Breeder and sportsman . 0 yardsin length, setting a stake at each end. Then draw aline on either side of the first line, exactly parallelwith and 417 feet 2 inches from it. setting slakes ateither end of them. You will then have an oblongsquare 440 yards long and 834 Eeel - inches each end of these three lines you will now setstakes. Now fasten a cord or wire 417 feet 2 incheslong to the center stake of your parallelogram, andthen describe a half circle, driving stakes as oftenas you wish to set a fence-post. When ho circle ismade at both ends of your parallelogram you willhave two str


Breeder and sportsman . 0 yardsin length, setting a stake at each end. Then draw aline on either side of the first line, exactly parallelwith and 417 feet 2 inches from it. setting slakes ateither end of them. You will then have an oblongsquare 440 yards long and 834 Eeel - inches each end of these three lines you will now setstakes. Now fasten a cord or wire 417 feet 2 incheslong to the center stake of your parallelogram, andthen describe a half circle, driving stakes as oftenas you wish to set a fence-post. When ho circle ismade at both ends of your parallelogram you willhave two straight sides and two circles, which,ured three feet from the fence, will be exactly a turns should be thrown up an inch to the fool. Keeping the skin of (he horses clean enables themto sweat freely and thus is essential to their health. On his early training entirely depends a coltsusefulness and value as a horse and it should beginthe day he is foaled. 20 THE BREEDER AND SPORTSMAN [Saturday, February 27,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1882