. The dog in health and in disease [microform] : including his origin, history, varieties, breeding, education and general management in health, and his treatment in disease. Dogs; Dogs; Chiens; Chiens. i^i^A^i^.'fV EXERCISE AND TRAINING OP PUPPIES. habits and tendencies, do not usually do well together, one being generally a source of annoyance or worry to the other, soujetimes of positive danger from lighting. All problems are greatly complicated when several breeds are kept in the one kennel, even if separated. But if study is the main object, there is more to learn for him who has the


. The dog in health and in disease [microform] : including his origin, history, varieties, breeding, education and general management in health, and his treatment in disease. Dogs; Dogs; Chiens; Chiens. i^i^A^i^.'fV EXERCISE AND TRAINING OP PUPPIES. habits and tendencies, do not usually do well together, one being generally a source of annoyance or worry to the other, soujetimes of positive danger from lighting. All problems are greatly complicated when several breeds are kept in the one kennel, even if separated. But if study is the main object, there is more to learn for him who has the eye to see. BZBROXBII AND TRAININO OF FUPPmS. These subjects are so closely associated in practice that they may be treated together to some extent. We have already tried to show that tlie best exercise for a dog is that which fits him for his work, and that in the very nature of the case this nmst be taken in connection with that work. Such is Nature's method. The young car- nivora soon take part in catching, etc., the maimed ani. mals the parents bring home. An analysis of our own psychic life, complex as much of it is, compared with that of the dog, shows that a great part of our mental processes are not concerned with ab- stractions and generalizations of a very high order, but with actual concrete perceptions and conceptions; that we think in pictures rather than words; that our thoughts are the result of past associations; that the machinery of the mind or brain is so connected tliat when one part is moved, so to speak, a whole series of connections are es- teblished. Hence the psychic life of every creature must be related essentially to its past experiences. If this be true—and it can not be doubted—we think, then, the puppy's intelligence, like our own, begins to develop, and continues to do so exactly in relation to its. L. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and a


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectdogs, bookyear1895