BTSENTEBY, BLOODY FLUX. 20ft 



with wasting of the boc|y, are we imperatively called 

 upon to interfere. 



TREATMENT. Give five or eight drops of the 

 SPECIFIC for DIARRHEA, F F, two or three times per 

 day. If it does not yield promptly, interpose a dose 

 or two of the SPECIFIC for ULCERS, I I, between the 

 others. 



Food. No green food, but gruel of flour or starch, 

 or cooked milk. 



Dysentery, Bloody Flux, 



This is a very severe and often fatal form of disease, 

 which prevails mostly in spring and fall, and in some 

 sections of country, and in peculiar states of the 

 weather and growth of feed becomes a most destructive 

 scourge. It is usually attributed to feed growing upon 

 wet or marshy grounds, or pasture sometimes under 

 water; or to rank grass growing in the woods ; or drink 

 from impure, still, and stagnant waters. It appears 

 also when animals are exposed to alternations of hot 

 and cold weather, live upon bad food, or are over- 

 driven. It is seen in cattle driven a long distance, 

 and insufficiently or badly fed, or with food to which 

 they are not accustomed. Poor and fat cattle are 

 alike subject to it ; it comes on after "hoose/' or the 

 disappearance of some skin disease, or sudden stop- 

 page of milk, or as a termination of diarrhea. 



SYMPTOMS Shaking, dullness, anxiety, dry skin, 

 slightly rough hair, and general uneasiness. In 

 some cases the bowels seem bound, the dung hard, 



