16 CURINE-The Great 



TREATMENT.— Paint with CURINE twice daily 

 for one week, over ankles above and below; allow 

 it to remain for another week, and if not improved, 

 apply ag-ain same as before. For young foals di- 

 lute three or four times with equal quantities of 

 water and alcohol and apply same as above. 



THICK WIND. 



The great majority of horses called "thick wind" 

 belong either in the class called "roarers," or are 

 more affected with "heaves," and no separate class- 

 ification is needed. Horses that are very fat and 

 those that have not been exercised for so long that 

 their muscular system has become unfit for work; 

 horses with large bellies loaded with coarse and 

 bulky food, emit a louder sound than natural in 

 breathing and are called "thick wind." 



The treatment is simple. Remove the cause and 

 the effect will cease. 



CAPPED ELBOW— SHOE BOILS. 



Capped Elbow, commonly called shoe boil, is too 

 well known to require any explanation from us. It 

 Is simply an enlargement at the point of the elbow, 

 caused by the result of the pressure of the heels 

 of the shoes upon that part. The peculiar position 

 in which the animal affected lies down; excessive 

 length in the shoe and the formation of the animal 

 with a cannon bone so long that the flexure of the 

 knee brings the heel in contact with the elbow. 



FROM THE OWNER OF THE NORTHERN 



KING. 



Waterville, Me., Nov. 22, 1895. 



H. S. Bossart & Co., Latrobe. Pa. 



Gentlemen:— Your Curine is the best article I ever 

 used for the ills of horseflesh, such as Sores, 

 Sprains, Curbs, etc. It is worth all the preparations 

 I ever used before. C. H. NELSON, 



Owner of Nelson, 2;09, 



