AND LECTURES. 36 
ute this dose is to be doubled; when it goes below 50, dis- 
continne entirely. When the patient begins to recover the 
following tonic will prove beneficial in this as well as most 
all other troubles where the appetite is involved or the 
blood is bad: 
PRESCRIPTION. 
Mustard (ground) 2.2.50. Un. sg ounces 
Sassafras Bark (powdered) . . . . 2 ounces 
Ser. wk {eounces 
Geuttan Cpowdered)) .°. 3. . 2. . F ounce 
Foenugreek Seed (powdered) .. . 1 ounce 
mamony Block % . . . . . .'. 1-2 ounce 
Mix and give one tablespoon full a day in soft feed. 
Quinsy. 
Quinsy in the horse is nothing more than larynyitis of a 
| ‘supurative type. This disease resembles tonsilitis in the 
human family. 
Cause—The inflammation in laryngitis is occasionally of 
such a deep seated and persistent nature as that there is a 
breaking down of tissue, and abscesses form, quinsy being 
the result 
HOW TO KNOw IT. 
We find all the symptoms of laryngitis. The throat 
swells and gets very sore, the patient refuses to eat and 
; generally has a small amount of fever which runs along 
from day to day until abscess breaks when there is a flow 
of pus and the sufferer gets almost instant relief. 
