VETERINARY JURISPRUDENCE. 
was to have met the plaintitF’s servant, not being there, the man left 
the horse, with orders that it was not to be delivered without the 
money; and he took back with him a letter which he was to have 
delivered, containing the warranty. The defendant’s son some 
time afterwards arrived,and took the horse home the same night, 
without the warranty, and consequently without leaving the 
money. The defendant thought that something was wrong about 
the horse, and returned him on the third day. Plaintiff refused to 
take him in; and the animal was driven out of his yard by his 
direction, impounded, and sold. 
The question left to the jury was, whether the warranty having 
been a condition precedent, the defendant, not having received it, 
had returned the horse within a reasonable time. 
The jury found for the defendant. 
D REAMS OF THE OlDEN TiMES. 
How to plom vp a Horse, and make him fatte and lustie; and also 
how to keepe a Jade from tiring by the Way, and to make her 
to foame at the Bit, 
TAKfiCEnula Campana, commin seed, tumericke, and annis- 
seeds, of each a pennie-worth, and seeth them well with three 
heads of garlicke amongst them, well stamped, in a gallon of 
ale ; then streine it, and expresse as much of the substance as you 
may well wring out, and giue your horse to drink there of blood 
warme, a full quart at once ; and then ride him til he be hot, then 
stable him, litter him well and currie him until he be colde; doe 
the like two or three morninges together, and so turne him to 
grasse, and he will thriue wonderfullie in a short time. Some 
commend a handful of grunsell sodden in the afore said ale with 
the rest of the ingredientes. 
But if you keep him in the stable, giue him to eat in his pro- 
uender the rootes of CEnula Campana with some commin seeds 
both beaten togither, or y^ cenula campa small shred for fourteen 
days togither, and it will make a leane jade to thriue more in one 
month than otherwise she would doe in three. 
When you ride abroad vpon a hired Hackney, carie a good 
quantitie of the powder of cenula campa with you in some lea¬ 
thern bag ; and when others doe baite their horses in their ordi- 
nairie manner, your horse being first well walked, littered, and 
rubbed, giue him a handful of this powder in a quart of stronge 
ale with a home, and tie his head high to the rack, and you need 
to giue no other or verie little prouender vntil night; then let him 
be well meated, and giue him in the morning two peny worth of 
bread and his ale with the powder, but water at night. 
