"V T 7HILE a horse is doing his work 



* * in a satisfactory manner he should 



not be irritated by having his mouth 



jerked and the whip applied 

 Management 



for the driver s amusement. 

 It is a pity all women do not realize 

 that a horse will accomplish, with less 

 fatigue, much more work when taken 

 quietly than he will if fretted and tor- 

 mented by needless urging or restraint. 

 Constant nagging affects an animal in 

 the same way as it does a human be- 

 ing; and though a horse is usually sub- 

 jected to such treatment through want 

 of thought, it is none the less exasper- 

 ating to him. 



One result of this ordeal is that it 



