742 



INDEX. 



Chorion, the, 645. 



Chorioptes spathiferus, 478. 



Chronic erythema, 585. 



Chronic indigestion, picture of ox 

 suffering from, 507. 



Chronic tympanites, 487-8 ; treat- 

 ment of, 487-8. 



Circulatory system, the, 74-9. 



Civilisation, the motive power of our, 

 is immense, 730. 



Cleanliness is most necessarj' for shep- 

 herds, 677. 



Cleansing, 646. 



Cleansing medicine, 698. 



Coates, Mr. George, 111. 



Coats, 233. 



Cobbold's work, value of, 5. 



Cochrane's Travels in Columbia, 28. 



Ccenurus cerebralis, 470, 471, 472, 

 559. 



Cohn found that the lymph of vac- 

 cinia and that of variolia contains 

 numerous micrococci, 304. 



Colchicum autumnale, or meadow 

 saffron, 391 ; poisoning by, and the 

 treatment of poisoning bv it, 391-2, 

 698. 



Colic, flatulent, 512 ; treatment of, 698 



Colic in sheep, 512 ; simple, treat- 

 ment of, 698. 



Collapse, treatment of, 698. 



College of Physicians of London, 389. 



Colostrum, 649. 



Columella, 286. 



Comparative pathology, 630-33. 



Conclusion, 723-36. 



Condition-powder, 698. 



Congestion of the kidneys, 570. 



Congestion of the liver, treatment of. 

 699. 



Conjunctivitis, 608-11 ; treatment of, 

 699. 



Connections between diseases of animals 

 and those of human beings, 301. 



Constipation, 513-14 ; ti-eatment of, 

 see Cathartics. 



Contagioiis diseases of animals occur- 

 ring in England at the close of the 

 year 1887, 5-9. 



Cooling lotions, 628, 699. 



Cornea, treatment of inflammation of 

 the, 699 ; treatment of opacity of 

 the, 699. 



Cornwall, cattle of, 89. 



Coryza, in cases of scarlet fever, 336. 



Cotyledons, 645. 



Cough, treatment of, 699. 



Counter-irritants, 700-1, 



Cow, the, as a source of profit, 20. 



Cow-pox, 303-7 ; duration of, 308 ; 

 may be small-pox communicated to 

 the cow, 309. 



Craven cattle, 107 ; horns of the, 107. 



Craven or Lancashire beasts, 105. 



Crema, 287. 



Cripple, 625. 



Crookshank, 137. 



Cruveilhier, 144. 



Cuboid, the, 37. 



Cumberland disease, 238. 



Cumming, Miss C. F. Gordon, 388. 



Cuneiform, the, 37. 



Curoyakee, 388. 



Cyanosis, or blue disease, is due to an 



imperfect closure of the foramen 



ovale, 404. 

 Cysticercus bovis and cysticercus ovis, 



470-1 ; cellulosse. 471 ; fistularis, 



471; tenuicollis, 470-1, 498. 

 Cystitis . or inflammation of the bladder, 



579-81. 



D. 



Dallinger, Rev. Dr., 638. 

 Damman's description of diphtheria, 



327, 328. 

 Darwin, Charles, 130, 155, 633. 

 Deadly nature of some diseases, 7. 

 Death, 129. 



Decaying vegetable matter, 672, 677. 

 Degradation into which some human 



beings are sunk, and the importance 



of helping them, 735. 

 Delirium, 553, 554. 

 Denbighshire cattle, 95. 

 Denham's travels into Central Africa, 



27. 

 Dense aggregations of human beings, 



133. ' 

 Depraved appetite, 507, 508. 

 Depression, agricultural, in great part 



due to bad seasons ; but good times 



are doubtless coming, 736. 

 Derby, 137. 



Derbyshire neck, or goitre, 387. 

 Dermatodectes bovis, 593 ; ovis, 438. 

 Desquamation, 335. 

 Diabetes, 382, 383; treatment of, 383 ; 



insipidus, 568, 569; treatment of, 



701. 

 Diaphoretics, 701. 

 Diarrhoea, 152, 514-22 ; causes of, 516- 



18 ; svmptoms of, 615, 516 ; treat- 

 ment of, 518-20, 701-2. 

 Digestive organs are complex in rumi- 

 nants and other herbivorous animals, 



49, 50. 

 Diodon, 148. 

 Diphtheria, 322-28; in the ox, 326- 



28 ; symptoms of, 326, 327. 

 Diploblastica, 145. 

 Disappearance of the Longhorns, 109, 



110. 

 Disinfectants, 702. 

 Disorders due to dietetic errors, 378- 



87. 



