518 
treatise on the care, treatment, See. 
“ ease a,,< ’ 
he Ion, enough to ISt IhZ Stl™’ «"> *-«* 
lar-reins, generally speaking, are not used in racin/stables 
to !he tuimber'of sta^lsf ,<3 raCkS ’ a peg unde ™ ea < b cotsponding 
divided into two^oinpartmen'tsl'one for'he ails’ Th t* ° ,lier I tbC | f ° rmer 
sored by quarts, insle'ad of pattern" COr “ ou Shttobe mea- 
sleeplm tlll e ° a “ d *' >Ur ' S " Jled s ‘ able sl,ould llave * "ttle in it, for a boy to 
I lie chief danger is, a horse getting himself cast Matlno-fiui a a 
level, and tying the collar-rein so short that the head cam of i 1°'™ 
upon the straw, are the preventives. d cannot be ,aid do '™ 
For horses addicted to this disagreeable and dangerous habit 
it Glinted tous °£? ^ f ° Und U8efoL We have also had ’ 
t ninted to us, that, as a horse gets cast during sleep or a state 
of unconsciousness, three or four links of a chain strained to one 
during the struggle,Tasini ofWslituadln before" hc-ge‘1 upon 
to shoeing, Mr. Darvill, with much reason, condemns 
" P lactlce of doing it in the stable, at a distance from the forge 
andtllX^tth b “‘ »"“* P-e«c, 
should not be made anxious, or kept waiting, on any such occasion’ '1'?“' 
ought to be a smith’s shop, with a shoeing stable adj^iZg, on ?he nremfses 
together, feed and do^etter’ thin they would'do^fk^t f Standin - 
horses, general,y speaking, not being g'ood felt " S ”« b 
the 1 hffpr S |° U d h - 110 ,10 , rses standin S in the same stable along with mares- 
tLirtd ,g> 1,1 SUCh S,tUati ° nS ’ ° fte « out of tender, and "off 
These extracts we deem valuable, because they are grounded in 
ClJato trrt and f eXperienCe ’ Should an y gentieman con- 
• smplate the formation of a racing establishment, we recommend 
