USA > New York > Ulster County > Gazetteer and business directory of Ulster County, N.Y. for 1871-2 > Part 8
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101. A fugitive from justice from one of the United States to another, may be arrested and detained in order to his surrender by authority of the latter, without a previous demand for his surrender by the executive of the State whence he fled.
102. A watch will not pass under a be- quest of "wearing apparel," nor of household furniture and articles for fami- ly use."
103. Money paid for the purpose of set- tling or compounding a prosecution for a supposed felony, cannot be recovered back by a party paying it.
104. An innkeeper is liable for the death of an animal in his possession, but may free himself from liability by showing that the deuth was not occasioned by negligence ou his part.
105. Notice to the agent of a company is notice to the company.
106. An employer is not liable to one of bis employes for an injury sustained by the latter in consequence of the neglect of oth- ers of his employes engaged in the same general business.
107. Where a purchaser at a Sheriff's sale has bid the full price of property under the erroneous belief that the sale would di- Vest the property of all liens, it is the duty of the court to give relief by setting aside the tale.
108. When notice of protest is properly sent by mail. it may be sent by the mail of the day of the dishonor; if not, it must be mailed for the mail of the next day : ex- cept that if there is none, or it closes at an unseasonably early hour, then notice must be mailed in season for the next possible mail.
109. A powder-house located in a populous part of a city, and containing large quanti- ties of gunpowder, is a nuisance.
110. When the seller of goods accepte at ded in the same way. The description of the time of the sale, the note of a third per- ja lo acre lot would read: The south half ron, unindored by the purchaser, in pay- of the west half of the southwest quarter
ment, the presumption is that the pay- ment was intended to be absolute ; and though the note should be dishonored, the purchaser will not be liable for the value of | the goods.
-
111. A man charged with crime before a committing magistrate, but discharged on his own , recognizance, is not privileged from arrest ou civil process while returning from the magistrate's office.
112. When one has been induced to sell goode by means of false pretences, he can- not recover them from one who has bona fide purchased and obtained possession of them from the fraudulent vendor.
113. If the circumstances attendant upon a sale and delivery of personal property are such as usually and naturally accompany such a transaction, it cannot be declared a legal fraud upon creditors.
114. A stamp impressed upon an instru- ment by way of seal, is good as a seal. if it creates a durable impression in the texture of the paper.
115. If a party bound to make a payment use due diligence to make a tender, but through the payee's absence from home is unable to find him or any agent authorized to take payment for him, no forfeiture will be incurred through his failure to make a tender.
Government Land Measure.
A township, 36 sections, each a mile square.
A section, 640 acres.
A quarter section, half a mile square, 160 acres.
An eighth section, half a mile long. north and south, and a quarter of a mile wide, 80 acres.
A sixteenth section, a quarter of a mile square, 40 acres.
The sections are numbered from one to thirty-six, commencing at the northeast corner, thus :
nw'ne
6
5
4
8
2
Bwse
8
9
10
11
12
18
17
16
15
14
13
19
20
21
22
23
24
30
20
28
27
26
25
31
32
33
34
35
36
€
The sections are all divided in quarters, which are named by the cardinal points, as in section one. The quarters are divi-
of section 1 in township 24, north of range 7 west, or as the case might be ; and some- times will fall short, and sometimes overrun the number of deres it is supposed to con- tain.
v
53
DECIMAL SYSTEM OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.
THE DECIMAL SYSTEM
OF
WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.
As Authorized by Act of Congress -- Approved July 28, 1866.
STANDARDS.
In every eystem of Weights and Measures it is necessary to have what are called "Standards," as the pound, yard, gallon, &c., to be divided and multiplied into s:naller and larger parts and denominations. The definition and construction of these Standards involve philosophical and scien- tide principles of a somewhat abetruse character, and are made and procured by the legislative department of the govern- ment. The nominal Standards in the new system are the METER, the ARE, the LITER, atul the GRAM. The only real Standard, the one by which all the other standards are measured, and from which the system de- rives its name of " Metric." is the METER.
THE METER
I- need for all measures of length, distance, breadth, depth, heighth, &c., and was in- tended to be, and is very nearly, one ten- millionth of the distance on the earth's surface from the equator to the pole. It is about 393 inches, or 3 feet. 3 inches and 3 eighths, and is to be substituted for the yard.
-------
The terms used may, at first sight, hare & formidable appearance, seem difficult to pronounce, and to retain in memory. and to be, therefore, objectionable ; but with a lit- tle attention and nee, the apprehended dif- THE ARE ficulty will be found more apparent than 1 - a surface whose side is ten Meters, and i- equal to 100 square Meters or about 4 Nycare rods. real, as has been abundantly proved by ex- perience. The importance, also, of con- formity in the use of commercial terms, on THE LITER the part of the United States, with the practice of the many nations in which the I the unit for measuring solide and capa- system. with its present nomenclature, has c' .!.. and is equal to the contents of a cube : already been adopted, mnet greatly over- h: we edge is one-tenth of a meter. It is | balance the comparatively slight objection &' . ut equal to 1 quart, and is a standard in | alluded to.
cubic. dry and liquid measures. D
A cubic Meter (or Kiloliter) is called a stere, and is also usedas a standard in cer- tain cubic measures.
THE GRAM
Is the Unit of weight, and is the weight of a cube of pure water, each edge of the cube being one one-hundredth of a Meter. Itis about equal to 15 grains. It is intended as the Standard in all weights, and with its divisions and multiples, to supersede the use of what are now called Avoirdupois, Apothecaries and Troy Weights.
Each of the foregoing Standards is divi- ded decimally, and larger units are al-o formed by multiples of 10, 100, &c. The successive subordinate parts are designs- ted by the prefixes Deci, Centi and Milli; the successive multiples by Deks, Hecto, Kilo and Myria; each having its own nu- merical signification, as will be more clear- ly seen in the tables hereinafter given.
-
54 DECIMAL SYSTEM OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.
TABLES.
OLD.
MONEY.
NEW.
4 farthing make 1 penny.
10 mills make 1 cent.
12 pence .. 1 shilling.
10 cents 1 dime.
20 shillings 1 pound.
10 dimes “ 1 dollar.
LONG AND CLOTH MEASURE .- NEW.
10 millimeters make 1 centimeter.
10 centimeters
..
1 decimeter.
10 · decimeters
1 METER.
10 merers 66
1 dekameter.
10 dekameters
1 hectometer.
10 hectometers .6
1 kilometer.
10 kilometers 66
1 myriameter.
SQUARE MEASURE .- NEW.
100 square millimeters make 1 square centimeter.
100 square centimeters ..
1 square decimeter.
100 square decimeters
1 square meter or CENTARE.
100 centares
66
1 ARE.
100 ares
1 hectare.
The denominations less than the Are, including the Meter, are nsed in specifying the contents of surfaces of small extent ; the terms Centare, Are and Hectare, in expres- sing quantities of land surveyed or measured.
The above table may, however, be continued beyond the Meter, thus:
100 square meters make 1 square dekameter.
100 square dekameters ..
1 square hectometer.
100 square hectometerd
1 square kilometer.
100 square kilometers .
1 square myriameter.
CUBIC MEASURE .- NEW. For Solids.
1000 cubic millimeters
make 1 cubic centimeter.
..
1 cubic decimeter or liter.
1000 cubic decimeters
..
1 cubic meter or stere.
1000 cubic meters
1000 cubic dekameters
1000 cubic hectometers
..
1 cubic kilometer.
1000 cubic kilometers ..
1 cubic myriameter.
For Dry awd Liquid Measures.
10 milliliters
make 1 centiliter. 10 centiliters ..
10 deciliters
1 LITER.
10 liters
..
1 dexaliter.
10 dekaliters
10 hectoliters ..
1
kiloliter.
10 kiloliters ..
1 myrialiter.
[REALITER, the standard of Measures of Capacity, usually in a cylindrical form, is equivalent to a cubic Decimeter, of the one-thousandth part of a cubic Meter, the contents of which are about one quart.]
The Kiloliter, or STERE, is a cubic Meter, and Is used as a unit in measuring firewood and lumber.
10 decisteres maske 1 stere. 10 Bieres ..
1 dekastere.
ALL WEIGHTS .- NEW.
10 milligrams
make 1 contigram.
10 coutigramis
..
--- 11 1
de igram.
10 d-ci_ru :.. s
10 grams
..
10 dekagramm-
..
1
10 kilograms
..
1 quintal.
10
quintals
..
: wagram.
10 hectograms
1 my riagram.
10 myriagrams
1 millier or tonnean.
1
1000 cubic centimeters
1 deciliter.
1 cubic dekameter.
1 cubic hectometer.
1 lectoliter.
55
PRONUNCIATION OF TERMS.
TER.MS.
ENGLISH. Mee-ter.
Meter, Millimeter.
Mill-e-mee-ter.
Are.
Centimeter,
Sent-e-mee-ter.
Centare,
Sent-are.
Decimeter, D'kumeter.
Dek-a-mec-ter.
Gram,
Gram,
Hectometer,
Hec-to-mee-ter.
Milligram,
Mill-e-gram.
Kilometer.
Kill-o-mee-ter.
Centigram,
Sent-e-gram.
Myriameter,
Mir-e-a-mee-ter.
Decigram,
Des-e-gram.
Liter.
Li-ter.
Dekagram,
Dek-a-gram.
Milliliter,
Mill-e-li-ter. Sent-e-li-ter.
Kilogram,
Kill-o-gram.
Deciliter.
.
Des-e-li-ter.
Myriagram,
Mir-e-a-gram.
Dekaliter,
Dek-a-li-ter.
Quintal,
Quir tal.
Hectoliter,
Hec-to-li-ter.
Millier,
Mill. er.
biloliter.
Kill-o-li-ter.
Tonneau,
Tun-no.
-
Acts and Resolutions of Congress. PUBLIC -- No. 183.
AN ACT to authorize the use of the metric system of weights and measures.
Be it enartal by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of Ameri- es in Congress assembled, That from and af- tur the passage of this act, it shall be law- ful throughout the United States of Ameri- cs to emplo~ the weighte and measures of the metric -y-tem ; and no contract or deal- ing, or pleading in any court, shall be deemed invalid or liable to objection, be- ' system.
cause the weights or measures expressed or referred to therein are weights or measuree of the metric system.
SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That the tables in the schedule hereto annexed, shall be recognized in the construction of contracts, and in all legal proceedings. as establishing, in terms of the weights and measures now in use in the United States, the equivalents of the weights and meas- ures expressed therein in terms of the me- tric system ; and said tables may be lawful- ly used for computing, determining and ex- pressing, in customary weights and meas- ures, the weights and measures of the metric
MEASURES OF LENGTH.
METRIC DZNOMINATIONS AND VALUES.
EQUIVALENTS IN DENOMINATIONS IN USE.
Myriametre, . .
10.000 metres,
Kilometre, ..
1,000 metres,
Hectometre,
100 metres,
323 feet and one inch.
Deka:detre,
10 metres,
393.7 inches.
Metre. ...
1 metre,
39.37 inches.
Dechuetre,
1-10th of a metre,
3.937 inches.
Centimetre,
1-100th of a metre,
0.3937 inch.
Millimetre,
1-10ut's of a metre,
0.0594 inch.
MEASURES OF SURFACE.
METRIO DENOMINATIONS AND VALUES.
EQUIVALENTS IN DENOMINATIONS IN USE.
Hectare,
10,000 square metres,
. Are,
100 square metres,
2.471 acres. 110.6 square yards.
C'entare, 1 square metre,
1.550 square inches.
--
Myrialiter,
Mir-e-a-li-ter.
TERMS.
ENGLISH.
Stare.
Stere, Are.
Des-e-mee-ter.
Hectare,
Hect-are.
Hectogram,
Hec-to-gram.
Centiliter,
6.2137 miles. 0.62137 mile, or 2,280 feet and 10 inches.
---
-
DECIMAL SYSTEM OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.
٠٠
56
DECIMAL SYSTEM OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES.
MEASURES OF CAPACITY.
METRIC DENOMINATIONS AND VALUES.
EQUIVALENTS IN DENOMINATIONS IN USE.
Namos.
No. of liters.
Cubic Measure ..
Dry Measure.
Liquid or Wine Measure.
Kilolitre or stere, ..
1000 100
.1 of a cubic metre ...
2 bus. and 3.35 pecks, .
9.08 quarts, ..
2.6117 gallons.
Dekalitre, .
10
10 cubic decimetres, . 1 cubic decimetre, . .
0.908 quart,.
1.0567 quart. 0.845 gill.
Decilitre, ..
0.1
.1 of a cubic decimetre,
6.1022 cubic inches, ..
0.338 fluid ounce.
Centilitre,
0.01
10 cubic centimetres, ·
1 cubic centimetre,
0.061 cubic inch,.
0.27 fluid drachm.
Millilitre,
0.001
1 cubic metre, ....
1.808 cubic yard, ..
264.17 gallons. 26.417 gallons.
nectolitre,.
Litre.
1
·
0.6102 cubic inch,. ·
-
INTEREST TABLE.
57
WEIGHTS.
METRIC DENOMINATIONS AND VALUES.
EQUIVALENTS IN DE- NOMINATIONS IN USE.
Names.
No. of grams.
Weight of what quantity of water at maximum density.
Avoirdupois weight.
Millier or tonneau,.
1000000
1 cubic metre,
2204.6 pounds.
Quintal,
100000
1 hectolitre,
220.46 pounds.
Myriagram,
10000
10 litres,
22.046 pounds.
Kilogram, or kilo,.
1000
1 litre,
2.2046 pounds.
Hectogram,
100
1 decilitre.
3.5274 ounces.
Dekagram,
10
10 cubic centimetres,
0.3527 ounce.
Gram,
1
1 cubic centimetre,
15.432 graine.
Decigram,
1-10
.1 of a cubic centimetre.
0.5432 grain.
Centigram,
1-100
10 cubic millimetres,
0.1543 grain.
Milligram.
1-1000
1 cubic millimetre,
0.0154 grain.
1
INTEREST TABLE
At Seven per Cent. in Dollars and Cents, from $1 to 810,000.
AX'NT.
1 day.
7 days.
15 days.
1*mo.
3 mos.
6 mos.
12 mos.
$
$ C.
$ C.
$ C.
$ C.
$ C.
$ C.
& C.
1
00
00
00%
00%
01%
03X
S
2
00
00送
00%
013
03%
07
14
3
00%
00%
0134
051
10%
21
00
001%
01
02%
07
14
5
00
00
0134
03%
10%%
21
4:2
7
00
01
02
04
12%
24
49
8
00
01
0234
01% 051
14
23
56
9
00
01K
0216
05%
17%
35
1 40
30
00%
04
09
17%
52%
1 05
2 10
10
00%
05%
12
23%
70
1 75
3 50
100
02
13%
29
5.43
1 75
3 50
7 00
200
01
271
59
1 10%
3 50
7 00
14 00
20
06
40%
546
1 17
2 83%
7 0)
11 00
28 170
54 +)
10
68
1 46
2 9125
8 75
17 50
35 00
1(* )
19%
1 36
2 92
5 -8
17 50
35 00
20 00
5 83
11 003
35 00)
70 00
140 00
4( * * )
78
5 416
11 67
23 3316
70 00
110 00
250 00
97
6 80%
14 58
29 16%
87 50
175 00
350 00
1 94
13 61
29 17
58 33
175 00
350 00
700 00
03
08%
172
35
6
10
888
01.
03
06
11%
35
1 40
2 80
50
01
15
873%
5 25
10 50
21 00
39
2 72Y
58
4 08%
8 75
17 50
52 50
105 00
210 00
1 75
15%
63
20
08
011%
58
MISCELLANEOUS.
Discount and Premium.
When a person buys an article for $1,00- 20 per cent off, (or discount,) and sells it again for $1,00, he makes a profit of 25 per cont. on his investment. Thus: He pays 8) cents and sells for $1,00-a gain of 20 cents, or 25 per cent of 80 cents. And for any transaction where the sale or purchase of gold, silver, or currency is concerned, the following rules will apply in all cases.
RULE 1st .- To find premium when dis- count is given : Multiply 100 by rate of discount and divide by 100, less rate of dis- count.
RULE 2d .- To find discount when pre- mium is given. Multiply the rate of interest by 100, and divide by 100, plus the rate of premium.
Suppose A has $140 in currency, which he wishes to exchange for gold, when gold is 27 per cent. premium, how much gold should he receive ? In this case the pre- mium is given, consequently we must find the discount on A's currency and subtract it from the $140, as per rule 2d, showing the discount to be a trine more than 21 per cent. and that he should receive $110.60 in gold.
5 pr ct. Dis. allows 15% pr ct. Pre. or profit 10 ** .. :
15"
66
66 +1736 66
.6
25 "
66 3% 66 .6
30 -6
*43 .6
40 .4
66 693%
66
A dagger (+) denotes the profits to be a fraction more than specified. A (*) denotes profits to be a fraction less than specified.
Table of Weights of Grain, Seeds, &c.
ACCORDING TO THE LAWS OF NEW YORK.
Barley weighs
48 1b. per bushel.
Beans
62
..
Buckwheat".
48
Clover Seed
.64)
.
Corn
weighs 58
Flax Seed*
.55
Oats
32
..
.6
Peas
66
Potatoes
60) ..
.6
Rye
56
..
46
Timothy Seed
..
Wheat
60
*Flax Seed by cust'm weighs 56 1b. per bush.
Facts on Advertising.
The advertisements in an ordinary num- ber of the London Times exceed 2.500. The annual advertising bills of one London firm are paid to amount to 8200,000; and three others are mentioned who each annually expend for the purpose 250,000, The ex- pense for advertising the eight editions of the " Encyclopedia Britannia" is said to have been $15,000.
In large cities nothing is more common than to see large business establishments, which seem to have an immense advantage over all competitors, by the wealth. expe- rience, and prestige they have acquired, drop gradually out of public view, and be succeeded by firms of a smaller capital, more energy, and more determined to have the fact that they sell such and such com- modities known from one end of the land to the other. In other words, the establish- ments advertise ; the old die of dignity .- The former are ravenous to pass out of oh- scurity into publicity ; the latter believe that their publicity is so obvious that it cannot be obscured. The first understand that they must thrust themselves upon public attention, or be disregarded; the second, having once obtained public atten- tion. suppose they have arrested it perma- nently; while, in fact, nothing is more char- acteristic of the world than the ease with which it forgets.
Stephen Girard, than whom no shrewder business man ever lived, used to say: I have always considered advertising liber- ally and long to be the great medium of success in business, and the prelude to wealth. And I have made it an invariable rule too, to advertise in the dullest times as well as the busiest : long experience having taught me that money thus spent is well laid out ; as by keeping my business continually before the public it has secured me many sales that I would otherwise have lost.
Capacity of Cisterns or Wells.
Tabular view of the number of gallons contained in the clear, between the brick work for each ten inches of depth :
Diameter
Gallons.
2 feet equals
19
8
44
3%
60
4
.6
78
4%
97
5
.6
122
6%
148
6
176
207
7
240
275
8
813
9
396
916
66
411
10
11
.6
12
..
13
..
14
15
1101
20
. ..
1933
3059
+11
66
20 -
25 66
50 44
100
66
.6
30
59
MISCELLANEOUS.
Brilliant Whitewash.
Many have heard of the brilliant stucco whitewash on the east end of the Presi- dont's house at Washington. The follow- Ing is a recipe for it; itis gleaned from the National Intelligencer, with some addi- tional improvements learned by experi- ments : Take half a bushel of nice un- ølacked lime, slack it with boiling water, cover it during the process to keep in the steam. Strain the liquid through a fine sieve or strainer, and add to it a peck of salt, previously well dissolved in warm wa- fer : three pounds of ground rice, boiled to a thin paste, and stirred in boiling hot ; half a pound of powdered Spanish whiting, and a pound of clean glue, which has been pre- riously dissolved by soaking it well, and then hanging it over a slow fire, in a small kettle within a large one filled with water. Add five gallons of hot water to the mixture, stir it well, and let it stand a few days cov- ered from the dirt.
It should be put on right hot ; for this purpose it can be kept in a kettle on a portable furnace. It is said that about a pint of this mixture will cover a square vard upon the outside of a house if proper- Ir applied. Brushes more or less small may be used according to the neatness of the job required. It answers as well as oil paint for wood, brick or stone, and is cheaper. It retains its brilliancy for many years. There is nothing of the kind that will compare with it, either for inside or outside walle.
Coloring matter may be put in and made of any shade you like. "Spanish brown stirred in will make red pink, more or less deep according to the quantity. A delicate Unge of this is very pretty, for inside walls. Finely pulverized common clay. well mixed with Spanish brown, makes a reddish stone color. Yellow-ochre stirred in makes yel- low wash, but chrome goes further, and makes a color generally esteemed prettier. In all these cases the darkness of the shades of course is determined by the quantity of coloring used. It is difficult to make rules, because tastes are different. It would be best to try experiments on a shingle and let It dry. We have been told that green must not be mixed with lime. The lime de- stroys the color, and the color has an effect on the whitewash, which makes it crack and peel. When walls have been badly smoked, and you wish to have them a clean white. it is well to squeeze indigo plenti- fully through a bag into the water you use, before it is stirred' in the whole mixture. If a larger quantity than five gallons be wanted, the same proportion should be ob- served.
---
How to get a Horse out of a Fire.
"The great difficulty of getting horses from & #Xe where surrounding buildings are in a state of conflagation, is well known .- The plan of covering their eyes with a blan- kot will not always succeed.
A gentleman whose horses have been in great peril from such a cause, having tried
in vain to save them. hit upon the expedi- ent of having them harnessed as though go- ing to their usual work, when, to his aston- ishment, they were led from the stable without difficulty.
The Chemical Barometer.
Take a long narrow bottle, such as an old- fashioned Eau-de-Cologne bottle. and put into it two and a half drachms of camphor, and eleven drachme of spirits of wine ; when the camphor is dissolved, which it will readily do by slight agitation, add the following mixture: Take water. rine drachms; nitrate of potash (saltpetre) thirty-eight grains; and muriate of am- monia (cal ammoniac) thirty-eight grains. Dissolve these salts in the water prior to mixing with the camphorated spirit; then shake the whole well together. Cork the bottle well, and wax the top, but after- wards make a very small aperture in the cork with a red-hot needle. The bottle may then be hung up, or placed in any stationa- ry position. By observing the different appearances which the materials assume. as the weather changes. it becomes an ex- cellent prognosticator of a coming storm or of a sunny sky.
Leech Barometer.
Take an eight ounce phial, and put in it three gills of water, and place in it a healthy leech, changing the water in summer once a week, and in winter once in a fortnight. and it will most accurately prognostieate the weather. If the weather is to be fine. the leech lies motionless at the bottom of the glass and coiled together in a spiral form ; if rain may be expected, it will creep up to the top of its lodgings and remain there till the weather is settled : if we are to have wind. it will move through its habi- tation with amazing swiftness, and seldom goes to rest till it begins to blow hard : if a remarkable storm of thunder and rain is to succeed, it will lodge for some days before almost continually out of the water, and discover great uneasiness in violent throes and convulsive-like motions : in frost as in clear summer-like weather it lies constantly at the bottoin: and in snow as in rainy weather it pitches its dwelling in the very mouth of the phial. The top should be cov- ered over with a piece of muelin.
TO MEASURE GRAIN IN A BIN .- Find the number of cubic feet, from which dediner one: j'h. The remainder is the number of bushels-allowing, however, one bushel extra to every 224. Thus in a remainder of 244 there would be 225 bushels. In a re- mainder of 418 there would be 450 bushels, &c.
60
VALUABLE RECIPES.
VALUABLE RECIPES.
[The following recipes are vouched for by ) several who have tried them and proven their virtues. Many of them have been sold singly for more than the price of this book .- PUB.]
HORSES.
RING BONE AND SPAVIN .- 2 oz. each of | or twice a day. This is a remedy of great value.
Spanish flies and Venice turpentine; 1 oz. each of aqua ammonia and euphorbium : > oz. red precipitate; } oz. corrosive subli- mate; 1% lbs. lard. When thoroughly pul- verized and mixed, heat carefully so as not to burn, and pour off free from sediment.
For ring-bone, rub in thoroughly, after removing hair, once in 48 hours. For spav- in, once in 24 hours. Cleanse and press out the matter on each application.
POLL-EVIL .- Gum arabic }. oz; common potash M oz ; extract of belladonna > dr. Put the gum in just enough water to dis- solve it. Pulverize the potash and mix with the dissolved gum, and then put in the extract of belladonna, and it will be ready for use. Use with a syringe after having cleansed with soap suds, and repeat once in two days till a cure is affected.
SCOURS .- Powdered tormentil root, giv- en in milk, from 3 to 5 times daily till cured.
GREASE-HEEL AND SCRATCHES .- Sweet oil 6 oze .; borax 2 ozs .; sugar of lead 2 ozs. Wash off with dish water, aud. after it is dry, apply the mixture twice a day.
CHOLIC IN HORSES .- To X pt. of warm water add 1 oz. laudanum and 3 ozs. spirits of turpentine, and repeat the dose in about "x of an hour, adding & oz. powdered aloes, if not relieved.
Bors .- Three doses. 1st. 2 qts milk and 1 of molasses. 2d. 15 minutes after. 2 qts. warin sage tea. 3d. After the expiration of 30 minutes, sufficient lard to physic .- Never faile.
MISCELLANEOUS.
PILES-PERFECTLY CURED .- Take flour of sulphur 1 oz., rosin 3 ozs., pulverize and mix well together. (Color with carmine or cochineal, if you like.) Dose-What will lie on afire cent piece, night and morning, washing the parts freely in cold water once
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