SMALL COUNTRY STABLE. 



399 



D, a shed entry to render the stable warm in winter and 

 cool in summer. 



F, the flags covering the drains as before. 



G, the drains as before. 



H, H, H, H, windows, as before, eight feet from the ground, 

 extending to the ceiling, twelve feet high. 

 H, air-pipe and as before. 

 I, I, windows to 

 groom's chamber and feed- 

 room. 



J, J, doors to ditto. 

 Iv, K, doors, perpen- 

 dicularly divided, to the 

 stable and both the boxes, 

 all opening outwards. 



L, L, L, L, racks and 

 mangers as before, all of 

 enamelled iron. 



M, lire-place with boil- 

 er. 



Wire-net outside all 

 the windows. Saslies slid- 

 ing up and down in the 

 wall, with inside Venetian * 

 shutters. 



Box casings, doors, 

 &c., two-inch oak plank. 

 Instead of the cupola on 

 the plan, substitute Col- 

 lins' patent ventilators, as 

 on page 387. 



This is a perfect little gem of a stable, for a single man keep- 

 ing a groom and one pair of horses, and cannot, I think, by any 

 possibility be improved. 



The ground plan, section, &c., of this stable are draMu for 

 brick outside walls and first story partitions; the former 12 

 inches thick, and the latter 9 inches. Estimates are made for 

 both brick and M^ood ; the biicks are estimated at $8 per 1,000, 

 laid in the walls, which can be done when the first cost of the 



End Elevation. 



