — There is a puff"y enlargement, but not sore to handle, and it feels as if it was full of oil. Treatment. — Bathe well once a day with cold water and salt, rub dry and bandage for three hours. After you remove the bandage — every third day — apply acid liniment, which will make, as a general thing, a complete cure. Never attempt to open a Bursal, for it will allow the oil that is in it to run out. In all cases, if you find the cause, remove it. SPLINT AFFECTING THE KNEE. This is where the splint is very high up on the bones and affects the knee. Treatment. — Use the same treatment that is given for splint, but in some cases it is very hard to effect a cure, KNEE SPRUNG. This is when the knee is bent forward. Causes. — From hard and fast work, or from standing in a stall that has a big slant, high in front and low behind, or from feeding out of a very high rack, or from a sprain and contraction of the back tendons, or a horse being shod with high Jieels will cause it. Horses with weak, small knees are more subject to this than horses with good, strong straight knees. An animal may be very badly knee sprung and still be a good work hors*. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 216 Treatment.— If you want to work the animal and treat it, first fix the fl lor, see that it is level and also feed him off the floor Bathe the legs with cold water and salt twice a day, after bathing rub dry and apply the white liniment every night, after the liniment is dried in, bandage for a few hours, shoe the animal with a flat shoe, if the roads are not slippery. If you do not want to use the horse turn him out and blister the back cords once a month with the following : Pulverized Cantharldes or Spanish Fly 2 drama. Vaseline or Lard .1 ounce. Mix and there will be enough in this to blister both legs once, rub in well and tie his head short so he can he can not bite it for a few hours, then in three days, grease it and let him run for a month, and repeat the blister until he is better. CALF-KNEED. This is not a disease but a fault in the formation of the knee, this is where the animal stands with his knees bent back. Treatment. — There is none; only in buying a horse watch that he is not calf-kneed for they are bad stumblers. SPRAIN OF THE BACK TENDONS. There is more or less swelling around the sprained tendons, the animal will be lame in travelling, and if you press on the cord- he will flinch. Treatment. — Bathe with cold water and salt if in summer, but if in winter bathe with luke warm water and salt twice a day, rub dry and apply the white liniment, and an hour or so after applying* tlic liniment, bandage, leaving the bandage on for three hour> After he is pretty well over the lameness, and if there is a thicken- ing left, blister with the following : Pulvei iz(^d Cantharides or Spanish Fly 2 drama. Vaseline or Lard 1 ounce. Mix and rub enough in to blister him well, and grease the third day. Keep the animal quiet while treating him. SPRAIN OF THE FETLOCK JOINT. Causes. — From the horse stepping crooked or turning over on his ankle. Symptoms. — The animal will be very lame, the joint will b» swollen and sore to handle. Treatment.— Use the same treatment as given in sprain of tht back tendons. 21% , THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. KHUCKLINQ. Causes. — From hard and fast work. Horses that stand »i raight on the fetlock are more apt to knuckle. Symptoms. — There will be a jerking forward of the fetlock ivery time the* animal steps, and in standing the animal stands ••■ith his fetlock joint bent forward instead o'f back. Treatment. — If it is a case of long standing there can be nothing done, but if it is only coming on blister him around the fetlock and turn him out. Blister with Powdered CantharideB or Spanish Fly 2 drams. Vaseline or Lard 1 ounce. Mix and apply around the fetlock, rub the blister in well and allow it to stand for three days, then grease and let it go for a few weeks and blister again ; repeat the blistering until the joint gets strong. There will be enough in the above prescription to blister two fetlocks. KNUCKLING IN COLTS. Causes. — From being left in the stable without getting much exercise during the winter and in the spring he will be knuckled in the fetlocks. Treatment. — Before turning him out blister around the fet- locks well with the above blister, and in three days afterwards grease and turn him out to pasture. INTERFERING, OR STRIKING THE FETLOCKS. This;itrouble'^is ^mostly met [with] in'colts when they are first shod. Causes. — Sometimes from shoeing with coo heavy a shoe and putting the horse on a long trip before he is used to it. Some horses naturally travel so close behind that they brush the legs together. Symptoms. — Soreness on the Inside of t^e fetlock, and some- times the hair and skin will be knocked off, ind in severe cases will swell badly When the horse, in travelling, strikes himself he will hop on three legs with pain for a little piece, 'hen be all right until he strikes again. Treatment. — Bathe the legwell with lukewarm water and a little castile soap twice a day, if it is swoolen, after bathing rub dry and apply thp white lotion. Have the shoes changed and m*^rie light. If the ammal is in poor condition, feed him well and do not work him too hard until he gets strong and in good shape for his work. While you are driving, it is well to wear an interfering boot on th« DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE,. 217 t«f , and by careful shoeinif and gfettlngf him ttrong and abla for hii work, he generally gets over it all right. WIND GALLS. These are little puffy swellings at the back part of the fetlock }o\nt. Causes. — From hard driving, in some horses it comes on easier than others. Symptoms. — It does not generally lame the animal, but it is an eye sore. These little puffy swellings are full of oil, which comes from the bursal that secretes the oil which lubricates the back tendons where they work over the back of the fetlock. Treatment. — If in the summer, bathe the legs well every night with cold water and salt, then rub dry and put on a bandage ; leave this on for a couple of hours every night after bathing, and every third night give the leg a good rubbing with acid liniment after taking the bandage off. If this does not cure him in a few weeks, blister with the fly blister used in knuckling, and treat him the same after blisteringv THICKENINGS AROUND THE FETLOCK. Causes. — ^This is generally from hard work and from sprains of the joint, and is often seen in livery horses. Treatment. — Blister the same and use the same treatment afterwards as is given for knuckling, only blister heavier. FRACTURES OF THE BONES BELOW THE KNEE. Causes. — Driving a horse fast along a very hard road when he is feeling good, will sometimes fracture these bones, or in jumping a fence, or in running away, or getting the leg caught, or anything that will give the leg a blow hard enough to fracture the bones. Symptoms. — ^The horse will be very lame and will hold the leg up with pain, and by taking hold of the leg and twisting it, you will hear the ends of the fractured bones grate together. Treatment. — If it is in an old animal destroy him at once, but if it is a colt or young horse, keep him quiet in slings, after yovi get the leg straight, then apply a starch bandage, which is a bandage wrung out of starch, put a good lot of the bandage on and hold the leg straight until tha bandage hardens, after that it will hold the broken leg straight ; leave it on for four or five weekr until you are sure the bones arc well knit together. 218 THE„ VETERINARY SCIENCE. BREAK K>WM. This is where the tendons and ligaments at the back of the fetlock gfive way and allows the fetlock to drop down almost on to the ground. This is mostly seen in running or racing horses where ihey are put to very severe exertion. Treatment. — You cannot restore the fetlock back to its natural state, but blister once a month with the following: Powdered Canthardiea or Spanish Fly 2 drains. " Vaseline or Lard 1 ounce. Mix and rub about half of thii in along the back of the fetlock, allow it to stand for three days and let the animai run out to pasture. Repeat the blister until you get him pretty well over the lameness. If he is very lame, better keep him in the stable for a while, and bathe with warm water and salt twice a day aftei bathing, apply the white liniment until he is pretty well over the lameness, then blister and turn him out. SPRAIN OP THE STIPPLE JOINT. Symptoms. — The animal cannot bring the leg forward, and it is very sore when you press around the joint. Treatment, — Bathe twice a day with hot water and vinegar, with » little salt in it, after bathing wipe dry and apply the white liniment. Keep the animal quiet to give the sprained parts rest. mSLOCATION OP THE PETELLA OR STIFPLB OUT. This is where the petella or stiffle bone slips out of the pulley- like process of bone in front of the stiffle joint, and as soon as this slips out it locks the joint so the animal cannot move it. Causes. — It generally occurs in young colts or young horses that are worked hard and get down thin ; it comes on by the animal slipping off the end of a plank, or slipping while in the act of getting up. Symptoms. — The horse will act like an animal with its foot nailed to the floor ; it cannot get it forward or back. When you feel around the joint it will be drawn and hard, and you can see the joint bone is out too far, and when it is left out for a long time the joint becomes swollen. Treatment.— It is very simple to treat in most cases. Have an assistant to hold the animal's head and another to pi'll the affected leg vvell forward while you place your hand against the joint and shove it in toward the animal as hard as you can, until the bone goes into its place, after which the animal can move his DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 219 leg; as soon as it is in walk the animal on a level piece of ground until the affected parts regain their strength. If it slips out tho second tim? it is easier put in, by pressing it the saiiie way. Bathe the parts with warm water and salt, after bathing rub dry and apply the white liniment twice a day until the joint gets strong and the soreness is all out. If the animal is in poor condition feed well and try to get his strength up. PARTIAL DISLOCATION OF THE STIFFLE. T!»is generally occurs in young foals when they are running over a rough pasture field, or in colts in the spring of the year when they are very weak. At first, when noticed, the stiffle will slip out and the leg will be locked for a hop or two, then it will slip in and he will go on all right again. The stiffle keeps slip- ping in and out for some time until the bones gets diseased and weakened, and then the bone gets about half way out and stays there. After this the joint will be larger than natural and the animal will never have proper action again. Treatment. — As soon as it Is noticed is the time to treat it. Place the animal in a level plac» where he can not run around much and feed well to get him strong as soon as you can ; apply a light blister around the stiffle joint made of the following: Pulverized Cantharides or Spanish Fly li drams. Vaseline or Lard 1 ounce. Mix and apply a light coat of the blister over the joint, rub in well and grease the third day. Let it go for a month then blister again and repeat this every month until the stiffle is good and strong. FRACTURE OF THE THIGH BONE. Causes. — Generally from a kick of another horse, and, although the bone itself is fractured, the coverings will hold the bone to its place in some cases. Symptoms. — For a few days after the kick the animal will seem lame and you may not suspect a fracture of the bone, but all at once the covering of the bone gives way and the horse will almost fall, and when you come to examine it you will see the leg is fractured, for you can swing the leg around. Trea.tment. — When the bones give right away, destroy the horse, hxjt if the horse gets a severe kick and is a little lame and you are afraid of fracture, keep the animal perfectly quiet, bathe with warm water ar.d salt and after bathing apply white liniment, 220 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. to g-et soreness and inflammation out. By doing this, the covering of the bone is so strong- that it will hold the bones together until it knits tog-ether and he gets all right. SPRAIN OF THE MUSCLES ON THE FRONT OF THB HIND LEG, BETWEEN ) THE HOCK AND STIFFLE JOINT. Causes. — Similar to other sprains. Symptoms. — The muscle will be swollen and sore in moving the animal forward, when he lifts the leg and goes to bring it forward — instead of it going forward it will fly backwards and up- wards. The muscle that is aff"ected is called the flexor metatarsi muscle. Treatment. — Keep the animal very quiet, bathe well with luke warm water and salt three times a day, and after bathing rub dry and apply the white liniment. SPRAIN OF THE MUSCLE ON THE INSIDE OP THB HIND LEG RUNNING UP FROM THE HOCK. Causes. — From a severe sprain of the leg by slipping in drawing. Symptoms. — There is thickening of the muscles above the hock, and the animal will be stiff for a few days, the stiff"ness will soon disappear, but it will leave a thickening if not treated. Treatment. — Leave the animal off work and bathe the parts twice a day with luke warm water and salt, if in the winter, but. If in summer use cold water and salt ; after bathing rub dry and apply the white liniment, after the animal gets over the stiffness and soreness, blister to get the thickening out, using the following: Pulverized Canthardiei 2 drama. Vaseline or Lard 1 ounce. Mix and apply about half the amount, rub it in well and let it go for three days, then grease. Repeat the blister in three weeks and repeat it every three weeks until the thickening is all gond down. Turn the animal out while you are treating it. BOG SPAVIN. This is a puffy enlargement partly on the inside and partly on the front of the hock joint. There is an over amount of joint oil secreted in the joint, and this bulges out the capsular ligament at this part of the joint. Causes. — Horses with round, meaty joints are most subjected to this. Keeping young colts in the stable and feeding them high without much exercise, or fast work or strain of the joint will cause it. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 221 Symptoms. — There is a puffy enlargement on the inside and front of the hock joint sometimes larger than others, by f'eelintj' it you can tell it is full of oil. If it comes on from a sprain the animal will be lame for a few days, but this passes off and leaves an enlargement. Treatment. — If the animal is lame, bathe with luke warm water and salt twice a day, in warm weather use cold water, and in cold weather use warm water, after bathing rub dry and apply the white liniment. Keep up this treatment for a few days until he is over the soreness and lameness, then blister with the follow- ing, and turn the animal out. Pulverieed Canthardiwi or Spanish Fly 2 dram*. Vaseline or Lard 1 ounce. > Mix and there will be enough to blister two or three times according to the size of the bog, rub in well and in three days grease. Repeat the blister in a few weeks as soon as the skin is nicely healing up. It needs to be blistered several times before you get it all down. Often where there is a bog spavin there is a thoroughpin in connection with it. For further particulars refei to-last paragraph under the heading of capped hock. THOROUGHPIN. Causes. — Similar to those given for bog spavin and the en- largements are on each side of the hock near the back. Treatment. — The treatment is the same as given for bog jpavin. Never, under any circumstance open either a bog spavin or a thoroughpin, for if you do, you will have a case of open joint to deal with. CAPPED SOCK. This is a common dis«as«. It is a swelling- or thickening on the cap of the hock. Causes. — From an injury of some kind, such as from kicking in the stable and striking the hock against the stall, or some horses will do it in laying down. Symptoms. — Swelling on the cap of the hock, which is gen- erally soft but not sore to handle, and is of a puffy nature, for it is mostly oil that causes the enlargement on account of the little bursa being injured, it secretes too much oil and that is what causes the enlargement. It does not lame the horse or interfere with his usefulness, but it is a bad eye-sore. Treatment. — If it is caused from kickit^ the stall, place the horse so ht cannot strike it. If bein^ treated as soon as U W 222 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. ion; bath* with luk« warm water and salt, rub dry and apply the white liniment. K««p this treatment up until the soreness and swelling i» all out, then blister the thickening with the foll CAIfCERS. They art very rare in the horse but are fully described in tumors and cancers in cattle. CURB. This ia rupture and enlargement of the ligament that runs down the back part of the hock joint — this ligament receives the name of calcaneocuboid ligament. Causes. — Horses that have crooked or curby legs are more liable to this than horses with straight legs. It generally comes on from a severe sprain by slipping while drawing or driving, or, from rearing up or backing the animal forcibly with a heavy load or in deep snow. Symptoms. — It is easily detected by looking at the hind leg at the side, you will see the enlargement at the back of the hock, or by running the hand down over the back of the hock joint you can feel it. When the curb is first sprung on, the animal will be lame, and, in travelling, he will step long, somewhat similar to ring'bone lameness. After the animal rests a day or two, and is driven, at first, he will not be very lame, but after driving a while he becomes very lame, and when allowed to stand he rests the leg by standing on his toe and throwing the fetlock forward. After a time the animal will get over the lameness if not treated, but the enlargement will remain. Treatment. — Get the soreness and lameness out of the liga- ment by bathing with luke warm water and salt twice a day, if in winter, but if in summer cold water and salt ; after bathing rub dry and apply the whit* liniment. When the soreness and swell- ing is all out of the ligament, bUst«r with the following to reduce the thickening. PolrerlMd Oantharidw or BpMisk T\j I drams. VaMllne or Lard 1 ouno*. Mix, and there will b« enough in this to blister three times. Cut the hair oflF around the curb and rub one-third of the mixture in well, in three days grease and let It go for a couple of weeks, then wash the leg oflF with luke warm water and soap and blister again, then grease as before, repeat this blistering every thre« weeks until the enlargement is all gone. During the treatment do not work the animal, but ]£ you miut work him keep him wel- •hod •• he wUl Mt Bli|^ Diaa^SfiS AND TRKATMKNT OF IHS H0E8K. 228 This 1« a kind at ehronie inflamm&tlon )a tha tendons ti»4 ligAmenta around the joints, and may affect any joint of th« b*»dy. Causes. — i* *^ten followi waakening diseases wheH )h« animal is aliowear to run out and lay on th« cold, damp ground oi from bad blood, v/hen ther« is too much acid in it, Symptoms. — Ther« is a slight soreness, swelling- and lame- ness in the joints, changing from one joint to the other, and is noticed to be worse in damp weather. Treatment. — Rub the affected joints well two or three times 9 day with white liniment ; also give the following : SaUoyllo Aold J pound, Kitrate of Potwh w 8«ltpetr« i " Common Soda \ ** Mix thoroughly and give a large teaspoonful three times » day. This medicine acts like a charm in rheumatism. CHAPTER XXIV. DISEASES OF THE FEET. ACUTE FOUNDER (LAMINITIS). This is inflammation of the sensitive part of the foot, or wha. is commonly called the quick of the foot. Causes. — This disease is very easily brought on by driving o- working a horse hard and then giving him a cold drink o\ watei . or allowing him to stand in a draft while he is warm. Thi> checks the perspiration suddenly and drives the blood to the feel, which c-ts up inflammation in them. Sometimes by giving ai, animal a small feed of wheat it will first cause acute indigestion, and then turn to a bad case of founder. It may affect mares u few days after foaling, especially if they do not have their natural flow of milk, or if by catching cold after foaling it should settle in their feet. Hard driving and bad shoeing will also cause it. Lung troubles sometimeN terminate in founder. Symptoms, — Founder generally affect the front feet, but may Affect the hind feat and the symptoms are plain. The puls$ beat^ strong and runs up to from 60 to 75 beats per minuts. The animal sweats freely and breathes heavy and quick ; he generally stands on his feet for a few days at the first of ths di-;ease ; hi stands in a peculiar way ; his front feet will be stretched out ^« 236 THE VBTERINARY SCIENCE. far as he can put meiii, And »ianUin^ oik u'lc hccl^ ir^in^ lo relieve the feet, while he has the hind feet drawn forward and well under him to throw as much weight as he can on his hind leg's to relieve the front feet His feet are very hot and feverish, and the horse can hardly move forwards or backwards. On account of the in- flammation being inside the hard resisting hoof where there is no room for swelling ; it is one of the most painful diseases that the horse is liable to, and if he does not get relief in a few days the quick of the foot becomes destroyed, and the bone will get loose from the inside of the wall and drop down on the sole, and when it does it will cause the sole to become bulged out in an unnatural way, and then it is known a» a club (pumiced) foot. Treatment. — Give a dose of physic consisting of Bitter Aloes 8 to 10 drama. Common Soda 1 teaspoonf ul. (ringer I " Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 10 drops. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench. If he is in high condition take half a pail of blood away from him, then take off his shoes and place his front feet in a tub and bathe them for two or three hours at a time with luke warm water — hot as you can bear your hand in it — two or three times a day ; after each bath rub dry and apply white liniment around the feet and legs, poultice the feet with hot linseed meal and bran and leave the poultice on till you are ready to bathe again, repeat this treat- ment until the inflammation is checked ; give the animal plenty of cold water to drink — a little at a time — and if he wants to eat give M>ft feed and the following dreneh : Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre. . 1 teaspoonf uL Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 10 drops. Water 1 pint. Mix and give as a drench three times a day, continuing the drenches until the animal gets relief. Clothe the body well and have the stall well bedded to induce him to lie down for it will help to relieve his feet. The after treatment is, blister with the follow- ing and turn him out to pasture : Pulverizi d Caneharides or Spanish Fly 1^ drame. Lard or Vaseline 1 ounce. M'x well and apply all of it around the tops of both the feet, rub in well and grease three days after, then turn him out to pasture. DTRKASKS AND TREATMENT OP THE HORSE M7 SORE FEET (CHRONIC FOUlSDliR). This is a soreness or a chronic inflammation of the feet. Causes. — From hard work, especially driving on hard roads. Horses with small or flat feet are more subject to this than other horses, but any of them are liable to it ; bad shoeing-, letting the shoe rest too much on the sole will cause it ; standing on a dry floor and the feet becoming dry, hard and contracted. Symptoms. — It generally affects the front feet ; they become hot, dry and very hard, and, in some cases, become contracted at the heels, which is caused from the fever and soreness in the foot. The horse has a peculiar stumbling action, and he tries to step on the heels first ; if you press around the feet with a pincers or your hands the animal will flinch. After a time, from trying to favor his feet, the muscles of the chest will gradually waste away and leave the chest hollow. This must not mislead you and make you think there is anything wrong with the chest. Sometimes when the chest falls away some call it chest founder, but this is a mis- taken idea, for there is no such thing as chest founder, the whole trouble arises in the feet. Treatment. — The treatment is not very satisfactory in some cases. If it a valuable animal soak the feet well in warm water and salt, in a tub containing six or eight inches of water ; leave the feet in the water two or three hours at a time, twice a day ; every night put on a hot poultice of half linseed and bran, leave it on all night. After the soreness is pretty well out blister around the top of the hoof with the following : Powdered Cantharides or Spanish Fly 1 dram. Vtweline or Lard 1 ounce. Mix and apply all of it around the tops of both front feet and turn the horse out to pasture fcr a long while, grease the blister the third day. After the horse is all right and he is brought in to work again let him stand on a ground floor, for an animal once affected with this disease is more liable to be affected again. Be careful in shoeing ; we recommend the bar shoe. If it is a horse you want to keep shod, and he is not of much value, keep him on a ground floor and pack the feet every night with cow manure, blue clay, or anything that will keep the moisture in the foot, and in very bad cases by blistering and turning out to pasture for a while will help it. ^Sd THB TBTSRINAJRY BOISNOJg, CLUB (rUHIC£]>) FOOT. Thin ir» wh«ri the fadt bone bvdomei i^prntutrnd frum thv i»aidtt ef th« walli! of the foot and drops down ha the sole and frog ef th« foot Thiss diseass Is g-enerally tha result -af acuta founder when it Is allowed to run on too long". This disease spoils a horse for road work, but he may be fixed up so he will work pretty well on the farm at slow work by blistering- him around the tops of the hoofs, same as is done for chronic founder, and turn him out for some time and shoe with a heavy shoe well corked up, and have it well beveled out so it will not bear any weight on the sole of the foot ; have the whole weight to come on the wall, also have the shoes set regular about once a month. CORNS. Corns are generally found affecting the front feet, but may be found in the hind feet, and are also more frequently found on the inside heel of the front foot, but may be found in either or both heels. Causes. — Horses with weak, flat heels are more subject to it, and it is generally brought on from bad shoeing-, and by the shoe resting too heavy on the heel and bruising the horn between the bar and quarter of the wall ; driving on hard roads has a tendency to bring on corns ; steady driving will also cause them. Symptoms. — The horse is more or less lame in most cases, and is more so just after he bruises it. When standing, if it is in one foot, he will be noticed to point that foot out, if in both feet, he will first point one out and then the other, changing from one to the other every little while. Th« n»iti»»nl will g-o pretty well on soft ground, but will be noticed to gut lame as soon as he strikes a hard piece of road. On raisings tlM fo«t and tapping or priming on tha affected quartar, he wtH ifaich. In taking the shoe off and paring down the quauctwr there wfll ba a red spot in the corner af tSie sole. In case the cora Wco«ea bruised and festers, tha symptoms will be more m&wwr%t ha will hold up tha foot and in walking he will step long-, and wM etep on the toe, then hop on tha ether foot to get along. Tha affected quarter viU be hot and tender when pressed on, and if he doas not soon get relief it will fester and break out at the top of the hoof. Treatment.— In many cases of corns it is not necessary to lay the animal off, but shoe him so the shoe will not press on the ^eels and apply a poultice of hot linseed and bran to the foot fior a DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 229 few nig-hts. A bar shoe is a very good one to put on, for it throws the weight on the frog and relieves the heels and quarter. In case it is a festering corn remove the shoe and pare down into the corn until you strike the matter, allow it to escape, this will give him relief, then poultice as above mentioned and allow the animal to rest a few days, and when you are going to use him again shoe him with a bar shoe, and see that the shoes do not press on his heels and quarters, and if the soreness continues, blister around the affected quarter wifh the same blister that is used for chronic founder. The after treatment is to keep the animal shod regular and see that the shoes do not press too much on the heels. THRUSH IN THE ?EET. This is a disease that affects the frog of the foot, and is mostly seen in the hind feet, but often affects the front feet. Causes. — From standing in wet and filth, or anything that will rot the frog. Heavy horses are more subject to this disease than light horses. Symptoms. — They are veffy plain, the animal may be just a little lame, but if he steps on anything very hard he will flinch, and by examining the foot you will find that the centre of the frog is eaten out by the disease, and there is a discharge that comes from it which has a very bad smell. Treatment. — Keep him out of the wet and dirt, and keep the >table very clean. Cut off the dead horn from around the frog and wash out the diseased part of the frog with warm water and a little soap, after it is cleaned well poultice with a hot poultice of half linseed meal and bran for a few days until the foot is nice and soft, after this clean the poultice out of the frog and dust in some dry calomel about twice a week until it is better; another cheap remedy is to pack the foot full of common salt a couple of times a week; another is to pour a few drops of butter of antimony into the diseased foot once a week. Do this until all the discharge and smell is gone from the frog, after that leave the frog alone until it goes down itself. NAILS IN THE FEET (PUNCTURES). This is a very common thing, especially in large cities. This is where a horse steps on a nail and it runs in to the bottom of his foot. When a horse is lame always examine the bottom of the foot to see that there is no iiail or anything in it. 280 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Symptoms. — It it is in the hind foot the animal knuckles over and becomes lame very suddenly. If in the front foot he points it out whilft ■'standing, and when he steps on it will put as little weight on it as possible and hop on the sound leg. If you ex- amine the foot you may find the nail itself; if not, by tapping around the foot with a small hammer you will find where the tender spot is, then pare around it and you will find a small, black spot where the nail went in. Treatment. — If you find the nail pull it out and pare out the hole where the nail went in almost down to the quick, after this drop in a few drops of butter of antimony, which will kill any poison or rust that may be left in. After this keep the animal quiet and apply a hot poultice of half linseed and bran for a few days until he is entirely over the lameness before you work him. The danger of these punctures are that they may start to fester, which is a very painful thing, and also very dangerous. If it starts to fester, the animal will hold the foot up with pain ; it will be swollen around the top and very hot. Cut down well into the hole and allow the matter to escape ; bathe with hot water and poultice to relieve the pain and draw all the matter out. In cases where you cut a large hole and the quick bulges out, burn it with butter of antimony once a' day. After the animal is able to walk nicely blister the foot around the top of the hoof with the same blister used in chronic founder and turn him out to pasture till the soreness •» all out. PRICKS IN THE FOOT. These are injuries which are caused in shoeing by driving nails too close to the quick. Symptoms. — At the timf> uf driving the nail the horse will give a sudden jerk, showing that the nail struck the quick. Treatment. — Remove the shoe and keep the horse quiet for a dav or two ; if he is lame poultice the foot with hot linseed. If he continues'' to be lame, pare around the nail hole and give it the same treatment that is given for punctures of other nails. In any of these cases, if you^want to work the animal when he is getting better, plug the hole with tar and cotton batting and put a leather under the §hoe to keep the dirt out. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 231 QUARTER t?.ACK. This receives its name on account of the part of the foot it affects ; it generally affects the front feet, and is more often seen to affect the inside quarter of the loot. Causes.— Certain breeds of animals are more subject to this than others, especially if the feet are of a brittle natuie, and it is often seen in road horses, more especially if they have high knee action and strike the ground heavy. Symptoms. — At first a small crack appears in the quarter of the foot just below the hair ; if the animal is kept to work he will get lame, the crack will get larger and longer, and will some- times bleed. If the animal is kept working, it will sometimes f'^ster on account of the irritation being kept up. Treatment. — Remove the shoe, -pare out the bottom of the affected quarter so the shoe will not rest upon it, then shoe with a bar shoe; as well as this, pare out the crack all the way down on each side — almost to the quick — from the top to the bottom of it so it will not be pressing on itself. If the animal is a little lame poultice the foot for a f«w days until the soreness is all out. After this apply a little of the same blister that is used for chronic founder just above the crack in the hair. This is to stimulate the growth of the horn and make the hoof grow and draw out all the soreness. CAULKS. This is common in the fall and spring when horses are sharp shod. Causes. — From the horse or his mate stepping on his foot and cutting around the top of the hoof. Treatment. — If it bleeds freely apply Monsell's solution of iron, and if you have not this apply a pad of cotton batting and bandage tightly over it, leave it on for twenty-four hours. The danger in caulks is that sometimes hair and dirt gets worked down into the caulk and it begins to fester and works down intr) the foot. In all cases where the animal shows any signs of lame- ness, pare out the hoof around the caulk to the bottom of i-t, then poultice for a few days, change the poultice twice a day to keep it hot and each time the poultice is changed, pour a little hot g^reen salve into it. 232 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. OVERREACH. This gfenerally occurs in fast horses where they are speeded vithout having on quarter boots, by stepping" too far with their nind foot and catching- the heel of the front foot. Treatment. — Treat the same as a lacerated wound, and in ali cases where you are speeding fast horses, wear boots on them to prevent them from catching their quarters. BRUISES OF THE SOLE OF THE FOOT. Causes. — From stepping on a stone or any hard substance or from the shoe pressing on the sole. Symptoms. — The animal in travelling steps very long on the affected foot, and by tapping the sole of the foot with a hammer he will flinch when the bruised spot is struck. If the bruise is allowed to run on without being treated it will commence to festet and the symptoms will be more severe ; the horse will hardly be able to put his foot to the ground, and it will be hot and swollen around the top. Treatment. — Remove the shoe and find the affected spot by tapping on the sole with a hammer, and if you do not think it is festering poultice with a hot poultice of half linseed meal and bran ; change the poultice twice a day to keep it hot until the soreness is all out, but if you think it is festering pare a small hole in through the sole to the festering part, to allow the matter to escape, after this poultice as above mentioned until the animal js better. Each time, when changing the poultice, melt a little green salve and dop it into the hole you cut. CUTS OF ANY KIND AROUND THE FEET. Refer to the treatment of wounds. FALSE QUARTER. Causes. — From a cut around the top of the hoof which some- times causes a false growth of horn, in the form of a ridge, to grow down the hoof as it grows out. Treatment. — File the ridge down level with the wall of the foot with a rasp. COFFIN JOINT LAMENESS (NAVICULAR DISEASE). This is getting to be a very common disease, and is se^-n mostly in driving horses. Causes. — From hard and fast work. Animals with sliort, uprig^ht pastern joints, short, stubby action, or horses v\i;h li't>h DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE, 233 pounding- action are more often affected with this disease; allow- ingf the toes to grow too lon^ and cutting down the heels when shoeing them will cause it. Symptoms. — There is usually more or less lameness ; in some cases it comes on sudden and severe, while in others it gradually comes on for weeks, and sometimes for months, before it is much noticed. While standing the horse will point the feet out, and in some cases this is the first symptom that will be noticed. If both feet are affected the horse suiTers pain and while standing will first throw the weight on one foot and then on the other. In travelling he has what is known as a groggy action. Another well marked symptom is a wasting of the muscles of the chest. On examining the feet the heels will be found to be contracted and hard, and by raising the foot up and pressing with your thumb on the back part of the heel the horse will flinch. If you notic^ the shoe the horse has been wearing it will be found to be worn most at the toe. Treatment. — II it is a bad case of long standing it is incurable, but il taken in time, by resting the horse and by bathing the feet twice a day for an hour or two at a time (if in the winter bathe with warm water, if in summer use cold water). After bathing apply white liniment around the top of the hoof and every night poultice the foot with hot linseed meal and bran, half and half. Continue this treatment until he is pretty well over the lameness, then blister the foot same as in chronic founder and let him out to •pasture. If it is oi long standing and you want to use the horse, have him stand or» a ground floor and pack his feet every night with cow manure or blue clay or anything that has a tendency to soften the foot. Shoe him with high heeled shoes and have it low in front. ^ In some cases neurotomy is performed, that is, where tile operation of nerving the foot is performed, this is done with a view of taking tho feeling away from the foot. The way this is performed is by throwing the animal and securing him, then make a cut along the inside and the outside of the leg between the knee and fetlock about *^alf ways, make the cut about two inches iong lengthwise in tlie groove between the shin bone and the back tendons, in this groove you will find the nerve, artery and vein vvliicli runs down the leg, then cut about an inch out of the ner\c so it will not unite together again, do this on both sides of the affected leg or legs, then stitch the cut up, bandage the leg and 234 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. treat as a common wound, bathe and apply the white lotion twice a day^ After this is performed the horse will g-et up and go off as thoug'h there was nothing wrong, but after this operation be care- ful in shoeing him and examine the foot every nigiit, for if anything went wrong with the feet they would rot off" before the animal would show any lameness. This operation at one time was performed to a great extent, but is not so much done now. In examining a horse it you think that he has been nerved in this way, prick him with a pin around the feet and if he has been operated on he will not feel anything, but if he has not he will show signs of feeling. CHAPTER XXV. MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION. Horses that are wide between the eyes with a nice tapering muzzle and a nice bright eye shows a good disposition and a kind horse. Nice large ears, and in travelling they should be carried forward, this also is a good indication. The neck should be good and long and bowed upwards, and well cut out under the jaws. The shoulders should be long and well slanted forwards with nice high withers, also a short strong back with long round well developed hips and rump. Also a good round deep chest with a tidi' belly not too small; it is also a good point to have him well ribbed up, that is, not to have too much space oetween the last rib and the hip bones; also look to the legs that the bone is fiat and clean with good shaped feet. HOW TO EXAMINE FOR SOUNDNESS. Give the horse a quick trot or gallop to see that he is not lame, and as soon as he stops put your ear to his nose to hear that his wind is not affected. Then examine his nostrils and mouth, at the same time lool" to see the age of the animal, which is told by his teeth ; then look closely into the eyes to see that there is nothing wrong with them, pass the hand up around his ears and the pole of the head to see that they are all right; then examine one side of him first by starting at the neck, running the hand over it to the withers, then over the shoulder, down the outside strtd in- side of the front leg, and watch carefully for splints, sidebones, ringbones and sucli like ; then raise the foot and see if it is a well DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. 286 formed one, with s^^ood, strong heels ; look back along- the belly for warts and running- sores caused from castration, then pass the hand down the back of the hips and see that the hip bones are both the same size, then follow the hind leg over the hock and hind fetlock an ! look for spavins, windgalls, curbs, splints, side- bones and ringbones, also look at the stiffles and see that they are all right ; examine the foot as you did in the front, then examine the other side same as side mentioned ; after this stand back and take a look at him to see how he stands on his legs, and, also, how he holds his head anJ neck; notice if he stands with his front feet well under him, for this is a good sign ■ at the same time see if he is inclined to be weak in the knees and fetlocks. Beware of calf-kneed horses for they are always stumblers ; see that he stands neither too straight nor too crooked on his hind legs. After this take a walk around to the front and see that he has a well formed breast, and that he does not toe in nor toe out too much; then make an effort as if you were going to strike him with a stick or whip over the side, if he grunts examine close to 5ee that he is not a roarer, then give him another good, sharp trot or gallop to see that he carries his front and hind legs nice and straight and that he has good action, also notice whether he car- ries his tail straight or not. Step up quick and place your ear to his nostril to see if he makes any noise, and be sure that he is all right in his wind. To make sure that the horse is all right put him in a stable for an hour or two, giving him a pail of water and a feed, for in some cases of lameness the animal will not show it uniil he has stood for a while. After this go into the stall and take the horse out yourself, watching how he steps over and how he- backs out of the stall for fear of strii^g halt and corea. After this trot him again and test him for lameness and soundness in his wind. HOW fO TELL A HORSE'S AGE BY HIS TEETH. Commencing at the time the colt is foaled: At nine days old he gets two centre nippers, or front teeth, two above and two be- low ; at nine weeks old he gets four more front teeth, one on each side of the other two pairs, these are called the lateral teeth ; at nine months old he gets four more front teeth, called the corner teeth, one on each side of the two pair below, and one on each siile of the two pair above. So, at nine months old, the colt has «i full mouth of milk, or temporary front teeth. At the age of 236 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. two years you have to judge from the general appearance of the colt a^ to his age, as there is no change in the front teeth. At three years old he sheds the four centre nippers or front teeth, two above and two below, and gets in permanent ones ; at four years old he sheds the four lateral teeth, two above and two below, and gets in permanent teeth in their places ; at five years old he sheds the four corner, or outside teeth, and gets in permanent ones. So, at this age, the horse has a full mouth of permanent front teeth. Each one of the front teeth has a black ring on it at five years old ; at six years old the rings on the two centre teeth in the bottom row disappears and only a black spot is left on each ; at seven years old the rings on the lateral teeth, or the ones next to the centre in the lower row, disappears and only a black spot is left on each tooth ; at eight years old the rings on the corner teeth of the lower row disappears and only a black spot is left on each tooth ; at nine years old the rings on the two centre front teeth on the upper row disappears and a black spot remains on each tooth; at ten years of age the rings on the lateral teeth, or the ones next to the centre pair in the upper row, disappears and a black spot is left on each tooth ; at eleven years old the rings on the corner teeth of the upper jaw disappears and a black spot is left on each tooth. At twelve years old we come again to the bottom row, and looking at the frcmt of the teeth the two centre ones will be found to be much narrower and longer than the others ; at thirteen years the lateral, or teeth next to the centre pair — one on each side — become much longer and narrower ; at fourteen years old the corner teeth in the lower row become much longer and narrower ; at fifteen years old the two centre teeth on the upper row become long and narrow ; at sixteen years old the lateral teeth on the upper row become long and narrow ; at seven- teen years old the corner teeth of tha upper row become longer and narrower. At eighteen years of age we look again to the bottom row and the two centre teeth will be much shorter than the others; at nineteen years old the lateral teeth of the bottom row have be- come much shorter ; at twenty years old the corner teeth have be- come much shorter ; at twenty-one years of age look again to the teeth in the upper row and the two centre ones will be much shorter ; at twenty-two years old the lateial teeth will be shorter, and at twenty-three years old the corner teeth of the upper row will be short. After twenty-three years old the age can not be told accurately. DI88ASS8 ANDgtRlATMBNT OF THE HOK3B 237 aow TO sHSKca a &o»^h. ^ Havhi a haitar An th« horas and takd him mom^ piac« where ihei*« is room for hia head to b« h«id up hig-h, then plae« a twitch on his nose. A twitch is a handle of some kind, about three feet long', at the end ia & hole through which is a small rope tied to form a ring". This rope is slipped over the horse's nose and twisted up pretty tig-ht, then hold the horse's head up high by lifting on the twitch. This is to keep the medicine from running out when poured into his mouth. Have an assistant to hold the twitch while you, with a black bottle which contains the drench, slip the neck of the bottle into the mouth from the side where there is no teeth ; only pour a little out of the bottle at a time, as you might choke the horse. If he goes to cough let his head down immediately until through coughing, then continue the drenching, but don't be in too big a hurry to empty the bottle. HOW TO BLEED A HORSE. Place a small rope, or plow cord, in the form of a slip-knot, over the horse's neck and draw it tight enough to swell the jugular vein on the left side of the neck, moisten the hair over the swell- ing and hold the fleames — which must be clean — lengthwise with the vein ; have an assistant to hold the rope, and also cover the horse's left eye so he cannot see you. When you are satisfied the fleames set over the vein strike them a quick, sharp blow with a stick of some kind, which, as soon as the vein is cut, will send a stream spurting out of the hole. Continue holding the rope tight until it has bled enough. Always catch the blood in a pail so you know how much you take away. When it has bled enough let the rope slack, which will stop the bleeding. Then take a bright new pin and run it through the two edges of the skin bringing them together, then wind a string around the pin so it cannot get off ; leave the pin in for twenty-four hours after bleeding ; tie the horse's head up and do not let him out to grass or eat anything that will cause him to keep his head down to the ground until the vein is healed. Be sure your hands, the fleams and the pin ar« @lcan, for dirt or rust will set up inflammation of the vein. A CHILL, Causes, — It is often noticed after a horse has been working' h&rd and takes a cold drink of water, or is allowed to stand in the v'olJ afierwardi;, or anything like that, will bring on a chill. Symptoms. — The horse will be shivering, looks very dull, hi$ 288 THE VETERINARY SOIENOE. ba g Tincture of Aconite 5 to 10 drops. ( ! i r g I- 2 tablespoonf uls. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, repeat the dose every hour until he is better. If you have not the sweet spirits of nitre give a wine glass full of whisky. As soon as the horse will eat give him a hot drink or a bran mash. HOW TO FEED AND TAKE CARE OF A HORSE. Always water the horse before feeding if he is not too warm. Feed regular, that is, set certain times for feeding him and feed as near that time as possible. Give him a certain amount of exercise every day that the weather is fit to take him out, if not working him allow him to run out around the yard, and always remember that good cleaning and a clean stable is half the feed. A good plan to cleanse the stable is to throw a little lime around the stalls every week or so, also in the summer when the horses are all out of the stable, close up the doors and burn sulphur in the stable, this will kill all the germs of distemper and all other diseases that are in the stable. Always have a little box of salt kept in front of the horse so when he wants it he can have it, and by doing it this way he will never take more than is good for him; rock salt is the best if you can get it. Whitewashing the stable about once a year is a good plan to keep it clean. NOTICE. All the doses of medicine which are mentioned In this book in the diseases and treatment of the horse, if not specially mentioned for the age of the animal, is intended for the average size horse, so in giving doses to colts or very small horses you must regulate the dose to the age and size of the animal. Yearling colts would take one-third of the dose mentioned for a horse. A two year old could stand one-half the dose mentioned for a horse. A three year old can stand nearly as large a dose as is mentioned for a horse. Four year old and upwards take the full dose. EXPLANATION OF PLATE V. SKELETON OF THE OX. This cut shows the position of each of the bones and jointf in the frame of the ox. For particulars in connection with this cut refer to the anatomy of the ox — the part which deals witb tJie bones. SPECIAL NOTICE. — Every place where Tablespoonful is mentioned in this boot< should read: Sm.\ll, or Desbri Tablespoonful, which is equal to two Teaspoonfuls. —16— PART III. ANATOMY, DISEASES AND TKEATMI-.M OF CATTLE. CHAPTER I ANATOMY OF THE OX Each of the bones and joints of the ox receive tlve same name as those of the horse. There are a few important points of differ- ence in the structure of the skeleton of the ox and horse, viz.: There are only thirteen pairs of ribs in the ox while the horse has eighteen pairs. The breast bone or sternum is much larger and flatter in the ox than it is in the horse. This is important to remember because when there is anything wrong with the lungs or chest of cattle they always lie down, for the breast bone and the ribs are so formed that when they lie on the breast bone it expands the chest, giving the animal more relief than if it was standing, while the horse always stands in lung troubl*, for his breast boo« and ribs are so formed that It contracts the chest and girma kin more pain while lying down. The booes of th« hMul of the ox differ from those of the horse by being vary haary and wida oa the upper part of the skull and has a projection of bone at each side on the upper part of the skull called the core of the horn. This is important -on account of dehorning, and every one interested should become familiar with it This projection or the core of the horn is hollow inside which is a continuation of the sinuses or cavities in the bones of the head. Attached to the core of the horn and covering it, is the horn itself. Another point of difference between the ox and the horse, is that there are two small bones found in the heart of the ox called the cardiac or heart bonea, while in the horse's heart there are no bones at all to be fouod. 244 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Another point of difference between the ox and horse is that th« bones In the leg of the ox are divided from fetlock down into *wo parts, while in the horse they are not divided. DIGESTIVE ORGANS OF THE OX. The Lips of the ox are thick and hard, the upper one in front has no hair on it and varies in color with the color of the animal. and when cattle are in good health this space is always moist. The Cheeks on the inside are covered by numerous little rough processes which give the cheeks a very rough appearance. The Ton^e of the ox is stronger than that of the horse and is more movable, it is very thick and heavy at the back; it is pointed at the front end and the upper part of it is very rough; it is by means of the tongue the ox takes most of the food into his mouth. The Glands which secrete the saliva are similar to those of the horse. The Teeth differ very much from those of the horse, the ox fias no front teeth in the upper part of his mouth, their place being taken by a pad of cartilage or gristle. This pad takes the place of the upper row of front teeth for the lower row of teeth presses against it when the animal is cropping grass ; on account of this pad it can be seen why cattle will not do as well on short grass as horses. The front teeth in the lower row also differs from those of the horse, they are eight in number, chisel-shaped and are loosely set in the gum. The molars or back teeth are similar to those of the horse only they are smaller and not so smooth on their upper surface. The ox has twenty-four molars or back teeth, and eight incisors or front teeth, making thirty-two in all. The Pharynx, or gullet in th« ox is much larger than that of the horse. The CBsophagUS, or tube, which carries ths food down from the mouth to the stomach is well developed, the fibres in it are very strong and have a double action. When the animal is eating they carry the food from the mouth down to the stomach, and during the time the animal is chewing its cud they act the very opposite, they carry the food from the stomach back up into the mouth. The Stomach is a very important organ to understand, for cattle suffer a great deal from diseases of the stomach. The stomach of the ox has a capacity of sixty gallons, and is divided Into four divisions. The first department is the rumen or paunch; the second is the reticulum, or honey comb ; the third is the •masum^ or manyplies, and the fourth is the abomasum, or true THE ANATOMY OF THE OX. 246 di-'eniive part ol Ihc slouiach. The first three departments of the 5i.jMuich prepares the food for dig-estion, while the fourth dig-esta It. The rumen or paunch is very large, and in an aged animal it fills up three-quarters of the belly cavity, it lies up against the left side of the belly/where it is attached and held to its place by liga ments ; its situation is important to remember, for in many dis- eases of the rumen, or paunch, it is first noticed on the left side, and in tapping for bloating it is always done on the left side because the paunch lies right up against the left side. The walls of the paunch of an ox resembles the stomach of the horse, but is not nearly so sensitive, and will stanu a great deal of abuse before inflammation will set in. The paunch has two openings, both of which are at the front, one is where the food enters the stomach, while the other is where the food passes out into the next division of the stomach called the reticulum, or honey comb, which is the smallest division of the stomach, and resembles a honey comb in appearance. This part of the stomach has not very much to do in preparing the food ; it has two openings, one in front, where the food enters into it, the other at the back, where the food passes through into the third part of the stomach called the omasum, or manyplies, which is the second largest division of the stomach. When this is full it is ovoid in shape and placed just behind the second division of the stomach and at the right side of the paunch, and if you examine the inside it will be found to be full of folds, or layers of membrane. The use of this part of the stomach is, while the food is passing through it to draw into its folds all the coarse parts of the food and roll it about in the layers until it gets it fine and well prepared to pass into the last part of the stomach, where it becomes digested. When this part of the stomach becomes de- ranged and the food becomes dry and hard between the folds it then sets up the disease called impaction of the manyplies, or dry murne. When the food passes out of this third division it is emptied into the fourth part of the stomach called the abomasum, or the true digestive part of the stomach. This is where the food is digested. The walls of this part of the stomach is redder in color than the three first divisions and has the glands which secrete the acids and gastric juices of the stomach which assist greatly in dig-estion. This stomach, also, has two openings, one where the food enters and the other where the food goes out of it and enters into the small bowels. 246 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. TIlC Bowels, or intestines, of the ox are divided Into large and imall bowels,^ same as that of the horse, the structure and action of them resemble those of the horse. The small bowels are only half the size of those of the horse, they being about one-half inch in diameter, and about 150 feet In length. The large bowels are not nearly so large as those of the horse, and are 86 feet in length. The Liver of the ox resembles that of the horse only it has a gall bladder which resembles a pear in shape and it acts as a vessel to store up the gall during the time there is no digestion going on. But during the time digestion is going on the walls of the vessel contracts and forces the gall down on to the food. The other two glands, the pancreas and spleen resemble those of the horse. These juices have the same action in cattle as they have in the horse. HOW RUMINATION OR CHEWING OF THE CUD IS PERFORMED IN THE OX. The ox takes the food into its mouth principally with its tongue, it is then roughly chewed and swallowed and passes into the rumen or paunch where it is rolled about by the action of the walls of the paunch and mixed with the juices which are secreted in the paunch. After the animal has finished eating, it then, as a general thing, lays down (but may stand up) and commence chewing its cud, the way this is performed is, the walls of the rumen con- tracts and forces the food up into the bottom part of the oesophagus, which then takes on a reverse action and forces the food up into the mouth where the food is all thoroughly chewed over again, and in swallowing it this time the end of the oesophagus, instead of opening out and allowing the food to drop into the paunch, keeps closed and passes the food right into the second stomach, thus you see the ox first roughly swallows its food and is held in the paunch until the animal has time to bring it back to the mouth and chew it over again. After it enters into the second stomach or reticulum, which is the honey comb part, the food is shifted around for a short time and mixed with the juices secreted in that part, then it passes back into the manyplies or third division of the stomach where the fine parts of the food pass right along to the abomasum or fourth stomach, while the coarser parts of food are drawn between the folds of membrane in the third stomach, here it is worked about between the folds until it is fine and ready to pass into the fourth stomach, where it becomes THE ANATOMY OF THE OX. 247 rully digested by the action of acids and g-astric juices which are secreted in this part of the stomach, then it passes into the small bowels ^and is acted upon by the bile from the liver and the pancreatic juice from the pancreas, these juices are emptied into the first part of the small bowels by little tubes or ducts, which lead from the glands down to the bowels, just on the same principle as that of the horse. After this, throughout the rest of the bowels, the nourishment of the food is taken up into the system by means of little glands or villi which are situated in the coats of the bowels, and the nourishment when once in the blood goes to supply the different parts of the body, while the part of the food there is no nourishment in passes off through the back bowels in the form of manure. The Feet of the ox and bones below the fetlock are divided and receive the name of trotters. THE RESPIRATORY OR BREATHING ORGANS. These organs in the ox work on the same principle, and re- semble in structure those of the horse, only they are not, as a gen- eral thing, so liable to diseases as the breathing organs of the horse. THE URINARY ORGANS. The chief point of difference in these organs are the kidneys. In the ox they are larger, and instead of being smooth, like those of the horse, they are rough, and resemble a bunch of grapes. The bladder and the rest of the urinary organs resemble those of the horse. THE GENITAL ORGANS OF THE COW. The Ovaries in a cow are smaller than Jhose of the mare, but resemble them in structure. The Womb in the cow somewhat resembles that of the mare, but the inside lining is different, for it is covered with button-like processes about the size of a pigeon egg, only more flattened out. These processes receive the name of cotyledons ; this is what the cleaning or afterbirth is attached to and is a very important point which every person interested should become familiar with by ex- amining a womb after calving or by opening a cow that diei. soon after calving. The passage out of the womb of the cow is shorter than that of the mare, but is formed on the same principle. The Bagf, mammary glands, or udder, is very important to understand in the cow. It it first divided Into two halves by a 248 THE VETERINARYJSCIENCE. partition or division in the center of the bng. Each one of theM halves arc ag'ain divided into two parts, each part is knowJJ as a c]',iarler ol the bag, each quarter having a mammary, or milk f^lar.J and a sinus, or pouch to hold the milk where it is secreted uniil ilie cow is milked. This sinus or pouch is situated just above the passage of the teat. THE GENITAL ORGANS OF THE BULL. The Testicles are ovoid in shape and well developed. The spermatic cord and artery are small compared with those of the horse ; the penis is long and pointed, and has an S shaped curve in it just below the pubis, or hip bones; this curve can be felt by feeling carefully just behind the bag ; the sheath is long and runs further lorward on the belly and has a tuft of hair on the point of it. During the time the bull is serving a cow the S shaped part ef the penis straightens out. CHAPTER II. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. CATARRH OR COLD IN THE HEAD. Cattle do not suffer so much from this disease as horses. This is an inflammation set up in the lining membrane or the sinuses of the head. Causes. — it is generally brought on from exposure or a sud- den change in the weather. Symptoms. — The nose is rough and dry and has a mattery discharge from it ; the animal has a slight cough and makes a rattling in the head when it is breathing. Treatment. — Give a mild dose of physic consisting of Epsom Salts ^ pound. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounoe, or 4 tablespoonfula. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench ; keep the animal dry and warm and feed on mashes and good hay until it seems better. After the first drench follow up with the following medicine : Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre ^ pound. Ground Gentian R ot. . . | " Mix together and give a teaspoonful three times a day until the animal is better. In cases where the discharge con- tinues from the nose and becomes chronic, it is then called nasal DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 249 fleet, same as in horses ; llie treatment then is to give a tea- spoonful of ground sulphate of iron three times a day in its feed or on its tongue with a spoon, and this will soon stop the discharge. SORE THROAT. This is a kind of inflammation affecting the larynx, or Adam's apple ; it may also affect the pharynx, or gullet. Causes, — Exposure to cold and sadden changes of the weather, or from choking, when something lodges in and irritaie> the throat, or from roughly passing a probang down the threat and bruising it, or from giving medicines that are not properly diluted with water. Symptoms. — Difficult breathing, the throat will be swo"en, and it hurts the animal when you press on it, the nose will be dry, and the animal will be noticed to keep swallowing, it refuses its feed and does not chew its cud, it also holds its head poked out trying to ease its throat. Treatment. — Give the following drench : Kpsom Salts j pound. Sweet Spirits of Nitra 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfuls. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, taking care not to choke the animal, as well as this follow up with Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre ij pound. Sulphur I " Pulverized Alum ^ " Mix and give a large teaspoonful three times a day on his tongue, this is to gargle the throat, give until the animal is better. Rub the throat three times a day with white liniment and in bad cases apply a mustard plaster to the throat or you might use a hot poultice every night on his throat. FILARIA BRONCHITIS. This disease affects young cattle and sheep and is caused from small germs or parasites getting down into the lining of the bronchial tubes; these germs receive the name of strongylus micrurus and they get into the system by being taken into the stomach in the water or food, then they pass from the stomach into the bowels, from there they get into the blood and pass around until they get to the bronchial tubes where they lodge and set up this disease. This disease is most common where animali are grazing on low pasture fields. Symptoms. — The animal makes a wheezy noise while breath- ing and has a dry husky cough with a slight discharge from the 260 THE VETERINARY SCIENCJE. no^e and by examining the discharge with a microscope you will find those litile germs or parasites in it The animal graduall) runs down in condition and if the affected one is not soon separ- ated from the rest the other young cattle will become affected. Treatment, — Kill the germs or parasites by giving Raw Lineeed Oil ^ pinK Spirita of Turpentine • • .J ounce or 2 tablespoonfulg. Mix and give as a drench once a week. The turpentine has a special action in cases of this kind for it gets into the blood and therefore comes in contact with the germs or parasites and kills them. If this should fail, drive the affected cattle into a stable, then take a pan of sulphur, throw some live coals in it and let the animal's breath the fumes of it, stand in the stable with the cattle (.nd just give them as much of the fumes as you can stand yourself and then turn them out, this is the best wav to tell how much to give them. Do this every day for a week or so until they are better. By breathing the fumes of the burning sulphur it comes in contact with the germs or parasites in the bronchial tubes and destroys them and stops the disease. The main thing in burning sulphur is not to strangle the cattle by letting them inhale too much of the fumes, as well as this feed them well to get them up in condition. INFLAMMATION OP THE LUNGS IN CATTLE (PNEUMONIA). Causes. — They are similiar to the causes of inflammation of the lungs in horses; catching cold in some way, such as being out in cold rains or standing in a cold draft or catching cold after calving. Symptoms. — The animal refuses to eat, has a slight cough and the nose is sometimes dry, then wet, changing frequently; he breathes heavy and quick and in breathing makes a groaning noibe similar to impaction of the stomach, and care must be taken that you do not mistake one for the other. By placing your ear over the side of the chest a sound is heard similar to that made by rubbing some hair of your head just over your ear between your thumb and finger. If it is a milch cow she will be noticed to drop off some in her milk. By pressing on the ribs over the lungs with your hand the animal is noticed to be sore, also feverish and very thirsty and from the fever of the lungs the bowels are often a little costive, the pulse is quick and strong at first but after a couple of days, if not better, the pulse gets quicker and weaker, some- times -unning as high as one hundred beats per minute. In this d;-.(.-:tse catt e lie almost all the time, and lie well upon tne brea s buii>; for this position seems to :j!ve them relief. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 261 Treatment. — If the bowels are not very free and the annual \» In fair condition, give Epsom Salts i pound. Sweet Spirits of Nitre i ounce, or 4 tablespoonful*. Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 16 drops. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give this drench three times a day, omitting the salts after the first drench. Rub the sides with white liniment three times a day, and keep a half pail of hot salt over the lungs, changing it about every hour dur- ing the day, and at night apply a mustard plaster ; take half a pound of mustard with enough vinegar to make it into a paste and rub well in over the sides and cover the animal up warm. Keep this treatment up until relief comes. When the animal seems to be getting better quit the above drenches and give the following : Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre I pound. Ground Qentian Boot i " Qround Aniseed | " Mix together and give a teaspoonful three times a day on his tongue. Keep the bowels regulated by giving one-half pound drenches of epsom salts once or tv'ice a week and feed on soft food with plenty of boiled flaxseed in it. BRONCHITIS m CATTLE. This disease, when it is the result of a cold, comes from causes similar to that of inflammation of the lungs ; the symptoms are same as those of inflammation of the lungs, only by listening with your ear at the windpipe you will hear more of a wheezing noise. Treatment — Is the same as is given for inriammation id« will b« greatly swoUan with gaa, and in severe cases the whole belly will b« distanded | by tapping with your fingers on the left side, ovar th« paunch, it will make a hollow, drum-like sound, and on account of th« stomach being so much swollen it presses on the lungs, causing the animal to breath very heavy. In severe cases the eyes will be bloodshot, and if it does not soon get relief will stagger, fall and die, actually smothering to death. Treatment — The treatment amist be quick la severe Qave the fbUowinff drench i 256 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Spirit* of TarpentiiM 2 onnoe*, or I UblMpoontnh. Raw Lmieed Oil 1 pint. ODtnmon Soda 1 tablespoonfuL Mix and g^ive as a drench, and if the animal doei not f«t relief in one hour and a half g^ive EpBora Salta 1 pound. Sweet Spirit* of Nitre 2 ounoes, or 8 tablespoonfaU. Oommon Soda -;.... 2 tablespoonf uls. Dissolve in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench, after this give the following drench every hour until the animal g^ets relief: Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonf ul a. Oommon Soda 2 tablegpoonful*. Apply plenty of heat to the body by means of blankets, and hot salt over the kidneys. The after treatment is to feed light, give luke warm water to drink and principally mashes to eat for a few days, so as to allow the stomach to have a rest. Where the animal is very much bloated and in danger of its life, perform the operation of tapping. The way this is done is to cut a small hole in the skin on the left side, midway between the point of the hip bone and the last rib, and about four inches down from the back bone. After the hole is cut in the skin take a trocar and cannula and run them downwards and inwards, then pull out the trocar and leave the cannula in, which lets the gas come spouting out of the cannula ; leave the cannula in for an hour or so until the bloat- ing is all gone down, then pull it out and let the hole heal up itself. A trocar and cannula can be got at a wholesale drug store from 50 cents to 76 cents, and is a very valuable thing to have on hand. If you have not one of these instruments take a sharp penknife and stick it in the same place as you did the trocar and cannula. IMPACTION OF THE RUMEN, OR PAUNCH, WITH FOOD. * This is when the rumen, or paunch, gets lull of food and is unable to work it out. Causes. — From feeding on poor food, such as straw and such like, and the animal takes a large feed of it, and on account of the walls of the stomach being weak it is unable to work the lood out of it as it should, or from a large feed of over-ripe grass, or Ironi the animal getting loose and getting a large feed of corn, bran. oats, wheat or oilier grain, or from a large feed of any kind oi Unvi the animal is not used to. It is also caused by feeding falienii>.ii cattle too heavy. DISBABBB AlfD TREATMBN7 OF OATTLB. 36? SyniptomSi — In som* cftses thd Animal is shghtly bioaied, while in other cases there is no bloating at all ; the animal seem* uneasy, and makes a peculiar grunt or jjroan nearly every time i« breathes. If it is a cow, and milking, the flow of milk will fall away in one nig-ht, the nose will be dry, breathing and pulse will be quicker than natural, and the animal will keep getting up and down once in a while, and will not take much food or water. By pressing on the left side, over the paunch, or rumen, it will b» found hard and full of food, and where you make the dent in i» with your finger the dent will stay in it some time. By tapping over the stomach there will be a dull, heavy sound. The bowels are costive, and the passage is dry, slimy looking, and h»^ - bad smell. Treatment. — Give a dose of physic consisting- of Epsom Salts U potmdt. Bitter Aloes 1 ounce. Common Soda 2 tableppoonfuls. Ginger 1 tablespoonf ul. Dissolve in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench. After this follow up with a stimulant to help iha physic to wo^i- through the bowels. Whisky 2 wiiiPglaRsfuis. Gingisr 2 tahletoufula. Common Soda '2 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and {^ive as a drench threr times a day until the animal is better, if the physic has not oper ated in twenty-four hours after giving it, walk the animal a quarter of a mile, the exercise often starts the physic to work, but i' it does not operate wait twenty-four hours more before giving any more physic, at the end of this time, if the physic has n»* operated, give a stronger physic consisting of Bitter Alo«s. 2 onncei. Gamboge 2 drams. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, then at the end of another twenty-four hours give the animal a short walk, and this will generally work the physic ; if this has n'*' operated, after walking it, give Raw Linseed Oil 1 pint. Give this drench every day until the physic does i>perate Keep the animal well blanketed and warm, and place a halt pai' of hot salt over the back, for heat helps the stomach to act. (iivr the animal all the luke warm water it will drink ; give it sli«po« —17— te&ii, nut fiu Uii^\ iii liio cours>i} ol a Wvck or no artor, ijf eh« physic has operated without carrying off the load of food out of the rumen or paunch, then, as the last resort, perform the operation of rumenotomy. HOW TO PERFORM THE OPERATION OF KUMFNOTOny. The animal, when sick, is generally very easy held ; shove it up against the side of the stall or partition, then fasten it there by means of a long rope, any way at all so you get it solid, and tie the animal so the left side will be out, then, with a sharp knife, make a cut four or five inches long, right through the skin and muscles to the stomach, commencing the cut two inches below the back bone, and half way between the last rib and the front of the hip bone, then pass your hand into the cut and take hold of the stomach, drawing it well out, then make a large enough cut in the stomach to pass your hand in and out free, then have some person to hold the stomach still out through the cut in the side so ihe food will not fall down between the wall of the stomach and the belly ; remove all the hard food in the paunch or rumen, then sew the cut you made in the stomach up with a needle used for sewing wounds ; use carriage trimmers' twine, and put the stitches half an inch apart, then wash off the cut which was made in the stomach with a quart of luke warm water and 10 drops of carbolic acid in it ; after it is washed off nice and clean shove it back to its natural place and sew up the outside cut, putting the stitches in half an inch apart. The treatment for the outside wound is to bathe the cut twice a day with luke warm water, and, after bathing, apply the white lotion until it is healed up. The after treatment is to give the animal a few drenches of stimulants, such as are mentioned in the treatment of impaction of the rumen, or paunch. Feed the animal on soft food made into the form of soft gruels for a few days and keep it quiet until the cut is healed up. VOMITING. This is sometimes met with in cattle, but never in the horse. Causes. — Generally from some irritation of the fourth, or true digestive part oi' the stomach, or it may be caused from eating some bones, old clothes, or a boot or something of that kind. Sometimes it is caused I rem nails being taken into the rumen with food. Often after an animal is slaughtered there are nails a,nd rub- bish tound in the stomach. Treatment.— Giv« a phytte eonaistini^ of Epaom Salts 1 pound. Brown Sugar J pound. Salt 2 tablespoonfuls. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench. This will generally give relief, but if it does not, give : Raw Linseed Oil 1 pint. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce, or 4 tableapoonfuli. Common Soda o 2 tablespoonf ula. Mix and give as i drench every second day until the animal gets relief. Feed on soft food and give luke warm water to drink for a while. In cases where this does not give relief and you are sure there is something in the stomach, perform the operation of rumenotomy and take it out. HAIR BALLS IN THE RUMEN OR PAUNCH. Causes. — They are caused from animals licking each other In the spring when the hair is loose, and this hair collects in a ball in the stomach. Symptoms. — The animal soon stops chewing its cud, and has slight spells of bloating ; it does not feed well and soon falls ofif in condition. Treatment. — Give a physic of Epsom Salts 1 pound. Common Sod* 3 tablespooiifaja. Ginger , 2 " Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench. Give this drench once a week, and if it does not help the animal, and you think there is a hair ball In the stomach, then, as a last resort, perform the operation of rumenotomy. There has been cases known where snakes, from three to four feet long, have been found in the stomach of the ox ; there are also eases known where nails have worked their way through the stomaoli into the heart and killed the animal. BINDER TWINE IN THE RUMEN OR fAUNOL Causes. — From eating straw that has been bound with binder twine, and the twine collects and rolls up in the form of a ball in the rumen or paunch. Symptoms. — Same as that given for hair balls In the rumen or paunch. Treatment.— Same as that given for hair balls ia tka hmmm or paunch. 2i0 tUlB YBTlRiNABT SCIBNOI. IMPACtlON OF THB UASTTtUM OH tXm» tAHl W THS StOIUCaK. Thii also receives the name of fardelbound, or dry murrain. This is when the food in the third part of the stomach gets hard and dry between the folds and cannot worlc out. In some cases it g-ets packed in between the folds as hard as a board. Causes. — From the animal eating dry and over-ripe food that does not contain much nourishment. A common cause is when the cattle are turned out too early in the spring, before the new grass has grown much, and in trying to get at the new grass they fill themselves with old, dry grass, which lodges in third part of the stomach and sets up impaction of it. Symptoms. — First there will be diarrhoea, followed by costive- ness and stoppage in the bowels, and anything that does come away is hard and slimy looking. The animal will fall off in con- dition, and if it is a milch cow she will nearly go dry. The nose will be dry and hot, the pulse quickened and breathing increased, and sometimes there will be slight moaning and grating of the teeth; the belly has a tucked up appearance, and on account of the animal not eating much it does not chew its cud. If the dis- ease is allowed to run on without being relieved it affects the brain and the animal becomes delirious, which is followed by con- vulsions and death. Treatment. — Give the following drench : Epsom Salts .....1 pound. Ginger 2 tableapoonfal*. Common Soda 2 " Salt 2 " Mix In a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench. After this giv the following stimulating drenches i Whiikj t wineglaufnls. Qingw 1 tablespoonfnL Oommoa Bod» 1 " Powdand Nox Voiulo* 1 t«aapoonfaL Ball 1 tablMpoonf qL Mix la a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench ; r»> peat this drench three times a day until the animal is better ; keep the bowels open by giving pint doses of raw linseed oil every three days ; by keeping the bowels open and giving these stimu- lants it will generally work the food out of the stomach in a few days. Give the animal plenty of luke warm water to drink, and feed on soft food. Salt is given to get the animal to drink, which helps to work the food out. DISEASES AND TREATMBFT OF CATTLE. 261 INFLAMMATION OF THE FOURTH PART OF THB STOMACH. This is inflammation of the fourth, or the true digestive part of the stomach, and is more often met with in calves than in older cattle. Causes. — In cattle it is caused from eating- frozen roots or grass, also over-ripe food. In calves it is caused from changing too suddenly from sweet to sour milk, especially when the calf is young this irritates the stomach and sets up the disease. Symptoms. — First diarrhoea, then constipation, and keeps changing from one to the other every day or so ; the animal breathes quick and groans with pain ; the nose is hot and dry, and the belly has a tucked up appearance and is sore when you press on it ; the legs and ears will be cold. Treatment for Calves. — Give the following drench : Raw Linseed Oil i pint. Tincture of Laudanum 1 dram, or 1 teaapoonfnL Mix and give as a drench* Give its belly a good rubbing with mustard and vinegar ; blanket to keep it warm, also place some hot salt in a bag over the back, after this give a teaspoonful of laudanum in half a cup of milk three times a day until it gets relief, and if it will drink give it small quantities of new milk, and In its drinking milk put one teaspoonful of common soda every time you feed it. Treatment for Larger Cattle.— Give the following drench : Raw Linseed Oil 1 pint. Tincture of Laudanum 1 ounce, or 4 tableepoonfnls. Mix and give as a drench, afterward give the following : Tincture of Laudanum 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfula. Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 15 drops. Mix in a pint of water and give as a drench three times a day until it gets relief. Clothe the body well and keep hot salt in a bag to its back. Give luke warm water to drink, and feed on ■oft food. DLVRRHCEA IN CATTLE. Causes. — From drinking impure, or stagnant water, eating frozen roots ; a sudden change of food, or from excitement by being chased. Symptoms. — There are large passages from the bowels of a fluid nature, and the animal soon gets gaunt and falls off in con- dition, and in bad cases will not eat, but seems very thirsty. Treatment. — Give the fo lowing drench : 262 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Raw Linseed Oil * pint. Tincture of Catechu 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfula. Mix and give as a drench. Clothe the body well and place hot salt to the back. Keep the animal very quiet ; give very little water to drink, and take the chill oflF it ; feed on soft, hot mashes and very little other food. In severe cases also apply a mustard plaster over the belly to heat the bowels. If the animal does not get relief in five hours after the first drench then give th« following : Tincture of Catechu 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfuls. Ginger 2 tablespoon! uls. Common Soda 2 " Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench every five hours until the animal gets relief. This disease, after it runs on for some time, is apt to terminate in bloody flux (dysentery). BLOODY FLUX (DYSENTERY) IN CATTLE. This comes after diarrhoea, when the manure is streaked with blood. Treatment. — The treatment is the same as given for diarrhoea, only in each of the drenches put a teaspoonful of ground chalk. . COLIC IN CATTLE, Causes. — This is generally caused from taking a cold drinlc of water or a change of food especially if it is green or frozen. Symptoms. — This is very painful while it lasts, the animal is rery uneasy, lies down, gets up, stretches out, strikes the feet against the belly and moans, and looks around at the side with pain and in some cases is slightly bloated on the left side. Treatment. — Give the following drench: Epsom Salts 1 pound. Tincture of Laudanum 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonful*. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 " 4 " Fleming^! Tincture of Aconit« 10 drops. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench, keep the animal warm by blanketing and repeat this drench every hour until the animal gets relief, but after the first dose leave out the epsom saks. Another good drench is Raw L'.Qseed Oil 1 pint. Spirits of Turpentine IJ ounces or 8 tablespoonfuls. Mix and give as a drench, after this follow up with the above drench every hour.. Another good drench is Whisky i pint. Black Pepper 1 tablespoonfuL DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE, 263 Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drenc*-. The danger of this disease is that it may terminate in inflammation of the bowels. INFLAMMATION OF THE BOWELS (ENTERITIS) This is not so common in cattle as it is in horses. It gen«l* ally affects the small bowels, in severe cases the animal dies hi four or five hours. Causes. — it sometimes follows cases of colic or from the bowels getting twisted and stopping the passage, from being out In cold rains; or a sudden change in the temperature and the animal gets a chill which settles in the bowels or from eating musty or frozen food, or from drinking ice cold water when it ii hot or anything that will chill the body. Symptoms— There is dryness of the muzzle, loss of appetite and on account of not eating does not chew its cud, it seems very restless and is in severe pain, pawing and getting up and down and does not seem to have a minute's ease. Its urine or water is of a red color and the manure that it passes is covered with slime, the legs and ears are cold, the animal keeps gritting its teeth, and on listening at the side there is no movement to be heard in the bowels, the pulse is very quick but after a short time gets very weak, so weak you can hardly feel it. Treatment. — Bleed the animal as soon as noticed, take threo- quarters of a pail of blood from it, if it is in fair condition and a medium sized animal; after this give Tincture of Laudanum 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonful*. Linseed Tea 1 P"i*- Mix and give as a drench every four hours, clothe the body well, place hot salt over the back and a mustard plaster to the belly. CONSTIPATION OF THE BOWELS IN CATTLE. This is not so common in cattle as it is in horses and is mor« likely to occur in cattle that are feeding high on strong feed such as corn, shorts and mill sweepings or any other rich food is apt to cause it especially if the animal is not getting a few roots along with it to keep the bowels loose. Symptoms. — The animal seems dull, does not^care to eat or drink, the muzzle is dry and there is no passage from the bowels. Treatment. — Give the following: Epsom Salt! 1 pound. Bitter Aloes H °".°.°*- Ginger 2 tableij)oonluta. OommoB Soda * 2«4 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and g'ive as a drench. If this has not operated in twenty-four hours walk the animal for a quarter of a mile and if it has not operated in twenty-four hours after the walk give it the following: Gamboge . , 2 drams or 1 teaspoonf ul. Bitter Aloea 2 ounces. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench ; «eep exercising the animal every day, and if the last drench has not operated in twenty-four hours give Raw Linseed Oil 1 pint. Whisky I " Powdered Nux Vomica 1 teaspoonful. Mix and give as a drench, and give this drench every day until there is a passage ; keep the body warm with blankets and hot salt in a bag over the back. [NFLAMMATION OF THE LINING OF THE BELLY CAVITY (PERITONITIS). The causes, symptoms and treatment are similar to those in this disease in the horse. It is rarely met with in cattle. DROPSY OF THE BELLY. This follows cases of peritonitis, and the symptoms and treat- •nent are similar to that in the horse. This disease is rarely met with in cattle. TAPEWORMS IN CATTLE. This is about the only kind of worms the bowels of the ox are subject to. This complaint is rarely met with in cattle, but In cases where it is there may be from twenty-five to one hundred feet of the worm found in the bowels. Symptoms. — The animal runs down in condition, but still keeps feeding and seems always hungry. The only v»ay to be sure that it is a tape worm is to watch the manure and you will find joints of the worm coming away with the manure. Treatment. — Get rid of the worm by starving the animal for four days, that is, just give it enough to keep it from starving to death. Give the following drench : Oil of Male Fern | ounce, or 2 tablespoonfuls. New IVfilk 1 pint. Mix and give as a drench. Give this drench three times a day during the four days you are starving the animal, and at the end of that time give one pint of castor oil, which will bring the worm away all right. Young calves are more often affected than DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 266 cattle ; treat them the same, only gfive quarter of the dose. Ai soon as the worm passes away bring the animal back to Its regular feed and habits again. JAUNDICE OR YELLOWS. Causes. — This may be caused^ from congestion or inflamma- tion of the liver, or from bile stones forming in the duct of the liver, damming back the bile. It is most often seen in stall-fed cattle. Symptoms. — By pressing on the right side of the belly it causes the animal pain, its appetite is poor and it does not want to drink much ; the white of the eyes and the lining of the mouth and nose is of a yellow color. If it is a milk cow the milk falls off in quantity, and has a bitter taste like bile ; the animal will sometimes cough a very painful cough, and will soon run down in condition and have a very dull appearance. Treatment.— Give the following : Epsom Salts 1 pound. Salt 2 tablespoonfals. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench, but before giving it to the animal put one dram of dry calomel (which acts on the liver) on the tongue with a spoon and wash it down with the drench. Repeat this drench once or tvice a week until the animal is better. Feed on soft food, give plenty of water to drink and gentle exercise every day. FLUKE DISEASE IN CATTLE AND SHEEP. This occurs in cattle and sheep pasturing on low-lying lands, and is more often met with in rainy seasons. Causes. — Animals drink the eggs of the flukeworm out of pools of water, or take them in along with the grass ; after they get into the stomach in this way they get into the blood along with the nourishment, and pass around in the blood until they come to the liver, where they lodge and form into flukeworms, after this they lay eggs, which pass down out of the liver along with the bile, then out of the system along with the manure ; they be- come dry and are blown into pools of water and over the grass, where the animals again take them up. This is the way they generate. Symptoms. — At first, when the eggs are taken into the liver, they seem to stimulate] the action of the liver, and the animal Keems to thrive better than ever for a time, but after the worms b«. 266 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. come full grown the liver becomes diseased, which stops the secre- tion of the bile, and the animal soon falls off in condition, be- comes very dull and weak, and has dropsical swellings under the jaws, throat, chest and belly, and these symptoms are soon followed by death. Treatment. — There is nothing that can be be done hut to destroy the diseased animal to keep the disease from spreading, and move the unaffected cattle to a higher and dryer pasture. This disease does not affect horses, so horses can be turned on the pasture the cattle are taken from. On examining the liver after death you will find it diseased, and you will also find worms which are from one-half to one inch long, and have round bodies. In some cases you will find them in great numbers. WHITE SCOWERS IN CALVES. This is a form of diarrhoea in calves. Causes. — Is from an inflammation of the lining of the fourth part, or true digestive stomach, and is generally caused from chang- ing the calf s milk by taking the milk of another cow to feed it on, or from giving it cold or skimmed milk when it is not used to it. Symptoms. — The manure it passes is very thin, and is of a yellowish white color ; the calf is in pain, breathes heavy, and groans in spells, keeps gritting its teeth and looking around at its sides. Treatment. — Try and find out the cause of the trouble, and if caused from a change in the milk, or from giving it too cold, give gc;od, warm milk to drink, and follow with the following: Raw Linseed Oil 2 ounces, or 8 tablespoonfuls. Lime Water 2 " 8 Tincture of Laudanum 1 dram, or 1 teaspoorifuL Mix and give as a drench, and if this does not give relief give the following : Tincture of Laudanum 1 dram or 1 teaspoonful. Lime Water 2 ounces, or 8 tablespoonfuls. Mix and give tliis three times a day in a little milk as a drench. Keep this treatment up, and see that the animal is kept dry and warm until it is better. BLOODY URINE (RED WATER) IN CATTLE. Causes. — It is caused by the animal eating some weeds thai act on and irritate the kidneys, or it may oe caused from stonej in the bladder or kidneys, or from a severe strain to the iMick. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 267 Symptoms. — The urine or water is of a smoky, red color, and the animal will pass water often, and strain after making^ it, and, in some cases, makes a great lot of it. Treatment. — Give as a drench : Glauber Salts 1 to 1^ pounds. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and g'ive as a drench, and follow up with the following powders : (iround Gentian Root. i pound. Sulphate of Iron i " Mix well together and give a large tablespoontul in a mash twice a day, night and morning. CHAPTER IV. TROUBLES IN CALVING AND DISEASES FOLLOWING. HOW TO TELL WHEN A COW IS WITH CALF. During the hot months of spring and summer a cow will come bulling every third week, and occasionally a well-fed cow kept in a warm stable will come bulling during the winter. After she takes the bull and is with calf she ceases to come bulling or running, and will thrive and feed better, and is of a quieter dis- position than before. After a few weeks she commences to get larger at the flanks, which is more noticeable on the right side on account of the calf lying mostly on that side. The calt gradually grows, and at the fifth or sixth month becomes alive, and can be seen moving at the side after the cow has taken a cold drink of water. A few months after the cow has been to the bull you can, by pressing your hand in quickly at the right flank, feel the calf, which is easily told by the shape and hardness of the object you feel. Springing commences in young cows about four months previous to calving, and the bag gradually keeps getting larger until calving time, while older cows generally commence to make a bag from four to six weeks before calving. During the time she is making a bag the vulva gradually keeps getting larger. Near the ^nd of the ninth month, when calving time approaches, the ligaments at the sides of the tail and hipis relax and leaves a hollow at each side of the tail, this hollow is well marked a day or to before calving. A few days before calvingf the cow has a wild 268 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. expression in her eye, and is cross to other animals, and will try to get away by herself, after this the labor pains come on and she is noticed to be straining, then the neck of the womb opens out, the water bag- appears and breaks, and if the calf is coming natural and everything all right, the front legs and head appears. The cow generally lies down, and after a few minutes of severe strain- ing the calf is delivered, and the cleaning, placenta or afterbirth generally comes away at the time of calving, or very soon after. DROPSY OF THE WOMB BEFORE CALVING. This is due to some derangement of the afterbirth, and there is an over abundant amount of fluid secreted around the calf, in home cases several pailfuls collect in the womb around the calf. Symptoms. — The belly keeps getting larger and larger until the cow seems almost as broad as she is long, and on account o* so much fluid forming she becomes weak and has difficulty in getting up and walking around. Treatment. — There cannot be much done in this disease only keep the strength up, give a teaspoonful of nitrate of potash or saltpetre in a mash every third day until she calves, this is to act on her kidneys, which helps to get the water out of the womb. Feed plenty of good, strong, nourishing food to keep her strength up and she will be all right after calving. PARALYSIS OF HIND QUARTERS BEFORE CALVING. This disease is generally noticed in poorly-fed, unthrifty cows, especially if they are exposed to cold or wet, and is caused by the calf in the womb pressing on the nerves that go to supply the hind quarters with power. Symptoms. — The cow appears healthy — is eating and chewing her cud, but is not able to rise on her hind parts. Treatment. — Give half-pound doses of Epsom salts once or twice a week, according to how it acts on the bowels, and give the following powder: Ground Gentian Root , J pound. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre ^ " Powdered Nux Vomica | *' Mix and give a tablespoonful in a slop twice a day. Give plenty of good food; keep her warm; have good bedding under her, and turn her from side to side twice a day until she calves, then she generally comes all right. Never attempt to put her in slings, just let her lie until she is able to get up. DlflHAaSS AND TBBAfMSNT OF OATTLS. Mi TROUBLES KET WITH IH CAtVU^G. Troubl«fl m«t with in cows when calving, such as deformitl**, or calvM comingf in unnatural shapes, is fully explained in con- nection with "Difficulties met with in a mare foaling." Th« deformities and positions are about the same, and the principle laid down to take foals away is used in taking calves away. Always, if the calf is coming front end first, have the front feet and head coming together, and if the hind end is coming first, do not attempt to turn the calf, but bring it out with hind feet first. Nev€r be too eager to use hooks, because small ropes are better and there is less danger of tearing the womb ; and in cases where there has to be any cutting done, it is best to get an experienced hand, for the parts of the calf have to be skinned inside, com- mencing at the legs and skinning to the shoulder blade, and then taking it off with the leg; then take out the ribs and insides, and so on, with the other parts until you have enough of the calf cut away so that you can get it out all right. CLOSURE OF THE NECK OP THE WOMB AT CALVING TIME. This is where calving time has come, and labor pains are on the womb, but the neck of the womb keeps contracted or closed, and will not allow the calf to come out of the womb. Treatment. — Give the following drench : Epsom Salt* 1 pound. Sweet Spirlta of Nitre 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfula. Fluid Extract of Belladonna 1 dram, or 1 teaspoonfuL Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench. Keep the body warm with blankets and half a pail of hot salt, in a bag, over the back. On examining the neck of the womb with your hand you will find that you can only get one or two fingers worked into it. Take a small piece of sponge or cloth and saturate it with fluid extract of belladonna, then shove it well into the neck of the womb aa if it were for a plug ; change this two or three times a day to put more of the fluid extract of belladonna on it. Do not use any rough treatment, for the belladonna in a day or so will dilate or open the neck of the womb^ enough so that she will calve herself. In case this treatment should fail, take a penknife and nick around the inside of the neck of the womb in several places on the upper side, then use the belladonna as described above — and this will open it. KUfiUKij {Jt iiXi; WU.lB UK ixlt i-AiiAt^i: U(J i i HOM rUE WUWb. This occurs at the time of calving in the same way it does in the mare when foaling, and for symptoms and treatment look at rupture of the womb, or the passage out from the womb, in the mare, TURNING OUT OF THE VAGINA OR PASSAGE LEADING FROM THE WOMB. Causes. — Both in cows and mares is from standing in the stall with their hind feet too low before calving or foaling, and while lying down, on account of being so full, the womb presses back against the passage and turns it out ; it is liable to come out in cows a few days after calving from straining, or it may be caused from constipation, in either cows or mares where they strain in making manure. Symptoms. — There is a bulging out of the passage about the size of a man's head. Treatment. — Bathe the parts well with luke warm water until it is nice and clean, and shove it back to its place and stitch the edges of the vulva together by putting in a couple of stitches, just leaving space enough at the bottom for the mare or cow to make water. Put the stitches deep in the vulva and allow them to come out of their own accord, which generally takes a week or so. If it is a cow, give a pound of Epsom salts and a tablespoonful of ginger in a quart of luke warm water, and raise her stall two or three inches higher at the back than in the front ; feed on rich food, as it will not make such a bulk in her stomach. If it is a mare, give her a pint of raw linseed oil, and raise her stall two or three inches higher at the back than in the front; and in either case be careful until after they foal or calve. In either case, if they are about to have their young, watch them close, and if the labor pains come on, cut the stitches out and give her assistance, and after she is delivered of her young shove the parts back and stitch up the vulva again for a few days, then she well be all right. WOMB, CALF OR FOAL BED TURNED OUT. This is where the calf or foal bed is turned inside out, and hangs dov^n from the vulva. This is not often seen in mares, but is a common occurrence in cows. Causes. — From the animal lying with her hind end too low, and while the womb is in its dilated or enlarged state, aftei calv'ng or foaling^, the body being low behind, the bowels and SIS1AS18 AKD TR1A¥M8NT OF OATITtl). §71 ■ iw>,h pro^-.es lite woiub back up illlo ihb poiviC, or uip cuvuy, and as soon as it gets up in this part It causes the animal to have pain and strain, which soon turns the womb inside out. To prevent t!iis from talking- place, it is always well to keep the animal standing" for a few minutes after having" her young, so as to allow the womb to go back into its place, and after this, if she lies down, see that her hind end is not too low. Symptoms. — The animal seems very weak and has a large, red mass hanging out behind, sometimes larger than a large wooden pail. Treatment. — In all cases, as soon as it is noticed, return it, for the sooner it is done the easier it is put back and the less danger there is of losing the animal, for the longer it is out the more it swells. If the cleaning is still attached to the womb — as it is in some cases — remove the cleaning, which is easily done, before returning the womb, by separating it from one button at a time. After this bathe well with warm water, and when it is nice and clean, place a clean sheet or blanket under it and have it held up by two men, one on each side, while you are returning it ; after everything is ready for returning it make* the cow, or mare, g-et on her feet, and have her stand so that her hind end is a few inches higher than her front end, then have the men who are holding the sheet raise the womb a little higher than the vulva, this makes it easier to shove in. After this begin turning the womb in, commencing^ at the edge of the vulva, returning it gradually until all of it is in the passag^e, then, with your hand closed, press it against the end of the womb and shove it right back to its place and hold it there for a few minutes with your hand and arm. Dur- ing the time you are returning it be careful not to run your fingers through it. After you draw out your arm place three or four good, solid stitches across the vulva, leaving a little space at the bottom for the water to come out. Cover the animal so that she will be warm and keep a half pail of hot salt in a bag to her back'. If it is a cow give the following : Epsom Salts 1 pound. Sweet Spirits of Xitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfuli. Tincture of Laudanum 1 " 4 " Mix in a quart of water and give as a drench, after this give one ounce or four tablespoonfuls of tincture of laudanum and ten drops of aconite in a pint of water every three hi urs until she ■tops straining, also keep her standing on her feet for a few hours, with hmr hind Mid r&ised three or lour inches hij^'her than her from •nd. In two or three days after the pains are gone take the ■titchei out and allow her to stand on the level floor again. If it is a mare give one pint of raw linseed oil instead of the Epsom salts, but the rest of the treatment is the same. In both cases re- move the stitches in two or three days, when the animal quits straining and seems all right. HOW TO TAKE AWAY THE CLEANING FROM A COW. Cause. — Is from a congested and swollen state of the buttons to which the cleaning is attached to the womb inside. Treatment. — As soon as the cow is noticed not to clean give the following drench : Epsom Salts 1 pound. Fluid Extract of Belladonna 1 dram, or 1 teaspoonful. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfuls. Mix \ti d quart of luke warm water and give as a drench. Blanket well and keep half a pail of hot salt in a bag to her back ; j^ve her a hot bran mash and leave her quiet, and when the medi- cine operates she will generally clean all right, in thirty hours after you have given her the medicine, if she has not cleaned you will have to take it away with your hand. Roll up your sleeves and oil your right hand and arm, then take hold of the piece of clean- ing that is outside with your left hand -and pass your right hand into the womb, and by gently pulling the cleaning it will come away quite easy after getting the medicine, it being held in only by the neck of the womb being tightened on it, not allowing it to slip out. In cases where the cleaning has not loosened off of the buttons, keep gradually pulling with the left hand and loosen the cleaning with the right hand off the buttons until it is all worked off. A little practice in removing cIeanings««oon makes a person perfect at it. When th« cleaning is green and too tight on the buttons allow it to remain in another day and give her another drench of the same kind as the first one mentioned, which will make it all right for taking away. Cleaning should never be taken away without first giving the medicine to loosen it from the buttons, IHPLAMMATION OF THE WOMB (METRITIS), This disease generally comes on two or three days after calving. Causes. — From getting wet, standing in a draft or anything that will give her a sudden chill, will bring it en. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 273 symptoms. — Slig'ht shiverin§^ ; th« horns, ears and leg's art cold, the pulse and breathing' quick, she loses her appetite and stops chewing her cud and seems restless on her hind legs, as if in pain ; she seems sore on the right side, her vulva is swollen, and she passes bloody looking stuff from it ; frequently, aftei making her water, she seems very thirsty ; her bowels are costive, and the urine is of a reddish color ; the bag is hot, swollen and and tender, and she does not give as much milk as she should. Treatment. — Give the following : Epsom'Salts 1 pound. Tincture of LaudHnum \i ounces, or 0 tablespoonfnls. Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 10 drops. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench; keep ^ler body warm with blankets and half a pail full of hot salt in a Dag on her back, and keep it hot by changing it •very hour. After the first drench give Tincture of Laudanum 1 ounce, or 4 tftblespoonfuU. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 i« 4 " ^ Fleming Tincture of Aconite 10 drops. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench tvery four hours until she is better. Feed on soft food with boiled flax- seed in it to keep the bowels loose. Give her cold water to drink in small quantities, but often. After this disease has passed oft there is sometimes a nasty discharge from the womb of a whitish color, which has a bad smell. This is called whites (Leucorrhcea). WHITES (LEUCORRH(EA). This disease frequently follows inflammation of the womb, but may be caused in other ways, such as handling the womb rough in taking the calf, or cleaning away, or returning a cai/ bed ; anything that will irritate the womb will set up this disease ; or it may be caused from th« cow being put to the bull too orten. Symptoms. — There is a nasty, whitish discharge, which naa a bad smell, passes from the vulva, which is often noticed after she makes her water, from the eff"ects of this the cow runs down in condition, gets poor, weak and hide-bound. Treatment. — Give her half-pound dosesof Epsom salts dissolved in a pint of luke warm water, twice a week to keep the bowels free. Oil your hand and pass it through the_ passage to the neck of the womb, then gradually open it up with your fingers until you get it large enough to pass your hand into the womb, then with a pai^ of luke warm water, soap and a sponge wash the wpmb and p?« —18^ 274 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. •ut «ntil 70U g:et it nic« and clean, then with a teaspoonful •f aulphate of zinc dissolved in a pint of water bathe the womb wlL This will heal the womb and dry up the discharge. In the eoursa of a week, if the discharge is not stopped, dress the womb ag^in the same as above mentioned. Keep giving her the salts onc« or twice a week, according to how much it acts on the bowels, and, if in the spring of the year, let her out to grass. PARALYSIS AFTER CALVING. Thii is when the cow apparently seems healthy, only she cannot rise up on her feet, and is generally caused from an injury to the muscles or nerves of the back when she is straining while calving^. This disease need not alarm you for, as a general thing, she g^ets all right in a few days. Treatment. — Give the following: Epsom Salts 1 pound. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonf nls. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench. Keep her body warm with blankets, and apply a quarter of a pound of mustard, mixed in vinegar, over the back every second day. Feed on soft food, with boiled flax seed in it. Milk her out twice a day, and also turn her over from side to side twice a day, but never, under any circumstances, put her in slings. MLK FEVER (PARTURIENT APOPLEXY). This is one of the most fatal diseases cows are subject to, and mostly affects well-fed, fat cows that calve during the hot months of spring and summer, but may affect poor cows. It is also noticed occasionally to affect cows at almost any time of the year; even in the winter, in rare cases, it is noticed. Causes. — The exact causes of this disease are not clearly understood; but it is supposed that on account of the hot weather, and the cow being fat and full of blood, it sets up a fever which affects the nerves, and when the nerves are affected, the milk f^-lands also become affected, and do not secrete the milk, and the milk not being- secreted as it should be, leaves the blood charged full of material which should go to form milk, and when the blood becomes full of this material, it affects the brain and nerves, soon causing paralysis. This disease is usually noticed to come on in from one to ei}j;^ht days after calving. The sooner it comes or atler calving, the more fataS the disease is. Cows taking it ie DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 276 one or two days after calving seldom get better, but ftft«r thai time there is more cnance of recovery. Symptoms. — At first there is a wild, glary appearance of th« eyes, and when you go to milk her there will be very little milk ii the bag, which, in most cases, seems soft and flabby. In trying to walk she has a staggering gait. These symptoms will gradu- ally get worse; saliva will run from her mouth, and she will seen greatly excited ; keeps staggering, and acts like a drunken man. Finally she gets down, and is unable to rise; her head is turned around to her side ; her ears are lopped over, and her eyes nom have a peculiar, dull, glassy appearance ; the pupils of the eyej are enlarged; she breathes a little heavy; her nose is dry, an<2 she does not take any notice of things around her. If you go to milk her only a little will come out at a time. There is very littli or no passage from the bowels, and if you prick her with a pin she cannot feel it. A few hours after this, if she does not get relief, she becomes delirious, moans heavy, lies stretched out, and keeps tossing her head about The bag keeps getting softer, and after a while, when you try to milk her, you cannot get any. She gradually gets worse and soon dies. We will relate a case where a cow was stricken with milk fever, and owing to the distance we had to go, when called to treat the case, it took four hours to reach her from the time she took sick, and on arriving Mhe was breathing her last. This shows the necessity of evety stockowner understanding this disease thoroughly, so he can trcAt them as soon as they are noticed sick ; for this is the onlj va|r to treat milk fever successfully. Treatment. — The treatment must be quick in order to be eflfect- tive. If the cow is on her feet and able to swallow without difficulty, give the following drench : — Epsom Salts 1 pound. Bitter Aloes 1 ounce. Nitrate of Potash, or Saltpetre 1 large teaspoonful. Common Soda and Ginger 1 tablespoonful each. Mix in a quart of lukewarm water and give as a drench. Put the cow in a cool, airy stable, and tie a bag, with broken ice, to the head between the horns, keeping the ice to the head until she is re- lieved. Milk her dry, and sponge the bag thoroughly with warm water so as to soften and clean it. Take a pint of clean boiling water, allow it to cool down to lukewarm, to this add fifty grains of iodide of potassium and stir thoroughly until dissolved. By the aid of a 276 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. teat syphon and small rubber syringe (which can be got at any drug store) inject one-quarter of this mixture through the passage of each teat up into the bag. After injecting, give the bag a thorough hand rubbing in order to work the medicine well up around the milk glands. In case the cow should get off her feet watch her carefully so she will not injure the bag by lying on it, and turn her from side to side every four "hours, keeping her lying up well on her breast bone. If her bowels are not free give her half a pail of luke- warm water injections every four hours. If she does not make her water within twelve hours after injecting the bag, take it away by means of a catheter, which is an instrument for this purpose, and can be got through a drug store. This is done by passing the point of the catheter, guided by the finger, along the bottom part of the vulva about four inches in, where you will find a small opening. Into this pass the catheter gently downward and for- ward until the water comes through the catheter. Guarding the open- ing mentioned is a little valve, and sometimes by slipping the finger in and raising the valve the water will come without using the catheter. Do this twice a day -if necessary. Six hours after injecting the bag if the cow is not showing signs of recovery, milk her out and repeat the same injection into the bag. Repeat this every six hours until the milk returns to the bag and she shows signs of recovery in other ways. During treatment offer her frequently small drinks of cold water and gruels. Milk often until she is well. When recovering give her a small quantity of such foods as she seems to relish best, and leave the calf with her for a week or so. If the cow is not going to recover the paralysis becomes more marked. She becomes dull and quiet, which is followed by a delirious state before death. The treatment of this disease is one of our latest discoveries, and has proved to cure over 90 per cent, of the cases. HOW TO PREVENT MILK FEVER FROM COMING ON. If the weather is hot and the cow is in good condition, And you are afraid of milk fever, turn the cow into a shady place every day for a week or so before she calves ; feed very light and allow her to run out at night, and give her the following medicine: Epsom Salts 1 pound. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfula. If she has a very large bag before she calves, milk her every day; after she calves, keep her in during the day and let her out at night for a week, and keep her well milked out. Repeat the above dose and she will generally be all right. INFLAPIMATION OF THE MILK BAG (GARGET). Causes. — From getting cold in the bag; from an injury; from too great a flow of milk at calving time; from a lump in the teat; or from anythinj^ that will stop the milk from being milked out of the '">:'iy. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 277 Symptoms. — The cow sccuis icvciisU; Liic biig is swollen, hot and tender; she is very thirsty, but does not care to eat; tne bowels are a little costive; when you go to milk her it causes her pain; there is very little milk in the bag; and, in severe cases, nothingf but a little water will come out. This disease may affect one quarter, half the bag, or all of it. It is most often seen in cows, just after calving, that are kept in high condition. If it is allowed to run on for some time the bag may fester and break, while in other cases, where there is a great deal of inflammation in the bag, mortification may set in, and the part mortified will drop off. The mortification may extend up into the body and cause her death. Treatment.— Give the following: Epsom Salts f pound. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfula. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre 1 teaspoonf ul. Mix in a quart of water and give as a drench, and repeat this every second or third day until she is better. This will carry off the fever out of her system. Bathe her bag well with warm water and vinegar three times a day; after bathing, apply white liniment, and as soon as the liniment is on, oil the bag with lard or goose oil to keep the liniment from blistering and also to soften the bag. Milk her three or four times a day and feed light until all the soreness is out of the bag. In cases where the milk stops coming entirely, and the bag is festering, watch for 'a soft place in the swelling, and, as soon as it forms, lance it and let the matter out. After you lance the bag, if it smells bad, put a few drops of carbolic acid in the water that you bathe it with; this will kill the smell and clean the wound or hole. The rest of the treatment is the same as given above. In case the bag mortifies, give it lots of bathing with the hot carbolic water, as above mentioned, three times a day, then apply the white lotion, and give the drench mentioned above once a week instead of every second day; the mortified part of the bag will gradually rot away and heal up. SMALL ROUND LUMPS IN THE PASSAGE OF THE TEAT. Causes. — From a bruise or injury to the passage of the teat in some way, and when it is healing the thickening or lump forms. Symptoms. — There is a small lump in the teat which can be felt between your finger and thumb when you are handling the teat. These lumps may be anywhere along the milk passage of 278 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. the teat. TTie first summer the cow is affected with these lumps in the teat they interfere greatly with your milking her, but if she is bred again when she calves these lumps will entirely block the teat and give you a great deal ot trouble for you cannot get the milk down, and the bag becomes swollen and inflamed, and in a great many cases she loses the affected quarter. Treatment. — Generally, the first season they are affected with it, you can get the milk out all right, but it is advisable not to breed the cow again but let her go dry and fatten her, for she will be worse next summer. When you cannot get the milk down with your fingers pass a teat syphon or milk tube up the pas- sage of the teat through the lump far enough to reach the milk, and then the milk will run till the quarter is milked out. Use the tube each time you are milking the other teats. These teat syphons can be got at almost any drug store or veterinary instru- ment store for about 10 or 15 cents. The way to use the tube is to first tie a colored string in the small ring at the side so you won't lose it if it drops out in the straw, then oil it; take hold of the teat with your left hand and with your right hand pass the teat syphon up through the passage to the lump, and when you come to it gradually force it through, which is easily done; con- tinue passing it gently up until the milk runs out, and leave it in until all the milk is out. Bathe the bag twice a day with warm water and vinegar, after bathing apply white liniment and then oil the bag with lard to keep it soft. It is advisable in very bad cases to let that quarter of the bag go dry as soon as you can. BLOODY MILK. Causes. — From any injury to the bag, getting cold in it, or from eating irritating weeds. Treatment. — Give the following : Epsom Salts 1 pound. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre 1 teaspoonful. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench ; give a teaspoonful of saltpetre in a mash every night. After milk- ing bathe the bag with warm water, wipe dry and apply white liniment, then oil the bag with lard or goose grease, and the milk will soon get all right. If you think it is caused from eating irritating plants put the cow in another pasture. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 279 BLUB MILK. This is where the milk is watery looking and very blutt. Causes. — From little germs, called bacillus cyanogenui, g«t- ting" up into the teat, The only way to be sure it is caused by these germs is to examine the milk with a microscope. Treatment. — With a small glass syringe inserted into the passage of the teat inject some of the following each time after milking : Hyposulphite of Soda 1 dram. VV^ater , 1 pint. Shake well before injecting, and after a few injections the milk will be all right. STRINGY MILK. Causes. — From swallowing small germs while drinking out of stagnant pools of water. Symptoms. — A few days after the germs are swallowed the cow's milk will be curdy and stringy looking, mixed with water, and will come out in jerks when milking. It will be like this for a few days,' then get all right for a week or so when it will come "»n again. Generally two or three cows out of a large herd will oe affected in the same way. Treatment. — If it is caused from drinking out of low springs or pools keep the cows away from the water by fencing it off, and give two drams, or one teaspoonful of bisulphite of soda in a mash every night, which will soon make the milk all right, and the dis- ease will not come back on her again. CHAPPED OR SORE TEATS. Causes. — This is caused from milking with rough hands; or 'rom the cow running through long grass and wetting and irritat* ing the teat; or it may be caused from flies. Treatment. — Each time before milking wash the teats off with luke warm water and a little castile soap, then after yow iiave milked her rub the teats with the following salve : Vaseline 2 ounoeat Oxide of Zinc 1 dram. Cartxlie Acid 10 drops. Mix well together and put in a box large enough to hold it. This is a cheap and a grand healing salve for any kind of sore> around the ha^. 280 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. SMALL WARTS ON THE TEATS. These are very troublesome when you are milking, but an very easily g"ot rid of if you take the right plan. Treatment. — After the cow is put dry is the best time to treat. Tie the cow up and hobble her two hind legs together above th« hocks with a strap so she cannot kick you, then with a pair of large, sharp scissors clip all the warts off as close as you can to the teat. By cutting them off with scissors they will not bleed. After they are taken off dress them once a day with the same salve used for chapped teats and they will not come on again, but if they should come on the next year use the same treatment again. CUTS AND FISTULA OF THE TEAT. This is when the teat has been cut deep enough to cut the milk passage, which allows the milk to keep dripping out through the hole. Treatment. — If the cut is big sew it up with a needle used for sewing wounds; bathe with warm water and apply white lotion every time after milking. The best way to milk a cow while the teats are sore is to insert a teat syphon, or milk tube, up into the teat, and this will let the milk run out without irritating the teat; sometimes after it is healed up there will be a small hole in the side of the teat, which will allow the milk to leak out while you are milking. The best way to fix this is after she has gone dry burn the hole with a pointed stick of caustic potash, which destroys the fistula, then while it is healing up the hole will disappear and be all right the next time she calves. COW POX. This is often seen in cow, and affects herds in all parts of the world. It is somewhat similar to smallpox in people only it is not nearly so fatal. This is an infectious disease, that is, it can be carried from one cow to another. For instance, one man milking eight or ten cows and only one has the disease at first, he will carry the disease to all the others by milking them. Symptoms. — The cow seems feverish and does not give quite so much milk. In a few days, little red, pimple-like spots appear around the teats. In a day or so more, these red spots will rise up in the form of a blister, which contains a watery fluid. If these are not broken during milking, they dry up themselves and form scabs, which, in a few days, drop off, leaving the teat DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 281 natural. It generally takes this disease from eight to ten days to run its course; but sometimes, when the blisters on the teats are broken by the milker's hand and kept irritated by milking, or from flies, it takes a long time to heal them up. Treatment. — Keep the cow separate from the others, and allow only one person to milk her, and no other, so as to keep the disease from spreading, if in the spring, only let her have grass; if in any other time of the year, feed on soft food with boiled flax seed in it, and give the following powders for her blood and kidneys : Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre J pound. Sulphur i " Ground Gentian Root i " Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful night and morning in a mash. Each time before milking her, bathe the teats with luke warm water and soap, then milk her carefully and use the following preparation : Sweet Oil 4 ounces. Carbolic Acid 10 drops, Mix and apply to the sore parts of the teats each time after milking. COWS LOSING THEIR CALVES (ABORTION). Causes. — This generally occurs from slipping on ice; being chased by a dog; or from the hook of another animal. Symptoms. — Labor pains come on; she will get up and down; the water bag appears and breaks; and if the calf is coming itraight, it soon appears and comes away all right. Treatment. — If the cow keeps on straining, and the calf does not come, oil your hand, pass it up into the womb and straighten the calf, and it will come away all right. After the calf is taken ftway, cover her up warm, and if she does not seem very well give Qer the following: Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfuls. Epsom Salts 1 pound. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench. If the cleaning does not come away, use the same treatment as is given in "How to take away the cleanings from a cow." After this, feed on soft food, keep her warm and milk her twice a day; this will bring her back to her milk. BARRENNESS IN COWS AND BULLS. This is a common thing in well-bred cows, especially in Jerseys. Causes. — From their being kept in too high condition; from a diseased state of the ovaries; contracted or diseased state of the neck 282 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. of the womb; ihe womb being deformed, such as the neck bein^ twisted to one side; or where there is twin heifers one or the other will be barren. Bulls or cows that are too closely inbred in the same line of breeding- for several generations may become barren, or what is known as run out; it is also caused in bulls sometimes from fatty degeneration of the testicles — mostly seen in old bulls — and, also, rig bulls (that is, where only one or neither of the testicles are down in the scrotom) are sometimes barren. This rule also holds good in horses. Treatment. — If it is caused ffom being in high condition bleed her, take a half pail of blood away the day before taking her to the bull, or give her a physic of one and a half pounds of Epsom salts in a quart of luke warm water as a drench. The idea of this is to cool her blood. Examine her, and if it is from contraction of the neck of the womb, pass your hand up gently and open it by working your fingers in it; if it is from the neck of the uomb being to one side, straighten it. In doing this have your hand and arm oiled. In either of these cases put the cow to the bull im- mediately after fixing it. If it is from inbreeding try and start her to breed by putting her to a mongrel bred bull. There cannot be much done for a barren bull. CHAPTER V. DISEASES OF THE GENITAL ORGANS OF THE BULL. INFLAMMATION OF THE TESTICLES (ORCHITIS). Causes. — It is generally from an injury, or from serving too tnany cows. Symptoms. — The bull moves stiff and has a straddling gait, the testicles are swollen and very tender. Treatment. — Give the following : Epsom Salts 1 J poundi. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre 1 te isi'oonful. Ginger 1 tablt^epoonf iil. Mix in a quart of luke warm water ana give as a drench. Bathe the testicles well with hot water and vinegar and apply a poultice of hot linseed meal and bran, about half and half. Have the poultice held up to the bag by means of strings tied up over the back and it will give steady heat to the bag and draw the inflammation out; ii DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 283 will also support Ihe lesiicles and ease the pain; keep the poultices hot by chang-ing them twice a day ; keep this treatment up until the bull is better, and do not let him get cold afterward. During the time you are treating- him feed on soft food and he will soon be all right. If, after he .s well, you find that the inflammation has destroyed the seed part of the testicles — which can be told by putting him to cows and if they do not get with calf — castrate him, for he will be of no further use for breeding purposes. INJURIES TO THE SHEATH AND PENIS. Causes. — From jumping over a fence and being caught on it, or being caught in any way that will injure the sheath and penis. Symptoms. — There is swelling and soreness of the sheath and penis. If it is a bull he will be unfit for service until he is better. Treatment.— E -camine to see that there is nothing in the end of the sheath, and it there is anything remove it at once. Bathe well three times a day with lake warm water, wipe dry and then apply the white lotion. Keep this treatment up until the swelling is all out. In very severe cases give him a pound of Epsom salts. CLAPP IN BULLS (GONORRHOEA). This is inflammation of the lining of the passage of the penis. Causes. — From too frequent service, or from serving a cow that is affected with whites (leucorrhoea). Symptoms. — There is a whitish fluid discharge from the end of the penis and sheath, and they are also very sore to handle, and in making his water it scalds him and causes him pain. Treatment. — Give him one pound of Epsom salts in a quart of luke warm water as a drench to cool the blood ; bathe the sheath well with luke warm water twice a day, wipe dry, and inject into the sheath a little of the following mixture : Sulphate of Zino 2 drams or I teaspoonful. Water 1 pint. Mix and shake well before using. This is a cheap and eff"ective cure for this disease. Keep the bull away from cows until he is better, as he would give the disease to the cows. CASTRATION OF BULLS AND CALVES. Secure him, either by standing him in a firm stall or throwing him down, which can be easily done by taking a rope about thirty feet long, make a loop in the centre large enough to slip over his head and neck and then tie a knot in it; after the rope is put over ais head and fitted oo the neck, pass it back between the front 284 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. idgs ana britig the ciiUs ot ii back one on each side around the outside of the hind legs, and back around the inside just above the hock, then bring them forward on the outside of the front legs through the loop; have a man on each side to pull on the ropes,^ which will soon throw him down, then tie him up solid. This is the best method known for throwing cattle. As soon as you have secured him, take a sharp knife and make a cut along the side of the bag large enough to let the testicle out; be sure the cut extends to the bottom of the bag so it will not form a pocket.. As soon as you have let the testicle out, draw it well up and you will notice a white covering attached t© the back part of it, cut this off close to the testicle with your knife, then you can pull up the testicle and cord free; after this, pull the testicle and cord well up, and if the bull is over a year old, tie the cord with a strong, fine piece of string about four inches above the testicle, leaving the ends of the string six or eight inches long' so they will hang out of the bag and not heal up in it; leave this string on until it drops off itself; cut the testicles off below the strings; fill the holes full of salty butter and let him go. The reason the string is tied on the cord when the animal is one year old and upwards is because there is danger of him bleeding to death from the cords. The operation of castrating a bull standing up is done by securing him in a solid, narrow stall and operating in the same manner as you would if he was lying down. The way to castrate a calf is to tie him or have some person hold him; make the cuts in the bag the same as for castrating bulls; when the testicle is out, separate the covering attached to the back part of the testicle with your knife; then draw the cord and testicle well up, and with your knife scrape up and down on tht cord until it is scraped off, this will stop the bleeding; fill the holes full of salty butter and let him go. The main thing after castrating bulls, bull calves, boars and dogs is to keep them away from dampness, and if they swell, bathe with luke warm water and soap and open up the cuts with salty butter on your finger. If ii swells very much, bathe with luke warm wiiier and salt three times a day, and after bathing apply while lo.ion. Sometimes, a few weeks after the cuts are healed up, the bag swells and become- very sore and hot; in this case you may know there is matter forming in the bag. Bathe well three times a day with luke warni water"; after bathing apply white lotion and put on a hot poultice of half linseed meal and half bran ; fasten the poultice on by meana DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 286 of strings over the back; this is to bring the festering' to a head. Change the poultice every time you bathe the bag. As soon as you find a soft spot in the bag, lance it to let the matter out; make a good sized hole in it, large enough to run your finder up into it to clean it out. After this, treat by bathing with luke warm water and soap and applying the white lotion twice a day ; keep the cuts open by putting butter on your finger and running it up into the hole once a day until it commences to heal. RIG OR ORIGINAL BULLS. This is when one or both the testicles never come down into the scrotom, or bag. These kind of bulls cannot be castrated like horses, and after they get a little age on them they become a per- fect nuisance. Advice. — When you go to castrate a calf and find only one or neither testicles are down, fatten and get rid of it, for it very rarely comes down afterwards. It will save you a lot of trouble if >ou get rid of it while young. HOW TO RING A BULL. Secure the animal by throwing him, or having him in a solid, narrow stall ; take a piece of sharp-pointed, clean, hard wood, or a sharp piece of bright steel large enough to make a hole for the ring ; put the hole through in the soft part of the nose, just in front of the hard cartilage that separates the nostrils, which is easily felt. After the hole is through, open and oil the ring, slip it through, close it and put in the screw. After the ring is in turn it every day until the wound is healed. These rings can be got at any hardware store. SWELLING OF THE POINT OF SHEATH IN STEERS. Causes. — It is mostly seen where they are grazing on a pasture field where there is a lot of limestone, or when there is much lima in the water they drink, and on account of the steer not putting out his penis while making water, just letting it dribble out of the sheath, the lime in his water collects and forms a small limestone which soon gets large and irritates the sheath, causing it to swell. Treatment. — If he is a quiet steer, let him stand, and have someone to hold him by the horn and nose, while you, with your fingers oiled, pass one of them up into the sheath, and by working the stone around you can soon remove it, then oil the sheath inside and outside with lard and it will be all right. In case you cannot do this with the steer standing up, throw him down and secure him as for castration and remove it in the same way. 286 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. CHAPTER VI. DISEASES OF THE EAR AND EYE. Diseases of the ear of the ox are very rarely met with, and are similar to those of the horse, and for any information contern- ing them refer to diseases of the ear in the horse. CANCER IN THE EYE. The eye of the ox seems to be a favorite place for cancers and is very often met with. Causes. — The causes of it are the same as other cancers, that is, the cancer germs get into the blood, for the disease first begins in the blood, but afterward locates and shows itself in the eye, although some say it will come on from an injury. Symptoms. — The first symptom is dullness of the eye, with tears flowing from the corners ; there will be a bulging out of the eye, and if you look close you will see in the back part of the eye a small growth ; the animal may thrive fairly well for a while, but will fall off in condition as the growth comes on account of the pain in the eye ; soon the growth gets so large that it will destroy the whole eye and hang down on the cheek ; it gets very angry and red looking, and will bleed freely if the least thing touches it; the cancer keeps on growing, and in a short time th« bones around the eye become diseased, and when they become dis eased, they also become enlarged, and have a very bad smell. Treatment. — By removing the eye in the early stages of th* disease you can effect a cure. This is done by throwing and securing the animal ; have the head held solid, and with a knife cut around the eye and loosen it from the eyelids, then stick a small hook into the eye and pull it out as far as you can, then take a piece of carriage trimmers' twine and slip it around the back part of the eye and tie it tight — tliis will stop the bleeding — then cut the eye off in front of where you tied the string ; saturate a piece of cotton batting with Monsell's solution of iron and insert it in the hole where the eye came out of; take the batting out the next day and bathe the eye twice a day with luke warm water and soap, after bathing apply white lotion ; if the parts are raw and angry looking touch the spots with caustic potash every day. This may effect a cure, but in a case where it grows again, or where the growth is very bad before operating, or the bones duh eascd, have the animal destroyed immediately. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 287 FOREIGN SUBSTANCES IN THE EYB. Sometimes chaff, barley-beards or small pieces of stick fet into the eye and become lodg^ed there. Symptoms. — The animal suffers very much ; tears run down 3ver the cheek ; the eye becomes very much inflamed and dim, and ii allowed to run on the sight will soon become covered with a v^hite scum. If you catch the animal and examine the eye closely you will find out what is in it. Treatment. — In all cases catch the animal and examine the sye closely, and when you find out the cause of the trouble remove I, then bathe the eye every day with new milk or luke warm '■Hier; wipe dry and apply, in and around the eye every time after bathing, the eye wash mentioned in the receipts at the back of his book. Keep this treatment up till the eye is better. A GROWTH ON THE HAW OF THE EYE. This is a red growth in the inaier corner of the eye, caused by -ome irritation of the haw of the eye, which is a piece of cartilage or toug-h membrane that fits across the inner corner of the eye. Symptoms. — At first the eye looks sore and angry in the inner jorner and runs water freely, afterwards followed by the red, ingry looking growth growing out of the corner of the eye. The growth may vary from th* size of a mai'ble to a small hen's egg. Treatment. — Secure the animal by throwing it the same as nentioned for castrating bulls. Have the head held firmly on the ground, take hold of the growth with a small hook, or anything hat you can hold it with ; pull the growth out of the eye far snough to get under it with a pair of scissors and clip it off ; there s usually very little bleeding or trouble with it afterward ; bathe he eye with new milk once a day, wipe dry and apply the eye A'ash. SORE OR INFLAMED BTBS Of CATTLB. Causes. — From getting cold in the eyee or from an Injury. Symptoms. — Tears run freely, and the eyee are very weak and red looking, and if not relieved a scum soon forms over the light af the eye. Treatment. — Bathe well twice a day with new milk or luke warm water, and each time after bathing wipe dry and apply the eye wash. CATARACT OF THE EYE IN CATTLE. This is very rarely met with in cattle, and for information re- garding it look up cataract of the eye in borsea, for the causea, symptoms and treatment are the 288 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. m JURIBS TO THB ETBLmS. It may occur in a good many ways, as a kick from a horse, a hook from a cow, or from catching on something. Treatment. — If they are torn much stitch them up with a sewing needle, used to sew up wounds, and carriage trimmers' twine, which is the best twine for this work, and treat it after- wards by bathing with new milk or luke warm water and applying the eye wash. Do this twice day and it will soon heal up and the stitches will work out themselves. CHAPTER VII. FRACTURED BONES, WOUNDS, SPRiMNS OF JOINTS AND TENDONS. FRACTURED BONES. Fractures occur in various ways, from the kick of a horse, getting caught on a fence while jumping, falling, being chased by dogs, or being struck with anything hard enough to fracture a bone. As a rule, when the fracture is so bad that the bone is shattered, or a piece of the bone is stuck through the skin, it is best to destroy the animal, and if it is fat enough it makes good beef, provided it is killed in time. FRACTURE OF THE LOWER JAW. This is a fracture that generally occurs from a kick or a bio*' of tome kind, and is first noticed by the animal not being able to eat, and the mouth will seem crooked. It is recommended in cases of this kind to set the jaw in place, and have it held there with wire fastened around the teeth in the jaw. This can be done better if it is the front of the jaw that is fractured. When you have set the jaw with wires feed on soft food, such as gruels, that the animal can drink down. If the animal is fit to kill it is best to butcher it. BROKEN NECK OR FRACTURE OP THB NECK BONES. To show how simple this may occur we will relate a case that came under our own personal observation. A cow that had been kept in the stable during the winter and fed well was let, out ons day by the owner, and she, feeling good, was playing about when the dog was put after her, and while running away from the DISBABBS AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 289 ih« kicked up her hind feet and lowered her head, in doing this she caught her nose on the ground, which threw hei over ontc her head and neck. We heard the bone snap, and by the time we got to her she was dead. On examining her w« found that one of the bones of the neck was broken in the fall, which caused her death instantly. In any case where the bonea of the neck are fractured enough to press on the spinal cord U will cause death instantly. FRACTURES OF THE BONES OF THE BACK. This may occur from something falling on the animal, or bj slipping and falling, or from another animal jumping on it whil« standing crooked. Symptoms. — There is paralysis of the hind quarters, attended with pain ; the animal will moan and refuses to eat anything^. In severe cases the back will be swollen, and the mark of what caused the fracture can be seen. Treatment. — It is best to kill the animal, but if you wish to trv to treat it, keep it quiet, feed on soft food and keep the bowelf regulated by giving small doses of salts ; turn it from side to sitV- twice a day, and be careful while turning it not to hurt its. back. FRACTURE OF THE BONES OF THE HIP. In some cases we have a hip knocked down from a blow, a» from running through a narrow doorway and striking the hi|v This is not dangerous, only it spoils the look of the animal whea its hip is knocked down. If it is sore after being knocked dows bathe twice a day with luke warm water and apply white liniment until the soreness is out ; if the bone heals all right do nothing more to it. Sometimes we have a case where the broken piece ol bone does not heal to the other ; it soon begins to fester around it, and the parts become swollen and sore. You must then ope» it with a sharp knife and remove the broken piece of bone. Fra» ture of the under part of the hip bones generally occurs from the animal slipping on ice when the legs straddle out. As soon •• K gets up it walks off very stiff, and the legs are straddled out b# hind whfle walking or standing. The treatment for thii to W keep the animal very quiet by tying it in a stall until th« M«"' unitei which generally takes four or five weeks. —It— 2ft0 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. FRACTURES 0 TUB RiiSi. Thii is always the result of a kick or a blow of some kind. In a severe case the animal cannot raise to its feet ; there will be a dingfe \n the side, and on shoving- it in and out you can hear the bones grating- on each other. In slight cases the animal will be able to get up all right, but will be stiff and sore. In most of these cases the animal will cough a little, and breathe short and quick. Treatment. — All that is needed is quietness, good care and food. It the animal is not able to raise turn it over from side to side twice a day. If the rib is broken so bad that it penetrates the lung and sets up inflammation there is no hope of recovery. FRACTURE OF THE SHOULDER BLADE OR SHOULDER BONE. Fracture of these bones is indicated by the extreme lamen&ss and pain it causes the animal, and on moving the leg you can hear the bones grating on each other. In a case of this kind it is best to destroy the animal, but if the fracture is not so severe, and. it is a young animal, keep it very quiet' arid feed well, and it will come all right in the couse of time. The less you bother with it the better. FRACTURES OF THE BONES BELOW THE KNEE. There is crookedness of the leg, lameness and extreme i^in, and when you move the leg you can hear the bones grating on eajh other. Treatment — Get the animal in a quiet place, set the leg in shape, and have some one to hold it while you bandage it with a starched bandage, which is a long strip of cotton dipped in starch used for starching clothes. On drawing the bandage out of the starch draw it between your fingers to clean out as much of the starch as you can, then wrap it moderately tight around the leg, put lots of the bandage on, and have some one to hold the leg and bandage straight for an hour or so until the starch hardens the bandage. After that the bandage will hold the leg to Its place. Leave it on four or five weeks until the bones are healed. Keep the aniitial quiet until the bones are well knit together. If the leg should swell with this bandage take it off and put it on looser. Fractures above the knee are sometimes treated by this method, but not nearly so successfully. DISBABKS AND TRKATMENT OF CATTLE. 291 FRACTURES OP THE BONES ABOVE AND BELOW THE STIFFLB JOWT. The animal may not able to stand, but if it is the leg will be hanging loose. By moving the leg you can hear the broken bonea grate on each other. Treatment. — In rery severe cases it ia best to destroy the animal, or, if is a fat animal, kill it for beef. If you attempt to treat it you will not be able to do anything for it only keep the animal quiet, and leave It lying down or standing up, whichever it prvjfera. STIFPLE OUT IN CATTLE. For this disease we refer you to dislocation of the patella (stiffle out) in horses, for the causes, symptoms and treatment are the same in both. This does not occur so often in cattle as it does in horses. FRACTURES OF THE BONES BELOW THE HOCK. For this we refer you to fracture of the bones below the knee, for the causes, symptoms and treatment are the same in both cases. SPAVIN. This is generally seen in working oxen, or cows. There is lameness and an enlargement on the inner side of the lower part of the hock joint, similar to spavin in horses. Blister with the following : Biuiodide of Mercury or Red Precipitate .....' 2 drams. Powdered Cantharides or Spanish Fly 3 '• Vaseline or Lard IJ ounces. Mix thoroughly and clip off the hair on the inside of the hock over the enlargement, and rub on half of this blister, rubbing it in well, and tie the animal short so it cannot lick it ; grease the blistered part the third day after blistering, then let it go for a month, and then wash it off with warm water and soap and keep repeating the blister until the animal is over the lameness, which generally takes three or four months. SPRAINS m ANY PART OF THE ANIMAL. Causes. — Generally from the animal stepping crooked, or a dog worrying it, or from fighting. Symptoms. — There is heat, swelling, pain and stiffness, or lameness according to the part of the body it is in. Treatment. — Bathe the parts well with luke warm water and vinegar three times a day ; after bathing wipe dry and apply th« 292 THE VBTBRINARY SOIENOB. white liniment. If the sprain is in a joint of the legs, by bandag- ing it each time after bathing will help to relieve the pain and support the joint. WOUNDS OF ALL KINDS. For wounds we refer you to the explanation of wounds givea in horses, for they happen in a similar manner and are treated th« same ; but, in sewing the skin in cattle you will find it toughM and a little harder to sew than in the horse. Am UNDER THE SKIN CAUSED FROM A WOUND. Sometimes from a very small wound in the ox, air gets und*t the skin into the tissue which connects the skin to the body. The amount of air which gets in varies greatly, sometimes only a small amount works in just around the wound, while again w« have seen cases where so much air would work in that it spread all over the body under the skin and make the animal look doublt its natural size. The way to be sure it is air, is to rub your hand over the skin and it will make a peculiar crackling noise. Treatment — The main thing to be done in this, is to tap tha skin in several places around where the air is with a penknife and let the air escape ; rub the skin to get all the air out, and after this give the skin a good rubbing once a day with white liniment, then give the wound the treatment given for wounds, and in a few days the air will all disappear. This disease is sometimaa met with in the horse and is treated the same. HAGGOTS Uf NEGLECTED WOUNDS. Symptoms. — The wound smells bad, is dirty, and if jou stir It, the maggots can be seen moving around in it. Treatment. — Give tha wound a thorough cleaning, by wash- ing it out with luke warm watar and soap, after this apply ereolia lotion, this will destroy them. In vary bad cases, if this does not iffect a cure, give the wound a good dressing with spirits of tur- pentine, and afterwards bathe twice a da/ and apply the oreolia lotion. tsefstULttssu This Is a kind «€ inflamnfiation that affects the joints aad tendons. Causes, — From bad blood where there is too much acid in it ; from getting wet or from lying on the damp ground bi the spring oi the year, will cause it. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 293 Symptoms. — There is swelling and soreness in the joint affected; it may affect one joint for a while, then move to another, and so on. Treatment — Rub the affected joint well with acid liniment once a day and give the following : Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre i pound. Oonimon Soda. i " Salicylic Acid i " Mix and g'ive a tablespoon ful twice a day in its feed. CHAPTER VIII. DISEASES OF THE SKIN. WARTS AND SMALL GROWTHS ON THE SKIN. Some cattle are more subject to warts than others. If the warts have a neck the best way to get rid of them is by tying a small, strong string tightly around the wart, as close to the skin as you can, and by leaving the string tied tight on it it will stop the blood circulating in the wart, which will cause it to die and drop off. If the wart is flat and has no neck that you can tie the string on cut it off with a sharp knife and burn it with a stick of caustic potash. Small lumps, or tumors, in the skin are very common in horses and cattle, but are easily got rid of. If it is a horse put a twitch on his nose and have one of his front feet held up; if it is a cow tie her up solid, then cut a hole in the skin over the lump and skin around it, then lift it up and cut it off at the bottom. There is not much danger from bleeding so long as you do not cut into a large vein, which you can see right in the skin. The after treatment is to bathe with luke warm water twice a day and apply the white lotion after bathing until it heals up LICE ON CATTLE. They may be cattle lice or hen lice. Symptoms. — The animal keeps rubbing itself until it rubs the hair off in places, and if you examine closely you will see them in the hair. Cattle affected with lice do not thrive well. Tred.tmeilt. — The treatment is very simple and cheap. Here la the most effective remedy known if it is properly used: Qreolln. ^ ounce, or 2 tableepoonfula WaUt. 1 pint. 294 THE VETEKiJNAllY SCIENCE. Mix and shake well and there will be enough in this to go over a cow twice. Before applying it give the animal a good brushing with a stiff brush; pour the wash into a flat dish where you can get at it, and with a brush or sponge, dipped in the wash, rub it all over the animal. Do this twice a week until the lice are all killed. Twenty cents will buy enough creolin to kill the lice on twenty head of cattle. MANGE m CATTLE. For this disease refer to mange in horse?, for the causes, symptoms and treatment are the same. RINGWORM. This is a common disease in young cattle and calves. Causes. — From a parasite, or germ, getting into the skin and working around the bottom of th& hair, causing it to fall out in round patches. This disease affects young cattle more than older ones, but may affect them at any age. Treatment. — The cheapest and best remedy for this is crude petroleum oil painted over the spot and a) little over the edges of the ringworm, in the sound skin, to keep it from spreading. Paint this on with a feather every day, or every second day until the ringworm disappears. Be careful in handling ringworms on cattle, as you are liable to get them yourself from the cattle. HORN FLY. These are also called Austrian flies and are a small, black, hard fly. They first started on this continent in the Eastern slates in the year 1887, and since th m have spread all over the coun- try. They start to bother ihi cattle d;?; ing the warm 'days of May and continue bothering thet'i until the frost comes in the fall. These flies become very m n. ^i:s on the! cattle, and they pierce holes in the skin and suck the blood. While they are resting they light on the horns, and sometimes the base of the'horn is literally covered with with them. Treatment. — Apply wagon grease, tar, or some oily substance around the base of the horn every few days to keep them from resting on the horn. Wash the animal's body twice a week with cr©olin wash, which is very cheap and effectual. Creolin 2 ounoes or 8 tablespoonfuU. Water , 1 gallon. Mix, shake well and rub them over twice a week with a cloth or sponge dipped in this wash and it will keep the files from bothering thent. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE, 295 WARBLES. This trouble is only found to affect cattle, and is caused by a large fly, called the g^adfly, stinging the animal around the back ; this fly lays an e'^g down in the skin each time it stings, which develops into what is known as the warble. Symptoms. — Small lumps appear in the skin, principally over the animal's back, and coming on spring, these lumps, which con- tain the grub, or warble, becomes pierced, and the grub gradu- ally works out and falls on the ground and in a few days matures into another gadfly which flies off to sting cattle again during' the summer. Treatment. — As soon as you notice the lump, cut the skin and squeeze the grub out. By killing the grubs in this way you will soon get rid of the pest. SNAKE BITES. The bite of some snakes is very poisonous and causes the animal to have great depression ; it becomes very weak and feeble, the eyes are dull and the pupils enlarged, the ears and legs be- come cold, and in severe cases death soon comes on if not treated. If you see the animal as soon as it is bitten cut the piece out and burn the wound with a hot iron to kill the poison ; give half-pint doses of whisky or brandy mixed in a pint of water every three or rour hours to stimulate the animal and counteract the depression and weakness caused by the poison in the system. BITES OF INSECTS, SMALL" SNAKES, HORNETS, ETC. After the bite, or sting, there is noticed a soft swelling, which Is sore. Rub the parts with white liniment three or four times a day; which will soon draw the poison out and take down the swelling. FROST BITES. Frost bites in cattle are treated the same as frost bites in horses. BURNS AND SCALDS. Burns and scalds on any animal are treated by applying car- bolic oil to the burnt or scalded part, take four ounces of sweet oil with ten drops of carbolic acid in it. Put this on twice a day and it will stop the pain and heal the parts. 296 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. CHAPTER IX. DISEASES OF THE FEET— HOW TO DEHORN, BLEED AND DRENCH. LAMINITIS (FOUNDER). This is inflammation of the sensitive structures of the foot, #r what is commonly called the quick of the foot. Causes. — Are from overfeeding', overheating, or from driving ft long distance on a hard, stony road. SymptoniS. — The animal persists in lying down ; the feet are hot and sometimes swollen around the top of the hoof and sore to press on ; the animal is greedy to drink on account of being feverish, but does not care to eat much, and if you force the animal to move it just slides its feet along, seems very stiff and its belly is all drawn up from trying to favor its feet. Treatment. — Keep the animal as quiet as possible, and poultice the feet with hot linseed meal and bran — about half-and- half. The way to do this is to take an old grain bag, cut about a foot off the bottom of it and pack the hot poultice in the bottom ; place the foot in it, and then tie it up around the fetlock and foot so it cannot fall off. Do this to all the feet and change the poultice twice a day; keep this up until the animal gets all right. As well as this, give a pound and a half of Epsom salts In a quart of luke warm water; also give a teaspoonful of saltpetre, or nitrate of potash, in a mash night and morning. Sometimes, If the weather is warm, by standing the animal in a stream of water with a mucky bottom, for a few hours every day, will soon brings them all right without anything else. SORENESS OF THE FEET FROM ANY CAUSE. Treat just the same as you would for founder, by poultices and keeping the animal quiet. If the toes are too long, cut them off with a chisel and mallet. FOUL IN THE FOOT (FOOT-ROT). This is an inflammation of the skin and parts between the crotters or toes, and after this there are ulcers or small boils form and break out all around the top of the foot and between the trot- ters. The foot becomes very much swollen in some cases and causes the trotters to spread wide apart. The animal suffers great DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 297 pain and can scarcely put the foot to the ground, and if allowed to run on without being treated at once, it becomes very tedious and hard to treat. The hind feet are more often affected than the front ones. Causes. — Are from something becoming wedged in between the trotters or toes, such as hard clay, manure or a piece of stick, bone or any such like substance, it is more often seen where cattle stand in a filthy place or have to walk through a dirty, soft place. Treatment.— As soon as noticed examine the foot and remove any substance found between the trotter or toes, wash the foot thoroughly with luke warm water and soap, after this apply a good warm poultice of linseed meal, poultice every night and keep the animal in a nice dry place and after you take the poultice ofl in the morning and before you put it on at night give the foot a good dressing with the following: Carbolic Acid 1 dram, or 1 teaspoonful. Water 1 pint. Shake well together each time before using and apply as mentioned, when applying get it worked in between the trotters or toes as much as you can. Keep this treatment up until it is better, in very bad cases it takes a long time to get better, but keep at it. Another very good wash to use in place of the carbolic water is Creolin i ounce or 2 tablespoonfuls. Water 1 pint Mix and use the same as the carbolic water, if one remedy should fail try the other; during treatment be sure and keep the animal quiet and in a dry place, and feed well to keep its strength up. FISTULA OF THE FOOT. No matter what part of the foot is affected it is just the same, it is caused by a bruise or from something running into the foot and dirt getting up in the hole or from diseased bone. Symptoms. — There is lameness and a discharge from a small hole which has no tendency to heal, and if it is from a small piece of diseased bone the discharge smells very bad. Treatment. — In all cases pare out the hoof or horn around the sore spot, so as to allow whatever is in it to have a chance to run out, and then poultice until you draw out whatever is in the bole causing the trouble. The best poultice for this is hot linseed neal. After you get it out, the hole will soon heal up of its own ieo«rd. 298 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. NAIL RUN IN THE FOOT. This g-enerally occurs where cattle are running around old building's where boards with nails in them are lying about. Symptoms. — There is severe lameness which comes on all of a sudden ; the animal appears lo be in great pain and can scarcely touch its foot to the ground. Treatment. — Pull the nail out, pare out around the hole made by the nail and poultice with hot linseed meal ; keep the animal quiet until the soreness is all out ; change the poultices twice a day. If it should tester then pare down around the hole until the matter comes out and then poultice well to draw it all out ; keep the animal quiet until the hole heals up. After you quit poulticing stuff the hole with tar and cotton batting to keep the dirt from working up into it. DEHORNING. This is an operation which is carried on to a great extent in Canada and other countries, and is gaining the favor of stock owners rapidly. It is a very simple, although a painful operation while it lasts, and is, as a general thing, attended with very good results. While this is a painful operation so are all other opera- tions, such as castration and docking, but as long as it is done with a view to benefitting the lives of the cattle themselves, and also their owner, it is not considered inhuman. It is best not to perform this operation on cattle under one year old for the horns will often grow again, and before that time they never do much harm. The best time to dehorn is in the spring, during the months of March and April, so that the horns will be well healed up before the flies come to bother them, or in the fall of the year, just after there has been frost ei»ough to kill the flies. The opera- tion is a simple one, and is performed in this way : Build a stanchion, similar to the old way of tying cattle, in a solid door- way, or any other such place where you car. run the cattle into it, one at a time. Have the stanchion built good and strong, also have the sticks in it good and tight together, just large enough for the animal's neck to fit in when it is closed ; have a narrow stall, built out of good strong plank, at the side of the stanchion where you can run the cattle in, this will keep them from swinging the body around while you are dehorning them. When you have the animal fast in the stanchion put a rope halter over its head, and '^ave the head and neck well pulled forward by means of a double DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 299 pulley so as to get gfood purchase to hold the animal in its place while operating- ; have the pulleys attached to somethings about eight or ten feet straight in front of the animal, and as near the ground as possible, this will hold the head in better position ; have a man take hold of the nose and ear at one side while you saw the horn ofT with a stifT-backed, fine-tooth carpenter saw, taking about one-eighth of an inch of skin off with the horn, then take off the other horn in like manner. By taking the horn off in this place it is easier sawed, bleeds less, heals nicer and there is no danger of it growing again. As soon as you are through with this animal put in another. In cases where you only have one to dehorn throw and secure it, and take the horns off in the same manner. Another way by which they may be taken off is to use large dehorning clippers. These clippers can be got at a hardware store, and the directions how to use are along with them. We recommend sawing the horns off, except in cases of very young cattle. After two or three years of age the horns be- come brittle, and in pinching them off with the clippers there is danger of fracturing the bon.ei of the head. Always keep the animal from being chased before and after the operation, for there is more danger of bleeding when they are excited. If they bleed much apply a little of Monsell's solution of iron with a feather, which will stop the bleeding. Keep the animal quiet and do not allo\^ it to be out in any cold storms, and be careful when feeding it not to throw dust or chaff on the head Sfo it will get in the holes, which would be apt to cause festering. If you want to kill the horns on calves it must be done when they are about a week old. When the little horn first appears take a stick of caustic potash, dip it in water and rub it well into the skin around where the little horn is coming through. One burning generally kills the horns ; if not, repeat it heavier in a few days, HOW TO BLEED A COW. Tie a small rope around the neck, just in front of the shoulders, so it will raise the jugular vein, then take the largest blade of an ordinary fleames, hold it lengthwiae, fair in the centre over the vein, then hit the fleames a sharp tap with a piece of hardwood ; hit hard enough to cut the vein, and catch the blood in a pail Take from half a pail to a pailful of blood awa\-. When you have enough blood away, let the rope slack, run a pin through the two edges of the cut and wind a string around the 300 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. pin in the form of a figure eight and tie it there. Keep the animal in the stable, and feed out of a high manger, for twenty- four hours, then remove the pin and allow the animal to go. In this operation, as in all others, have everything clean for fear of blood-poisoning. HOW TO DRENCH CATTLE. In cattle always mix your drenches in a large quantity of water, because it will wash out of the paunch quicker, and have a quicker and better action when given this way. Have an assistant to hold the horns while you take hold of the nose with your left hand, and hold the head a little above a level; with your right hand put the bottle well back into the mouth and allow it all to run down without taking the bottle out of the mouth, unless the animal should cough; if it does, let go of its head until through coughing, then continue the drenching. Be careful in drenching, especially in lung troubles, for they are easily choked. CHAPTER X. DISEASES OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. CORN STALK DISEASE. C£lUSeS. — From eating corn stalks which have minute germs underneath the leaves ; these germs are so small that you cannot see them without the aid of a microscope. Corn stalks that are affected with these germs do not grow so well, and ripens long before the other corn. Symptoms. — There is first, symptom.s of impaction of the third part of stomach or manyplies, after that the brain becomes aff"ected and the animal becomes delirious, this is followed by itupidness ; the animal will shove its head forward against the stall and pay no attention to anything, and after a few days, dies. Treatment. — Give >the following : Epsom Salts 1 pound. Bitter Aloes 1 ounce. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfuU. Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 10 to 15 drops. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench, and afterwards follow up with : Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 10 to 15 drops. Sweet Spirits of Nitre .... 1 ounce, or 4 tablespoonfnla. Ginger 1 tablespoonfuL Common Soda 1 '' DISJBASEB AND TRBATMENT OF CATTLE. 301 Mix in a pint of water and give as a drench every four hours until it is better. Give luke warm water to drink and feed on soft food, k»e^ the body warm, and if the animal's head is affected, keep ice to its head in a bag. Smut on corn is very bad feed, as it is apt to derange the stomach and cause diarrhoea, and if the animal gets too much smut it will set up a disease similar to ergotism. INFLAMMATION OP THE BRAIN (ENCEPHALITIS). This disease is not so often met with in cattle as it is in horses. Causes. — From a severe blow on the head, or from falling and striking the head; irritation of small tumors growing around the brain and pressing on it; certain kinds of food containing ergot or narcotic principles will cause it, or from eating grains from a distillery. Symptoms. — The first symptoms are the animal will be dull and drowsy and stands with its head pressed up against a wall or fence ; its legs keep moving as if it was going to walk right through whatever its head is pressed against ; when walking it has a staggering gait ; its bowels are costive and its urine is of a dark-red color. After these symptoms pass off the animal gets delirious and acts as if it were mad, it bellows, stamps its feet, grates its teeth, froths at the mouth, runs about wildly, and, if in the stable, rears up into the mangen Treatment. — In the first stages, when the animal is dull, bleed it, taking a half pailful of blood away, and give Epsom Salta 1 pound. Bitter Alo«a 1 ounce. Qinger 1 tableapoonfoL Common Sod* 1 •• Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench. Keep the animal in a quiet, shady place ; apply a mustard plaster to th« back ; ke«p th« body warm and apply ice to its head in a bag. Oive SwMt Bsiritc of Ifitre 1 onaoe or 4 tablespooaf oli. fleming^i Tlnoture of Aoonitek 10 to 10 drop*. Mix In a pint of cold water and giy evary Ay hours, until tha animal is better. Giva plenty of cold water to drink in small quantities and feed on soft food. Giva an injection into thd anua of half a pail of luke warm water and soap twica a day to help to start tha bowels. 302 THB VETBBINABY SCIBNOS. SUNSTROKE, Thi« very rarely occurs in cattle. The causes, symptoms and traatment are the same as those of the horse, only in giving^ i physic use one pound of Epsom salts along with the bitter aloes. LOCKJAW (TETANUS). This disease is rarely met with in cattle. Causes. — Following operations, or wounds of any kind, and sometimes it comes on from causes unknown. Symptoms. — If it is from a wound just when it is healing up the muscles all over the body is contracted and hard ; the animal has a stiff way of walking ; the tail will be stiff, and keeps work- ing- like a snake ; the jaws become partially set ; the animal can- not reach down to the ground ; the eyes have a peculiar look and seem to be turned back in the head and set. In some cases the animal can eat, while in other cases it cannot, according to how much the muscles of the jaws are affected. Treatment. — This is one of the diseases that does not need much medicine because in giving the medicine it excites the animal and does more harm than good, and, anyway, medicine ioes not seem to do any good in this disease. Give the following: Epsom Suits 1 pound. Common Soda , 1 tablespoonfuL Ginger 1 * ' - Fluid Extract of Belladonna 1 dram, or 1 teaspoonful. Mix in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench once a week. Keep the animal perfectly quiet and free from noise. Feed on food made into gruel, so that it can drink it down. If it is caused from a wound, bathe the wound twice a day and fill the place full of green salve. If the wound is where you can poultice it, poultice it every night with linseed meal. This disease generally takes three or four weeks to run its course, and if you can keep the animal's strength up till then it will pass awa) , while in severe cases they die in a week or se. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE 303 CHAPTER XI. CONTAGIOUS DISEASES IN CATTLE CONTAGIOUS PLEURO-PNEUMONIA. This disease is contag-ious, or catching, and is inflammation of the lungs and covering of the lungs; this is how it gets its name. This disease was more common at one time than it is now. It was first noticed in Prussia in 1802, Russia in 1824, England in 1841, and America in 1843. It is a very contagious disease in cattle, but never aflfects other animals. If an animal once gets over this disease it will never get it again. When there is an outbreak of this disease it spreads very rapidly, by the germs of the disease being carried about in different ways. Symptoms. — The first symptom is, the animal gets very feverish; the temperature goes as high as 105 degrees. The animal will remain feverish for a week or so, and also have a cough, as if from a slight cold. After this the lungs become inflamed and sets up inflammation of the lungs and their covering. By listening at the sides you will hear the peculiar grating sound that is heard in inflammation of these parts. The animal breathes heavy and quick, falls ofl^ rapidly in condition, refuses to eat, becomes hide bound, and there is a discharge from the nostrils of a whitish color, which has a very bad smell. The pulse runs up higher and becomes weaker; the nose is dry, and the animal lies on its breast bone most of the time. Sometimes there is diarrhoea, then costiveness; the eyes become dull and the animal soon dies. When one animal in a herd becomes affected with this disease the whole herd will soon become affected and die, and if it is not checked in this herd it soon spreads all over the country. Treatment — If there should be several animals die in the same district, and you suspect this disease, send for one of the government reterinjirjr inspectors, who looks after all contagious diseases that break out in America. The treatment he will follow, after he is sure it la this disease they have, is : He will have the affected herd immediately destroyed, and, the people who have been attending the cattle and those who are on the farm, will not be allowed to leave the farm for ninety days, and all the stables where the cattle have been will be disinfected and no other cattle will be allowed on the farm for ninety days after the slaughter. Medical treatment is of no avail in this disease, and you are not allowed to treat them. 304 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. CIWSUMPTION IK CATTLE (TUBERCULOSIS). This disease is a contagious one, caused by germs called th« bacillus tuberculosis. This disease has been known for centuries back, and there has been laws passed calling for the destruction of affected animals, and also forbidding the meat to be used as food. This disease is known in all the civilized world. It may affect the lungs, bowels, liver, kidneys, bladder, brain or spinal cord, or any part of the body. The germs in the affected cattle come away from the lungs by coughing, or flows away in the saliva from the affected animal's mouth, they fall on the grass, in mangers, pails and such like, and other animals following them up may breathe the germs into the lungs by eating or drinking out of the same pail or manger, or off the grass where the diseased cattle have been, and this is how the disease is com- municated from one to the other. These germs may also pass out of the system into the milk, and animals or people that drink this milk are liable to take the disease, so you see the danger of having a diseased cow around. Symptoms. — At first the disease comes on very slowly after it is taken into the system. If the disease affects the lungs there is a short, dull coug-h which may be noticed more in the morning, after exercise, or drinking, later on in the disease the cough be- comes more troublesome, the animal runs down in condition, the breath has a bad smell, there is a dribbling of saliva from the mouth, the animal becomes hide bound, the hair stands out and it is a pitiful looking sight, and in a few months pines away and dies. The time it takes the disease to run its course varies from three months to a year. This disease ia noticed more in thoroughbred cattle than it is in grade cattle. If it affects the bowels the animal will run down in condition, will have diarrhoM sometimes, then coativeness changing every few days ; the other symptoms are the same only when the disease does not affect the lungs the animal has not such a cough. If the disease affects the brain or spinal cord it causes paralysis, and death soon foUowe« If any of the other parte or organs of the body are affected It causes symptoms peculiar* to that organ when affected, and tlM animal slowly ptnes away and dies. The way to teat cattle to find out whether they are affected with tuberculosis or not is to use the test known as the tuberculine test, which is done by injectin|f ^berculine into all the herd of cattle that are supposed to be affected with the disease and having them starved for twenty- four DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 305 hours after the injection, then take their temperature. The temperature of the cattle not affected with the disease will be normal, tvhile the temperature of the affected ones will be raised two or three deg-rees. In case you suspect this disease in your herd of cattle it is best to send for the government veterinary inspector to come and use the test, for he thoroughly understands how to test them, and the affected ones will be destroyed. In this way you prevent the disease from spreading in your own herd of cattle, and by doing this you also protect the lives of your family, yourself and those around you, for this disease can be communi- f:ated from cattle to people by drinking the milk or eating the meat of affected cattle. In opening cattle that are affected with this disease the organ that is affected will be found to be eaten away with the disease, and its place is taken by a lot of small lumps inclosed in a membrane, and if you cut into them they are found to be full of oilier little cheesy lumps about the size of a pea. In very bad cases tumors will sometimes form and be full of yellow matter. HYDROPHOBIA, MADNESS OR RABIES IN CATTLE. f his disease originates spontaneously in dogs and cats and can be communicated to other animals or man by the poison caused from the bites of these animals while they are mad. The saliva of the mouth contains the poison and this is how it is caused from a bite. Every animal that they bite does not go mad, but about one-fourth of the animals bitten do go mad. Symptoms. — A few days after being bitten the animal loses its appetite, is very restless and anxious looking, then there i* increased restlessness, loud roaring at times, bunting at things and pawing with its feet; saliva keeps dripping away from the mouth, there is a peculiar wild look in the eyes, and the animal keeps continually straining to pass manure, but very little comes, and in a short time it becomes paralyzed in the hind quarters, tails down and death soon relieves it. If the above symptom* are present, and a mad dog has been through that section of the country, you may as well destroy the animal, for it is mad and is dangerous to have around. Treatment.— If the disease has set in, destroy the animal, and in going around it be very careful not to let it hook or bite you; but if you go to treat the animal just after it has been bitten by a mad dog, take a sharp knife and cut a piece right out of th« —20— 306 , THE VETEBINABY BGIENOE. wound, then take a stick of caustic potash, or nitrate of silver, and burn the wound well with it ; but if you have not got these, burn the wound well with a red hot iron, which will also kill the poison. LUMPY JAW (ACTINOMYCOSIS). This disease is contagious and spreads among cattle. It is caused by germs known as "actinomycosis." This disease gener- ally affects the upper or lower jaws, but may affect the tongue and other parts of the body. The way this disease is communi- cated from one animal to another is from the affected animals slavering on the grass or over feed and other animals take it up when eating or drinking. These germs pass down into the bowels, where they are taken up into the blood and carried around until tliey locate in the jaw. They may also be taken into the system from the slaver getting into the wound on another animal, and it is thought that this disease may be carried to and affect man . by eating the flesh of an animal affected with this disease. Symptoms. — If it affects the jaw there will be a hard, bony lump form opposite the roots of the teeth, either in the upper or lower jaws. The disease gradually works in the jaw, the lump grows, and in the course of time the disease gets so bad that the teeth loosen and fall out, and on account of the disease being so bad that the animal cannot eat, it falls off in condition and dies. If it affects the tongue, it is generally the thick part at the back that is affected. It thickens and hardens the tongue so much that when this is affected, it sometimes receives the name of wooden tongue; in this case the animal will fall off in condition, from not being able to eat, and will soon die. Treatment. — If more than one animal In a herd becomes affected with lumpy jaw, and alter examining the teeth you find nothing wrong with them and you cannot see the mark of any injury outside around the jaws, and if they are not sore to handle, then be suspicious of this disease and treat in the following man- ner : Separate the affected animals from the sound ones ; treat the affected ones by throwing and securing them, then skin a piece of the skin off the upper part of the lump, and take a quarter-inch auger or a trephine, which is an instrument used for boring into the bone, but an auger will do just as well ; bore two small holes well into the bone, which is easily done when the bone is diseased ; pour tincture of iodine into the holes and let it soak well around the diseased bone ; let the animal DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 307 up, and in a few days afterward catch it again and fill the holes with iodine, and keep putting in the iodine every fourth day until the holes heal up. If this treatment fails to kill the lump destroy the animal and burn it, for it is dangerous to have it in your herd, and its meat should not be used for food, as it might set up the disease in man. AWTHRAX. This is an infectious disease caused by germs, called the anthrax bacilli, getting into the blood. This disease affects cattle in all parts of the world, and is only noticed in cattle that are grazing on low, swampy land that have pools of stagnant water on it. When once the disease gets into a pasture field it will remain there for years, and the only way to get rid of it is to break the field up and drain it. Symptoms — It more frequently affects young cattle than older ones ; the attack is very sudden, and an animal apparently well the night before will be found dead in the morning. In some cases as soon as the animal is affected it drops down, goes into convulsions and dies. In other cases it will last longer, the pulse will run up to from 80 to 100 beats per minute ; the animal will not eat; the whole surface of the body, legs and ears are cold, and it is very dull, stupid and weak. In a short time this dullness gives way to uneasiness, it champs its jaws, kicks and paws the irround and appears to be in terrible agony ; it has very much difficulty in breathing, the nostrils are enlarged and the mouth open ; the lining of the mouth, nostrils, rectum or back bowel ind vagina are of a blue color, the manure is first thin and watery looking, then covered with slime and blood ; the symptoms gradu- ally get worse, and in a few hours it dies a miserable death. The germs are taken into the system from eating grass around a swamp or drinking the water from stagnant pools. They find their way from the bowels into the blood, and work around until they locate themselves in the bowels or tissues under the skin. When an animal dies from this disease it bloats up, decomposition setting in very quickly, and there is a blood-stained fluid flows from the mouth, nose and anus. If you have had an animal or two die while pasturing on this kind of land, and showing the above symptoms and appearance after death, send for the government veterinary inspector, he will examine the blood, and if the germs are found in It you will then be sure it is anthrax. Burn the 308 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. carcasses of the dead cattle and remove the sound ones from the pasture ; drain the field and break it up is the best way to get rid of the germs. Sheep are also subject to this disease and have the same symptoms. Treatment. — There is no treatment for this disease. BLA"-: QUARTER. This is an infectious disease and is very fatal, and affects cattle from six months to three or four years' old. It is caused by germs getting into the system. This disease is noticed mostly in cattle grazing on low-lying, swampy lands. Symptoms. — About three days after the germs get into the system the animal becomes dull and feverish, the temperature rises as high as 107 degrees; there is lameness in some of the legs, generally in one of the front ones, which is caused from a swelling which usually forms just behind the front leg, but may be in any other part of the body. The symptoms gradually get worse ; the animal acts as if it had severe spells of colic, but keeps looking around to where the swelling is; breathes heavy; becomes very weak and soon dies. The swelling, after it is first noticed, grows very fast, and when you rub your hand over it, it makes a crackling noise as if it contained air. If you cut into the swelling the animal does not feel it, and nothing comes out only a dark red, frothy looking substance, which has a bad smell. If YOU skin the animal where the swelling is, there will be dark brown, dark red and yellow colored patches, and the parts around where the swelling is will be soft and easily torn. Treatment. — There is no treatment for this disease, only remove the sound animals, destroy and bum the affected ones, md drain and break up the pasturs. TEXAS FEVER. This disease affects cattle all through the southern parts of the stales, and is caused from germs getting into the blood. The germs are carried from one animal to another by cattle ticks. Symptoms. — At first there is dullness, loss of appetite, and the animal will leave the herd and stand or lie down alone. The temperature at this stage will be up from 105 to 107 degrees, and stays about that all through the disease. The bowels are con- stipated, and anything that is passed is covered with bile, and near the end of the disease the urine or water is of a dark red color. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 309 The pulse and breathing' are both quickened ; the animal becomes very stupid and lays down most of the time, and in a few days death relieves it In some cases they die in three days, while in others they live for several weeks, and if an animal does recover it takes it a long^ time to do so. Treatment. — In order to keep the disease from spreading- do not allow cattle that have these ticks on them to go into other herds, and cattle affected with this disease should be put on a pasture by themselves, and the ticks should he picked off and killed, then give the animal the following : Fifteen grains of sulphate of quinine three times a day, either in a drench mixed with a pint of water, in a capsule or on its tongue with a spoon CHAPTER XII. DISEASES THAT ARE LIABLE TO AFFECT ANY ANIMAL. TUMORS. Tumors are growths which are not inflamed nor sore to handle, and are of various kinds ; they do not fester and break, and run matter as abscesses do, but simply grow; they may affect any part of the body in any kind of an animal, and in some cases there will be a small amount of matter in the center of the lump. Tumors, as a general thing, grow very slowly, and ire very hard when you feel them. Treatment. — At first they may be stopped growing and ab- lorbed by blistering For Tumors on Cattle— Use the following blister : Powdered Cantharides or Spanish P'ly 2^ drams. Vaseline or Lard 1 ounce. Mix and rub in well what you can get on the tumor ; tie the inimal's head so it cannot bite the blister ; grease the blistered part in three days, and in two weeks blister again, and continue antil you have blistered it three or four times, and then if this does not stop the growth of the lump and reduce it down it is best to cut it out. Tincture of iodine is also good to use in some ;ases. Rub the lump well with it once a day till you get it well blistered, then grease and let it go for a few days, then wash the g-rease off with luke warm water and soap and commence using the iodine again. 310 THE VETERINARY SOIENOB. For Tumors on Horses. — Use the following blister : Powdered Cantharides or Spanish Fly IJ drams. Vaseline or Lard 1 ounce. Mix and apply with the same directions as is given for the blister on cattle, if this does not fix it try the iodine the same as for cattle. In case you have to cut the lump out, throw the animal down and secure it, make a good, long cut in the skin over the tumor and cut around it until you have it cut out, after the tumor is out and it is bleeding, take a large piece of dry cotton batting about the size of the tumor and shove it in where you took the tumor out, then sew up the skin the same as sewing a wound, and leave it sewed up for twenty-four hours, then take a couple of stitches out of the lower part of the wound and take the batting out and dress it by bathing it off with luke warm water and soap twice a day, after each bathing dress the wound by inserting melted green salve with a feather up in the wound and applying white lotion around the outside and inside of the cut. Keep this treatment up until it is healed. If the tumor lies near a large vein such as the jugular vein, and you cannot cut it out, keep blistering it, and if this does not help it, paint the lump over with tincture of iodine every day the same as above mentioned. This treatment will do tor tumors either in the horse or in cattle. CANCER. Cancers are angry looking growths generally, affecting cattle, sheep and dogs, and is sometimes noticed in horses, around the head and neck, but may affect the other animals in any part of the body. Symptoms. — At the first appearance of the cancer — before it (fets into the blood — it does not hurt the animal's health, but after the cancer once gets settled in the blood the animal falls off in condition, the growth grows very rapidly, and the least irritation .auses it to bleed. In some cases the disease gradually eats the surrounding tissue until it kills the animal, and if it is near a bone ii gradually works into it, and when the bont becomes affected it has a very bud smell. When the disease has a.vived at this stage it is called bone cancer. Treatment. — In the first stages of th6 disease cut it out good and clean, and by doing this you can sometimes prevent its spreading. It is best to throw the animal and secure it before you aiiempL to cut the caiicer out, and as soon as you have taken it DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 311 out burn the place gooii with a rcd-hoL iiun, Uieu balhe it twice a day with lake warm water and apply the green salve and white lotion after each bathingf. If, at any time afterwards, there should appear to be a red spot growing", tie the animal up and give the spot another good burning with the red-hot iron, and keep this treatment up until it is healed. In some cases when the dis- ease has run on too long before it has been cut out, or after it is cut out, it grows again worse than at first, or where it has been entirely neglected and allowed to run on so long that the bones become affected and smell bad destroy the animal and burn the carcass, as it is not fit for beef and would be very apt to communicate cancer to anyone eating the meat. ABSCESSES. Abscesses are of two kinds, one festers and has matter in it, while the other, which is called a serious abscess, is only a bruise containing water, or serum. These kind of abscesses are gener- ally found around a horse's shoulder, but may affect any part of the body. Symptoms of a Serious Abscess.— About twenty-four hours after the bruise there will be a swelling varying in size from an tgg to that of a man's head, and when you press on it you can tell there is fluid in it, and on opening it you will find a watery looking fluid mixed with blood. Treatment of a Serious Abscess.— Cut a whole in the bottom part of the lump large enough to run your finger in and clean all the fluid out, then bathe the part well with luke warm water and salt, and insert melted green salve up into the lump through the hole with a feather twice a day, also run your finger into the hole once a day to keep it open until it heals inside, each time after bathing rub the outside of the swelling with white liniment to help get the thickening out and keep the swelling down. ABSCESSES THAT CONTAIN MATTER. Causes. — From distemper; from bruises; or from a cut honU ing up and there being some substance left in the cut which afterwards festers. Symptonrs. — Abscesses differ from tumors, as they fester and form matter; are hot and sore to handle; cause the animal to be feverish and in pain, and after a time they come to a head and sither break or have to be lanced. 312 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Treatment.— Bathe well with hot water and salt, or vinegar, twice a day, and where it is very sore poultice it once in a while to help to bring- it to a head. Each time after bathing <'p,)ly white liniment around the swelling; this also helps to bring it to a head. When the abscess is ready to open there will be a soft place on it where the hair is falling off and pulls out easily; take a sharp penknife or lance and make a cut in it large enough to put your finger in and clean all the matter out, and treat with green salve, bathing and applying white liniment the same as is gfiven in the treatment of serious abscesses. RUNNING SORE (FISTULA). Running sore, or fistula, may form in an'' animal or in any part of the body. Causes. — From the animal getting a deep wouna and some substance being left in the wound after it is healed which should have been taken out before the wound healed up. It is also caused from diseased bone, or a small piece of broken bone which keeps testering. Treatment. — In all cases where it has been a wound that is healed up and then turns to a running sore, you may come to the conclusion there is somethirvg at the bottom of the wound that is causing the trouble, and if it is in a place you can operate on It without throwing the animal down, by twitching it, do so (this can generally be done in the horse), but if not, throw it down and secure it, then take a goose quill and probe into the hole to see which way it goes and the depth of it, then with a sharp knife cut a hole large enough for your finger to go in ; cut the hole to the bottom of the wound and clean out whatever there is in there, then treat the wound by bathing with warm water twice a day. After bathing each time put melted green salve up in the hole and apply white lotion in around the cut; keep this treatment up until it is healed. If it is caused from a diseased or fractured bone, cut down same as above and take the piece of bone out. If it is a diseased bone, scrape it out well with a hard steel spoon, and then treat the wound the same as given above, and it will soon be all right. STRUCK BY LIGHTNING. The shock is instantaneous, and affects the brain and nerves. If the shock is heavy enough it causes immediate death, but if it is not severe enough to cause death it leaves the animal prostrate, unconscious and paralyzedr DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 313 Symptoms. — When it does not kill the animal it falls paralyzed and unconscious, the muscles relax and are soft and flabby, and in lome cases there will be twitchinj^" of the muscles, the animal will breathe hard and slower than natural, and in most cases there will be spots of hair singed off the body. Treatment. — Dash cold water on the head, rub the body and legs well to get the circulation up, then apply a thin mustard plaster on the back of the head and sides of the neck; blanket the animal well to keep the body warm, and keep the head cold by ap- plying" cold cloths, and as soon as it is strong enough to swallow, if it is a cow or horse, give it half a pint of whisky in a pint ol warm water; if it is a sheep, dog, or pig give a wine glassful oi whisky in half a pint of warm water, pour the drench down slowly so as not to choke the animal ; give a drench every hour, and turn it over from side to side every once in a while, and attend to its general comfort until it is better. After the shock has passed off, if the animal seems to be paralyzed, for a cow or horse givt a teaspoonful of powdered nux vomica twice a day on its tongue with a spoon, or in its feed, this is for a nerve stimulant. Give a sheep, dog, or pig one-quarter of a teaspoonful of powdered nux vomica twice a day until it is strengthened. THE APPEARANCE OF AN ANIMAL KILLED BY LIGHTNING. If a thunder-storm has just passed over, and the animal, which was previously healthy, is found dead shortly afterwards, the muscles are soft and flabby and you can move its legs any way you like, and in some cases there will be spots of hair scorched off the body, this indicates that the animal was killed by lightning. ERGOTISM. This disease is most often seen in cattle, and shows itself mostly in the winter and spring of the year. Causes. — From eating ergotized grass, which is nothing more than diseased grass. (Ergot also affects rye wheat). The dis- eased grass is cut along with the hay and other food, dried and brought into the barn and fed during the winter with the good hay and other parts of food. This is how the animal* get it. The ergot aflfects the grass, etc., on the same principle as smut does the corn. Ergot is mostly seen in grasses and rye wheat, but may aff'ect other kinds of grain that is grown on low, rich land in wet, hot seasons. 314 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Symptoms. — After cattle have eaten it and it gets into the blood it has such a peculiar contracting action on the heart, arteries and other vessels that it weakens the circulation of the blood so much that in some cases it stops it entirely in the legs, ears and tail, and as soon as circulation in these parts stop they die, rot and drop off, and later on in the disease the brain becomes affected and the animal goes into convulsions and dies. Treatment. — Change the food entirely, bathe the affected parts with luke warm water twice a day, rub dry and apply white lotion to them after bathing. Give the following powder: Nitrate fif Potash or Saltpetre J pound Ground Geutian Root i " Sulphate of Iron J " Mix and give a teaspoonful three times a day to a horse or eow; to smaller animals give one-half of the above dose. HOW TO DRY AN ANIMAL THAT IS GIVING MILK. For a cow, give her a pound of Epsom salts in a quart of luke warm water as a drench, then bathe the bag once a day for a week with luke warm forge water (this is best obtained at a blacksmith shop where they cool the irons). After bathing, milk out a little of the milk once a day, on the ground, for a few days, then milk a little out every second or third day for a few days, then once every week or so for a while, and then stop milking. The last time you milk her, milk the bag out dry. During the time you are putting the cow dry, feed on dry, hard food. For a mare, give eight drams of bitter aloes and a teaspoonful each of ginger and common soda, dissolved in a pint of luke warm water, as a drench. After you give the physic drench, let her stand in the stable for a day or two, bathing the bag and milking her the same as is given for the cow. In drying a sow give a teaspoonful of sulphur in her feed twice a day, and if it is a quiet sow bathe the milk glands with luke warm forge water once a day for a week, and allow her to run out. In drying a ewe give a tablespoonful of Epsom salts dissolved in a half teacupful of luke warm water, once a day for a week, and bathe her bag with forge water, and milk her out in the same way as is given for the cow. Why forge water has such a good effect in drying up the secretion of milk is on account of the iron in it, which gets into it while cooling the irons in the water, and this iron has an astringent action on the milk glands. The reason the physic is given ia to clean the milk out of the blood. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. 315 DISEASES OF liih htAhJ, AKlLiatS AJND liLUUU. These diseases in cattle are the same as in the horse, and foi causes, symptoms, and treatment we refer you to the pag^es ir Part II. of the horse where they are fully explained. NOTICE. All the doses of medicine which are mentioned in this book in the diseases and treatment of cattle, if not specially mentioned for the ag"e and size of the animal, are intended for an averagfe sized cow, steer or bull, so in giving doses to young- cattle you must regulate the dose to the age and size of the animal. Calves under one year old would take about one-third of the dose; two-year-olds would stand one-half the dose ; three-year-olds and upwards take full dose mentioned, and cattle over the average size, such as large bulls, cows or steers, can take a little more than the dose mentioned. PART IV. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF SHEEP. PIGS, DOGS AND POULTRY. CHAPTER I. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF SHEEP. Sheep belong to the class of animals called ruminants, which means animals that chew their cud. In regard to the structure of sheep, they are on the same principle as that of cattle, only smaller. The skin of the sheep is different to that of the ox, as it grows wool instead of hair, and has in the skin numerous small glands which secrete oil, which is used to lubricate and soften the wool. COLD IN THE HEAD (SIMPLE CATARRH). This is a common disease in sheep, and consists of an in- flamed state of the lining of the nose and the cavities of the head. CilUSeS. — From being left out in a cold rain and exposure to cold weather, and is mostly seen in the fall and spring, during the seasons of cold rains. It is often seen during washing and shearing time. Symptoms. — There is a discharge from the nose, and the affected sheep keeps snuffling, sneezing and coughing; does not feed well and se«ns very dull. Treatment — Tfe* treatment is very simple in most cases. Keep thft sheep dry, warm and clean, and this often effects a cure in a few days without any medicine; but if the disease does not pass off, give '•'^ ^•'lowing mixture: "diseases and treatment of sheep. 317 Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre | poaod. Sulphur I ** Gromid Gentian Root J •• Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful twice a day on tb* tongue with a spoon, in its feed or as a drench ; feed hot mashes, and take special care to see that it does not get wet, for the disease might settle on its lungs. If the discharge from the head gets clogged around the nose wash it off with warm water and soap. In some cases, where the above treatment does not stop the dis- ease, change the treatment to half a teaspoonful of ground sulphate of iron three times a day in its feed, or on its tongue with a spoon. Iron acts on discharges of any kind in helping to stop them, and also builds up the system, for it is a great tonic. SORE THROAT. Causes. — The causes are similar to those of catarrh, only the throat being the weaker part it settles there instead of elsewhere. Symp cms. — There is swelling and soreness around the throat, and the animal holds its head and neck poked out, and when it :oughs it seems to try to save itself all it can. The animal is dull, iats very little, and when drinking the water runs out through its nose. Treatment. — Give Nil rate of Potash or Saltpetre J pound. Sulphur J " Powdered Alum ^ " Mix thoroughly and give a small teaspoonful on its tongue with a spoon three times a day. As well as giving the powder rub the throat three times a day with white liniment. Feed on soft food raised high so it will not have to bend its head over to eat. Give all the cold water it wants to drink in small quantities at a time; also take good care of it, not allowing it to get wet or cold, and it will soon get all right. BRONCHITIS. This 'S inflammntion of the lining of the bronchial tubes. Causes. — From being chased by a dog ; inhaling smoke, or gettiriii' wet are the principal causes of bronchitis in sheep. SymptOms.'^The afTected sheep will be dull, breathe heavy and quick, the ears will lop over, and, like the ox, they will lie down most of the time while suffering with lung trouble. If you listen at the bottom of the windpipe a wheezing noise will be heard. 318 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Treatment. — Keep the animal very quiet in an airy place and give the following : Sweet Spirits of Nitre ^ ounce, or 1 tableepoonfuL Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 3 drops. Mix in a teacupful of luke warm water and pour this down as a drench. In drenching do not raise the head too high, and be very careful not to choke the animal. If the sheep wishes to drink give cold water in small quantities ; also, small, hot mashes and grass, or hay to eat. Give the sheep the above drench three times a day for a day or so until it gets relief. If the sheep seems very weak then change the drenches to something mor-r stimulating. Whisky 1 wine glassful. Ginger 1 teaspoonf al. Mix in a half pint of oatmeal gruel and pour this down very carefully. Give this drench three times a day until it gets strong ; also, be sure to keep it warm and dry, and allow it to have plenty of fresh air without being in a draft. FILARIA BRONCHITIS. Causes. — From small germs getting into the system and settling in the lining of the bronchial tubes and inflaming them. This disease is not very common, but sometimes we have an out- break of it where the sheep are pasturing on a low-lying pasture, and, as a general thing, if one of the flock gets aff"ected with it, nearly all the herd will be showing symptoms of the disease. Symptoms. — They have a dry, husky cough ; fall off" in condi- tion, and with the slightest exertion the animal will breathe heavy, and on placing your ear to the bottom of the windpipe you will hear a wheezing noise, the sheep will not feed well, scarcely ever chews its cud and lies down most of the time. If you have several sheep showmg the above symptoms, and they are pasturing on a low-iymg pasture you may come to the conclusion it is this* disease they have. , Treatment. — Turpentine seems to have a special action in cases of this kind, because as soon as it gets into the blood it spreads through the system and has a tendency to kill all kinds of g'erms. Give the following^ : Bpirits of Turpentine J ounce or 1 tablespoonful. Raw Linseed Oil J teacupful. Mix and give as a drench every third day until the disease disappears. Another good treatment is to burn sulphur in a stable DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF SHEEP. 319 where the sheep are and allow them to breathe the fumes of the sulphur. Do this twice a week and it will kill the germs and stop the disease. The way to tell when they have as much as they can bear is to have a man stand in the stable with them, and when he has all he can stand let the sheep out of the stable. Sheep can stand about the same amount of the fumes of sulphur as a man. INFLAMMATION OF THE LUNGS AND ITS COVERING. Causes. — This generally comes after sore throat when the sheep get cold, or from a neglected cold in the head, or from get- ting chilled from being in a cold rain. Sometimes it is caused from a sheep getting cold after lambing. Symptoms. — The sheep lies down with its ears lopped over, breathing heavy, its legs and ears are cold, and it does not eat nor chew its cud, but seems feverish and greedy to drink. Some- times it will cough. If you separate the wool on its side and listen with your ear you will hear a peculiar grating sound in the lungs, and the affected sheep will moan once in a while as if in distress. The sheep gets very weak, falls off in condition and will die in a short time if it does not get relief. In some cases the sheep will linger nine or ten days. Treatment. — Put the sheep in a dry, warm, well ventilated box-stall or stable. If the sheep has just been shorn cover the body well with blankets, but if not just keep dry. Give the fol- lowing medicine : Sweet Spirits of Nitre J ounce or 1 tableapoonfuL Ginger 1 teaspoonf ul. Fleming Tincture of Aconite 3 drops. Mix in a half pint of water and give as a drench. Give this three times a day, being careful not to lift its head too high and choke it, and give plenty of time for the animal to swallow the drench. In a day or so, when the animal is better, but seems weak, give the following drench, as a stimulant ! Whisky 1 wine glassfuL Ginger 1 teaspoonfuL Oatmeal Gruel ^ pint. Mix and give as a drench three times a day until the sheep gets str®ng and commences to feed all right again. During the time the sheep is sick give cold water to drink in small quantities, but often. If it will eat mashes with flaxseed in it give that, but if not give any other kind of grain it will eat. 320 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. TROUBLES OF THE TEETH. Sometimes, when the sheep is a year or two old, there will be a cap of one of the grinders, while shedding- the teeth, stick on the new tooth and not fall off; this causes the animal difficulty in eating. Sympioms. — The sheep does not do well ; would like to eat; takes food into its mouth and chews it, but throws it out again and goes off, and although it seems to be failing and does not eat, still it does not seem sick. It will sometimes be noticed to be working its tongue around its mouth. Treatment. — Catch the animal and examine the mouth, and if it is a cap you can tell it, for it will be higher up than the other teeth in the row. Remove the cap with a pincers and the animal will soon be all right. PIECES OF WOOD OR ANY SUBSTANCE LODGED IN THE TEETH. In eating, the sheep gets hold of a piece of stick or some other substance and it gets caught between the teeth or around the lips or gums, and it cannot work it out with its tongue. SymptOins. — The animal is not eating and keeps its tongue working around in its mouth as if trying to work something out. Treatment. — Examine the mouth, and if you find anything caught in it, remove it, either with your fingers or a pincers. OLD SHEEP LOSING THEIR TEETH. Sometimes an old ewe that has lost some of her teeth gets with lamb; you want to keep her over another year, and she only has two or three front teeth, which interfeie greatly with her eating, and she runs down and gets so poor that you think she will not pull through. Treatment. — Catch the ewe and pull out the remaining front teeth and let her gum it, and as soon as the gums heal up she will do well and be able to eat, and will be good for a year or so. The reason why the sheep did not do well was because all the food she could get to eat was merely what she could catch with the few stubs of teeth that remained in her mouth, and when they are pulled out she can take the food in all right with her gums and chew it with her back teeth, which a re generally all right at this age. CHOKING IN SHEEP, This is not nearly so common in sheep as it is in cattle, but ■ometimes it occurs when they are fed on sliced roots. DIBBABB8 AND TRIATMBNT OF SHEBP. 391 Symploms.~-The animal stops feeding, froth* at the mouth, coughs anJ keeps working ita tongue, and in some cases i* bloated and the eyes bloodshot. Treatment. — Pour down a little raw linseed otl as a drench. in some cases this will start whatever is lodged in the throat causing the trouble. Feel along the bottom of the neck, and if you car find the obstruction try to work it up or down with your hand.'J, but be sure you do not mistake the larynx or Adam's apple fo» the lump. If this treatment fails, get a probang that is used fc-i choking in cattle and pass it down in the same way as i> explained for choking in cattle, being very careful in passing \\ down, for the sheep is a more tender animal than the cow. 0«' the probang well before passing it down. BLOATING (TYMPANITIS) IN SHEEP. This disease in sheep affects the first part of the stomach »» paunch. Causes. — From a change of food of some kind; getting a feed of wet clover; getting a feed of grain; by chilling the stomacfc with a big drink of cold water; or by eating frozen roots or gras*. Symptoms. — The sheep is uneasy; keeps getting up and down and seems in pain; breathes heavy and keeps moaning; on examining the sheep it is found bloated on the left side; if yo« separate the wool on the left side over the paunch and tap on it, it gives a hollow, drum-like sound, showing that there is g»» inside. Treatment — The treatment must be quick. Give the foMc*- ing mixture : Epaom Salts ^ pound. Bwe«t Spirit* of Nitr« ^ oudo«, or 2 tableipoonfaki Common Soda 1 teaapoonf uL Ginger 1 " Dissolve in a pint of luke warm water and giy as a dr««¥rik If this does not give relief in one hour, give i Raw Linued Oil 1 ttaaupfuL gpiritc of Turpentino . . | ounce, or 1 tabloapoaiafaL Mix and g-ive as a drench. If this does not giv9 relS*' te fwp hours, follow up with the following j Swe^t Spiritfl of Kitrfl ..,..,,.,..! oanoci, or 2 tablespoon ful% rommo;i Sodi^ , ,.,..,,.. ..I toaapoonful. Ginger...... . .,,,,..,,...,...,. 1 '• Mix in a half pint of luke warm water and give as a Hr»»»«^ •very two hours until it gets relief. Iji very urgent uases, wf'ft** —21— 322 THE VETERINARY SOIENOE. !he bioalmfj is so bad thai it endangers the sheep's life, tnpping is performed by measuring first half way between the point ot the hip and the last rib, and about three inches down from the back bone, then clip the wool off that space about the size of your hand and cut a small hole in the skin just large enough to allow the trocar and cannula to go in; the one used for tapping cattle will do for the sheep by oiling it first and pressing it through the hole that you cut in the skin downwards and inwards right into the paunch. Leave th* cannula in and pull the trocar out, and the gas will all esca»3e thrwjgh the hole in the cannula and save the sheep's life. As scon as ^he gas is all out, draw out the cannula and let the hole heal up its©?f. If you have not a trocar and cannula, run i penkniie in the same place as described; this will let the gas out. IMPACirON OF THE FIRST PART OF THE STOMACH WITH FOOD. Causes. — From tl.-*' sheep getting at some food that it is not used to eating, such as grain, or being turned into a good pasture ifter feeding in a poor one. Feeding a poor quality of peas, straw or clover hay, especially if it is a little musty or over ripe, will sometimes cause it. S3'^inptOins. — The sheep will not be eating, looks dull, grates Its teeth, does not chew its cud, and has a short, quick grunt ivhile breathing, caused from the food in the stomach pressing on the lungs. The animal walks about in a stupid manner, and has I'ery little passage from the bowels, and what does pass is hard and ary. 15" pressing on the left side over the stomach it is found to be hard, and by tapping on it, it makes a dull, heavy sound, showing that there is food lying in the first part of the stomach or paunch. Treatment.— Give the followinj^i Epsom Salts i pound. Ginger I teaapoonfuL Common 8od& 1 " Sweet Spirits of Nitr* ^ ouDoa or 3 t*blc«^otfifu1a. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench, then wrait for twenty^four hours to see if this dose will physic and clean out the stomach; if it do«s not physic in that time, give: Raw Linseed Oil , ^ pint. Spirits me after bathing, until healed. DIARRHOEA IN SHEEP. This disease does not occur so often in sheep as it does in cattle. Causes. — From a very cold drink when the animal is dry; from a sudden change in the feed, or from eating anything thai i^ frozen or very green, will sometimes cause it. Symptoms. — The sheep will be dull ; will not eat much. Anyi passes a thin, watery manure often, and the hind legs and tail -Lib. wet and dirty looking. Treatment. — Give the following : Castor Oil h teacupf nl. Tincture of Laudanum | ounce or 1 tablesp onfnl. Ginger 1 teaspoonful. Common Soda 1 Mix in a half teacupful of luke warm water and give as a drench, then follow up with : Tincture u{ Laudanum i ounce, or 1 table-- poor fiO Common Soda 1 teaspoonful. Gingrtt 1 Mix in a half pint of luke warm water and give as a drench every three hours until the diarrhoea stops. In very b,id chs§J DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF SHEEP. 329 add one-quarter ounce, or one tablespooiiful of tincture of catechu in each drench and this will make a sure cure. Give luke warm water to drink with dry flour dusted in it to make a sort of a thin g^ruel. BITES FROM DOGS WORRYING SHEEP. Bathe the wound off with luke warm water and soap twice a day each time after bathing-, then wipe dry and apply the white lotion and this will soon heal it up. SORE EYES m SHEEP. C fh« lamb good and 836 THESYETEBINART 80IEN0B. DIARRHOEA. Causes.— Sometimes from a chill, or from the milk not agree- ln|f with it. Symptoms. — The lamb will often pass a "/atery manure from the anus, and the tail and hind legs soon gets wet and stl>.ky The lamb will not suck and seems quite dull, and soon beconics very weak if the diarrhoea is not checked. Treatment. — Give a teaspoonful of whisky and one of castor oil in a tablespoonful of its mother's milk, mix and shake well and pour it down with a small spoon. If not relieved in four hours. give five drops of tincture of laudanum and a teaspooniul oi whisky mixed in a tablespoonful of the ewe's milk. Give this wiih a spoon, being careful not to choke the lamb ; repeat this do'-e every four hours until the diarrhoea is checked, also be sure ;iiu) keep the lamb in a warm, comfortable place until it is all n^^lw. As well as attending to the lamb in those cases, see that the mother's bag is kept milked out so it will not become inflamed. FOOT ROT IN SHEEP. In some parts of the country this is a very common disea'^e and resembles foul in the foot in cattle Causes. — This disease is sometimes brought on from the teet growing too long and splitting up and setting up inflammation in the feet. Sometimes when they are pasturing on a low, damp pasture from continually getting the feet wet, it irritates the foot and sets up the disease. It may be caused from the sheep walking through mud or dirty places, and the mud or dirt getting up between the trotters and getting hard, which irritates the foot and sets up the disease. In some localities this disease is of an in- fectious nature, that is to say, where the matter from the feet of an affscted sheep gets on another sheep's feet it will set up the disease. Symptoms. — The sheep are lame and stiff when walking, and If the disease runs on the feet will swell and little boils will form around the top of the hoof, which break and run matter, and the sheep will become exceedingly lam«. If the disease is allowed to run on for a time, the hoofs become loose and fall off, and th$ sheep will then die from fpi^haustlpn. When one sheef becoipes affected, the same cause will usually affect more ; so ypu so^ it is advisable to try and find out the cause and rernove it, for \h§ same cause that brings it on in one sheep is likely to bring it oti in all of them- DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF PIGS. 337 Treatment. — Separate the affected sheep from the sound ones and put the affected ones in a quiet, dry place, and if it is caused from the sheep being in a wet place, remove the sound ones to a dry field. Catch the affected sheep, lay them on their side, and bathe the feet well with luke warm water and soap, cleaning all the dirt from between the trotters. As soon as you have bathed the feet, poultice them with a hot poultice of half linseed meal and bran ; leave the poultice on all night, and poultice every night until the sheep is better. Each time before putting on the poultice, and after taking it off, dress the foot with white lotion with a few drops of carbolic aoid in it. If this does not effect a cure, then try the following mixture: Sweet Oil , 4 ouncea. Carbolic Acid 20 drops. Apply this the same as the lotion before putting en th« poultice and after taking it off. CHAPTER II. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF PIGS. 1 I f\g9 ar« not subject to ms mttay diseases as cattle or iheep^ CHOKING. Thli ii not a very common thing in pigs, but is sometime! met with when they try to swallow some hard substance which i* too large for the throat- Symptoms. — The pig keeps coughing, and saliva runs from the mouth ; when it tries to eat or drink, the food or water wili run back out ol its mouth, and if it does not get relief will soon die. Treatment. — Pour down a little raw linseed oil, and then if you can feel the obstruction in the tube alonj,' the neck, try and work it around with your hand to ^e\ it to slip down. If th« 338 THE VETERINARY SOIENOB. obstruction is caught in the back part of the mouth, remove it by prying the mouth open with u stick and working it out with another stick or a long pincers. If the obstruction is so solid that you cannot get it out or rub it down after giving the oil, take a probang, w^hich is used for cattle when choking, and pass it back through the throat into the oesophagus, and push the obstruction down into the stomach. Before attempting to pass the probang, tie a rope around the upper part of the mouth and have the head hekd up, then place the gag across the mouth (the same as is done when cattle are choking) and run the oiled probang down. SORE THROAT. This is more often met with in young pigs from three to six months old, but may occur at any age. Causes. — Generally from getting cold; by changing from a warm to a cold pen ; or from getting wet in cold weather. Symptoms. — The pigs will sneeze and cough; in drinkintj, the water will run out through the nose ; the throat will he swollen and sore to press on. When one pig becomes affected others generally get it from the same cause. Treatment. — Make the pigj as comfortable as possible, by having the pen dry and lots of bedding in it. Feed on soft, warm food, with a large tablespoonful of sulphur in it, which will be enough for six small pigs. Give the sulphur twice a day. When the pigs get so bad that they do not even attempt to eat, take a quarter of a pound each of sulphur and nitrate of potash or saltpetre, mix together and throw half a teaspoonful back on the tongue three times a day; this will gargle the throat. Rub white liniment around their throats each time you give the medicine, and if it is a valuable pig, and a bad case, poultice the throat with hot poultices of half linseed meal and half bran. Change the poultice every couple of hours until the pig is better. ACUTE INDIGESTION. This is where the stomach is distended with food and gas. It is mostly seen in pigs six to twelve months old. Causes,— -Generally from a pig that is poorly fed getting into a field of peas or grain and getting a big feed, or sometimes when the pigs are not used to grain and on being brought in to fatten they are given a large teed of peas or wheat which will sometimes (et up this disease. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF PIGS 339 Symptoms. — The pig refuses to eat, seems bloated, very un- easy, and in pain. If the sickness is after any of the above causes, you may then be sure it is acute indigestion. Treatment. — The dose for a pig from six months to a year old is as follows : Epsom Salts 8 tablespoonf alt. Common Soda 1 teaspoonfuL Ginger 1 " Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 tablespoonfnl. Mix in a half pint of luke warm water and pour down the pig after it has been caught and turned on its back. Give only luke warm water to drink and no feed until the medicine operates. If it is not better the next day repeat the dose. In giving the drench do not pour it down too fast for fear of choking the pig. If the cause is from getting a large feed of wheat or peas it some- times swells so much that it ruptures the stomach, in this case nothing can be done. As soon as the rupture takes place the pig soon dies ; if you want to be sure of it being a rupture, open the pig and you will find a hole in the stomach. STUNTED OR CHRONIC INDIGESTION. This is a common thing in young pigs where they are being weaned and started to feed and before they get used to it they are fed on strong food such as peas, wheat and corn ; this is too much for the young pig's stomach and seta up indigestion. It is also caused from worms. Symptoms. — The pig seems to eat plenty but does not g^row or thrive. Treatment. — To prevent this disease from coming' on pigs, when they are being weaned they should never be fed on hard, hot feed, but should get milk and swill until about three months old, then bring them gradually to hard feed by g^lving' a little at a time. In young pigs, they are so much troubled with worms that they should get a handful of hardwood ashes and charcoal put in the feed twice a week, one handful being enough for six young pigs, also give them plenty of salt, for pigs getting ashes, charcoal and salt in this way seem to thrive half as well again When thw pigs are stunted change the feed from hard to soft feed, and for six pigs give ot : Sulphur h pound. Common Soda. \ " Nitrate of Potaah or Saltpetr* i '< 340 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Mix thoroughly and give a tablespoonful in their feed night and morning until they begin to thrive, also give them plenty of hard> wood ashes, charcoal and salt in their feed, as is explained abov*. CONSTIPATION. This Is liable to affect pigs at any age, but is more often noticed to affect stunted pigs. Causes. — In young pigs it is generally caused from chronic indigestion, or worms in the stomach, while in older pigs it is caused from feeding on dry food without getting exercise, that is, being kept in a small pen. Symptoms. — -The pigs are very dull; refuse their food; lie down most of the time, and seem fuller than natural; they will strain to pass something but nothing comes. In young pigs, they will not thrive well ; the rectum, or back bowel, will be bulged out, and in some cases will be turned out entirely; they seem full and do not eat as they should, and if not attended to will become stunted and pine away until they die. Treatment. — In young pigs, catch them and pour down a tablespoonful of Epsom salts and a half teaspoonful each of ginger and common soda dissolved in half a teacupful of luke warm water; give this every day until the bowels get nice and loose ; after the physic, continue the treatment by giving the hardwood ashes, charcoal, sulphur and salt, as recommended in chronic indigestion. In older pigs, give: Epsom Salt! S tftblespoonfuU, Ginger ..« 1 tsaspoonfoL Common Soda. 1 " Dissolve in a teacupful of luka warm water and pour down as a drench, after catching the pig and turning it on its back; also give the hardwood ashes, charcoal, sulphur and salt as mentioned in chronic indigestion. In aged pigs (that is where they are two or three years old) use the same treatment as ia given for medium sized pigs, only give a larger dose. They can stand about a quarter of a pound of Epsom salts with a tea- spoonful of common soda and ginger dissolved in a pint of luke warm water; repeat this dose every second day until it works the bowels. .; As well as giving the medicine, give them exercise every day which will help the physic to operate. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF PIGS 341 DIARRHOEA. This is the very opposite of constipation. Causes. — It is generally caused from a sudden change In the Cood ; from eating something that is frozen ; or from excitement by being chased. Symptoms. — The manure runs away like water; the pig is dull and refuses to eat its food, but is very thirsty and greedy to drink. Treatment. — Change the food, and give a gruel drink of Dry Flour 1 teacupful. Common Soda 1 tablespoonful. Ginger 1 " Mix in a half pail of luke warm water and give as a drink three times a day. The above is the proportion to give six small pigs. In a case where it is in young pigs sucking a sow, give the sow Dry Flour ^ teacupful. Common Soda 1 teaspoonful. Ginger '. 1 " Mix in a half pail of luke warm water and give three times a day. As well as the above treatment, keep the pigs warm, dry and clean, and they will soon get all right. WORMS. This is mostly seen in young pigs. Symptoms. — The pig eats plenty but does not seem to thrive well, and sometimes you will see small worms pass away in the manure. Treatment. — Give a handful of charcoal and hardwood ashe.» in the food twice a week; also give half a teaspoonful of sulphur for each pig twice a day in their food and this will generally kil the worms. TURNING OUT OF THE RECTUM OR BACK BOWEL. Causes. — This is generally caused in young pigs by getting dry food to eat, and the bowels become costive, and while straining to pass manure, it turns the back bowel out ; or where pigs rise on their hind legs with their front feet upon the front of the pen every time you go to feed them; or from going to jump a low fence and getting caught, and while lying with the belly over the fence, the back bowel becomes turned out. Symptoms. — There is a bulging out of the back bowel from half the size of a hen's egg to even larger than a hen's •Cg', 342 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. which will be red and angry looking, and after a time becom* blackened. Treatment. — As soon as noticed give the back bowel a syringing out with luke warm water and soap so as to clean any hard manure out of it, then wash it off clean and oil the bulged out part of the bowel and shove it back to its natural place. As soon as this is done, if it is a small pig, give a tablespoonful or epsom salts mixed in half a teacupful of luke warm water and pour down as a drench, and give one-half teaspoonful of sulphur mixed in sloppy feed twice a day, this will keep the bowels free and the pig will generally be all right. Have the pig fastened in its pen so it cannot jump up on its hind legs ; in a case where the bowel is blackened or comes out two or three times after putting it in, do not return it but leave it alone and the piece of dead bowel will drop off of its own accord, and the pig will be all right in a week or so, but give the physic and .sulphur as mentioned to keep the bowels loose. BLIND STAGGERS. This is a disease that affects the brain and nerves. Causes. — From pigs being kept in a dirty, ill-ventilated, poor- ly drained, small pen. The blood gets in such a bad state that it becomes stagnant. This disease is mostly seen in pigs under a year old. SymptoniS. — The pig will be dull, stands in a corner with its ears lopped over, will not eat, and when it goes to walk will run against anything in its way. In a short time, the ears, nose, and around the head turns to a blue color which is caused by the stagnant blood. The bowels are costive, and the pig becomes duller and duller, until convulsions come on — and it dies. When one pig becomes affected in a pen where there are thirty or forty pigs kept, what caused it in that one will cause it in the other pigs, and we have seen cases where farmers would have lost half a dozen pigs in a few hours, so when you find the disease is affect- ing your pigs, let them out of the pen where they are kept into open air, and clean out the pen thoroughly. Treatment. — As soon as one pig becomes affected let them all out of the pen into the open air for a few hours, and afterward put them in a clean pen. In treating the affected one, drag it out into the open air and rub it well with cloths to get the circulatios started, and give the following : DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF PIGS. 343 For a pig 3 months' old, give 1 tablespoonful of Epaoin V-illa. •• 3 to 6 " " 2 " " " 6 to 12 " " 3 to 4 " " As well as this put from a teaspoonful to a tn lispocrnful or two (according' to the age of the pig) of good / .•mdy, also a teaspoonful of ginger and common soda in the drench. Dissolve in half a teacupful of luke warm water, and pour down the pig as a drench after turning it on its back. As soon as the drench operates it will relieve the pig. In some cases persons have been known to cut off the ears and tail with a view to getting the circulation of the blood started, but the hand rubbing is better and is not so cruel and does not disfigure the pig. FOUNDER OR SORE FEET. Causes. — This is a very common thing in pigs, especially when fattening them and feeding them on hard, dry feed, when they are in a small pen with very little straw on the floor. Driving them on a hard road or from getting a feed of wheat when not used to it will cause it. Symptoms. — The pig will be dull and lie most of the time and when it moves around it is so sore on its front feet that it walks with its hind feet well under it with the front feet stuck out ahead of it, in some cases the feet are so sore that the pig squeals when it is forced to put its weight on the front feet. From the severe pain of the feet and not being able to get around to eat its food it soon falls off in condition and becomes very gaunt. Treatment.— If it is in the summer time, turn the aiffected pigs out where they can root in the ground, and pour water in the hole where they lie every day to keep the ground wet, as this wjU help cure the sore feet, as well as this mix half a pound each of sulphur and n'trate of potash or saltpetre, and give a tea- spoonful of the mixture in a slop twice a day to each of the affected pigs. If it is in the winter time, keep the pig in a warm, dry place. Give it a physic of Epsom salts (use the prop^^'Mon given in blind staggers), feed light and give the mixture ^e it, leave the pig- in a very quiet place, and sometimes the broken bone will knit together itself. BROKEN BACK IN PIGS. This is very often seen in sows when they are very thin and weak after suckling- pigs. It will happen very easily sometimes ; a very little tap on her nose will sometimes break a sow's back; getting hit over the back, slipping, or from something falling and hitting her over the back will sometimes cause it. It may occur in other pigs in the same manner, but they are not so liable to be hurt as weak sows just after you wean the little pigs. Symptoms. — All at once she will loose power of her hind quarters and drag them after her. If you prick the hind parts with a pin she cannot feel it, and will lie there quite helpless. Treatment. — Put the sow in a small, clean pen with a good bed, and feed her so she will not be hungry and try to move around. Give one or two teaspoonfuls of sulphur a day in her feed to keep the bowels loose. Keep her as quiet as possible and she will probably get well in the course of time. HOG CHOLERA. This is an infectious blood disease, and is sometimes called anthrax ; it is noticed to break out in herds of hogs all over the country. Symptoms — The first symptoms are dullness, drooping of the head and ears, loss of appetite, and the pig will go away by itself to lie down ; the pig seems very feverish, hot, and in some cases will lie quiet and die very suddenly, while in other cases, as the symptoms advance, the pig has pains in the bowels, will lie on its side, moan with pain, then jump up, run around, squeal and gruni in a very painful manner. The pig at times gets easy spells and becomes quiet ; if you catch and examine it you will find that the skin of the belly, thighs, front legs, throat, and around the nose will be of a purple color, and in some cases on account of the high lever, the skin breaks out in a rash. In the last stages of the disease there is diarrhoea, and the manure whicli is veiy thin, is o( a black color and has a very bad smell. The pig rapidly loses strength, gets a cough, begins breathing very licavy, and in a few hours is so weak it can hardly stand. In some cases the pig dies in from six to ten hours after being sminen with the disease, while in other cases it lives for a lew days. The rash that comes 348 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. jiu on the skin soon causes it to slough, and the skin will drop oH in places, g-iving the animal a bad appearance — and will soon die Although this is a very fatal disease and most of the pigs die that are afFec«^ed with it, occasionally we have a case get better when the treatment is taken in time. Treatment. — As soon as any of the pigs are noticed sick, separate the sick ones from the others that are not sick, and put them in a dry, clean pen, and give the following medicine to each pig, using your own judgment as to the proportion to give the different sized pigs : Epsom Salts 2 to 4 tablespoonfuls. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 teaspoonful to 1 tablespoon ful. Sulphur 1 " 1 " Mix in half a teacupful of luke warm water and pour down a» a drench after turning the pig on its back. If this drench operates on the bowels before the disease gets too bad, it wili olten save the life of the pig. If this disease breaks out in youi herd of pigs, send for the government veterinary inspector ; he will come and examine the pigs to make sure about the disease and help you to prevent the disease from spreading. DIFFICULTIES WET WITH IN SOWS PIGGING. The average time it takes a sow, after being put to the boar, before she has pigs is three months, three weeks and three days. In a month and a-half after being put to the boar, she begins tc get larger and continues getting larger until pigging time. Just before she pigs she is noticed to be uneasy, and starts to make hei bed: if anything disturbs her she makes a fuss and seems excited. After her bed is made she seems sick and lies down for a short time, then the labor pains come on — she will strain and the watei bag will appear and break, if the pigs are coming all right, she will soon be delivered of one ; the front feet and head should come first but sometimes they come with the hind feet first ; in a few minutes more she will strain again and another pig will be delivered, and so on until they are all delivered. After this there is usually no trouble unless the sow has too much bedding and she smothers the little pigs. Somslioi«s, when a sow is pigging, a pig will come crooked and get Itdgsd in the passage and she cannot pig without a Mtle Assii^^mce-. The pig may be coming head first with the front feet tu?Med back, or coming with its hind end first and its legs turned i ^ — it, and all you can feel while examin- DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF PIGS. 349 ing" is the tail and rump. If the sow is large enoug'h for you to pass your hand into the passage, oil your hand and pass it up; If the front legs of the little pig are turned back shove it back into the womb ; catch the legs with your finger and bring them up even with the head, then pull on the legs and it will come all right. If it is coming backwards, and the hind legs are turned under it shove the pig back into the womb and straighten out the legs so as to have the hind feet coming first. In case the sow is too small for a man's hand to go into the passage, get a boy that has a small hand and have him oil it and pass it up into the pas- sage, and by you telling him what to do he can bring it away all right. In working with sows always keep your hand well oiled, and try and not bruise the passage, for it will swell and make it worse for you to work at. MILK FEVER IK SOWS. This disease is occasionally met with in sows, but the causes of it is not clearly understood. Symptoms. — They are generally noticed as soon as the sow is through pigging, when the little pigs go to suck they cannot get any milk ; if you try to milk her no milk will come ; the teats are soft instead of being full and hard, showing that there is no milk being secreted in the teats, the sow seems very sick, is feverish and does not take notice of her little ones, nor eat, but is very thirsty and will drink a great deal if she can get it to drink. Treatment. — Give the following for a large sow : Epsom Salts J pound. Sweet Spirits of Nitre J ounce, or 1 tablespoonf al. Ginger 1 te&spoonf ul. Mix in half pint of luke warm water and pour down as a drench, first turning the sow on her back and prying her mouth open with a Btick to get the drench down. After giving the drench follow up with the following powder : Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre ^ pound. Sulphur J " Mix thoroughly, and for a large sow, give a teaspoonful on her tongue with a spoon twice a day, or in soft feed. Give her plenty of luke warm slops to eat, bathe her milk glands three times a day with luk^^warm water, rub the parts dry each time after bathing and keep the little pigs sucking to try to bring her back to her milk. By attending to her in this way for a few days she will get all rifht WhiU the sow ia sick keep the little pigs alive by feeding 350 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. - them milk from a newly calved cow ; weaken the milk down one- third with luke warm water and sweeten it with sugar, pour this down with a spoon, or let them suck it out of a bottle, also keep them sucking the sow as much as you can. INFLAMMATION OP THE MILK GLANDS IN A SOW (GARGET). This is generally noticed right after pigging. Causes. — From catching cold, or from losing some of the pigs and not having enough left to keep the bag sucked out, and on account of this the glands get so full of milk that they swell become sore and inflamed. Symptoms. — The sow seems dull, feverish and does not care to eat, and when the pigs go to suck her it causes pain and they do not get much milk. On examing her the milk glands will be found swollen, hard, hot and tender. Treatment. — Give the same medicine inwardly with the same directions as is given for the treatment of milk fever in sows, be- sides this bathe the milk glands well three times a day with luke warm water and vinegar, each time after bathing rub the glands dry, and in severe cases where the young pigs are not sucking her, rub the glands with white liniment, and after putting on the the liniment oil the parts with oil or lard to soften the glands and keep the liniment from blistering. In cases where the disease runs on, and the glands fester and form matter, they will have to be lanced to let the matter out; then treat by bathing with luke warm water and soap twice a day, and apply the white lotion each time after bathing until the glands heal up. In bad cases it is best to wean the young pigs. PIG BED OR WOMB TURNED OUT. This is generally noticed right after pigging, where the sow is left lying with her hind end lower than her front, which causes the pig bed to work back into the passage, and when it does, it causes her pain, and she starts to force and forces the pig bed inside out. Symptoms. — The womb, or pig bed, is turned out behind, which is larg^er than a man's head, and in a very short time becomes very red and swollen, and is a miserable loo"king sight; it should be put back as soon as noticed before it swells much. Treatment — As soon as noticed, bathe the womb well with luke warm water to take the swelling down and make it clean anJ DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF PIGS. 351 tt nn , tiicn Hiive a couple ot men to raise the sow's hirni end stra g-ht up while you start turning the womb in at the passage, and keep turn.ng it in until it is all in the passage; then oil your liand and arm, if the sow is large enough for your hand to pass into the passage, but if not, get a boy with a small hand, and press the pig bed right back into its place. As soon as you have done this, sew up the vulva or the opening of the passage to the womb; put two or three stitches across it; put them in good and Jeep, just leaving space enough at the bottom for her to make water. Leave the stitches in for a day or two until she stops straining, then cut the stitches, pull them out and she will be all right. After you have put the bed back, if she keeps straining, give her the following: Tincture of Laudanum J ounce, or 1 tablespoonful. Sweet Spirits of Nitre J *' 1 " Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 2 to 3 drops. Mix in a teacupful of luke warm water and pour down as a drench, after turning her on her back and prying her mouth open with a stick. If she does not get relief in two hours, repeat the drench, and keep repeating it every two or three hours until she is all over the straining. HOW TO RING A PIG. The object of ringing pigs is to keep them from rooting. The best way to ring them is to first make a noose on the end of a small rope, slip the noose into the pig's mouth, draw it tighi on the upper jaw, and have the rope over a beam or something to draw the pig's head up tight; have a pincers and ring, which can be obtained at any hardware store, place the ring in the pincers, and while the pig is pulling back, close the ring on its nose so as to catch about one-quarter of an inch of gfristle ; this is done by pressing on and closing the handles of the pincers. Be careful not to put the ring back farther than one-quarter of an inch, also lee that there is no rust on the ring before putting it in. Put in from one to three rings, according to the size and age of the pig. If the nose should fester after ringing, it is best to take the ring out. FITS m YOUNG PIGS FROM WORMS. Symptoms. — The pig is first noticed not to be thriving well, and after a time is noticed to take fits, its legs begin jerking, its head and neck bends back and it keeps champing its teeth, and after working in this manner for a while, falls over as if it were 352 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. dead, but Ln a short time gets up and seems all right /or a littU while, thcA another fit comes on. The pig keeps on taking those (Oh every little while for a few days, but finally gets so bad it dies. Treatment. — For a pig two months old give Raw Linseed Oil i teaoupf ul. Spirits of Turpentine 1 dram or 1 teaspoon! aL Mix well and pour down as a drench. Repeat this dose once a day until the bowels move and the pig seems relieved, after- wards feed lots of charcoal, hardwood ashes, salt and sulphur, the same as is given to stunted pigs to get rid of the worms. CHAPTER III, DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF DOGS. MANGE. This is a very common skm disease among dogs. Crises.— From parasites, or germs, getting down into the skin, ind as soon as they do they commence to breed and spread ali 3ver the body, mostly affecting the skin on the back, head and tieck. This disease will soon spread among dogs and to other animals, even to the human being. Symptoms.— The dog becomes extremely itchy, keeps rubbing and biting himself until the hair falls off, and in some cases the skin gets so sore and irritated that it will bleed ; the hair is dry and scruffy-looking, and the dog soon falls off in condition. To aiake sure of this disease examine the scales under a micro8oa|^ mikI you can see the pajtuitM m gtrm^ fm^"^ ' DISIIBSB AND TBIATMBNT OF DOGS 86S TreatinCnt.— »If the weather is warm lip the !.^.i <■•< i!u- tU.y g'ood and short, and give him a thorough good washing with luke warm water and soap, |ifter this rub him dry and apply the creolin wash by rubbing it well into the skin all over the body; use two tablespoonfuls of creolin to the pint of water and apply it once a day until the dog stops rubbing himself, the skin heals and the hair starts to grow out; as well as this, give a teaspoonful o/ sulphur in his milk twice a day if it is a' large dog; give th» sulphur in proportion to the size of the dog ; if it is in the wintw time just clip the hair off and apply the creolin wash, but do not wash him with water. FLEAS. Fleas are a very common thing In dogs, especially if they ar* kept tied up and not properly taken care of. Treatment. — Clean out the place where the dog is kept an* whitewash it to get it thoroughly clean and put in fresh bedding, then, if it is in the summer time, wash the dog with luke warift water and soap, then rub him dry, after which rub him thoroughly with creolin wash every third or fourth day until the fleas ar» killed. One washing is usually enough to kill the fleas. Ust two tablespoonfuls of creolin to the pint of water to wash him with CANKER m THE EAR. Causes. — This is a common disease in dogs that run througb long, wet grass. Symptoms. — There is a discharge of matter from the eai which has a bad smell; the dog holds his head to one side, and U you go to catch him to examine the ear he will be very muck afraid, showing that it is very sore. Treatment. — Bathe the ear well with luke warm water an4 ca<:tile soap once a day; wipe dry each time after bathing and inject a little white lotion into the ear with « syringe and ha vIV soon get all right. DEAFNESS. This is very common in old dogs. Symptoms. — The dog seems stupid, and when you eall him he does not hear you. Tre^^tment. — If it is an old dog, and the cause is from age, there cannot be anything done ; but if it is a young dog, and th» deafness is caused from wax in the ear or anything like that, wash the it with luke warm water and soap, after which drop a fe\vdrpp« -23 - 364 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. of sweet oil into the car; do thia every second day and m a short time it will effect a complete euro, SORE BYES. * This is an inflammation of the eye and its covering'. Causes. — From something getting into the eye; from a bite or scratch, or anything that will irritate the eye. Symptoms. — The eye is very red, sore and inflamed, and after a time a little scum will form over the sig-ht. The eyelids, in some cases, are swollen and tears keep running from the corners. Treatment. — Catch the dog, examine the eye, and if there is anything in it, remove it at once ; after this, bathe the eye with new milk twice a day, and each time after bathing apply the eye wash mentioned in the back of this book until he gets all right. While treating him keep him in a cool, dark place. ENLARGEMENTS OR GROWTHS IN THE EYE. In some cases the eye itself will become so enlarged that it will bulge out of its socket, which gives the dog a very unsightly appearance. In other cases cancerous growths aff'ect the eye, and the cancer grows until it hangs out of the eye onto the cheek Treatment. — In either of the above cases treat by removing the eye. First, put a muzzle on him or tie his mouth with a strong, small rope so he cannot bite you, then tie his legs firmly. When you have the dog securely tied, stick a hook into the affected eye and pull outwards and upwards, then with a sharp knife cut around the eye and separate it from the eyelid and draw the eye up as far as you can. You will find the eye attached at the back by the muscles, nerve and artery of the eye. Tie a string tight around the back part of the eye, so it will prevent bleeding, then cut th« eye off in front of the string, leaving the string on. The after treatment is to bathe the parts with lukewarm water and castile loap once a day; each time after bathing apply the white lotion and it will soon heal up. Keep the dog in a dark, cool, quiet place during^ treatment. WOUNDS OR CUTS OP ANY KIND. If the wound is torn much, tie the dog's mouth with a rope or muzzle him so he cannot bite you, also tie his legs to hold them firmly, then stitch the wound up with a needle and twine (the same as is used for sewing wounds on horses). There ii no necessity foi using medicine on it afterwards, but just leave the dog in a dark. DIBSASSS AND TRBATMBNT OFf DOGS. 366 quiet place, and allow him to lick the wound, which is the best medicine you can use. If the wound is where the dog cannot get at it to lick it, bathe it twice a day with luke war.n water and castile soap, and each time after bathing wipe dry and apply the white lotion. TUMORS OR GROWTHS ON THE SKIIf. As soon as they are noticed it is best to cut them out clean. First secure the dog in the same manner as is given in the treatment for "enlargements and growths in the eye," then take a sharp knife and skin the lump right out; let the dog go and do nothing more to it, only let the dog lick it, for it is dangerous to put medicine on cuts or wounds where the dog can lick it, for the medicine might poison him. CONSTIPATION IN DOGS. This is where the bowels have stopped working. Symptoms. — The dog will not eat, seems very dull and dumpish ; the belly seems fuller than natural ; he is often noticed to strain, but does not pass much, and anything that does come away will be hard and dry. Treatment. — For a small or young dog give Syrup of Buckthorn J ounce or 1 tablespoonful. Pour this down twice a day, night and morning, until the bowels are moved. For a large dog give one-half ounce or two table- spoonfuls of syrup of buckthorn twice a day until it acts on him. Castor oil is also recommended to be given in the same propor- tions as the syrup of buckthorn. As well as giving the medicine mentioned give an injection of a teacupful of luke warm water with a little soap in it twice a day. Give the dog gentle exercise once a day and see that h« has nothing but new milk to drink during the time he is sick. DURRHCEA Df DOGS. This is not a very common disease in dogs, but is sometimes leen, and is generally caused from a change in his food. Treatment. — Keep the dog very quiet, and in some cases by pving him boiled new milk with a little dry flour in it, it will :heck the diarrhoea without any medicine. If this fail*, give to a imall dog half a dram or half a teaspoonful of tincture of laud- anum and a teaspoonful of whisky in a tablespoonful of new milk as a drench. For a large dog give one dram or a teaspoonful of tincture of laudanum and a tablespoonful of whisky mixed in h«lf see tHB VBTBRINARY 80ISN0B. a. leacupful of boiled miik and flour and gfivd as a. drench. Re> peat the drench three times a day until he g-ets all rigfht. During the treatment keep the dog very quiet and give very little to eat except boiled new milk virith a little dry flour sifted in it. WORMS. Symptoms. — The dog has a g-ood appetite, but does not thrive well, his hair is dry looking and dusty. Occasionally there will be a worm noticed to pass away in his manure. Sometimes dogs affected very badly with worms will take fits. Treatment. — For a medium-sized dog give one dram of oil of male shield fern mixed with four tablespoonfuls of new milk. Pour it down by putting it well back in the mouth with a spoon or bottle and holding his head until he swallows it. Give this dose every third day until the bowels are moving free and the dog is relieved of worms. DISTEMPER IN DOGS. This is a very common disease in dogs from three to six months old, but may affect them at any age, and is mostly seen during the fall, winter and spring. This disease somewhat re- sembles distemper in horses. Causes. — It is caused from parasites, or germs, getting into the blood and setting up the disease in the same manner as dis- temper in horses. By allowing the affected dog to be with other dogs they will catch it from him. Symptoms. — The dog is very dull and sleepy looking, tries to get in a quiet, dark place and refuses to eat, his eyes keep run- ning water, and after a time they become very sore. In a few days his hair becomes dry, there is a discharge from the nose, eyes, and sometimes from the penis, the bowels are costive, the dog falls off in condition, the symptoms gradually get worse, and if he does not get relief he will go into convulsions or fits and soon die. Like other diseases of this kind it must run its course, which should last about nine days. Treatment-— The treatment is rery simpla. Give the affected dog nothing to eat but new milk and the following medicine : Nitrate of Potagh or 8altp«tro k pound. Sulphur t Ground Gentian Root S " Mix thoroughly together, and for a large dog give half a teaspoonful of the mixture three times a day on his tongue with • DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF DOGS. 367 spoon or in his milk. Regxilate the dose in proportion to the size of the dog". Keep the dog in a quiet, clean place ; wash off the discharg-e from his eyes and nose with luke warm water, and afterwards wipe dry with a soft cloth. If his bowels are costive, give from a teaspoonful to a tablespoonful, according to the size of the dog, of syrup of buckthorn once a day until the bowels move freely; after that give a dose once or twice a week to keep the bowels free, and in a week or so the dog will begin to get better. Be careful not to let him get cold until he gets all right. MAD DOG (HYDROPHOBIA OR RABIES). - This disease originates spontaneously in dogs and cats with- out being bitten, and is mostly seen in very hot weather and in hot climates. It may also be caused by dogs or cats being bitten by another mad dog or cat. Symptoms. — The affected dog is first noticed to become excited; runs about and bites at everything that comes in his way; saliva keeps running from his mouth and his eyes are blood- shot. After this, the dog wil) take a spell of quietness, and will go and lie down in an out-of-the-way place. He seems to have a depraved appetite; will eat clay and all sorts of dirt. Suddenly, he will again become excited and run about biting at everything that comes in his way, the same as at first. A mad dog rarely, if ever, goes out of his way to bite anything. In running about he keeps snapping his teeth, and once in a while gives a peculiar howl. He has great difficulty in swallow- ing, and in some cases cannot swallow at all. These symptoms gradually get worse until the dog dies. The time the disease affects a dog after being bitten varies from ten to fifteen days. Treatment. — As soon as the dog is noticed to be mad, have him destroyed, for he is very dangerous to have around, and, besides, there is no cure for it. In cases where a dog has been bitten by a mad dog or cat, cut the piece out where he was bitten and burn the hole with caustic potash, nitrate of silver or a red hot iron, which will destroy the poison before it gets into the system. CHOREA. This is a disease that affects the nerves, causing the affected part to keep jerking. Causes. — It is very often noticed after a dog has had a very severe attack of distebiper, or it may be caused from an injury. 358 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Symptoms. — There is a continual jerking of the muscles around the affected part when the dog is resting. Treatment. — There cannot be much done for it after the disease has once set in, but by giving from one-quarter to one-half a dram of bromide of potassium twice a day on his tongue with a spoon or in a little new milk, according to the size of the dog, as soon as the disease is noticed, it will nearly always effect a cure. DOGS POISONED WITH RAT POISON, STRYCHNINE OR ARSENIC. Symptoms. — All at once the dog seems in great pain; takes fits; slobbers at the mouth; the eyes are bulged out and blood- shot, and he keeps trembling all over. If the dog shows the above symptoms, and you have had poison around the place, or he has been anywhere that he could possibly get it, you may conclude he has been poisoned. Treatment. — The treatment must be quick. Give the dog an emetic to make him vomit ; this is the only way you can save his life. The idea is to get him to throw up the poison out of his stomach before it gets absorbed into the blood. Give him one tablespoonful of salt dissolved in a half teacupful of luke warm water as a drench, or one teaspoonful of mustard dissolved in a half teacupful of luke warm water as a drench; either of the above will cause vomiting. But the best of all, if you have it, to make him vomit, is to give him from half a teaspoonful to a teaspoonful of sulphate of zinc dissolved in a half teacupful of luke warm water and give it as a drench. If you can get him to vomit soon enough it will generally save his life. FRACTURES OR BROKEN BONES IN DOGS. Causes. — Fractures of bones in the dog may occur in various ways, such as a kick or being struck with anything. Symptoms. — The symptoms vary according to the part affected. If it is a fracture of the neck bones the dog dies instant- ly ; if in the back it causes paralysis of his hind quarters; if it is in the hip or hind leg it is easily told, for the dog cannot use the leg and hops along on the other three while the broken one will be dangling; if it is a fracture in the front leg, he acts similar to when the fracture is in the hind leg. To make sure it is a fracture, catch the dog and move the affected parts and you can hear the ends of the broken bone grinding on each other. Treatment. — If the fracture is in the back, there can be noth- ing done but to destroy the dog, to put him out of pain. If it is DISEASES AND TRBATMEJ^T OF DOGS. 359 (he hip or shoulder bone that is fractured and it is a young dog keep him perfectly quiet and the bones will soon knit together, but if ii is a very old dog there is not much chance of the bones knitting together, although they might. If the fracture is down on the leg set the broken bone to its place and have a long, starch bandage (which is a bandage soaked in starch and then wrung out as dry as possible), roll the bandage around the fractured leg letting it go two or three inches above and below the fracture, wrap it moderately tight and hold the leg and bandage straight until the bandage hardens. Keep the dog quiet and leave the bandage on for three or four weeks until the bones are healed and he can use his leg all right. BREEDING PUPS AND TROUBLES MET WITH AT PUPPING TIME. Bitches usually come in heat about twice a year, but some come oftener than that. She is nine days coming in heat and nine days going off, during that time she will take the dog about nine or ten days. It is best to keep the bitch shut up during the eighteen days, so that no other dog but the one you want to breed to can get at her. If you want to get bitch pups, let the dog tc her as soon as she will take him; while if you want to get dog pups, let her go for seven or eight days after she would have taken the dog, before you let the dog to her and you are almost sure to get dog pups. The bitch carries her pups nine weeks. At the enrf of that time, and a few hours before pupping, she will try to get away to some quiet place and make a nest As a general thing after she once starts to pup, it does not take her long to have them all. Sometimes we have cases where she cannot pup alone, that is,wherff one of the pups is coming wrong — sometimes head first with the front legs turned back, and it gets caught at the shoulders. In this case shove the pup back a little, slip your finger in under the front legs and bring them forward, and it will then come all right. If the front legs are coming out and the head and neck are turned back, shove the pup back a little, and straighten the head and neck up along with the front legs, and the pup will soon come all right. Sometimes the pup comes backwards with only his rump and tail up in the passage, in this case shove the pup back and straighten up the two hind feet, and bring the pup away backwards. Before starting to work at a job of this kind, have your fingers and hands oiled so as not to irritate the bitch, some- times a small hook will be of some use, but if you use one be very careful not to tear her. Bitches are not very liable to disease after 360 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. pupping and the only thing to be done Is to see that she is dry and warm, and that the pups are sucking her all right. HOW TO CUT PUPS' TAILS. This is usually done when the pup is ibout a month old. The length of the tail to be left on varies with the breed of the pup ; find out the length you want to leave it and then find the joint, and cut it through with one stroke of a sharp knife. They do not usually bleed, but if it should, touch the spots with Monsell's solution of iron, or if you have not got that just touch it with a red hot iron which will stop it, but in most cases it will be all right without anything. HOW TO CASTRATE A DOG. This operation is done at all ages — but like other animals it is best done when he is young ; it is very simple. Catch the dog and roll him up in a blanket, turning his front legs back and his hind legs forward so as to catch them in the blanket, and have him held on his back with his hind end stuck out of the blanket enough to get at the bag. Take hold of the testicle with your left hand, and with a sharp knife in your right hand, let out the testicle by making a cut in the bag large enough to let it out, separate the covering which is attached to the back part of the testicle with your knife, as soon as this is cut draw the testicle well up, and il he is a young dog cut the cord off with a scissors which will stop the bleeding, but if he is an old dog, tie the cord tight with a piece of strong string, leaving the ends long enough so they will hang out of the bag, then cut the testicle off about one-half an inch below where it is tied, operate on the other testicle in the same way, and fill the holes with salty butter and let him go. HOW TO SPAY A BITCH. This operation is taking the ovaries away from the bitch, to prevent her from coming in heat and getting with pup. It is best to perform this operation when the bitch is between six and nine >spoonfuls ; sheep and pigs, 2 to 4 drams oi 2 to 4 teaspoonfuls; dogs, 20 to 25 drops. It is given in a pint of hike warm water as a drench, and may be given as often as every two hours in severe cases. PIONSELL'S SOLUTION OF IRON. Monsell's Solution is a preparation of iron which is got from the mineral kingdom. It is used in the form of a brown, sticky liquid. Its Action and Use. — Its chief action is for stopping blood in R wound of any kind, and also for scabbing the wound over. It is a great remedy for open joint and leaking of the navel in toals. It is applied to the parts with a feather four or Hv* fimes a day. MEDICINES AND RECEIPTS. 370 MARSHMALLOWS. Marshmallows is gfot from a plant that grows in this country, generally in the neighborhood of rivers. Its Action and Use. — It is chiefly used in poultice, mixed half and half with linseed meal. It makes one of the most effectual drawing and soothing- poultices there is. It is also used when boiled, the tea from it is mixed with luke warm water for bath- ing the milk-bag, for garget, milk-fever, etc. ; it also makes a very soothing bath for sore or irritated wounds or swelling. Use one teacupful of the tea to a pint of luke warm water. MUSTARD. Mustard is got from a plant which grows in most parts of^ Europe. The seeds are dried and ground, and this is the form we use it in. Its Action and Use. — It is chiefly used for mustard plasters which are applied over the bowels in severe cases of colic or in- flammation to relieve the pain and check the inflammation; also in lung troubles, applied over the ribs and chest, and also the back in disease of the kidneys, and around the throat for sore throat. To make a mustard plaster of ordinary strength for a thin-skinned horse take a quarter of a pound o/mustard, two tablespoonfuls of flour and enough vinegar to make it in the form of a paste. In very severe cases use the mustard and vinegar without the flour on cattle and horses with a very thick skin. Instead of applying it to an animal with a cloth just rub it into the hair over the parts you want blistered. NUX VOMICA. Nux Nomica is got from the seeds of a small tree that grows in India and Australia. These seeds are dried and ground, and it is used in this powdered form. Its Action and Use. — It is a nerve stimulant, and is used in all cases of paralysis where the nerves have lost their power to strengthen them. The way to use it is to take equal parts of gentian and powdered Nux Vomica, mix thoroughly, and as a dose for horses and cattle give one teaspoonful three times a day in the feed or on their tongues with a spoon; for sheep pigs o* dogs give one-half teaspoonful. NITRATE OF SILVER. Nitrate of Silver is got from the mineral kingdom, and is used in the form of whitA pencil sticks. 380 THE VETERINAKY SCIENCE. Its Action and Use. — It is used for burning off warts, proud flesh in cuts and growths in any part of the body by just wetting the stick and rubbing it to the parts. Keep the sticks corked in a bottle for they dissolve when exposed to the air. NITRATE OF POTASH OR SALTPETRE. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre is got from the mineral king'- dom, and is used in the form of a white crystal powder. Its Action and Use. — Its chief action is on the kidneys and blood, it causes the kidneys to secrete an extra amount of urine. It is used a great deal in practice in almost all lung troubles, also in cases where the blood is bad and where the sheath and legs are swo len. * Dose. — For horses, 1 teaspoonful ; cattle, 1 teaspoonful ; sheep and pigs, J teaspoonful. If given for the kidneys, give once a day ; if for lung troubles, see diseases of the breathing organs. OLIVE OIL. Olive Oil is got from the seeds of an evergreen tree that grows in Southern Europe. Its Action and Use. — It is not used internally to any extent, but is used externally for soothing and healing irritated wounds. It may be used in its pure state or be mixed with carbolic acid — 10 drops of carbolic acid to 4 ounces of olive oil. OIL OF TAR. Oil of Tar is a product of the pine tree, and the form it is used in is of a dark, thick, sticky liquid with a tar-like smell. Its Action and Use. — It is chiefly used in cases of chronic cough and is a very eflFectual remedy. Give a teaspoonful three times a day in the horse's feed, or on his tongue with a spoon. OXIDE OF ZINC. Oxide of Zinc is got from the mineral kingdom, and the form we get it in is of a white, fine powder. Its Action and Use.^It is mostly used in making up healing salves, and is used in the same proportion as the receipt that is given in chapped or sore teats in cows. OIL OF MALE SHIELD FERN. Oil of Male Shield Fern is got from a shrub that usually grows along the side of the road in most temperate countrie*. It is got in the form of a dark, thick, oily liquid. MEDICINES AND RECEIPTS. 381 its Action and Use. — This medicine is a most bffevtual remedy for worms, especially tapeworms, m all animals. Dose. — For horses, 3 to 4 drams ; cattle, 3 to 4 drams ; sheep and pigs, 1 to 2 drams, dogs, ^ to 1 dram. In giving it to cattle and horses have them starved for twenty-four hours, then g"ive the above mentioned dose mixed in a pint of raw linseed oil or gruel; feed very light for three days, and if the worm has not come away repeat the dose every third day until it does. In giving it to sheep and pigs, give it In the same manner, only in half the quantity mentioned of raw linseed oil or gruel. In giving it to dogs, give it in half a teacupful of new milk, in the same man- ner as for horses and cattle. For further particulars how to use it look ac tapeworm in the different animals. PEPPER. Black pepper, which is the kind mostly used for animals, is got from the berries of a climbing plant that grows m the West Indies. Its Action and Use. — It is used internally as a stomach stimulant to heat the stomach and bowels, and in this way helps to relieve the pain in colic, indigestion, etc. Dose. — Fa horses, 1 tablespoonful . cattle, I tablespoonful ; sheep and pig'.». I teaspoonful , dogs, ^ teaspoonful In mixing up this drench it is often combined with whisky, and makes a good colic drench. QDASSIA CHIPS. Quassia Chips are got from a handsome tree that grows in the West India Islands. It is odorless but bitter to taste. Its Action and Use. — It t» used mostly as an injection for pinworms. To prepare it for injection refer to pioworma in horses. StJLPHURIC ADD. Sulphuric Acid is a product of the mineral kingdom, and ts got in the form of a light brown liquid. Its Action and Use. — At one time it was used a great deal as a caustic for burning warts, etc., but is not so much used now as it is too irritating, its place being taken by better caustics, such as chloride of zinc, nitrate of silver and caustic potash. It is used externally in the form of liniments. How to mix and use it, refer to the receipt for acid liniment in the back of this book. 382 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. SULPHURIC BTHER. Sulphuric Ether is prepared from sulphuric acid and rectified iptnts of alcohol, and is used in the form of a clear liquid with a very strong odor. Its Action and Use— It is used a great deal for putting animals asleep for operations, especially for dogs. As to how to use it, refer to "how to spay a bitch." It is sometimes given for indigestion or colic, both in horses and cattle, to relieve the pain and gases. Dose. — For horses and cattle, 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonful.s mixed in a pint of luke warm water, and can be given every two nours. Where the pain is severe, it is a very effectual remedy. SULPHATE OP COPPER. Sulphate of Copper, blue vitriol or blue stone is got from the mineral kingdom, and is got in a blue crystal form. Its Action and Use. — Its chief action when given internally is for checking discharges, such as nasal gleet or chronic catarrh, and whites or leucorrhoea. When used for this purpose, refer to the receipt to be used internally in the above named diseases. When used externally, it is used for wounds that are not healing well and have proud flesh in them by grinding it fine and dustint,^ It on the wound every two or three days according to how much it burns it. SULPHATE OP IRON. Sulphate of Iron, or commonly called green vitriol, is got from the mineral kingdom, and is used in the form of a crystal, similar to sulphate of copper, only of a lighter shade in color. Its Action and Use. — It is one of the best mineral tonics that we have, and is used combined with gentian, in equal parts, for almost every case where the system is run down and needs building up. For horses and cattle give a teaspoonful three times a day; for sheep and pigs give one-half a teaspoonful. It is also used in the same form for killing long round worms and pinworms in horses. For full directions as to how to use it in this case refer to the receipt of worm powders given at the back of this book. SULPHATE OF ZINC. Sulphate of Zinc is got from the mineral kingdom. It is used in the form of a white crystal powder, and resembles Epsom salts in appearance. MEDICINES AND RECEIPTS. 383 Its Action and Use. — When used internally it is in the form of an emetic that is to cause vomiting. As to how it is used refer to "dogs poisoned with rat poison, strychnine and arsenic." When used externally it has a healing action. How to use it, refer to the receipt of white lotion at the back of this book. It is also used as a drying wash for clap or gonorrhoea in horses and whites in mares. As to how to mix it refer to those diseases. SUGAR OP LEAD. Sugar of Lead, also called Acetate of Lead, is got from the mineral kingdom. Its Action and Use. — It is not much used internally, but is used outwardly for healing washes, such as white lotion and eye wash, which are fully explained at the back of this book. SALICYLIC ACID. Salicylic Acid is got from a plant. It is used in the form of a white powder. Its Action and Use. — It has a special action in cases of rheumatism. As to how to use it, refer to the receipt given for rheumatism in horses and cattle. SALT. Common Salt is got from the mineral kingdom. Its Action and Use. — It is an essential article of food, and something every animal should have regularly. Horses, cattle, sheep and pigs should have it in front of them all the time for, it should be remembered, stock cannot thrive well without it. Rock salt is the best form in which to have it as the animals can lick it whenever they want it. It is used externally by throwing a hand- ful of salt in a pail of luke warm water, and in this form it makes a very effectual wash for bathing swellings and wounds. SWEET SPIRITS OF NITRE. Sweet Spirits of Nitre, or Nitrous Ether, is chiefly a prepara- tion of alcohol. It is got in the form of a clear liquid which has a sweet taste and smell. Its Action and Use. — In small doses it acts on the kidneys and skin. For this purpose give horses and cattle a quarter of an ounce or one tablespoonful in drinking water once a day. For sheep, pigs and dogs give a teaspoontul in their drinking water or food onc» a day. In large doses it acts on the bowels and stomach to relieve pain and gases. Thus it is ^opd \^ tba ent forms of indigestion and colic. 384 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. Dose. — For horses, 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfuls; cattle, 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfuls ; sheep, ^ ounce or 2 tablespoonfuls ; pigs and dogs, ^ ounce or 1 tablespoonful. Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench. For how often to g'we it refer to the different diseases it is used in. This is a nieiluine tha' is used a great deal in practice, as you will see all through the book, and should be thoroughly understood. SPIRITS OF TURPENTINE. Spirits of Turpentine, also called Oil of Turpentine, is pot from a tree. It is used in the form of a cleat, oily looking liquid Its Action and Use. — Internally for horses and cattle it is used in one ounce or four tablespoonful doses mixed with a pint i>l raw linseed oil in severe cases of acute indigestion and colic to re- lieve the pain and gases; it is also used in this proportion for killing the long round worms and bots in horses. For furthi! particulars turn to bots and long round worms in horses anci other diseases it is used in. Internally for sheep and pigs the dose of turpentine is one-quarter of an ounce or one tab espoonlu! mixed with half a pint of raw linseed oil. It is used for the sanitr purposes as it is in horses and cattle. Outvvardl\ it is ustd toi making liniments, and for how to use it refer to ihe receipts lo- making white linement and acid liniments at the back of this book. SALTS. Salts are used in two forms, Epsom and Glober. Both kinds are got from the mineral kingdom, and are in a wluu- crystal form EPSOM SALTS. Its Action and Use. — Its chief action is as a physic for cattle, sheep and pigs, and is used to a great extent, as \ou will notice on reading the treatment of the above mentioned animals. Although salts is a good physic it should not be given to horses, aloes being far the best physic for them. Dose. — Cattle take from one pound to one ami one-half pounds dissolved in a quart of luke warm water with a la k'spoon- ful each of ginger and common soda and given as a drenoii. This physic takes twenty-four hours to operate on the bov\eK. It is alway* best after giving a dose to wait twenty-four h>'ur.s 'or an action before giving any more. Sheep and pigs take one-qiarter of a pound dissolved in a pint of luke warm water vviiti a tea- spoonful each of ginger and common soda and given as a drench. MEDICINES AND RECEIPTS. 386 Wait from twelve to sixteen houre for an action on the bowele be- fore giving any more. OLOBBR SALTS. Its Action tnd Use. — It is not so much ased as the Epsom Salts, but is used in horses and cattle for their blood by grinding it up fine and giving a tablespoonful in a hot mash every night. SULPHUR. Sulphur, or Brimstone, is got from the mineral kingdom. It is used in a yellow powdered form. Its Action and Use. — It is a great medicine, when given internally, to act on the blood and clear it. It also acts on the skin and helps to kill parasites or gejrms in the skin, thus it is good in mange and other skin diseases. Dose. — For horses, 1 tablespoonful; cattle, 1 tablespoonful; sheep, 1 teaspoonful ; pigs and dogs, 1 teaspoonful. Give every night in a hot mash or soft food; but it is best given combined with gentian root and nitrate of potash or saltpetre as is explained in the treatment of swelling of the limbs (anasarca) in horses. VASELINE. Vaseline is got from the mineral kingdom and is used in the Torm of a yellow salve. Its Action and Use. — Vaseline has a very healing and sooth- ing action on wounds or irritated parts, and is used in nearly all kinds of healing salves, also for mixing blisters, etc. VERDIGRIS. Verdigris is a preparation got from the copper salts, and comes from the mineral kingdom. It is used in the form of a blue, fine, heavy powder. Its Action and Use. — It is not much used now internally, at sulphate of iron and copper take its place. It is used for making up healing salves for wounds, etc For how to use it ••• th* receipt for green salve. —26— 386 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. CiiAPTEK 11. RECEIPTS. WHITE LINIMENT. Proportions to make one quart of the liniment. Use either a quart bottle or a quart self-sealer to mix it in: First. — Put in one-half pint of hard water. Second. — Put in two ounces or eigfht tablespoonfuls of spirits of turpentine and shake thorougfhiy for five minutes. Third. — Beat up one hen egg and put it in and shake thoroughly for five minutes. Fourth. — Put in two ounces or eight tablespoonfuls of methylated spirits of alcohol and shake thoroughly for five minutes. Fifth. — Put in two ounces or eight tablespoonfuls of strong liquor ammonia and shake thoroughly for five minutes. Sixth. — Put in enough hard water to make up a quart, then shake thoroughly and the liniment is ready for use. This is one of the most effectual remedies known for all kinds of sprains and bruises where the skin is not broken. The longer this liniment stands (if the bottle is kept corked) the stronger and better it gets for using. For making larger or smaller quan- tities of the liniment add to or take from the proportions given for one quart. WHITE LOTION. Proportions to make up one quart of White Lotion. Uia either a quart bottle or a quart self-sealer to mix it in. Put in one-half ounce of each of the following: Sulphate of zinc, sugar of lead and pulverized alum, add enough water to make a quart and shake thoroughly. This makes a most effectual lotion for healing all kinds of wounds and bruises where the skin is broken, also where the skin Is irritated, such as scratches, grease, etc. ACID LINIMENT. Persons getting this liniment that are not experienced in handling drugs had better get the druggist to mix it for them, ai it is a little dangerous mixing the sulphuric acid with other drugs, and it requires to be carefully handled. The following are the pro portions for one quart which is best mixed in a quart bottle or a quart self-sealer: MEDICINES AND RECEIPTS. 387 First. ^Put in two ouneM or oiffht tabUspoonfuli of spirit! of turpentine. Second. — Put in one-half ounce of sulphuric acid; pour this very slowly into the bottle by letting it run down the inside of the bottle which is better turned sideways. Take about five minutes to pour it in. Third. — Pour slowly into the bottle two ounces or eight tjiblespoonfuls of methylated spirits of alcohol. Fourth. — Pour in enough cider vinegar to make a quart, then shake well and it is ready for use. It is a most effectual sweat blister for removing puffy en- largements, such as bog spavin, wind galls, thoroughpins and other pufiEy swellings around the legs, by applying it every third day. It is also an effectual remedy for sweeny, curbs, etc., wbore you want to work the horse. This is also an effectual remedy for rheumatism by rubbing the affected joints every third day. It is also used in various other ways as you will notice through the book. CREOLm LOTION. The following proportions are for one pint of Creolin Lotion : First. — Pour in one-quarter ounce or one tablespoonful of creolin into a pint bottle. Second. — Pour in enough hard water to make a pint, shake well and then it is ready for use. This makes an excellent healing lotion for wounds, and by making it double strength it makes a most effectual wash for de- stroying germs, parasites, lice or ticks on all animals. It is used in various other places as you may see in this book. BTE WASH. The following proportions are to mak« an eight-ounce bottle of eye wash ! Solphat* of Ziae I dram. Bugar of L«ad | " Fluid Extract of Belladonna SO drops. Add enough hard water to make eight ounces, shake thor- oughly and the wash is ready for use. <• This makes a very cheap and effectual wash for sore eyes, or sores around the eyes in all kinds of animals by applying twice a day after bathing with luke warm water or new milk. 388 THB VBTBBINARY SOIBNOfi. CARBOLIC OIL. The following^ proportions are for a four-ounce bottle i Olive or Sweet Oil 4 ounce*. Carbolic Acid 20 drops. Shake well togfether and this makes a splendid application for healing wounds. PHYSIC DRENCH FOR HORSES. Bitter Aloes 8 drams. Common Sod« 1 teaspoonful. Ginger 1 " Dissolve in a pint of luke warm water and g-ive as a drench, always allowing the horse to stand in the stable a day after giving it. This is one of the best physics known to clean out a horse's stomach and bowels, and also to purify his blood. PHYSIC DRENCH FOR CATTLE. Epsom Salts 1 pound. Brown Sugar ^ pound. Common Salt 2 tablespoonfula. Ginger 1 '• Common Soda. 1 " Dissolve in a quart of luke warm water and give as a drench. This makes a good general physic for a cow that is not thriv- ing well. PHYSIC BALL FOR HORSES. This contains the same ingredients as the physic drench, only it is prepared in a different way, as follows : First. — Grind up eight drams of bitter aloes good and fine. Second. — Add a few drops of water to make it sticky when rolled. Third. — Roll it in a teaspoonful of ginger into the form of a long ball, BO it will be about one-half inch in diameter and two or three inches long. Fourth. — Roll it neatly in a piece of pap«r, and before giving It to tlM horse oil the paper, so h will slip down easily; shove it well back Into the mouth and hold the horse's head up until he ■wallows It. The action of this ball is the same as the action of tha phjnk drench. lAIX TO ACT W m LIYBR AlfD VORJIS. PntsT. — Grind up four drams of bitter aloes, moisten it and rail it into the form of a ball. Sbcond. — Make a hole in the end of the ball and drop in one-half dram of calomel, wrap it in paper, oil the pa|^ and givs it as you would a physic batti MEDICINES |AND RECEIPTS. 389 •ItBBH tALTB. Th« following are the proportions for makingf green salve : First. — Take mutton tallow, one-half pound; lard, three- quarters of a pound; beeswax, two ounces; put in a pot and stir over a hot fire until it is melted. Second. — Keep on stirring, and pour in one-half ounce of verdigris. Keep stirring it over the fire for fifteen minutes. Third. — Then take it off the fire and add one ounce of spirits of turpentine and keep stirring it until it is cold, then it is ready for use. This is one of the best healing salves known, especially when a wound is nearly healed up, for it keeps the wound soft, draws the edges together and allows the hair to grow over better. The way to apply it to a wound is to melt it in a spoon and apply it with a feather. MERCURY BLISTER. Biniodid of Meroary or Bed Preoipitato. 1} drams. Vaseline or Lard 1 oanoe. Mix thoroughly and this is one of the best blisters for blister- ing bony enlargements, such as splints, spavins, ringbones, side- bones, etc. Rub into the part well, grease it three days after, and in three weeks repeat the blister, and repeat in like manner until you have the required action. In case you want a heavier blister add another half dram of the biniodid of mercury. For further directions look at the separate diseases above mentioned, FLY BLISTER. Powdered CantharidM or Spanish Fly 1 J drams. Vaseline or Lard 1 ounoe. Mix thoroughly, and this is one of the best sweat blisters for blistering thickenings or enlargements in any part of the body where they are not on the bone. Use the same directions as ar« given in the mercury blister. POWDERS TO ACT ON THE KIDNEYS AND BLOOD. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre ^ poimd. Sulphur I •• Ground Gentian Root ^ " Mix thoroughly and givft a teaspoonful three times a day In the horse's food or on its tongue with a spoon. K it is a cow, give a tablespoonful twice a day; if a sheep, give a teaspoonful twice a day. This is a good powder for starting an animal to thrive, but before giving it, it is best to give a physic drench. If it Is a horse, give aloes; if a cow, give salts. 390 THE VETERINARY SCIENCE. WORM POWDERS. Sulphite of Iron i pound. Ground Gentian Root i Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day In the animal's food or on its tongue with a spoon. This powder is only intended for bots, round worms and pin worms in horses. It is alsc ft good tonic powder. Before and after using the powder give a physic drench. COUGH POWDERS. Sulphur , JpouncL Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre i " Powdered Alum .,..4..v ...i Mix thoroughly and give a teaspoonful three times a day on A horse or cow's tongue with a spoon, if it is a sheep, pig or dog. ^ive half a teaspoonful iree times a day on the fongue with a ^poon. This is a splendid powder for a gargle in all cases of sore throat, or sore mouth, and also makes a good cough powder. GENERAL CONDITION POWDER. Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre | pound. Common Soda i " Ground Aniseed i " Femigreek i " Mix thoroughly and give a tablespoonful every night in a bran mash, but if in a case where you want to fatten the animal in a hurry, give a tablespoonful twice a day in a bran mash. In horses that are working hard give a tablespoonful every Saturday night in a bran mash to keep them in good working condition. RECEIPT FOR COLIC AND INDIGESTION. Sweet Spirits of Nitre 1 ounce or 4 tablespoonfuls. Tincture of Laudanum 1 ounce or 4 tablespooufula. Fleming's Tincture of Aconite 10 drops. Common Soda 1 teaspoonful. Ginger 1 Mix in a pint of luke warm water and give as a drench every two hours'^ih cases of colic, indigestion and infiitnn ition t For further particulars refer to diseases of the stomacn an J bowels. HOOF OINTMENT. wnimti Raw Linseed Oil i pmt. ^j^— .- Crude Petroleum Oil i Neatsfoot Oil i Pine Tar i " Mix well and apply every night with a brush all over and under the hoof— even a little in the hair abote the hoof. Clean out the hoof beforeapplying. MEDICINES AND RECEIPTS. 391 UST OF MEDICINES TO BE KEPT QN HAND. The following- is a list of medicines that every stockowner should keep on hand for cases of emergency, that is, where he has an animal take sick with inflammation, colic, indigestion, or any other disease that requires his immediate attention, he can give these medicines, while if he had to go to a drug store for them at the time, he might lose the animal : Sweet Spirits of Nitre 4 ounces. Tinotnre of lAadanom 4 " Fleming's Tincture of Aconite J " Raw Linseed Oil 1 pint. Epsom Salts 1 poimd. Bitter Aloes 8 drams. It is also advisable to have m bottle of white liniment and a bottle of white lotio» on hand for, as they do not cost much when mixed by the quart, they are very handy to have on hand for sprains, sore shoulders, cuts, etc. As for the other medicines in the book they can be got at a drug store any time, as the cases they are used in are not so urgent. The cost of the list of medi- cines given is trifling, and by having them on hand »*id able to give it at the time the animal is noticed to be sick will often save the animal's life, whereas, if you had to go to a drug store at the time, the delay would cause the loss of the animal. Note. — In buying fluid medicine always take your bottle to the drug store, for the new bottle often costs you more than the medicine. TAKE NOTICE. All the doses of medicines which are mentioned in the section of the book, dealing with Medicines and Receipts, are intended for an average sized animal, unless otherwise mentioned, so in giving doses to smaller animals you must regulate the dose to suit the animal. CONSULTATION AND ADVICE FREE OF CHARGE. Any per.ion buying a copy of The Veterinary Science from >ne of our authorized ag;ents will have the privilege of free consultation on am- disease they do not understand, or anything in the t>ook they want more information about. In cases where a new disease should break out, by sending the symptoms of the case in full, and causes oi the trouble as near as you can tell, we Will furnish you by return mail, advice and prescription in full — free of charge. Parties living in Canada should enclose a three cent stamp; if in the United States, five cents in silver, for re'urn postage. Advice given on all kinds of operations, (castrating rigs or original hordes a specialty). Address all mail under this heading to J. E. Hodgins, V. S., or to T. H. Haskett, Secretary of the Veterinary Science Company, London, Canada. inde::?^. PART I. ANATOMY OF THE HORSE. PAGE Abdominal Muscles 17 Bladder, the 38 Bone 9 Bowels, the 32 Breathing 37 Bronchial Tubes or Air Cells 36 Carpus or Knee 14 Cervical or Neck Bones 10 Circulatory System 22 Classes of Bone 9 Coccygeal or Muscles of the Tail. . 18 Coccygeal or Tail Bones 11 Coffin Joint 14 Consideration of Jointt 13 Contents of Bone 9 Covering of Bone 9 Digestive Orgaoa 26 Dorsal or Back Bonea 11 Ear, the 64 Elbow Joint 13 Eye, the 65 Fallopian Tubes, the. 43 Feraale Genital Organs, the 43 Fetlock Joint 14 Fetlock, Pastern, Coffin Joints.. . , 15 Foetus or Young Animal Before Birth 46 Frog, the 64 Genital Organs 40 Genital Organs of the Horse 40 Glands, the 33 Gluteal Muscles 17 Gullet, the 31 Hair 48 Head Bones 10 Hip Joint 14 Ilip or Pelvic Bones 11 Hock or Tarsus Joint 15 Hoof, the tf How to Tell When a Mare is With Foal 47 How to Tell When an Artery is Cut 24 Important Points of Joints in Legs 1 3 Involuntary Muscles 20 Joints of Hind Leg 14 Kidneys, the 38 Larynx or Adam's Apple 36 Liver, the 33 Lumbar or Small of Back Bones . . 11 Lungs, the .37 Lymphatic System 25 Mammary Glands 4o Membranes of the Body 34 Mucous Membranes 34 Muscles of Front Leg 18 Muscles of Hind Leg 19 Muscular System 16 Nasal Chambers or Chambers of the Head 36 Nervous System 20 Nostrils, the 35 Number of Bones in Skeleton of Horse 12 Oesophagus, the, 31 Organs of Respiration 35 Ovaries, the 43 Pancreas, the 33 Pastern Joint 14 Penis, the 42 Process of Digestion 35 Rectum or Back Gat 33 Ribs •*«-%.. 12 Sacral or Rump Bones. . ' . . .7. ... II Salivary Glands 26 Scrotum, the 40 Semen, the 42 Sarooa Membranes ^4 394 INDEX — Aitatoniy of the Horse. Sheath, the 42 Shoulder Joint 13 Shoulder Muscle 18 Signs of Foaling 47 Skin, the 48 Sole, the 53 Spermatic Cords 41 Sjjleen, the 34 Sternum or Breast Boas 12 StiQe Joint 15 Stomach, the 31 Table of the Teeth 58 leeth, th* 66 Testicles, the 40 Trachea or Windpipe 36 Ureters, the 38 Urethra, the .?. . . 39 Urinary System 38 Uterus, the 43 Vagina and Vulva 44 Vaa Deferens 42 Vesiculae Seminales 42 Voluntary Muscles 16 Wall, the 48 Wolf Teeth 57 Womb, the 43 INDEX PART IL DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF THE HORSE. PAGE Abortion. 136 Abscesses in the Scrotam after Castration 144 Abscesses of the Bones of Head ... 62 Abscesses — Serioos Abscesses and Abeoesses Containing Matter. . . 311 Acute Indigestion. 90 Afterbirth not Coming Away 131 Afterpains 131 Age— How to Tell by the Teeth . . 235 Amaurosis, «r Star Gazer 153 Appetite, Rayeaous (read Chronic Indigestion). 94 Appetite, BavenooB (read Broken Wind, or Heaves) 74 Apth», or Thrush of Mouth 84 Artery, Enlarged and Diseased (see Aneurism) 1S6 Artery, Rupture of 187 Azoturia 189 Back, Horse not Able to, see Chorea 178 Back, Sore (see Sore Back) 208 Back Tendons, Sprain of 215 Bad Blood 188 Bad Disorder (see Clap, or (Jonor- choM) 122 Bag, Enlargement of (see Rupture in Bag) 1^9 Bag, Festering in, After Castra- tion, (see Abscesses in) 144 Bag, Swelling or Dropsy of 119 Barb-Wire Cuts (see Wounds ang of (^ee Inflammation of Wound) 201 Cutting by Searing 142 Cutting Colts (see Castration) 1 39 Cutting with Ligatures 142 Cutting with the Clamps 141 Cutting with the Ecraseur 141 Decayed Teeth 80 Diabetes 114 Diaphragm, Spasms of 76 Diapluagm, Rupture of 77 Diarrhaca 101 Diarrhoea in Young Animals 1(>2 Diarrhoea in Young Foals 137 INDEX — Diseases and Treatment of the Horse. 397 Ear TAOM Disinfect SUblv, How to (r«&d How to Feed and Take C&re of a Horse). 238 Dislocation of tke Stifle Bone. .... 218 Distemper 163 Distemper in Toung Fo«li 139 Drench Horse, Ho# to. 237 Dripping of Urine or Wat«r 1 W Drooping Head (see Inflammation of Lungs) 69 Dropping Dead (see Buptore o/ Valves of Heart) 186 Dropsy of Belly 108 Dropsy of the Belly Before Foaling 136 Dropsy of the Scrotum or Bag. ... 119 Dysentery 103 /Diseases of 150 Running Sores of 150 Deafness 150 Injuries or Cuts 150 Frost Bites of 151 Diseased Cartilage or GrisUe of 150 Eating too much Wheat. 1€9 Ecraseor, catting with. 141 Eczema, simple 168 Elephantiasis 184 Elbow Joint, Lump at the Buck of (see Capped Elbow) 212 Enlargement of Liver 112 Enlargement <^ NaveL 148 Enlargement of (Esophagus or Guile* 89 EnlargmMnt of Bag (see Dropsy of ) 119 EnlarfaoMnta — Puffy or Soft krwaA tlM Kbm or 7«tloek. . . 814 BpiBootio CddnUtti 166 Ergotiaa 313 Eye, BUbMlasw frea OUnMt .... 16S Eyft, OteMTMi Qxovth ia 164 Eye, DiM«M« oL 161 By«, Orwih ts Oarasr (see InflMU- mation of Haw) 166 lye, Inflaiwnatioii of HXw in Cor- ner 155 Eye, Injury to Tear Ducts 156 By*, Lids Injured or Cat 156 167 Eye, Bourn on (Cataract). 163 Eye, sore (Moonblindness). 152 Eye, sore (Simple Ophthalmia) 151 Eye, Worm in (see Filaria Oouli) . 164 Eyes, Yellow from Enlargement of Liver .' 112 Eyes, Tellow from Inflammation of liver 110 Eyes, 'f'ellow From Jaandioe Ill Falling Away of the Muscles of the Hip After Foaling 210 Falling Away of the Muscles of the Shoulder (see Sweeny) 205 Falling Down (see Stomach Stag- gers) 175 False Quarter 232 Farcy, Button 162 Farcy, Water (see Weed in Leg).. 182 Fatty Lining of the Bowels Com- ing Down After Castration 144 Feet, Club or Pumiced 228 Feet, Cuts of Any Kind Around Them 232 Feet, Diseases of 225 Festering in Scrotum or Bag After Castration 144 Fetlock Dropping (see Breakdown) 218 Fetlock Joint, Sprain of 215 Fetlook, over on (see Knuckling). . 216 Fetloek, over on in Colts (see Knuckling in Colts) 216 Fetlock, Thickenings Around 217 Filaria Oculi 154 Firing, read . . -. 198 FUtula 312 Fistulous Withers 204 Flagged Bag (see Garget) 135 Foal Bed Turned Out 132 Foal, How to Tell When a Mare is in 123 Foaling, Difficulties Met With while 129 Foaling and Diseases Following .. . 123 Foaling, Immediate Signs of 124 Foaling, Troubles Following 131 Foaling, Pains After. 131 Foaling, Swelling el the Mare't B«UyB«fM« 13« 398 INDEX — Diseases and Treatment of the Horse. Po»l— The Natural Way to Come. 124 Foals, Constipated or Bound Up. . 137 Foala, Crooked in the Legs 139 Foals, Diarrhcsa or Scowers in Young 137 Foals, Diseases and Troubles of . . 137 Foals, Distemper in 139 Foals, Rheumatism and Leaking of Navel '. 138 Foals, Weak in the Legs and Joints 139 Foot, Bruises of the Sole 232 Foot, Club or Pumiced 228 Foot, Cut From Horse Stepping on (see Caulks) 231 Foot, Nail Run in 229 Foot, Pricks of in Shoeing 230 Founder in Chest (see Sore Feet), . 227 Founder — Acute 225 Chronic 227 Fracture of the Bones Below the Knee 217 Fracture of the Bones of the Hock Joint 222 Fracture of the Bones of the Knee 214 Fracture of the Bones of the Shoulder 212 Fracture of the Bones of the Tail.. 210 Fracture of the Hip Bones 209 Fracture of the Neck Bones 203 Fracture of the Thigh Bones 219 Frog, Thrush in 229 Front Leg, Diseases of 212 Frost Bites of the Ear 161 Frothing at Mouth 86 Frothing at Nostrils, (see Rupture of Diaphragm) . 77 Galled Back (see Sore Back) 208 Galled or Scalded Shoulders 206 Garget 135 Genital Organs of the Horse, Dis- eases of 118 Genital Organs of the Mare, Dis- eases of 121 Glanders — Acute 159 Chronic... , 158 Glandeis (see Nasal 01e«t) 61 Glaucoma 165 Gleet, Nasal 61 Gonorrhoea (Clap) 122 Good Points About a Horse ...... 234 Grease. 167 Growth in Eye 154 Growths, Angry Looking (see Cancer) 224 Growths on the End of the Penis.. 120 Gullet, Diseases of 78 Gullet, Paralj sis of 88 Gums, Sore (see Lanipas) 7H Hair Falling OflF in Circles (see Ringworm) 17! Head and Throat, Swelling Around 89 Head, Big (see Big Head) 191 Head, Blow on (see Concussion of Brain 174 Head, Disease of 202 Head, Drooping (see Inflammation of Lungs) 69 Heel, Cut From Overreaching (see Overreach) 232 Hearing (see Deafness) 150 Heart, Arteries and Blood, Dis- eases of 185 Heart, Rupture of Valves 185 Heart, Palpitation of 186 Heart, Palpitation of (see Spasms of Diaphi agm) 76 Heaves, or Broken Wind 74 Heels, Cracked (see Scratches) .... 166 Heel, Crack in (see Quarter-Crack) 231 Hernia, After Castration. 143 Hernia, VentraL 149 Hernia, Umbilical 148 Hernia, Scrotal 149 Hind Leg, Diseases of 212 Hidebound (see Bad Blood) 188 Hip Muscles, Sprain of 211 Hip Muscles, Falling Away After Foaling 210 Hip Joint Lameness 211 Hip, Point Knocked Off (sea Hipped) 209 Hipped 209 Hips, Diseases of 202 Hips, Injuries to Daring Foaling.. 135 INDEX — Diseases and Treatment of the Horse. 399 PAGK Hock Bonea, Fracture of 222 H (jk, Capped (see Capped Hock). 221 Hock Joint, Sprain of / 222 H'>oi, Rough After a Cut Around the Top (see False Quarter) 232 Horse, How to Drench 287 Horse. How to Bleed 237 Horse, How to Feed and Take Care of 238 Horse, Loss of Appetite (read in Medicines — Aniseed, Arsenic) 369 Horse not Able to Back (see Chorea) 178 Horse not Able to Get Up (see Paralysis) .... 176 Horse not Able to Get Up (see Broken Back) 208 Horse Dropping Dead (see Heart Disease) 185 Horse not Doing Well (see) — Bad Blood 188 Chronic Indigestion 94 Worms 109 Bots 94 Horse, Miscellaneous Information. 234 Horse's Age, How to Tell by His Teeth 235 Horse Stepping on Foot (see Caulks) 231 How to Bleed a Horse . . 237 How to Drench a Horse 237 How to Feed and Take Care of a Horse 238 How to Examine a Sick Horse. ... 59 How to Tell a Horse's Age by His Teeth 235 Hydrocele (see Dropsy of the Scrotum) 119 Hydrophobia 180 Indigestion/^^"^* 90 l-Chronic 94 Inflammation (read How to Tell From Colic) 96 Inflammation of Bladder 116 Inflammation of Bowels 98 Inflammation of Brain 172 Inflammation of Haw of Eye 155 Luflam mation of Kidneys 113-114 Infljunmation of Lunga 69 Inflammation of Liver HO Inflammation of Parotid Gland.. . 87 Inflammation of Spleen 112 luflammatiou of Lining of Belly (see Peritonitis) 107 Inflammation of Lining of Belly After Castration (see Peritonitis) 146 Inflammation of Spinal Cord 177 Inflammation of the Milk Bag 135 Inflammation of Tongue 83 Inflammation of Throat 63 Inflammation of Vein 187 Inflammation of Vagina, or Pas- sage From Womb 134 Inflammation of Womb 134 Inflammation of Wounds 201 Influenza 160 Injuries and Sprains of the Knee. . 213 Injuries to Ducts of Eye 156 Injuries to Eyelids 156 Injuries to Lips and Cheeks 85 Injuries to Hips During Foaling. . 135 Injuries to the Ear 150 Injuries to the Penis 119 Injuries to the M uscles of the Belly 208 Injuries to the Muscles of the Neck 208 Inj uries to the Tongue 83 Interfcring/S'^"'^'°g ^^e Knee . 213 IStriking the Fetlock. 216 Inversion of the Bladder 117 r From Eczema 16S From Lice 172 From Mange 170 ^ From Pin worms 109 Jaundice, From Bileatones HI Jaundice or Yellows HI Jerking of Legs (see Stringhalt) . . 179 Joint Oil Running Out (see Open Joint) 223 (Acute Inflammation of. 113 Chronic Inflammation of 1 14 Inflammation of 113 Killed by Lightning, Appearance of an Animal 31.1 Knee Bones, Fracture of 214 Knee, Injuries and Sprains of ... . 21* Knee, Splints Affecting it. . .... 214 Knee Sprung 21 Itching 400 INDEX — IHseasesland Treatment of the Horse. FAQS 81n«e, SweUhig on the Inside of (sea Striking the Knee) 213 Knuckling 216 Knuckling in Colts 216 Lameness, Hip Joint 211 Lameness (see Rheumatism) 225 Lameness, Shoulder Joint. 207 Lameness, Stepping on Toe (see Nail in Foot) 229 Lameness, Sudden (see Nail in Foot) 229 Laminitis 225 Lampas 7S Laryngitis 63 Leaking Joint Oil (see Open Joint) 223 Leaking of the Navel or Rheuma- tism in Foals 138 Legs and Joints, Weakness of in Foals 139 Legs Crooked in Young Foals. . . . 139 Legs Swelled From Grease 167 Legs Swelled From Bad Blood 188 Legs Swelled From Big Leg 184 Legs Swelled From Stocking 184 Legs Swelled From Weed in the Leg 182 Legs Jerking (see Stringhalfc) 179 Leucorrhoea or Whites. 121 Lioe 172 Ligatures, CatitiB« 1\ tth 142 Lightning, the AppeanuM* of an Animal ELilled by 313 Lips and Cheeki, lajnriM to 86 Lips and COMeka, ParatTidi «!.... » Urwr and gpieea, IHiinii«< 110 LiTw, BalargMMBt «l 112 LiT«r, TiiWsiiiMlfaB vmL OsagH^ toBfl< 110 Lockjaw ItO Lookjaw, Altar C^timttm 147 Lamps AbMi* Tfci—t (■■• Dis- temper) 163 Lamps at Ba«k «l BWw Jofart (■M OappMl nba^ 212 Lamps, Hacd (mm TioBoni and CancersV 224 Lamps, Hard (sea AbsBBWSM) 811 Lamps, Hard oa Kaok BU» «f th« Lamps in Nose (see Nasal Polypi). 63 Lumps on Shoulder (see Bruises on Shoulder) 206 Lumps on Shoulder (see Tumors or Lumps) 207 Lumps on Grey Horses (see Melan- otic Tumors) 170 Lumps Swollen and Sere (see Abscesses) 311 Longs, Bleeding From 66 Lungs, Congestion of 67 Longs, Inflammation of 69 Lymphatic System, Diseases of . . 182 Lymphatic System, Weed in the Leg 182 Lymphatic System, Big Leg 184 Lymphatic System, Swelling of the Limbs 184 Lymphangitis 182 Mad Dog, Bite of (see Hydro- phobia) 180 Madness (see Hydrophobia) 180 Mange. 170 Mare, Barrenness In, or Not Breedina;. 122 Mare, Diseases of Genital Organs. 121 Mare Foaling, Difficulties Met With 129 Mare Foaling and Diseases Fol- lowing 131 Mare Foaling the Natural Way. . . 124 Mar«, How to Tell When with FoaL 123 Mare in Foal, How to Use. 124 Mares Losing Their Foals 136 Medicines Used in Loading the Clamps. 148 Metritis, Inflammation of Womb. 134 Melanotic Tamors. 170 Milk Bag, Inflammation of. 135 Milk Teeth, Shedding of 78 Modes of Healing Wounds 201 Monday Morning Feyer (see Lym- phangitis) , 183 Mouth, Blisters in (see Apth») ... 84 Mouth, Can't Open (see Lockjaw). 180 Mouth, Deformity (see Parrot Month. 79 M4Mitk. Diseases of 76 INDEX — Diseases and Treatment of the Horse. 401 Mouhh, Foreign Substancjea in 82 Myopia 157 Nasal Gleet, or Chronic Catarrh. . 61 Nasal Polypi, or Small Tumors in Nose 63 Nail in the Foot 229 Navel Strings 124 Navel, Leaking of, and Rheumat- is n 138 Navel, or Umbilical Rupture 148 Navicular Disease 232 Nearsightedness 157 Neck Bones, Fracture of 203 Neck, Disease of 202 Neck, Lumps Under (see Dis- temper) 163 Neck Muscles, Injuries of 203 Neck, Sore on Top from Collar. . . 204 Needle (read How to Sew Up Wounds) 199 Nervous System, Diseases ol 172 Concussion of Brain 174 Cerebro-Spinal Meningitis.. . . 177 Chorea 178 Inflammation of Brain, etc. . , 172 Hydrophobia 180 Lockjaw 180 Paralysis 176 Stomach Staggers . . . ^ ^ . 175 Stringhalt 179 Sunstroke 173 Nettle Rash 169 Nose, Bleeding at 66 Nose, Frothing at (see Rupture of Diaphragm 77 Nose, Lumps in (Nasal Polypi) ... 63 Nose, Running at, From Catarrh. 60 61 Nose, Runninj^ at, From Distemper 163 Nose, Running at, From Influenza. 160 Ni)se, Running at, From Sore Throat 63 Oats, Choking With 88 Oil, Leiking From Joint (see Open Joint)..... 223 Opprating With the Clamps 141 Operating With the Ecraseur. . .. 141 Operating With Ligatures 142 Opar&tiug By Searing , . 142 Open Joint. 22S Orchitis (see Inflammation of Tes- ticles) lis Original.or Rig Horses.Cist rating. 148 Osteo-Porosis (see Big Head) 191 Ovaries, Diseases of 121 Over Driven (see Chill) 2.3'( Over on Fetlocks (see Knuckling) 210 Over on Fetlocks in Colts (st^e Knuckling in Colts) 21b Overreach 23'2 Palpitation of Heart 186 Palpitation of Heart — Thumps (see Spasms of Diaphragm) 7tt Paralysis 176 Paralysis From Azoturia 189 Paralysis From Sunstroke 17S Paralysis (see Cerebro-Spinal Men- ingitis) 177 Paralysis of the Bladder 118 Paralysis of Hindquarters (see Broken Back) 208 Paralysis of Lips and Cheeks 85 Paralysis of Pharynx and Gullet. , 88 Parotid Gland, Thickening of 80 Parotid Gland, Inflammation of . . 87 Parrot Mouth 79 Partial Dislocation of the Stiffle. . 219 Parturition, or Foaling, and Dis- eases Following 12S Passage, Rupture of. Out From Womb 132 Penis, Growths on the End 120 Penis, Injuries of 1 19 Peritonitis 107 Peritonitis After Castration. .... 14fl Pharynx, Paralysis of 81 Pink Eye 163 Pinworms 109 Placenta Not Coming Away 131 Pleurodynia 73 Pleurisy 71 Pleurisy (see Pleurodynia) 74 Pneumonia, or Inflammation of the Lungs 01 Point of Hip Knocked OflF (see Hipped) 20f Poll Kvil »♦- -26— 402 INDEX — Diseases and Treatment of the Horse. PAGE Pox, Small 157 Precautions Before Cutting or Cas- trating . . ; 139 Pricks in ihe Foot From Shoeing.. 230 Puffy Eiilaigtmeuts Around the Knees and Fetlocks 214 Pumiced Foot 228 Punctures in Foot From Nail 229 Quarter Crack 231 Questions to Ask About a Sick Horse 59 Rabies 180 Rash, Nettle. 169 Ravenous Appetite (see Chronic Indigestion) 94 Ravenous Appetite (see Broken Wind or Heaves 74 Rheumatism 225 Rheumatism and Leaking of Navel in Foals 138 Rig Horses, Castrating 148 Ringbone 195 Ringworms 171 Roaring 65 Rotten Frog (see Thrush) 229 Rubbing (see Itching in Index) Rubbing Tail (see Pinworms) 109 Running at the Nose (see Cold in Head) 60 Running Sores 312 Running Sores About Ear 150 Running; Sores (see Open Joint). . . 223 Rupture at Na\ el 148 Rupture of the Womb 132 Rupt ure After Castration 1 43 Rupture in the P.Hg or Sciotum. 149 Rupture in the Rim of Belly, Ven- tral Hernia 149 Salivary Glatids, DiseHses of 78-8t> Scalded cr (Jailed Sliuuliler 206 Scrotal Hernia. 149 Scii rhus Cord. 145 Scrotum Festering After Castra- tion l45 Scowers ir Young Foals (aee Uiar- rhceu) . ? 1.37 Scratches 16(> Bcum on Eje (see Cataract) 15? PA(iB Scrotum, Dropsy of . 119 Searing, Cutting by 142 Sewing Up f Wound or Cut 199 Sharp Edges of Teeth 79 Sheath, Swelling of, Dirty 120 Sheath, Warts on 120 Shivering (see Chill) 237 Shivering (see Congestion) 6" Shivering (see Inflammation) 69 Shivering (see Pleurisy) 71 Shoulder Bones Fractured 212 Shoulder, Diseases of 202 Shoulder, Swelling of (see Bruises of) 206 Shoulder Joint Lameness 207 Shoulder, Scalded or Galled 206 Shying (see Nearsightedness) .... 157 Sick Horse, How to Examine .... 59 Side Bone 194 Sight, Near (see Myopia) 157 Signs of Immediate Foaling 124 Sitfast on Shoulder (see Tumors or Lumps) 207 Skin, Diseases of 166 Cracked Heels or Scratches. . 166 Grease 167 Lice 172 Mange 170 Melanotic Tumors 170 Skin, Diseases of — Mud Fever 167 Nettle Rash 16ii Ring Worm 171 Simple Eczema 16.S Slobbering (see Inflammation of Tongue) 83 Slobbering or Frothing at Mouth.. 86 Smallpox 157 Sore Back 20S Sore on Top of Head (see Poll Kvil) i>()'2 Sore on Top of Neck From (Joliar. 204 Sore Eyes (see Simple Ophthalmia) 151 Sore Eyes (fee Moon Bliudness^) . I.i2 Sore, Running 312 Sores, Running About Ear (see Cartilages of Ear) 150 Sores, Running (see Open Joint). . 223 Sore Throat 63 MNDEX — Diseases' and ^Treatment of the Horse. 403 9u« Tall (aee Frmetora ti TsO Bonea) 210 Sore Tail From the Crupper 210 Bore Feet. 227 Bore Feet (see Corns) 228 Bore Shins 193 Boandness, How to Examine for . . 234 Spavin, Bog 220 Spavin, Bone 196 Spavin, Blood 223 Speedy Cat 213 Spinal Cord, Inflammation of 175 Spinitis 175 Spitting Out Food (see Paralysis of Gullet) 88 Spitting Out Food (see Diseases of Teeth) 78-81 Split Teeth 81 Splints Affecting the Knee 214 Splints 192 Spleen and Liver, Diseases of 110 Spleen, Inflammation of 112 Sprain of the Back Tendons 215 Sprain of Knee, 213 Sprain of Fetlock Joint 215 Sprain of Hock Joint 222 Sprain of Muscles of Hip 211 Sprain of Muscles on the Front of Hind Leg Between Hock and Stiffle 220 Sprain of Muscles on Inside of Hind Leg Running Up From Hock. . . 220 Sprain of Stiffle Joint. 218 Staggering, From Stomach Stag- ger*. 175 Staggering, From Cerebro-Spinal Meningitis 177 Staggering, From Spinitis. 175 Staked 209 Star (Jazer 153 Stable, How to Clean Diseases Cat of (read How to Feed and Take Care of a Horse) 238 Stiffle Out 218 Stiffle Partly Out (see Partial Dis- location of) ..,.,„.... 219 Stiffle Joint, Sprain el Zlt fltiffiiesi (see RheumatlsM) SB Stiftiesi (see Founder). 225 Stiffness (see Azotoria) 189 Stiffness (see Pleurisy) 71 Stiff Neck (see Injuries to Muscles of) 203 Stiff Neck (see Poll Evil) 20'i Striking the Fetlock 216 Striking the Knee 213 Stocking (see Swelling of the Limbs) 184 Stomach and Bowels, Diseases of.. 90 Stomach, Rupture of 93 Stones in the Bladder 117 Stones, Inflammation ot 118 Strangles , 163 Strangles, Bastard \Qh Stringhalc 170 Stumbles (see Calf Kneed). 215 Sunstroke 1 73 Surfeit |69 Swallow, or Gullet, Paralysis of the 88 Swallow.or Gullet, Enlargement of 89 Swallow, Being Unable to (see Paralysis of) S8 Sweeny 205 Swelling Around Head and Throat. S9 Swelling Over Back, see Azotuna 189 Swelling Alorg Belly Before Foal ing I3fi Swelling After Castration I45 Swelling From Ruptured Artery IC7 Swelling on the Muscles of Hip (see Sprains of) 211 Swelling on Inside of ELnee (see striking Knee) 213 Swelling, Sore (see Abscesses). . . 31 1 Swelling of the Milk Bag 135 Swelling of the Vulva and Vagina. 1 34 Swelling of the Sheath. 120 Swelling of the Testicles (see In- flammation oO 118 Swelling of the Testicles (see Dropsy of) 119 Swelling of Legs (see Swelling of Limbs) V 18% Swelling Under tiia Ear (see Pa retid Gland). 86-87 Prfl Binw, FwitMii el SUC 404 INDEX — Diseases and Treatment of the Horse. Tail, Sore, From Cropper 210 Tail, Rubbing (see Pinworms) 109 Teeth, Diseases of 78 Teeth, Decayed or Rotten. 80 Teeth, Sharp Edgea 79 Teeth, Split 81 Teeth, Wolf Teeth 79 Tear-Ducts, Injuries to 156 Testicles, Inflammation of. ..... . 118 Tetanus, or Lockjaw 180 Tetanus, or Lockjaw, After Cas- tration 147 The Appearance of an Animal Killed by Lightning 313 Thirst (see Diabetes) 114 Thickening Under Ear, Parotid Gland 86 See Fistulous Withers 204 See Poll Evil 202 Thickening Around the Fetlock . . 217 Thickening at Side of Hock Joint (see Thoroughpin} 221 Thickening on Point of Hock ^see Capped Hock) 221 Thigh Bones, Fracture of 219 Throat and Head, Swelling of. ... 89 Throat, Lumps About (see Dis- temper 163 Throat, Sore, Inflammation of . . . . 63 Throwing an Animal for Castration 140 Thrush, or Apthas, in Mouth 84 Thrush in Feet 229 Thoroughpin 221 Thumps (see Spasms of Diaphragm) 76 Thumping of Heart (see Palpita- tion) 186 Tongue, Injuries to 83 Tongue, Inflammation of 83 Treatment of Wounds 199 Trembling From Congestion of Lungs 67 Trembling From Chills 237 Trembling From Inflammation of Lungs 69 Trembling From Pleurisy 71 Tumors ... 1^ 309 Tumors and Cancers 224 Tumors, or Lumps on Shooldsr. .. 207 Tnmors in Nose (see Nasal Polypi) 63 Tumors, Melanotic, seen in Gray Horses I^ . . . . 1 70 Turning Out of the Bladder, or In- version of 117 Twine for Sewing Up Wounds. ... 199 Udder (see Milk Bag) 135 Urine, Bad, Receipt for (see Pow - ders for Kidneys) 389 Urine, Bloody (see Inflammation of Kidneys) 117 Urine, Bloody (see Stones in Blad der) 117 Urine, Bloody (see Inflammation of Bladder) 116 Urine, Dribbling of 1 18 Urine, Excessive Flow of (see Dia- betes) 114 Urinary Organs, Diseases of 113 Urine, Stoppage of (see Inflamma- tion of Kidneys) 113 114 Urine, Stoppage of (see Ischuria).. 115 Urine, Stoppage of (see Paralysis of Bladder) 118 Vagina and Vulva, Inflammation of 134 Vein, Inflammation of 187 Warts 169 Warts Around the Sheath. .-. 120 Wasting Away of the Hip Muscles After Foaling 210 Water, Bad, Receipt for (see Re- ceipt of Powder for Kidneys) . . ,389 Water, Bloody (see Inflammation of Kidneys). 113-114 Water, Bloody (see Inflammation of Bladder 116 Water, Bloody (see Stones in Bladder) 117 Water, Dribbling of 1 18 Water, Excessive Flow of (see Diabetes) 114 Water in Chest 72 Water in the Bag (see Dropsy of Scrotum) ©. 119 Water, Farcy (see Weed in Leg). . 182 Water, Stoppage of (see In flam - maAion of Kidneys). 113 114 INDEX — Diseases and Treatment of Cattle. 405 PAGK Water, Stoppage of (see lachnria). 115 Water, Stoppage of (see Paralysis of Bladder) 118 Water in Belly (see Dropsy of Belly) ... 108 Weakness of the Legs and Joints in a Foal 139 Weakness (see Knee Sprung) 214 Weed in the Leg 182 Wheat, Horse Eating Too Much. . 109 Wheezing (see Nasal Polypi) 63 Wheezing (see Bronchitis) 73 Whites 121 Wind, Broken (Heaves) 74 Windgalla 217 Withers, Sore (see Fistulous Withers.. , 204 Womb or Foal Bed Turned Out. . . 132 Womb, Rupture of 132 Womb, Inflammation of 134 Wolf Teeth 79 Worm in the Eye (see Filaria Oculi) .' 154 Worms, Pinworms .- 109 Worms, Long Round 109 Wounds and Treatment 109 Wound by Sharp Stick (see Staked ) 209 Wounds, How to Sew Up 199 Wounds, Modes of Healing 201 Wounds, Inflammation of 2iil Wounds, Swelling of (see Inflam- mation of) 201 Wounds, Poisoning of 202 Yard or Penis, Growths on the End 1 20 Yard or Penis, Injuries of 119 Yellows From Bilastones Ill Yellows From Liver 110, 111, 112 Yellows or Jaundice Ill INDEX PART IIL ANATOMY, DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF CATTLE. PAGE Abortion 281 A bscesses That Only Contain Water 311 Abscesses That Only Contain Matter 311 Actinomycosis 306 Afterbirth or Cleaning — How to Take It Away 272 Air Under the Skin Caused From a Wound 292 Animal Killed by Lightning 313 Anatomy or Structure of the Ox . . 243 Angry Growths (see Cancer) 310 Anthrax 307 Apple, Choking From 254 Arteries, Diseases of 315 Austrian Fly (see Horn Fly) 294 Backbones, Fracture of 289 Back Teeth, Sharp 252 Bad Disorder in Bulls (see Clap). . 283 Bag of Cow 247 Balls of Hair in the Rumen or Paunch , 259 Barley Beards in Eye (see Foreign Substances in) Barrenness in Cows and Bulls. . . . Bellyache (see Colic) Belly Very Large (see Dropsy). . . . Binder Twine in the Rumen or Paunch Bites From Frost Bites From Insects, Small Snakes, Hornets, etc Bites From a Snake Black Quarter Bleed, How to Bloating Blood, Diseases of Bloody Flux Bloody Milk Bloody Urine Blue Milk •Bone, Choking From . Bones, Fracture of... Bones, Fractured Above the Stiffle Joint . - , t ^ C 287 281 262 261 2.->9 295 295 295 308 299 255 315 262 278 266 279 254 288 291 406 INDEX — Diseases andl^ Treatment of Cattle. Bones Fractured Below the Stiffle Joint 291 Bowels 246 Bowels, Inflammation of 263 Bowels Not Working (see Consti- pation) ... ., 263 Brain, Inflammation of 301 Breathing Heavy After Being Driv- en or Chased (see Bronchitis). . . 251 Breathing Organs 247 Broken Neck 288 Bronchitis 25 1 Bronchitis, Filaria 249 Bulls, Barren 281 Bulls, How to Castrate 283 Bulls, How to Ring 285 Burns and Scalds 295 Caked Bag (see Inflammation of Milk Bag) 276 Calf Not Coming Right (see Trouble Met With at Calving Time 269 Calves, How to Castrate 283 Calf Bed Turned Out 270 Calving, Diseases After 267 Calving, Troubles Met With 267 Cancer 310 Cancer in the Eye 286 Caps on Teeth 253 Caries — Decayed Teeth 252 Carrot, Choking From 254 Castration of Bulls and Calves 283 Cataract of the Eye 287 Catarrh, or Cold in the Head 248 Cattle Bitten By a Mad Dog (read Hydrophobia) 305 Cattle, Contagious Diseases of . , . . 303 Cattle, Diseases and Treatment. . . 248 Cattle Killed by Lightning 313 Cattle, Lice on Them 293 Cattle, Madness in 305 Cattle Rubbing Themselves (see Lice 293 Chaff in the Eyes (see Foreign Sub- stances 287 Chapped or Sore Teats 279 Cheeks 244 Chewing Cud, How It Is Performed •;4(i Choking 254 Clap 283 Cleaning of Cow, How to Take Away 272 Clogging of Food in Paunch (see Impaction of) 256 Closure of the Neck of the Womb at Calving Time 269 Cold in Head or Catarrh '. . . 248 Cold in Throat (see Sore Throat). . 249 Colic 262 Constipation of the Bowels 263 Contagious Diseases 303 Contagious Pleuro-Pneumonia. . . . 303 Consumption 304 Cough (read Sore Throat) 249 Cough (read Consumption) 304 Cough (read Inflammation of Lungs 250 Cough (read Pleurisy) 251 Corn Stalk Disease 300 Cow Calving, Troubles Met With. 269 Cow, Barren 281 Cow, Discharge From Wound (see Whites) 273 Cow, Giving Milk, How to Dry Her Up.... 314 Cow, How to Bleed 299 Cow, Falling off in Condition (see Impaction 2C0 Cow, How to Tell When With Calf 261) Cow in Severe Pain (see Colic) .... 2(j2 Cow Losing Her Calf 2S1 Cow, Mad (see Hydrophobia) 305 Cow Not Able to Get Up (see Paralysis Before Calving 268 Cow Not Able to Open Her Mouth (see Lockjaw) 302 Cow Not Cleaning Right, How to Take It Away 272 Cow Pox 280 Cow Yellow Around Eyes (see Jaundice) 265 Cranipa in Bowels (see Colic) 262 Cud, How It Is Chewtd 246 Cud, Tlirowing It Up (see Vomit- ing) 258 INDEX — Diseases and Treatment of Cattle. 407 PAOB Cats of the Teats 280 Cuts of All Kinds (see Wounds of All Kinds) 292 Decayed Teeth 252 Dehorning . T 298 Diarrhoea 261 Diarrhsea in Calves (see White Scowers) 266 Digestive Organs, Diseases of .... 252 Digestive Organs of the Ox 244 Discharge From the Womb (see Whites) 273 Disease After Calving 267 Drench, How to 800 Dropsy of the Belly 264 Dropsy of the Womb Before Calv- ing . 268 Dry Murrain (see Impaction of Manypiies) 260 Dysentery 262 Ear and Eye, Diseases of 286 Encephalitis 301 Enteritis 263 Ergotism 313 Eye and Ear, Diseases of. 286 Eye, Cancer in 286 Eyelids, Injuries to 288 Fardelbound (see Impaction of Manyjllisfl) 260 Feet, Soreness of From Any Cause 296 Festering Below the Ear (see In- flj,mmatioiQ of Parotid Gland) , . 253 Filftcia Bronchitis 249 FiHtdla of the Foot 297 Fistdlu,, or Running bore 312 Fistula of the Teat 280 Flagged Bag (see Inflammation of Milk Bag) 276 Fluke Disease in Cattle and Sheep 265 Fly, Little Flies About Horns and Body (see Horn Fly) 294 Foal Bed Turned Out 270 Food Cuming Out of Mouth (see VomiMng) 258 Foot, Fistula of 297 Foot,, Nail ^un in 298 Foot, livit .... . 296 Fureijjn Substances in the Eye. . ... JbQ TAGA Foul in the Foot 296 Founder 296 Fourth Part of Stomach, Inflam- mation of 261 Fractured Bones, Wounds, Sprains of Joints and Tendons 288 Fractured Bonea 288 Fracture of Louver Jaw 288 Fracture of the Back Bones 289 Fracture of the Bones Above and Below the Stiffle 291 Fracture of the Bones Below the Hock Joint 291 Fracture of the Bones Below the Knee 290 Fracture of the Bones of the flip.. 289 Fracture of the Bones, Neck Bones 288 Fracture of the Bones, Ribs 290 Fracture of fche Bones, Shoulder Blade, or Shoulder Bone 290 Garget 276 Genital Organs, Diseases of 282 Genital Organs of the Cow 247 Genital Organs of the Bull 248 Glands Around the Throat 244 Gonorrhoea 283 Growths, Angry Looking (see Can- cer) 310 Growths in the Comer of the Eye (see Hiw) 287 Growths on the Haw of the Eye. . 287 Growths in the Eye (see Cancer in Eye) 286 Grunting (see Impaction of the Rumen or Paunch) 256 Gullet, or Throat (see Pharynx) ... 244 Guts (see Bovels) 246 Hair Balls in the Rumen 259 Hair Falling Ofl" in Circles (see Ringworm) 294 Hard on Left Side (see Impaction of Paunch) . 256 Haw of the Eye, Growths on 287 Heart, Diseases of 315 Hide-Bound (is not a Disease but a Symptom of Impaction of Mauyplies) 260 408 INDEX — Diseases and Treatmentlof Cattle. PAGE Hind Quarters, Paralysis of Before Calving'-', 2G8 H'p Bones, Fiacture of 289 Hollow Horn (is not a Disease, is same as Impaction of Manyplies) 260 HornFly 294 Hoven, or Bloating 255 How to Bleed a Cow 299 How to Drench a Cow 300 How to Dry an Animal That Is Giving Milk 314 How to Perform the Operation of Rumenotomy 258 How to Prevont Milk Fever From Coming On 276 How to Ring a Bull 285 How to Take the Cleaning Away.. 272 How to Tell When a Cow Is With Calf 2G7 flow Rumination, or Chewing the Cud, Is Performed 246 Hydrophobia In Cattle 305 Impaction of the Manyplies, or Third Part of the Stomach, 2C0 Impaction of the Rumen, or Paunch 256 Inflamniaiion of the Bowels 263 Inflammation of the Biaiii 301 Inflammation of the Lining of the Belly Cavity .'.. 264 Inflammation of the Lining of the Chest Cavity (see Pleurisy) .... 251 Inflammation of the Lungs 250 Inflammation of the Milk Bag. . . . 276 Inflammation of the Parotid Gland 253 Inflammation of the Testicles in Bulls 282 Inflammation of the Womb 272 Injuries to the Eyelids 28S Injuries to the Sheath and Penis. . 283 Intestines (see Bowels) 246 Jaundice In Cattle 265 Jaw Bone, Lump On (see Lumpy Jaw 306 Jaw Bone, Lumps On, From Teeth or an Injury 253 Kidneys (see the Uiiuaiy Organs). 217 P/.(ii Knee Bones, Fract«re of 2bJ Laminitis .v • • • • 296 Leucorrhoea, or Whites 273 Lice on Cattle 293 Lightning, Struck By 312 Lightning, Killed, the Appearance of After 813 Lining of theBelly,Inflammationof 2641 Lipa 2411 Liver 24a Liver, Diseased (see Fluke Disease) 265 Lockjaw S(t2 Lower Jaw, Fracture of 283 Lump on Inside of Hock Joint (see Spavin) 291 Lumps In Passage of Teat 277) Lumps on the Jaw Bone From the Teeth or an Injury 253 Lumpy Jaw 306 Lungs, Inflammation of 250 Lungs (see Respiratory Organs). . . 247 Madness In Cattle 305 Maggots In Neglected Wounds. . . 292 Mammary Glands 247 Mane;e In Cattle 294 Mangel, Choking From 254 Manyplies, Impaction of 260 Metritis or Inflammation of Womb 272 Milk Bag 247 Milk, Bloody 278 Milk, Blue 279 Milk Fever 274 Milk Fever, How to Prevent It Coming On 276 Milk, Falling Off in One Night (see Impaction of Rumen) 2."6 Milk, How to Dry Up a Cow 314 Milk, Stringy 279 Milk, Stopped (see Small Lumps in Teat) 277 Milk, Stopped (see Inflammation of Milk Bag) 276 Milk, Stopped (see Impaction of Rumen) 256 Milk, Stopped (see Milk Fever). . . 274 Mouth, Not Able to Open (see Luckiaw). .,.,.,,., 3C2 INDEX — Diseases and Treatmeni of Cattle. 409 PAGE Nail Run in the Foot 298 Neck of the Womb Closed at Calv- ing Time 2G9 Nerves, Diseases of 300 Nuts, Bulls (see Testicles) 248 (Esophagus, or Swallow 244 Orchitis, Inflammation of Testicles 282 Organs of Digestion in the Ox .... 244 Ovaries 247 Ox, Anatomy of 243 Ox, How It Chews Its Cud 246 Ox, Skeleton of 240 Panting After Being Chased or Driven (see Bronchitis) 251 Paralysis After Calving 274 Paralysis After Calving (see Milk Fever) 274 Paralytis From Any Cause Is Treated Same as Paralysis After Calving 274 Paralysis (see Sunstroke) 302 Paralysis of Hind Quarters Before Calving . 268 Parturient Apoplexy or Milk Fever 274 Passage Out From Wound, Rup- ture of 270 Passing Blood (see Bloody Flux). . 262 Paunch, Hair Balls in 259 Paunch, Impaction of With Food. 258 Paunch, Twine Ball in 259 Penis, Bulls (read Genital Organs of Bull) 248 Penis, Injuries to 283 Peritonitis 264 Pharynx. Gullet or Throat 244 Physic (see Diarrhoea) 261 Pink Eye in Cattle (same as Pink Eye in Horses) 165 Pleurisy 251 Placenta, or Cleaning, Not Coming Away, How to Take It Away . 272 Potato, Choking From 254 Pneumonia, Inflammation of Lungs 250 Quarter 111 (see Black Quarter) . . 308 Rabies 305 Red Water 266 B^spiratorj or Breathing Organs . 247 PAOR Rheumatism 29'2 Ribs, Fracture of 2.00 Rig or Original Bulls 285 Ringworm 294 Rubbing (see Lice on Cattle) 293 Rubbing (see Mange) 294 Rumen, Hair Balls in 259 Rumen, Twine Balls in 259 Rumen, Impaction of With Food. 256 Rumination, How It Is Per- formed 246 Rumenotomy, How to Perform It. 258 Running Sore 312 Running Sore in Foot (see Fistula) 297 Rupture of the Womb or Passage Out From 270 Scalds 295 Scowers (see White Scowers in Calves) 266 Scowers in Cattle (see Diarrhoea). 261 Scum on the Eye (see Sore Eyes). 287 Scum (see Cataract of the Eye) . . . 287 Severe Pain in Cattle (see Colic). . 262 Sharp Molars, or Back Teeth 252 Sheath Swelling in Steers 285 Shoulder Blade, or Shoulder Bone Fractured ^ 290 Shoulder, Bruises of (see Abscesses) 311 Skeleton of the Ox 240 Skin, Air Under, Caused From a Wound 292 Skin, Diseases of 293 Slavering i52 Small Growths on the Skin 293 Small Lumps in the Skin (see Warbles) 295 Small Round Lumps in the Pas- sage of the Teat 277 Small Warts on the Teats 280 Snake Bites 295 Sore Eyes in Cattle From Any Cause (see Foreign Substances in) 287 Soreness From the Feet, From Any Cause 296 Soreness From the ^ Feet (see Founder). 296 Soreness Around Chest (see Pleur- isy) 251 410 INDEX— Diseases and Treaimient of Cattle. Sore Throat 249 Sore Teats (see Chapped Teats). . 279 Sore Teats (see Cow-Pox) 280 Sore Teats (see Cut on Teats) 280 Sore, or Inflamed Eyes 287 Sore, Runninfj 312 Spavin 291 Spitting Food Out of Mouth- See Decayed Teeth 252 See Sharp MoIsts 252 See Caps on Teeth 253 Sprains in Any Part of Animal 291 Steers, the Point of the Sheath Swollen 285 Stiffle Out in Cattle. 291 Stomach of Ox 244 Stomach, Fourth Part, Inflamma- tion of 261 Stones, Bulls (see Testicles) 248 Stones, or Testicles Not Down (see Rig Bulls) 285 Stoppage in the Stomach (see Im- paction of) 256 Stoppage of the Bowels (see Con- stipation) 263 Stringy Milk 279 Struck With Lightning 312 Structure (see Anatomy of Ox) 243 Swallow, or (Esophagus 244 Swelling Around Shoulders (see Abscesses) , 3jl Swelling, Crackling When You Rub It (see Air Under Skin) ... 292 Swelling Below the Ear (see In- flammation of Parotid Gland).. 253 Spelling of Milk Bag (see Inflam- mation of Milk Bag) 276 Swelling of Point of Sheath in Steers 285 Swollen on Left Side (see Bloating) 255 Swollen (see Impaction of Stom- ach) 256 Sunstroke . '. 302 Tail Dropping Off (see Ergotism).. 313 Tapeworm in Cattle 264 Tapping for Bloating (read Treat- ment for Bloaiiug) 255 Teats, Small Lumps in Passage. .. 277 Teata, Warts on 280 Teeth 244 Teeth, Caps on 253 Teeth, Sharp (see Sharp Molars). . 25^ Testicles Not Down (see Rig Bulls) 285 Testicles of Bull 248 Tetanus 302 Texa Fever 3Q3 Third Part of the Stomach, Im- paction of 260 Throat or Pharynx 244 Throat Sore, Culd in 249 Throwing Up Food (see Vomiting) 258 Tongue 244 Troubles Met With While Calving 269 Troubles in Calving 267 Tuberculosis 304 Tumors 309 Turning Out of the Vagina or Pas- sage Leading From the Womb. . 270 Turnip, Choking From 254 Twine Ball in the Rumen or Paunch 259 Tympanitis or Bloating 255 Udder (see Bag). 24? Urinary Organs 247 Urine Red (see Red Water) 266 Uterus or Womb 247 Vomiting 258 Warbles 295 Warta on the Skin 293 Warts on the Teats 280 Water, or Urine, Red (see Red Water) 266 Wheezing (see Filaria Bronchitis). 249 Wheezing (see Bronchitis) 251 White Scowers in Civlves 266 Whites, Leucorrhoea. 273 Womb, Dropsy of Before Calving. 268 Womb, Neck Closed at Calving Time 269 Womb of Cow 247 Womb, Passage From Turned Oat 270 Womb, Rupture of 270 Womb Turned Out Aftor Calving. 270 Worms in Liver (see Fiuke Disease) 265 Wound, Maggots in 292 Wounds of All Kinds ^M..... 29J Yard, Bulls (read G enital* *6rgans ^o^BuU) 1.. 248 Jf eliowa 2uJ INDEX PART IV. DISEASES AND TREATMENT OF SHEEP, PIGS, DOGS AND POULTRY. SHEEP. PAGE Afterbirth Not Coming Away (see Cleaning Not Coming Away) . . . 333 Bag Mortified (see Inflammation of Milk Bag) 334 Bag Swollen in Rams (see Inflam- mation of Testicles) 330 Bag Swollen (see Inflammation of Milk Bag) 334 Bellyache (see Colic) 323 Bloating 321 Bowels, Inflammation of 323 Breathing Heavy (see Bronchitis) 317-318 Breathing Heavy (see Inflamma- tion of Lungs) 319 Broken Legs in Lambs and Sheep. 329 Brenchitis 317 Bronchitis, Filaria 318 Caked Bag (see Inflammation of Bag) 334 Caps.on Teeth .\ 320 Catarrh, Simple 316 Chased by Dogs (see Bronchitis). . 317 Choking in Sheep 320 Cleaning Not Coming Away 333 Cold in Head 316 Colic in Sheep. 323 C iistipation in Young Lambs. . . . 335 Cougliing (see Choking) '. 320 Coughing (see Sore Throat) 317 Ci amps (see Colic) 323 Cud, Not Chewing (see Impaction of First Stomach) , 822 Cutting Lamb's Tails 331 Diarrhcsa in Lambs 836 1 )iarrhcea in Sheep 328 D gs Chasing Sheep (see Brbn- chitis) 317 Diigs Chasing Sheep (see Wounds) 343 Eyes, Sore. »... 329 Feet, Sore (see Foot Rot in Sheep). 336 Filaria Bronchitis ^. 318 Fluke Disease in Sheep 325 Foot Rot in Sheep 336 Fractured Legs 329 Garget 334 Grating Teeth (see Impaction of First Stomach) 322 Grub in the Head of Sheep 325 Grunting (see Impaction of First Stomach) 322 Head, Grub in (see Grub in Head). 325 How to Cut or Castrate Rama .... 330 Impaction of First Stomach 322 Inflammation of the Lungs 319 Inflammation of the Bowels 323 Inflammation of the Milk Bag 334 Inflammation of the Testicles in , Rams 330 Lamb Bed Turned Out 333 Lamb, Constipation in 335 Lamb, Diarrhoea in 336 Lamb, Weakness in. 335 Lambing 331 Lambing, Signs of 331 Lambing, Troubles Met With in.. 332 Lamba, How to Cut their Tails. .. 331 Legs Broken 329 Liver Diseased (see Fluke Disease). 325 Lungs, Inflammation of 319 Maggots in Wounds of Sheep 328 Manare, White Spots in (see Tape- worm) 324 Milk Bag Mortified (see Inflamma- tion of) 334 Milk Bag, Inflammation of 334 Mortification of Milk Bag (see In- flammation of Milk Bag).. . . 334 Mouth, Wood or Anything Elae CaughiAJi .,..— . 32$ 412 INDEX — Diseases and Treatment of Sheep. Nose, Running at (see Cold in Head) 316 Old Sheep Losing Their Teeth 320 Pain, Severe (see Colic) 323 Pain, Severe (see Inflammation of Bowels) 323 Pieces of Wood or Anything in Mouth) 320 Placenta or Cleaning Not Coming Away 333 Pleurisy (see Inflammation of Lungs) 319 Pneumonia (see Inflammation of Lungs) 319 R?ms, How to Cut or Castrate. . .. 330 Running at Nose (see Catarrh). . .. 316 Scab in Sheep 327 Scowers [see diarrhoea] 328 Sheep Choking 320 Sheep Chased by Dogs (see Bron- chitis) 317 Sheep, Fluke Disease 325 Sheep Lambing 331 Sheep, Losing Their Teeth 320 Sheep, Maggots in Wounds 328 Sheep, Not Eating (see Impaction of First Stomach) 322 Sheep, Old, Failing (see Losing Their Teeth) 320 SL.^jp, Scab in Skin 327 Sheep, Ticks 328 Sheep, Wool Falling Off (see.Gcab in Sheep) ■- 327 Sheep, Wool Falling Off (see Wool Falling Ofif in Spring) 327 Signs of Lambing 331 Simple Catarrh 316 Slavering at Mouth (see Choking). 320 Snufiling (see Cold in Head) 316 Sore Eyes in Sheep . . , 329 Sore Feet (see Foot Rot in Sheep). 336 Sore Throat 317 Swelling (see Bloating) 321 Tapeworm in Lambs and Sheep. . . 324 Teeth, Troubles of 320 Testicles, Inflammation of in Rams 3^0 Throat, Sore 317 Throat Swollen (see Sore Throat).. 317 Ticks on Sheep 328 Troubles Met With in Lambing. . 332 Tympanitis ... 321 V\ eakness in Young Lambs 335 Wheezing (see Bronchitis) 317 White Spots in Manure (see Tape- worn?.) 324 Womb Turned Out (see Lamb Bed Turned Out) 333 Wool Falling Off in the Spring. ... 327 Wounds, Maggots in 328 Young Lambs, Diseases of 335 PIGS. FAQE Acute Indig'^o+ion 338 Back B.wel iuri.e^l Oat 341 Bick Broken in Pigs 347 Barking in Pigs (see Sore Throat). .3.38 Black Teeth in Young Pigs 345 Blind Staggers 342 Bloated (see Acute Indigestion). . . 338 Roars, How to Castrate 344 Bound Up (see Constipation in Pigs) 340 Bowels, Back One Turned Out 341 Bowels Not Working (see Consti- pation) 340 Broken Back in Pigs 347 Broken Legs in Pigs 346 PAGE Castratin;» 344 Choking 337 Chronic Indigestion 339 Ci)nvulsions in Young Pigs (see Fits in Young Pigs) 351 Constipation in Pigs 340 Coughing (see Sore Throat) 338 Coughing (see Choking) 337 Cuts or Wounds of Any Kind. . . . 343 Diarrhoja . 341 Difficulties With Sows in Pigging. 348 Diseased Milk Glands (see Inflam- mation of the Milk Glands) 350 Eat Too Much of Any Kind of Food (see Acute Indigestion) . . . 338 INDEX — Diseases and Treatment of Pigs. 413 PAGE Fits in Pigs (see Worms) 341 Pits in Yonng Pigs From Worms. 351 Founder, or Sore Feet in Pigs. . . . 343 Fracture of a Pig's Leg 346 Garget 350 Hog Cholera 347 How to Cut or Castrate Pigs 344 How to Cut or Castrate Pigs That Are Ruptured in the Bag 345 How to Ring a Pig 351 Indigestion, Acute 338 Indigestion, Chronic 339 Inflammation of the Milk Glands. 350 Leg Broken 346 Lice on Pigs 346 Little Pigs Sick (see Black Teeth). 345 Little Pigs Sick (see Worms) 341 Milk Fever 349 Milk Glands Mortified (see Inflam- mation of Milk Glands) 350 Paralyzed Pig (see Broken Back in Pigs) 347 Paralyzed Pigs (see Blind Staggers) 342 Pig Bed Turned Out 350 Pig, Blue Around Head and Ears (see Blind Staggers) 342 Pig, How to Cut or Castrate. 344 Pig, How to Ring 351 Pig's Leg, Fracture of 346 Pigs, Lice on 346 Pigs, Little Ones Sick (see Black Teeth).... 345 Pigs, Little Ones Sick (see Worms) 341 Pigging, Difficulties Met With. . . 348 Pig, Not Able to Get Up (see Broken Back) 347 Pig, Not Able to Get Up (see Blind Staggers) 342 Pigs Paralyzed (see Blind Staggers) 342 Pigs Paralyzed (see Broken Back) . 347 Pigs Ruptured, How to Castrate. . 346 PAOI Pigs Very Stifif and Sore (see Founders or Sore Feet) 343 Pigs Very Stupid and Not Eating (see Blind Staggers) 342 Pigs With Broken Back 347 Pigs, Young Ones, Fits From Worms 351 Rectum or Back Bowel Turned Out 341 Ring Pigs, How to 351 Ruptured in the Bag, How to Cas- trate Them 345 Scowers (see Diarrhoea) 341 Sore Feet 343 Sores (see Wounds) , . . 343 Sore Throat 338 Sows Pigging, Difficulties Met With 348 Sow's Teats Mortified (see Inflam- mation of the Milk Glands) . . . 350 Sows That Won't Give Milk After Pigging (see Milk Fever) 349 Sows Very Sick After Pigging, (Always Look for Milk Fever). , 349 (Also, Inflammation of Milk Glands) 350 Sow, Very Sore Along the Milk Glands, (see Inflammation of Milk Glands) 350 Sows With Milk Fever 349 Stiffness and Soreness (see Founder) 343 Stoppage in the Bowels (see Con- stipation) 340 Stunted 339 Stupidness (see Blind Staggers). .. 342 Swollen Belly (see Acute In- digestion) 338 Water Running Out of the Mouth (see Choking) 337 Womb Turned Out 350 Worms 341 Wounds or Cuts of Any Kind. . , . 343 414 INDEX. — Diseases and Treatment of Dogs and Poultry. DOGS. PAGS Arsenic Poison 358 Bitch, How to Spay . , 360 Bound Up (see Constipation) 355 Breedine; Pupa and Troubles Met With 359 Broken Bones in Dogs 358 Cancer in Eye (see Growths in Eye) 354 Canker in the Ear 353 Chorea 357 Constipation in Dogs 355 Cuts of Any Kind 354 Deafness 353 Diarrhoea 355 Distemper 356 Discharge from Eyes (see Dis- temper) 356 Dog Trembline; or Jerking (see Chorea) 357 Dogs, Constipated or Bound Up. . 355 Dogs, How to Cut or Castrate. . . . 360 Ear, Canker in 353 Enlargement of the Eye 354 Eye, Growth in 354 Eyes, Sore 354 Eyes, Water Running From (see Distemper) 356 Fleas 353 Fractured Bones in Dogs 358 Growths in the Eye 354 Hair Falling Off (see Mange) 352 Hard of Hearing (see Deafness) . . . 353 Hide Bound (see Worms) 356 How to Castrate a Dog 360 How to Cut Pups' Tails 360 How to Get Bitch Pups — read .... 359 How to Get Dob Pups — read 359 How to Spay a Bitch 360 Hydrophobia. , , , . , .357 Itchy, see Fleas , 353 Itchy (see Mange) ... 352 Jerking. Dog (see Chorea) 357 Lumps in the Skin (see Tumors) . . 355 Leg Broken (see Fraetured Bones) 358 Lice on Dog (see Fleas) 353 Mad Dog 357 Mad Dog (see Dog Poisoned) 358 Mange 352 Poisoned 358 Pups, How to Breed 359 Pup's Tails, How to Cut 360 Pupping, Troubles Met With While 359 Rabies 357 Rat Poison 358 Red Eyes (see Sore Eyes) 354 Running Sore in Head (see Canker in Ear) 353 Scratching (see Fleas) 353 Scratching (see Mange) 352 Scowers (.see Diarrhcca) 355 Skin Irritated (see Mange) 352 Skin Raw (see Mange) 352 Sore Eyes 354 Sore in Head (see Canker in Ear). . 353 Sores (see Wounds or Cuts) 334 Spay a Bitch, How to .360 Straining (see Constipation) 355 Strangles (see Distemper) 356 Strychnine Poison 358 Swelling on the Skin (see Tumors) 355 Tails on Pups, How to Cut .36(» Trembling Dog (see Chorea) 357 Troubles at Pupping Time .S59 Tumors or Growths on Skin 355 Wax in Ear (see Deafness). 353 Whitfe Spots in Manure (see Worms) 356 Worms 356 Wounds or Cuts of Any Kind .... 354 POULTRY. PAGE Big Head in Turkeys 366 Canker 364 Cholera 364 Crop Bound 365 Gapes 365 Hen Lice in Hen House and on Hens 303 Leg Weakness 36.5 Roup 362 Diseasea uid Trsatment of Poultry 362 Scaly Legs 363 INDEX PART V. MEDICINES AND RECEIPTS. MEDICINES. PAGE Aconite 367 Acohol 367 Aloes 368 Alum 368 Ammonia 369 Aniseed 369 Arnica 369 Arsenic 369 Belladonna. 370 Black Antimony 370 Butter of Antimony 370 Benzoin 371 Bromide of Potassium 371 Biniodid of Mercury (Red Pre- cipitate) 371 Buckthorn 371 Camphor 372 Dantharides, or Spanish Fly '. 372 Carbolic Acid 372 Castor Oil 373 Catechu 373 Calomel 373 Croton Oil 374 Chlorate of Potash 374 Caustic Potash 374 Chloride of Zinc 375 Creolin 375 Crude Petroleum Oil 375 Digitalis 375 Gamboge 376 Gentian .... 376 Ginger 376 rAfii Hyposulphite of Soda .iV ; Iodine 37 / Iodide of Potassium 377 Lime 377 Linseed 378 Laudanum 378 Monsell's Solution of Iron 378 Marshmallows 379 Mustard 379 Nux Vomica 379 Nitrate of Silver 379 Nitrate of Potash or Saltpetre 380 Olive Oil 380 Oil of Tar 380 Oxide of Zinc 380 Oil of Male Shield Fern 380 Pepper 381 Quassia Chips 381 Sulphuric Acid 381 Sulphuric Ether 382 Sulphate of Copper 382 Sulphate of Iron 382 Sulphate of Zinc 382 Sugar of Lead 38.'» Salicylic Acid 383 Salt 383 Sweet Spirits of Nitre 383 Spirits of Turpentine 384 Salts 384 Sulphur .385 Vaseline 385 Verdigrifl r 1 1 385 416 INDEX — Receipts and Illustrations. RECEIPTS. PAGE Acid Liniment 386 Ball to ActoD Liver and Worms. . 388 Carbolic Oil 388 Colic and Indigestion 390 Condition Powder 390 Creolin Lotion 387 Eye Wash 387 Fly Blister '. . . . 389 Free Consultation 392 Cough Powders 390 Green Salve 389 Hoof Ointment 390 List of Medicines to Be Kept on Hand 39 ( Mercury Blister 3s9 Physic Ball f.u- Horses 3 :s Physic Drench for Horses ;i>S Physic Drench for Cattle .TScJ Powders to Act on Kidneys ami Blood ,;<'i White Linhiieiit ; ■; White Lotion. ;, .,i Worm Powders ;;„ j ILLUSTRATIONS. Skeleton of the Horse Internal Qigans of the Horse. Foot of lilt- Hoise PAGE . 6 . 28 . 50 PAGE Position of Foal in Womb 126 Skt Ictou (,f the Ox 2 10 -^^'^k^ HE. AD OFFICE OF THE VETERIMARI^ SCIENCE ASSOCIATION LONDON, CANADA. Copies of this book ma}' be had by writings to the address above. W^e want the services of farmers and ^farmers' sons during their spare time. Agents wanted in every locality. Write for particulars.