SPORTSMEN, FARMERS, &C. 13 



they look unkind in their coats, give it 

 them again, — for you need never stop their 

 work. 



Farmers, who are fond of having: their Noxious dmgs 



^ given to far- 



cart-horses look w^ell in their coats, when ITo^rsesto S^ 

 they go to market, are in the habit of look fmc.' 

 giving antimony and other noxious drugs 

 to their horses ; this medicine will answer 

 every purpose, and is most innocent and 

 simple, and very efficacious. 



Ignorant John Groom, and the farrier, SXines'dt' 



T, . ,1 1 , , trimental to a 



equally is^norant, whenever a horse looks horse's consti^ 



. , tution. 



unkind in his coat, and most particularly 

 when his legs in the least swell, give him, 

 for two or three successive days, a strong 

 diuretic ball ; which makes the horse stale 

 profusely, weakens him, and is detrimental 

 to his constitution. Diuretic balls are com- 

 posed of rosin, juniper-berries, and other 

 violent, strong diuretics, violent in their 

 operations, and noxious to the animal. The 

 medicine I recommend is perfectly inno- 

 cent, and so mild and gentle in its opera- 

 tion, that it acts insensibly on him, and is 

 not to be perceived, but by the cure. 



