278 KENNELS AND KENNEL MANAGEMENT. 
in the field. Sometimes it is entirely committed to the care of 
the feeder, but every huntsman who knows his business will take 
as much pains with his hounds in kennel as out; and though he 
will not, of course, prepare the food, yet he will take care to super- 
intend it, and will always “draw” his hounds himself, for no one 
else can possibly know how to feed them. During the season 
this duty must of necessity devolve on the feeder or kennel-man 
SUN 
¢c _ Ff 
x<T 
Muir’s Ventilating Apparatus. u, }, ¢, d, the four divisions of shaft; ¢, f, board 
for distributing down-current. 
on the hunting days, but the huntsman should always carry it out 
himself whenever he can. Hounds cannot be too fond of their 
huntsman, and though “cupboard love” is not to be encouraged 
in man, yet it is at the bottom of most of that which is exhibited 
by the dog, however much it may appear to take a higher range 
when once it has been properly developed. 
The regular daily kennel discipline is as follows :—With the 
