3:36 
A CASE OE" NASAL GLEET. 
the latter embracing a large circle of the hip, particularly where any 
portion of the pelvis is fractured. 
In the early stages of the affection the animals should be kept 
quiet in a loose box until we commence blistering, when they 
should be turned out to grass until restored, or made the best of 
that circumstances will allow. 
ON THOROUGH-PIN AND ENORMOUS BURSAL 
ENLARGEMENT OF THE HOCK. 
By Mr. J. W. Ions, V.S., Waterford. 
A LARGE bay hunter, the property of F. Penrose, Esq., and that 
had just arrived from Mr. White’s, of the Hippodrome, in London, 
was sent to my stables. The moment I saw it I was astonished at 
the appearance of the parts, for they were as large as a man’s hat, 
and tense and hard as if ready to burst. 
I immediately gave a dose of physic, and applied cold evaporat¬ 
ing lotions for a few days, until the parts were free from inflamma¬ 
tion, and then punctured the part which most pointed to the depth 
of an inch-and-a-half; but little or no fluid escaped. 
After this I commenced rubbing in daily the following ointment, 
for a quarter of an hour each time. 
Hydriodate of Potass. jvj 
Iodine.i. 3iij 
Weak Mercurial Ointment. Jiv 
Lard. Jiv 
In one month from the commencement of the rubbing the hock 
became as fine as the other, and has remained so, although the horse 
has been repeatedly hunted since, and was daily exercised during 
the inunction. 
A CASE OF NASAL GLEET. 
By the same. 
A BEAUTIFUL bay thorough-bred horse, by Byron, six years 
old, the property of J. H. Jones, Esq., of Mullinabro’, had been la¬ 
bouring for three weeks under influenza, and which had given way 
to the ordinary treatment, leaving a most offensive smell from the 
off nostril, with a muco-purulent discharge of a darkish colour 
streaked with blood, and of a gluey tenacity, adhering to the nos¬ 
trils. The maxillary gland of the same side was much enlarged. 
