REPORTS OF CASES. 
419 
laudanum. Reduced the prolapse and ordered patient to be kept 
in a narrow stall, with posterior parts higher, and fed on sloppy 
food, with injections of half a pint of foregoing solution twice 
daily per anus. 
. p^ le c ^ se made a good and uneventful recovery, but I am 
still undecided as to the cause. I attributed it to stints from 
bees or other insects. 
EXTENSIVE DISEASE OF THE FOOT. 
By George A. Clark, M.D.C., Stoughton, Mass. 
The history of this case is as follows : The animal was 
purchased at a sale stable, and was sold with the understandino- 
that he could not travel on pavement, as he had a flat foot, but 
might go in the country. His present owner bought him to run 
on an ice wagon in the country. About two weeks after pur¬ 
chase he came to me and said the horse flinched and kept point¬ 
ing. I looked at the foot and ordered the shoe off, thinking I 
might get at the cause of the crack shown in the accompanying 
photo. The crack began practically at the quarter and ran as 
