|
|A guaranteed remedy for harness galls, sores, grease heel, bleeding |
|ulcers, etc. It will arrest hemorrhage and check blood flow. Dirt and |
|dust cannot get into wounds, as the Powder forms a coating over them. |
| |
| |
|~PRATTS FLY CHASER~ |
| |
|Gives comfort to Horses and Cows. Insures more milk and prevents |
|annoyance at milking time to both the milker and the cow. Guaranteed to |
|satisfy. |
| |
| |
|Sold by 60,000 Pratts dealers. There is one near you. |
| |
| "~YOUR MONEY BACK IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED~" |
| |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Always go to a horseshoer who thoroughly understands the anatomy of
the horse's foot.
[Illustration: ~MORGAN HORSE~]
The hoof is not an insensitive mass of horn, to be cut, rasped, burned,
nail-pierced, and hammered without causing pain or injury. It is a thin
mass of horn overlying and intimately attached to a sensitive, blood and
nerve-endowed tissue called the "quick" which is capable of suffering
excruciating agony.
The slices should be made to fit the hoof and need to be reset once a
month.
The permanent teeth are forty--twenty-four grinders, twelve front teeth
and four tusks, except in mares, which seldom have tusks. The age of a
horse can be told more or less accurately by the teeth.
The teeth are liable to disease and should be closely watched.
Bad teeth are often an unsuspected cause of indigestion, loss of
condition, bad coat, slobbering and other troubles which puzzle the
owner. Horses very often have decayed teeth, and suffer with toothache.
These teeth should be removed.
~Horse Diseases~
If horses and cattle were left free to roam as Nature intended, many of
their present-day ailments would be unknow
|