TABLE OF SYMPTOMS. *- 593 



and strong; nostrils red and florid; expression, anxious and wo-begone; grunt- 

 ing and restlessness; frequent lying down and getting up; fretful change of 

 position; rising upon the haunches; placing the nose upon the feet.... 113 



DISEASES OF THE GLANDS AND NASAL MEMBRANES. 



(Page 118—163.) 



Blind Staggers. — Real or apparent blindness, generally of one eye, some- 

 times of both; running constantly round and round in a circle, the circum- 

 ference of which is about sixty feet; deafness; occasional fits of staggering, 

 pitching, and reeling, lasting from twenty minutes to an hour, spasms increas- 

 ing in frequency and violence; rearing, plunging, groaning, convulsions, and 

 mad plunges of indescribable violence .• 118 



Glanders. — Running of the nostrils, usually beginning with the left; the 

 secretion aqueous and somewhat sticky, increasing in quantity and stickiness 

 with the progress of the disease, and growing yellowish white instead of trans- 

 parent; long, stringy clots hanging and dripping from the nose; nasal mem- 

 brane pallid or of a leaden hue; ulcers form in the nostrils; secretions become 

 darker, and are flecked with blood; loss of flesh and hair; cough, diflficult 

 breathing, tenderness about the forehead; tumors, first about the head and 

 face, and then over the body generally 129 



Farcy. — Similar to last stages of glanders, above described. Ulcers on the 

 skin, discharging a fluid, at first watery and yellow, afteward purulent, bloody^ 

 and very oflFensive. These ulcers first appear upon the legs, neck, and shoul- 

 ders, and often extend till they cover the entire body... 152 



Distemper. — Dry, hacking cough; running of the nose, the discharge being 

 first watery, afterward thick, purulent, and whitish in color; swelling under 

 the throat; abscess often formed in the throat; high fever; hard pulse; loss 

 of appetite and flesh; occasional abscess on the belly, near the sheath 158 



Nasal Gleet 162 ^ 



DISEASES OF THE EYE. 



(Page 164—183.) 

 Weak Eyes ^. 169 



Sore Eyelids 174 



39 



