INDEX. 
765 
Foot-rot in sheep, description of, 37—supposeii non-contao-iousiiess of, 39— 
treatment of in Germanv, description of, 505—successful treatment of, 
576 
Foul air, how a cause of pulmonary disease, 114 
Founder, complicated with inflammation of the womb, 714 
Foxes, cases of rabies in, 71 
Fracture of the les^in a cow, and the application of a wooden one, 245—frac¬ 
tures generally, the power of nature in producing-re-union of, 461—the 
blemish of, hereditary, 723 
Free-martens, valuable observations on, 81 
French horses,account of the, 591, 594—the manner of shoeing them, 63— 
account of their stables, 685 
French and English weights and measures, comparison of, 318 
Fuller, Mr., his account of a hydrocephalous colt, 108 
Gabriel, Mr., his letter on veterinary reform, 547—on the treatment of the 
horse during autumn, 627 — appointed on the standing committee of 
veterinary surgeons, 682 
Galen, his account of the old weights and measures, 308 
(ialloway breed of cattle, account of the, 758 
Ganglions, nervous, a cause of roaring, 47 
Gangrene, important observations on, 657 
Garget, the treatment of, 426 
(iases, diflerent, the little effect they seem to have on animals, 738 
Gastritis, a case of in a horse, 542 
Gastro-enteritis in cattle, 297, 436, 604 
Gell4 on cattle, pathological review of, 54, 297, 436, 604 
- on the spontaneous cure of hoove in cattle, 611 
German horse, account of the, 421 
Glanders, analysis of the concretions of, 44—the effect of the diniodate of 
copper on, 142—a discharge from the nose of a horse, simulating, 161—in¬ 
curable, 175—the ravages of are rapidly increasing, 176—chronic is not in¬ 
fectious, 176—acute glanders, the contagion of doubtful, 177—iu the hu¬ 
man being, 178, 445—inoculation of other animals with the virus of, 1 79— 
the transmission of to other animals, 378, 686—may be transmitted to 
every animal, 379, 381, 686—not spontaneous in any animal but those of 
the horse tribe, 379—tlie difference between acute and chronic, 380—the 
symptoms of iu the horse and in man, 381, 386—the nasal eruption in 
both, 382—the enlargements of the submaxillary ganglions, 382—the na¬ 
sal fossae in man, hovv far connected with glanders, 383—the different le¬ 
sions in the human being and the horse, 384—the treatment of, 387—Mr. 
Percivall’s account of farcy and glanders, 389—the limit of the infection 
of, 390—acute, Mr. Pritchard’s observations on, 399—the rascality con¬ 
nected with, in Smithfield, 428—account of the horses at Quiberon Bay, 
458,523,655,682—the varying symptoms of in different stages, 684—tricks 
to conceal it, 684—is it curable ? 685—acute, various experiments on, 686 
—how communicable from horse to horse, 686—how far communicable by 
cohal)itation, 687—is it only one of the forms under which the purulent 
diathc.sis is developed ? 687—produced by the injection of pus into the 
veins, 687—M. Marsall on the treatment of, 713—acute, contagious, 713 
Gohier, M., performs the Ciesarean operation on a cow, 125—on croup in the 
horse, 738 
Governors of the Veterinary College, the strange procrastination of, 748 
(jraminese, the chemical structure of, 751 
Grecian horse, account of the, 421 
Green, Mr., his case of vomiting in a cow, 218—of spasmodic rigors, 719— 
on open joints, 730 
Groggiuess can seldom be cured, 471 
VOL. Xlll. 5 i 
