MAYHEW (EDWAKD) ILLUSTRATED- 



HOESE MANAGEMENT. — Containing descriptive 

 remarks upon Anatomy, Medicine, Shoeing, Teeth, 

 Food, Vices, Stables; likewise a plain account of the 

 situation, nature, and value of the various points ; 

 together with comments on grooms, dealers, breeders, 

 breakers, and trainers ; Embellished with more than 406 

 engravings from original designs made expressly for this 

 work. By E. Mayhew. A new Edition, revised and 

 improved by J. I. Lupton, M.E.C.V.S. 8vo. 12s. 



Contents. — The body of the horse anatomically 

 considered. Physic. — The mode of administering it, 

 and minor operations. Shoeing. — Its origin, its uses, 

 and its varieties. The Teeth. — Their natural growth, 

 and the abuses to which they are liable. Food. — The 

 fittest time for feeding, and the kind of food which the 

 horse naturally consumes. The evils which are 

 occasioned by modern stables. The faults inseparable 

 from stables. The so-called " incapacitating vices," 

 which are the results of injury or of disease. Stables 

 as they should be. Grooms. — Their prejudices, their 

 injuries, and their duties. Points. — Their relative im- 

 portance, and where to look for their development. 

 Breeding. — Its inconsistencies and its disappointments. 

 Breaking and Training. — Their errors and their results. 



DAUMAS (E.) HORSES OF THE 



SAHARA, AND THE MANNERS OF THE DESERT. 

 By E. Daumas, General of the Division Commanding 

 at Bordeaux, Senator, &c. &c. With Commentsjies by 

 the Emir Abd-el-Kadir (Authorized Edition). 8vo. 6s. 



" We have rarely read a work giving a more picturesque 

 and, at the same time, practical account of the manners and 

 customs of a people, than this bookonthe Arabs and their horses." 

 — Edinburgh C our ant. 



