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A48581 The country-man's treasure shewing the nature, cause, and cure of all diseases incident to cattel : with proper means to prevent their common diseases and distempers : being very useful receipts as they have been practiced by the long experience of five and thirty years, and all approved of : fitted for the use of all farmers and others that deal in cattel / by James Lambert ; with a table of the several diseases therein contained. Lambert, James. 1676 (1676) Wing L231; ESTC R41333 20,191 67

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Turpentine and work the Powders and the Turpentine very well into Balls as big as a great Crab and give him two at a time night and morning and he will mend presently without fail LVI For the Disease in Beasts called the Sturdy or turning-Evil OF this Disease there are many kinds one in the Brain-pan of one side or both and another under the Horn-root and another in the Neck-joynt If it be in the Neck-joynt or under the Horn it is uncurable as for that in the Neck-joynt you may finde it out by their carriage for they will hold up their Heads in the Air and look wildly and for the other under the Horn they will turn round none of these are curable but that in the Brain-pan The Cure You must first cast them and bind their Feet then slit the Skin against the Brain-pan and with a Needle and a long double Thread stitch up the Skin out of your way and then take a strong short Knife and a Hammer and cut the Scaup two inches square and turn it up and then you may see the Bladder then take it out very carefully for fear of breaking it and cast it away and annoint the place with fresh Butter and always apply warm Cloths for fear of the cold and be very careful that you lay the Scaup on again in the right place and then turn down the Skin and stitch it down with some Silk close together and then make a Plaister of Turpentine Wax Rosin and Swines-grease or fresh Butter and a plaister of Flax-hards and lay on four or five doubles of Wollen-cloth for to keep it from the Wind and Weather remove the Plaister once in five days and be carefull of cold and let them drink no cold Water for six or ten days or more and they will do well Approved of my self LVII For a Cough or Shortness of Breath in Cattel IF your Beasts are troubled with a Cough as I have already shewed this will cure them if they are Curable The Cure Take a quart of new churned Milk and beat in some Ta● and a Head of Gail●ck clean pilled Alicampane made into Powder and a little brown Sugarcandy blend all together and give it to the Beast three mornings one after another and if they be curable this will oure them without doubt LVIII For to kill Lice in any Beast FOr the killing of Lice in any Beast you must take Quicksilver and kill it with Swines-grease and rub them very wel about the Horns Head and Neck and upon the Shoulders and Dewlap and they will lick the rest of their Body themselves or strew some keen ashes on their hinder parts and let them stand in the Rain a while and it will make them all fly away from the Beast for certain LIX For the Milting of a Beast THe Milting of a Beast is when they have got a stroak with a Goad or Cudgel or Rush against some piece of Timber The Signs are when they lay themselves down they will rise again presently and cannot rest but sit in pain The Cure You must take Stone-pitch and pound it small and blend it with Ale Saffron and Pepper and give it him and walk him a little after it and he will mend presently for certain LX. For the Rottenness in a Beast IF your Beast be subject to Rottenness you may know it by his Poverty and Leanness and continual scowring and if they be very rotten they will scower Whitish Brown and it will stink filthily The Cure You must give them Bayberries beaten to Powder Mirrhe Elder-leaves Rhue Fetherfew all made small and take a lump of the blewest Clay you can possibly get and burn it till it be very red or almost black and then pound it to Powder and and blend it all together in strong Urine and give the Beast half a pint at a time three several times Milk-warm and it will stay the Scowering of the Beast and heal the Disease LXI For the Clush and swoln Neck FIrst let the Beast rest three or four days then take fresh Butter Honey Hogs-lard and Wax all in equal quantities and melt them together like a Salve and annoynt the place and it will mend presently Also if the Neck be swoln and raw then take Honey and Mastick and a little fresh Butter without Salt or fresh Swines-grease without Salt and boyl these all together and annoint the sore place and it will mend Also if the Neck be puffed and swoln and raw you must take Alicampane and boyl it very well and stamp it with Hogs-grease and the fat of a Weather and a little Honey and Frankinsence and new Wax blend all together and annoint the place and it will presently amend Approved FINIS Books Printed for Henry Twyford and are to be sold at his Shop in Vine Court Middle Temple London THe Gentlemans Jockey and approved Farrier instructing in the Nature Cause and Cure of all diseases incident to Horses with an Exact and easy Method of Breeding Buying Dieting and otherwise Ordering of all sorts of Horses aswel for the Common and Ordinary use as the Heats and Course with divers other Curiosities Collected by the long Practise and Experience of J. H. Esquire Matthew Hodson Mr. Holled Mr. Willis Mr. Robinson Mr. Medcalf and Nathaniel Shaw Octavo price 2 s. 6 d. The Clarks Tutor to Arithmetick and Writing being a plaine and easie way of Arithmetick and for Buying and Selling of Land either in Possesion or Revertion at 6 or 8 per Cent The measureing of Timber Stone Paving Housing Surveying of Lands Dyalling c. Being Remains of Edmund Wingate Esquire Octavo price 2 s. The Countess of Arundels Secrets in Physick and Chyrurgery Preserving and Candying c. The Chymical Galinist wherein the Practice of the Ancients are reconciled to the new Discoveries in the Theory of Physick by George Castle Doctor of Physick Octavo price 2 s. Italy in its originall Glory Ruine and Revival Being a survey of the whole Geogrophy and History of that famous Country with the Adjacent Islands of Sicily and Malta and whatever is remarkable in Rome and all those Towns and Territories mentioned in Ancient and Modern Authors by Edmund Warcup Esquire Folio price 6 s. A Comentary on Antoninus his Itinerary or Journeys on the Roman Empire so far as it concerneth Brittain wherein the first Foundation of our Cities Laws and Government according to the Roman Policy The Ancient names of their Garisons with their sight and true distances Their military ways and walls with many Antiquities Medals Inscriptions and Urnes very useful for all Historians Antiquaries Philologists and more particularly for the students in law By William Burton Batchelor of Laws Folio price 6 s. History of the troubles of Swedland and Poland which occasioned the expulsion of Sigismundus the Third King of those Kingdoms with his heirs for ever from the Sweedish Crown By John Fowler Secretary to Sir George Douglas Knight Folio price 5 s. The Annals and History of the Low-Countrey Wars by Hugo Grotius in English Octavo price 6 s. Ecclesia Restaurata Or the History of the Reformation of the Church of England containing the Beginning Progress and Success of it The Councels by which it is conducted the Rules of Piety and Prudence by which it was founded The several Steps by which it was promoted The first preparations to it by King Henry the Eighth until the Legal setting and establishment of it under Queen Elizabeth By Peter Heylin D.D. Fol. price 10 s. The Minister of State wherein is shewn the true use of Modern Policy By Monsieur de Sithon Secretary to Cardinal Richelieu In two Parts Fol. price 10 s.