DIARRIKEA. 189 



n^hich is in fact the whey passing off whilst the curd accumulates 

 and produces obstinate constipation. 



The first thing to be done is to administer an alkali, to nissolve 

 the mass, such as magnesia, in doses of half an ounce twice a day ; 

 after which two to four drachms of Epsom salts, with a little ginger, 

 dissolved in warm water, and the warm water often repeated, if ne- 

 cessary, by means of the stomach-pump. The farmer with a valuable 

 flock of sheep will find the stomach-pump as useful for them as for 

 cnitle. When the bowels have thus been opened, and the curdled 

 milk has in some measure passed oft\ the stomach may be strength- 

 ened by occasional doses of the Tonic Drink for Cattle (No. 32, p. 

 81). The ewe and lamb should then be turned into scantier pasture. 



DIARRHffiA. 



There is not a more destructive disease among young lambs than 

 this. It frequently attacks them when they are not more than a day 

 old, and carries them off in the course of another day. Oftener it does 

 not appear until they are nearly a week old, and the lambs have not 

 then a much better chance : but if they are two or three m mths old, 

 and have gained a little strength, they may, perhaps, weather the 

 disease. The causes are various, but not always difficult to discover: 

 they are generally referrible to the neglect and mismanagement of the 

 farmer. It may be the consequence of absurd and cruel exposure to 

 cold. For sheep generally, and more particularly for lambs, I once 

 more repeat it, and I would impress it on the mind of the farmer and 

 the practitioner, shelter and comfort are the first and grand things to 

 be considered. I do not mean confinement in a close and ill-ventilated 

 place, but that defence from the wind and snow which it would cost 

 the farmer little to raise, and for which he would be amply paid in 

 one season. If it probably arises from cold, the remedy is plain — 

 better shelter, and, for a few days, housing. 



It is sometimes attributable to want of proper support: the ewe, if 

 it is her first lamb, may have deserted it, or she may have little milk 

 to give it; and the combined influence of starvation and cold produces 

 diarrhoea sooner than anything else.* Warmth and new cow's milk 

 are the best remedies. 



Not unfrequently the mother's m.ilk seems to disagree with the 

 Iamb. It is naturally aperient. It may occasionally be too much so. 

 If her leats are full, and she evidently has plenty of milk, this will 

 probably be the case. She should be fed on dry meat for a day or 

 two, or should be turned out only during the day, and housed at night, 



* [Mr. S. W. Jewett, of Woybridge, Vermont, says — " It is generally caused by 

 '.ating raw or early cut hay. The best method to cure or prevent is to give tlivrn 

 iaMy a few messes of wheat in the sheaf; a regular quantity of salt at all times. If 

 it occurs in the winter, steep, in I)rine, ripe hay in the seed; wheat chaff is good, aa 



■ a small quantity of oats, and a few pine or hemlock tops. Keep them a few days 

 ripe hay, or corn fodder.— S,J 



