The mode of administering it, and minor operations. SHOEING. — Its origin, its uses, and its varieties. THE TEETH. — Their natural growth, and the abuses to which they are liable. FOOD. — The fittest time for feeding, and the kind of food which... Warren Hastings: A Biography - Página 7por Lionel James Trotter - 1878 - 383 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Blanchard Jerrold - 1864 - 396 páginas
...and the abuses to which they are liable. FOOD,— The fittest time for feeding, and the kind of food which the horse naturally consumes. THE EVILS which...occasioned by modern stables. THE FAULTS inseparable from most present erections which are used as stables. THE SO-CALLED "INCAPACITATING VICES," which are the... | |
| Karl Theodor Griesinger - 1864 - 352 páginas
...and the abuses to which they are liable. FOOD.— The fittest time for feeding, and the kind of food which the horse naturally consumes. THE EVILS which...occasioned by modern stables. THE FAULTS inseparable from most present erections which are used as stables. THE SO-CALLED "INCAPACITATING VICES," which are the... | |
| Edward Mayhew - 1864 - 572 páginas
...VII. The faults inseparable from most present erections which are used as stables. 233 CHAPTER VIII. The so-called "incapacitating vices," which are the results of injury or of disease 268 CHAPTER IX. Stables as they should be 297 (XV) CHAPTER X. Grooms — Their prejudices, their injuries,... | |
| Edward Mayhew - 1865 - 574 páginas
...having done his duty toward the meekness which Beneficence has intrusted to his keeping. CHAPTER VIII. THE SO-CALLED "INCAPACITATING VICES," WHICH ARE THE RESULTS OF INJURY OR OF DISEASE. THE word " vice," when applied to the horse, represents any quality which may annoy the prejudices... | |
| Ármin Vámbéry - 1868 - 488 páginas
...from most present erectious which are used as stahlca. THE SO-CALLED "INCAPACITATING VICES," which arc the results of injury or of disease. STABLES as they...Their prejudices, their injuries, and their duties. HORSE DEALERS. — Who they are: their mode of dealing: their profits: their morality, and their secrets.... | |
| Antoine Frédéric Ozanam - 1868 - 322 páginas
...and the abuses to which they are liable. FOOD. — The fittest time for feeding, and the kind of food which the horse naturally consumes. THE EVILS which...occasioned by modern stables. THE FAULTS inseparable from most present erections which are used as stables. THE SO-CALLED "INCAPACITATING VICES," which are the... | |
| Ikhwān al-Ṣafāʼ - 1869 - 280 páginas
...are occasioned bymodern stables. THE FAULTS inseparable from most present erections which are used as stables. THE SO-CALLED " INCAPACITATING VICES," which...Their prejudices, their Injuries, and their duties. HORSE DEALERS.— Who they are: their mode of dealing: their profits: their morality, and their secrets.... | |
| Mrs. Manning (Charlotte Speir) - 1869 - 420 páginas
...occasioned by modern stables. THE FAULTS inseparable from most present erections which are used as stables. THE SO-CALLED " INCAPACITATING VICES," which...of injury or of disease. STABLES as they should be. G BOOMS - Their prejudices, their injurles, and their duties. HORSE DEALER".— Who they are: their... | |
| Edwin Clennell Leaton BLENKINSOPP - 1869 - 388 páginas
...and the abuses to which they are liable. FOOD. — The fittest time for feeding, and the kind of food which the horse naturally consumes. THE EVILS which...occasioned by modern stables. THE FAULTS inseparable from most present erections which are used as stables. THE SO-CALLED '' INCAPACITATING VICES," which are... | |
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