=JUST PUBLISHED. 



THE PHYSIOLOGY 



OF THE 



DOMESTIC ANIMALS. 



A TEXT-BOOK FOR VETERINARY AND MEDICAL 

 STUDENTS AND PRACTITIONERS. 



BY 



ROBERT MEADE SMITH, A.M., M.D., 



Professor of Comparative Physiology in University of Pennsylvania ; Fellow of the College of Physicians 



and Academy of the Natural Sciences, Philadelphia ; of the American Physiological 



Society ; of the American Society of Naturalists ; Associe Etranger 



de la Societe Franchise D' Hygiene, etc. 



FIG. 117. PAROTID AND SUBMAXILLARY FISTULA IN THE HORSE, AFTER COLIN. 



{Thanhoffer and Tommy.} 

 K, K', rubber bulbs for collecting saliva; cs, eannula in the parotid duct. 



In One Handsome Royal Octavo Volume of over 95O Pages, Pro- 

 fusely Illustrated with more than 40O Fine 'Wood- 

 Engravings and many Colored Plates. 



HTHIS new and important work, the most thoroughly complete in the English language 

 on this subject, has just been issued. In it the physiology of the domestic animals 

 is treated in a most comprehensive manner, especial prominence being given to the sub- 

 ject of foods and fodders, and the character of the diet for the herbivora under different 

 conditions, with a full consideration of their digestive peculiarities. Without being over- 

 burdened with details, it forms a complete text-book of physiology, adapted to the use of 

 students and practitioners of both veterinary and human medicine. This work has already 

 been adopted as the Text-Boole on Physiology in the Veterinary Colleges of the United 

 States, Great Britain, and Canada. 



24 (F. A. DAVIS, Medical Publisher, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.) 



