General Management. 14¢ 
know the full extent of his or her responsibility ; and that 
though the charge is, as they may express it, “ dt a dog,” it 
is endued with imagination, instincts, and thought, has a 
language of its own, is sensible of neglect, harshness, yea, 
even cross looks on the part of those ministering to it, and 
to a degree rarely exhibited in other of the lower animals. 
The two then—the practitioner and nurse—acting in 
combination, and working to the same end, if they do not 
reap the desired reward of their labours, have at least the 
satisfaction of knowing they did their best for the patient 
under their care. 
