The art of taming and educating the horse : with details of management in the subjection of over forty representative vicious horses, and the story of the author's personal experience : together with chapters on feeding, stabling, shoeing, and the practical treatment for sickness, lameness, etc: with a large number of recipes . 9 r*- plexion 05 o c *l » g CO cr •^j -r o ^ (R (X 5 £ zf crq p -1 )—I 1 p p 01 3 r^ -? n re B- 2 Pi 01 ap C P O E ^ 0 n c P 01 o e c 5 s- f £ 2. dq 5 ? g ^ E P 3 r^ P CR Ol andscava 5< -»• ^ • 5* h !^ rc& H Q 5 cr ? o 2 ^ o 2 f=2. 3 JiT « c p p, Pi 3 o <-( mph

The art of taming and educating the horse : with details of management in the subjection of over forty representative vicious horses, and the story of the author's personal experience : together with chapters on feeding, stabling, shoeing, and the practical treatment for sickness, lameness, etc: with a large number of recipes . 9 r*- plexion 05 o c *l » g CO cr •^j -r o ^ (R (X 5 £ zf crq p -1 )—I 1 p p 01 3 r^ -? n re B- 2 Pi 01 ap C P O E ^ 0 n c P 01 o e c 5 s- f £ 2. dq 5 ? g ^ E P 3 _ r^ P CR Ol andscava 5< -»• ~^ • 5* h !^ rc& H Q 5 cr ? o 2 ^ o 2 f=2. 3 JiT « c p p, Pi 3 o <-( mph Stock Photo
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The art of taming and educating the horse : with details of management in the subjection of over forty representative vicious horses, and the story of the author's personal experience : together with chapters on feeding, stabling, shoeing, and the practical treatment for sickness, lameness, etc: with a large number of recipes . 9 r*- plexion 05 o c *l » g CO cr •^j -r o ^ (R (X 5 £ zf crq p -1 )—I 1 p p 01 3 r^ -? n re B- 2 Pi 01 ap C P O E ^ 0 n c P 01 o e c 5 s- f £ 2. dq 5 ? g ^ E P 3 _ r^ P CR Ol andscava 5< -»• ~^ • 5* h !^ rc& H Q 5 cr ? o 2 ^ o 2 f=2. 3 JiT « c p p, Pi 3 o <-( mpha t; r. a pS c-t- Bp re (R g i o o r+ r+- o >3 o o ? ^ ^ £. cr p Ol » (jq <^ ^ 3 sr 5^ B ^ r ?-. Oi f3 o» XS O P Ml 03 Ol p s- 5 o f?. 888 DISEASES ATs^]) TIIETP. Tl^EATMENT. tend to be able to explain deiiuitt^ly the nature of the trouble; buttliey believed it was this, that, or somethinj^^, else, and the conse-qu(!nce was that the poor horse was liable to be tortured for hours, often killed, by cruelty or repeated dosing with remedies that werenot applicable to the case. WliiU; it is true a horse may show thesymptoms of colic, from a variety of causes, which would misleadthi> judgment of even good practitioners, it is so exceptional as tobe scarcely worth referring to here. Tt was stated in another part, by the writer, that he employeda -eterinary surgeon of unusual skill and experience, to instructlii)ii ill his method of treatment for the cure of such diseases asare most commoji an«1 dangerous to borses in this country, includ-ing the prescriptions used by him for the same. The first morning, while waiting in the office for the com-mencement of this instruction, the doctor came in hurriedly, say-ing, There is