INFLUENZA. 



2.^T 



impaired, give one of the following powders in the feed night 

 and morning : sulphate of copper one ounce ; pulverized gentian 

 root one and a half ounces ; pulverized ginger six drachms ; 

 mix and divide into eight powders. Good wholesome food only 



should be given. 



DISTEMPER. 



All catarrhal affections are classed by horse-owners under 

 the common head of distemper. Common catarrh, epizootic or 

 epidemic catarrh, laryngitis, bronchitis, and all other diseases 

 accompanied by nasal discharges, are regarded by horsemen 

 generally as one and the same disease. 



INFLUENZA. 



For several years past a disease has been more or less preva- 

 lent in various sections of the United States, known to the 



^^^r^"^:^^-— "^^^^^^"^^T profession as 

 ^\^ /* w7~T epizootic (epidemic) ca- 

 tarrh, or influ- 

 enza. The 

 symptoms of 

 this disease 

 iare so various 

 in different 

 animals, no two 

 being precisely 

 alike, that a vari- 

 ety of opinions are current 



QCIET ENJOYMENT. J *• 



concerning it and its nature, and, as a consequence, various 

 other diseases are often confounded with it. 



