COTTOH 106 







patient is convalescent. Too great care cannot be 

 exercised when the legs are swelled, to let the horse 

 stand } not to move or exercise the patient, as the 

 movement or exercise while the legs are swelled or 

 hot, invariably aggravates the difficulty, and may 

 cause it to extend to the lungs or other important 

 organs. Take the feed away, or keep the feed very 

 low, no grain, only a bran-mash, or pick at a little 

 hay, and let the horse stand, and the swelling will 

 disappear with the use of the medicines mentioned, 

 H H . If from cold or exposure, or an extension of 

 the morbid process, the lungs should become involved 

 and Pneumonia be present, the disease will require 

 to be treated by the SPECIFICS A A, and E E, as di- 

 rected for that disease, which see. 



Any weakness, or loss of appetite or condition, re- 

 maining as a sequel of the disease, will be removed 

 by the use of SPECIFIC J J, giving fifteen drops three 

 times a day. 



Cough. 



Cough is so well known as to require no description 

 It is in almost all cases a mere symptom of some 

 disease or morbid condition of the air passages, such 

 as a cold, bronchitis, catarrh, or other more serious 

 affection of the chest, upon the cure of which it dis- 

 appears. In some cases, however, this affection is 

 so slight as to occasion only cough as a symptom of 

 its existence, and the cough may be said to be 

 idiopathic. Continued cough predisposes to inflam- 

 mation, yet some horses have a slight cough for 



