193 PLEUBO-PNEtTMONIA, PtJLMONASY MUEBAIN, &0. 



on, the discharged matter being quite watery, black- 

 ish, highly offensive, and sometimes mixed with 

 blood ; eventually, the cavity of the chest becomes 

 so full of fluid or so much of the lung is condensed, 

 that the breathing, from being more and more diffi- 

 cult, and labored, and frequent, at last ceases, and 

 the animal is dead. 



TREATMENT. Preventive Measures: During the 

 prevalence of such a disease unusual care should be 

 taken of all animals liable to it; for although a con- 

 tagion may be in the atmosphere or conveyed by 

 contact, yet some untoward circumstance, such as 

 cold, a chill, exposure, or bad food or ventilation, al- 

 ways provokes the attack ; hence, at such times 

 especial care should be exercised that food, housing 

 and general management should be unexceptionable. 



Give, also, an exposed animal the SPECIFIC for IN- 

 FLAMED LUNGS, E E, a dose of fifteen drops every 

 night or every second night, experience having abun- 

 dantly shown that the Specific for a disease always 

 acts as a preventive when given before the attack. Medi- 

 cines, if specific and thus given, are as surely pro- 

 tective as is vaccination a preventive of small-pox. 



At the first indications of the disease, the " hoose," 

 which may be a day or two before any other symp- 

 toms, give the SPECIFIC for COUGH, E E, and re- 

 peat it three times per day, a dose of twenty drops, 

 and the disease will go no farther. 



* Should the disease have manifested itself with some 

 violence, cough, breathing more or less labored and 

 painful, manifested with the grunt, give the SPECIFIC 



