STABLES as they should be.
GROOMS.—Their prejudices, their injuries, and their duties.
HORSE DEALERS.—Who they are; their mode of dealing; their profits; their morality, and their secrets.
POINTS.—Their relative importance, and where to look for their development.
BREEDING.—Its inconsistencies and its disappointments.
BREAKING AND TRAINING.—Their errors and their results.
CARRIAGES.—Their cost; their make; their excellences and their management.
SADDLERY, HARNESS, AND STABLE SUNDRIES.—Of what these consist; their application and their preservation.
Mr. Mayhew's ILLUSTRATED HORSE DOCTOR, and his companion volume, THE ILLUSTRATED HORSE MANAGEMENT, should be in the possession of all who keep horses.