144 ILLUSTRATED STOCK DOCTOR. 



be of oak, half an inch thick, and with strong iron bails, and to hold 

 fourteen quarts. The set of cleaning tools should be provided for every 

 two horses. Every stable should have two manure forks, one of steel and 

 one of wood, splint broom, a scoop shovel, and a wheel-barrow. With 

 these any stable may be kept clean, and if the eye of the master is kept 

 on the help, the horses will not suffer for want of care. And these essen- 

 tials to a stable, and the treatment suggested, are urged on the score of 

 economy. They^ay. We also urge them from humane considerations, 

 and those of neatness and system . In all respects kindness and attention 

 to a horse axe both satisfactory and remunerative. 



