SPORTSMEN, FARMERS, &C. 17 



her corn did her good, which it did not 

 before she was perfectly freed from them. 



Courteous Reader., (as the man who makes 

 Moore's Almanack, ever addresses his cus- 

 tomers,) be pleased to observe, that 1 posi- 

 tively decline even entering into any 

 difficult and intricate disorders which horses 

 may have. I presume only to point out 

 the methods which should be practised with 

 all horses afflicted with simple and common 

 complaints, which are so easily known and 

 distinguished by any man, who has the 

 least knowledge of horses. Provided your 

 horse be afflicted by a greater malady than 

 common, send for a Veterinary Surgeon. 

 That description of men have arrived at 

 great perfection, and there is scarcely a 

 large town in England, where there is not 

 one to be found of some proficiency. Pro- 

 vided you doctor your horse, when you 

 know not what his disorder is, it is three 

 to one but you kill him. 



If your horse be attacked with a putrid 

 fever, (which is easily ktiown from a com- 

 mon inflammatory fever, proceeding from a 

 Jiorse having caught a violent cold, and 



