-S!- 



direoted, to attach the appliance to the leg he paws with, re- 

 versing the straps when required, which will give a horse the 



To Frevent a Horae from Kicking or Pawing in tbe StAil, 



knowledge that when he paws he punishes himself, and the 

 reader will see, by this treatment, the habit speedily broken up. 



The habit of kicking in the stall is one that is not only dis- 

 agreeable to the owner of the horse addicted to it, but is often 

 destructive and costly, as a horse viciously inclined to that 

 habit will sometimes even splinter the boards of the stall, and 

 with so simple and effective a method of correcting the bad 

 habit it should never be tolerated for a single day, and the pos- 

 sessor of this book would be inexcusable should he suffer it to 

 continue in any animal owned by him. 



The habit of pawing in the stall, though not so vicious in its 

 nature as that of kicking, is yet sufficiently troublesome and un- 

 pleasant to deserve a speedy correction, and the owner of a 



