The American Veterinary Journal, Volumen11856 |
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Página vi
... labor with a single Fœtus , delivery by opera- tion ; Death , etc. , Singular Fact , 253 Preserving Vegetable Substances . 253 240 Increase in the bulk of Vegetables by Remarks on Veterinary Literature , & c . , 242 Boiling , 253 Report ...
... labor with a single Fœtus , delivery by opera- tion ; Death , etc. , Singular Fact , 253 Preserving Vegetable Substances . 253 240 Increase in the bulk of Vegetables by Remarks on Veterinary Literature , & c . , 242 Boiling , 253 Report ...
Página 2
to the inferior orders of creation , ) and we shall still labor with willing heart and steady purpose to retain the good opinions they have been pleased to express . The Journal now commences under more favorable auspices . In the first ...
to the inferior orders of creation , ) and we shall still labor with willing heart and steady purpose to retain the good opinions they have been pleased to express . The Journal now commences under more favorable auspices . In the first ...
Página 18
... labor or exercise to produce lameness , and therefore the disease must have originated at birth . Mr. Percival , whose opinion on veterinary matters is unques- tioned , says that his attention to the hereditary origin of ringbone , was ...
... labor or exercise to produce lameness , and therefore the disease must have originated at birth . Mr. Percival , whose opinion on veterinary matters is unques- tioned , says that his attention to the hereditary origin of ringbone , was ...
Página 27
... labor . Un- der such circumstances , the air respired fails to decarbonize the blood , or counteract the effects of an air - tight atmosphere . Beauty and endurance , therefore , are no match against ir discreet stable management ; for ...
... labor . Un- der such circumstances , the air respired fails to decarbonize the blood , or counteract the effects of an air - tight atmosphere . Beauty and endurance , therefore , are no match against ir discreet stable management ; for ...
Página 42
... labor , eating his regu- lar allowance of food , yet the finger of death may be on him . In the human family the symptoms of very extensive disease in the liver are often so mild as to pass unnoticed , and dissection sometimes reveals ...
... labor , eating his regu- lar allowance of food , yet the finger of death may be on him . In the human family the symptoms of very extensive disease in the liver are often so mild as to pass unnoticed , and dissection sometimes reveals ...
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action Agricultural allowed amount animal appear applied attention become better blood body bone breeding called cattle cause chest cold common condition consequently considered contains continued course cows death disease effect equally existence experience fact farmers feeding feet foot four frequently furnish give given glanders ground half hand head hereditary horse important improvement increase Journal kind known labor less living mare matter means medicine membrane milk muscles nature never observed occur operation organs pain patient period persons possession practice present produced prove Published quantity readers regards remarks require result shoe side sometimes soon stable stand stomach surface symptoms taken tion treatment turn usual veterinary whole young
Pasajes populares
Página 350 - ... in the forehead and eyes, and were often ill and unable to work. Upon examining the rooms in question I found they were both equally well ventilated and lighted. I could not discover anything about the drainage of the premises that could affect the one room more than the other; but I observed that the room occupied by the cheerful workers was wholly whitewashed, and the room occupied by the melancholy workers was colored with yellow ochre. I had the yellow ochre washed off and the walls and ceilings...
Página 79 - My opinion is, that it is presumption in us to say no, because we do not understand them. A horse has memory, knowledge, and love. He knows his master from the servants, though the latter are more constantly with him. I had a horse myself, who knew me from any other person, and manifested by capering and proudly marching with his head erect, when I was on his back, his knowledge that he bore a person superior to the others by whom he was surrounded.
Página 95 - Then spread a little straw on the bottom of a boiler, on which place bottles with straw between them until the boiler contains a sufficient quantity. Fill it up with cold water ; heat the water, and as soon as it begins to boil, draw the fire, and let the whole gradually cool. When quite cold take out the bottles and pack them...
Página 256 - Ye whose hearts are fresh and simple, Who have faith in God and Nature, Who believe, that in all ages Every human heart is human, That in even savage bosoms There are longings, yearnings, strivings For the good they comprehend not, That the feeble hands and helpless, Groping blindly in the darkness, Touch God's right hand in that darkness And are lifted up and strengthened...
Página 41 - The improvement depends on this principle, that the power of the female to supply her offspring with nourishment, is in proportion to her size, and to the power of nourishing herself from the excellence of her constitution. The size of the...
Página 286 - He engages to exercise his best judgment, but is not responsible for a mistake of judgment. Beyond this the defendant is not responsible. The patient himself must be responsible for all else ; if he desires the highest degree of skill and care, he must secure it himself. 4. It is a rule of law that a medical practitioner never insures the result.
Página 416 - ... leaves the egg adhering to the hair: she hardly appears to settle, but merely touches the hair with the egg held out on the projected point of the abdomen. The egg is made to adhere by means of a glutinous liquor secreted with it. She then leaves the horse at a small distance, and prepares a second egg, and, poising herself before the part, deposits it in the same way. The liquor dries, and the egg becomes firmly glued to the hair: this is repeated by various flies, till four or five hundred...
Página 254 - The idle levy a very heavy tax upon the industrious when, by frivolous visitations, they rob them of their time. Such persons beg their daily happiness from door to door, as beggars their daily bread, and like them sometimes meet with a rebuff. A mere gossip...
Página 57 - The hereditary transmission of physical and moral qualities, so well understood and familiarly acted on in the domestic animals, is equally true of man. A superior breed of human beings could only be produced by selections and exclusions similar to those so successfully employed in rearing our more valuable animals.
Página 82 - ... of resemblance to the actual parent then becomes combined with that of the individual variations, and the result is an excess of deviation in the direction of the resultant of these two combined forces ; or, if it be preferred, the individual variations will then radiate, not round the common centre of the type, but round a point situated on the line which separates the type from the variety first obtained. Abandoned to nature, individual variations almost always perish in the superabundant mass...