Part 3 (1/2)
_To destroy Lice._--Sometimes the receipt below for fleas will prove efficacious, but not always; but a small quant.i.ty of Mercurial Ointment, reduced by adding hog's lard to it, say an equal quant.i.ty, rubbed along the top of the dog's back never fails. The greatest care must be taken to keep the animal warm.
_Fleas._--Scotch snuff steeped in gin is infallible; but must be used with great care, and not above a teaspoonful of snuff to a pint of gin,--as the cure, if overdone, is a deadly poison.
_Torn Ears._--Laudanum and brandy, equal parts. Mix well. Apply alternately with sweet oil.
_Feed for Greyhounds in training._--Wheat flour and oatmeal, old, equal parts. Liquorice, aniseed, and white of eggs. Make into a paste. Make loaves. Bake them. Break up into very rich broth.
_Swelled Teats._--Make pomade of Camphorated Spirit, or brandy, and goose grease, two or three times a day.
_Inflammation of the Bowels._--Symptoms: Dulness of appearance and eyes; loss of appet.i.te; lying on the belly, with outstretched legs; pulse much quickened; scratching up of the bed into a heap, and pressing the belly on it; desire to swallow stones, coal, or any cold substance not voidable; inclination to hide away. It is very dangerous; requires active treatment.
Bleed most freely, till the dog faints away. Clap a blister on the pit of the stomach. Give Aloes, fifteen grains, and Opium, half a grain. Repeat dose three times a day. Bleed after twelve hours, if pulse rises again, and continue dosing and bleeding till either the dog or inflammation gives in. No half measures do in this disease. After determining that it is inflammation of bowels, set to work to get the upper hand. When that is done, there is no trouble. Otherwise it is fatal. Feed low, and attend carefully to prevent relapse.
_Films over the Eyes._--Blue stone or Lunar Caustic, eight grains, spring water, one ounce. Wash the eyes with it, letting a little pa.s.s in. Repeat this daily, and you will soon cure it.
_Films caused by Thorn Wounds_.--Rest the dog till perfectly healed over, was.h.i.+ng with rose water. If much inflammation, bleed, and foment with hot water, with a few drops of laudanum in it--about forty drops of laudanum to one ounce of water; or two grains of opium to one ounce of water--one as good as the other. Then apply four or five times a day the following wash:--Superacetate of Lead, half a drachm, Rose Water, six ounces.
_To extract Thorns._--Cobbler's wax bound on to the place, or black pitch plaster or a poultice, are equally good.
_To preserve Gun Barrels from rust of salt water._--Black lead, three ounces; hog's lard, eight ounces; camphor, quarter ounce; boiled together over a slow fire; the barrels to be rubbed with this mixture, which after three days must be wiped off clean. This need not be repeated above twice in the winter.
_Bite of a Snake._--Olive oil, well rubbed in before a fire, and a copious drench of it also.
_To render Boots or Shoes Water-proof._--Beef suet, quarter of a pound; bees' wax, half a pound; rosin, quarter of a pound. Stir well together over a slow fire. Melt the mixture, and rub well into the articles daily with a hard brush before the fire.
_To Soften Boots._--Use hog's lard, half a pound; mutton suet, quarter of a pound; and bees' wax, quarter of a pound. Melt well, and rub well in before the fire; or currier's oil is as good, barring the smell.
_Water-proofing for Gun Locks._--Make a saturated solution of Naphtha and India rubber. Add to this three times the quant.i.ty of Copal Varnish. Apply with a fine, small brush along the edges of the lock and stock.
DISTEMPER.
How best to convey to my readers a clear, and at the same time succinct account of this disease, has much troubled me. This is now the third attempt made to set before my brother sportsmen, who have had little or no experience, in the plainest terms, the symptoms and features of the disease, as well as the best remedies to be applied to its various stages and ever varying types. After considerable doubts on the subject, I fancy that by setting before you a series of cases which have come under my own treatment, the peculiar features of each case, the remedies prescribed, and the termination, whether fatal or otherwise, I shall best serve the interests of my readers. I beg expressly to state, that with one or two exceptions--the cases of the older dogs--of which I write from recollection, after a lapse of several years, and consequently cannot be so positive about, the others have all recently pa.s.sed through my hands, and the course of treatment, &c., has been especially noted, and here recorded with minute exactness. The range of cases are, I believe, sufficiently numerous to meet any form and stage of the disease, from the most simple to the most complicated and fatal. With the sole exception of ch.o.r.ea or paralysis, a case of which I have never fairly seen through, one or two cases are noted, in which this would have been the termination, but for the remedies applied. The system pursued has been a combination of a great many various receipts, adapted to each peculiar case; and through the very severe cases that this year have depopulated my kennel, I have been under great obligations to a very talented medical man, whose advice I ever found of great service, and whose professional knowledge enabled him so to vary the quant.i.ties and forms of the medicines as best to overcome some particular form or other. Every keeper or sportsman has, or professes to have, some never-failing nostrum or other. Believe me, this is all stuff. There have been, are, and ever will be, cases incurable; but I will venture to say, that ninety-nine out of a hundred who know anything of the subject will admit that these remedies contain some one or more of the following medicines, all of which are of value:--Epsom Salts, Calomel, Jalap, Tartar Emetic, as purgatives or vomits; Antimony, Nitre, James'
Powder, Ipecacuanha, as sudorifics, diaph.o.r.etics, or febrifuges. From these medicines, the most used, it is evident to see what tendency the course of treatment is designed to have, and when it fails, extra means must be employed till that is effected. Here it is that study, practice, and an intimate knowledge of medicines and their combinations prove of great advantage. At this stage more dogs are lost for want of knowledge what next to do than in any other way; for they are either getting worse or better, never standing still, and each day's illness tells much against the recovery, from the great emaciation and weakness which commences from the first, and keeps increasing daily. Never was there a more appropriate quotation than ”Opus est consulto, sed ubi consulueris mature facto.” It were idle to speculate on the origin of the disease. Suffice for us that we have it, and that we consider it an affection of the mucous membrane, solely, in the earlier stages, but ultimately combining itself with general mucous affections. But it will not be foreign to our purpose to state several influences which are supposed, if not actually to cause, at all events, greatly to increase its virulence. They are these:--_Low Diet_, _Dirt_, _Confinement in close, unhealthy, damp kennels_, _too great a quant.i.ty of raw, or even boiled flesh_, _too little exercise_, _sudden changes in the atmosphere_, and _contagion_. It cannot be called endemic, since it exists everywhere. Neither is it exactly an epidemic, though some years it does a.s.sume that form, while at other times it does not.
Bleeding we see recommended in the Field Sports. Some pract.i.tioners are very fond of the lancet. We confess quite a contrary penchant, and hold that bleeding is seldom or ever justifiable, except in cases of violent inflammations.
In distemper, we would not draw blood, once in a hundred times; for the usual course of the disease is so enervating, that in ordinary circ.u.mstances nature is reduced far more than agreeable; and as purgatives must be used under any circ.u.mstances, they will in general be sufficient to reduce any fever. We will now mention the ordinary symptoms whence we determine this complaint. Lowness of spirit, drowsiness, dimness of the eyes, staring of the coat, loss of appet.i.te, may be noticed, and frequently disregarded. Here we will remark that a mild dose of Epsom salts, according to age--vide prescriptions at the end, No. one,--will suffice. In a day or two, however, if neglected, sometimes a running at the nose will be seen; or the ears and feet will be cold, while the head and body will be feverish; the nose will be hard, dry, and cracked. By degrees, if neglected, the nose will discharge a thick purulent matter, the belly become hotter and distended, the dog will lie full stretch, belly to the ground, the hind legs begin to fail. He may also have spasmodic and convulsive twitchings, giddiness, foaming at the mouth, epileptic fits. Now he will ravenously eat anything cold, drink any quant.i.ty of water.
FIRST CASE.
_Three Setter pups, two to three months old. Appearance, &c._--_Slight_ drowsiness, dimness of eyes, staring of coat, faeces hard. Gave two teaspoonfuls No. one, and repeated next day. Intermitted a day. Repeated dose to make sure. All well.
SECOND CASE.
_Three Setter puppies, same age at the same time._--Symptoms same, and also heat in body and head; coldness of extremities; bodies inclined to hardness; faeces dark and irregular. Gave four teaspoonfuls No. one. Next morning, if anything worse, belly still hard and swelling, gave each half a grain of Calomel, half a grain of Tartar Emetic. After an hour, no vomit having been attained, repeated the dose. At night gave each a pill--Antimony, two grains, Nitre, ten grains, Ipecacuanha, three grains.