WANTED—A PROTECTIVE LAW FOR VETERINARY PRACTICE. 
IO 9 
Staples asked witness what the trouble was. He told him, 
and Staples said that it was only a case of bellyache, and he 
wouldn’t be needed any longer. When he went away, the horse 
was quiet, and looked as if he would get well if properly treated. 
If he died it was because he was allowed to get a chill. 
For thirty years he had used the red liniment in his own 
ears, eyes, mouth, and every part of his system. He had cata¬ 
racts in his eyes that Dr. Green told him he would have to have 
taken out, but the red liniment cured the cataract. He used to 
have sore ears and the red liniment cured them. He put it in 
his mouth for toothache and sore mouth. 
There was nothing in it that would blister. It is an impos¬ 
sibility to blister with it. 
“For diphtheria, take twenty drops in water and gargle the 
throat, and I’ll warrant it to cure.” 
Witness waved a bottle in the air, as if pouring it on top of 
his head and in his ears and down his neck, and offered to pour 
it in reality, but receiving no encouragement did not pull the 
stopper out. 
He had put it in a horse’s ears when its eyes were white as 
snowballs, and in less than a minute the eyes were as clear as 
any eyes. 
Cross-examined. 
“What is this red liniment made of?” 
“Alcohol, chloroform, ether and essential oils. I don’t want 
to tell just what it is made of. I’ve been offered $1,000 for 
the recipe of it.” 
Witness went on to say that it would cure a headache in less 
than a minute. 
“ Does it make any difference as to the cause of the head¬ 
aches ? ” 
“I’ve cured a man with the headache in half a minute, that I 
know had been drunk for five days.” 
“Do you understand what the word abdomen means?” 
“I understand it means something the same as the rectum.” 
Then he said it meant the stomach, then complained of his 
