2CK3 DYSENTERY, BLOODY FLUX. 



dry, in small lumps, and the discharge attended with 

 pain; in others the dung is soft, discharged frequent- 

 ly, and the animal wastes, and loses appetite and 

 spirits. In others again, the purging is almost con- 

 stant, attended with pain, gripes, straining, and forc- 

 ing out of the fundament. In this stage the dis- 

 charge is watery, mixed with white sh reels, or dark 

 colored blood, with little or no dung, and attended 

 with a horrible bad smell. These violent symptoms 

 may disappear, but the purging and wasting continue 

 as bad as ever, or stop for a short time, and then 

 return again, and continue until the animal is worn 

 out by the constant drain ; or, the dysenteric dis- 

 charges are arrested and improvement begins and 

 goes on slowly. In some extreme cases, the wast- 

 ing is so excessive that the animal is reduced to a 

 mere bag of bones, the joints swelled, body covered 

 with sores, strength gone, eyes hollow and dim, 

 parts under the jaw enlarged, body covered with 

 vermin, discharges mixed with blood, and horribly 

 offensive, and the skin bedewed with cold sweat. 

 Such extreme cases are often hopeless. 



TREATMENT. Give twenty drops of the SPECIFIC 

 for DYSENTERY, F F, every three hours, or even 

 more frequently in the more urgent cases. 



In the extreme cases, with great prostration and 

 weakness, alternate the SPECIFIC for ULCERS, I I, 

 with that for DYSENTERY, F F, at intervals of two or 

 three hours, and continue the course patiently, pro- 

 longing the intervals between the doses as the animal 

 improves. 



