Edinburgh Veterinary Review and Annals of Comparative Pathology, Volume 51863 |
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Page 3
... proportion of lean on their backs . Now , however , such a description of sheep is not to be purchased . Taking the supplies collectively , we firmly believe that they now carry quite one - fourth IMPORTATION OF FOREIGN STOCK INTO ENGLAND .
... proportion of lean on their backs . Now , however , such a description of sheep is not to be purchased . Taking the supplies collectively , we firmly believe that they now carry quite one - fourth IMPORTATION OF FOREIGN STOCK INTO ENGLAND .
Page 4
firmly believe that they now carry quite one - fourth less consumable food than prior to 1842 , and that this great deficiency has arisen from an uneasy feeling amongst the breeders and feeders , but more especially amongst the latter ...
firmly believe that they now carry quite one - fourth less consumable food than prior to 1842 , and that this great deficiency has arisen from an uneasy feeling amongst the breeders and feeders , but more especially amongst the latter ...
Page 13
... believe , to infuse some of the excellent Dutch blood amongst the cattle of Ireland . At that time pleuro - pneumonia and epizootic aphtha were raging abroad . The distillers in the neighbourhood of Rotterdam and Schiedam had carried ...
... believe , to infuse some of the excellent Dutch blood amongst the cattle of Ireland . At that time pleuro - pneumonia and epizootic aphtha were raging abroad . The distillers in the neighbourhood of Rotterdam and Schiedam had carried ...
Page 24
... believe she can see a little . I could not see into the interior so well as I could have wished . Put a little of solution of potassa iodid . within the lids and on the surface of the cornea . Turned out again . Nov. 11th . There is a ...
... believe she can see a little . I could not see into the interior so well as I could have wished . Put a little of solution of potassa iodid . within the lids and on the surface of the cornea . Turned out again . Nov. 11th . There is a ...
Page 29
... believe that no hound could be in better health or less predisposed to disease than the bitch referred to , when I saw her a few days before her death , on the grass with her fine litter of fat puppies , she herself being in no degree ...
... believe that no hound could be in better health or less predisposed to disease than the bitch referred to , when I saw her a few days before her death , on the grass with her fine litter of fat puppies , she herself being in no degree ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid action affected ammonia amongst animals apoplexy appearance black quarter blood body bones breeding brought butcher calves cattle cause coagulation colour condition contagion contagious cows death digestive organs diseased animals diseased meat district Edinburgh epizootic epizootic aphtha ewes examined experience extent fact farm farmers fatal favour feeding feet fibrin flocks fluid foot foot-and-mouth disease glanders Harpley healthy hoof horse important infected inoculation intestines JOHN GAMGEE joint lambs lame limb liver loss lung-plague lungs malady mare matter membrane milk Milk fever months murrain nature never observed occurred outbreak parasites Partney parturient fever pigs pleuro-pneumonia pneumonia poison present prevalent produce profession Professor Gamgee quantity red water respiratory organs result Royal scab sheep skin slaughtered Sledmere small-pox sold splenic apoplexy stomach Strongyli suffered symptoms tion treatment tube United Kingdom Veterinary College veterinary surgeon whilst worms
Popular passages
Page 318 - Treaty between Her Majesty and the King of Denmark, for the Marriage of His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales with Her Royal Highness the Princess Alexandra, Daughter of Prince Christian of Denmark; signed at Copenhagen, January 15, 1863.
Page 318 - Queen's Most Excellent Majesty MAY IT PLEASE YOUR MAJESTY...
Page 644 - The cystic areas vary in size from that of the head of a pin to that of an English walnut.
Page 244 - ... straw and turnips, is exceedingly small; indeed, the turnip does not contain any, and yet animals under such a diet will speedily fatten. The fat, then, is the product of a peculiar digestive process on the unazotised constituents of the food, and is formed in consequence of a want of due proportion between the food taken into the stomach and the oxygen absorbed by the skin and lungs. The chief source of fat is starch and sugar ; and its composition is such, that if deprived of oxygen, fat remains....
Page 375 - Majesty, they would mentally include the health of the Prince and Princess of Wales and the rest of the Royal Family.
Page 243 - In contradistinction to vegetable life, the life of animals exhibits itself in the continual absorption of the oxygen of the air, and its combination with certain component parts of the animal body or food.
Page 319 - I have had the honour to lay before The Queen the loyal and dutiful Address of the President...
Page 391 - Upas, or Poisoned Valley : it is three miles from Balor, on the road to the Djiang. Mr Daendels had ordered a footpath to be made from the main road to the valley. We took with us two dogs and some fowls, to try experiments in this poisonous hollow. On arriving at the foot of the mountain, we dismounted and scrambled up the side, about a quarter of a mile, holding on by the branches of trees, and we were...
Page 55 - The urine, from being scanty and high coloured, becomes pale and abundant, whilst from the first dose the feelings of the patient assure him that " the medicine is killing the disease.
Page 585 - Men are included) sometimes, after a slight puncture of some part of the encephalon with a needle, turn round just like a horse in a circus, or roll over and over, for hours, and sometimes for days.