64 DISEASES 



to make is given under that heading), see index, just a couple drops twice 

 a day, is required. 



Pugs, toy spaniels and all dogs with prominent or "pop eyes," as 

 they are termed, are greatly troubled with their eyes, and here is where 

 I found out the merits of my own eye remedies. 



You may discover some morning the eye of your dog covered with 

 a blue film, this is so common in pop eyed dogs that I named it "blue eye" 

 for short. Very rapidly this eye, the ball, will enlarge, and if not promptly 

 treated will assume proportions that are apparently startling, and in a 

 few days if not taken care of, the ball of the eye would bulge out so much 

 that it would seem as if it would drop out of its head. Don't be alarmed, 

 for my lotion "No. 2" will take care of this, will cure the eye, which 

 in due time will be sound as ever, the same as it was before this trouble 

 appeared, and the sight saved, as perfect as ever. No. 2 will never fail to 

 cure ulceration and perforation of the ball of the eye if used in time. In 

 some cases a white spot or speck will remain, but the sight is all right, 

 and to remove this spot use the following: 



Eye Salve. 



Vaseline 1 ounce 



Yellow oxide of mercury 2 grains 



Mix, use daily, putting inside the eye a portion about the size of a pea, 

 then closing the eye rub it gently. This prescription should be 

 thoroughly and carefully mixed by your druggist. This is very im- 

 portant - 



In other cases the "No. 2" has done all the curing, and there was no 

 white spot left. Due to the present stringent laws in many states as to 

 narcotics, it will be necessary to have your doctor write this prescription 

 because of the cocaine in it. Where I 'discovered" this "No. 2" was in 

 the case of a Pug dog I had bought, that when I received her from the 

 express company, had gotten this on her long trip, and I at once took her 

 to my own eye doctor, Dr. Robert C. Heflebower, (now one of the greatest, 

 if not the greatest, eye specialist in the .world, today. My bill with him 

 for this dog was eighteen dollars), and now with "No. 2" it can be cured 

 for less than a dollar. I consider this "No. 2" worth more than twenty 

 times the cost of a copy of this book. 



Dogs are subject to affections of the eye in more or less degree ac- 

 cording to their breed and uses. Hunting dogs are naturally, owing to the 

 nature of their work, more subject than other dogs to receive injuries 

 from thorns, dust and dirt and other foreign matter. This will be followed 

 by more or less inflammation of the mucous membrane lining the eye- 

 lids, which is attended by a watery discharge at first and assuming a more 

 purulent condition as the trouble increases. 



It is well known that a small particle of grit may remain under an 

 eyelid in spite of fomentations, and should the eye be examined without 

 discovery of the source of trouble, very often an application of pure olive 

 oil with a camel's hair brush to the underpart of the eyelid Avill often 



