SECOND PART. 



THIS Part is divided, as already stated, into 

 four chapters. 



CHAPTEK I. 



On Typhous Diseases in general, and the Typkm 

 which affects the Ox in particular. 



By following the example of those authors 

 who have described the contagious typhus of the 

 ox, we might proceed at once to explain its 

 symptoms, and go directly to our purpose ; 

 but, by taking this hasty course, we should 

 expose ourselves to be imperfectly understood 

 by the majority of our readers, and to leave 

 certain doubts in the minds of physicians as 

 to the nature of the disease and the propriety 

 of its treatment. 



All animals, including man himself, are 

 born - with a predisposition and liability to 



