192 PNEUMONIA, on INFLAMMATION OP THE LUNGS. 



muzzle is dry ; the mouth hot ; the cough frequent 

 and dry ; the coat rough and staring ; the horns, ears, 

 and feet are hot at one time and cold at another ; 

 the breathing is quickened and attended with heav- 

 ing of the flanks ; the pulse is full and quick ; 

 appetite is gone, and chewing of the cud suspended. 

 The thirst is great, bowels bound and dung dark- 

 colored, the spine is tender when pressed upon, the 

 head projected forward and eyes staring; tears flow 

 down the face; the teeth are ground; a discharge 

 flows from the nose, at first clear and watery, after- 

 wards red and containing some blood ; the breathing 

 becomes quicker, more difficult, and labored as the 

 disease advances ; the cough comes on in fits j the 

 nostrils are widened, and play to their utmost limit ; 

 the body is covered with sweat; the pulse becomes 

 weaker and increased in frequency, and these 

 symptoms increase in violence and become gradual- 

 ly worse until the animal dies. 



TREATMENT. Give, the first twelve or twenty-four 

 hours, the SPECIFIC for FEVER, A A, a dose of 

 twenty drops every two hours. 



After the fever and heat have been thus in a 

 measure subdued, alternate the SPECIFIC for IN- 

 FLAMED LUNGS, E E, with that for FEVER, A A, at 

 intervals of three hours, giving as before twenty 

 drops at a dose. 



Continue this treatment steadily, except that un- 

 less the case is very critical and urgent, the medicine 

 need not to be kept up during the night, but a dose 



