"INCURABLE" DISEASES OF BEAST AND FOWL. 



'' Includi7ig Pleiiro- Pneumonia, Rinde^-pest or Texas Fever, 

 Glanders, Tnhercnlosis, Roup, Chickc7i and Hog Cholera. 30 

 pages. 121110. Paper, 25 cents, net. Postage, 2 cents. 



Twenty-two of the thirty pages are taken up with a reprint of 

 the eighth edition of James Moore's famous monograph of Pleuro- 

 Pneuni07iia or Pulmonary Murain in Cattle. Following which 

 are treatments of the other diseases named in the pamphlet's 

 title. 



"If this little book is half what is claimed for it, it is worth 

 its weight in gold. It gives directions for the cure of pleuro- 

 pneumonia, glanders, hog and chicken cholera, roup and other 

 incurable (?) diseases." — Farm, Stock a^id Home. 



MANUAL OF HOMCEOPATHIC VETERINARY 

 PRACTICE. Designed for Horses and All Kinds of Domestic 

 Ani77ials and Fowls ; Prescribhig Their Proper Treatment When 

 Injured or Diseased, and Their Particular Care and Geiieral 

 Management in Health. 685 pages. 8vo. Half-morocco, 

 $5.00. Mailed, post-paid on receipt of price. 



This is the largest work on homoeopathic veterinar}^ practice 

 published, and, as may be seen from the title, embraces all the 

 domestic animals and fowls. It is considerably more than 

 a work on the treatment of diseases of animals, as it also 

 takes in their care, training, feeding, habits, and so on. The 

 medical treatment of all the animals receives very full attention, 

 and the book contains what no other \vork does, i. e., materia 

 medica applied to animals, which is an especial and valuable 

 feature of this excellent book. It is a book for all well-to-do 

 farmers and stablemen, and can easily be made to save its price 

 many times over if it is studied whenever anything is wrong 

 with the live stock or in the poultry yard. 



"Of our own knowledge it has already done good service, as 

 adapted to the treatment of horses especially, which, as a class 

 and as a rule, know more than their drivers and their doctors 

 combined; it is nearly perfect." — fohn Rogers, Veterinary Sur- 

 geon. 



