Edinburgh veterinary review and annals of comparative pathology. [Continued as] The Veterinary review and stockowners' journal, ed. by J. Gamgee. New |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 11
... reason to dread the malignant typhus . They have established strict quarantines , and if perchance the disease appears in any of their provinces in the vicinity of the Russian confines , the slaughter of dis- eased and infected animals ...
... reason to dread the malignant typhus . They have established strict quarantines , and if perchance the disease appears in any of their provinces in the vicinity of the Russian confines , the slaughter of dis- eased and infected animals ...
Page 15
... reason wish . I must mention , however , that contagious diseases in Ireland induce annually quite 50 per cent . of the total losses by disease . In some of the dis- tricts I have referred to , fully 70 or 80 per cent . of the total of ...
... reason wish . I must mention , however , that contagious diseases in Ireland induce annually quite 50 per cent . of the total losses by disease . In some of the dis- tricts I have referred to , fully 70 or 80 per cent . of the total of ...
Page 17
... reason or other , not insalubrious , and we find that , generally , animals must be predisposed to disease by being badly kept in winter , and then suddenly changed from bare to luxuriant pastures , in order to develope the malady . A ...
... reason or other , not insalubrious , and we find that , generally , animals must be predisposed to disease by being badly kept in winter , and then suddenly changed from bare to luxuriant pastures , in order to develope the malady . A ...
Page 18
... reason to believe she became infected from the diseased animals . " Professor Simonds also this year witnessed similar accidents from the blood of cattle suffering from splenic apoplexy having been thrown into a yard where pigs ate it ...
... reason to believe she became infected from the diseased animals . " Professor Simonds also this year witnessed similar accidents from the blood of cattle suffering from splenic apoplexy having been thrown into a yard where pigs ate it ...
Page 27
... reason , from all that has yet been revealed , that would lead me to alter or add to the advice I gave on the 24th of September . Returning to a notice of Professor Dick's paper , he tells us that he was summoned to the East - Lothian ...
... reason , from all that has yet been revealed , that would lead me to alter or add to the advice I gave on the 24th of September . Returning to a notice of Professor Dick's paper , he tells us that he was summoned to the East - Lothian ...
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 701 - Letter to Lord John Russell" was written and published, she said — " Now I have said all I can say upon these subjects, and I must return to art.
Page 316 - Queen's Most Excellent Majesty MAY IT PLEASE YOUR MAJESTY...
Page 762 - President, in the chair. The minutes of the preceding meeting were read and confirmed, a list of donations was read, and the thanks of the meeting were voted to the donors.
Page 502 - Instinct,* expresses an opinion that " the greater part of the propensities that are generally supposed to be instinctive are not implanted in animals by nature, but that they are the result of long experience, acquired and accumulated through many generations, so as in the course of time to assume the character of instinct.
Page 644 - The cystic areas vary in size from that of the head of a pin to that of an English walnut.
Page 242 - ... 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 373 - Majesty, they would mentally include the health of the Prince and Princess of Wales and the rest of the Royal Family.
Page 241 - 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 495 - And this proves not only that the brutes have less Reason than man, but that they have none at all : for we see that very little is required to enable a person to speak ; and since a certain inequality of capacity is observable among animals of the same species, as well as among men, and since some are more capable of being instructed than others, it is incredible that the most perfect ape or parrot...
Page 317 - I have had the honour to lay before the Queen the loyal and dutiful Address of the...