horse or cow with a nail or snag to take out, or to cast and 

 gentle any wild colt with and break it without getting hurt, 

 and make that wild colt safer all its life. To be cast easily, 

 tied properly, rolled over and over and perfectly conquered 

 at first is the best. 



I handle all wild horses best by casting them and re- 

 casting and sitting en them with robes or blankets and get 

 the fear all out of them. 



My ropes are the thing to cast a cow or mare with in dif- 

 ficult labor; turn them on their backs well tied and push 

 the calf or colt forward to get room; to get the head or legs 

 in position and no one get hurt. Many times such ropes 

 are badly needed if bowels are snagged and out; to cast a 

 large bull, or spay cows and heifers; to cut a wart off of a 

 kicking horse or cow. Casting them is the best way, when 

 it can be done so easily and safely, as this book plainly tells 

 you how to do it. 



$io.oo is very little money for what may save you $100 

 a year, and still be worth ten times their cost annually. 

 Five men can pay $2.00 each and save all costs the first 

 year and do safer and better work than you can hire it done. 

 Do it yourselves. 



Q. If a man wants to see this fellow that does all this 

 talking do the work, how can we see him? 



A. Only get him five or six bad ridglings to cut, near 

 you, and write him. 



Statistics of Agriculture for 1892 tell us that the United 

 States had 



15,498, 140 Horses, at $65.01 each $io,<-75»936-36 



2,314,699 Mules at $75.55 each 1,748,820.70 



16,416,351 Milch Cows, at$2i.4oeach S^^,/ 81 ^ 2 



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