210 APPEXDIX. 



no man lias au}' right to give medicine until he 

 ffllj ascertains what the disease is. This he 

 can easily get at if he will pay some attention 

 to the symptoms which are so plainly descrihed 

 in this work. As soon as your horse commences 

 to complain, watch him closely and you will 

 find him to point out to you plainly what the 

 disease is, and you will find the horse to point 

 it out to a hair's hreadth as I have described it 

 to you. 



Why is it that men will toil and labor hard 

 through the summer's heat, and expose them- 

 selves to the extreme cold in winter, and at the 

 end of the y^r perhaps, will lose more in horse 

 flesh than they have made. Millions of dollars 

 are lost yearly in horses and a great part of it 

 ibr the want of carefulness and paying some at- 

 tention to the diseases of the horse, which costs 

 no man any hard labor or exposure. Let me 

 urge upon you the importance of reading this 

 work over again and again, paying attention to 

 it as you peruse it over, and you will find it 

 gives you such information as each and every 

 person should have for his own interest. I will 

 here state that an ounce of preventative is a 



