/ TUFTS UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES 3 9090 013 408 683 Webster Family Library of Veterinary Medicine Cummings School of Veterinary iVIedicine at Tufts University 200 Westboro Road North Grafton, MA 01 536 G We^aAay dro'Ui THE HORSE'S RESCUE. BY GERARD DOAN, FOE FOaTY-GNE YEAKS A WOttKEtt ON THE HORSE. " I don't go much on religion, For I never liavo Jiad any sliow, But I've p:ot a mighty tight grip oa The tow things that I know." *4fe4r%4i^ NEW YORK: PUBLISHED BY THE AUTHOR. 1882. ^/vS Entered according to Act of Conp:ress in the year 1882, • By GERARD DOAN, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington. INTRODUCTORY. Of course all scientific men of advanced and devel- oped minds well know it is necessary to have refer- ences in order to introduce any great science with success ; and at this daj it requires noted men, men of good standing, men of honor, men that have been tried, men that are located and well established, in order for references to carry an}'- influence with them. There have been all kinds of humbugs, as they are called by some. The people have been duped in so many ways that it has become almost impossible to introduce a good thing ; and after reading this work through you will be convinced of that fact. In this work there has been but a very small part told. The financiering necessary in order to make a center or focus of this great science, and to get it introduced in some great center of science, where we could get reliable and scientific men for references — men that were known all over the world nearly — for this science extends round the wide worJd, everywhere the horse has ever had his feet ironed. After many years of hard labor this was accomplished. This firm is known as D. M. Osborn k Co., with which the well-known inventors and scientific men are connected, Cyrenus Wheeler, Mr. Kirby, and 0. H. Burdick. Such men as these are not going to give themselves away by allowing their names to be used to back up any INTRODUCTORY. science without knowing what they are about. They nil liave liad and seen this woi'k done and watclied the result, and many others in Auburn city. This is where this 2:reat center of science is located of D. M. Osborn & Co.; this is where tlie great center of tliis horse science is now well established, and this is to be one of the great centers; this, too, must, like all other businesses, in order to be successful, be systematized and introduced on the principles of science. I could give you scores of names to back this work up — some are many miles- away, and some hundreds, where I have worked and my brothers in different places on the horse. That is not necessary, as Auburn city is to be the center. I will give you a few men's names that will be worth more than a score of some, and here they are. After vou read this work carefullv through, and look at your horse, you can easily see how this all is. I could get hundreds of names to put in this work, if it was the biggest humbug that was ever written, by ask- ing them. To prove this work to be a valuable one, test it ; then you will know ; you always will be in the dark unless you do. The trouble is and always has been that nearly all have learned this science out of selfish motives ; they would keep it all to them- selves in order to make money fast out of it. This is not my intention. I want all to know how this work is done. I will show and teach all mankind. If I would not be willing to do this, this book is wrongly named. This book is the teacher. I do not know as I can work on the horse much more. My health is failing fast; persecution and abuse have had something INTRODUCTORY. 7 to do with its failing. I will go back to my bo3^hood days and show you where I and all others must begin. The first mechanical work I ever did in my life Was to make a sled out of shingles, my tool was a jackknife. With a rickety knife I borfid the runners through, It was all the tool I had, 'twas the best that I could do. The next job for me to see what luck I would have to make A small bundle of ax-helves T would undertake; Of course these were all small children's toys — I was just like all other children and little boys. I made small ships, sloops, and every kind of boat ; In my mother's rainwater trough I set them afloat,; After a while I traded off some of my toys, And got a gimlet of one of the neighbors' boys. Then I must make a sled that would be of use of boards With this gimlet the lioles tlirough the runners I bored ; There must be more tools added to my kit, I cannot make the holes la?^ enough with this gimlet bit. These holes in these runners must bigger be. Or it will not be strong enough to hold up me ; These holes must be made bigger by running a hot iron through- It must be made strong enough to hold up two. After making several sleds in this way They did not suit. They had to be repaired every day. They were poor and rickety things at the best — Were soon all in pieces, but a few days they'd last. On this sled business there must be some improvement made; Some of us boys will get hurt with these sleds, I am afraid. They must have the beams cut in the top like a dove's tail, And a board put all over the top and all solid nail. This proved safer and a great deal better to be, Now two could ride in safetj^, sometimes three. I had learned quite a good deal at the sleigh-making trade When tlus improvement on my sleiglis I iiad made. 8 — - INTRODUCTORY. The next improvement was frame with pin beams, Like those 3-ou see drawn around with ox teams. Next I made wlih mortise and tenon, beam, and knee, Qiute a sleigli maker I was getting to be. "Wagons and carts I made and improved in ^Jiis way, And some had to be repaired nearly every day. If any of these wagons or sleighs should happen to break They would come 10 me for repairs or new ones I must make. I had quite a business in that line and trade ; I made the girls and boys happy — no charges I made. It was plenty pay enough for me them to sec. After I had got their work done, how happy they would be! There were trades of other kinds I was learning too — Of my mother T learned to knit, mend, and sew. My mother has got feather tick pillows I made the first I learned to sew, Them I made for her over forty-five years ago. Shirts, pants, vests, and all kinds in that line of trade, "When I was a small boy I repaired and n&W 1 made; Pants and vest I cut and other garments, and made them too, To cut and make a coat that I never tried to do. To know how to do this work has been of use to me— I could mend my own clothes no nnatter where I would be; I have been where I have mended other's while to bed they had to go, For this reason — they tliemselves did not know how to sew. The cap trade I took up— I had lots of little brothers; they did » « surround. I must make them some caps. For foundation I used old straw hats' crown. The first I made was round on top, covered with green, Cut goring with a button on top. It was the funniest cap ever was seen. The next cap I made the foundation on top was flat Of course T had to make my work to fit that. The cloth that I made it of was dark blue. That was a nicer color, and the 'style was better too. INTRODUCTOIiy. 9 These caps the front piece was made of old boot le^, Each one covered with the same cloth it was made. These caps -were both lined with different colors too; They were very good caps — it was then the best J could do. The shoemakers trade I must try that work to do. No lasts I had ; them first I will have to make too. The children's feet all vary in many different degree, And 1 must liav a pair that will fit me. In an old woodshed these lasts wore made With an ax and an old jackknife blade ; "With my gimlet I bored the holes through To make a place to pull the last out of the shoe. A string I tied in the hole to pull out the last, For sometimes I would get my shoes all pegged fast I got along very well for a while in this way ; 1 would like* to hav a hook to pull the last — sometime I may. My pegging awl and pegs them I all made » "When I commenced first to work at the shoemaker's trade, After my kit and stock all rigged I had got. In my father's old kitchen 1 opened my shop. My father had a large family. There was always leather round, Go up garret at any time there it could bo found, "With five or six little brothers all gathered around me. How tins work was going to be done they all wanted to see. Thiough the course of the day I had made some progress at this trade — I had repaired several pair of shoes — no charges I mader As we sat m front of the old fireplace in a half circle round, My father was a chopper. He came in with his ax and with us sat down. My father was as hard working man as ever you see, ^ He soon had his lap full of children — two on each knee. After working all day in the woods in the cold, All the evening this lap full of children he would hold. 10 INTRODUCTORY, The children gathered round hira, showed hun the woric I had done. He said to me, If you can do as well as that you had better keep on. This of course encouraged and very much pleased me, My work was bein^ appreciated by him, I could see. My father was a good farmer — all kinds of that work he understood^ — And all the work he did he always did good. His word could always be relied on no matter where he would be; An honester, kmder- hearted man no man ever see. My father never tried much mechanical work to do — Make beetles, his ox sleds with wood he could shoe. To dress a beef or hog, and all worlc of that kind, No better man for that in the country could they find. He always had something every day to do, No matter how cold, how much the snow and wind blew. For him to work there was never a day too cold. And this he kept up until he was very old. He kept right on one steady course, you can see, As pro*vider for liis family no better could be. Through cold winds and drifting snow, out all day in the cold, Nights in this half circle a lap full of children he would hold. I was next oldest of this large family of boys; I had plenty of work all of the time to keep them in toys; There was eleven boys in this family grew up to be men; Seven boys first, then two girls, then boys again. There were two boys that died when they were quite young. I assure you to support this family, some work had to be done. A truer and better man in a family than my father could not be^ How he carried this heavy load has always puzzled me. It was all done by hard knocks, the sweat of the brow ; If you want to know how it was done, ask him ; he can tell you how. My father was a large, powerful, strong-built man ; To do better work, and more in a day, very few can. He supported his own family, and helped others too. And this, wlierever he could^ he was always ready to do. INTRODUCTORY.' IT I have seen him on trees chopping, that was four feet through ; All aloue, coat, vest, and liat off, no matter how hard the wind blew. And this, too, after he had got to be quite old. I never heard him say, I cannot go to the woods to-day, it is too cold. Day after day to the woods to chop he would go, And his hair had got to be now as white as the snow. And at night he would by this old fireplace sit down, "With his children help form a half circle around. First there must be a big back-log put on, And that too he almost invariably done. I have thought what fools on this earth some folks must be ; Such a man as that his worth they cannot see. ' He would work early and late, and it was not for gold ; He would suffer himself to feed and shelter others from the cold My poor father passed away many years ago. Whether he will be rewarded in the next life I do not know. I would as lief take his chance as any man I ever see. To be a better man than he was I can't see how it could be. The course he took, it always seemed right to me ; And never in life did he and I ever disagree. We did business together for a very long time ; A more honorable, honest man no man can find. To forget my father, that will be impossible to be. His life must always be stamped indelible with me; And after I pass from this life, if him I do not see, In the next life, heaven will be no heaven to me. When I was a small boy, to help my father I would try; I would make him some ax-helves, them he all had to buy, I made a lot, put them up garret in a barrel to dry ; There is no telling what a boy can do if he \vill try. My father used up many ax-helves, you must know; There was many ways they would give, and sometimes by a misblow. This stock of ax- helves I did not show him or have them around; They were not dry yet, in a short time them I see he had found. 12 INTRODUCTORT. Them T see were going to be of use and help to him, Then making ax-helves I went at it again. Of these I kept on hand a small supply, AVhile my helves could be found in the barrel no helves would he buy. Somewhere about this time I went to learn the blacksmith trade : At that time I was about fourteen years of age , To go to work at that busmess my father opposed it some; That is very hard business, I am afraid you are too young. I was very anxious to learn a trade, some place to find To learn the blacksmith trade, T had not thought of, that was not the kind. The carpenter's trade, when I was a boy, was- what I wanted to learn. It is curious sometimes how quick our course is turned. • At this at first I commenced on a very small scale. The first thing I tried to make was a horse nail. Small hammers, jewsharps, hooks to catch the trout^ I made. Repaired old gun-locks, put in tubes and jackknife blades. Of this kind of work I always had some on hand to do. In order to learn this trade I must always be trying something new. To make a gun, that, too, I must try and see if could make. I got along very well, all but the mainspring, that would break. Several locks for this gun I made, all new ; The mainspring would break, the very best I could do. How many springs I made, of course I do not know ; There was a great many : every time I tried them, clung they would ga I learned in springs the temper must very low be. After making and breaking many you can see, And the steel varies to a very great degree. That, too. I did not know at that time; thai bothered me. I did learn after a long time these sprmgs to make. And could do it very quick, and they would not break. No receipt can be laid down that is good for tempering steel; In all degrees steel varies quite a great deal. Many different kinds of mechanical work I have tried to do; The art of taking likenesses, that I have worked at U)0. INTRODUCTORY. 13 At the time when the chemicals we all made, I did not work at that long, I did not hke that trade. For many reasons, of them I will give you a few; They all wanted me to make handsome pictures, that I could not do. There always would be a lot standing or sitting a^ound: Find fault with these pictures they would, or the background. They all wanted a handsome picture, all the same, young and old. A good likeness of themselves was quite hard to be sold. Ko matter how dark the sitter was, they all must be white; To suit them they must be nearly burned up with the light. Then they must all be painted, and colored up, too; Unless they were daubed in this way they would not do. I got tired of taking good pictures to spoil in this way, About that kind of business I shall have qo more to say. A carriage I can make ; iron, pamt, stripe, and trim it, too. Houses I have painted and worked on ; some I have built new. The mason trade, I never did much of that kind. To be a good mason, it wants some practice, I find. I have plastered and laid quite a good deal of stone wall ; To build a chimney of brick, that stuck me the worst of alL To build a nice chimney, it is quite a knack to do ; To have the brick all lie level and carry it up true. To build only one brick chimney in my life did I try, And that was all daubed and winding before it was two feet high. I could not keep it true, do the best I could do, So I plastered it inside and out ; the smoke could get through. To know how to do this work has always been of use to mo. There was always some work to do, no matter where I would bo. It all kept me busy, and I was learning, too. What does r. man amount to with nothing to do ? Nearly all of these trades I dropped oif, one by one ; Some I dropped off many years ago, when I was quite young. The horses' feet nearly all of my life I have worked ou, And at that yet I have not got done. 14 INTRODUCTORY. Nearly all kinds of saws, them I liave worked on, too; To make a saw, that I never tried to do. I have tiled, set, gummed, and re-tecthed some new; Circulars to work on is quite a science, and keep them true. Not much work did I ever do at the harness trade, Only repair ; once a bridle, martingales, circingle I made. At the machinist business, that, too, I have turned my hand; The principles to do that work on T quite well understand. If you want to make a machine, and have it good work do, From the center you must work, and make all true. One great center you must liave, that you ought to know, And all must run iu harmony, or to pieces it will go. It is the same with the horse, if you will look }'ou can see, For him to move well, in harmony of action all must be. On him for many years I have spent nearly all of my time, For he needs help, he is a great sufferer, I find. There are a great many kinds of work I have done and understock. Of course T had learned something before I could write a book. The science on the horse is all I ever perfect made, And to do that T had to leave behind every other trade- On them, others have sailed far in advance of me in their line; For this reason, ray time lias been spent on the horse, you. find-; A man cannot carry along so many trades and excel, If ho perfects only one in life he will do very well. To write poetry is quite a science, too, I find ; To make all run smooth, and make all rhyme. Five parts have got to be carrried at the same time; Compose, spall, write, convey, and make all rhyme. After writing awhile I think at that I can do well: What bothers me the most is to all words spell. There are so many things that all have the same name, If I do not spell them all right, I ought not to be to blame. My main object in writing this book is tiie liorse to rescue; And if you will read it. and study the horse, that it will do ; And after you have learned this science no man can fool you Much on stiff horses ; if they do it will be only on a few. SCIENTIFIC ^VORKS OF GERARD DOAN ON THE HORSE. By experience and experimenting for forty-one years, by practical work as a horseshoer, by study- ing the natural horse and all of the changes from the natural to the unnatural, and their effect in all of the different changes, I find the noble animal, roan's and woman's favorite, in a suffering and deformed con- dition, which I shall explain in this work, and stand ready to demonstrate and teach to seekers after knowledge and the truth. Everything is a mystery until it comes to light; then it becomes a common thing when understood, like the telegraph, and all things, man being a progressive being. The seekers after knowledge get it; that is the way this great discovery was made, through great mental and practical labor, and with but little help or reward. A large part of my hard-earned money has been used to perfect this work, but it is the long-winded horse that wins the race. Right here, I will say, I will introduce the principles laid down in this book or die a pauper. They are all facts, and have been demonstrated hundreds of times by J. J. Doan, of Auburn city, Cayuga Co., N. Y., and by Oliver Doan, of the same place. They are skillful operators. The horses are all, or nearly all, that 16 THE horse's rescue. have been shod one year, changed from natural, more or less, some way; it being the natural conse- quence, it not being natural for the liorse to have l;is feet ironed. When the horse gets stiff or lame, he is called by the ignorant, foundered. They think or talk that they had watered or fed them to warm, or fed them too much. All the argument they can bring is, he was stiff after thev had fed or watered him. Al- most all men water and feed their horses three times a dav, and it must be soon after the feed if ever they get stiff. This word "founder " has been in use for hun- dreds of years, and, for all of that, it has no meaning; it does not tell how and where the animal is affected^ only he is lame and stiff, he is incurable. So say the ignorant pretenders to great wisdom on the horse. This stiffness is classed in four different kinds of founder — water, grain, plank, and chest founder Some said they are affected one way and some in another; all disagree, and none cure or remove the cause. I differ with them all I have long known what ailed these horses, and can remove the cause, and will explain it all in this work, and pro- duce plenty of honest and scientific men that have had and seen it done; and, as strange as it may appear, it requires no medicine to do this wonderful woik. Re- move the cause, and nature repairs the damages. This work is confined to the feet, tracmg cause to ef- fect and effect to cause. I might as well say here what removing the cause does. It lets nature have a chance to repair damages ; it does its work very quick; it cures water, grain, chesty and plank founder; perished shoulders ; it straightens THE horse's rescue. 17 the leg, called the tip-knee ; straightens cocked ankles , cures corns, coffin-joint lamenesses, the ambler, shuffler, spring-halt ; horses that hop behind when speeding ; the single-footer. These names are known and understood by horsemen. It removes all air puffs from the horse, and makes him the perfect natural horse. These clianges are not seen only by a very close observer of long practical experience. It took me a long time. It was clothed and buried in mystery. The first horse I ever shod was a cripj^le. One foot was so bad it could not be shod ; I have shod cripples ever since, and they are all over the woi'ld, so far as I have been. There have been hundreds of books written on the horse, and they seem to be the same thing continued — doctoring the effect; finding a sore place, and making it worse. It is not my intention in this work to travel that old field over again, and rehearse all of the cruelty and barbarism that I have seen practiced on the already suffering horse, called doctoring. My intention is to introduce something to relieve suffering. I said I use no medicine to cure these horses. For fear you may think I perform some surgical operation, I will state here I do nothing of the kind. I do not draw blood on the horse ; it is hard work to do it, but it is busi- ness. It's no miracle or miraculous thing ; it is science. I use these words, founder, ambler, single-footer, and other names, or people would not understand what I am talking about. The fact is, it is all summed up in these words : Horses are changed from natural in many ways and many stages, which I will explain on principles which will not lie. 18 THE HORSF/s liESCUE. This work will be arranged on scientific principlef?, with a foundation and superstructare that will stand, based, ns it is, on truth, facts, and principles that men cannot supersede, if thej equal. These principles j^ou have got to know. To cure tlie horse, you must make him natural. I have read some books on the horse, but I could find nothing in them to clear the fog away, no svstem. There were receipts to cure these difficulties the horse was in, which I well knew were of no kind of use, onlv to make bad worse. I continued mv search. It has been a hard road to travel so far. I am getting off of the subject ; I do not want to write my life in this work. I will explain in this work the effect in all of the different changes, changing back to natural. 1 do not intend, for the sake of making a large book, to write much more than enough to convey what I want to on the horse ; the simpler and less complicated, the easier learned and understood. For fear the reader mif^ht misconstrue what I have written before, I will say here I do not mean to be understood that 1 will make all of these lame and deformed horses natural; there are some that are past help, and this work does not take up blemished horses, such as ring-bones and spavins, curb-splints, thorough-pins. I pronounce the ring-bone incurable; it is a bone affection, and the spavin the same. Ring-bone destroys the structure of the foot; they can be relieved some by shoeing and dressing the foot, for which I may give directions in this work. Wlien horses are blemished — the kind 1 have mentioned — they have lost two-thirds of their value, no matter how much they were valued, as it brings them all down on a par, save the clean-limbed, and that THE horse's rescue. 19 will be business enough. It is not the intention of this work to keep up this changing back to natural, but it will have to be done many years before the people will learn these principles, and there are millions of horses in all stages of suffering; some are there and some have just started. It will be a long time before this will be understood. Iris not the intention of this work to keep up the curing stiff and lame horses; the preventive is what I want to teach and introduce; but before the owner can prevent he must know how to cure; then, in this case, he has the preventive that I will explain about in the course of this work, scientifi- callv. A FEW REMARKS IN DEFENSE OF THE ABUSED AND WRONGED HOKSE-SHOER. — THE QUALIFICATIONS HE NEEDS TO MAKE HIM A GOOD ONE. He should weigh about one hundred and seventy- five pounds, his working weight; five feet seven inches tall, size around under his arms forty inches, broad- shouldered, short-necked, something like a bull; mus- cle and strength equal to the best well-fed stallion ; a large amount of courage, physical force, firmness, and resolution; an inexhaustible amount of patience, so as to enable him to come to time when he is kicked across the shop, or turned a summersault; his head should liave a reasonable amount of brains ; he should have a mild and passive nature, so he can stand perse- cution without showing any signs of anger when he is told twenty times a day, by Jones or Tom or Jirn, or that old "They say," the father of all lies, that he lias spoilt his horse, and he can never set 20 ' " THE HORSES RESCUE. another shoe for him, when the fault is more their own than the smith's, and no fault of either ofttimes, if it was understood, which I will show and explain in this work. There is no business that tries man's powers of endurance equal to that of horse-shoeing, and no class of mechanics so poorly paid, according to labor performed. He is expected to be there at his post, always pleasant, with a smile on his face when three or four wild colts arrive to be shod, or a vicious stallion, sometimes two or three, and often twenty and more; all want to get home to dinner. These colts never had a foot raised from the ground ; if they have it has been with a rope tied to it, and jerked at a while ; they call that breaking them for shoeing, when the fact is the owner dare not even take up afoot; yet the shoer is expected to get through this difficult task in time for dinner; during this time there are more arrivals, two or' three old offenders, for the after-part of the day ; a lot of old cripples, so tortured on their feet that they can hardly stand, caused by ironing their feet ; and yet he is expected to cure these old de- formed horses, or he is no mechanic. They 'ride him parf of the afternoon : the balance is filled up with the old offending kickers and strikers. They rise up on your knees, and throw nearly all of their weight on you repeatedly ; and finally they smash down on your bio- toes, and off goes the nails; mine has been smashed off so much there is but little left. ^ nd all this is ex- pected to be endured for a miserable existence. Imag- ine the shoer's feelings, and this is to be endured daily until he is broken down, and crippled worse than the horse, at about forty years of age. He has put his THE horse's rescue. 21 strength against thousands of horses and mCiles, and it is surprising to me that shoeis last as long as they do If you want your horse well shod, give your shoer plenty of time to do it, and pay hiia well; for no man can do a good job,, at any kind of business, if he is hurried, and goes blundering along. Ironing the horse's foot is, or should be, the most scientific piece of mechanical work ever done ; and yet it is but glim- meringly understood. "No one is to blame ; all are studying and trying their level best to find their way out of tliis entanglement, and I have been in that same fix for vears. Nine years previous to the date of this work I " dug out," which I will show in the course of this work. The shoer is expected to do what is impossible for him to do, and it is unjust to blame him or hold him re- sponsible for your horse in any way, for many reasons. In the first place, he does not have your horse in his care, neither does he drive him. He shoes him and he is gone, and the owner takes no care of his feet. Perhaps he exchanges for another, cr sells him — that is going on all the time, and always will be. The shoer does the best he can. The horse comes to him, his leet dry and hard-shrunken. He pares his feet and irons him. This treatment will spoil all cupping feet. In fact, there is no use trying to lay down any princi- ples to iron the horses feet to prevent him from chang- ing from natural, for he is traveling on unnatural feet all of the time, unless he is dfead. There has been a large amount of talk about shoes, and all to no pur- pose. There are no curing properties in shoes. There is one principle that helps a little if proper care is 22 THE horse's rescue. taken of the foot, and that but very few will do. I saw at the Centennial quite a number of horses' hoofs with pi'inted papei's on them. I read tliem. This was on them all, "Caused b}'' impi-oper shoeing." Same old stor3^ I am not going to spend my time and fill up this book with a lot of trash tliat has been talked and written for hundreds of years — a large amount of talk, but little knowledge that has been any benefit to the suffeiing horse. KINDS OF FEET. I will make a few remarks on the horses' foot — how to select. There are four kinds of feet on colts be- fore thev have been ironed ; then thev commenc=;j to change and assume all kinds of shapes hard to de- scribe; and it matters not what shape they are in, I shall show in this work I change them back to the natural one ; that is, put the colt's foot on the horse. That is what I want to teach. The foot halE way between the large flat foot and cupping foot is the best, for this reason: It ex- pands from the weight of the horse. The cup foot con- tracts faster. The large flat foot expands too much with the weight of the horse. The large peck-measui-e foot is poorest of all. It has too much membrane; it is too heavy, and changes quicker; it is moi-e liable to get sore by ironing. They are all good enough for me, as I can do what I want with them. That is what I want to teach ; that is what all ought to know. HOW TO RAISE UP A GOOD STRAIGHT HORSE. Tliis is the most important of all. The horse, while growing up from a colt, is neglected, not intentionally. THK irOIlSE's HESCtJE. 23 but through ignorance in regard to his feet, and the effect it has. By tliis neglect his hoofs are allowed to growiu all shapes. They need trimming, and to be kept in their proper shape. A long toe does not affect the colt as much as it does the shod horse, for this reason : the structure of the foot is nearly all in harmony on the flat foot ; on the cup foot it is different ; the wall is thicker; it does not wear off as fast. I have seen a few, and shod them, that were stiff, that never had a shoe on. Tliis kind should have their feet cared for, pared down heel and toe. The flat-foot seldom needs paring on the bottom, but his feet should be trimmed. Take him on the floor, hold or strap up one foot, take a chisel and mallet, trim all of his feet, rasp them tiue ; see if he can stand with his forward feet back of straight, see if he stand well back on his hind feet, and keep him so. If you want to see if your colt is growing up straight and natural, and the structure of his feet natural, look at the top of the heel. The heel is double. If the two parts are not even, the structure is changed from natural, and should be changed back. On all, or nearly all, horse kind the outside wall grows the fastest, and is the thickest and strongest. The growth raises the outside ; that throws too much weight on the inside, and warps or pushes up the inside heel Look your horse over. You can equalize the weight by-dressing the bottom. You can easily tell how this should be done if you look. This unequal weight pro- duces the same effect on colts that it does on shod horses — the same unnatural strain on the back tendons — warping the foot or pushing up the inside heel, which turns out the toes and causes the ankles' to turn 24 THE HORSE S RESCUE. in, and that makes the horse interfere. He cannot move well. The same effect is produced from the same cause if he is run over the opposite ; it turns his toes in, his ankles out The fact is, his heels should always be kept as even at the top as possible. This keeps the foot nearly on a straight line. The point of the frog is the guide. Make a true circle from that point each way after you have got the heels even at the top. This will stop more horses from interfering than all the tinkering ever done. Of course there should be judgment used in dressing the foot. A long, pointed- toe is not natural either on the horse's forward or hinder feet. Keep the feet natural as near as possible. The fact is, the colt grows up crooked for the want of proper care, the raisers being ignorant in regard to this fact, which I well know. Look at your colts, not at pictures of horses, if you want to study the horse. If you will read this book carefully, you will see these facts as plain as I do, and can talk horse as well. I have been told that I have broken myself down bawling "horse." My lungs are the soundest part of me. I could talk this twenty times faster than I can write it. Talk comes with the knowledge; quite a number of exceptions to that rule. One thing my mouth was made for is to talk. To return to the subject: I have straightened hun- dreds of colts' feet, although they had grown up de- formed and crooked. The colt comes to the shoer in this condition, run over, both toes out, sometimes all. or in. On forward legs, they come with knees thrown together, ankles on hind feet run over the opposite THE horse's rescue. 25 throwing ankles out when moving forward feet pointing on two opposite lines, hind feet traveling in two opposite lines, ofttimes so bad that the lines cross each other six feet from the starting-point; head going on straight line. The horse gets fre- quently a jerk on the mouth for his awkwardness. If he should happen to blunder he would be likely to get thrashed. Then the shoer takes a scurfing for not making that horse move well. " He is an old botch." He tries another. He is told Wood, or Doan may be, can shoe him so he can travel all right. The colt goes the rounds, and the result is not good. Before I get thi'ough this work I will clear some of that fog away. This ends my treatise on the colt A FEW REMARKS ON SELECTING A GOOD HORSE FOR MYSELF. There are many diverse tastes and different opin- ions and judgments in regard to the horse, so I will select one for myself. For the road I like a rangy horse, about ten hundred weight ; foot half way be- tween the cup and large flat foot; short from fetlock down; large arm; heavy cords; leg tapering to the foot ; forward legs well back under ; that is, points of shoulders projecting well over ; not very wide between legs; thin withers; long, thin, arched neck, well cut out under the threat; light, clean head; large, full eyes ; short, straightish back ; broad hips ; round body ?* no curb joints. I never saw a horse too full at the breast to suit me; flat leg; middling straight hind leg, tapering to the feet; ribbed up close; full of courage and ambition. My favorite color is dark 26 THE horse's rescue. mahogany bay ; black legs, mane, and tail. In choos- ing a horse it depends something on what use you want to put him to. There is a variety of horses in shnpe, all good. The creator iias taken as much pains in making the horse as it has making mankind, and there are about as many different forms and colors. I never saw a perfect idiot, looking the whole race over. I have seen lots of fools driving horses, and worse than fools. I am come to their rescue. The horse is a slave, if that word has any meaning ; and I think it has.' There is no animal that is abused and suffers equal to the noble animal, the horse. He is tied up by his head, covered with foam and perspira- tion, panting for breath, in cold^ bleak winds, witliout feed or water, while the driver is sitting by a com- fortable fire. Perhaps the clothing nature provided for him is all sheared off. Thus he is expected to stand until his driver is readv for another lide. If he gets in the stable daring the long, cold night, he will be lucky, and gets any water or feed. All foam and sweat, there he shivers. In the morning you can see him covered with frost. Such cruelty as that is hard for me to see and not try to do all that is in my power to relieve his suffering. Knowing as I do the pain he has to endure, and its causes, and then sit down and not do my level best to help him, I think it would be wrong. My nature is such that it causes me to suffer with them; and I do suffer intensely, too. If I did not know how to relieve them, perhaps I would feel differ- ent. Nearly all of my life has been spent in doing all I could to relieve this noble animal's suffering, and THK SORSE'S rescue. 27 I have relieved it in a small degree. But it was only in a small field that I could work compared with this wholesale torturing that is going on. I am fiftv-five years of ao^e ; mv health is orivins: out • I feel I am getting stiff, too. I have laid the ham- mer down to write this woik to still keep up the bat- tle to free the suffering horse, and to see if I can work a larger field and on a better plan to introduce this great discovery that has cost me so much mental and physical labor for forty-one years. If I fail to introduce it, and let it be buried again, I have made a failure of life after all. The horse suffers greatly in many ways. The cause of the greatest suffering is in his feet. That I will explain and teach. I have not quit yet, nor ever will, while I am alive. I do not know as I shall after I am what they call dead. I shall be at the front under all circumstances. No matter how much the op- position, 3'ou will find me at my post. If you want to know something of the suffering of the horse,- if you ever had the toothach® bad, you can judge a little. That is no comparison to what the horse suffers* There is nothing it can be compared to. I v^^ill tr}^ to convey something of it, which I well know I have not the power. To begin, the structure of the foot is chanD:ed from natural in many ways and in many different stages. Ponder, think ! Can this take place without an effect? I well know it cannot. All men must see this. I ap- peal to all thinking naturalists and scientific men for their aid to help introduce this work. There are three Doan brothers. Thev have been battling: for 28 THE horse's rescue. years against a power of opposition. I assure you we are not ignorant of our surroundings. All great things are small at the beginning. An}^ great science like this is in advance of the age. The craft is in danger. This great discovery looms up head and shoulders over all. I return to the suffering horse; I cannot get away from him. I said the structure of the foot was changed from natural. No matter how much or how little, or in what way, or what degree, the horse's suffering commences at the first change. The more he is changfed from natural, the more in- tense is his suffering, until death comes to his relief. It will be well to mention a few cases here. While I was looking for one of these sufferers to demonstrate soiiie things and relieve their suffering, I went into a stable at Elmira. There I saw one of thousands of cases like this, lying in a small, un ventilated place, on a pile of manure — a fine young horse, with sores on his sides. I asked how long he had been in that condi- tion. I think they said about three months. I asked what ailed the horse. They said he had bruised his feet working in the stone quarry. He was gnawing his feet, and had holes gnawed at the top of the hoof. There were marks of teeth all over his feet. He was not what I w^as in search of. I tried to buy him. They said he was a fine horse. It would take some money to buy him. How much, I asked, will it take? "One hundred and fifty dollars." That horse died; and, worse than all, his shoes were on. He was com- pletely paralyzed. I well knew^ what ailed him — cup foot badly contracted, or, in other words, changed THE horse's rescue. 29 from natural; his eyes looked sunken, staring, and glassy. There are thousands in this same condition. Fonder, think, I say, again ; look at your horse after you have looked this work through. That is the place to look. Study tlic horse as I have done; understand there are all stages of these changes, and always a beginning. There is the end above men- tioned. What do 3'ou think I wanted of that horse on that pile of manure? I wanted to relieve his suf- fering: You say, "Why didn't you?" They would not let me. They called me a "damned old lunatic.'' That did not affect me any ; that had become a com- mon thing many 3'ears before. I have been told so much that I am crazy, not being a judge of lunacy. I was in Lincoln, Nebraska, some two years ago. They have a lunatic asylum there. It struck me it would be a good time to test my case. They have several hundred lunatics in that asvlum. It was Sun- day. It is their custom to get them, or nearly all of them, in one room, then sing. I got permission to go in. They did not act crazy; all w^as quiet. When singing was over, all marched out in single file. I did not learn anything satisfactory touching my case by this experiment. I am writing history of my life- I must return to the horse. As this is not intended to be a history of my life, it matters not where I sail to, neither does it matter which end. I begin at, as this is not intended to be the scientific part of this work. At sixteen years of age you can see a boy sitting on a saw-horse, about six feet from a horse. The horse interfered. His ankles were bleeding and sore. Kight 30 TSE HORSil'S RESCUE. there was the first scientific principle I ever studied out on the horse. I did not get half of that. At that time I did not know his foot was changed from natural and run over inside, half of double heel pushed up, causing the toe to turn out and ankle in. I saw I could throw his ankle out by lowering the outside heel and outside toe, and the outside heel of shoe and .toe of shoe. That throws the weight on the outside; that will push up the outside heel ; that turns the toe in, brings the foot on a straight line. This principle, followed up, will run the toe in or out by changing the weight on the double heel both forward and be- hind. When the top of heel is even, care should be taken to dress bottom, so as to equalize weight ; give easy toe to raise on, or he will toe in or out to relieve the back tendons. His foot is growing all the time, and when it gets long the strain increases. If it is very long be will be apt to turn out his toes, the ankles turn in. In this ease he will be likely to inter- fere, unless the shoe is reset, the foot dressed and made shorter. This principle will hold good to shoe all horses that are natural, or have not been injured in any way. If they have there is no better principle, if it is done right. If the horse is used right, on any decent road, and is not driven nearly to death, which he often is. And yet other difficulties soon arise after the horse's foot has been ironed a short time. The cup foot suffers the most — it cannot expand. What effect that can have I will tell you. It grows straighter up. The sole, that is, the bottom, rises, and most in the center; that changes the whole structure of the foot, inside and out. That affects the coffin- THE horse's rescue. SI joint most It is located nearly in the center; this change is going on to a greater or less degree all the time, if the foot is ironed. It pushes out of tlie cup; or, in oLlier words, top of hoof or wall. That destro^'S all harrnori\^ of action, and it does not stop where the cause is located. Trace from that cause to the effect. Its effect is more than jou ever thought of. It does more mischief thaa you are aware of; it effects the horse all over. Now I am talking about the hind feet. They get higher, as this contraction takes place, from bottom to top. They cannot be lowered by paring as low as the}'' should be, for this reason : you wouid come to the membrane at the bottom near the wall inside of sliell. You must liave shell foi- shoe to rest on. or lameness will be the result. If 3'ou (lo])are down, the cause is tliere jet. The toot is not tiie natural size, and this is not all. It shoves the foot forward. Of course the leg goes with it. This change is going on as the sole raises in center, where it raises fastest ; I mean highest. It all goes together. After you have cupped out the foot, place a straight edge across the center; measuring down; that will tell you. Com- mence at side of frog, measure out to wall. That will tell you. As this change is allowed to go on in tliat course, the foot moves forward according to the desrrees of chanQ:e from natural nntil the liorse is nearly off his legs, and he is standing gambols out, feet huddled together, with a constant strain on tl.e back tendons or cords; the heels closed in, stiuctnie ail changed. My god, the pain and suffering this poor 82 THE horse's rescue. horse endures ! and that, too, continually until wel. oume death comes to his relief. Let us continue this search. What's the matter with this horse's back? He humps up across his loin. Oh, I see; it's this position he is obliged to stand in, caused by the structure of his foot being changed from natural. Why, he has got irons on his feet ! Now T am going inside and see what I can find in there. I see his kidneys affected, urinary organs all affected, caused by this unnatural strain and position which he is placed in, and obliged to stand and travel, and draw heavy loads day after day. Of course that effect must quite often be doctored. His water-works are out of order by being obliged to work and draw heavy loads when all are out of harmony. I have changed lots of these poor horses back to nat. ural on scientific principles, and all came right in a little time, and no medicine used. If vou follow me you will have a wild-goose chase, for I am going to have a horse sail. Don't back out I will bring you back all right. Oh, there has come a poor, suffering horse. I must go and relieve him. I left that poor horse in a bad fix. I did not look his fore parts over. I will. He is braced out from the same cause. Like causes produce like effects. I mean tlie horse I was writing about. I told you how he was affected on his hind parts, as far as I went. Let us talk about the same horse's fore parts. Contraction changes the structure of foot th.e same, and shoves the foot for- ward on the same principles according to the degree of change. It changes faster on the cup foot. What effect does that have ? Strain on back tendons. That THE HORSE'S RESCUE. 35' is bad enough. His forward legs should stand back of straight. When standing, are all of his feet in a pile? and when moving, trotting, see what strides he makes, and yet it would not sore him if he never had his feet ironed. That has produced this change ; and when ironed it does not wear off. That is not all. It is growing all of the time in some shape, and assumes many ; and with all of the experience I have had I cannot describe these feet. Let us go up a little higher. His chest is all fallen in. That is called chest-founder by people that have no knowledge of the horse. Well, what is it? changed from natural. Being changed in this way, the head is drawn do^^n ; the shoulders drop back, and begin to perish ; he is fastened there. He is worked in that position and wofully deformed, and it is not seen except by a very few and never have been seen ; they are quite natural on their forward parts, and very bad behind, and seem quite natural behind. la some one foot is changed and its mate is quite natural. These feet do not change in pairs. There are all stages of it difficult to describe. My long ex- perience and experimenting and shoeing these poor horses enable me to see it instantW. There are other causes that lame these horses, which I will explain. This poor horse that I have been talking about is changed fore and aft, but I shall have to leave him awhile to suffer, as I have walked with tears in my eyes away from thousands. But 1 will come to his relief and get him out of his trouble before I get through this work. He is not so bad off as he can be made. I will come and see him again. This is the way this work was discovered and perfected, always 34 THE HQB3ES RESQUE. on the watch, always ready to do all I could to relieve; and I went at it where I saw I could help them. Some I could and some I could not ; but I tried and kept trying, though not on the right principle. But I did find out the right principle and get master of the feet at last. Hello, here comes Sam Grover. "Can you set a shoe?" " Yes ; lead in. W.hat ails that mare, Sam V she is awful stiff." "Yes; she has been so these two years." "How old it she?" "Six." "Ever done anything for her?" "Yes; she has been doctored; has had setons in her shoulders ; blistered. She belonged to Doc. Mede. They think she was stiffened driving tn rough the creek to wash her legs off when he came home." "I can cure that mare." "Doc could not drive her on the road, so he let his brother Gird have her. She has been turned out sijc months." "Did that help her any?" " No ; she sores up as quick as she ia driven." " What breed is she?" "Kentucky hunter." "Did they pull her sh jes off when they turned heir. out?" " No." " I've got a good young mare coming five that will match that bay of yours, I will trade for that stiff mare." THE horse's rescue. So "I will trade. Gird told me to trade her off. How will you trade " "Give me twentj-five dollars." "I'll give jou twenty." "It's a bargain." "Trust for the money?" " No ; cash down boot money on a horse trade." "Leave the trade open till Saturday; got to go home." "Yes; any time in a week will do." He came in a day or two. It had frozen up rough and hard. He had to come thirteen miles over hubs. ''Well, how is horse trade?" "All right; unhitch." Of all stiff and sore horses I ever saw, she was the worst, and stand up. She was nearly off her legs. Her legs were all covered with scabs. That was called mud fever; all scratched with sharp currj^comb and swelled. Let us get her in the barn. She is all wet with sweat. Cover up warm and feed. Another good job for to-night. Hurry to the shop. It ia getting dark. Folks waiting; all in a hurry to get home. Hurry up! Shoe three or four horses; each has a little tinkering job to do, and before they are all away it is an hour after dark. Do you suppose you got a good job? I think not. Do you think the weight was equal on all of the heels of those horses? If you do it would not make it so, and if it was it would not stay so long, about which I have already written and the consequences. By golly 1 in this hurry I liked to forgot that poor suffering horse I just got. I must go and see her. *Sty THE hoese's kescue. On follows four or five to see too. They all want to see, and I wanted them to. I found her just as I ex- pected to, lying down. I walked in, looked to see if she had eat her feed. It wp.s not touched. "Did yon kick her up? " I did not. " Did any one kick her? " No; if they had, they might have got it back, for self-protection is the first law of nature. This horse was down, unable to help herself; but before I can remove the cause of her suffering, I must get her up. I touched her on her hind parts ; she was sore all over. I succeeded in getting her on her feet. Of all the sore horses I ever saw, all produced from a small cause, she was the cap-sheaf. Of course that called out remarks, opinions, and beliefs, and not much knowledge, but a great deal of talk. " Doan, I guess that black man has waxed it to you this time." Sam was black. Some one said she was chest foundered ; some one thing, some another, and all dis- agreed. 1 well knew they had no knowledge where the cause was, neither did they know where the effect was. I told them I would have her out on the road in four days, and she would have as good knee action as a colt That is rather short time. I told them what was the matter with her, as I always have; but thgy do not seem to see it as I do. At it I went. At that time I did not have as much knowledge of the horse as I have now. If you will sail with me through this \v< rk. I will do all of the work. You look on ; understand ? I am shoeing cripples and all kinds through the day and sometimes the night, and it's night now ; but this THE horse's rescue. 37 poor horse must be helped to-night. I must have two quarts of whisky. That is uot to be had short of twr> miles. I got it. I did not drive this cripple, and told short stories. I am home now, but before I com- mence I will tell you where the cause of this poor horse's suffering was located, and what the effect was, and where and how I removed it, and that is what you want to know and I want you to know. This is what this long story is told for, and it is wdiat they are all told for. This mare had a small, round, thin-shelled, flat foot, when natural ; low heels. Let us take a peek at those shoes. Golly I that is all wrong ; that shoe is not the shape of the foot ; not wide enough across the quarter. It is too wide at the heels. It is a long, clevis-shape; yes; and it's too long. So is the foot; and the toe is too peaked, and the toe-cork is too high for the heels. "Can't you find a little more fault?" Yes. The web is too narrow and too thick for such feet. "Is that all?" No; let us take this shoe off and look on the other side and see what we find there. It's not concave; it's dishing clear around to heel — bent instead of being hammered, and no flat rest; and yet it sits hard on the sole. Let us examine these feet. The toe is one inch and a quarter too long. That should be cut off. It is nothing but useless shell ; it needs paring some. Let uslook at the heels. These heels are too low. They are all mutihited and break down, caused by the shoe not resting on the heel ani not having a flat rest on the shoe at heel. What else? Being to ) wide, it formed a lever i)urchase across the quarter and warps the foot. Let us look and see if the heels are contrGCted. Not much. We SS THE HOKSB'S rescue. will pare the foot so the shoe will rest only on shell until we corne to the heel. Leave brace in, pare flat, and fit all around — no springing business about it. Well, what are you going to do with those low heels? It is getting cold here ; we canH wait for those heels to grow. They must be raised to-night. Won't to- morrow do as well ? There will be a lot more horses to the shop to-morrow, and there will be no time. It's fearful cold here. I guess you can stand the cold. Let us go to the shop and make a pair of shoes for this horse. What sort of shoe shall we make for this horse to relieve him ? In his present condition he is braced out ; head down; chest sunken in; shoulders dropped back ; great strain on back tendons or cords; the heels are even at top ; the sole is a little raised up. She should stand back of straight comfortable. That will be all we can do to-night. We will make a shoe with wide web, at toe quite wide ; very thin at toe ; one inch thick at heel ; taper from center of toe to heel. It should be made as light as possible ; thinned an trued so as to reduce weight ; wide where the heels rest ; concave clear out to nail holes ; holes in shoe close to edge. This concave should stop at about one inch and a half from the heel. The brace should be cut away slanting toward the frog. We want to get the sole down by the weight of the horse. That ex- pands the foot. The shoe should be made full acros^s the quarter; it is too narrow. It has been cut off. Get.the colt's foot in shape — round, easy toe to rise on ; good length shoe, not stuck out at heel. Let us go to the barn. I am getting somewhat tired. It is awful cold here, too. These shoes were made by eye and TJJE HORE'-^'S RESCUJg. 89 measuring the foot. Now tliis is a hard job for me and the liorse. She has got to stand on one foot. It must be done. Get two nails in, and let the foot down. Back goes the foot, and the leg with it. Of course now she can stand better. The strain is off the back tendons, Now lean set the other shoe easier., Down goes the foot back of straight. Finish this job off quite easy. Now I feel better, and the horse too. It mat- ters not what this animal is called, horse or mare. It is a mare. It is principle I am working on. I must tell you how the nails are in this shoe ; two are in the toe, six in all. None back of the widest part of the foot. No corks on this shoe. That suits me. My golly! her head and neck have gone up. Look here ! that hollow is all gone in her breast, and she sticks out right pliimp and full. It is getting late. It It is not so cold as it was. I have removed the cause and cured " chest founder." The heart is not affected, as I have been told. She is eating hay; that's a big thing. It will be daylight soon. I must hurry up. I want some warm, soft water. We will have to go to the liouse, build a fire, and warm some water. Get t'iat whisky, castile soap, and sponge, and back to the barn again. These scabs must all come off clean and lean all over. It is a good time, while I think of it, to say that I never use a currycomb. A stiff brush is all I want, brushing always the way the hair lies. Wash off ma- nure. I must rub the mare dry, and wash her all over with whiskey with a sponge, and rub dry three or four 40 THE hopvSe's rescue. times. Rub lightly, put on a light blanket, and make her a good, soft, dry bed. Gracious heavens ! It is daylight, time to feedj and I want my breakfast, too. " Hello ! Doaii ; sharpen these horses ; have them done in an hoar ?" **Yes." I want to say here that whiskey had nothing to do with curino; that mare's stiffness. It miorht have made her feel better, and it might have helped take out the soreness. But it was the work done on the feet that cured her. Castile soap and water was all I needed to cure her scabby legs. Water v/ould have cleaned them. I have cured hundreds since, and used no whisky; all I use is water. It is science, principle. I wanted to make the mare comfortable, so she could lie down and rest and sleep. All should do the same. If the horse could talk in a language that we could under- stand, you would hear louder bugling than you ever heard from me. You would think that it was the judgment-day, and that the supreme court of heaven was in session. I use the word "cure " in this book because it is in common use, to convey what we are talking about. It is all well enough ; but I do not cure these horses — I remove the cause and nature repairs the damages. When I go at a horse to fix him up, I look him over and do all I can that will make him comfortable. The day's work is done in the shop. It has been a hard road all day, I tell you. In all stages of suffer- ing I have helped some, and I have made some worse, whicli I well knew ; but I did the best I could for THE horse's rescue. 41 them and the owner. Their feet were in all kinds of conditions. By George ! in tliis hubbub I was likely to forget my mare in the barn. I said before that I had cured her, and she had not been out of the stall yet. But I have removed the cause, or part of it. I have got to polish her off yet. Let us go to the barn, move her around on the floor, and see how she acts. She must be exercised moderately at first. The change is so great she hardly knows how to use her legs. She will soon recover from that. She has been changed from natural so Ion of, and her cords are out of harmonv, she can hardlv control herself; but she does not suffer. Her soreness is nearly all gone. I will right here say to the readers of this work, in this sail working on the horse, I am alone in this barn ; all are quietly sleeping. My talk is directed to you, reader, and I want you to go with me, if you will, and pay close attention. I will give you the biggest and the most instructive lesson you ever had on the horse. Let us sponge the mare's legs, shoulders, and loins with whisky; rub dry each time; repeat this three or four times; take her out-doors; run with her awhile. Again in the barn, rub her legs and shoulders an hour or two. Let us drive her in harness. Now I can ride. Before we take this ride I will say I packed this horse's feet. These were dried up with fever, caused bv unnatural strain on the cords which fasten in feet. Let us look at the bottom of tlie feet. The frog does not touch the ground yet. That's all right in this case. It is a little lower than the shoe-heels. When the foot is on the floor, look ! she stands her fore legs 42 THE HOKSE's rescue. buck straight, Where is the weight now? It is nearly in the center of the foot That's right. Don't be ill a hurry; we will take a sail after this horse soon. We are experimenting now. There is some- thing more, before we start, to be looked to. I told 3^ou when we dressed this foot to prepare it for the shoe we must have the brace slanting a little down toward the frog, and have a flat rest on the shoe-heel. Now the shoe rests on the shell all around, and it is up from the sole. Where is that foot-hook? Let us clean out everything under that shoe clear out to nails. Have the hook thin. The foot is middling sof t<. Pile in. Let us have a sail after this mare. Thunder ! how cold it is. Yes, it is, but we can stand it to ride four or six miles, I guess. G-^-lly ! she moves finely. Look at that knee action. See where her head is. Whoa; let us get her in the barn ; cover her up after she eets done steaminof. Let us look at the bottom of the feet to see what we can find. There ! that frog is down even with the heel of the shoe. Let us look at the foot at the heel, and that sits fiat on the flat rest on shoe. Let us look at the bottom. This foot is not as cupping as it was. How is that ? Look at heel of foot where it rests on heel of shoe. It is spread a little. What did that? Before we took this i-ide the sole was raised up, as I have explained before, and the structure of the foot was changed from natural. I prepared the foot and shoe for the operation. The weifrht of the horse is in the center of the foot. The drive settled the sole down in the cup or top of hoof, and when the sole is down in its natural place^ all is in harmony of action. It should in no case go below THE HORSfi'S RESCUE. 4S flat It would not kill the horse, but it would be out of harmonj, for nature has formed the foot^ "When natural, the sole is arching and the frog intended to rest on the ground; but these changes are con- stantly going on in greater or less degrees. It does not affect the horse's shoulders as bad to have the sole go down below natural, that is, get rounding on the bottom. It lets up on the back tendons. It never would go down if the frog could rest on the ground. When it rises it effect is terrible. Let us examine this horse we are at work on. Now the frog is down on the ground ; the sole is down or nearly so ; let us try her and see how far back we can put her foot and have it sit flat down on the heel and not hurt her. Seel she can put it back from the point where her foot was when we commenced on her, four feet and a half. That's boss! It's cold, and it is three o'clock. Let us eo to the house. This horse wants rest. So do I. Give her good bed ; build a fire. There is no use go* intr to bed, it's so late, and there will soon be a lot of horses here to be shod ; and there will be no peace. Sleep by the stove a little !• "Hello, Doan ; shoe these horses? " "Yes, I will be there as soon as I swallow a mouth- ful." " This mare is lame forward. She interferes behind ; she stumbles. She never interfered, and never was lame until after that damned Bloom shod her." Let us look her over. "How long has she been shod." " It is not over six months, and the shoes are all clattering now." 44 THE horse's rescue. Well, what about this one? She is stiff. It hurts her to go down hill, and she falls down once in a while, and it hurts her to go up hill. And when she first starts off she straddles out behind. Warm her up, then she goes better, but it hurts her when she gets up in the morning. She is awful sore then. " Tom Jones sent me here ; he said vour were a good shoer. Some think she is strained across the loins." "Well, it does have that appearance.'' Of course I am at work at them all of the time. I left one of that kind in this book. I shall go and see him one of these days. Let us shoe this one we looked over first. " I want long corks on them ; I am going to hauling wood, and I want a good big cork on, so they will last. Those corks that Bloom put on are all off now\" "All right." This lame foot is about one inch longer than its mate. What is this? the hair is all off on the back side of his leg." "Well, I blistered his cords; they are sore." "I see they are. Did it help him any?" "No." • • "Have you tried anything more?' " Yes, I put on whisky, skunks' grease, and angle- worm oil." "No good? Why, you have been at work in the wrong place. That is the effect. The hind feetare in the same condition, only worse. The nails stick out and cut like a knife, and it affects across the loins and the kidnevs. This is a flat foot, however. The sole is down ; the foot is spread out over the shoe." THE horse's rescue. .. 45 These poor cripples are coming and going while I am sitting bv the window over my shop writing this work, and it bothers me, but I must do it. Well, let us fix this lame foot. Let us work on principle, and see how that will work. Let us shorten that lever purchase. How much ? Tliat foot has been shod six months; and the toe was too peaked when it was shod^- and it was left about three-quarters of an inch too long then. It has been growing ever since. It takes about one year for a foot to grow from the hair down. This foot, when natural, from hair down, would be about five inches. It has grown half a year, and was about one inch too long when shod. According to this figuring, this foot is three inches and a half too long. That is a trifle too much. Let us do away with that lever purchase by shorten- ing the foot. We better raise the heels a little, for it is going to grow longer. It is growing now; but we cannot see it. Now it is shod. See where his foot is x^ow — back of straight, weight in center. • Sore some; it will be all right in ten days, I will warrant for a cent. The same all round ; like causes produce like effects. We have got this foot fixed. Let us walk him around. Golly ! we have lamed him on the otber foot. The fact is, he was lame on both. The lever was the longest on the one we fixed first. That is, this principle effects all horses, shod or not, in a greater or less degree. This is a flat foot. I have changed him some, and that effects him. He does hardly know how to use his legs. His ankles are a little weak, caused by this sudden change. Exercise will soon bring him out all right Yet, with all this 46 « THE horse's rescue. work, he is not natural. But this is the best that can be done with him-^shoeing him. Try him. Place his foot back as far as you can from point where his foot now stands, and that is back of straight. You can see he cannot get his foot down flat on heel more than two feet, and the corks are higher 'than the toe cork, a little. How is this, the heels are pinched in, and the structure is changed enough to cause that, and I cannot fix it shoeing. I have cured thousands of this kind of feet of lame- ness, and the owners were well pleased and talked for me ; and I will thank them right here. This work is for them and all mankind and the suffering horse ; and when you read this work do not take any offense, for it is not intended to ridicule. I have thought of writ- ing this wci'k for nine years. How to convey it in a book I could not study out, for I talked and explained continually. They did not learn much and worked. I have taken this way of explaining my methods of treatment because there is no other way of giving the information I wish to convey. It is all meant for your interest and that of your poor, suffering Horses. Well, we have not got that horse done j^et His foot is growing. He will go very well for a while, and you will hear from that lever purchase if you let it get too long. I am done with him. Next! This horse I do not like to tackle. It is a hard job, but I can help him a little. He has got it bad, but it must be done. It will make us both sweat before we get through. This horse has a thickshelled cup foot He has got cold standing here. We should have shod him first while he was warm. Can't shoe THE horse's rescue. 47 them Jill while they are warm ; there are so many. Some must wait. "Stand around here!" Thunder! how he straddles !" " Back !" How he raises up his feet! and he drags them before they leave the floor. They do not go up very quicfk ; if they did I should think he had spring-halt. There is not much "spring " motion about it. I have a mind to leave him with the other I left in this book until I come around again. I can't help him much. I do not think he can stand on three legs ; and, worse than all^ he has got two sets of feet on him. for they were not hal I cut down when they were shod last, which was six months ago, and they are hard as a stone. I won't back out; that's not my name. I think we had better shoe him on his forward feet first. He can't stand un- til we do, he is so changed from natural, and all is so out of liarmony. " How old is this horse ?" " He is nineteen years old." " How long have you owned him?'* "I raised him from a colt." " Have you ever doctored him ?" " Oh, yes; I have tried everything most." " His chest has fallen in some ; that looks like chest founder." " It is not that. I have always taken care of my horses myself, and never feed them when they are warm ; and no man drives my horses, they don't." "Has one man shod them all of the time ?" "No, since be got stiff I have been to a good many shoers." " They help him any ?" ^ ,**.:,-■ 48 THE HORSES RESCUE. ^^'No ; they say yoa can cure these horses by shoe- ing. "I can help some of them for a while. I can help this one a little." This horse is different from the one just shod. His feet are cup feet. His shoulders are perished some. '^ Yes ; some say he is sweenied." *' Ever doctor them ?" "Yes; we inflated him." "What's that?" "Pull the skin up like this, all loose; cut a little hole in ; jerk it back and forward, and it will fill up ■with wind. Well, it made it look full, and plump, and soft. Before I got home it was all gone down again." " How much did it cost you ?" " A dollar. I've paid out lots of money doctoring this horse, and he gets worse every da3^ and I have to doctor his water-works every little while now." "I see his shoulders have been blistered " "Yes; I've blistered them and his cords on the backside of his legs and across his loin." "Ever try setons?" " Yes, in both shoulders, and I had him roweled in the breast, and a fellow told me to cut the skin open on the shoulders and take smoked meat rinds, put them in, and sew them up, and let them rot out; that was a sure cure for sweeny." "That help him?" " ISTo." " What do you give him for his water now?'* "Turpentine." j "How mucli at a time?** THE horse's rescue. 49 *' Half a pint once a week, and I keep rosin in his feed-box all of the time." "I see his legs are swelled," "Yes." " Do anything for that?" "Yes. I have used gargling oil, Anderson's derm- adore, liniments, and all kinds of liniments I could hear of." " I see he is sore under his fetlocks." "Yes; that is scratches." " Ever done anything for them ?" " Yes ; I have tried all kinds of salves I could think of, and I bound live toads under his fetlocks; and a fellow told me to make a poultice of human dung." "Well, how did that work?" " It drew out the inflammation." "Did it?" " Yes ; when I put it on every few days." - " I see some enlargements here," "Those are wind-puffs. They don't hurt him any. Some say the cause of these legs swelling is yellow water." " I know they do. Did you ever give him anything for that ?" " Yes, I have." " Help him ?" " No." " It does have that appearance,^ looking him over. What is this inside? He is swelled here and sore." " I never saw that before. That is called the sec- ond stifle by some. Yes, he has strained himself prob- ably getting up." bO THE horse's rescue. " What is this up here? He sinks down here over tlie whirl hone. Ever do anvtliins: for tliat?" "Yes; I put on different kinds of Jiniment and lien ted it in with hot irons." "Did that help him?" ''I don't know as it did." '' What are those marks on the inside of his legs?" " I had him fired — burnt ; thej say that makes them stronger. '• He seems weak on his hind lesrs. What are these enlargements here?" ''They call them blood-spavins; some call them bog-spavins." "What is this?" "Well, thev sav them are curbs" " What is this in here?" "Oh, that's nothing but thoroughpin." "Ever do anything for these diflQculties?" "Yes." "Did it help them?" " I can't see as it has." "Well, we can't stand here long. We must get these horses put of here. It will soon be dark. I have got a job at the barn to-night on that Kentucky hunter mare. Well, we may as well tackle this horse. Take up ! Thunder ! this horse's feet are contracted. Didn't you know that ?" " They told me they were." "Did you ever do anything for them ?" " Yes. J[ have used lots of foot ointment and salves to^make them grow fast." " Well, I think that did make them grow. I guess THE horse's rescue. 61 that is a good thing. It is about eight inches from the top of the coronet to the toe on these feet all around. Did jou have irons on his feet when you used this stuff?" ''Yes." " Well, I think they grew a little too fast. Where did you put this ointment you used r'' " Well, I made a mark all around the foot just be- low the hair, on the hoof, and I put it below the mark." "Did you put any on the inside? " " Yes ; on the sole." "Did you get any on the frog?" "No." " Didn't you know that in putting this trash on horn or hoof that was already grown there was danger of making it grow too fast ?" "No, I did not." " Didn't vou ? Didn't you know there was a receipt out to prevent it growing in case it should get to grow- ing too fast ?" "No." " Well, there is, and they should always accompany each other, for they are dangerous to be used separ- ately. This is a fast age in which we live. I read a receipt the other day that would make a foot grow out from the hair down to its natural length in six weeks. The natural growth of the hoof is about one year when healthy, and no fever in it; and this is not all— with irons on it could not expand, and that would incline it to grow long and narrow. And at this rate of growth a horse could be grown up from the time it 52 THE horse's rescue. was born in twenty-four weeks to four years old. That would excel the creator.'' I will show the effect of long feet before 1 get through this work. Let us go on with this examina- tion of this horse. "This hoiS3 ever been bled in plait vein?" "Yes." "Help him?" "No." "Ever been nerved?" "Yes." "Help him?" "No." " What are these scabs on here?" "I had the wind puffs cut open to let the wind out." " They are sore yet ?" "Yes." "Let us try him and see if he can stand on one for ward leg while we get the shoe off the other." It has High corks on the heel to raise it to take the strain off cords now He can't stand down on heel. It is lower with the shoe off. Well, we must work on this foot until we get it fixed or we will have him down. There will have to be some judgment used in shortening the lever purchase on this horse with all this contraction ; forward legs braced out at least one and a half feet from point where the}' should be, and his hind feet shoved for^-ard under his belly about the same distance and from the same cause, and run over at that; gambrels bowed out; toes in ; hind feet hud- dled together. This horse weighs twelve hundred ; weight two-thirds, thrown back on his hind legs. Now THE HORSES RESCUE. 63 this horse has got to be balanced in some way to equalize his weight. Shorten that lever on toe, and fret his weiorht in center of foot, on all of his feet, or nearly so, by dressing foot, or preparing shoe, or by both. " Well, Joe, you are too tall ; you will raise him too much ; it will tip him over. I will try him. This foot has got corns?" ^' Yes ; I had them dug out and tar burnt in." " They are sore now ?" ^'Yes." "Ever do anything more to them?" *'I put in spirits of salts and butter of antimony." "Cure them?" "Ko." " What is this hole in the toe ?" "A veterinarian said he was foundered ; bleeding in the toe would cure him." " How much blood did he take from him?" " Five quarts from each toe." "Well, what else?" " He corked it with tar and tow, and burnt it in with a hot iron." "Cure him?" "No." " We will never get this horse shod if we do not quit examining them. What is this hole in this foot?" " Well, a fellow told me to bore a hole in the bot- tom of his foot and fill it up with turpentine. It would cure him." " Bid you ?" "Yes." 54 THE hokse's eescue. "Cure him?" "Ko." " Well, tliis shoe is on at last. The weight is in center nearly. His knee is a little weak, but I guess he is about balanced on that foot. Let us shoe the other." ".What is this cutting around the coronet or top of hoof?" " A veterinarian told me the coronet band was too tio-ht It should be cut so as to give it room to ex- pand ?" "Did it help him? "No." " That operation of spreading the foot by fitting the shoe wider than the foot, so you could see the nail holes all around, commence at the toe and starting all of the nails and driving, no matter how high, by alter- nate raps so as to spread the foot where it was con- tracted ; and another process for contracting his heels to tighten up the coffin-joint when it gets too much play ; that is, when it gets to cutting through neglect to oil ; and a few other great discoveries on horses' feet, cost this government twenty-five thousand dol- lars in the time of the Rebellion." " It's larger at the top than it is at the bottom. I guess that, let it spread." "Did you take the shoes off when you cut the coronet band ?" "No." " Were the fore legs braced out?" "Yes." " If he had stood up straight, as he now does, it would THE hokse's rescue. 55 spread faster, the weight being in the center, with shoe nailed on the bottom. Don't you think the bottom would have been the proper place to spread the foot?" " Well, it does seem so.'' '' I have shod horses a great many years, and I have never tried to spread tlje foot wider at the top than it was at the bottom, but this process was recommended by Robert Bonner, and I suppose it is all right. This horse's shell is thick. If it had been thin there would have had to be some plan studied out to stop his foot from splitting open in many places. Then it would want contraction a^ain to close the cracks. It is curi- ous they could not see the lever; that tip-back principle is not seen by many on horses, yet it exists, Vvdiich I shall show before I get through this work. I intend this work to be an eye-opener. I am wiiting it in the night, wiien all is quiet, all asleep, for I am so annoyed through the day I cannot write so well. These poor cripples are continually coming for re- lief. Of course I tell them what to do. They want me to do it. I tell them I am as stiff and sore as their horses, and let them go. This book must be written. Let us return to the horse. He is shod on the for- ward feet. He stands a little back of straight. Let us see how strong he is on his kness. Push him for- ward on his knees. He is very weak, but he is bal^ anced about as well as he can be considering the con- dition his poor contracted feet are now in. His toe, that awful lever power, is growing. His knee will not go over with this job. He feels better now, but his feet ache awfully. Golly ! in all of this hubbub, folks 5f> THE HORSE S RESCUE. coming and going, horses, something the matter with all of them ; four or five talking at one time ; all ex* pi-essing their opinions and beliefs; new arrivals all through the day, and late at night, no two affected alike; some from one cause, some from another, all in a hurry to get home or go to mill or some other place. To talk with them all and balance them all up in good shape so they will not go lame in six months, and fail nine times out of ten, is somewhat trying. Well, let us go on with this job. Stand out about eight feet from this horse, take a side view of him. If 3^ou have a good sharp eye, if you are any judge of the horse, or even if you are half blind, you can see the position he is obliged to stand in. I have fixed him forward, and moved him back from the point where they were when I commenced, at least fourteen inches, and that is as far as I can get him without tipping him on his knees, with his feet contracted as thev are now. Balancing deformed hor«es, you will find before we get through this sail, is quite a science; and man will have something more to do than to eat^ sleep, and wear clothes. Golly ! that makes me think it is almost night, and I have not had my dinner. Are you looking at that horse? Yes. If you are going to be my pupil 3^ou must pay close attentior.. Where is -the weight of that horse? See where his hind feet stand now, and we have not even touched them yet. They are all contracted, and eight inches from the hair down to point of toe. These feet should be moved back at least eighteen inches, to get the weight in the center of the foot Of course, we can- THE horse's rescue. 57 not spread out his feet. We must do the best we can as he is. Spreading the foot with nails, that is, by fitting the shoe so much wider than the foot, I do not like. I do not want to spread the foot at the toe ; the heel is the place. All feet spread at the toes, on that principlej would contract the heels; they are contracted enough now. And that is not all; it would tear all the shell off; besides, when they get soaked soft, the shoe, shell and all, would go. It is curious, is it not, with all of the ailments this poor horse has, his doctors have worked at the wrong place — the effect? But I have not got through looking him over yet. He '^'stands as w^e left him. A¥hat would be the effect on this horse if we should leave him, and not get his feet back, so as to have his weight on the center of his foot? There is eight hundred weight on them now. There should be more than half on the fore legs, and the horse weighs twelve hundred. That lever is rather long. In the position he is obliged to stand in his hind legs are of but little use. If we take up one of them half the weight must come on the shoer, and there will be quite a struggle before that leg can be got in a position to shoe. It has been so a long time, and the horse is sore across his kidneys. His hind parts are too low for his fore parts. Look at him ; his back is humped, and there is a constant strain. All :s out of harmony, both internally and externallv. This horse is not as bad as he will be made yet by these effect doctors, these veterinarians, these professors of great wisdom. He will stand a little more torturing and mutilation. He is tough. 58 THE horse's rescue. I can fix him so he can haul his half of two cords of green wood up and down heavy hills a little while j^et, and suffer night and day, and I am going to do it. Come on, Oliver, let us try him. We will have a tough time. This horse is finished, and he stands well back on his hind feet, shortening that lever by dressing the foot, and raising heel of shoe a little higher than toe. Look the horse over if you must shoe, not stand and talk about shoes. This horse stands where the weight should be — in center; he is in pain, and always will be, unless his foot expands; and I well know it will not with those irons on his feet — all out of harmony, structure all changed from natural. He steps short, and every foot pains him, night and day. Still, it looks well on the outside. If 3^ou want to tell look at his movement. Do you think these two horses were all we shod that day? No, it was not. Forty -one years wrestling with horses of all kinds — I am tired. Good-bye, poor horse, I will come and see you before I get through this work, for I am determined to find the way out of this trouble. Supper is over. Let us go to the barn and see the Kentucky hunter. By golly! Kit, you are looking fine. Her feet have had packing iu them all the time. Sponge over with whisky twice; rub dry each time. We must look this mare's hind parts over before we di'ive her any more, for we want all to work together " in harmony of action." That lever is too loi»g. ■ Weiirht is back oi center of foot. Too much strain on back tendons. That must be fixed before the mare is di'iven another rod. Lei us go to the shop, pare the THE horse's kescue! - 59 toe and shorten. The lieels are ]ow enough. ^Mie structure is very nearly all iwht. Easv toe to riot. Let us cut the heels down half. Thev are THE horse's rescue. 91 that mucli too high at least. Pare none from toe; cup it out ; it is filled up; it is hard as a stone. That will do, now. Soak him more; when it gets soft we will cup it more. The doors are open now. Mr. Brees comes in, apron on, to see and talk. His shop is nearly opposite from mine. All in a bluster, he said : " That is not doctoring horses ; that is nursing." "Yes, this horse needed some of that." This uproar was kept up by many in the shop and all over the town. Being in the business of tracing cause to ef- fect and effect to cause, I well knew what ailed them. Beat and excel them was what I wanted to do, and relieve the suffering horse. That is what I went there for. They v/ere all strangers to me. Let them fight while we look at this horse. If you wish to learn a lesson, look at the horse we are working on. Now he stands braced out forward ; now his knees are tipped, yet his cords hurt him. He can scarcely stand. How is that? We cut his lieels down ; tliat is the cause. Where is the weight of that horse now, or what is the effect of cutting his heels clown? Before we did that I told vou how his weight was divided, and the effect of it. This operation throws him off his base with two-thirds of his weicrht on his hind legs, which were also badly off their base before we cut his heels down. He should be balanced or poised in the center, and his equilibrium restored, that is equalize his weicrht on the center of each foot, and balance him between the four. This lookslike a rather hard job, yet it can be done. -It will take a little brain, work withal. We must get rid of some hallooing around this shop; no one can do anything this way. 92 THE horse's rescue. Lock the shop again ! Let us finish cupping out his feet. It will not do to cut away much near the wall at toe; it is thin there now. Pare down next to the point of frog until you can spring the sole a little with a pair of shoeing pincers all around the frog. Pare the brace very slanting toward the frog. Care should be taken to cut the sole even. Feel with pincers. There, these feet are dressed for shoeing. Keep them in warm water. They have been days all of the time. In comes Mr. Bennett. He says he is losing two dol- lars per day by the horse lying still. "Mr. Bennett," says I, "my time is not up yet. This horse's feet are badly contracted. I cannot fix him unless I have time." Now we will make a pair of shoes, narrow web, for this horse has a very thick shell ; six nails on each side. Nail clear around to heel — light nails. I am going to spread these feet. It will be necessary to turn the shoe-heels down a little to hold against the brace, so as to spread at the heel and take the strain off the nails and the shell. ISTail solid, and clinch. The shoe should rest only on the shell all around; the foot should represent an inclined plain clear to the very edo-e of the wall, and be left so when ironed. All should slant toward the center of foot. The doors are ooen. It is nearly dark. Mr. Brees came in in a bluster when I was at work on the last foot, drawing the shoe down solid, he looking on. When done, I dropped the foot down, and said: "There, Mike, I guess I have got you fixed at last." I had been som.e time getting these shoes on to suit me. They did suit me, for the opei-ation called out the remark I made. THE horse's rescue. 93 Said Mr. Brees : "I think you have fixed him." I^e starts for the hotel, and tells Bennett I am spoiling his horse so I can buy him cheaper. That starts another uproar. I was in some fear they would get the horse away from me. Yet I did not fear them, I held the horse. Let us look at these feet again. Eeaders. you * ' remember how they were when we first examined them. Now look in the bottom of these feet. There is a deep hole in this foot. It is cupped out deep, and yet it is not cut through in any place ; no blood drawn. His foot is narrow, and the shoe follows the shell around clear to the heel even. The foot has an elongated appearance, and it is so. The horse stands braced out, chest sunken in, shoulders dropped back, head down. He does not gnaw his feet. He soon quit that habit when I got him in my care, and yet he can hardly walk. " Mike, to morrow is the last day I can hold 3^ou on the contract. We must fix you for the night. You can lie down. That will save your cords. Your poor feet ache yet,- and they are feverish. To prevent their drying up too much we will pack your feet with sponge, filled with water, and tie cloths on them. It will not do to tie them tight; that would give you pain. We will gather the cloth above the hoof, and sew it so that it will not hurt or stop the circulation of the blood. You must have a good soft bed. It is late at night. I will let you out of some of your trouble before the sun goes down another day." This horse is not in my barn, but in Mr. Bennett's, which is open to all. This work, when I am gone, must be inspected by all to see what I have done. Mr. Brees saw his heels cut down, saw him 94 THE horse's rescue. thrown back in ihis position. All talk. And I let tliem. I bad to. Mr. Brees's nepbew bad a good eigbt-year-old liorse, which I wanted to get to cure. I told him I would do the job for ten dollars, as it would be an easy one. When I first talked with him I could not persuade him to let me have the horse, and I dropped down on the price. It was of no use. I was obliged to give it up. His horse's heels v/ere walled up very high, tipped on knee; Jame in one foot — lame in both, but he eould not see it I told the owner that if he was mine I would cut the heels down, and straighten the horse out very quick. He looked at me when I was talking. I walked away in search of another suf- ferer, which I should soon have room for. Let us go and see how Mike is getting along. It is morning, and not light yet. All is quiet, all sleeping. We will have to go to the shop, heat some water, take the tub to the barn, and soak his feet while he eats his breakfast. Then we will take him to the shop. It may be necessary to state the plan I intended to follow out in experimenting to prevent inflammation taking place by expanding Mike's feet so much at one time. I well understood this contraction and expand- ing principle that was constantly at work, caused by wet and dry weather, and tight and loose shoes. It did not kill all its victims, but a great many it did. I had now to spread tlie foot and flatten it out at once. If I did not do it, there would be no cure. The plan was to have the foot as soft and pliable as I could make it, so as not to hurt the horse. Tiien I must watch his feet bv feeling to see that no unnatural heat THE HORSE S RESCrE. 95 should get the start of me, and I prevented it bj soak. ing and packing with sponge, as I have previously de- scribed, after I had spread his feet, I think this horse's feet are soft enongh to spread, and I am going to try to spread them. The shop is locked ; curtains up at the windows. I am alone. I cannot hold his feet and spread them ; mv arms are not strong enouoh to do it in this position. I can make a screw, but that will take me nearly all day, and my time is growino- shoi-t. Tliis horse is expected to be on tl^e road to- morrow. It will be of no use to ask these fighters to help me, and I have other reasons for not Vv'antino- their assistance, whicli I will explain hereafter. I will take Mike to my barn, and get my wife to hold up liis feet. The reader can see a frail woman holding up the foot of a horse that weighs about twelve hun- dred, thrown off his base bv contraction and leverage struggling to stand on one foot which he takes away many times; it hurts him so to stand. Do you know s]}e was in great danger of getting hurt? She weighs about one hundred pounds. We were alone in this barn, but we accomplislied this difficult task. It is two good men's work. We flattened his feet out by spreading about three-fourths of an inch. Look at the bottom now. It has the same appearance to look at that it did when we commenced work on it, but the cup is all gone, and the foot is flat Who can tell how this is done unless he sees the operation ? I^o man. This horse's heels are low now. I had cut them down half or more, and expanding lowered them still further The horse's heels are wide ; his foot is nearly round ; he has got the colt's foot on, and the structure of his •96 THE horse's rescue. foot is all in harmony inside and out. His body goes forward on its base with weight in center of the foot. It will be well to more minutely explain this process of preparing feet of this kind for operation. This horse's feet were badly rolled up in at the base of heels. Expanding raises the heels until the wall gets perpen- dicular. "When it passes the line it lowers. In order to have it come in perfect harmony when expanding, you must use all the judgment you can command. If you leave the heels too high you will tip his knee; if too low, it will strain the cords, and either will throw the horse off his base to a greater or less degree. He will not move well, though it will not kill him. After the foot ,has been expanded, the shoe should not be taken off again in any case until the hoof has had time to grow and settle. Then it may be removed. If you should take the shoe off before, the foot would go back, which would create great heat, and cause great suffering to the horse; to get him out of which the same work would liave to be done over again. But we will finij^h this horse. As I said, he has got to go on the road to-morrow. Spreading this horse's feet did not seem to effect him much at first. He tried them by stepping first upon one, then the other. For a while I watched him. His head went up. I moved him moderately around the barn floor. At first he did not seem to have full control of his legs. I was in danger of being hit with his feet, and yet it was no fault of his, the change being so great. Let us give liim a chance to recover; he is changed in many ways. Let us take him outdoors and lead him around. In no case at first get on the horse ; he has all he can do, THE horse's rescue. 97 if he is changed on all of his feet at one time, to hold his own weight, until he has time to recover his equilib- rium and balance. It gives him a sick and weaken- ing sensation ; all is changed so suddenly internally and externally. I led him on the back streets. He soon wanted to trot, and I ran with him, my hand hold- ing his halter at the head. After running some time with him, his legs flying in all shapes, he seemed to go faster. We started through the business part of the town, which I was obliged to do to get to my shop. Mike swung me and carried me clear from the ground many times with his head. I could not help it. He was a powerful horse in all ways. He was coming to himself. I got him in the shop as quick as I could, locked the doors, got his feet in some hot water, rubl:)ed and washed his legs, and rubbed all of the air- puffs off. The air-puff is caused by the skin being loosened bv unnatural action of the feet and legs, which forms a vacuum, which fills with air. It in no case should be opened. The cause is removed. Let us rub the air out through the skin while Mike's feet feet are soaking in warm water. They will stay out as long as we can keep him natural. Nearly all horses are badly changed f]'om nature when air-puffs appear in many ways and stages. Of course that sail through the town attracted the attention of many. Some said I was crazy; some called me a "damned old fool." I understood all of that blowing too well to let it effect me. I got in the shop and let them pound the door. I kept on a straight line and on my base, which they did not at all times. Let me paint a picture, while Mike's feet are soaking, of what I saw pass this shop 98 THE hobse's kescue. one day. This is only one of thousands, whicli can be seen almost any day, and many times some days, if you have eyes. The railroad crossing was close to my shop. They had raised and graded so it made a little rise. I saw a horse and wagon coming, the horse thin in flesh. The wagon had two seats; three persons were on each seat, and there were some bags in the hind part of the wagon. A man on the front seat, with a hickory club as large as a broom- handle, five feet long, was pounding the horse, which could hardly move. The man was badly off his balance. I cast my eyes to the horse's feet. They were very long; his hind ones so long that he could not rise over the lever with- out breaking his legs. I stepped out into the road and stooped down to see what shape he put his feet in to get up that slight grade. No two feet were traveling on the same line. He was wringing and twisting to draw that load, and that club was playing on him con- stantly. He turned his toes some in, some out. He could not rise over that lever. Do you know what I thought at that time? Can it be possible the creator has made such a botch making mankind ? This has the appearance of a perfect botch. It has occurred to me many times since that man was not in any wise per- fected yet. He has still something to learn, and I con- tinue to hold the same opinion. Let us look this wagon over. It comes in all right, as this work is called " The Horse's Kescue." This wagon is heavy enough for two horses ; in fact, it is a two horse wagon. Every wheel makes a separate track, something as a snake would crawl ; wheels grinding on the shoulders of the axle, which has not been oiled in THE HORSE S RESCUE. 99 three months; so much gather that thej are constantly sliding on the ground, trying to keep on a straight line. If they could move the way they are set they would travel on lines that would cross each other sixtv rods ahead of the point where the wagon stood. Tlie driver being badly off his base, and out of harmoiiv, and the wagon running on the wrong principle, added greatly to the horse's suffering. The poor h rse, also off his base, trying to draw that heavy load up an in- clined plain rising over a long lever, has rather hard work ; and yet he had to endure it, and it is no fault of his. Look out for that lever ! There is a power in lever principle. After this poor horse has dragged that load up hills many miles, for his reward he is stabled in some old rookery you could throw a cat through ; cold, bleak wind and snow howling through ; some old rotten clover-stack hay for his rations; the place where he is tied and obliged to stand has not been cleaned out in three months, and ofttimes more ; his hind parts ele- vated according to the size of the pile. Eeader, the horse has four legs. It makes a vast difference to him how he stands; give him his head, he will tell you whether the position he is obliged to stand is not right. How is he going to rest lying in this position — hind parts elevated in this way ? Some morning he is found cast. Then club and boots are used to help him up; if this does^ not raise him, a chain is put around him, and he is drawn out of his uncomfortable position. He cannot rise. The hard treatment, that lever, the abuse he has been obliged to endure, have exhausted all of his power of endurance. 100 THE horse's KESCUE. And this is no uncommon thing ; it is a very u;?nal thing. Take a peek around. I have been peeking around many years. I went into a shop in Auburn city, and I saw two men turning horse shoes. I looked at them a few minutes, then walked away. In a short time I met one of these men on the street. He said to me : " Were you in my shop peeking arpund to-day ?" " Yes," said I ; " I was in your shop." " I can beat any man in the state turning shoes," he rejoined; "lean turn one hundred shoes in just foi'ty minutes !" All talking about the number of shoes made, and none about the principle the work should, be done on. This man was badly oQ his bal- ance. There is great danger of shipwrecks and collis- ions when driver, horse, and wagon are all out of har- mony. But let us not forget Mike. The plan must be carried out to prevent inflammation taking place in Mike's feet. I was with him, taking his feet out of warm water for a time to see if I could feel, by placing my hand on his hoofs, any change of heat arising. I did not perceive any change. I thought my plan was going to work. Of course there was no sleep for me that night. This horse was out of my control in the morning. He would be put on the road the next day. There was no use in protesting ; they all knew every- thing that was worth knowing, and what they did not know was of no use to any one. I had to take all of the chances and do the hard work. When daylight came you might have seen a tired man standing by this thankful horse soaking his feet in warm water, and washing his cords, helping them to change back to THE horse's rescue. 101 their natural place to give him as little suffering as possible. That plan holds good yet. It does help and relieve the suffering sooner than if it was not done. There is one thing yet to be explained, that is, how thatprocessofspreadingMike'sfeet worked. When the foot contracts the sole rises in the center. That pushes the structure of the foot up in the center and raises it out of the cup or coronet at the top. Expand- ing lets it down. These wonderfully wise people could not see how this was done. The hostler swung his hat. ''Doan has cared Mike. I don't know how, but he has done it." The shoes had to be looked at and pat- terned after. They are just the thing. Of course they must steal the secret; it is a big thing. Those lips on the shoes at the heel are not of much use. He has cut the heel down. Mr Brees and his relative (the one who had the stiff horse I tried to get) are going to cure their horse I saw in the shop. I could sit in my shop and look in theirs. This horse being buckskin in color, we will call him Buckskin. Before we commence on this horse we must see Mike off on the road. He was to let out. I was at the barn and watched him. He was whipped up when he turned around the corner and fell on his knees. He was not yet used to the change. But he was driven and hurried off his legs, which I told them over and over again, they must not do. ^ I thought to my- self, "What is the use of trying to do anything with such a. pack of damned fools?" I am not yet done with poor Mike. We will let him sail a while. He is still in very bad shape. Let us see what they are doing for poor Buckskin. 102 THE HORSES RESCUE. We can see from my shop. This is a good time to trace cause to effect. They are cutting his heels down. That is right so far. but they have left the toe at least one inch too long. They have got his shoes patterned after Mike's as near as they can. He is coming out of the shop. He has to be pulled out, for he can hardly move. What is his condition now? He is thrown back off his base the furthest I ever saw. Let them work ; it's no use to say anything to them; it would only set them to bawling. The crowd gathers around this horse. All talk ; no one knows what ails this poor horse. The owner looks rather worried. His horse is in a worse condition now than ever, he is braced out so bad that his back sinks down. If you should get on him he could not hold your weight. He can hardly move This horse stand now on the oppo- site side of the street from Mr. Brees's shop. It is no use to talk to them. They all fight me. Let us walk away. We will watch that horse and see where his suffering ends. I have many horses to look to. They need my care. I can't relieve them all, but I will do all I can. I work for the horse, not the man. I nearly always had from one to four horses in my barn. Some my own; some belonging to others; and which I was caring for in different stables, and my shop was to be kept up. I had almost a night and day business to watch the changes and effects in all stages I was determined to get master of this complicated business. I was sure there was a way out, and I would find it, let it cost what it might. It is morning again. While going to my shop I passed the place where^we left the buckskin horse. He was about two rods from where THE horse's rescue. 103 we left him the night before. His owner was with him, and looked worried. He had a keg with a swab in it, and was daubing his feet. I walked in. I felt .sorry for him and his horse. Said I, "What is that staff you are putting on?" "It is tar, keroSene, and soft-soap." " Mr. Brees, it is of no use. You had better give me eight dollars. Your uncle cannot steal this great discovery. (I know not whether he was his uncle or not, but their names were Brees.) The principle is what I want to lay down correct in this work. They had disabled this horse completely by throwing him off his base, cutting his beds down. They had lengthened the lever so much it had sprung his back down and thrown nearly all of his weight back of cen- ter. There he was fastened, and was obliged to stay. They knew no way out of this serious trouble. I would have helped them out, but they would not take any lessons. This was early in the fall. The horse was missins:, and I lost track of him for a long time. I think it was in the month of March following that I saw Mr. Brees doing his chores at his barn. I went in. There lay this Buckskin horse. I asked, "Has this horse been lying in this condition all of this time?" "Yes." " Does he stand up?" " He can, but lies down nearly all of the time." " Are those the shoes you had put on last fall ?" ''Yes." " Have they ever been reset since ?" "No." 104 THE hokse's rescue. "Mr. Brees, it would be my advice to pull those shoes off, cat off his toes some, pare the toes down well ; cut no more from the heels ; give him room to travel around, and put no more shoes on him for six^ months. That will help him some. It will not cure him bj any means." He did so. I saw him driving Buckskin many months afterward, and he was quite a horse. His knees were tipped yet, but if they had done what I did to Mike's feet after catting his heels down, and shortened his toes a little more, he would have gone back on his base or nearly so ; instead, it threw him further off. Ife would have straightened his legs at the same tirae_ Mike is iu trouble again, but it does not surprise me. I have got used to this business. It has become a common thing; I well knew he would be. He was in a very bad shape when he started from the barn. He has been on the road about two weeks. Mr. Bennett said : ''Doan, there is something wrong about Mike's hind parts." "Yes ; there always has been since I knew him." " Can you fix him behind ?" "Yes, if I can have him in my care and control four days. Nobody must use or exercise him but my. self during this time." " All right," says Bennett, " go ahead." It is a hard job to get this horse's hind feet in the soaking tub and keep them in. My little boy Frank cannot do it; that's a man's business. I shall have to neglect my shoeing for a while almost entirely to at. tend to this horse and those I have in the barn. Mike was THE horse's rescue., 105 was divided against himself. His forward parts were changed so as to let his weight go back on the base, which it did when he stood still. But his hind parts were con- stantly pulling his fore parts off the base — always on a strain — when he was on his feet (which I have ex- plained). When traveling he had to draw his hind parts with his forward parts over that lever, caused by contraction, drawing his hind feet forward under his belly. It hurt him so that it caused him to amble. I saw when he left the barn what position he was thrown in. But what could I do ? They were all so smart, and they were losing so much money by their horses lying still. Some people are always stopping spile holes and leaving the bung out. The fact is, Mike was divided against himself. How are we going to put him in harmony of action, balance him in the center, and take those large air-puffs off? The prin- ciple we applied on his forward feet will work behind more than it did forward to change him. It seems to effect all liorses more on their hind legs chang- ing them back to natural, and it affects them behind more to change from natural to uimatural. I soaked Mike's feet, spread them, and carried out my plan as nearly as I could under the circumstances and the sur- roundings I had to contend with. The sole is the guide in spreading all feet. Some require more, some less, according to the degrees of change. No rule can be laid down. If the foot is skilTully dressed and pre- pared, you can spread until the sole comes down nearly flat. You must look when you are spreading to see if you can see it come down. It must spread at the same time clear to the top of the wall. If you do not 106 THE horse's refcue. see it flatten after you have spread a little, yoa must stop and walk the horse aronud or run with him. Spread in pairs so as to drive the sole down. Look and see how much it has come down. Soak in warm water, spread again ; continue to move him around until the sole is down flat. Some horses are so bad their feet are pushed clear out of the cup at the top and pinched in at the bottom. If great care is not taken in preparing the fooc for this operation, the foot will get pinched at the top of the wall, the bone not having room to go down between the cup at the top. It would not kill the horse, but it would cause him suffering for a few hours, then it would matterate and cause a flaw in the hoof. It should be spread enough to give it room to go down before he is driven much. These are cases of long standing, as a general rule, but there are many exceptions to that. If you do not cut the heels well down you will be likely to get him pinched, for this reason : it would spring the foot out at the bottom, which would throw it together at the top. You must see it go together both top and bottom. Let us look at Mike after spreading his hind feet, and see where he has gone to, caused by spreading the foot half an inch His body has all gone forward on the base ; his back iias lowered across his loin ; his forward parts are i-elieved of their constant strain. He is "ftnited again ; that is, the cause is removed. Some hard work will have to be done yet to make him com- fortable. The air-pufls have all gone around on the front side of his legs. It hurts him. He stands up on his toes. He won't }-)ut liis heels down to a flat THE horse's rescue. 107 rest. He must be got down on his feet one at a time, stand him in a tub of warm water, while those air-puffs are rubbed out through the skin. This shop is locked, curtains up. I am alone. This is a heavy and power- ful horse. There is no other way to get him out of this fix except to compel him to stand on one foot, which must be done by raising the others. It is " business " to hold up the hind parts of that heavy horse, he standing up on his toe, and keep him in the tub and rub his legs at the same time, and change around and keep it up for three or four hours. Walk him around the shop. Soak and rub. Hold him up while doing it; get him nearly down on his heels ; air-puffs are nearly all gone. Open the doors ; out we go. Eun with him awhile ; tie to tree, take up one leg, rub the other, the horse straddling and throwing two-thirds of his weight on me all of the time. Change legs five or six times, then run with him again ten minutes ; tie to the fence the same. Up with a leg by main strength ; rub and change. Keep this up. Eun and tie for two hours or more. Then run with him to the shop; get both of his feet in the tub of warm water. He stands down on his heels flat rest. The air-puffs are nearly all gone, and some hair is rubbed off m spots. That will soon come in again. His trouble is over for a while. I had no time during the operation to listen to bawlers. I could hear them any time, and not go out of my way. It affects the air-puffed horses on their hind legs all in this way, and they have got to go through this or no cure. It is business, but it brings them out all right in a short time if it is done as it should be. Mike is chansred, or the cause is removed. He should 108 THE horse's rescue. have a chance to recover from the effect of this great change. • His hind feet were not so hard, and it did not take so long to soften his feet. After this hard day's work for me and Mike, I got him in his stable and made him as comfortable as I could by packing his feet with clay (other packing would do as well, the object being to keep his feet moist). Thus I left him and went to my barn, where I had business "for more than half of the night exercising, caring for, and watching the effect of changes on horses, and the time it took to recover" from the change. These horses were different from Mike, which I will explain b}'' and by. It is morning. I must go and see Mike. I was at the barn before there was much stir in town. I found Mike in a bad fix. The hostler was there. How is this? Some one has been driving this horse, and has nearly driven him off' his legs. He stood up on his toes, and could hardly stand on his hind leg?. Tho hostler told me Mike was out all night. Of course there was some loud bugling. It could be heard ten rods at least. This hard work is to be done all over again to get him down on his heels. It will take me all dav, and it did; besides, it has caused Mike unnecessary suffer- ing. I pulled him out of tlie barn. I had got in the middle of the street. Mike was hobbling upon h's toes. Mr. Bennett, hearing the uproar, came to the front door of the barn. "Doan, what is the matter with that horse?" " It is the change." " I don't like that kind of charge." '•I will have him all riglit by night. If you want THE horse's rescue. 109 one hundred and fifty dollars come and get it, and let me have the horse'' He walked away. The same process — soak, ruh^ run, and tie to go through with again, all caused by their not doing as they agreed. How do you like reader, the business I am at work at? Let us stick. Never give up the ship. I got Mike in the barn at dark that night. He was down flat rest on his heels, and his ankles were weak. I bandaged his ankles, packed his feet, and left him again, and told them he must have rest or they would have him down. The next day T soaked his forward feet and spread them a little. They had grown some. It had been nearly three weeks, the foot flaring from top of wall down to tread. If it was not ironed. I would be wider and not wear off, which it could not for this reason : the wear was on the shoe and not the hoof, and it was ironed so it could not expand. What would be the result if I did not spread his feet a little? The sole would raise, he would be thrown oS. his base again, according to the degree of change of which I have already written. He has six nails on each side of these shoes, put there on purpose for this operation. Let us draw out two of these heel nails on both sides. We have spread his feet and given them liberty. They will spread with his weight if they are kept soft. Do not get discouraged. With all of the hard work we have done, he is not right yet. His toes on his for- ward f^et have more lever. They have grown since his shoes were set three weeks ago. Spreading his feet at the heel will help him some, but that does not shorten the lever by any means. To have him right 110 THE house's rescue. he should have had all his feet fixed at the same time. I cannot do away with that lever. If I could it would be one of the biggest things man ever invented. I can see no way except to kill the horse ; then it would cease to grow. Putting on trash to stop a foot from growing too fast, or to make it grow faster and iron- ing, causing great fever and heat, and preventing na- ture from having its course at the same time, is rather antagonistic and claiming a little too much power. Horses must, if ironed, travel on unnatural feet all of the time, with the lever at a greater or less degree of length. Before I get through this woik I shall tip over more than you dream of with that lever power. I started to go to the end of the whole business. We will put Mike in his stable again, pack his feet, all four. The ignorant never have seen anything wrong about the horse's hind feet, which should have equal care. His hind feet and legs are necessary to him. He sends himself off with his hind legs, and draws more with them if he is as the creator made him — which a very few are that have been shod — he does not stay so but a short time. We will have to let Mike sail on the road three or four weeks and watch him. Take care of his feet; no one else will. Neither will they })ay for doing it. They had rather sit with their feet on the back of chair tops and smoke. Doan will shoe, balance all tlje cripples, and cure them and keep them cured. He is willing to do it, and we are willing he should. We can drive the horses off their legs, and then go to him. It is not necessary for us to be broken of our rest, neither is it any use for us to know how he does it. THE horse's rescue. Ill Eeader, this has been going on in this way for many years. I will say right here that I never received but five dollars in forty-one years aside from the price of shoeing, except what I made by buying and trading for these cripples, curing them and letting them go again That five dollars was paid to me by Mr. Hatch, of Auburn city. I gave half of it to my brother, J. J. Doan, who did nearly all of the work. Mr. Hatch gave me all I charged, and would have given me more, but that was not my object. I wanted to introduce this great discovery, and relieve the suf- fering horse ; and that is what I am writing this ■'^■ork for. T have put thousands of dollars in the pockets of others, and will continue to do so if they will read this work, and study the horse. It is no trouble to look at a horse. They are before you nearly all the time. Let us look at a pair that are passing now. These horses are in Horseheads, the place I am at work m now, and shall be for some time to come vet. This pair of horses are about six j^ears old — a matched pair of browns. They are valued at one thousand dollars. I have looked them over in the stable manv times. Let us take a side-view of them in harness. In order to see these horses as you should, you must see two pairs at the same time; and 3'et there is but one.. You should see this pair first, as the creator made them, before man tried to improve on them. They stand with their forward legs back of straight; heads up, neck arched, head in, with mouth closed; weight equalized on center of all four feet; balanced in center; no strain unnatui'al in any way; their head pointing on a straight line, and feet all 112 THE horse's rescue. pointing on a straiglit line, providing tliej have had their libertv to exercise and wear off their feet as fast as they grew, and been trimmed and cared for. They stand the perfect natural horses, as their creator made and intended them to be. Now we will look at them and see man's improvements, trying to make horses over, or, in other words, excel 1 the creator. I had looked at this Pair of hors*^s almost dailv for over a j'ear, passing and repassing. They are fitting these horses for market for coach horses ; it will not do to say anything to them; neither it will it do to point out any defect in them, or tell them how to improve their movement ; it would set them bawlinsr. Read- ers, let me tell you their suffering condition, then you can step out and see thousands all around you ; and, travel where you will, you cannot miss seeing them if you have eyes and use them. I will try to describe the suffering condition these horses ai'e thrown in. The causes are many, and hard to describe. As this work is tracing cause to effect and effect to cause, we will begin at the first cause. That is, the fallible be- ing, man, is ignorant of natural laws and the suffering produced by abusing them. These laws are the crea- tor, and I recognize no other. The horse is the inno- cent and helpless sufferer, and is part of the creator's works. Through ignorance he has been made a great sufferer — the greatest of all the creator's works; and I send this work on its mission for the purpose of res- cuing them from their deplorable condition : and I ap- peal to the supreme court of heaven to back me up. Man's courts would be of but little use to me; no jus- tice can be had in them. Let us return to this pair THE horse's rescue. 113 of horses. They are all thrown off their base in many ways, which I have explained. Like causes produce like effect. This is a pair of matched horses. This is to show you how well they work and come together, and shows their action and movement together, and "what a hard time a man has that has no knowledge of the horse, and the cause and effect he is obliged to contend with, and does not know it. The nigh horse is badly off his base on his forward legs, and a greater degree on his hind legs. Two-thirds of his weight is on his hind legs. His feet are all different lengihs, and all run over ; some traveling the same line, some not, and none on straight line. He wrings his feet at every step, and ambles on his hind feet. This move- ment is caused by contraction, leverage, and run-over feet, produced by ironing and not balancing him and equalizing his weight; and that is not all. Contrac- tion has lengthened the lever on his toe to a far greater length than you are aware of. You cannot see it beyond the toe of his foot, and yet it is. This horse is nearl}'' always lagging behind his mate, unless he is constantly urged up with the whip. Let us look over his mate ; he is the same, only not quite so bad off. On his hind legs the lever is not quite as long ; he single foots. They are both thrown back off their base badly, and are obliged to stay so, for all the great wisdom their owners have- contained in their heads. Let us look at the gaggers and see if they help the action and movement of these poor tortured crea- tures. Readers, remember these horses are drawn down by contraction and leverage, braced out and fastened there. 114 THE horse's rescue. Now they are trying to make them carry high heads by over-draws and checks. What is the effect of this? It adds greatly to the suffering of these horses. It throws them off their base further than they would otherwise be. Their necks sink down, their noses stick straight out, and they have the ap- pearance of camels; the lines are so arranged they turn their heads out nearly one-quarter around, when thev should point on a straight line when the horses are traveling on a straiglit line. And that is not all. The}^ have been kept in the stable not verj'' light. They are brought out in the sunlight gagged up, and obliged to have the bunlight pouring in their eyes, while the driver must have a shade over his tender eyes and head. This is a rather hard picture, but these are facts. Let us look at the driver ; he sits on the front edaQ of the seat; he appears as though he was sitting on a jug. He wants to go faster, his hands extending out toward the horse's loin. With each hand he has the appearance of pushing on the lines. He does not like the movements of his horses, but is ignorant of the cause. It does not take a very clear observer of human nature to see the unrest and worry he is obliged to endure, caused by the awkward movements of his horses. Let us watch him circle them. He will be obliged to make a large circle, or they will be likely to fall. See, he is turning them to the left. The near horse's head is drawn hy the lines the course Ije wants him to take. His mate's head is drawn the op- posite. Reader, is it not curious that these horses can- not move together ? Let us look and see how they THE horse's rescue. 115 handle their feet. They have but little knee action. They drag one foot over the other. If they are har- ried, they will be likely to tread on their own feet, and on each other's. The near horse sags back on making this circle ; the off horse swings his hind parts out against the trace. There are all degrees of this awkwardness, accord- to the change. This pair are not very bad yet. They were sold, I heard, for one thousand dollars, to a gen- tleman in Bath, Steuben bounty, K Y., though the story IS not to be relied on ; but it can be done any day, and is every day, all over the world. Horses are sold and bought, and large prices paid for them, in all stages of change from natural, and ofttimes they are in the last stages. It does not seem to affect the sale or price, for this reason : the people are ignorant of the horse, and the position he is in. I could have balanced them better than they were if I could have shod them in my shop, by dressing their feet,, making the levers on the toes of equal length, shoeing them all around at the same time, having the hind feet in pairs, and the fore feet the same, and work to one- sixteenth of an inch both on shoe and foot, eye always on run-over feet. I could keep them from showing their defects by limping, for they limped equally on all their feet. I have balanced thousands of these poor horses between contraction and leverage and run- over feet in forty-one years, and while I am experi- menting nights I am doing all I can at this hard busi- ness daily to get money to keep my horses, which I have no use for only to see if I can find out what ails all of these poor cripples. My close and careful work 116 THE HOBSES RESCUE, on the horse's foot gave me a good run of business; more than I wanted. Many thought I could cure their horses by shoeing, for this reason — they did not limp. That was all they knew, or could be taught about it. They would come pouring in from a dis- tance, sometimes thirty miles, and ofttimes more. Some I could help, some were out of my reach, and I could not help them by shoeing; but I could get them out of their trouble, if I could have them in my care a short time. " What will you charge me," they would ask, " to cure m}' horse?" " Well, it is worth from ten to fifty dollars to do it. It depends something on what ails the horse, and what condition he is in when I commence on him." About nine out of ten would rail out on me in this way: " When you get ten dollars out of me for shoeing a horse you can consider yourself damned smart;" or, " When you fool me you will have to be smarter than T take you to be." That kind of talk I have heard daily, and many times a day, in the past ten years. Before I get throuo-h this work I will show you these smart men could be fooled badly. I experimented on the horses a little, just to see if I could fool them. I did not take any of their money. Mike has come around again to be shod. He has done some traveling. His shoes are nearly all worn off his feet These shoes were flat all around, and were nearly worn in two at the toe. Their wearing off saved Mike's cords some. His forward shoes has been on seven weeks, his hind shoes four weeks. He THE horse's rescue. 117 looks fine ; his hair begins to look bright and glossy, and yet he has been traveling out of harmony some, for this i-eason, that the lever on his fore feet has been tlie longest. If it had been the longest on h:s hind feet the effect would have been more serious, which I well knew wiien I set him sailing. Mike always had a good friend peeking around, watching and caring for his feet, to see they did net dry up hard. Mike, we will put the polish on you this time. Header, I have laid down the principles for expand- ing the foot by shoeing a little on the Kentucky hunter mare. That principle is right, and all there is, except to spread it out at once. We will make the lever on all of Mike's feet equal length. The colt's f >ot he must have. All is nearl}" in harmonj' of ac- tion ; structure is nearlj' right. We will shorten the lever a little shorter than natural ; his feet are grow- ins: all the time. It will wear the toe of shoes off* some if we do not put on corks, which we will not do. In this wa}^ we can fix him so he can go six weeks very well, with good care taken of his feet. Then he will want to be changed back again. Reader, how wn)ukl y^n like to follow this business for forty-one 3^ ears ? I will tell 3-()U about the pay before I get through this sail. Perhaps ^^ou will like it, better. That is what all seem to be after. I have an iron-gra}^ in my barn. I always, or nearly always, had from one to four, seldom more than four, at one time. This grriy is five years old. It was stiff v hen I took it to cure. It is not mine. I have forgotten the owner's name. It is no loss to me, hov/evei'." I took his horse to cure. The bargain was this way : I 118 THE horse's rescue. was to cure li is horse for ten dollars. He v/as to pay me for the feed while I had the liorse in mv care, or furnish the feed, and he chose to furnish the feed. He owned three farms. He told me if he continued to have as good lack as he had had he would soon own more. He came with the feed. It was a small jag of wet wheat straw taken out of a stack half rotten — not fit to bed a horse for me. I said nothing. This horse was thin in flesh. I fed her well with good feed of my own. She was so badly thrown off her base that she could hardlv move or turn around on her forward feet. She was quite natural on her hind feet. I told him it was something of a task to get her back on her base; it would take me about two weeks before he could take her home. This is in the winter. I shod horses in my shop days, and had these cripples in the shop, soaking and preparing them for spreading their feet, Kights I was in the barn or exercising these horses. While changing them it affects them. It would set them howling worse to see these horses while going through this change. It would put me in danger of being mobbed ; if they did not do that it would bother mc some about my work. I could do better when they were all asleep. I had all I could handle without being bothered. Night after night you see a man in a barn with an overcoat on — cold winter nights — heating water in the house, washing and rub- bing these horses' legs ; sometimes in the street run- ning with them ; sometimes driving ; sometimes riding them. When you commence to change them tl^ere is no stopping. Then you must go through. I had no help; I had to do it all. I stood alone, iiearly all on THE UOKSE'S rescue. 119 my track. During this horse fight a Cornell student ari'ived in town, a graduate under Prof. Law. He put up at Bennett's hotel. He had a large stock of knives and instruments. They were polished nicely. Whnt use lie made of them I know not. I have no use for such. He had a lot of bones of horses' legs that had been spavined and ringboned. He told me they were all curable but one ; the pastern joint where the ring- bone is located had grown solid together. That, he said, was incurable. I told him cases w-here the bone was so badly affected as they were it was out of the power for any man to cure, for this reason : he could not remove the cause. The bone is fall of lioles; the enamel is all off; the bone is rasfsfed and rouirh. You cannot make it natural and smooth again. Of course t],atset him to howling. He was an effect doctor. I a ked liim if he ever saw a horse's foot expand or spread at the heels at once three-quarters of an iiu-h. No; it could not be done. They say it would npo 1 the horse. You would be arrested for cruelty to'ani- mals. '* Look here^ professor^ are you personally ac- quainted with that personage, 'They Say?' I have heard so much about him I would like te see him and have an introduction. He seems to be very wise. Nearly all appeal to him and quote him. If I could get acquainted with him I might get him to help me cure horses. I am spreading horses^ feet and curing them every day, and nights too, and no one is smart enough to tell how it is done. I can't see any danger from They Say. This new-born babe on the horse had just started out after graduating at Cornell Univers- ity. He will learn, like all others, by experience. It 120 THE HORSES RESCUE. takes time and practical work, like all other great things. Reader, let us go on with our work. This iron-gray had been shod before she had grown up to her natural size. Her feet were not their full size, when first ironed, and were held by the shoe from growing nat- ural ; the sole' raised. It served her as it does all others ; threw her back off her base, and held her there, and she partly grew up in this condition. It is a hard job to get such cases back on their base. In about ten days I did accomplish this hard task. She had good knee action. During these ten days I had some cold rides in the night when all were asleep. Her shoulders did not come back as easy as some. They must be worked back by drawing loads after you re- move the cause, and you must keep it removed ; that is, keep the structure of the foot natural, and watch that lever at the toe. This mare's head is up; she moves very fine ; not many move better. I will drive through the town .ind see wliat the eflect will be tak- ing this sail. They all seem to look at me. I do not. see one looking at this mare. The fact is they do not know her. The horse led through the town ten days ago was foundered ; that is incurable. It is the same color. No argument could be produced or used to convince them it was the same horse. The good care and good feed with it had changed her wonderful]3^ I drove past my old friend the blacksmith and shoei-. The better success I had the more his wrath increased. There were several men with him standing in his shop [loor. He commenced as I was passing to rail at me so I could hear it. I drove on. The ihouqht came THE HORSE S RESCUE. 121 to me, "This is rather hard after ten nights with but little sleep, and days the same." I had others 1 was working on in different stages of change toward nat- iiral to care for, and they were not all in my barn. It was the last straw that broke the camel's back. This inan had dogged me nearly one year, and had no cause for doing so, I had had as much patience as any man in that town, but it was exhausted. At last I must shake that man off, I have carried him long enough. He is no good to me in this work, and a damage to himself. It will be better for us both. So I turned and drove back and pulled up in front of his shop. The parties were all thera Header, I assure you this was what I did not like to do. I had tried to be friendlv with Mr. Brees, and was then, but he did not seem to look at it in that lisfht. I did not want to shoe horses. I wanted to cure stiff and crippled ones if I could get enough to live out of it. I could not cure all of thtsse horses shoeing; that was what made the most of them stiff, with the bad treatment they are are obliged to endure. I asked Mr. Brees if he had plenty of business. "Yes; what of itT " I think it would be better for you to attend to it then. Mine is no part of yours. If you meddle any more with my business I will tell the people you are slaughtering more horses than any man in the Che- mung valley. They will believe me as quick as they v/ill you. I want you tD shoe. The more you shoe the better my business will be. You slaughter and I will cure and keep still. We will build up a big trade. 122 THE hokse's rescue. Trj that. Do not set any more troublesome fellows on me." That stopped that i-acket. But let us dispose of this iron-gray. I kept this gray two weeks. The owner took her home. Slie had her spreaders on. I told him he must put her in the team and work her ; it would help her shoulders by drawing to come back to their place. She was nearly all right. I saw him drawing coal with her. She was traveling fine, and on her base ; good action. I charged him to not take her shoes off. I would do that when it was time. I told him to drive around so I could see her when he came to town. He lived about three miles away. He did not pay me for keep- inc^, shoeincr, or curinsr when he took her away, but I was safe enough. He owned three farms. I was very busy. I thought he v^ould come around. I had no time to run after him. He was to come to me. Time passed, and I did not see or hear from him. He was almost a stranger to me when I took his horse to cure. In about six months this man drove up to my shop with this same mare, the stiffest I ever saw. If one can be much stiSFer than another, she had the extra touch. She was thrown back further off her base than she was when I first commenced on her. I was sur- prised to see him and her too. I asked him what he had been doing. He told me Dave ToMmsend told him to pull those spreading shoes off. They were pulled off in his shop soon after she went out of my control. This was the reason I did not see him around. Mr. Townsend ran a shop in Ilorseheads. He tried hard to make the people believe I was crazy. I was very much in his way. He worked a very small THE horse's rescue. 123 field on the horse. He might run a peanut stand. He did for a short time. The poor horses would not have suffered quite as much if he had kept at that business. He caused this poor horse suffering that I cannot de- scribe, and this man came back to me to have me get her out of it again. He said he would try me once more. If I did not do it this time he would give me up. " How did she act after you pulled her shoes off?" "I thought she would die. I had to stand her in cow manure all of the time." *' It would have been better for her if she had died, then she would not suffer. She is not much use to any one as she is. Dave Townsend can get her out all straight. He does it with angle-worm oil." I did not touch her, neither did I get anything for what I had done. This man I will have to let go free. I think it is wrong to abuse a perfect fool. Keader, we have another case to dispose of. Here stands Mike at the same post where he stood nine weeks previous. Let us look him over. ISTo man could tell by looking at him if he had not known him and seen this change take place by degrees. He has been almost daily on the road and improved all the time. His feed, when I commenced, was eighteen quarts of oats per day. It was reduced to twelve in a short time, for this reason : Mr. Bennett had a partner in his business. He started to go to Elniira, his wife with him. He went part way and came back, drove up to the barn, ordered the feed taken off of Mike, ordered another horse. He told them in the hotel, ''I was not afraid of him ; my wife was." 1-4 THE horse's rescue. I was always peeking around. In the evening I walked into the hotel. There were several around the bar. Mr. Bennett had a number of new bits. They were counselinir about the best bits to hold Mike to keep him from running awaj. I told them Mike was coming to life ; he wasn't running av^'ny. I would drive him on a slack rein, and there would be no dan- ger in doing so. There was no reply. I walked a.way and let them fight. They will be scared worse when I fjet this horse balanced in the center. At that time 1 had not fixed his hind feet. Let us look at Mike after he is balanced standing at this post. I shall never forget that horse. While looking him over in all points I pronounced him the best horse I ever saw at that time. I have not seen his mate since. There is a great change in him. I stood up by the side of him. I am five feet seven inches talJ. I put up my hand, and could just reach to the top of his ears. He stood natural and easy ; his hair was sleek and glossy, and as handsome dapple-brown as I ever saw. "Mike, ^ you are as near as the creator made you as I can make you ; and yet with all the hard work I have done on vou nights and days, your owner is as ignorant as ever he was. He does not seem to realize this wonderful change in you. He cannot see you gnawing your feet, sufferii!g night and day; shrunken and shriveled up; all air-puffs ; stiff and sore ; hair dead, and you nearly so, but he tells the people there was nothing the mat- ter with vou, only a little road sore. I wanted to cure you for an advertisement, Mike. I am well paid now if you would only stay so; but I well know you will not; that lever will grow, contraction will take place, THE horse's rescue. 125 and you have the ignorance of jour owner and many others to contend with. I w^ill care for you ail I can when I can net a chance. No medicine has been used on you internally ; no butclierin^. Tlie cause of all your trouble hns b?en removed by expanding your feet and dressing them, and making them as your cre- ator had made tliem before tliey were slaughtered by ironing them. Hi rum McConnell, the veterinarian of this town, tells me that that butcher I drove out of this town cured you. I suppose he had reference to those shoes he ordered Mr. Brees to put on, that caused you to gnaw your feet. Now I would like to know, in the name of reason and common sense, how MeConnell came in possession of so much wisdom about this complicated matter." He was an agent for the railroad company, and was obliged to be at the de- pot all or nearly all of his tin.-^. He kept his medi- cine to cure horses there. I cured without it. He did not cure these stiff horses with all of his trash. The fact is, some wanted to drive me out. I had good friends before I left that town. Their craft was in danger. I think I will drjp in there soon again, and try them another battle on the horse ; I have not quit yet. I must clear away some of this rubbish before I can go on with my work. Mr. Bennett and I had a few words about shoeing a horse ; I shod his horses. He had. traded and got one. It was a strange horse to me. I shod it, and it inter- fered afterward. He wanted me to try him ngain. I did, and charged him for setting them over. He found fault. I told him I was tired working for him for no 126 * THE horse's rescue. pay and no credit. If he had given me credit for curino- Mike I would not have said a word. "I paid you for shoeing." "Yes." "Then you have no honor." So much for that hard job. Let us go on with this horse fight. It is paying business. There was another racket around Bennett's hotel. Mike ran away. Mr. Bennett was in the pump busi- ness. A party of three went out in the country to set a pump. Some pumps made up the load. Mike was the propelling power. Jack Eacker was the agent and boss. lie was a reporter for the papers in this town, and was a clever fellow. He was quite a bugler — a good match for me on that. I was sorry to see Jack hurt, for he did get hurt; his face was badl}^ bruised, and shoulder injured. There was no use of my telh ing them anything before or after the shipwreck- I was in the last stages of lunac}^ They knew it all, and I let them have their own way^ and kept on a straight line. Mike spread them all out along the road, pumps and tools, and made a bad shipwreck. While all this raeket is going on I must go and see Mike. I am quite a hand to talk with horses. I en- joy talking with horses better than I do with some men. "Mike, how did you come to shipwreck those fel- lows so ?" * " I did not have room enough for my hind legs to have full swing." " I see the skin and hair are all off your cords, above your hocks ; that must have hurt you ?" THE horse's rescue. 127 "It did; the cross-bar of the fills was chawing my legs at every step. You see, since you made me as my creator made me, I need at least eighteen inches more room to clear my hind legs. I can make long strides now, and I like to do it; it scares them some, but if they will give me room I will scare them worse, if my feet are' kept as they are now." The fact is just as it is stated above, and that was the cause of the wreck. As this work is called " The Horse's Eescue, and Cause and Effect Book," this comes in all right. Such ignorance adds to the suffer- ing of the horse. Tiie old, nearly worn out spreading shoes that I pulled off of Mike were ordered to be carried to the hotel, where they were looked at and commented on. '•These are the shoes," they say, "that cared Mike." These shoes had no curing properties in them ; it was the principles I worked on — removing the cause ; na- ture did the curing. Mike was a natural trotter, and if he had been in goo J hands would have been hard to beat. He was ambitious, and had great powers of endurance; for strength and muscle I never saw his equal. There is no use setting any price on him. The price of horses is o-overned and reo:ulated in manv ways — sometimes by fear, by fancy, by the size of a man's pile, and how he obtained it, and the owner's circ^umstances and sur- roundings. This horse Mike was soon missing from his stall. I missed him, for I had visited Mike's stall daily for nearly three months, though I did not always find him there. Where he went I know not. I never saw him after the wreck but once, that I can remem- 128 THE horse's rescue. her. Fear was the cause of Mike's changing hands. He might get stiff and lame again; he might ship- wreck some one again. And iofnorance was the cause of all. There is not much use trying to teach a man when he thinks he has all of the knowledge. Such a man's atttention can be attracted with children's toys quite easv. I have seen children wearin2^ men's clothes. It is no indication of wisdom. A man's grandfather may give him t])iee thousand dollai^s, but that does not add to his knowledge. It does have an eSect sometimes in this wa}^ ; it will cause a man of small intellect to wear a pair of boots three inches longer than his feet, soles about one inch thick, causing him to toe out and interfere, knocking his heels at every step ; his head thrown back of a perpendicular line^ with a segar in his mouth lacking only a few degrees of sticking straight up; hands in both pockets nearly to elbow. He can bend a little every five minutes to look at a fob chain, but he could not bend enougli to see the lever on the toe of a horse's foot. It might strain him across the loin^ being thrown back off his base in a small degree, on the same principle that his horses are. I do not want you to think a man's foot is any com- parison to a horse's foot. I speak of this to show the difference. Ignorant people are always making these comparisons. Mankind nearly always take their boots or shoes off nights, and sometimes days if they hurt their feet. I have worn mine a f^ood man v nic^hts, and clothes too, while working on these suffering hoi^ses' feet. The horse is obliged to wear his shoes dav and THE horse's rescue. 129 niglit if tbey do Imrt. For many reasons tlie owner does not want to pay for movirig the wboes, and be does not feel tbe pain the poor horse endures. I wish tbey all could for twenty-four hours ; that would be long enough ; you would hear the loudest bawling you ever beard. Man's feet do notgr^win length ; bis toe- nails grow; if be does not cut them off be will be likely to have bis attention called to the end of his toes if be wears boots ; and this is not all; his foot bas joints, and bis foot has no shell ; it turns up at the toes when be walks, if tbe soles are not too thick and are made of leather, if they are three inches longer than tbe foot; but it is rather torturesome to break such boots in in any weather. When tbey do not get soaked with water it hurts at tbe top of tbe instep — where tbe ringbone is located on tbe horse. They will slip up and down at tbe heel, which wears tbe skin off tbe heels, but that will grow on again if you can stand the torture a few hours each day. It will be neces- sary for you to have rest from tliis suffering quite often. If you can stand it until these boots assume the shape of sleigh-runnoi p, it will be more easy to raise over that lever. I notice the}^ do not all accom- plish this difficult task, and tbey toe out, which runs over their boot?. Then tbey interfere and are con- stantly wiping the mud oft* of their boots on their trousers at tbe ankles at every step. But this is no comparison to the horses' feet. Take all into consid- eration. The shell of tbe horse's foot does not bend as tbe lever lengthens, if it is not ironed, without pro- ducing injury in some way. If it is allowed to get too long it may cause it to sink dovv'n in front, or it may 130 THE HORSE'S RESCUE. turn tip a little. If it does it must split at the toe or break nown. I have seen colts' feet split from point of toe to top of wall on both forward feet from this cause that never had a shoe on, and have drawn them to- gether with nails. That is the best way I ever tried. It stops the cracks from springing apart at the top. If you can do that on any plan the new hoof will grow out sound. If you cannot do that, it will crack as fast as it grows. There is no bending that lever on the horse's foot, no matter how long it is made by ironing, or allowed to grow, without producing injury in many ways. It has joints and bones, but they are clothed with a shell, and when out of harmony of action the result is fearful. The horse's foot cannot be compared to man's, and yet this is not all. He has four feet and legs to be bal- anced on, which I have already remarked. Men ask sometimes if horses take cold from pulling off their shoes! There is as much reason in asking^ this question as there would be in asking if there was danger of horses taking cold sleeping in the barn-yard with the gate open. It all goes to show the ignoi'ance of men concerning the horse. Their feet do get cold, and the horses get cold all over and shiver and suffer; they are as sensitive to pain as mankind; and irons nailed on their feet, with a row of nails driven inside of the shell half way to the hair, does make their feet cold in frosty weather. The frost will follow the nails, which are very close to the membrane. Nearly all shoers fit the shoe so narrow the nails start inside of the shell. The feet being bound up, and the struct- ure all changed from natural, causes heat. That will THE horse's rescue. 131 warm the foot some, but does not relieve the suffer- ing. Here came Mr. Bennett again with another stiff and lame horse — a light-limbed young horse. "Doan, what is the matter with this "horse?" " I should think you might see." "He wants his feet soaked, don't he? How far have you driven him?" "About eight miles. It is all 'sposh.' I should think if that was all he needed he would be cured now." " His feet must be well soaked. The best way to soak horses' feet is to drive them in mud and Water. Your horse's feet are badly contracted, and that is not all." I walked away. This horse was badly contracted, and he had two sets of feet on him, a very long lever, and a heavy, bungling set of shoes, entirely too large in every way, if his feet had been properly dressed. I did not touch that horse. It looked to me as though Mr. Bennett had gone to buying stiff horses for me to cure for nothing. That would have been all riglit if I had chosen to do so. It is good business to have others work for you for no pay, and grow poor all of the time yourself. Some get very wealthy that way, and sometimes you can hear them brag about their wealth. Some folks may think it is the part of a man. It may be in some cases ; in this case it was a total failure. I will have to let this case go in with some other rubbish I have just cleared away, and pass on. It is uphill business here all alone ; no backing out. When I first came in this town I was verv cautious. 132 THE hoese's rescue. My experience had taught me it was rather dangerous to tell a man his horse was stiff. It would hurt the sale of him; and yet they were nearly all of them stiff that had been shod — lame in a greater or less degree, and they were in a worse condition in the Chemung valley than in anyplace that lever had been in at that time; and I heard as much horse talk as in any place. They all claimed much knowledge of ihat noble ani- mal. My ! is it not queer? It is so all over. I have taken the pains to demonstrate that. Soon after I came in this town I was looking over the stables. Tliere I can be found as quick as in any place. You can see me in a horse doctor's stable, or veterinarian, as they are sometimes called. . His name was Hiram McConnell. It was Sundaj^ Hiram had a little time that day He was caring for a horse while his feet were soaking. He seemed like a clever fellow. I talked with him some about his horse, which was a trotter. He was called Billy Crawford. This horse, I heard, cost Hiram eight hundred dollars. That may be the truth, or it may not; folks can lie. That matters not, for it will not cure these horees. I could see Hiram had some unrest about his horse. I ven- tured a few remarks. I told him he could not cure him soaking his feet ; he was not working on the right plan. Hiram, being rather a quiet fellow, took it all quietly and kept on at his work. I looked over his stables (he had the best in town) and walked away. This horse had contracted feet. He had shoes on. His feet needed cutting down at least one-third. It would have helped very much. At the time I first looked at; THE horse's rescue. 133 Billy he could have been cured very easily. I tried to get this horse. Some weeks after I liad a little talk with Hiram. He said he would give one hundred dol- lars to have him cured. 1 told him I would cure him for that. I thought at that time I would be able to get him soon. I was very anxious. He was going on from bad to worse, which I well knew. I visited him often; it worried me verv much. I did all that was in 'my power to get this horse to cure. I finally gave it up. I watched Billy the same as I had others I was at work on — one belonging to a lady. She was an agent for sewing machines, and traveled on the road. A Mr. Wright took care of her horse, which was a six-year-old roan pony. He had got to be such a cripple on his forward feet he could hardly hobble. With all the wisdom Horseheads contained, they could not tell what ailed the horse, neither could they get him out of his trouble; but they could call me a brag and a damned old fool. It does not take a very smart man to do that, and I got lots of that kind of music. They could do that easier than they could cure horses. All that ailed this horse was that his feet were all cut oS. ; that is, the shell was nearly all cut off. His feet were not of the natural size. He was on his base. His feet were not contracted. He was ironed down solid, and was very sore, caused by this botch-work. I soon got him out of his trouble by D-ivin"^ his feet room and packing them. In a short time he liad his natund feet, and sailed all i-ight. I told Mr, Wright he must keep his feet sofr. I did not mean soak his feet all of the time when he was in the stable. All at once this horse became dead lame 134 THE horse's rescue. about three miles away, and could hardly be got liome. Wright brought him to the shop to find out the cause. "Mr. Wright, what have j^ou been doing? You have soaked this horvse's feet too much." " It was some trouble to soak this horse's feet. I have got a ground floor in my barn I dug a hole in the ground and filled it wnth water, and tied him so he would be obliged to stand in it." This horse had flat feet. After his feet got to be their natural size the fever was gone, and they needed but very little soaking. He had corks on his shoes, and the frog: did not touch the erround. The weight is in the center of the foot. Driving on dry roads his weight drove the sole down ; or, in other words, he went down through the cup or top of the wall. His foot was rounding on the bottom, which affected the coffin joint badly and threw all out of liarmony of action. If it had been muddv it would not have been as likely to go down. The frog would have had a rest. This often happens on all flat feet where the frog has no rest. It is easy enough to get it back, dishing the shoe, as ignorant people do, to get it off the sole, that only makes bad worse. Most people, in cases like this, will run from one shop to another until their horse is nearly ruined. To pull o£f the shoes is all that is necessary. The weight of the horse on the frog will push it back to its place. I told Mr. Wright not to soak the horse's feet. '' Put him to night on the floor. In the morning he will be all right. He will lie down; his feet will dry; his weight will be off t])em, and as they dry the sole will rise up." THE horse's rescue. 1S6 In the morning Mr Wright said tlie horse was as well as ever it was. Five years afterward I saw this v^ame liorse and the lady that owned it driving it forty miles from Horseheads, where I was at w^ork. I talked with her about her horse. She said he had been all right ever since I got him out of his trouble, and yet if I tell any one what I can do, and do it, they do not all see me do it, and there is always plenty to fight and bleat, calling you a brag. It is almost as dan- gerous to find out anything new as it was two thou- sand years ago. We will go on with this liorse fight in this town. They begin to worry sortie about my spending my money, and yet not a man has paid me a cent for cur- ing his horses. I shall have to stop spending my money soon, curing their horses for nothing, or some of them will hang themselves. Then I shall be blamed for that. They do worry so there is danger. We will try it a little longer, and run the risk. Here comes Jack Bennett with the American Star stallion. Jack is a wide-awake follow ; got lots of cnsh and horses. He iikes horses, and has lots of time to play with them. His star horse is a natural trotter, and is the nearest natural of any horse I have seen in or around this town yet, or was before he was slaugh- tered in his feet. Jack sent his horse to school at Corning to teach him to trot. He went to Corning to to see how Star was learning. Hfe soon saw that some- thing was wrong. He could not trot as well as he could when he left home ; and that was not all. Tiiere was danger of his being spoilt. Star had white legs nearly to his gambrels; the blood was running down 136 THE horse's rescue. on the inside of his legs, and there was danger of cutting his legs off. Jack brought his horse home. •' I can beat those fellows myself," said he. " This is the last time I send Star to school. Doan, what is the matter with this horse? He never cut his legs be- fore in his life. There must be some cause. He is not right in some way. I can tell when my horse is rio-ht by driving him five rods. I want you to fix him." ''All right." When Jack was around talking horse I had to stop. I could not get a word in. He could talk louder and faster than I about what was the cause of this horse's trouble. They had shod him in this way on his for- ward feet with fiat shoes. The shape was well enough. The shoes were concave, but there was too much flat rest on the shoes. The surface for the shell to rest on was five-eighths of an inch. The shell is three- eif^hths in this case. The way the foot was dressed; one-quarter inch rest was off the shell and on the sensi- tive part of his foot. It made his feet sore. They were ironed down solid and dead ; not a particle of give. The concussion soon caused soreness. Let us fix his hind feet. The cause of his legs being cut was they had been shod so they botli toed in; the \veight was unequal on his heels. They had run over a little — enough to cause him to hit his legs on the out- side heels of his forward shoes. He did not spread his hind legs enough to pass clear. He was out of harmony of action all around, and that was the cause of r.ll. After I had shod him, Jack said : THE horse's rescue. 137 '*I will try birn. I can tell in driving' him ten rods if he sails all right." Jack came back. '' Doan. he is all risi-ht." This great science of working on the horse is called bragging by men that have no knowledge of the horse. To-daj while stopping to rest a little I was called a brag. "They will not place much confidence in your book, you are such a brag.'' -He quoted that old fool ''They,'' as all ignorant people do. A man might think, to hear such men talk, that ihey or they say was the highest authority that could be appealed to — equal to the creator. The man that perfected this work never paid any attention to what They Say says; if he had, it would never have been perfected. I would like to have some of these wonderfully smart teachers tell me how to introduce any new discovery without writing or talking about it. You cannot put any ma- chine in practical operation without talk to introduce it; and of all the machines lever saw, the horse is the greatest. When he is as the creator made him, he is the most complicated. Men l^ave tried to improve this machine, and have spoilt nearly all they have worked on, sooner or later, by ironing their feet. No proof is needed ; neither will it admit of denial, for it stands in bold relief all over the land, g'o where you will. Let us go to the fair at Elmira and see the show of horses while there. It will be best to keep quiet. Some big guns on the horse will be there, and we can learn more to get in some quiet place and look on. It will be no use to talk horse here ; you will set them 138 tb:e horse's kefcue. on you, and that will botber you in your lesson, Tlie onl}^ way for the inexperienced to learn these grent truths is to watch these horses when they aie in mo- tion. They cannot tell by seeing them standi fjg. The natural horse will stand sometimes, if he is all right, with his leirs sprawled in many ways, and yet be all right, or nearly so; and he can be made by dressing his feet and shoeing, lo all appearance, while standing, to look and seem natui'al to some. When put in mo- tion, he will show his deformed and suffering condition in man}'' ways. This panorama of hoi'ses that is pass- ingf is hard to describe. They have all been brought here to be looked at, and to look at them is what I have come for. The more the horse is deformed and changed from natural, the worse he is used. If he is stiff and sore, he must be driven around the track and scored, to warm him up preparator}^ to trotting. He must be jerked, whipped, and sawed, swung nearly off his feet, being all out of harmony of action, which causes him to cut his heels, and pound his own legs to pieces. These horses are nearly all thrown back off their base, or tied up i.n some way or degree on their feet. They do the best they can. See how that lever they are obliged to rise over throws them up. They go into the air, tangled all up; break, trot forward, run or trot behind, some on one foot, some on both ; some lame on all four feet- and yet it is not seen bv these great horsemen, '^^hicli I shall show if they are honest by the premiums when they are declared off. Some horses burst their feet in man}^ places at top of wall, caused by contracted feet. Then they pull off and quit. Such horses cannot trot fast. They foot short THE horse's rescue. 139 and rapidly. They are all tied up on their feet and out of harmony. Their feet pain them night and day ; they cannot rest day or night. The driver does not feel the pain these poor horses are obliged to endure, but that does not prove this suffering does not exist, neither does it remove the cause, which cause is igno- rance. They are all trying to make fast horses, and this process ruins nearl}^ all and makes them slov/er. The next object is money, and ten lose that while one makes ; the country is no better off for all this whole- sale slaughter of these horses. If the people understood the horse, and would take good care of him and keep him natural, or nearly so, it would be a pleasure to ride after him. The horse likes to sail when he is all in harmony of action. I like to drive a good, sound horse ; and if you will take good care of him, he will sail you as far in a day as you want to ride. In this race after money the horse is the greatest loser of all. He loses his sleep, caused by pain ; he loses the use of his feet and legs; his life is shortened, and he finally loses that be- fore he is in his prime. I cannot go on and describe all of these cripples. I have written enough to show you where to study the horse. Every foot on one horse may vary in degrees of change, and it throws him out of balance on each foot and leg according to the degree of change. Billy Crawford is here, and is showing himself; he was quite a trotter once. He is young yet, but is lame on one forward foot, that is, he is limping. He seems stiff all over. He ambles and straddles. The lever is too long. He cannot get there ; he is a long 140 THE horse's rescue. way behind. It is the best he can do. If he was untied he would show them some good stepping. It is no use trying as I am now. Tliese are facts, and can be seen at any fair in the United States. There is a cause for this condition of the horse, and it cannot be removed by bawling at me. You will not learn these great truths that way, nor will you any other great science. The horse is a machine, and so is man. The horse is a horizontal machine, and more complicated than man; for this reason: he has four legs and four feet to balance his weight on, and he must be balanced in the center at the same time, and the structure of all four feet must all be in harmony of action when he is put in motion, or you will see a bad movement, and the motion will cause heat and soreness. You let him stand still. When in this condition he suffers greatly. The soreness will disappear some when he is still. As soon as you put him in motion it increases. The more you run him the more he is obliged to suffer, while in this condition. And that is not all ; he is divided against himself in many ways, and on no two feet alike. There are hardly two horses to be found that are out of harmony alike, and and in the same degree of change. A man (that is, he thinks he is a man ; he is large enough in bulk), knowing I was writing this book, told me he would give a dollar to read it. '' But I don't care anything about your book,'' said he. If it was a child five years old talking like that, we ought to, and would, make some allowance, but when THE horse's rescue. 141 men thirty or forty years old talk like that,' there is not much hope of their improvement. As though a man could read any book without first caring for it. That is what causes all improvements and progres- sion. This man told me, a few days previous to this con- versation, that he had set seventy horse shoes in a day in winter, and the first horse did not get in the shop until ten o'clock, and it was dark at about four o'clock. If he went without his dinner it would give him six hours to do this work. I have no doubt that he did the work ; it is too often done. Notwithstand- ing all this boasting, owners of horses, when you hear a man telling about setting seventy shoes in six hours, if you get in his shop you will be likely to take your horse home with two sets of feet on him, and in a worse condition, or soon to be, tha-n if he had not touched him. I must brag a little. lean outbrag them, all; that is what ails them. If they could beat me bragging they would be all on an equal footing; but they can't — I never met a man that could. But no man ever heard me brag about the number of shoes I set in one day, for I knew that the people were not all fools, and that they could and do see something. There is no use talking; it will only end in confu- sion. I have no recollection of setting over forty shoes in a day, and that was spun out to twelve hours; but it was fairly done — nothing extra. The pay was small, and I was obliged to do more than I ought, in order to keep the business up. I have spent one whole day — and faithfully to — shoeing one horse that 142 THE HORSE S RESCUK was going to make a trot, to please the owner, and charged no extra pay ; but I followed the horse to watch his movement and action; and many are the horses I have shod in forty-one years, and followed in this way. This show of horses is not all over here yet at this fair. I am here following Jack Bennett's star stallion. He will not show himself until these amblers and shufflers and single-footers get through. Here comes one down the track. My golly ! How he does amble and single-foot. This is Hiram McConnell's champion stallion. He is not old. He was once called a trotter. He belongs to a horse doctor, and his home is in the same stable with Billy Crawford. He is a long distance behind in this great horse show. This horse I have looked over manv times before he came to this horse show of speed. Tiiere is a cause for this slow, stiff, straddling, single-footing, ambling motion, and I Veil know what it is; but there is no use talking when you 'are all alone in the fight for the horse. Their time is more taken up in trying to make themselves and others believe I am crazy. This-was red-hot in this town. The more big things I did on the horse, the crazier I got. My, my ! This stallion was changed from natural in many ways, and in many degrees of change, and every foot was changed different from the others, and differ- ent degrees of change ; and he was so sore he could hardly straddle around the track. Sometimes, when looking at the deplorable scene. I feel bad, and think there is no use. They brag and call these horses all THE horse's rescue. 143 sound, or nearly so; there is nothing the matter with tbem. Reader, I have gone off by myself and rolled and laughed about these horse shows at many fairs, and you can do the same when you study the horse. Af- ter you read this work you can see it as quick as I do, if you will give your attention to it. If you do not you must suffer loss, and your horse will suffer. No man on this earth, that has got any fine feelings, would allow his horse to suffer if he could help him out of it, and knew how to do it. You must learn as I did. It need not cost vou fortv-one lone? years of experimenting, and the hardest practical mental and physical labor that a man ever did, and a power of opposition. My God I it makes the tears come in my eyes and my head ache, and back, shoulders, and hips too, to write about it. You need not go through all of this. Tears are no proof that a man is a baby. Be- fore I get through this work you can tell better. I have to laugh sometimes at these horse shows. I can- not help it. I would not if it made the horse suffer. I do not laugh at the movement of the horses. It does me good to laugh. It is no use to tell you what I laugh about. I suppose these great horsemen have seen me off by myself laughing, and that is one reason why they called me crazy. What did I care what they called me, as I well knew thev did not have any knowl- edge of the deformed condition of these poor horses. They were nearly all that had been shod in this con- dition. In some degree you can see this any time where these poor horses are put in motion. Here comes Jack Bennett with a double team. This 144 THE horse's rescue. is the first time I have seen Jack to-da3\ He has got his sorrel trotter and American Star stallion together. Star takes the outside track ; the mare is a good trot- ter , see them sail. The mare is running nearly her best, and Star trots. Not a break, no whipping, no jerking around ; thej go several times. Jack swinging his hat over his head. Star is the most natural horse I have seen in the Chemung valley, and Jack knows how to keep him so. He does not drive him to death. Jack stopped at the stand and blew his bugle and laughed at them some and drove off. He does not trot his horses for money, and does not keep his horses' shoes on. This horse I shod for this surprise for Jack, a few days before this great horse show^ : and as soon as the horse got home I went, or Jack came and got me, and off came Star's shoes. He stood on the ground floor. Jack was a great talker, and I tried to beat him talk- ing. When we got together you could hear some of the loudest horse talk you ever heard, because we tried to talk each other down ; and each had to raise his voice a little at every word, and it would get to a veil. Jack could beat me talkins:. Jack told me all the objection he had to me was, I talked too much ; and that was all of the fault with him, but I could beat him balancing horses. Let us look at this tirade of cripples going home from the fair. Tirade is a proper word to use, for some of these horses were tied upon their feet, and in many ways caused by bad shoeing and ironing their feet, and some had two sets of hoofs in growth. Of all the sights a man ever saw this capped the climax. I have THE horse's rescue. 145 told JO a of their movement on the track. I cannot describe this scene; they are deformed in so many ways and degrees, straddling, stiff, poking along, nearly all got cards on their bridles. They took pre- miums according to their class and degrees of worth, and yet not one of these horses was entered as a crip- ple ; neither did the judges know they were cripples. If they did they were not honest Reader, what chance do you think a man would have with such judges if he was to be tried for lunacy for talking horse? I had to look sharp and keep watch of my surroundings in this town. I have not yetgotdone in Horseheads bawling horse and experimenting on the horse to know the cause of all of these horses' troubles, and they are many. I must buy and work on many to prove and test their ailments, each sepamtely, in order to know if this principle of working on the feet would remove the cause of this trouble and suffering condition of these horses. This is no easy task, but it must be done in order to know. Opinions and be- liefs are not knowledge. These things must be proved by experimenting. It occurred to me after I had worked on these horses some time, that it ought not to cause any inflammation by changing these horses back to natural by this process — spreading the feet — if it was done right, and if I did not go beyond nat- ural, that is, spread too much. It is rather hard busi- iiess to work on these horses almost night and day to prevent inflammation taking place after spreading. I must test this thing. I must have another horse. If it kills him it will be my loss, and no one will know what did kill him. 146 , THE horse's rescue. This horse I prepared in the most skilful and care- ful manner, to test tliis operation. I made the foot very soft bv soakins: in warm water — water is all I ever use — tliat is natur.yl : that is needed, and is the best: it leaves the foot all right. I want no trash on horses' feet for me. 'Just at night I spread these feet, that is, the two forward feet, and let the sole down flat or nearly so, and exercised him some; put him in the barn, fed him, and thought I would sleep to-night. I did not go to the barn until morning. I Inj on the lonnoe — not any sleerj th.at nijrht. It was not tlie loss of the horse that ke}>t me awake. I never stop for money when I want to test anything. I went to the barn, the horse was eating liay ; he Inid not got over the change vet. I well knew he wouUl not without moi'e exercise. I felt of his feet; they wci-e cool; no heat unnatural in them. That's a bi-g thing: to know; that will save me lots of work, and that is not all ; it proves that in changing the horse toward natural, if done right, no heat and fever or inflammation is produced by the operation; if he is put in motion when in hai'mony of action none is produced. After this operation the cause is removed, the unnatural heat is gone, and the foot does not dry up as long as it is kept so. This old shell on some of these horses of long standing is hard and dried up, caused by great internal heat that closes the pores in the shell ; it seems dead, r.nd thcJ'c is not much life in it, and it does help to soak and keep tliis old shell soft. This old drv shell cannot be all cut ofi at once, and if you do not keep the bottom s]:)re:id ii holds the new from o-rowin2f natural. There liaveb'.M n sets of feet grown and cut off, of long-standing cases- THE horse's rescue. 147 When this old dried shell is removed, and new growth of hoof takes place, the old shell kept spreading at the bottom so as to allow the new to grow natural, yon will find, if jou trj^ it, if you keep the structure- of the foot in harmony of action, you have removed the ' cause of more suffering than you ever thought of There are some cases I have ?:een that are incurable ; some of long standing are quite easily cured ; some of short standing are hard to cuie; all, or nearly all, are caused by ironing their feet, and ignorance k is the great cause of all this suffering the poor horse has to endure. Keader, I do not want vou to understand bv this ex- periment that there is no use in washing these horses' legs with warm water and packing their feet while they are going through this change. I have already writ- ten that this treatment holds good, and always will, and you must always take care of their feet. After the fever is gone they do not want much packing, neither do they want much soaking. After they have got back on their base they want work in mud, snow, water; that's what they want. Standing in the barn will spoil the best horse ever was, and driving him when he is out of harmony of action will do the same. Here is another experiment. I prepared one of these contracted feet and let the sole down to its nat- ural place. It required five-eighths of an inch to do this on this foot. I at first measured all of the feet before I spread. I do not now, unless I want to know how much I have spread the foot, or to show others', the sole is the guide in raising and lowering if it is 14:8 THE HOESE's BESCUE. prepared right for the operation. The colt's foot in shape is the object structure of the foot — all iu har- mony of action — when done on all feet of horses and mules this is the point to aina at. After spreading the foot, as I have above written, I waited six hours; the horse was. not lame. I had spread both of his feet the same; he was doing well: no heat in his feet un- natural. I closed or contracted his foot one-eighth of an inch bv measure by pressing the shoe and foot to- gether to see if there would be any heat caused by tills opeiation unnatural ; and how long it would be before it would take place, and what degree of heat would take place by this sudden change toward the ur.iiatural. The horse pointed his foot out instantly, and was lame. I was shut up alone iu my shop. I put my hand on his foot ; I could feel the heat arise; the horse's suffering seemed to increase with the heat, and did, I left him in this condition about fifteen minutes; I had learned all I wanted to on that change toward the unnatural. This was a sudden change the wrong way. Unwilling to see the horse suffer any longer, I put it back to its original place, one-eighth of an inch, put his foot in the tub of warm water a short time, then moved him around the shop; in less than fifteen minutes the heat was all gone, the horse stood up straight with his weight on the center of his foot. The man that allowed Dave Townsend to fool him b\^ letting him pull the spreading shoes off from that iron- gra}^ got in this hot business; if they had been long enough on to get settled and grov; more they could have been taken off and no trouble would have arisen from so doing. He drove her home over the hubs, THE horse's rescue. 149 about four miles. It was winter, and that helped to set this lieat a-going, and it increased according to the degrees of contraction, and she w^^nt off her base ac- cording to the degrees of change from natural; and slie went fast, too, and he lost money fast, and she continued to suffer, all caused by Dave Townsend and the owner of the horse's ignorance. This principle of heating horses' feet holds good ; expanding too much will cause heat according to the degree of chano-e from natural. So much for Dave Townsend's skill on the horse. Here is another experiment in this town. Georo-e Woodrough is a horse trainer by profession. Geor^^e was my true friend, and so was his father, Dr. Wood- rough. George's stable was close to mine. I let him in my stable after I had been working on these horses, and he knew what I did on their feet. He had a very fine mare, valued at five hundred dollars; he told me she hopped behind; she was not trotting well; she would go level at a moderate gait, but when he wanted her to sail she would tangle up an^ hop on one foot ; he could not keep her level ; he said she had a record and she was going back; I told him it was a limp; he wanted me to look her over; at that time I had not seen her move ; I told him if I could not tell which foot it was she hopped on I could not do any- thing for her. I must see it in the^foot. "George, if I tell you which foot she hops on with- out seeing her move you will think I know what ails her. won't you?'' '^Yes." "It is the nigh foot; that is the foot." 160 THE horse's rescuk " What do you see there?" ''Look in front of these two feet, they are not mates ; this lame foot is contracted ; look at the heels : til is lame foot is not as wide at the heel as its mate by half an inch, the sole is raised, the lever is longer, strLicture out of harmony, there is moi'e strain on the tendons, it hurts to raise over that lever which is not seen at the toe; it tossed her up on that side and throws her off her balance." " Can 3'ou level her?" "Yes, if you will let me." • Geoi'ge had not seen these horses at that time go through tliis chano[e. I told him I was afraid he would be scared. This is a valuable mare. He said he would not. This was about ten days previous to the fair. He wanted to show her at the fair; he had a mate to drive with her; he wanted her level. I told him I must spread her foot. I told him how she would be in a short time, and he must follow the directions, and pay no attention to thebawling, forthere would be lots of it. " We must exercise her," said I, and you must do it. I have all of the horses I can handle now. If you get her ready for the fair I will operate on her, and you must do the rest of the work. I will tell you how." I thought I would come out in day- light on this iob ; Geor^je was not as much of a nie:ht bird as I was. We got her in the shop and went at it. I prepared her foot and spread it ; it took George two davs to soak her foot to set it soft. I took this mare right through the business part of this town, limping and standing upon her toe. A crowd soon gathered around to know the cause of the THE horse's rescue. 151 trouble she was in. In order to keep clear of this rabl)lf3 I was forced to battle witli them nearly all of tiie time, so I might be ai)le to go on witli mv work. I was ol)li<^e(i to tell them a lie. I told ihem it was a very bad aid^le sprain, and kept on movin<2: her around, going througli the same process in getting her down on her heel to flat rest. This process they all have to go through ; some it affects more than others. It did not last long with this mare. I took her in the shop, closed the doors, and worked on her there. I soon got her down all right, no limping. Out I came in the street again. This is quite a business town. I led her all over the town ; the crowd gathered in manv places to learn how I cured her so quick. I told them I had a way that belongs to me. Greoi-ge and I took a sail after her around the town and out in the country to see if she was level. She went all level, no hoppinir. Tills foot was spread half an inch. Of course it must have time to get strength after this change, and settle and grow before it could get strong. After this hard day's work with this horse and others I thought I would walk down town and see what kind of' a racket I had made. I walked in the Riant House. I got it slap in the face. " You're a dam purty man, you are. You have spoilt George Woodrough's five hundred dollar mare." "You publish this in the papers ; you can spread it faster and it will be less trouble. "^ This man ran a cooper shop on the bardc of the canal. He came to me after thic to get an old cripple cured, not worth curing. He bragged on her very much. He said she came from Orange county ; she was a fast sailer. I 152 THE horse's rescue. did shoe her, but she was so much out of harmony slie was not worth curing. If I had tried he would have fought me, so I could not do it. Such fools as these I heeded not. This mare went to the fair, and T followed her to superintend and see that her foot was not allowed to get dry. She had not had time enough. The drying up of the foot would raise the sole up. If it was but a small degree it would affect her action at that tiaie. She showed all level. In six months after this fair two men came to this place and bought this mare and paid a big price. Thej came from Williamspcrt, Pa. George was to deliver her at that time ; mj time was all taken up experimenting. I did not shoe any horses. In the morning George was going to start with this mare. I went in the stable. It was hubby. He said he was going to ride her. It is a lonoj iournev. He had her shod for this journey. I cast my eyes down to this mare's foot. "George, this mare will be very lame before you get through. Why, look at them levers on the toes. She never can stand that." It is no use describing this botch job. " I have got my pay and pay for taking her through," said George. The men that did this skilful work on this horse's feet were my warm friends. This valuable horse was slaughtered the first time she got in the shop after all my hard work, and yet I charged nothing for my extra work. They got pay for spoiling her, and they would like by their actions no better fun than to see me crucified or got rid of in some way. Tliat I was i]ot ignorant of. Stay I would as long as I wanted to, THE hokse's kesoue. 158 and did, and worked on those lame and crippled horses of all kinds. George returned. I asked him how he got through. He told the man the cause, and they removed it bj removing the shoes, and that is the way to cure thou- sands of lame and crippled horses, and never nail or have nailed on any shoes unless it could be done by men that have more and better brains than these men seem to have. A man's work corresponds with the caliber of his brain, quantity and quality and degrees of development, and when this is understood a man will not be in so much danger of being killed for cur- ing stiff and lame horses as I was in Horseheads. It was a hard job for me to cure, and keep cured, so rnanv horses where there was so much slaughtering. They could slaughter twenty times faster than I could cure. One man could do that, and there were hun- dreds at it, and those that I had cured they would slaughter over again if the}^ could get them, and yet I tried to keep up with them. If they had thought of that they might have got me in the asylum. I was experimenting, and they were ignorant of this fact, and had but very little knowledge of the horse or any right or wrong principle to iron a horse's foot. Still they had some power to control others to fight me, and did, and yet after they got through they were as big fools as they were two years before. As for knowl- edge of the horse, I never learned in that way, and I never saw any one that did. I sometimes fight with my mouth to clear away the rubbish, and have to yet. If I paid attention to all who advised me, 1 could never get through. They seemed to differ so on all 154 THE horse's rescue. points, and make none. It would drive a man like me cvixzy. My mind is so weak, and I have been told so veij often I can hardl}^ tell myself. If I am not crazy now there will be no danger. Let us go on with this horse fight. It is time to go and see Billy Crawford. Poor Billy, I can't get him. He has got to die by inches. He stands in a box stall. He is not seen out on the road lately. I must see if I can find ther cause. I well knew he would go on from bad to worse. Poor horse, if I could only get you how quick I coald relieve you of some of that suffering. I can come close to you ; your owner I cannot reach. He did talk with me about you once, and I thought I was going to get you to cure, but that wa= all wind, and that will not cure suffering horses. There are lots of that kind of horse doctors all over the land, and yet these poor horses like you are owned by them. Tiiey cannot cure them, neither will they let any one else. I have performed some cures in this place. I should think he might let me have you ; you are of no use to him now that 3H)u are past work. I sup- pose he is afraid you will take cold if you do not have shoes on. My God ! what is the use of this poor, dying horse having shoes on, standing in the stall month after month ? If some good and wise man can tell me I would like to know. These shoes holding the foot from growing natural, and two sets of feet in growth on at that. This work is to expose all such icrnorance as that. Look at this horse; eyes sunken and staring, and glossy hair all dying. He is very nervous, eats ravenousl}^, pot-bellied ; he stands with his back humped across the line; head drawn down, THE horse's rescue. 165 and is so stiff and sore he can hardly move. If he does it hurts him fearfully, and yet tlie owner of this horse is a horse doctor. There is a boy sixteen vears old that takes care of this stable of horses. He was blamed for this horse's stiffness, which I well knew he was not to blame for, and I am going to rescue him before I get through this work. I talked with this boy, and told him the cause of his favorite horse's trouble, and told him he vould go on from bad to worse unless it was removed. Then I walked away. I had given up all hopes of getting him. It was not the pay that I was after. I would give ten dollars to get him, but I well knew I could not get him if I had offered to do it in this wav. Hundreds of such men have talked with me for hours at a time about their stiff and crippled horses, and told me they would give me big money if I would cure them, but it was all dead wind. It would have been just as well if it had never been blown. The horse remained a cripple the same. I have cured, or nearly so, hundreds- of these horses; so much so, they called them cured, and they thought they were at least. They talked so, when I well knew^ they were not. I did relieve their suffer- ing some for the time. With all of my hard work, I could get but little credit in this town. While working in my shop some months after this talk with this boy about Billy Crawford, he came to mv shop. He had never been in my shop that I knew of at that time. In a pitiful way he approached me. "Mri Doan, will you cure Billy for me? I will pay you. I have money of my own," " It will hardly do for me to go to work on him 156 THE horse's rescxj£ without your father's consent, will it? I have never had any of your father's horses in my shop." " I get all of the horses shod and take care of them. He will not know anything about it. It will not do for me to put spreaders on his feet. That will be rather too high-handed without his consent." ''My dear boy,'' said I, "I can help your horse very much without spreaders if you will not let any one know I am at work on him. Should your father find I was working on Billy he might make trouble for me and you too. If you will follow directions — my directions, not others' — I will put Billy sailing on the road in two days.'' ''I will do just as you tell me," said the boy. ' This is to be kept a secret, and we two must keep it." "Yes; all right. Fetch up Billy." This horse was brought into the shop. I had not seen Billy in a long time. He had been growing worse daily, and the boy knew it, and that was the cause of his comirjg to me. The horse had shoes on all of his feet, which had grown very high and long, and were badly contracted. In one of his forward feet he was very lame. It was contracted more than the other. He had been lame in that foot ever since I knew him. It was pinched badly "If I dared put a spreader on this foot," thought I, " how easy I could iret him out of that, but it will not do. I must do the o best I can in the old way. That way is slow, and this foot is so full of heat it will be a hard job to keep it soft." It will help him wonderfully to cut his feet down. THE horse's rescue. 157 and it would be better if he could go without shoes unless the work is done better than this seems to be. Let us move this horse around, and see how much he is out of harmony of action, before I commence work on liim, and we will watch the result. After you read this, look arounJ, and you may see some cases as bad as this. There are not many put in mo- tion that are as bad as this horse had got to be. They are so out of harmony they cannot be put in motion and run in any way. The whole business is com- pletely tied up and clogged internally and externally , cords all out of place; structure of feet all out of har- mony of action, and no two feet alike, consequently no two of the cords of the legs are alike. This horse's shoulders were not mates. One foot had been worse than the other for some time, and was yet. Certainly it will require some brain work to get this horse sail- ing on the road in two days. I told the boy that if he would take good care of Billy I would not charge him except for shoeing the horse; and he did take good care of him, '"Stand around, Billy." Heavens! I cannot describe this horse so you can tell how badly ofif he was from so small cause, and that is ignorance, blind and wilfullv so. But I have started and I must go through. When this horse was made to move he straddled his hini Icofs the widest of any horso I ever saw of his size, and raised them the highest. It was done with a stiff and slow motion^ He was \-ery nerv- ous, an'd seemed to tremble when I made him move. I backed him, and he dragged his feet and his hind legs ; he seemed to have but little control of them. Some would call this spring-halt. It was not that, for 158 THE horse's rescue. he had got past all spring motion. His movements were slow and stiff. He would not move at all unless he was forced to it. It hurt him in many ways. He was verv sore across the loin and kidneys. In fact, he was sore all over. This soreness and stiffness can- not be removed in two days. It vfill take time for that to disappear after the cause is removed, and that cannot be done by the process I am obliged to work on . but I can change. him back toward natural many degrees in this way, and his suffering will disappear according to the deo^rees of chanjie toward natural, and if I can relieve part of his suffering I shall be well paid. We will fix him behind first. It will be neces- sary to cut away all useless hoof, and shoe on the same principle I have shod all others for expanding the foot by the horse's weight — his forward feet the same. This is all I can do. .One of the forward feet is rolled under at the heels. The structure of this foot is more out of harmony than the other three. If I could have this horse to do as I wished, I would soon put his feet in shape. By spreading, I could put his foot in or out of harmony. Cutting away the useless hoof and shoeing this horse on scientific principles — thin, fiat shoes — helped his movement at once, and this same treatment will help all horses that are in this deformed condition, and there are countless numbers all over 'the world, and countless numbers of people that are ignorant of this plain fact, as the owner of this poor, suffering horse was. ' • " Bub," said I, " take this horse to his stable; soak his feet well in warm water all around, then pack them all with cow manure; that is the cheapest and THE horse's rescue. 159 best, and can be got with little trouble. It will draw out the soreness, keep the foot moist, and stay in bet- ter, and there is no stone or "-ravel in it, as there raifrht be in clav, for the sole to settle on between the sole and shoe. I want the sole to settle. After you have softened his feet, drive him, moderately at first, on smooth roads. After a few days you can let him sail. Pack all of his feet when standing in the stable nights. Never neglect it; and keep the feet moist while going through this change and afterward unless you want to drive a cripple. Before you drive clear all out under the shoe.'' I have already written enough about that. This is a lesson to this bov. I called him '' Bub." I never learned his given name. I write as I talk. Men use different words to convey the same ideas, and I may use some that others would not. It is principles on the hgrse which I want to convey, on relieving the suffering horse scientifically without medicine. I watched the change and action of this horse. He was driving by my shop daily, and many times a day. In ten days the spring-halt was all gone ; he settled down across the loin ; he changed back wonderfully in that short time. This ''spring-halt" business is called by great horsemen "string-halt." With all of my experience I have never seen anj^ strings about it. Some say it is caused by horses sweating too much in the flank. What is the use of ta^lking such baby talk as that? After they have removed the cause of this difficulty on scientific principles they will know. Un- til they do, or see it done, they must remain in igno- rance of these demonstrated facts. 160 THE HORSE'S RESCUE. I superintended, shod, and cared for this horse's feet, with this boy's help, for several months, and we had the satisfaction of seeing Billy quite a trotter again. He got to looking well, tiie hair brightened up and lay sleek; his body rounded up; he could rest nights. If he was not in harmony of action on his forward feet he was so much so that it would not be seen by such judges as awarded him a premium at Elmira six months before. He could have been put in harmony of action if I could have been allowed to do it by his owner. They called all of these stiff horses in this place *' foundered," and classed them in four kinds. After I had cured them it was something else — "road-sore" or " rheumatism," or they would oret stiff asrain. I had worked almost night and day in this town, and had spent hundreds of dollars besides what I earned shoeing, a great deal of which was paid me in prom- ises that were never fulfilled. I saw that my money was going fast. I must change my course or there would be danger of shipwreck. I used no medicine, consequently I could not get any pay for my skill. A thought occurred to me to experiment on the hu- man family. I always have been experimenting and watching the result. I picked up two castawav beer bottles, went to the brick-yard, put sjme brick-dust in them, and filled them with water. Then I got some of the ingredients fi-om a hen-roost to make up this composition, and locked it up in my desk. They would ha\'e it I used medicine in some way. I thought, as I could not have my way, I would let them have their way, and see what the result would THE HORSES RESCUE. 161 be. Soon there came a man with a lame horse. This was a common thing at all hours of the day at my shop. Some came thirty miles and farther. All came to get cured for the price of shoeing the horse. My fame had spread far and wide. This horse had been lame about two years. His shoulders had been blis- tered, and his cords, too, until the hair was all off. He, too, was sent to me. He wanted me to tell him what ailed his horse. Tired nearly to death, talking with so many from mornincr until nif^ht, and workinor at the same time, I told him it was coffin-joint diffi- culty, as it was. But that was not all of his trouble; he wanted to know if I could cure it. "Yes," I replied, "I can, but it will require some powerful medicine to reach that." I heated up my water, prepared the foot, put it to soak in the tub, went to the desk, which I unlocked, and took these two bottles of medicine out. I poured some of the contents of each in the water. Then I put the bottles in the desk again and locked it. After this horse's foot had soaked a short time I dressed and shod it. All that ailed this horse, or rather the cause of his lameness, was having irons put on his feet by some one that knew but very little about the horse. Some smith had cut off the sides of his foot, set the shoe too narrow, and rnn it out at the toe. The lever would have made him lame if nothing more had taken place. The coifin-joint was out of harmony. I told the owner he would go better by degrees ; in ten days he would be well. At the end of that time he came to my shop and told me it turned out as I said it would. I did not practice this new process of curing 162 THE horse's rescur horses long, neither did I charge an}^ extra aside from shoeiuL^. I soon saw thev could be humbuooed hv nie, and easily too. But this was not wliat I was airn- ing at. There were too man}^ at work at tliat now for the [)ay. I did not cause the horse suffering, and they <]id. My health fj'om this laboi'ious wcik was likely to give out. I decided to make a bold stand right in the hottest of this battle for the hoi'se. I would find an old horse that was well known by many and was stiff and lame, and what they called " founde]-ed " of loLg standing. I searched around for a long tim.e to find the one I wanted. I could hardly go amiss of stiff and lame horses, and they were all for sale, but W'ere not Vvhat I wanted. At last one came to me. I saw str.ndinc; tied in the stj-eet an old-lookino", stiff, white mare, poor in flesh. She seemed shriyeled and dried up around her shouldei's ; her neck di'opped down from withers; eyes surdvcn. She stood braced out, with her feet huddled together. I looked her leirs over. She war. of Messenger stock; her limbs were as smooth and clean as a deer's. The hind feet and legs were quite natural, and she stood well on them. I looked in her mouth, and saw that she was old. She had a parrot n^.outh — that is, the upper teeth shut over the under ones. I knew she could eat, for that kind of a mouth will allow the grinders to come together when old. While I was looking" the horse ovej", a man came who was her owner. That was what I w.-is waiting foi'. I had made up mv mind to liave this mai'e pi'oviding I could trace her past life, if I had to pay twenty times as much as she was was woi'th. Her stii'fuess was of longstanding; that THE HORSES RESCUK 163 I knew, and her worth to me was not ten cents except for experiment. I did not tell him what I wanted her for. " AVill you sell this mare?"' I inquired. He said she was a pet in the family; "the old women could drive her." Tliev can drive all such cripples as this, but not far in a day (I did not tell him that). "Whom did you get her of?"' "Marshal. He keeps this crockery store right here. His father raised her. Let us go in and talk with Marshal." " Mr. Marshal, can vou tell me this mare's life from a colt?" " I can, nearly so. She was owned by Yardcee "Wes- ton. At three 3'ears old my father bought her. Siic had always been in the family until I sold her to this man." " How old is she now ?" " T went V- three." " How long has she been stiff?" "She was foundered when she was eight years old." "According to that, she has been stiE fifteen years." *'Yes." " How was it done?" "Father let the hired man have her to drive, and he nearlv drove her to death. She has been stiff ever 7? SHICC. " Did you ever try to do anything for her?" * "Yes; we did everything we could. She has been 164 THE horse's rescue. blistered, seatoned, and roweled, and she ran out two years. It did not seem to lielp her." " Cap./' said I, " what will you take for this mare?" •' Had I better sell her, Marshal ?'' said he. " Let him have her if he wants her,'' replied Mar- shal. "You may have her," said the owner to me, "for fifty dollars." "Here are four ten-dollar bills," said I. "I will give them to you for her." " If you will let me keep her one week — that will finish up my fall's work — I will do it. I will bring her down." He came as he agreed. That was the biggest horse sale that had been made in that town, and it would have gone hard with me if they had hauled me up for lunacy. Paying so much for such a horse as that, in the fall, did show some symptoms of insanity ; but, said I, I will risk it. I wuU kick up a bigger racket if they do not take better care of their horses. After clearing my shop of some work I had on hand, I led this old mare into the most public places, and com- menced talking horse in order to attract attention. After the crowd had gathered I told them the object I had in doing this was to get their opinion on this horse. ' Many of you," I told them, "know her. I want you to say, in your judgment, if you call this horse foundered of long standing. Marshal says she was stiffened fifteen years ago." They stared at me, and looked at each other. Finally I got some of them to pronounce her foundered of long standing. I told them they had better put some private mark on THE horse's bescue. 165 her or brand her. I was going to try to cure this horse without medicine, and in si:x: months they would not know her. Then I went to another part of the town. As I marched away I heard mutteringlike tliis, " The damned old fool is crazy." That I knew would come, and worse, before I started out. I got another crowd in another place, and told the same story over. This I followed up for several hours, then led the horse up Main street. She hobbled along, stepping about eight inches, one foot over the other; head down ; lame on both feet, and Inmei* on one than the other. On mv route home I w:is in the center of the. street. People were passing and repassing on all sides of me. I had got to be quite well known at that time. I. took it on all sides, but all they could get out of me was, "My money paid for this horse.'' I led her in the yard at my house. My wife looked at her. She did not say much, but I could see she did not fancy my purchase. I put the horse in the barn. Next morning she liad to be led through Main street to get to my shop. I took the center of the street. This street parade got up more opposition. The old women took it up, and tliey went to talking horse. When I had attracted their attention I thought there would be hopes that some of them might want to know what all of this racket was about. In that case there would be a good chance to teach them. But these rackets, would rise and fall, and no one seemed to learn anything about the horse. By their talk I judged they knew it all, and for this reason the}'' could not learn. When a man arrives at this stage of progression, there is not much hope. When a man 166 THE horse's rescuk is satisfied with what he has got, he is not prepared for anything higher. I was not satisfied, witli all my experience and experimenting. I wanted to try and see what effect it would have on this old, chronic, long-standing case, to please myself, and as long as I paid my way, and was burdensome to no man, and the money I used was the proceeds of my own labor, it was the business of no man to interfere with mv busi- ness until I wrong or injure some one, then, of course, I should have been amenable to the law. This old mare I took into my shop, pulled off her shoes, and dressed her feet. They were so rolled up by conti-action on the bottom that they had but very little frog They had the appearance of a grain of coffee on the seam side, and they were very hard. I well knew this was a long and hard job, and what the result would be I knew not. I had tnken a bold stand. If I failed whose business is it? Where is there a man that has not made some failures in life? But in this town I was in the way of some, and they hud their dupes to help them do their dirty work, and they had lots of it to do in many ways. I put my spreading shoes on. After' soaking very soft and spreading her feet the first time one-quarter of an inch, it affected her very much. She could not con- trol her ]egs. I moved her around the shop, soaked her feet, and washed her legs and shoulders with warm water. While she stood witli her feet in the tub, 1 held m}^ leg in front of hers houi's at a time, and tnpped her on her hind parts to get her on her base. If the time h.ad been kept, it would have amounted to a month that I spent night and day on this mare. THE horse's rescue. 167 When I was in my shop shoeing this mare was there. My little boy helped me. He could wash her legs and move her around. I had other horses to take care of at tl'is tinie. I woi'ked on her in the stable cold winter niiihts, and exercised her ni«^hts for six ill o montlis when all were asleep. After I had spread her feet the first time she was so bad I did n^t show hei". She could not stand on three feet while I packed ihe other one, but would come down on her knees, I kept her feet soft. In a few davs she could stand up quite well, though one foot kept lame about ten days. The shoulders were so deformed, and had been so so long, that it seemed impossible for them ever to come back to their natural place. This was the cause of my hav- incr so much work to do to f>"et her there, but she could not stay. I pulled her neck on to}), rubbed and pulled the skim on her shoulders, *and washed them in warm water; the fact is, I was in the barn nights with tliis horse and others, or on tlie I'oad driving them more than half of the time that winter. j\[y wife told me one night that I was a fool. I did not quarrel with her, for I had had some serious thoughts en the subject myself. I was losing many nights' rest, and obtaining no reward. I was buying feed to keep other people's horses, and curing them for nothing. "When looking at it in this light, it did not look veiy promising. They could not read m^^y thoughts. I was determined to excel as a worker on the horse's feet, and fit myself for a teacher; and before I can insti'uct, said I to mvself, I must know somethiniy to teach. This old mare was to be my last experiment. I could not expand her feet enough at one time to let 168 THE horse's RESCUE. the sole down to its natural place. It bad to be done by degrees and without taking off the shoes. At the second change I spread her feet three-eights of an inch. This did not effect her as much as the first. It made her lame on the same foot as it had at the former change, but in about ten days she recovered from that, and begun to have knee action and stay on her base better. This was encouraging. This was a light mare ; her weight did not seem to hold the sole down : it was inclined to go back. It had been that way so long that a little raise would effect her. If she could have been put to drawing loads it would have helped to draw her shoulders back to their natural place and kept the sole down, and she w^ould have got out of her trouble in half of the time. That I knew, but I had no such w^ork for her to do. This hor.se must have good care, and if I did it myself I would know it w^as done. I fed her fine middlings. She was old, and in order to cure she must thrive and grow fat. The skin around her shoulders must be got loose and filled up underneath with fat. Withal, it is some work to lim- ber up such cases as this. While I was working, on this horse's shoulders George Wpodrough came up. He sa js : "Poan, why don't you use some linimeats on her shoulders? It might help you." "Yes," I replied, " if might, but I would not put any on her for twenty-five dollars. If I should I would only have to go through all of this work again. I am experimenting on this thing to see if this trash has any curing properties in it. I am well convinced it has not. and have b^en for many years ; and I am go- THE HORSK's liESCUE. 169 incr to know, by reducing this wbole complicated busi- ness to demonstrated fact for myself, then I shall know when this is done. If it proves as I think it will, I will salt that down as knowlege. There is no knowledge in opinions and beliefs for me, especially what others believe." After working on this mare about four week^; I took ojff her shoes and cupped the feet out and pared them down some. They were then narrower than the shoe, I closed the shoe, and nailed it on. This mare's feet were kept soft all of the time — spread next time half an inch; that let the sole down, or I thought it ought to, nearly flat It did not come down to suit me. This was in the day time. The horse must be moved around ; this sole must be got down in some way, soon after spreading, or it will play mischief. It must all work together in harmony. I led her out of the business part of the town. Her movement was bad. After I got well out of the business part of the town I got on her to ride, not for pleasure, but to add weight, so as to settle the sole down. After riding in thi^ way for some time, I would get off and look to see how this plan was working. It was going down all riglit It was rather hard work for me, worse. I thought, than riding on a rail. 1 hurried her up, but she could neither trot nor run, and did not seem to have any gait, but all kinds of gaits tangled up to- gether. While going through thi^ exercise I passed some laborers that worked in the brick-yard, some white men, some black. They were loading a boat witb brick. They hooted at me, and swung their hats, which did not affect me any. I knew as well as 170 THE horse's rescue. ttey did what kind of an appearance 1 made. I knew what I was trying to do, and they did not. I well knew what thej would be, some of them, after pay da3^ They could wheel brick after others liad made them by having a man to superintend the work. This mare for four months after this was not mucli seen in the streets in the day time, not that I cared for what I was surrounded with, but I had to work in my shop during the day to get money to live on, and work on the horse nights. I do not wish you to understand I did not sleep any. My rest was not long at one time. My mind was so fixed on this job I could not sleep much. All hands were watching this old mare, and I could not tell how it was coming out myself. This last spread let up on the mare, and she stood her fore legs back of straight. She was lame on one foot the same, and al)out the same length of time. After having got this mare on her base, reader, it will be well to look her over and see the condition her shoulders are in. They look enlarged around and at the point of the shoulder, caused by the shoulders being shrunken above. Let us look and see if her shoulders are al?ke. The side that she was lame on when I bought her, and lame ever}'' time I spread her foot, is many degrees the worst. She is crooked. Header, do you want me to tell you my thoughts when I first saw this? I had not seen it before, as the deformity did not show until I got her well back on her base. I knew her shoulders were deformed, but I did not think one side was so much worse than the other. I said to myself — for I was alone — " The cake is all dough ; these shoulders will never be mates, that THE horse's rescue. 171 is certain. If this old mare was back in some swamp dead I would give twenty-five dollars. I guess I have come out of my bole too far this time. They have got the whip row on me now, certainly. Well, the world is as big as it ever was, and I have got lots of time yet, and if I fail I can move to another place. If the m.are is crooked, she is not lame ; and she stands up good on her legs and has got good knee ac- tion. I will spend five months on her A'et. If she never gets well and straight, the principle is i-ight- Reader, there are all degrees of deformed shoulders, and they are not always deformed in pairs. It is seen only by men of practical and experimental knowledge unless they become very bad. Tliey ai-e all caused, or nearly so, hy ironing the feet. These degrees of deformity of the shoulders are regulated by the de- grees of contraction of the feet. Expansion, that is, settling down below flat, does not effect much. If the horse is balanced up between contraction and lever- age the shoulder is affected. If his feet are not con- tracted alike, his shoulders are not affected alike. You cannot iron a cup-foot horse and nail on his shoes as it is usually done without these changes taking place. In the fore part of this work I left two horse.s. The first was badly thrown off his base by contraction on all his legs. When, as a boy, I first commenced working on the hoise, for several years I did not know that cutting the heels too low and leaving the toe too long would throw the horse off his base as this horse is if no contraction had taken place. I was not alone in this ignorance in that day, and as far as I can see, nearly all are as ignorant now of this simple fact 172 THE hobse's rescue. as they were thirty-five years ago. I just saw one pass, with a man on his back, so stiff from this cause that he could hardly go ; completely off hi« base ; back settled down, and in no shape to hold up weight. I should think this man, by his looks, would weigh about two hundred pounds. His knowledge of the horse must be very slight. Horses thrown off their base in this way, and worked for many years, or even if they are not worked, get in the same fix as this old white mare I am working on now, and from the same cause, contraction and leverage, which become chronic and seated, and the longer standing the harder to change back. Let us look at the hind legs of this horse. It has been a long time since I have seen him. He was young when I left him, and is well along in years now. He has two spavins. They are called by the veterina- rians and professors of great wisdom of the horse, " blood " or "bog" spavins. These doctors tell about curing these spavins. They burn, blister, and daub on all kinds of trash, and charge for doing it, and yet the horse is lame and so stiff I can hardly raise his feet from the floor to shoe him, it hurts him so. He cannot bend his leg, and I have many times been obliged to raise the whole hind parts of these cured spavined horses clear from the floor before they could stand, and yet they were all cured. They did not limp because they were stiff and lame in both legs. Let us see if we can trace from cause to effect and see what we can find. All horsemen and thinking men will and do allow that what is called spavin is caused by a strain or sprain in some way, and that is what I THB3 HOESE'S RESCUE. 173 think myself. A horse may slip and injure himself running or playing, and there are many that do. I will say right here that there are more horses sprained by contraction and leverage than all other causes put to- gether. When horses are thrown off their base, as this horse is, by contraction, it lengthens the lever very long. When a horse has to rise over that lever, draw a load, and hold up two-thirds of his weight all of the time, and w^hen standing or drawing, he is in no position to hold up this weight. I should think there was danger of straining thegambrel joints. Horses in this condition you cannot go amiss of if you will look at them. They are in all degrees of change from natural. What is the condition of these horses, if they lie down, when they want to rise? The horse always rises up on his forward legs first. Then he comes up on his hind legs wdth a spring-like motion. The more these horses are thrown off their base, no matter from what cause, the more the strain on the gam.brel joints in rising. It is in many ways a strain on these horses to rise. The kidneys are strained ; in fact, it strains the horse all over. Now, quacks, come on with your firing, blistering trash and cure these spavined horses, or any other, without removing the cause, if you can, with tw^o- thirds of his weight on these crippled legs. All you can do, or ever have done in this Jine, is to torture the already suffering horse, and there has been a great amount of that done all over the land, and no good result derived from it for either the horse or its owner. This I have known for many years. Let us look the ringbone over a little. I have seen 174 THE horse's rescue. one colt in my life, I think, that was foaled with what is called ringbone. I did not see this colt until he was about four months old. The mother had ringbone on both forward feet. I was looking at this colt. I thought I could see a little enlargement around the top of the wall. It did not look quite ]-ight to me. I watched him. At about eight months he began to show signs of trouble in his forward feet. When he traveled over frozen ground I could see it hurt him. At one year old he was lame in one foot. With all of my study of the horse this is the only case of this kind I ever saw. I think nine-tenths of the ringbones are the result of irritation caused by contraction and leverage. To raise over the lever irritates badly where the ringbone has its rise. I have experimented on these in this way by shortening the lever and giving easy toe to raise on. They would go better as long as the cause of the irritation was kept removed. I never meddled with their feet spreading. I never have seen one cured. I have seen lots of men torturing them and watching the result, and have had as good oppor- tunities as any man. I have lived with horses all of my life, and been straddle of their legs, or had their feet on me in some way (and sometimes they were on my head), and their teeth, too. I have had these ring- bone curers come into my shop to heat up their irons. They would have several kinds, which they would heat red-hot ; kept some in the fire heating all of the time, so as to keep this red-hot business of torturing the horse a-going fast. I have seen this done on ring- bone horses, when the cause of their worst trouble was that the toe of the foot was one inch too long, and had THE horse's rescue. 175 shoes on at that. These horses can never recover from their lameness with this lever on the toe, and growing longer all the time, and the foot made still sorer by the most barbarous treatment a man ever wit- nessed— that of burning. Horses treated in this way- would be disabled for six months at least. I have watched the result of this butchery, and have seen no cure and no relief. Keader, do you want to know bow I look on these burners of horses? They put me in mind, when I see them at work on the horse, of the wild and uncivilized savages tattooing themselves and each other by burning and disfiguring their own bodies ; and yet these fine-feeling men have threatened me and my brothers, J. J. and Oliver Doan, with prosecution for crueltv to animals. What innocent and sympa- thetic barbarians these men are ! This horse I have been writing about in the fore part of this work is not yet as bad as he can be made. I may get around and see him again. I have many horses to watch, many miles apart, and some hundreds of miles This watching has been kept up all my life. Let us go back and look at this second^ horse, which I left in this work — the one T had such a hard time bal- ancing up between contraction and leverage. It has been some time since I have seen him. His knees and ankles were straight when I shod him. He is now tipped on knee and ankle on both his forward legs;, both ankles behind are crooked. His head is down ; ankles swollen all around ; cords seem to be thickened up; he looks bad. Poor horse, they have got you in a bad fix. I suppose the reader will want me to tell the cause of this horse's trouble, and the way out of 176 THE horse's rescue. it. That I can do. I understand this whole business. As complicated as it may appear to you, it is as easy for me now to tell you the cause that threw this liorse in this position, and the principle to work on to get him out of this fix, as it is for you to pick up a basket of chips; but to get him out of it is quite another thing. It is a hard job, and yet it can be done. I have learned something since I balanced this horse. That was the best I could do with the cup foot at that time on him and all others. I have novv^ got to hj master of the horse's foot. I can do as I like with it. I can expand the foot on the right principle. Contraction is the great cause of this horse's first trouble. Then to divide between contraction and levernge, the best that could be done at the time when I shod him last. He has been shod many times since, and they have left him too high on the heels by not dressing his feet properly, or the fault is in the shoe partly; in both perhaps. They have thrown him forward off his base by this work, and he has been so so long it will be a hard job to change him back. I have tackled horses that are harder, to cure than this. This horse's shoul- ders are not half as bad as they would have been if he had not been balanced up in this way. His shoul- ders are badly out of harmony. He will not be as bad to get on his base. The way to go to work is at the feet. This cannot be done at once ; it will take time. It will have to be done by degrees, the same way I am working on this old gray mare ; but he is difTerent. She is thrown back off her base; he is thrown forward. He has more ailments than she. His knees and ankles have all gone forward, and yet TjiE horse's rescue. 177 with all he has had done to him, the first cau^e has not been removed. This horse is the on 5 that liad £o much experimenting done on him, and still he is alive ; and to the first cause there have been several more added. The structure of the feet have been out of harmony all this time. This horse's feet and legs are nearly paralyzed, and he has been a constant sufferer all this time. After long-standing cases like this thei'e is some work to be done to let this horse down at the heels, change the structure of the foot back, and put it internally in harmony of action ; relax the cords on all four legs, and equalize his weight on the center of each foot, and balance him on an equilibrium in the center, and equalize the lever in length on all four feet, and equalize the weight on the eight separate heels so as to cause him to travel on a straight line ; and yet this can be done, so much so, that it would be hard for the closest observers to tell where the defect is if there is any. There are many cases that are past cure. They can all, or nearly all, be helped. Old horses are not worth curing. They are never as good as they would have been if they had not been in this condi- tion. Young horses are easier to change back, and are as good as ever. This poor horse is the final result of thousands and millions on the globe. There is no use describing the process of curing him. The same method by which I cured the dapple-brown called Mike cures all the troubles they are thrown in that I have laid cown in this book. I never tried to cure bog or blood spavin by throwing the unequal weight o2 their legs or removing the unnatural strain to see what the cfiect would be. I considered them incur- 178 THE horse's rescue. able, and do jet. I will leave that for some more sci- entific man than I am to test. I shall spend my time in introducing what' I know. The horse cannot be cured or the cause of this trouble removed while he is standing in the stable. After the change he must draw loads, and that will draw him back on his base by degrees. The first change will eSect him very much, and he should be helped by washing and rub- bing his legs in water as \^arm as he can bear, and keep it up. Do not get tired; if you do, you will never curs any stiff horses. This is the only way they can be cured. The effect doctors can sometimes find the effect when it gets very bad. That is a little of the effect to tinker at. They have a good long list of names for the effects, many of which have no mean- ing, or, if they have, it does not remove the cause that produces the effect. I have had many of thege fel- lows gather around me, trying to put me through an examination, asking me what I was going to do in cases of ossified cartilage and navicular disease. Poor fools ! what can they do? They have dissected some dead horse's feet, and found that this or that had taken place ; and this trouble had shortened the horse's life, and in many cases caused his death by the suffering he was obliged to endure frcm being out of harmony in many ways internally and externally. I would ask these wonderful talkers. What help is it to the live horse in this same suffering condition that you are able to tell what ailed these dead horses ? They can see no farther inside these horses' feet than I can to tell what condition it is in. All they can do is to open them after theliorseis dead. I can make them as THE hokse's rescue. 179 they were when thev were colt's feet. If they have been contracted very bad, so as to cause ossification, expanding lets the body come back on the base and helps in many ways that they have never seen, and which I think some never will see. They have so much talking to do they can spend no time to learn this great science, and that is not all ; they will have to take as much as two lessons before they will be able to teach. I use no medicine, and work on the feet, the cause of all this trouble, and cure ; they work all over the horse, and useall kinds of liniments, blis- terins, and butchering, and the horse goes on from bad to worse, and no cure is effected. After I get the colt's foot on in shape, and all in harmony of action, and keep it so or nearly so, and nature does not repair the damages caused by contrac- tion, then I think there is some trouble inside that na- ture cannot help. I never applied this principle on any horse that I did not help, and wonderfully, too. "When I quit one of these horses the effect doctors need not take the job of curing. Their medicine is useless trash, and their butchery is worse. If I can do this as I state, that is proof enough. I read a small piece in a paper about ten years since, written many years ago by Dr. Gangees, on the horse's feet. They had been held, he said, from growing nat- ural by ironing. That was all he could say about it. He knew nothing of the effect it produced. They had been elongated. He was an Englishman. Here are some sayings of a horse-shoer, also an Englishman, who wrote a book in 1700. His name was William Osmer. He was a practical horse-shoer. They had 180 THE HORSE'p rescue. Stiff and lame horses in his day. They called stiff horses " shook in the shoulders.'^ He said in his writ- ings that the people were "shook in the head," and I think he was right; and that saying holds good 3'et. He said, too, that the cause was in the feet, but be could not get them out of their trouble. The English have spent as much money experimenting on horses' feet as any nation on the globe, without doubt. There are many things to look to at the same time; and in changing these horses all must work in har- mony. The cause of failures in the spreading of horses' feet is due to the fact that the men who have attempted to do the work could see but one thing at one time, and that one thing they did not see as they should. It is very simple when understood. My experience and trjnng to introduce this science convinces me that Robert G. Ingersoll's lecture on the "Skulls" is the soundest lecture I ever read or lieard. Bob did not mean to say that the skulls had any knowl- edge in them ; he meant that the brains- that were in- side of the skulls were what did the business. He said in this lecture, at the first start, " Man advances just in the proportion that he mingles his thoughts with his labor. ^' There is more sense conveyed in these few words than whole volumes written by some that are dogging on his track. That is the way this work was perfected — mingling thoughts with labor for forty-one years ; and I have had lots of dogs at my heels, but I never felt I was in danger. It is queer ; some folks will not no anything themselves nor let anyone else if they can prevent it. What a lot of trouble they do have I THE horse's rescue 181 I had to tack ship sometimes in this horse sail. Those that were with me sometimes, blowing their bugles for me, would change their tunes and .blow the other way. Then I would be obliged to tack ship. It is queer, when you think this matter over, how quick a man can change a tune on his bugle after he gets used to blowing it In order to understand these sud. den changes on these bugles you must ti-ace from the change to the cause of the change. These changes are constantly taking place in all things. About the first stable of horses I tackled was Mot Bennett's, in Horseheads — not the hotel keeper, but his uncle. He was carrying on a heavy business at that time in many ways. He was building railroads; he was opening an avenue six miles long to connect two towns; he kept a large lumber yard and sawmill ; he had all kinds of machinery connected with tliis to get out brackets, cornices for buildings ; in fact, en- tirely too much for any man to carry. He had lots for sale on this avenue. He gave employment to a large number of men that wanted work. But times changed on Mot. He bucked at it hard to keep it going, but it was no go'j it balanced over the wrong way for him. Men that he Ijad paid thousands of dollars v.ould not lake his promises to pay written on paper nuy more. I shod Mot's horses through these trying time. It was all charged on the book, and the amount was about forty dollars. I well knew I would stand no chance to get my pay. The big fish always eat up llie little ones. I took my pay in an old wagon at about three prices, and let it go at that. Poor Mot, I liked him. He was a whole-souled fellow, but he was carrying too 182 THE hokse's rescue. heavy a load. He came home from his hard day's work over taxed, and sat down in his chair, his speech lost. In a few days Mot passed away. Some time be- fore iLIh I was talking horse in the streets. Mot said to me, '"You had better go to work." This remark, coming fj-om bim, rather shocked me. I thought of his horses that I liad been caring for, and the one that I pulled out of the stiaw — that four hundred dollar horse; besides, at that time I was doing more hard work and working m.ore hours than any two men in that town. Eighteen hours a day and night were put in ; the fact is, I was nearly used up. The cripples kept increasing on me. I was over- worked, and I was obliged to send some away, and I di'opped Mot's horses. Monev I must have to live on, and to buv feed for these horses that I was experimenting on, or I should fail. This caused his bugle to change, but the blast did not blow me oK my base. I was likely to lose all of my friends in this town. Some fought me for cur- ing and some for not curing their horses and keeping them cured. The whole business seemed likely to turn against me. I made up my mind I would switch off awhile and rest up. I was about whipped in this horse fight. I went to my shop, threw both doors open, got a shoe-keg and set it near the door, took some papers and books and commenced to read. I did not read much ; I did not get a chance. New customers kept coming all of the time to crowd out the old ones. I could not do all of this hard work. They would come an go. None of these men stayed with me all of the time They did not come to my shop except occasionallv. There was not one man in the lot that THE horse's RESCUE. 183 knew how much work I was doing, and I came to this conclusion : It was none of their business if I take a rest. I made up my mind to clear away some of this racket. The horses commenced to come. I sent them all away. I was asked : "Are you not going to shoe any more horses?" "Not at present." Some would ask: "How are you going to live? You live, don't vou ?" " Yes ; I can live anywhere you can. There are plenty of shops in this town where you can get your shoeing done." I sat on that keg eveTy week-day for two weeks and sent all away. That seemed to quiet the noise for a time. Then I resumed my work. The horses came, all I wanted to wrestle with.' I had bought a house and six village lots in this town. The street-cars ran past my place. They run from Horseheads to Elmira. The distance is six miles, and that was the main wagon road. At the time I lived in this town it was a great thoroucrhfare. Here I saw some of the worst cruelty I ever witnessed dealt out to these poor, stiff horses. It was all I could do to keep cool. This was going on daily, and Sundays it was worse. It was brutality run mad, made so by rum. When I commenced this work it was to be confined to the horse's feet, tracing cause to effect and effect to cause. This book was not named until I had made quite a start in the work, and as it is called " The Horse's Rescue," I shall have to meddle a little with the rum question. I never have talked much on that subject, but I cannot see any way to steer on my course 184 THE HORSE'S RESCUE. without coming in contact with it. I have heard lots of men lecture on this subject, and talk about the effect of rum on the human family, and I have seen the effect punished while the cause remained undis- turbed. In all of these lectures I ever heard or read I never heard one word sriid in defense of the long- suffering and abused horse ; and as I am come to their j-escue, I shall work all the field I can to accomplish it. This lecture on rum is to show that it affects the horse in many ways, and badly, too, all over the United States, and I have been over some of it. It is the same in all placea, some worse than others. I will give you a little sketch of thi^wholesale abuse caused by rum in this God-serving town where I am battling for the horse. These are facts. They are no third hand business. It was a common thing on Sunday for me to see three and four wagons pass my house at one time, going from Horseheads to Elmira, four in the wagon, one horse drawing the load, and he stiff and so sore on his feet — caused by ironing his feet by such as are whipping and pounding him — that he could hardly keep on his balance; all swinging their hats over their heads ; one plying the whip, sometimes a club; cross- ing and rocrossing this street-car track every ten or fifteen rods Some of these beings called human were so badly off their base they could not sit up straight if they tried. They would balance over in all shapes, some forward, some backward. Some would hang over sideways, and they were constantly changing, all the time yelling and whooping ; horses going as fast as they could be made to go in their deformed con- dition. This could be seen, passing and repassing all THE HORSES RKSCUK 185 days. Sundays with me part of the day was spent fixing up my patients, the horses, making them as com- fortable as I could. The shop I did not work in in this place ; they would not bring any work on that day, so I got a little rest working in my garden, which is no labor to me ; it is enjoyment. I could enjoy my- self hoeing and weeding in my garden on this day as well as anything I could do, if it had not been for this panorama that was constantly passing ; that destroyed all. It was very annoying to me. Of all the damned sights I ever saw, these are the worst to me. I use the word " damned " because it suits me the best to convey my feelings. Damned means condemned, and, if somebody does not get damned for abusing tliese horses, neither of these two words has any meaning at all. I think the damning should rest on the cause. What kind of compositions these poor, duped speci" mens of humanity had been taking into their stomachs I know not ; they did not seem to know what they were doing, neither did they seem to see where they were steering to. These are fit subjects to have the horse! If these horses were balanced in the center and limber there would be some brains spilt. One cripple sailed past my house, after crossing and recross- ing this track. He was quite a sailer, for a three- legged horse, for one was not of much use except to keep him from tipping over. I told my wife, '"There will be a shipwreck soon ; that craft cannot sail long in this course without one." In a few days, not far froni my house, this wreck took place. The driver had been helped into his wagon ; up-town he went, steam all up, and no regulator. This two-legged, perpendicular 186 THE horse's rescue. machine in the wagon was so badly ofi his balance that it fell over the horizontal machine — the propell- ing power. The center or vital part was all in mid- dling order, so much so that it was danger^^ns to set it in motion without a governor. Somebody started it, and down it came. It ran wild. Out went the man headfirst, struck his head against a stone, and knocked his brains out. This horizontal machine kept on go- ing, and if there had been three or four more in this wagon in the same fix the first was in, this machine would have run the same until it smashed up some more. The horse smashed up at his stable. This kind of steam all adds greatly to the suffering of the horse. One Sunday, while working in my garden, there had been more than usual of this kind of business going on, which seemed to come from up-town. There must be a fountain, it occurred to me, up there where all this corruption has its rise. It all seems to come from one source. But I have got all I can attend to working and experimenting, and if they will let me alone I will them. I can onlv fio^ht on the defensive. There are too many balanced over the wrong way for me here. I shall, in order to carry out my plans, keep as quiet as possible. It seems to be going rather smooth now. I think they have made up their minds to let me go on in peace. After hoeing in my garden all day Sunday (I thought it was Sunday, and others told me it was), I asked several through the course of the day, and my wife said it was. From what I could see going on all around me I could not tell. To look at the day it THE horse's rescue. 187 seemed like all others to me ; and I am so forgetful that if there had not been somebody to.tisk I should have lost track of this day. The canal was close to mv house, and the boats and street cars were running. This was a great place for cars in this valley. I could hear the locomotives blowing their bugles, and the music came from all directions. I could hear them many miles away, talking with each other, at all times of day and night. I could hear and see this without stopping my work. I had my sleeves rolled up, vest and coat off. It was a warm day. My garden was quite large. There was six large village lots all in one garden. It lay close to this great thoroughfare. The Sunday did seem to me to be the most business day I had seen in a long time. All seemed to be in motion — all life and action. I did stop and rest on my hoe and take a telescopic view of what was passing. The streets were full of horses, some running, some trotting, or trying to ; some limping at one end and' some at both; some stiff; in fact, they were in all stages of deformity. I could see I attracted quite a little attention. They stared at me ; that is, some did, such as had sense enough left to do this. They could not stare long at a time. If they did they would be in danger of a smash-up. There were lots of machines running on this street without governors, and they did not always run on a straight line.^ When a man got on this road, if he did not attend strictly to business, tliere was danger of shipwreck. Milk wagons were running morning and evening; some selling it by the quart and half pint, some taking it to the creamery, 188 THE horse's rescue. some to the cheese factory, and selling it. The birds were singing, the street cars were making extra trips. They left Horseheads every fifteen minutes for El- mira ; the same coming to Horseheads. It was a sorry day for these poor, crippled, and deformed horses. Street cars off the track; men jerking the horses on the mouthy jamming them back, yelling, ''Whoa, damn you!" every half-minute, the horses at the time standing as still as they could. Some had all they coald do to stand, and were almost ready to fall over backward. Some, unable to stand, did fall, and yet they were obliged to do extra labor on this day called Sunday. It did seem to me they were all let loose on these poor horses this day. Some of them were run from morning until morning again. There was all kinds of music, pianos, organs, vio- lins, and I actually heard roosters crow, on this day, on the backside of my lot. I saw the water run in the creek. I did not see it stop and pile up in heaps. There were fish in this water, and they were constantly in motion. Reader, when I bought this place I intended to or- nament up this ground and fix up a pleasant home. There was a large, lively stream of living, sparkling water on the backside. When I bought this property I thought it was in a sightly place. In this I was not disappointed. I could see too much, and the sights did not suit me. I saw too much cruelty and abuse practiced on the helpless horse, and it made a hell for me. I gave up fixing up the place, and this was the cause of my moving. On the day following this red-hot day of abusing THE horse's rescue. 189 tliese deformed horses I W9s on my way to my shop. Reader, I was loaded to the muzzle. It would not take much to touch me off. I was the horse's sworn friend, and always had been through life. Right in front of Bob Col well's place of business, the boss of this town at that time, I met Jack Racker, the cat's- paw general of all the dirty work that was to be done. He said to me, *'Doan, they are going for you." '' What have I been doing now, and who is ' they ' this time ?" '' The authorities of the town." " Bob Colwell, what is the charges ?" " Well, I sat up-stairs in my house writing for the paper, and I could see you hoeing in your garden all day. They are going to arrest you for violating the Sunday laws." "My, my! did you write about me?" "No." " You should have done so ; it would help fill up the paper." " I told them you would be the first man up here Monday morning after working all day Sunday in your garden." " You told a lie ; there were lots of folks here when I came. Jack, what do you think it will cost me?" '^I can't tell you." "Tell that great b'usiness personage 'They,' you quote so much, that I will pay all the fine they can get against me, and I will double it if they will let me lay it out." "What would you do with it?" "I would give it to some poor widow woman that 190 THE horse's rescue. was trying to support herself and her children. ISTot one cent will I ever pay to any authority in this town or in any other for the use of this day you call Sun- da}^, for this personage 3^ou call * They ' to convert to his or their own use; but I do intend to have a lot in- dicted before the grand jury for violating the license law on all days, at the next court, if they do not stop drugging these poor fools, causing them to kill them- selves and others, and misuse and kill and cause to be killed their helpless horses, and endanger innocent parties, and place the lives of children and all living things in jeopardy. And this is not all ; it is very an- noying to me when I am at work on Sunday. If it is not stopped soon I shall appeal to the courts." This lecture was delivered in front of the ofSce of the boss of the town. Let us go on to the shop. There will be a lot of cripples waiting. That racket is stopped. I wonder what will come next. Reader, I suppose you want to know how the old white mare gets along. It has been four weeks since she had her feet spread. The same shoes have been on all that time. She has been driven every night in some by-road. She is not lame, and is growing fat — improving slowly. She must have her feet dressed and spread again. Her feet do not dry up now, and there is not much fever in them. I cupped out her feet and pared the shell properly for this spreading operation. It is the same proces . It is by degrees I am doing this. It could not be done on this mare all at once, she was so badly rolled up. I closed up the shoes, nailed them on, soaked the feet soft, and spread them one-quarter of an inch again. That let the sole . THE horse's rescue. 191 doT^vn as far as I wanted it. In all I have spread this mare's feet one inch and three-eighths at different times, and yet it is not more than five-eighths of an inch wider than it was before I spread it at all. Every time I spread this old mare's feet it threw her off of her base on both feet and lamed her on this same foot that she was lamest on when I bought her. She was lame on both, and had been for many years. This time she was not so lame on this foot, and recovered sooner from the effects of the change. As she pro- gressed toward natural by degrees she was easier to get on her base ; the time lessened, and the effects les- sened by degrees the nearer she approached natural. This is encouraging, certainly. She does improve slowly; her shoulders are not mates; she is very crooked yet, and both badly deformed. She does not look like the same horse now I have changed her; this is certain, and the cause is removed. This long- standing effect around these shoulders is stubborn and touo^h. I know the bones are not broken : all else will yield by degrees, but it must be slow. It has yielded a little now ; and if it has yielded a little it will yield a little more. This is the way I reasoned with myself in the cold barn many cold winter nights while others were sleeping or sitting by comfortable fires. Days I v/as in my shop doing all I could to re- lieve the suffering of horses for the same men that were fighting me their level best in many ways. Some of them were poor dupes, which I well knew, set on and made so by a jealous, ignorant set of pretenders of great knowledge of the horse. I well knew I could out general them working on the horse. A man did 192 THE horse's rescue. , not have to know much about the horse in this town to do that. In this town, where they worried so much about my spending my money and so much time, I was obliged to sue two men after waiting one year for my pay for shoeing their horses. One of these men lived in a house that cost forty-five thousand dollars. Bragging all the time about their wealth ; I never heard them brag about their knowledge. The fact is, they did not have much of that. That was a scarce article on the horse in this town. I want to ask these men who this time belongs to, and how much money they have got invested in time. Some folks talk and act as though time belonged to them, and they wanted to monopolize it and convert it all to their own use, as they have many things. I have used as much time, probably, as any man of my age, and others have used it, and yet there seems to be lots of it left. Some use time in one way, some in another. It is used in many ways. Some use it fighting against their own interest and others' at the same time, and do not know it; and that was what the ignorant part of this com- munity was doing in this town for two years fighting me. I suppose they will fight this work if they ever see it. Then they will be fighting against their inter- est It will not hurt the sale of this work ; it will help it to sell. It will call the peoples' attention to see what all this racket is about. That was what I got up so much racket in your town for, to get the people's attention attracted to me. I wanted to teach them something about the horse. I well knew they did not know but little about this great science of workinsc on the horse. After this science is under- THE horse's rescue. 193 stood, the long lists of names laid down in books for effect will be buried with many other dead and useless names and things of the past. There will be no effect to name. Men lose money and their hcrses too. If there is a way to prevent it, and they know it to be a fact, they will grasp it very quickly. All they want is to know that this is a success (and it is, and all of the howling and bawling of these effect doctors will not make it otherwise). After working in this town, with no one to help me but my little boy and my wife, I thought I would teach a young man. He had worked at blacksmith- ing a short time, and was trying to learn how to shoe and work on the horse. This horse business requires two good, able-bodied men at least part of the time — one to hold up the feet while the other spreads them. Sometimes he is obliged to hold up more than half of the horse's weight. It takes some strength and cour- age to tackle all kinds of horses in this way, and yet it must be done if these horses that are in this fix are ever to get out of it. This young man saw me do this and helped me some, and yet he did not have confi- dence enough in himself to do it. He could not stand the opposition we were surrounded with. It did not take much to cram him down. I soon saw he would not make a good soldier in this horse fight. He dared not come right out and talk. He was shy. He dared not get up a racket. He could not stand that. I soon saw he would be of little use to me. I wanted fear- less men to introduce this science ; no coward could do it The horse he must not fear ; he must drive and handle him iu many ways, and all strange horses. A.l 194 THE horse's rescue. of the time he was too weak on his knees. I dropped liini. Tn about one year I went in his shop. He was sliooing horses. The work he was doing looked rather ragged. He told me, " This is the way I am doing it now." He was driving in old stubs in the old holes, with the lever all left on the toe, and growing longer all of the time. I said to him : " This is not right ; the horse is the sufferer. Your customers will go back on you." " Thev do not know the difference " said he. In that he was partly right. Some do know when they have got a job that looks well. This ironing a horse's foot is quite a different thing, if botched, from other mechanical work. It causes the horse to suffer. A man can botch a job on a wagon, and yet tlie wagon does not suffer. I have seen and heard some groan as if they feel pain. The cause was a botch job, and it caused the horses to suffer that was drawing these wao^ons. To set the tire too ti^rht on the lumber wagon dishes the wheels one inch each too much. What effect can that have on these deformed horses? Put on forty hundred weight on rutty roads, then you can tell. If the wheel runs in the rut at all it con- stantlv crowds and grinds against the shoulder of the axle This causes the horse to suffer. I have had many of these new-born babes on the horse try to talk and lie me down to build themselves up. I shall state here I know the horse's condition has o-rown worse for the last twenty-five years, and for several reasons. Since shoes for the horse, and nails to nail them on, have been made by machinery, the THE horse's rescue. 195 shoer, as soon as be can learn to weld on a cork on the toe in a bungling way, buys some stock and sets up the business of slaughtering the horse. He works on no principle, either right or wrong. He brags, and his friends brag for him, and* they know less, if it is pos- sible, than horses. He is safe enough if they all get crippled on his hands. The creator has made such a botch of making the horse, he can't eat or drink water. All kinds of grain will make him stiff or lame in all deforces, sonie on one foot, some on two, some on all, in all degrees, and yet he must eat or he will die. In some places they are nailing on cast shoes. In this case the foot must be cut to jSt the shoe. Of ail the damned fools that I ever heard talk, the biggest is men that claim that horses are stiffened by w^hat they eat or drink. There are so many degrees on the same horses, and on the same horse ; and these men gather around me in herds almost daily, teaching me these w6nderful truths they claim to know, and all driving stiff and lame horses in some degree. If what they say is true, they are a careless, ignorant lot of fools, and their talk bears witness against them- selves, and it needs no other proof, for their horses are enough to condemn them. They are nearly all crip- pled in a greater or less degree. That needs no proof. It crops out all over the land in bold relief ; and if these horses are stiffened by grain and water, why do they scurf the shoer so much for spoiling their horses and run to him to get them cured — the same place where they get them spoilt? It is curious how many tunes can be played on one of these lying bugles when some men get to blowing them. 196 THE horse's rescue. There are many animals that eat grain, but none are stiff and lame like the horse and mule. All animals di'ink water, and it does not affect any but these two species in this way. How is this, you wonderfully knowing men ? I should think you would appeal to the creator to have an improvement made on these two species of animals. According to your reasoning, there is something wrong in their construction, or you should use more reason and judgment about feeding grain and giving them water, knowing, as you claim, so much about the cause of all this. Suppose you experiment a little and stop giving your horses grnin and water, or a very little, and keep their feet ironed, and that by a botch; you can tell soon where the cause is. They feed all kinds of cattle, young and old, the strongest kind, and they are tied up and have but little exercise ; yet they do not get stiff by an}^- thing they eat and drink. The ox is kept shod in many places the whole year round, and fed grain, and heavy too, and I have seen them when warm drink a half-barrel of water at once, and have shoes on at the same time, and not get stiff. My father lived among the rough hills of the state of Pennsylvania. He kept them, shod and fed them, an J yet I never saw him have a stiff or sprained ox. He worked these oxen. The ox's foot is split; the shoe is in two parts, and there is no contraction. The lever does get long. It does not effect the ox as it does the horse. The lever on the ox's foot does not extend beyond the useless growth of the hoof. On the horse it is very different. After I get this work from the press I am ready to THE horse's rescue. 197 go to school to these great teachers to see what great discoveries they have made on the horse Some have never been out of the town in which they were born. If they can tell me how and on what theory or plan the}^ obtained so much knowledge of the horse's foot and the cause that threw him in this deformed condi- tion, without any experience or experimenting, tliey will f'onfer on me a great favor. They can make their independent fortune out of that. It will do away with exnerimentino- on all things, and save a vast amount of useless labor. This is the way all great things have been perfected. It will save mental taxa- tion. I wish I had known this new theory forty-one years ago ; m}^ back and hips and shoulders would not ache so while I am writing this work. I have heard in my life folks talk about using common sense. How plenty that article is I know not. There is not much used for the benefit of the horse, that I know. The article of reason, talking, and working on the horse is almost out of use. Judgment, there is lots of that of all kinds. There is all degrees of it. They all differ using judgment. There is good and poor judgment used on the horse. Of that article ninety per cent used is very poor. Useless opinions and beliefs are used by the wholesale. Still the horse suffers. Igno- rant men have the impudence to tell me I cannot cure these horses, and never did. Any one would think, to hear them talk, they knew all things, and were in all places at the same time. ISTow I want these poor fools to tell me how they know I cannot cure these horses. Thev are in one place drawing manure, which they can t^o after somebody has made the wagon to draw it 198 THE horse's rescue. on ; that tliej could not make. I am hundreds of miles away curing these horses. I could do this in a small village and they be ignorant of the fact. It might be put in print in the daily papers, and such ignoramuses as these never know it. They seldom, if ever, read ; and yet I have had nearly all of my abuse from this source. To get drunk on what they call whisky is the hight of iheir ambition. The next is to abuse and misuse these helpless horses in many ways. Reader, if j^ou ever try to introduce this science, my experience has taught me from such to turn away. They cannot take in this great science; they only fjght; you cannot teach them. The higher always teach the lower. You cannot get teachers from the lower to teach the higher ; that would be too much like spreading the horse's foot at the toe or at the top. You must select naturalists and scientific men — men of brains, men whose word is good, not liars. I have studied man some in the same time I have been study- the horse. There are men that can and do lie, and it is wonderful how they will multiply. Liars are very prolific. If one big liar should tell lies out of whole cloth before six or eight bearers of lies, it is surpris- ing what a crop you will have in a short time, and how they will multiph'', and what a field they w^ill spread over. They are borne in papers, on the tele- graph, and telephone, in the mail, and across the ocean and under it. I speak of this for this reason, to post you up. All this I have had to contend with in try- ing lo perfect this w^ork and trying to introduce it. Before I get through I will show you where I experi- mented a little on this lying business. The lying fruit THE horse's rescue. 199 some are very fond of. They can masticate and swal- low and digest this easy. They seem to relish it, too. 'No matter how large this fruit is, they can swallow it, and some have swallowed so much of it that it is almost impossible to get them to taste the truth. It is surprising how full some folks will allow themsel\T;s to be stuffed with lies. Why do you not investigate for yourselves, and go for facts and see them demon- strated? and then you will know these lies are only told to deceive you bj^ men that want to keep up this torturing business on your poor, suffering horses, and put down this great science. They are badly scared ; their craft is in danger of being wrecked, and they do not like to be made out worse than fools. When this science is introduced they will feel exceedingly small. This is certain ; it is and has been almost a daily oc- currence for many years to hav a lot of teachers gather around me, all talking horse, all talking at the same time, all directing their lesson to me. Since I have commenced writing this work several have told me they were going to write a book on the horse. I told them if they wanted to I had no objec- tions. ''That is all right," said I. "You may know many things about the horse that I do not. Your book would perhaps sell as well as mine. You have as good a right to make books and sell them as any man." But they would have to write different from what they talk in order for the reader to understand what they wanted to convey. If these books ever do come out 1 will compile them. Then you will have the best guide to cure these lame and deformed horses that ever came from a press. I have tried to learn 200 THE horse's rescuk these lessons so I could talk them. I may give a shoi't lecture i"hat I have learned from these teachers after I get this work out I can talk it bettei than I can write it. It is very complicated. It requires quite an expert to talk eight or nine men's lessons and carry them all along at the same time, and all disagree- ing on all points, opinions, and beliefs. The more a man believes the less he knows. The more he knows the less he believes. A man that is satisfied with what he has got of knowledge is never prepared for any more. I have no power to convey with my pen these horse ]essons that I have had. I think after taking five or six hundred more I will be able to talk it. I am going to try to learn them. If I can learn to talk nine men's talk at one time on the horse, that will be a big thing. It has been now one month since you have heard from the old white mare. It has been all of this long month the same thing — continued talking, shoeing, and working on all kinds of lame and crippled horses, early and late, sometimes all night. These few horses that I write about are only now and then one of thou- sands I have worked on in forty-one years. This fight for the horse has been a long one, and it is not over yet. We are just getting in the hottest of it now, but the hotter the battle the more glorious the victory — for that we are going to have. It has got started, and it cannot be stopped. Too many have seen this work done — scientific men, which I shall refer to be- fore I get through this work. This old mare is doing, finely. She must have her feet dressed as before and spread a little. I did not THE house's rescue. 201 measure her shoe to see how much I did spread it. It needed but very little. The sole is the guide on all feet. I cannot furnish any reason, sense, or judgment in this woi'k. I want all I have got for my own use. You must use your own on this work — all you can command — and use it all of the time in all cases. They all vary in many ways, as I have already written many times. I spread after this operation a little every ten or twelve or fifteen days, according to my best judgment. The object in doing this was to keep the structure of the foot always in harmony of action, and this cofTni- joint and all others as r.ear their natui'al place as pos- sible all the time. So as to have her improve, I did not leave anything undone for one hour that I could do to forward this work I was trying so haid to do. I had got this mare's feet flattened out, and the growth not wearing off. The shoe nailed on to hold it spread would also hold it from spreading; at the same time, if the foot was allowed to grow on the course it is in- clined to grow and not spread, the sole would I'aisc up in degrees according to tlie time it was held at the bot- tom. This would affect the coffin-joint and throw her off her base and affect her all over according to the degree of change from natural. I kept this mare and changed her shoes several times to keep the lever on the toe as short as I could, and spread her feet many times a little. You ought to see what I was spreading her feet for by small degrees. I kept up rubbii]g her shoulders often, and nights many houi-s at a time. I drove her nights. There was no let-up on this job for six months. Reader, imagine, if 3'ou can, my feelings, 202 THE horse's rescue. \7liicli I well know jou cannot, after all this hard work and no reward to perfect this work, to have a lot of ierty and freedom was bought ; For seven long years the soldiers suffered, died, and fought. Tyrants, do you think you can our liberty legislate away? If you do, try it • you will find some of the same mettle ihey had m that day. It do3S seem to me the first principles of this government you have lost: The way you legislate, act, talk, you seem to thnik yourselves boss. We do not intend to pay you much longer to. rob us, we will have you know : The first thing you know, out of our legislative halls you will go. Legalized thieves and robbers of yourselves you have made, And at that damned business you have carried on heavy trade, To rob us and build up powers of your own : These facts to us have a long time been known. Steal our hard-earned money, to buy yourselves a position, Then legislate to make ten times worse our condition ; Enact laws to prevent us frovn so to do, Then sell us and yourselves to this damned robbing crew. This is what you have been doing for many long years; "Weep for your crimes now with scalding, bitter tears. You have been now in the balances weighed, No more confidence to do our business in you can be paid. Our great ship of state you have wrecked and stranded, THE horse's rescue. 249 Quarreling and fighting for yourselvs a position it to man. You have scuttled this ship and deserted it, too, This is just the way all robbers and pirates do. There is no use of denying this, it is all true, And worse, you have done, you have murdered some of the crew. Poor Garfield you shot down without any cause; lie has been these many years battling against tyrannical laws. My God 1 what do you think is going to become of this nation? Rob us in many ways, fight, murder — all for a ]50sition. All the legislation for many years for yourselves that you have done, It has made your own condition worse, no good to us by it can come. All over our great republic this legalized robbing we have had; They have shipwrecked the whole fleet, and now they are play:ng grab. For httle or no service big bills are poured m, just take note — My good God! no wonder this fieet no longer could float. With such men as we have had to steer this fleet of our nation. If they are allowed to go on they will sail us to hell and damnation. If we follow them any longer the course they are pursuing You will get all tlie hell you want ; it's already brewing. In the case of Guiteau, look at the useless expense of his trial ; He committed the act; that was seen: it will admit of no denial. Poor, unhappy, unfortunate man he must be. And his case could have been disposed of without so many roibers to fee. In either case, insane or of sound mind, A verdict against him they would have to find. About this poor, unfortunate man I shall have no more to say ; I do not believe in hanging or kilhng my fellow-man in any way. As things look now. something will soon have to be done ; 111 this corruption the fleet of the United States cannot run. The only way now that I can see to pursue Is 10 clear away this damned rubbish and begin new. For condemned they are by the overruling power; If they are allowed to go on, themselves and all others they will de- vour. They seem no longer able to keep this ship afloat, They might possibly run an old, stinking canal boat. If that they should wreck there would not be so much loss. Such a craft as that they might possibly get to boss. 250 THE horse's rescue. Their works are enough to condemn them . no more evidence is needed ; Their power in thousands of ways they have exceeded. Our servants to represent us we have sent to the center of our nation. They have been duped — bought to make unwise legislation. Some mea have such an awful greed for the glitter of gold, They will sacrifice the lives and property of a nation and let h be sold. And that is the power now with it this nation they are trying to run, To rob us of that first that had to be done; They all seem trying to see which can get the bit^gest pile. In doing so they have got into a devil of a rile The flag of seventeen hundred and seventy-six will not fade, The stripes for tyrants and traitors, thieves, robbers, they were made. Some seem trying their level best to pull it down ; On their wise and honest, faithful heads put a crown. This government on the opposite principle was built to run To put crowns on our hired help ; I think it will be hardly done For many years, now we have lived under monarchical reign. And now it has become despotic. Some are being slain. Eobberies and riots all over our country we have had, Now it looks as though corruption and misrule had run mad. There is no use trying to cover it up ; it stares you square in the face. The way our government for many years has been run is a disgrace. It would be tedious for a man to write where this corruption all had its rise. If he knew, and had the time, and was ever so wise. Just to open your eyes I will give j^ou a little history of a few. In the first place, we are sold to this damned robbing crew ; We are taxed and robbed iu thousands of ways ; Without representation they have made us underlings and slaves. They are usurpers of power which to them does not belong : They raised their own salaries themselves, and that was wrong. The people never authorized them this mean business to do ; It was all planned by that robbing, sneaking, treacherous crew, That was done in the beginning of that great General Grant reign. Right in the very time when all around was to be slam. Our country was in danger ; the rebels in destruction it had laid ; To render us a little assistance fifty thousand dollars a year to him must be paid And that must be secured a term eight years long ! THE horse's RESCDS- 251 Fellow-citizens, if you do not clear yourselves of ihese sappers you aro jrone. In this salary grab, of course, they all had to take a hand : Like all other corruptions, it is contagious ; it spread all over the land. To double like ihis is easy for you, wc all very well know, But we iiave to work for very small pay, and tliat comes slow. You doubled our taxes on that damned robbmg raid, And now you put on pomp and show, and say these taxes must bo paid. And if you do not pay it we will sell you out of house and home. And as paupers and tiiieves over the country you shall roam. It seems to me for servants you are putting on considerable style ; The first you know, out of our legislative halls yovi will go in a pile , This damned tyrannical 3'oke wc do not much longer intend to wear . "We liave stood now about, all we can possibly bear. For frauds, robberies, and corruptions all other 1 nations you have out- done, If that is what you are trying to do, you excel, I will not except one. Even old ancieni Rome you outdo in your blind race for gold — For that their happiness, country, honor, and lives were sold. As for you, General Grant, something more must be done ; Such services for your country and great laurels you have won , A crown should be put on your head, you should have another fee, Of this whole band of robbers you should be king bee. This honor you certainly have won, it is plain to be seen. To see this the people do not have to be very keen. It is widespread and well known over tlie land, That robber cluef you have become of this entire robbing band. Now, sir, I do not see as we can honors any more on you bestow; We are getting very poor ; you hav squandered our money and robbed us so. Raismg the salaries all over our whole entire nation. It affected all, rich and poor, all in the same relation. It caused men who had the poor laborers in their employ To close up. " We cannot run, these heavy taxes do us so annoy." Some would try a little longer to run by cutting wages down , This has caused thousands, what are now called tramps, to run around To see if they could get some work, employment find ; And now for doing so they have made laws to make it a crime. 252 THE horse's rescue. Mr. Grant, do you not know to prison for begging we have to go, All caused by you and your damned rotten, robbing crew ? You have robbed us and on us heavy taxes laid, And criminals and slaves and paupers, too, of us you have made. When 3'ou pilot of our nation eight years were made, Four hundred thousand dollars to 3'ou was paid. And extras that all cost us money were thrown in, And now you are around begging for help again. "What you did with all that money of course we do not know, Unless you spent it sailing around, setting yourself up for a monkey show. If now a beggar and pauper 3^011 have got to be AftPr all we have done to help you, it is of no use any longer that I can see. You will have to take your chances as all beggars and paupers do. Your money has been spent without doubt for pomp and show ; Of ours we have been robbed by heavy taxes to pay you And your damned, corrupted, thieving, robbing crew. We do not intend any longer by you robbers and tyrants to be run; To work and slave night and day for small pay is no fun, And give it to you to squander and sow broadcast. And be shipwrecked, made paupers, and in prisons at last. Of all the damned robbers that I ever heard of, of this or of any other time, You are the biggest, the meanest of this or any other, for crimes. You have got so 3'ou are so bold \'ou do it in the broad da3'light, Then try to cram it down us, and make us believe it is right. On scientific principles b}- honest men this government was made to run. And now by legalized robbers and thieves corruption it is overdone. No matter what business you are doing, on a large or small scale. When you are overrun with sit-stills and sappers it must fail. The idea of taking the hard-earned money of thousands of men, And giving it to a lot of blockheads, robbers, and thieves to spend 1 These pills are a little to big now ; they will not go down ; You have made them too big of late ; it has caused the people to look around. You have rung in taxes in all conceivable wa3's you can, And down in your own pockets the most of it 3"ou cram. THE horse's rescue. 253 You have made a great mistake; you have got the whole business wrong end too ; It's bad, I know, but it is so, we are the government in place of you. Of course we understand the principles of this government and plan. And you have as much to say about how it shall be run as any other man. Until you are chosen by the people them to represent, And to all of the great centers of our great nation are sent. Then in relation to this government you are changed clear around, Then you are our servants, then by honor, fidelity, you are sworn and bound, "^e have trusted this great fleet of our nation in your care. You have betrayed your official trust, embezzled, robbed, plundered beware I Some men seem to think and talk, as it is now it must go on, To rescue this nation from your grasp it cannot be done. "When we look over this great fleet of our nation and take a view. Then say this all must be eternahy run by this damned robber crew, I do not wish any man on this round globe any harm. But the way we are sailing now, there is great reason for alarm. If we do not tack ship and steer a difEerent course soon To hell and destruction together we will all go in this vortex and mael- Strom, "When men come clamoring around the great center of our nation Pleading for aid to keep them from poverty and starvation. After we to them have hundreds of thousands of dollars paid. To do this it has by law paupers, beggars, criminals of us made. Sappers and leeches, do you always think, with .vour blind greed. You can always grind us down to the earth and on us feed ? The principle that you are working on now, if you could ca^ry it out, Will ruin you as it has us, of that there can be no doubt. On labor the support of this nation depends and has its rise, And if we cannot clear ourselves of these leeches she dies. What a damned lazy, burdensome set they seem to be, They are no earthly use to tliis government, and nowhere tliat I can see. These robbers are fast sapping out tlie heart's blood of our nation And covering our land with prisons, pDorhouses, and desolation. \Ye have for many long years these robbers and spendthrifts tried to keep up, 25-^ THE horse's kescue. But we see it's of no kind of use, they only grow more corrupt. Before you get us all in tlie poorhouse and prison pens, You will have to some of that money you stole from us spend. When a nation gets corrupted and rotten a the core. The people have no confidence, no safety any more. If you steer this fleet of our nation and keep it secure, You must keep all of the centers of this great republic pure, Then we can battle with outside corruption and keep it at bay: No stream can be kept pure when the fountain is corrupt ; it must be cleared away. You have inoculated your poisonous venom all over our land, And now you hang around the center to be fed in bands. I see, now, business seems to take a little different course, But it is no better; ii's going on from bad to worse. It has the appearance as thougli they were going to disband now, As all robbers do when they get in a row. They are going to divide up ; of course they begin with the biggest thief. That is General Grant; he is now their great robber chief. Thirteen thousand dollars, five hundred a year, lie wants us bound; That won't do; that's too much; there won't be enough to go around. If you have started out on another damned robbing raid, Do not be such a hog ; there will be thousands of others to be paid. Mr. Grant, we will have you and your robbing band to know On us you cannot rivet chains that gall and chafe us so. This is just the way that damned salary grab was played. And ail over our land beggars, paupers, and thieves it made. If this great nation you are going to ruin and the spoils divide, That is to be seen yec, you can tell better after you have tried. Tt looks now as though that is what you are trying to do — You and your damned selfish, thieving, robbing crew If It is a division of all now that you are trying to make A share of tliat we all have, and that we intend to take, Tlie principle of this goverum.ent is equal rights to all mankind, .\nd in that, too, we intend to have a share, you will find. As for being made paupers and slaves by sucli as you. That you and your damned robbing crew can never do. On scientific principles by this government you was educated to fight, And you have turned robber-chief, doing it in broad daylight. THE horse's rescuk 255 At fighting you may be good — you ought to be ; it is all you know. For the course you are taking now with this nation will show The principles of this government you do not understand ; If you do, so much the worse for you, you ought to be damned If fight is all you know, and that is what you want to do, We will give you all you want before we get through. These sappers and leeches and robbers at the heart of our nation Are driving the supporters of it to despair and desperation. Nearly all of the blood on this green earth that has been shed, Has been caused by tyrannical laws that tyrants have made. Poor, blind, ignorant, selfish men you must be to think You can grind us down with taxes, and yourselves not sink. In order with success to run this flleet of our nation The laborers and producers must be in a prosperous condition. When hoggish, selfish, bad-principled men get tlie balance of power Through ignorance, tyrannical laws they will make, themselves to devour. For all crimes committed on this earth retribution must be made^ Either before you leave this earth or after you are dead. This is the decree and law the creator has made for all ; On your own merits you must sink, rise, or fall. No other provision the creator for us has ever made; All sins committed by ourselves, by us they must be paid. All nations, when they get corrupted by their blind greed for gold, For this, sooner or later, to destruction tliey are sold. Now this is just what all of this trouble in our nation is about; We will go the way all others have gone if it is not purged out. Like causes produce like effects; search the world around, No argument can be used ; to destruction they seem bound. All can see plain enough after it is too late; It will be no time then to grieve and mourn your sad fate. This will be the sad result, and that, too, very soon; This is the way of all nations — when corrupted, this is their doom. All men seem to have their sphere and bounds to fill. And all should in harmony live and show each other good will. But when selfish men make tyrannical laws, on us encroachments make, * It causes all mankind then a different course to take. To live in shanties and hovels, and at last be crowded in prison pens, 256 THE horse's rescue. It causes men to rise up and try themselves to defend. Whether they can or cannot, they always have and always will try; It seems to be their nature; for liberty they will tight until they die Now these encroachments are talked and felt all over our nation, And if there is not a change soon, it will be laid waste m desolation Capital to do business we must have, that we all well know; But it is a curse to this nation to spend it in pomp and show. From all business of this kind no returns can be had. It is only squandering the producers' money; no dividends can be made. I suppose some think they are doing big things at the center of our nation, Squandering our money building palaces all over God's creation. Of course in this robbing raid they must all have a share. Producers and laborers, you are the treasury ; take care, take care ! Some are trying to save all they possibly can in this way, By converting all they have in bonds, then they will have no taxes to pay. This throws the whole burden on those that are the least able it to bear. Remember the principle of this country is equal rights; beware, be- ware! No laws that you have made do we recognize when your powers you exceed. No privileged ones in this government on us much longer can feed. Laws that you have made, no matter when or by whom they were made, The most of the burden on the laborer and producer is laid. My God I the most pitiful sight that a man ever can behold Is to look over this nation and see men robbing themselves for gold. In the course you are pursuing now, you will soon have to know You have been robbing yourselves ; you had better go slow. "When the time comes, with your plunder, where you can steer ; That is a mystery to me that I cannot see clear. When this robbing that you have begun all over our land breaks out, Then you will see the cause when it is too late, without doubt. It doosnot seem as though people would be such selfish bhnd, fools, By legislation to rob themselves and sail riglit mto a whirlpool. In order for this fleet of our nation to suc<^essfully be run, Capital and labor must be balanced as u«ar as it can be done. THE HORSE S RESCUE. 257 As it is now them that is the best able have no taxes to pay ; In this way the whole fleet of our nation is balanced the wrong way. With interest on bonds, and idle capital in vaults doubling on us, AVith this, and many other robberies, will cause the boilers to burst. This great fleet of our nation out of balance cannot sail ; Do all you can to prevent, unless you cliange, it will fail. If out of balance you sail, it is easy enough to see In favor of the laborer and producer it should be. As it is now, you are killing the goose that lays the golden egg, Fining the prisons, poorhouses, insane asylums, causing them- to beg, Now you seem to be bewildered in a fog, and failed ; You act as though your compass you had lost, rudder and sail. You have been drifting out of your course for a long time ; You cannot sail this great fleet in corruption and crime. Equal rights to all mankind in this government it was to be, And in safety no other way it can be run, you will soon see. You will have all the business you want, the best you can do, If all are honest — pilot, mate, passengers, and crew. "When robbers and traitors to the helm of the fleet of our nation turn, There will be trouble enough ; these facts you will soon learn. . Unless the people all change their course, and right-about face. We will all sink together with this fleet in everlasting disgrace. For by trickery, bribery, and rascality the business is nearly all done; Some damned scoundrels started it, and in this channel they run, In order to keep pace in this blind race and keep up. To hell and destruction we are sailing and growing more corrupt, If in filth, carrion, crime, and corruption you try this flee* to wallow through, And all out of balance the wrong way, that you can never do. If you want again to -get this fleet of our nation afloat k« You must elect honest men when you come to vote. That will balance it up on the original plan. And that is equal rights to all, every mau. Clear away the leeches and robbers so many to fee, Then you can get this great fleet of our nation at sea. How can anyone do anything with so many prowling around ? It would be a blessing to this nation if some would get drowned. The first thing to be done is our expenses to curtail; There is no use trying to run so, if you do you will fail. Knock the wages down more than one-half on the whole crew. 258 THE horse's rescue. If you ever sail this fleet this is what yon will have to do, And throw out no more such attractive bait as that salary grab, That caused the people with corruption almost to go mad Next to be done will be to tax all property on the equalization plan ; Make all bear their part of the burden, both woman and man. Next, there should be only a small appropriation made, To set idle men to work with pick, shovel, and spade. To bury this old canal ; it stinks ; it has a long time been dead. There is no use of its having any more carrion to it fed. Now I will bid you all a hearty adieu, The whole entire, dishonest, robbing crew ; But I intend to keep watch to see the progression You make sailing this great fleet of our nation. I have sailed myself out of my course; I must tack ship and go to Avork on the horse, To follow you any longer, that I cannot safely do ; It would shipwreck and ruin me, as it has you. When a nation gets so selfish, so ignorant, and blind. As to rob themselves, there is no safety I find. When on themselves they make robbing raids, There is danger ahead, I am afraiJ. There does not seem to b^ any way to make them see — To be robbers of themselves they are bound to be, In rings and monopolies all oxer our land. To ruin themselves they are bound, if the}^ can. When on you tliis great destruction and calamity comes, Do tell, what will with your plunders be done ; When all are trying each other to devour, Who will stay the hand, then, of this unruh' power? When at the center of our great nation it is begun. What then, do you think, to save this great fleet can be done ? When the people have no standard or center to rally round, When the old flag of seventy-six you have pulled down ? When thieves and robbers are at work at our nation's heart, Lookout, take care, beware ; that is the vital part. THE horse's rescue. 259 You will have to stop that soon, without doubt, Or you will cause this nation's blood to all run out. Eor the lave of money, selfish, avaricious greed Has caused other nations to suffer and to bleed ; And some themselves to death they have bled, And have become extinct, and now are dead. Unless you are more honest and liberal, yon will see, The same as it has been with others, with you it will be. If you are not more harmoniously united, every man, For a house divided against itself cannot stand. You will bring destruction down on your own heads ; In rapine, slaughter, and blood you will make your beds. It is liable at any time now to break out. And when it comes it will be like an avalanche, no doubt. No one can foretell in advance what will take place, It is easy to see ; it now stares you in the face. I mean just when the great crisis will come, That will be soon if there is nothing to prevent its being done. This avalanche, if they would, could be turned a different course. I must quit now and go to work on the horse. Poor old gray, a customer for you I have found ; He cannot tell that you were ever lame or unsound. All I want for you is just what I paid last fall ; The feed and work that I have done, j^ou are welcome to it all ; And I will take you to the shop and shoe you all around new ; This will probably be the last for you I shall have a chance to do. For all this long winter's work on you I am well paid ; The lesson I have learned is enough, now I am not afraid. All stiff horses on this principle can be cured, I find ; The older they are, and of long standing the longer the time. Now I have got you shod all around, nice and new, I will bid 3'ou good-bye ; it may not be a final adieu. You look fine now ; good-bye, good-bye, poor old mare, I may come around again to see how you are. - • ■ 260 THE horse's bescuk After working almost night and day through tliis long, cold winter to demonstrate and satisfy myself what could be done for old stiff horses of long stand- ing, I found myself more than paid. I found in this search that this science, if followed up, would perform wonderful cures on all. This was to put the cap-sheaf on all of my experimenting. It went beyond all my expectation, I was surprised myself. " Now," thought I, "I can tackle almost everything in the line of stiff and lame horses, and this I am determined to do. This science I am going to introduce." This is the way I reasoned with myself : I have got the big- gest thing on this globe — and I have not changed my mind yet on that, neither can I. After all the searches of others, for no one knows how long, this complicated and difficult mystery they have not solved and cannot. This job on this old mare has com- pletely cleared the fog av/ay. No matter what the people say to the contrary, I am going to start out and try to introduce it in some new places. I know what I will have to contend with. It will be the same old music that I have heard so long. The first thing to be done will be to close up my shop and business in this place ; the next will be to have a fat pocketbook, for nothing can be done without that toward introduc- ing this great science ; that I have demonstrated to my satisfaction. Header, you may wonder where I got all my money at that time aside from what I earned in my shop. It was instalments and interest from a farm that I sold that I was using to rescue the suffering horse. After receiving my annual instalment, the next thing to be THB horse's rescue. 261 done was to get some bills printed to advertise tliis great discovery and science and announce my corning. This bill was drawn up in this way : " PROF. GERARD DOAN, TnE CHAMPION HORSE-SHOER OF AMERICA, Having made horse-sboeing a business for many years, and study- ing the natural borse and all of tbe cbanges from tbe natural to tbe unnatural, its effect in all of tbe different cbanges, bas ' made tbe great dis- covery bow to cure foundered borses of long stand- ing — water, cbest, and grain founder; perisbed sboulders ; remove all air-puffs, corns, coffin-joint lameness, bo'jlers, sbufllers, single-footers, and borses tbat bop bebind in speed- ing. All these cures I will perform without medicine. I will deliver lectures free. All owners of borses and mules will do well to attend. I will be at your place, etc. I did not advertise on this bill all I could do with, out medicine. I well knew this was more than thev could stand. I put on " professor " because I thought it would help me. They like the sound of these big- sounding titles. I have seen as big fools with " pro- fessor" attached to their names as I ever did without; and my attaching it to my name did not help me any, as experience proved. After this bill was drawn up, 262 THE HORSE^S RESCUE. I sailed for the city of Elmira to get it printed. The printer read it over. I said to him : '' It's a big thing; don't YOU think it is?" *' Yes ; but I do not believe it." "You will print the bills, I suppose, if I will pay you?" ''Yes." After arranging this bill with a cut of two fast- sailing trotters at the head, I closed a bargain with him to strike me off sixteen dollars' worth. After this job was completed I sailed forHorseheads. After my arrival I stood with my bundle of bills under mv arm on the walk. A man drove up. He says to me : " Professor, one of my horses is lame ; the other is getting wind-puffs on him." While I was talking with him there was a stranger to me standing by. He heard our conversation. Af- ter our talk was ended I turned to walk away. He said to me, " Are you a veterinarian ?" " No ; I am not. I work on horses' feet. I have done tbat for many years, and I have made some quite big discoveries recently. I have been getting some bills printed preparatory to traveling and lectur- ing, and getting up schools to try and see if I can in- troduce it." "Come to our place first. I am a veterinarian. I will help you. I would like to travel with you. I can cure spavins, ringbones, pole-evil, and thistloes. I can work on the outside and pick up some money that way. I will do all of the posting bills and secure the halls to lecture in. If you will come to our place I will take some of your bills now and put them up THE HORPES' RESCUE. 263 if you will just fix the day and evening on them that you will be there." " Where do you live?" " It is in the state of Pennsylvania." "Plow far is it?" "Sixty miles." "Is it a large place?" "Oh, yes; it is a large, thriving business town, and lots of stiff and lame horses." " When I start this science in a place I have to stay some time to introduce it. I want a big field to work There is no use stopping in a small place. This is a rather hard science to introduce. It is in advance of the age to cure horses without medicine. I will come to your place first. I will fix the time on some bills. You put these bills up in all of the public places, and secure a hall for the evening. I will be on the ground." After arranging matters at home by dividing m}^ money with my wife, closing my house, she and my boy Frank left this town to visit their relatives and friends in Auburn city and other places, I was pre- pared for a long campaign battling for the horse. With my shoeing tools and bills in a heavy satchel, when the day came I set sail. I arrived in this town about noon. I must say I was never more disap- pointed in my life. I do not remember the place's name, neither do I remember this veterinarian's name. It was a little huddle down in a sunken place sur- rounded with high mountain peaks. There was no way I could see out without looking nearly straight up. One old run-down, dilapidated hotel. About 264 THE horse's rescue. tlie first object I saw in the form of s^ human being was one man who had another poor, drunken man by the nape of the neck, kicking him ahnost to death. There were two or three old stores. The first thing I did was to look and see where all of those bills were put up. I looked .this town all over, and no bills could I find. I walked-in the hotel, and inquired for and about my veterinary friend. They told me where he lived. I, with satchel in band, walked up to his house. He sat on the verandah, tipped back in a chair, reading the news of the day. He seemed surprised to see me. I accosted him in this way: ''The bills are not up, I see. How is this ?" " Well, I showed them some. They did not be- lieve anything in it. They said it was a damn hum- bug." " Then you hav not secured any hall to lecture in ?'' *'No." "Did you think they Vvould believe it could be done? This is just what our business is to teach them these principles, truths, and facts." I soon saw this man was of no use to me. He was entirely too weak in the knees and garret. Golly ! this ia a hard battle to fight alone. I am not going to leaye this town without giving them a brush. I am going to lecture in this town on the horse if there is not one man to listen. I am going to look this town over. I will get up some kind of a racket. I walked up to what they called a livery stable. ' There sat the proprietor on some rubbish. Pieces of old wagons, harness, and old boards were all over the floor. He sat with both elbows on hi* knees, his chin THE horse's rescue. 265 resting on both hands to hold his head up. I ap- proached him, as cautiously as I knew how to, on the horse. I saw the condition of his row of fine horses at a glance when I first stepped in. It would not take a very close observer to see they were in a very bad condition. The whole row stood on piles of manure that elevated them behind at least a foot too high. Some were ankle-cocked ; some off their base badly ; in fact, they were a hard-looking sight. In a round- about way I commenced to talk horse. I carefully closed upon him at last. I told him they could be cured without medicine. Then he exploded. He railed at me : *' Bo you think we are all damned fools here? Do you think you can humbug us?" There was no use in talking with him any more. There would be danger of getting some of that rub- bish over my head. Next I walked into a blacksmith shop. I glanced around. I saw things were all kept in good order. The work all looked mechanic-like. There was some good work finished and partly fin- ished. Onlv one man was in this shop. I asked him if he was the proprietor. He said he was, and worked alone. I saw he had quite a head on him, though his body was very inferior. He was deformed, small, hump-shouldered. He did not look as though he was able to shoe horses. But he did, I saw, and his work looked well. I soon saw I could, talk with him on the principles of "forking on the feet of horses. I had my pasteboard foot to show him the principles to work on. He soon saw the whole business. I spent about an hour with him. He was the most i 266 THE horse's rescue, looking man I saw in that town, and the best me- chanic. I visited two other shops and bad a cbat with the owners. They stared at me when I lold them I could perform these cures without medicine on principles of science. They looked at me as though they thought I was insane. Night came. A few col- lected in this little huddle. To leave this town with- out delivering a lecture on the horse I was deter- mined not to do. I saw some boxes on the steps of a store. I asked permission to take one. I rolled it across the walk in the street. I quietly got myself on this base to attract their attention. I commenced by a few introductory preliminaries, stating my business in their place ; my disappointment on account of the bills not being posted and no hall secured, and the field was too small to try to introduce this great science ; but if you wil»l listesi I will give you a short lecture here. This bugling attracted a few. I sailed' out at the same time. I kept watoh of the crowd. It was not a large one, not more than five or six at one time. They would come and go. This changing was constantly going on ; it was rather discouraging to try to teach science in this way. I saw they stared at me* a little while, then moved away. Others would do the same. There was one fine-looking man I saw staid at his post from the first. I saw he was inter- ested, and that induced me to go on. If it had not been for him I might just as well have been in the woods on a stump talking to trees.* After this lecture was over I rolled the box back, and walked bnck to the hotel. I remained in this place part of the next day. While sitting in the hotel this listener to my THE horsk's rescue. 267 lecture came in, seated himself,, and commenced to draw me out in conversation on the horse. Said he: "You are all right, stranger, but I do not believe you can introduce it. What will you take to teach me what you know about the horse? I am in earnest." " I do not know as I could teach you all I know on the horse," I replied. "It has been a life-long study with me. If I was going to remain in this place I could and would teach you some very valuable les- sons." The remark I made to this man when he told me he did not think I could introduce this science was, *'I will or burst; that is, I will sink ever}^ dollar I have got, then earn more, and go at it again." After this noble-minded and gentlemanly man passed out. I inquired who he was. They said he was the physician of their place. At that time I com- menced to reason \vith m^^«=elf in this way: It took me a lono; time to learn how to introduce it. I can see now that I sailed out before I was full rigged. I have got no bocks with these principles and rules laid down. They cannot remember all that I say to them if they- listen. I must write a book. Here is the sticker — for me to convey all this in a book, and if I do. that will not sell as this matter now stands. They would call that a damned humbug, as they do me. That will not do yet. It must be introduced first by <]oing the work in order to get good, reliable, substan- tial, noted scientific rnen for reference to put in the book. I am going to leave this town and sail to Au- burn city. I have a brother there, a horse-shoer, and another twenty miles from there. They are both 268 THE horse's rescue. good workers on tbe horse's feet. I am going to en- list them in this horse fight. That will be easy enough to do, for thej have been and are now trj'ing to solve this mystery. I sailed for Auburn. On my way I stopped at my brother Oliver's place of busi- ness. He was located in a small inland town at that time surrounded with a beautiful country and well-to- do farmers. I walked into his shop. He was seated on a saw-horse. I shall never forget how he looked, tired and sick, thin in flesh, cheeks sunken, eyes the same. "What's the matter, Ob?" said I. '• Well, the fact is," said he, "I am about used up. I am nearly ridden to death with so many crippled and stiff liorses. They come pouring in on me from mnnj^ miles away. They keep me nearly all of my time holding them up. I can fix them up, and do, some that are very bad, but it is killing business for me, and small pay. I can hardly live out of it." I said : " I have got something I want to show j^'on. I have come on purpose to do this. It solves the whole mystery we have so long been trying to find out. I can tell you how you can cure all of these stiff horses." I took out of my satchel my pasteboard hoof, and explained the principles it was done on. He saw it all at a glance. ''That will do it, I know," said he. In a few words it was all made clear to him. He could do it as well as I could. His long experience and the progression he had made enabled him to grasp this new discovery instantly. It was what he had been many years reaching after. THE horse's rescue. 2i>9 "Oliver," said I, "I am going to Auburn to see Joseph. I want you and him to help me introduce this science." "You will meet with a power of opposition in many ways," said he. "That I care nothing about," I replied. "T liave been pulverized through that mill. I want to beat them if I can. I am ahead here. If you will take hold of this they never can excel you ; equal is all thev can do." After staying over night, the time all spent talking horse, I sailed for Auburn city. I found Joseph in his shop wrestling with all kind of cripples. I soon found a way to let my business be known. "Jo," said I, "when you have leisure I have got a big thing on the horse I want to show you." "I thought you had got something," he replied, "or you would not be around. If you liave got any- thing new on the horse I want to learn it. I will be one of your scholars." After explaining what I could do with a horse's foot, he said : " If you can do that, and not produce any inflamma- tion, that is all I want to know ; that will do the whole business. I want to see that done." " We must have a horse." "I will find a horse. There are stiff horses enouc^h ; you can hardly find one but whatsis stiff." " We want one that is bad." " I know of one that we can get. She is six years old. She is so stiff that after driving her, when she 270 THE horse's rescue. comes in tlie stable, she is so sore that she will lie down near]}'- all the time." " You will find it will bother us some to get these horses to work on. Their owners are afraid we will spoil them." " We can buy them." " Wo do not want the horses. The best way I have found is to hold ourselves responsible for the horse. There is no risk to run caused by the work we will do on them This saves their lives many times." "All rigfht; that we will do. I will have a horse before night." Business was hurried up in tlie shop. We got the six-year-old mare. She was ow^ned by Mr. Westlake. By holding ourselves responsible for one hundred and' fifty dollars if she did not come out all right, we got full control of her. She was fed and kept in Joe's barn. The next day after my arrival we were at work on a horse. Only one bill was put up, and that was in Joe's shop. This work was commenced in Auburn city over eight years previous to the date of this book. This mare was badly off her base on all of her feet. On her hind legs above her ankles were large air-puffs. The woik on this mare was done all at one time; that is, her feet were all prepared and expanded at one time. • She was changred back to natural at once ; that is, the cause was removed. Mr. Westlake was to see this work done. I well knew it would not do to let him see it. It would have brought the whole town down on us. After the feet were prepared they were all made soft. THE horse's rescue. 271 "All read}^," Joseph said; "we must Lave West- lake here now to see this work done." *' No," said I ; " that will not do. We must put the harness on her first, and have the wagon in readiness at the door to hitch her on as quick as her feet are spread. If we do not We will have her down. We must put her in motion, then she will soon recover from the chansre." Tne spreading was all done as quick as it could be, with care and by measure. There is no kind of use to write any more about how much these horses' feet are spread, they vary so, and on the same horse. After this work was done we hitched her to the wagon and sailed out of the city a few miles and back into town. Joseph got out to go in a store on busi- ness and left me sitting in the wagon. After a short time this mare began to balance over back and for- ward, and acted as though she was about to fall. She did not have the control of herself yet enough to keep on her eqiiiiibrium. This is the way tiiey all will be more or less, according to the degree of change. While sitting in the wagon the people gathered around. They asked me what ailed my horse. I re- plied, " I guess she is all well enough." " That mare is sick ;" "she ought to be taken out of the harness;" " she is dying now ;" " she ought not to be driven any more." While this was going on around me, Joseph came, jumped into the wagon, and we sailed out of that crowd of bewildered people to the barn, put the mare up for the night, and cared for her the same as I have 272 THE horse's rescue. done for all others. When it came time to retire, I said to Joseph : "I am going to bed. I am tired." " Are you not going to do anything to that mare's feet to night?" ^' No ; she is all right." ** Her feet will be turned all wrong side out before morning." "You can tell better in the morning. I will pay for her if they are." When I got up Joseph was in the barn caring for his horses. '* Jo, how are the mare's feet?" " Tliey are cold ; there is no heat in them." '' That is boss ; that settles the whole thing. The air-puffs are all gone ; she begins to show her deform- ity ; it will take time to bring that back. Work and exercise will bring that all right after the cause is re- moved on all horses; but remember it must be kept removed. We will let her rest awhile. We went to the shop. Joseph had hands at work for him. When we got there the shop was full of horses. There was a long row there waiting to have their feet ironed. Joseph^ with hat in his hand^ walked up and down this row of horses, looking them over, I suppose, to sse what condition they were in. After he had looked them all over, he swung his hat around over his head and said, " I can cure every horse in this shop without u particle of medicine." There were several standing around. " Hold on, Jo," said I. " They will call you crazy, as they have me ; you will get in the lunatic asylum the first you know." THE horse's rescfe. 273 My advice did not stop his bugle. He kept it going. That helped me. Mine could rest a little. This is making a little start in this place, sure. Said Jo : "I have got a six-year-old mare ; her legs stock up behind ; one is swollen very bad. . I have used lots of liniments. I cannot take it out. She inter- feres badly, too. I have shod her heavy and light, in all ways I can think of, but it has all done no good.'' " Put a pair of spreaders on her, Joe ; put the struc- ture of her feet in harmony of action, and the swell- ing will leave so quick the skin will be all loose on her legs. It will stop her cutting her legs off at the same time." She was soon in the shop. Joe did this work him- self. We spread her feet, and hitched her to the wagon. It threw her on her base, and she traveled at once about eight inches apart. The swelling did go out, and left the skin loose. So much money thrown away for liniments. This will work the same on a large per cent of all the horses on this globe. This fever has its rise from internal heat in the foot, caused by being out of harmony of action. It is not neces- sary any longer to write all the particulars about how I worked on the different horses in this city. The principles are already laid down in this work ; that is, as far as I had got at that time. I made some new discoveries after I left this city. For six weeks brother Joseph -and myself battled for the horse early and late. During this time we op- erated on quite a number of horseti. It did not seem to get advertised, and this was the reason the people would get their horses cured and say nothing about it 274 THE horse's rescue. They thought it would injure the sale of them if the people knew they had ever been stiff; or if they did sell them and they ever got stiff again, no matter what the cause was that made them so, they would be likely to get into a lawsuit ; and that is the case many times, and this is caused by ignorance. If this science was understood it would save a vast amount of trouble fi'om that soui'ce and many others. " Joseph," said I, one day, •' I am going to leave this place now. I will leave the unfinished jobs in your care to finish up." I made no charges ; presented no bill to any man. This is the place where I received five dollars from Mr. Hatch for curing his horse. He insisted on my takinsf it, and would willins^lv eive me four times as much more. He knew me, and had for many years. He told me, "Take my horse, cure him, and I will pay you your own price." Joe did tl]e work on this horse. I shared equally with him. That left me two and a half dollars, vvrhich is all the reward I have ever ]-eceived from any man for work done for them aside from shoeing in my long life of fort^^-one years bat- tling for the horse I must tell you a little stoiy about Mr. Hatch's horse, thea I will leave Auburn city. Mr. Hatch, hearing I was in the city at work on horses, looked me up. Said he: "I have a horse; he is a good seven-year-old liorse; he is stiff, unable to work. He was so when I got him. I traded for him. I want you to go and look at him." "I will do so." This horse was turned out in a low, wet pasture. THE horse's rescue, 275 We found him standing in this position : hind parts at least eighteen inches higher than his forwai'd parts, with his forward feet in the mud and water. He had placed himself in this position to save the strain on the back tendons. He could stand more comfortable in this way. The mud and water helped keep the fever and heat out of his feet at the same time. In fact, he could hardly move around. We pulled him out of the mud, and got him on hard ground. He was a large, noble, fine-looking young horse, with flat- tish, good feet. I took out rav foot ho(;k to clean out his feet. He had shoes on. While cleaning out his feet I came to some tow or cotton packed under the shoe at the toe. I commenced to dig it out. I knew it was of no use, no matter what it was. " What is this, Mr. Hatch ?" "Well, a veterinarian that has charge of the street- car horses toH me he could cure him by bleeding him in the toe, then turn him out ; so I had that done." "How much blood did he take out?" "About ten quarts; five quarts to each foot." "And here he is in this mud hole yet?" "Yes ; and I want him to work." "What do vou want to do with him ?" "I want to draw hay." "You can have him to-morrow." Eeader, such ignorance as this ought to be exposed. Men calling themselves veterinarians, who do not know anything only to make bad worse and torture horses in this way and m.any others. I told Mr. Hatch what ailed his horse. I towed him to the shop, and now I will tell you his feet were con- 2T6 THE horse's rescue. traded some, as almost all horses are that have had their feet ironed. This was not the worst trouble with this horse. He was badly thrown off his base by cutting his heels too low and not cutting the toe down, leaving the toe at least one inch and a half too long. This was a short job to remove the cause of all of this poor horse's trouble. His feet were soft ; he had soaked them himself. I did the work on this horse. This wonderful wise veterinarian had commenced at the toe of this horse's foot ; cut back towards the point of frog crossways at least two inches deeper as he went back ; he had cut a large hole through in this useless hoof in order to reach the sensitive part of the membrane, as it is called by some. This had been done long enough so nature had in a measure repaired the damage. The first thing we did for this horse was to pare these feet well down at the toe until this hole was all gone, cutting but little from the heel, just enough to true and level his feet up; cupped them out preparatory to spreading his feet and letting the sole down to its proper place. We spread this horse's feet five-eighths of an inch, and shod him on his hind feet. Toward night I led him home, standing on his toes. He balanced back and forward a little. I ex- plained that to Mr. Hatch ; told him he would be over that in the morning. He could put him to work. It would be better to do so. He pulled out his money to pay me. '' You had better wait and see how you like the job," said I. '' I will come and see how he gets along in a few days." I did so. He was drawing hay. This horse was on THE horse's rescue. 277 his base, head up, limber, about half a neck ahead of his mate, and was the limberest of the two. Mr. Hatch pulled out his money to pay me. I charged him five dollars. It was not the money I wanted ; it was to introduce this science. Some may call this bragginc^. I will say right here that when all such men as they get this great science learned, after some one else has studied it out and perfected it, they will have more to brag about than they have now. It is not my intention to write the experience of my broth- ers working on the horse. They enlisted in this horse fight, and have been at it ever since, and show no signs of giving it up. I have got it started in two places, by two practical men of long experience, working on the horse. Kow I will sail back to the old battleground in Horseheads. When I started out on this campaign I sold out all of my interest in my shop. I soon secured another, a good, new shop, rigged up; all stocked up new. "I must have money," said I, "or I shall be shipwrecked soon in this way." I did not put up any sign. I never had a sign on my place of business, but one, in all of the places I have done business in. I soon found a way to call trade. When I saw a lame, crippled horse I went for him. It soon spread, and in a short time I was overrun again with horses. This is the way I always advertise when I commence i i a new place; but tliis was no new place; this was liie place where I got jerked out of a wagon head-first U)v talk- ing for the horse. It is not necessary to write ;il] the particulars about this second atcack on this town, battlinsr for the horse, onlv enough to lav down some 278 THE HORSES RESCUE. principles that will be of use to the horse and his owner. My life I never intended to write, and I well know no one else can. Neither do I care to spend rny time in that way. So I will hasten along with this work. While battling in this town a man came to my shop to get a horse shod. His Ran>e was Wix. He was a teamster. His was a large, middle-aged horse, ihin in flesh. He was badly off. It was all he could do to stand ; he was thrown back off his base on all of his legs; his hind feet wei'e thrown forward so much by this same cause I have written of that he appeared about to go over backwards. "Mr. Wix," said I, '"that horse is so far gone I do not think I can balance him by shoeing; and I do not think he can stand on the other leg if I was strong enough to hold him up. He will break down on one leg. He cannot stand, that I knovv^ ; but I will try him." After balancing him on his .forward feet first, whicji helped him some, I tried him on one hind foot. After lifting and tugging a long time, with a large proportion of this heavy horse's weight thrown on me, Mr. Wix on the opposite side tr^Mng to hold him up, that is, from going over sidewise, I finally, by main strength, raised his foot. The other leg gave out, being able to hold but very little w-eight. The lever tipped him over*, and down he went flat on the floor. Mr. Wix pounded him, and after struggling a wdiile he managed to get on his feet again. This was in the heat of the Burnmer, and a very hot day. " Mr. Wix," said I, " this horse will not be of use to you if we do shoe him ; he cannot be balanced by THE horse's rescue. 279 shoeing so lie can work or stand long. I do not tliink he can stand on one ]es: \oy\s: enouofh to shoe." Mr. Wix said he could hokl bini up. He must liave him shod, so at it he went. After struggling a long time he manag:ed to raise a foot. Down went the horse broadside ; then he must be pounded up again. Wix tried it again with like result. I did not like to give this job up, so I tried a new plan. The horse had shoes on, and his feet were quite long. I cut the hoof off at the toe and around; cut the nails out in this way. We got the shoes off, then cut the hoof awry on the under side at the *toe. That helped him some ; it let him go forward on his base a little. Then I tried him again. After a hard struggle for me and him, Wix holding him all he could to keep him from fall- ing over, I succeeded in getting his foot up without his falling. I worked as fast as I could, cutting the hoof awaj at the toe, holding his weight at the eame time :- holdino" his foot up onlv a short time and chanofing legs often. In this way I let his body go back on his base bv deo^rees. After a loni2:, hard struo,-- I'le I got him shod. In this way I shortened his toes and pared them down at heel and toe, the toe the most ; gave him a long shoe at the heel ; corking the shoes the highest at the heel. This was the best I could do, shoeing this poor horse, and as well as any man can do for a horse in like condition without ex- })anding the foot and putting the structure of the foot in harmony of action, which his Was fearfully out of order. Reader, you may ask, "Why did not you do that?" You ought to know by this time. How can a man do 280 THE HORSES RESCUE. anything when others will not Jet liim? — wlien they will only gather around him and fight, and blart a lot of nonsense? After a few days Mr. Wix came into the shop. "Doan, that horse is dead." "How is that?" "I found him down this morning oat doors on the manure pile, unable to rise. I took the axe and knocked him in the head, and took him to tho bone- yard." "How did he get outdoors? " "The door of the stable was behind his stall. He broke his halter and knocked the stable door off tlie inges. The fact is, he was tipped over backwards with con- traction and leverage, as thousands are. This lever works both ways, and there is a power in it. It has tipped this horse over ; and the discovery of this will tip over and shove from the base some institutions, so that no power can put them back, built as they are on false teachings and no principles or foundations, only tinkering at the effect. There are two levers that tip horses over back- wards. They both work in harmony of action ; they are both caused b}^ contraction ; the fulcrum of both is at the center of the foot, above tho coffin-joint. One . runs up the leg ; the other runs out at the toe, beyond the point of hoof. That is not seen, and yet it is equal in length to the other. When any degree of contraction takes place, the levers both start at the same time. They are connected at the center; they are not independent of each other when contraction THE horse's rescue. 281 takes place. The useless growth of hoof on the toe, if there is no contraction, is the end of the lever. How can these poor horses stand, thrown in this position? Feet moved forward, or body back— have it either way if you please, it is all the same — this lever run- ning up the hind leg to the extreme point of the horse, with two-thirds of his weight at the end of the lever, and with his feet thrown forward, caused by contrac- tion. Follow that lever down to the fulcrum ; look the horse over ; look at that lever-purchase breaking him down ; then look at the one on the toe of equal length working in harmony with it, one lifting, the other pulling down. There is some power, I want you to know and see. These principles will not lie, nor can they be ruled out. Contraction works the same on all of the feet on all horses expanding too much. I have explained that the length of these levers varj^ on the same horse. The length they can get is accord- ing to the size of the horse and the degrees of con- traction. "When the horse gets as bad as Wix's was^ the lever is farther away from the fulcrum, as long as the horse's leg is, and to the extreme point behind, I mean as far as the horse's body extends. Of course there could not be any lever beyond where there is weigiht. On this horse science, when a horse is thrown in this way, there is no powder that can raise him except his foot is expanded, or it can expand itself as his creator intended it^ should. Reader, I want you to understand that these poor horses endure some suffering before this takes place. This is called by the ignorant, strained across the loin. About that they are right. The horse is strained across the 282 THE horse's rescue. loin, and badly too; but the cause they know nothing of. A horse thrown in this way will struggle hard to retain his feet, and many times he is crammed with all kinds of trash, bled and blistered, when the cause all lies in his feet. In the fore part of this work I left a horse that had not been balariced up. He was badly off his base. He had become spavined. He went over backwards, and horses would go more off their bose were they not divided against themselves. Beino- on their base for- •ward saves them somewhat. Sometimes it will not do that. When they get verj^ bad behind they must go down. Being on a constant strain all of the time, and drawing loads, or traveling in any way, and rising over that lever, all out of harmon}'', the}'' are soon ruined in a greater or less degree. To balance them up only adds more effects in number. By splitting it "up it only makes this entanglement more complicated. Not a cause is removed. It prolongs their sufferings. Sometimes, and many times, it causes their death by suffering. I have seen lots of this kind. After battling alone in this town, woi-king on all kinds of cripples, from far and near, ten months, not one soldier could I enlist to take hold of this science. My health was fast giving out, and money too. I de- cided to sell my property and try a new field. I soon did this. When I wanted to sell I always put on a selling price. It always went. I collected all I could by asking for it. Some I took in promises that have never been fulfilled. The old gray mare I sold on one year's time ; that is due now. I must collect that. I want to see her, and see how she fares, and see if she THE horse's rescue. 283 s limber yet. She is four miles away, if tlieraaonwns her yet that I sold her to. I had not seen this mare from the time I sold her, nor her owner. I went on foot. I found all at home. The man paid me. I told him I wanted to see her. We went to the barn. She stood there with a row of horses, with a rack of black, moldy hay before her, and with plenty manure enough to lie on ; very poor and dirty ; no one could have sworn for certain she vras the same mare I sold to him one year previous. I did not let him know what I wanted to see this rnare for. There was a boy stood b}^ I told him I would like to see her move off a little. She had shoes on. This boy was soon on her back, sailing her up and down the road. I saw at a glance she was limber, and more so about the shoulders than she was when I sold her. That was what I went four miles on foot through deep mud to see if working another yeai- after the cause was removed would make any more improvement. It did. She was as limber as 'any horse, and had as good knee action as she ever had.. In that all horses vary some. I asked him if she ever had been lame in any way since he owned her. He said she had not. Eeader, this man never knew this mare had ever been stiff or lame before he bought her, and he does not know what mare it is ; neither does any that once knew her, except the Woodrough ^brothers. I found out what I went for, and sailed hom.e. Next thing was to look up a new field. I set sail- I made up my mind to start somewhere in the lake country. I stuck my stake at Lake Ridge, six miles 284 THE horse's rescue. from where I commenced to learn the trade of horco- shoeing, and four miles from the place I first started business for myself. Lake Eidge is situated on tlie east bank of that beautiful sheet of water Lake Cay- uga, with as beautiful surrounding country as a man ever looked at. In a very short time I had a new shop erected in a cheap, rough manner. All I wanted was to work on the horse. That was to be my busi- ness in this place, and I wanted no other. I put up one bill in this shop, and went for the first cripple I could get. I was soon overrun witb all kinds. I did not say much about spreading horses' feet for several months. I well knew that would scare them away; stopping them from interfering, balancing, equalizing their weight on their feet; straightening run-over feet^ and many other troubles the horse is suffering with, caused by shoeing, was what I did and talked about. I will give you a few lessons. While I was in this place a stranger led in a pair of horses. He wanted a shoe set. I saw one was lame and stiff on his forward feet While setting the shoe on the other I learned they were young and twins. They were a good pair. I said to him : "Would you like to have that other horse cured?" •*'Yes." " How long has he been stiff and lame ?" "It is about two years." "I will cure him for the price of shoeing." "You may shoe him." All that ailed this horse was run-over feet In ten days he was nearly well, and soon recovered entirely. This man told me after his horse got well about taking THE horse's rescue. 285 him to Prof. Law, of Cornell University, to have him examined. This horse had a very small enlargement on the inside of his leg. The professor told him that was the cause of his lameness, charged him twelve shillings, and wrote a prescription to get filled that cost ten shillings. The horse must not be worked while under treatment. The man could not get along with his work at that time without using this horse, so the medicine was never used. I shod that horse over three years. He was all right as far as the most of people can see. He was not lame. So much for professors. This is only one case of hundreds of this kind that I balanced up while I staid in that place. After get- ting a good run of business and well established I thought I would venture a little further. It would not kill my business dead. If it did scare some away, there had got to be more cripples than I wanted. Mr. Jefferson lived near this place. He was the owner of a stallion. I had seen him several times. He was badly off his base on his for\^ard legs ; his knees were badly tipped, weak, and shook ; cords seemed thick; legs swelled. This horse was well along in years, and had been in this condition a long time. I said to Mr. Jefferson : " Would you like to have that horse's legs straight- ened and all the swelling taken out so you could see the cords and tendons clear down^o his feet?" ** Well, yes, I would if it could be done." ''Well, sir, it can be done. He can be made as natural as he ever was." I told him all about how I would do it, and how he 286 THE horse's rescue. would be afEicted. For a short time he would be af- fected more on oce leg than the other. That would cause him to limp. It would last only a short time on this horse. I did not put on spreaders. This horse I could fix v/ithout. He was a heavy horse. His weight was over the center of his foot. His heels were too high, contracted some. The principles are already l*aid down in this work that I do this work on. There are only a very few horses that can be cured in this way. This was one of that kind. I mean expanding by their own weisrht. To cut this story short, I gave him directions what treatment to give the horse : Soak and wash the cords in warm water; drive. In a short time all would come right. Away he went for home. I well knew I had started a racket, but there is nothing like being prepared for it. In a day Or two I saw Mr. Jefferson drive past my shop. His horse was lame. He stopped at the hotel across the way from my shop. He sat on the verandah, looking over toward my shop. I was in my shop at work, at the same time watching his movements. I wanted to have a talk with him. He showed no signs of com.ing to the shop. I left my work, walked over and sat down on the verandah. I saw he looked rather sober. Said I : "Mr. Jefferson, how is the horse?" "He is awful lame. I wanted to go about three miles further, but I think I had better go home. It will not do to drive him. If I get home with him I will do well." THE horse's rescue. 287 "You know, Mr. Jefferson, I told jou in advance how this would all be." "Yes; I know you did." "If you will do as I told you, you will come out all right, and your horse the same. Drive your horse where you want to go. Before you get back he will be nearly over his lameness, and will gradually get stronsf and better all of the time until he is entirelv well." He started out. His horse was quite lame. After he had gone, there was a man v/ho told me what Jef- ferson said before I came over from the shop. He did not tell me anything new. I had been through the mill. He said, " I guess I have let that old fool spoil my horse." This is not all the place he told it. I knew he would before I commenced to work on his horse. I cared nothing for that. They nearly all do the same. I well knew he would be my friend in the end, and he was, and is now, as far as working on the horse is concerned. In a short time Jefferson drove in the place. He said he had been where he wanted to go, and had come out of his way to tell me that before he got three miles his horse was entirely over his lameness. " He has got over the change now," said I. " You will have no more trouble." His tune was changed in my favor. Kow this horse's head had began to come up. In a short time he had as clean, straight, tapering legs as anv colt. Mr. Jefferson said it added seventv five dollars to his value at once. This job did some adver- 288 THE horse's rescue. tising, bat that was not all I wanted. I wanted them to learn and know how this was done. When I first commenced in this place, the landlord bought a good four-year-old horse. I stood near when thej was looking this horse over. I saw he was off his base. Of course it is no business of mine. They are nearly all so in some degree, greater or less. I did not have anything to say. I saw he had a hard, horn- like foot, and he would be likely to have me shoe him. He would be kept up in the j^table ; he would grow worse and get stiff, in spite of all I could do, in a short time; and he did gradually grow worse. The winter before he was sick; in the spring he would get down, or cast, and had to be helped up, caused by contrac- tion throwing him off his base or balance, and fasten- ing him there. This winter he stood in the stable nearly all of the time. His owner did not have much for his horses to do. He did not get out much him- self, his health not being very good. Time slipped away unperceived, and this horse stood with his shoes on all winter, without being reset or having his feet cut down. His feet had grown high and long in this condition, all out of harmony of action. They gave him a thirty-two mile drive after a load, up and down heavy hills, which about floored him. He was so sore and stiff he could hardly move. He would not move unless he was made to. Of course I was always around when these wrecks took place. I knew about what time they would take place. I told Mr. Ives, for that was his name, what ailed his horse, and I thought I could cure him. "lean remove the cause of all of his trouble. It will be a hard job ; his feet are in THE horse's rescue, 289 about the worst condition of any I ever worked on." After making a conditional bargain with him, I went to work on this horse. Reader, here is a lesson. I dread to tackle this horse again. His feet were very high. About half-way from the top of his foot to the bottom, they were pinched in all around. H3 had to be changed by degrees. This shell could not be all cut away at once. I cut his feet down as far as I could, and spread them. They were as hard as they could be ; it took a long time to get them soft enough to operate on with safety. At this time I did not have control of this horse. I exercised him myself. This was a tough job. I wanted this horse used every day. In about four weeks I took off his shoes, cut his feet down, spread again, and so on every four weeks. I wanted to do, but I could not have him in my control to do as I liked ; so I quit and let him go. I kept watch of him. His shoes were allowed to remain on three months. His toes got long; the structure of his foot was nowhere in harmony of action when I quit him. He was not driven on the road. At that time of the year he was working on the farm, plowing, and putting in crops in the spring. It did not hurt him to rise over that lever on soft ground as bad as it did when he was sailed on the hard road. He took one of these sails; it wrecked him at once. Of course I was around again. This poor horse was in a terrible suf- fering condition. T told Mr. Ives what ailed his horse. He thought the trouble all lay in his shoulder. He did not have much shoulder ; he was deformed so. This time he was so stiff he had to be pulled along. Mr. Ives I saw was getting discouraged about his horse 290 . THE horse's rescue. He was not such a horse as he wanted. He made him so much trouble that he began to talk of taking him off to have his shoulders doctored, or dispose of him in some way. I made up my mind, while I was around looking at this poor horse, to rescue him, let it cost what it would. I said to Mr. Ives : *' What will you take for this horse ? " "You dare not make me an offer." "Oh, yes, I dare. I will give you fifty dollars." " He is yours." I pulled him. across the road to my barn. N'ow I have got this horse in my control. Whether I can cure this horse or not, I can help him wonderfully in about one hour by dressing his feet down. There was no time lost nntil this job was completed. I put on a pair of spreaders, cutting his feet, and letting him go back on his base some. I soon had both of his feet in warm water, soaking, washing his legs and cords. I soaked his feet the remainder of that day, and packed them at night. The next day I drove him eight miles and back, up and down heavy hills single, and he drew a heav}^ load of stock for my shop. He sailed very comfortably, no limpmg, and yet all the cause I had removed then was what I cut off his toes ; that shortened the lever some. After making his feet as soft as I could, I spread them about three-eighths of an inch. Of course it affected him badly at -first. The shell and sole of his feet were just like horn, and did not seem to have any life in them. The shell was completely dead and shrinking all around the sensitive part of his feet. When I spread his foot I did not see the shell come down. He was on his base ; his weight THE horse's rescue. 291 was nearly over the center of his feet, and yet it did not press the sole down. This was a hard-meated, sti-ong, ambitious horse. This sole must be got down according to the degree I have spread bis foot, or there will be trouble. To do this I led him out of the shop. He was badly off his base, caused by my spreading his feet. His feet internally were very sore ; any change either way would affect him badly. A num- ber were standing around. I put a boy on the horse and told him to run him a hundred rods and back, The road was drv and hard. After he returned I looked to see if the sole had come down. I cleaned the dirt all out under the shoe. It was not down as far as it ought to come by spreading his feet three- eights of an inch. "Grive him another sail." I looked to see what effect that had. The sole was nearly down flat on the shoe. "That will do." It made him step short. His feet must be put in warm water a short time. Next, pack his feet, give him a good, dry, soft bed, so he can lie down and rest and sleep. Of course w^hile this running business w-as going on in the streets, it called out remarks. Some said they would not have a stiff horse used that wav. All this bugling I cared nothing about. I knew w4iat I was doing and they did not. I was the owner of the horse and could control him. It took this horse ten or twelve days to recover every time I expanded his feet, and tbat I did once a month for a long time. Some- times I would be sailing all right, or nearly so ; once a month I would be partly wrecked. Every time this took place, I could hear this : "That horse is worse; I guess you will never do much for that horse. 292 THE horse's rescue. After working on him many months to get rid of that old, dead, lifeless shell, his foot was smaller than it was when I first commenced. How is this? I had got up to the small place in his foot. Now I can go ahead. ISTow I have got where I can flatten out his foot and it begins to show more life. Kemember, this horse did all of my work, long and short drives, and was driven on purpose to give him work, and I had all the exercise I wanted in the shop at the same time, balancing cripples ; in fact, it was getting red-hot for me. So I made up my mind to have a little rest after getting up my crippled horse in good shape. To leave for a while, I sailed out. I had business in New York, Washington, and Chicago, tracking up a shipwreck somebody had made of one of my inveutions. To please myself I wanted to find the cause of it — that is, where it was located. It had made quite a racket for many years. I hauled in at the center of this, our great re- public. I always had time to spend looking after the interest of the horse. You can see me standing in the streets of New York city for hours looking at the condition of horses as they passed. The flat feet seem to stand it the best on all horses. All cupping feet that I saw were in a very bad condition, and the horses that had that kind were badly out of harmony of action, off their base and bahmce in many ways, which I have already de- scribed and explained. My time was mostly spent while in this city looking at horses. I next sailed to Washington. While standing on the verandah of the hotel I saw coming down a beautiful, smooth drive- way toward this hotel a very nice single turnout I THE HOESE's IiESCUK 298 saw the horse was a prompt driver. He was quiet lame in one forward foot-. The rig pulled up at a post. There was only one man in it. He jumped out, tied his horse, and went into the hotel. I looked his horse over. He was a fine, beautiiul young horse, His hair looked as though somebody had tried to take good care of him; but he was a cripple on all of his legs. One of his knees was badly tipped forward ; on this leg was a badly contracted foot and high heel ; the mate was a little better ; the hair was nearlv all burned off his legs all around his feet. They looked as though turpentine had been burnt on them. Tins gentleman did not stay long in the hotel. He soon was sailing again after this cripple. I did not intend to stop long, so I thought it would be of no use to get up any racket here on the horse. While this gentle- man is sailing around I will give you a little descrip- tion of him. He had on his head a very shiny stove- pipe hat; white vest; pants the same, and white gloves ; he is sailing around here again. He jumped this time clear from his wagon on the top steps; he has a cane under his arm about the size of a pipe- stem, with a ribbon tied to it. Well, I suppose he carries that because he wants to. He went in the hotel again. When he comes out I am going to try and see how close I can get to him talking horse, and not shock him awav from me. This kind of men are very sensitive. I find my long experience has taught me that one of the most skilful things a man ever tried to do is to approach some men and begin to talk about the defects of their horse, and not shock them away from you; and yet these horses are all, or nearly 2 94 THE horse's rescue. all, cripples that have been shod in some wa}'. I am going to ti'y this man when he comes out. I can stand as biened my shop. I have not quit in this place yet. While working in my shop a man from Ithaca drove up. He said he bad two valuable horses ; they were both stiff ; one he had with him. They were valued by him at about seven liundred dollars. I think his name was How- land. Ko matter. He asked me if I could cure them. " Yes, I can if I can have them ; this one I can, I know." He told me if I would come up to his place and look at his horse he would pay my fare and give me my dinner. " I think that would hardly pay," said THE horse's rescue. 297 I ; " I can make a few dollars here at home." Then he made another offer. *' If yon will come to Ithaca I will build yon a shop." " I have a shop and house of my own here." "You could get more work up there.'' *'I have enouirh to kill four men here. I do not do half the work that comes here. I can't stand so much hard work. I am getting old and stiff myself." "Well, I am going to bring my horses here for you to shoe." "That you had not better do. It is a long way to come. I am full nearly all of the time. It might not be so I could shoe them. I cannot cure your horses by shoeing them." Another offer: "If you will cure this horse I will make you a present." "I do not work for presents." " Well, I will give you ten dollars." " I would not do it for ten dollars. It is worth more than that to cure anv stiff horse." " Will you shoe her?" " Yes." She interferes behind badly ; heels low, toes long, contracted badly, and off her base on her forward feet She had flat shoes on her forward feet. I commenced to work ; he commenced to give orders how it should be done. Those shoes were all right to go on again; no ne\Y shoes must be used. I soon saw there was no use trying to teach him anything. When a man has got that far advanced he knows all there is — about as far as a man can get — it is dangerous to try to get any farther. He might supersede the great Jehovah. I 298 THE horse's rescue. saw I could do nothing for him. I shod his horse the best I could. Then he began to talk cure horses again. I told him, "If you will bring your horses here, pay the keeping, and let me have full control oC them, I will take cp.re of them, and cure the two for fifty dollai's." lie drove off. That was the last I saw of that generous, noble-minded man. While I was operating in this place, brother Oliver stuck his stake in a nev/ place about twelve miles from me, at Groton, there to try and start curing stiff horses without medicine. I saw and talked w-ith him many times to learn how the battle was going. He said it was red-hot. He got horses and cured them for all that. Some came from many miles away. While I was operating at Lake Eidge something took place that caused quite a racket. It was this: The boys, I call them, but they were as big as they ever would be, asked me to lecture. " What subject do you want me to lecture on?"' " Oh, choose vour own." Whether they were in fun or not I did not know. I rather thought they were. They said they would furnish house, light it, and put up bills. I should be at no expense or trouble. Notice was given out before the bills were up. I saw they were not going to get the bills up, so I saw to getting them printed, paid for them, and sent some to different places, putting them up myself over the country. The time came. I had quite a full house. I lectured in an old deserted Baptist church. I told them I was going to try and see how big a field I could work and experiment on, talking or lecturing on scien- tific principles, taking the whole Bible for the text or THE horse's rescue. 299 center, then sail around and work up the outside. I told them- before I started it was only an experiment. I made it go so well it shocked them, and it was felt for manj miles away. I told tbem I would try it again the next Saturday night. When the time came I was there at my post. The house was closed ; no getting in. There was no one around only the neigh- bors, with one exception, and that man was John Cor- win. I had shocked them all away but him. He told me the people thought I was crazy. I told him that was nothing. They would soon recover fjom that. They were only shocked a little. On this experiment I came near sailing into the lunatic asylum. Some thought I ought to be taken care of, and yet I had harmed no man. Well, it was only a lot of bigots and peaked heads. I think there is not much danger yet. It spread over quite a large field that I was crazy. There was one that took great pains to tell this all over. He had kept it up for more than a year, so I thought I would try another experiment. This is where I experimented on lying, to see bow fast it would multiply, and how far they would sail. This man's name was Mr. Yorhees. I had done his shoe- ing for many years. I liked him, and do now, and he liked my work. I went to my shop. There were several there sitting around. I told them I had bad news to tell them. " What's up now ?" " Mr. Vorhees is crazy !" Some made one remark, some another. All told what the cause must be of his losing his reason. In a few hours it was many miles away, multiplying, spread- ing. It had started, and there was no stopping it It 300 THE horse's rescue. was news for three months to some, and I do not know but it is going yet. It is about me Since I have commenced to write this book I have had letters from parties threatening to put me in the asylum, there to remain the remainder of my days, and during the same time I have been obliged to write twenty-six pages answering letters. I commenced and numbered the pages so they could make a book to sell. It would save them the trouble of writing one. One of these men was a purple-nosed lawyer. How much it cost to color his nose I do not know. It did not cost him much. He was one of the kind that sells us out. I think I am in my right mind yet, allowing me to be the judge. I have stood it re- markably well considering the surroundings. I will have you know it takes quite a good head, and he needs to be a good financier, to sail clear of the asylum and not get crazy ; to work on horses, cure them with- out medicine with so much opposition. But I am going to try a little longer. This horse that I am at work on now, his name is Prince. The soreness has nearly all gone out of his feet, and yet his shoulders seem somewhat stiff. I tracked this horse back to a colt. I found he had been kept up in the stable nearly all of his life on account of his being unruly and shod very young; before he had got his growth. He had grown up a deformed horse; he could not bear to have a toe cork on his shoes. It would sore him on his cords on hard roads. If his feet were allowed to get half an inch long it would affect him the same. I kept this horse nearly two years. He gradually grew better. I never put any corks on his THE horse's rescue. 301 shoes. In the winter I put in what are called frost nails. The heads stuck up along the shoe on the sides ; none in the toe. When they wore off I drew them and put in more ; beveled the toe of shoe off to save the leverage. In this way I could sail him sixty miles in ten hours, and be would be no worse for doing it. I mean after I bad spread his feet, got the structure of his feet all in harmony and kept them so. He was a good horse and a hard one to follow. He was a nice- coated dapple-brown, in fine condition when I let him go to rescue another that was about dead, caused by abuse, night and day drives, and poor care. I must give you a description of this animal as she stood tied to a post. Hooked her over, that is, her bones, for I could see some of them in many places. As for flesh she had none ou, and the hide was off and worn * through to the bones with the harness. Her hair was faded and dead ; the hide on her ribs was set ; no stir- ring that ; blood, scabs, and sores on every ankle. She stood with her head down. She was sick. She rattled badly in her throat at every breath. I saw she had a fine, clean, cordy deer leg, and points about her, if she had good care, that would make a good sailer. I made up my mind to rescue her. She was only six years old. While I was looking this mare over the owner came out of the hotel. I asked him if he ever traded horses. "Yes." ''I have a horse that I will trade for that mare." After looking mine over he said he v>/ould trade even. I told him all right. We changed horses in front of the hotel. There were quite a number stand- 302 THE horse's rescue. irig around. I took my frame over near my shop and let her pick some grass. When she put her head down to eat she disch argued badlv at the nose and rattled in her throat. She was very cross. If I rubbed her on the ribs she would try to bite and kick me at the same time She appeared savage, and w-as when I first got her and put feed into her. If I attempted to go toward her she would jump at me, mouth open, and kicking with both feet at the same time. Poor horse! she was so near starved to death she was afraid she would lose some of her feed. She ate ravenousl}^ and as fast as she could, and kept watch at the same time. Now for a man to make a horse trade like this is evidence enough that reason is dethroned. No mat- ter; I am going to loosen the hide on this mare and use no medicine; cure that rattling in her throat and heal every sore on her by removing the cause. The place to begin is at the feet. There is the place I always begin, after giving the horse water and a good square meal. She is rather dangerous to handle, she is so sore. The danger will disappear gradually as the sores do. and she will quit kicking and biting at me after she gets over being afraid of starving to death. Her feet were badly out of order in many ways. After straightening them up, I washed her sore ankles off clean with soft, warm water, and took her to the barn. I had a small piece of corn just beginning to harden up. I cut it, corn and stalks, and threw it in to hei'. She would stamp her feet, kick, eat, bite, and jump at me if I came near her when she was eating. She was in constant motion all of the time. I think I never THE HORSES RESCUE. 303 saw a horse in my life so nervous as this one, all caused by suffering, starvation, and abuse. She looked wild out of her eyes. She had a large, wild- looking eye. Some told me I would get killed with some of these horses yet. At this time I had rented out my shop. I did not work for others on horses, for this reason, I had been badly injured in the shop working on a horse. From that injury I have never recovered. I was hardly able to take care of my own horses for two years. I had to change my cjurse then. In order to live and provide for my family I went to trafficking, that is, buying at wholesale what I thought I could market and make a little on. This business I followed. That was the business I was doing when I rescued this mare. It was sailing on the road, sometimes long drives. I put this mare the next day after I got her on the road ; fed her well. She was soon all clear of her cold, no rattling in her throat. Her hide, as she put on flesh, began to loosen ; holes in her skin where the bones liad worn it through, slowly filled out. My little boy, twelve years of age, took care of these horses As she gained in flesh sVie became less nerv- ous by degrees. Stamping, kicking, and biting nearly all disappeared. A truer and kinder horse and better sjiiler on the road or on a load I never wish to sit behind. I have given you only a little sketch of the hard wres- tles I had in this place. I stopped five years here. My health gave out. I could not stand sailing on the road nor wrestle with hores any more as I was then ; that I could not do. I thought perhaps I might go West, keep cattle, and make a living that way. I 304 THE horse's rescue. soon found a customer for my place, and made a sale. This mare brought ninety-six dollars. She had a very bad name as being ugly and cross cr she would have brought one hundred and fifty dolUirs. When she was led out to sell I think I never saw a finer picture of the horse kind. This mare never haJ a particle of medicine, either internal or external, while I owned her, although some said I doctored her up. It was all done by kind treatment, good care, and feed, and worked nearly all of the time; nicely haired over in a little over a year. Look at her sores and scabs! I did not cure this mare, I only removed the cause, and I did that when I rescued her. In three months after I let Prince go I saw him. He was so sore he could hardly go. They had shod him and slaughtered him the first time. He had the damnedest botch job done on him I ever saw ; toggled up on corks at least an inch long, and nothing right about the whole job. He soon changed hands. ISText he was ten miles away in a team drawing heavy loads, going good ; and I saw him since I have been writing this book pass drav/ing a heavy express, going well. I saw him only a few days ago standing before abuggj^ in this place. I looked him all over. He looked well ; his' feet looked well ; he stood well on his legs ; did not appear to be sore ; it is about six years since I first spread his feet. There are only a few as hard cases as Prince was to get on his base. I never had as hard a case in all of my work on the horse. I am going to sail out of this place west of the Mis- souri Kiver on the plains. I stopped in Lincoln, ISTe- braska. awhile. Of course my time was all spent THE horse's RESCrE. 805 looking over the sale stables. There were lots of horses changing hands in this place, some very good horses. The most of them were in some degree stiff. They poured in from nearly all the states and from Canada, but I saw that very few sound ones had shoes on. I saw a very fine looking pair. They were some along in years. I saw their feet were badly con- tracted. I took up their feet to look at them. Their frogs were all gone ; their feet had some trash in them that looked like verdigris. Horses in this country, if they iron their feet, get stiff very quick for this reason : they do not have much rain ; the feet contract very fast. I selected me a farm on the winding trail called the old Santa Fe route. This was a great thorough- fare. Horses and mules were constantly passing in droves. I had a good chance to look them over as they passed, all more or less stiff or ofi their base. I built what is called a house. While I was at that there were almost daily horses driven up around my shanty. Some days several teams, all stiff ; some so sore they would be covered with sweat; some lame. They were all horses brought in from other states. They all wanted to sell me a team. I was not ready to buy yet. It was rather laughable to hear them brag of their poor cripples, and warrant them sound ; and some old horses had got to be quite young again. I did not stay long on the plains. I found- it wanted a tougher man than I was then to care for a herd of cattle; and that was not all. There was more wind than I wanted to sail in at the time. I sailed east this time. Brother Oliver was moving to Auburn city to try and see • SOQ THE horse's rescue. what luck he would have in that place introducing curino- horses there without medicine in brother Joseph's shop; back in the rear of Joseph's hack, livery, and boarding stable he commenced this busi- ness, Joseph doingall he could to help him. It went slow; no money to fall back on. He was soon starved out, and was obliged to go to work by the day for others in order to live, and thai was what I found him doing when I sailed into this city from the west. This is the third time I have lived in Auburr. After getting settled I went to his place of business to have a talk with him. He was at work for another man, and at the same time curing stiff horses. He had some on his hands all of the time caring for. He continued on in this way. I was sick and unable to do work of that kind. I did but very little work for six months. After resting up for six months I began to feel better. I decided to tackle the horse again. I well knew I could not hold out long, for this is hard business and poor pay, not enough to live. The first thing to be done is to curtail expenses. I started out to find a place. I found a small, new shop, with rooms over the shop. It was deserted, empty, five miles south of Auburn. I found this was for sale. I bought it for four hundred dollars, and I rigged up new ao^ain to try and introduce this great science. This is where this work is written, over my shop with a checker-board for my writing-desk, with a Scieniific American spread over it. The first thing when I came ill this place was to commence to talk this science^ How could I introduce it unless I did ? No one knew u.iything about it but me, and they never would un- THE horse's rescue. 307 less I talked and tried to teach it. The first thing was to tackle the first cripple I could get. This was the second time I had been in tliis place. Through the influence of some of my friends, after a long time, I got a cripple to work on. In a short time I found myself obliged, in my old age, to work for less pay than I ever had in m}' life, and nothing but cripples to woi'k on. Of these I had more than I wanted The price of shoeing was dropped down as soon as I opened my shop. Of course I must do it the same, or have no woi'k, and m}^ work was all stiff, lame cripples, four times as much work to do it. My health was not good enough to do this ; it wasn't what I opened this shop for. I had made up m}^ mind to cure no more horses by expanding their feet for no pay and make others rich and grow poor mj^self, and they not learn or even try to learn this great science. I will bury. As for killing myself, and all for no pur- pose, only being in hell red-hot all the time, that busi- ness is about plaj^ed out. Reader, this is the way I began to reason with my- self. I found my brothers began to feel the same. They had done thousands of dollars' worth of work to try to introduce this work, and yet no help c;;me. That is what we wanted. We wanted the people to give their attention and see and learn this science. I have had men in my shop getting their horses shod, who, when I tried to tell them what made their hoises stiff, would say : "I don't want to hear anything about it. I am in a hurrv; I never had a stiff horse in mv life." These same men's horses were so stiff they could not back without drngging every foot. Th© 308 THE horse's rescue. cause of their talking so was they had become so accustomed to driving and using stiff horses they did not know when they were stiff. While I was in this place battling for the horse, brother Oliver got back in liis old place in the rear of Joseph's hack stable, there to tr}^ it again. We met often and talked the matter over, and to compare notes, so as to see bow the battle was going. We thought we were gaining slowly. Of course all of the shoers were on our backs, and veteri- narians the same. The last time I saw Oliver we were riding after a horse that had been laid up for six months unable to work. He had had this horse only a few days. He was now able to sail and keep doing it, and grow better for it. He told me he was able to cure these horses yet, and carry twelve men on his back, if they did not drag their feet on the ground too much. After I had been at Fleming Hill six months I saw a very fine young dapple gray stallion pass my pltxce of business. I saw he was badly oS. on his for- ward feet. I soon learned he was owned by a man in Auburn, He was kept near me during the summer. I saw him many times. I saw he was getting worse all the time. I did not mention this to any one. It was no use. I would not be allowed to touch him ; besides, I did not want to get my old wounds torn open anew ; but I watched the horse. In the fall he was so crippled he could hardly get along. I learned he was formerly owned by D. M. Osborn &Co , and had become almost useless. They must get rid of this horse in some way. He is of no kind of use to us. Orin H. Bur- dick, of thaafirm, bought him. What he paid for him THE horse's rescue. 309 I know not. In the fall Mr. Burdick brought this horse to J. J. Doan's stable to have him kept for a while. Joseph saw the condition this poor horse was in at a glance. He told Mr. Burdick his horse could be cured for fifteen dollars, no medicine used, and a cure warranted or no pa}^ I have no time to do it. I can bring a man that will do it. Oliver soon came around. They told him all about the operation. Mr. Burdick soon saw the principle was all right. He left the horse in their cui'e completely, and never got weak in the knees or head since he first enlisted in this army battling for the horse, which I shall show before I get through this work. Oliver had made quite a start previous to this; he had cured several horses for dif- ferent parties, and Dr. Quigly was one. He proved to be a Q^ood soldier. He is a scientific man. He soon saw the principle was all right. I saw that with such men as these to help we could make it go now. They w^ere not afraid to talk and tell the truth. We have got in the hands of men of science, men that can see the change in their horses at once and how it is done. I was soon in Auburn. I found Oliver in a box stall with this gray stallion. '" Now," said he, " we have got a good horse and a good man. This horse is well known to be a cripple ; he is a fine one, and a liorse that will attract attention, and I am going to c-ire him. I have got this business in the firm where I have been trying a long time,-^and on this horse iiaugs the whole business. If this job does not wake up the people I am going to bury the whole science." While we were talking Mr. Burdick came in. I told him what we had been trvin^c to do for ten years, and 310 • THE horse's rescue. we wanted him to help by talking, if this job pleased him. He told Oliver he should have all the horses he wanted, and at it he went. He was quite a horse lec- turer in that town. When such mechanics asBuidick indorse this great science small heads have to stand back, and they did. It has been quite calm since, as far as fighting against us has been concerned. It had effect iive miles away at least in this direction ; it calmed the racket around me and infused n.ew life in me. I told Oliver: "Now is the time to write this work. It will sell now. I will go home and com- mence. You keep at work. I went to Auburn quite often. I walked in the stable to find Oliver; there I always went first to find him. He had a fine saddle horse to work on that belonged to D. M. Osborn, sti-aightening his legs, taking air-puffs off, balancing at the same time. There were seven or eight of the most scientific men in Auburn city taking lessons on the horse. One was CjM-enus Wheeler, the patentee of the Cayuga Chief harv^esting machine. Bui'dick had waked them up. He was there, and Di'. Qaigly and sevei'al otljers. I saw it was a eo this time. After thev left I swune: mv hat over mv head. I could not help it. I told the boys: " It's a go this time !" So much for a good, honest, live man to help. When w^e can get such men as these enlisted it will go. '"They are known all over the woi'd, neai'ly, and it has gone ever since, and it cannot be stopped now. It lias taken a heavv load off tliree men's shoulders that was hard to cai-ry. We had cari'ied it for. many years. Mr. Wheeler has had a horse fixed, John Os- THE HORSES RESCUE. 311 born two, Mr. Burdick three, all of this firm and many others of this city. There is no discount on tliivS science. Oliver was up here a few days ago. While he was here the man that keeps Mr. Burdick's stallion drove into town The stallion is kept near me. We looked him over. He is as limber and sound as any colt, and stands his forward legs back of straight, head up, and needs no gagging to make him do it; he is one of the best stallions now in the country that I know of for raising stock for many reasons: he is the best dispositioned stallion I ever saw ; he is pow- erfully built, well proportioned, good at both ends, just the right size, a beautiful dapple gray. Six months ago this poor horse was a worthless, suffering cripple. He has been out of his suffering many long months. That was done by this science of spreading feet. This horse's feet were spread an inch and a half in a very short time. With all this staring you in the face what is the use lighting any longer? Why not look into this and see for yourselves? Blowing and blart- ing will do you no good. With a few more such men as Dr. Quigly and Bur- dick to work it will not be long before the poor suffer- ing horses' condition will be bettered in many ways. All it wants is some live and honest, fearless men of brains to do this. When it gets started it will spread fast. It is only one process that does the whole busi- ness. It is not such a wonderful thing, after all, when it is understood. The next dciy after Oliver was up looking at Mr. Burdick's stallion I went to Auburn. I have traveled over this road on foot many times on this horse busi- 312 THE horse's rescue. ncvss in one year and a half. I wanted to see Mr. Bur- dick to get the privilege of using his name in this scientific work on the horse. He was gone awav. I waited for liim to return home; he said he had been up to look at his stallions. " Mr. Burdick," said I, " I have got along with my book now where it comes to vou. Can I use your name in this science?" " You can use my name in any way you please and I will add a little myself; you can say ihe work done on my stallion has added to his worth five hundred dollars. I would not have him put back where he was last fall for that ; and that is not all ; my brown horse that I have just had fixed can out-trot his mate, which he could not do before I had him fixed; he sailed ont at once ; it let him loose, untied him. The mist is clearing away." This was the last he said to me. I walked away. This is encouraging, and this work is still going on and spreading, and it will continue to do so for this reason : it is right, based on principles that will stand, and all trash and rubbish it will clear away and shove from their base, just as these poor horses are. There is one nure mare I want to mention. It is the Westlake mare of Auburn city. It is nearly nine years since I changed her back to natural and put her in harmony of action. She never changed hands; he owns her yet. I have seen her nearly every year since and looked her over as she was passing and re passing. She was on her base and limber, looking fine. She was a good animal and i- yet. When I changed her back she was badly deformed and showed it. Working- on this mare I learned a lesson. I did THE horse's rescue. 313 not spread her forward feet quite enough to let her down between the cup at the top. She was badly- contracted ; she was completely raised out of the cup and shutout by the wall closing up below. By driving, it drove the sole down, not being room at the top of the wall for the bone to go down. She got pinched or wedged in the cup. After driving awhile I saw she was not going well. I soon saw the cause. Her feet began to bulge out at the top and both sides It was too late then to help that ; it made her sore only a few days, then all was right; if the feet had been spread one quarter or over an eighth of an inch more she would have sailed all right This was the first and last time I ever got pinched in that way. I explained the whole thing to Mr. Westlake and have talked with him since ; his mare was cured for all that ; it only set her back a little. All horses that I worked on were in Auburn citv at that time, but that mare I have lost track of. I offer fiftv thousand dollars to anv man that will brinsf me a man that never made a mistake in life. I want to see him ; it would be a big sight to ma I will pass on now. I could write about thousands of horses that I have worked on. It's of no kind of use. All are cured by the principles that are laid down in this work. That is what I claim ; and more, it will almost raise a horse that is r.early dead, and this is a fact, as strange as it may appear to some. This great science is classed with the highest ; it is one of the great sciences of the sciences. It cannot be grasped at once by men of small caliber of brain, but they can 314 THE horse's rescue. learn it by degrees, as all other great things are learned, if they will apply themselves, vhich they will have to do or suffer loss. And Mr. Kirby, the well-known inventor of the Kirby harvester, has been taking lessons. He saw this work done and measured the feet before spreading, and stood and saw the feet spread, then measured them after this was done and watched the result. He wanted to know for himself, and that is the way. I never had any trouble from such men as these, and this kind of men will be the men to help introduce this science or it never can be done. My long experience working at mechanical work has taus^ht me this — the higher must teach the lower; the lower cannot rise all at once. How can they? And all men that fight this work with all this evidence before them, coming as it does from men well advanced and developed in science, men of char- acter, of good standing, and they have earned it and they are not going to indorse a science unless it is all right and then have to tight against such men and evi- dence as this, any longer will only expose your io-norance. Here will be the great center of action to set it sailing, for sail it will, and no power on earth can stop it. Now, what is the use trying to throw blocks under the wheels of progression ? They always have had to move out of the way and always will. There are lots more of things to learn yet. I have got another bifrger thinor than this horse science, which I have been working on about twenty -five years to per- fect. I vshall if I live bring that forward when I get it so I can handle it as well as I can this horse busi- ness. On that I challenge all the wisdom, knowledge, THE horse's rescue. 315 and brains concentrated on the globe to excel. Mill- ions may equal; excel they cannot. It makes the "horse as the Creator made him, and that is as far as man can go on that case. The created, I think, will hardly excel the Creator, In experimenting and studying this horse business I have undermined some foundations that have been reared on false teachings, and they will tip over, and they ought to, and it will be a godsend to the suffering mule and horse when they are scattered to the four winds or buried with all other false teachings of the dead past. This is what I have been trying to do for many years. In place of this entanglement of nonsense I will leave you some principles that will take yon safe through all of this trash and rubbish and let the light of day in on you. This foundation that I have built in this work, and the superstructure reared thereon, will stand. Ages and ages can roll on eternally, nnd it will be there. It is founded on truth and principlesof science, and after I am dead I want no man to worship me or erect a monument to my memorj^ All I ask is: Take care of vour horse! All the headstone I want is a natu- ral horse and carved on his side " Gerard Doan, author of ' The Horse's Rescue.' " SI6 TKE HOUSES KESCUE. THE HOESE'S APPEAL FOR MERCY. Do on me some feeling, judgment, and mercy show, I cannot travel with these long levers on my toes. Just look at my feet, you can see very plam. Every step I take on my cords there is an awful strain. To ri^e over these long and peaked toes, It me all out of action and balance throws. And that is not all, I have no use of my feet. All contH'acted, sore, full of unnatural heat, The structure of mj^ feet are all out of condition to run; To travel in this way, and not hurt, it cannot be done. Look at my heels, all pinched up, you can easily see; They are not as my creator intended them to be. I am worse off than you think I am. I know They ache and hurt me so I can hardly go. I wish you would take me and have my feet spread ; I cannot stand this long, I shall soon be dead. Iti s cruel to pound me around in this way. When all of my trouble can be leraoved in a day. Unless this is done, I never can any better be; I am growing worse every day, you can plainly see. I shall soon be of no kind of use to you; You will only have me to feed; no work can I do. "When I am completely thrown back off my base, What condition am I to put in a race? I will only be laughed at; they will of me make fun; The condition I am now in, I cannot trot or run. To whip and jerk me, it will only make matters worse; To get there in this condition I cannot first. With all lengths of levers on the ends of my toes, If you hurry me in this condition, out of balance all ^oea. THE horse's REKSL'E. 817 When this takes piace, I have all I can do to stand on my feet; And contracted feet is the cause of my losing the heat. To pound me around on this hard irack in this way, I am always ten times worse for it the next day. If you could onl}^ see the inside of my poor feet, You could soon see the cause of my losing the heat. They may look to )ou all right on tlie outside, And yet for all that good horses as I have suffered and died From this cause that I am now teUing you about; And if you keep on, I will go the same way, no doubt. I cannot kist long pounded around this track every day, To have my feet contracted and bound up in this way. My suffering is very great; the cause is all in my feet; They pain me so day and night I cannot rest or sleep. Sore, and stiff, and sick, and lame you pound me through; 1 assure you it is worse than death ; it may be fun for you. If you would cut my throat, let the blood out of my •» eiins, I would to you thankful be ; it would end all my pains. my God I is there never any relief or help to come ? Have I always got to suffer in this way— every day be run? Creator of me and all that is great, wise, and good. Is there no way that my suffering can be understood? my God ! in some way do to me send rehef I 1 appeal to you now ; to my groans my driver seems deaf ; For there must be a great first cause of all that is created, And to that, hke all others, I must be related. I well know on me in creating you have made Ho such mistake ; That I cannot eat or drink, and from that cause no comfort take. I know myself where all of the cause is well enough, But I cannot talk and tell, and I assure you it is tough. It is not caused by anything that I have drank or eat; It is nearly all caused by botch-work done on my feet. It is caused sometimes by leaving my heels too low. That throws me back off my base so J cann«t go. If you leave my heels too high, it is no better, you can see, That will throw me off my base, cock ankle, and tip my knee. • If you dress my hoof, and get it all right to a fraction, To look at may yet be out of harmony of action. Imternallv the structure may badly changed be ; 318 THE horse's rescue. Put me in motion ; if you have got eyes you can see I will have to step short and have a crippled, hobbling gait; When my feet are in this condition, my God ! how they ache. That causes great internal, unnatural fever and heat ; That causes my ankles to swell; it lias its rise from my feet. Tinker and toggle me up the very best way you can, Ko relief to me can come until you my feet expand, For the sole is raised up; all is out of harmony of action. I cannot move well; tliis is nearly all caused by contraction ; There is other causes connected with this corapHcated matter, But, with all, it relieves the most to make my feet flatter; That lets my weight go back on my base a great degree, And liberates the coffin-joint, and lets all go free. Th?n if you will just look at the tops of my double heels behind. And you find them even, you are ah right so far you find. Do not forget I have four feet that are of use to me ; They are, or can be, all affected the same, you can see. If the heels are not even at the top, they are not right you will find, Thai turns the toe in or out, I cannot travel in a straight line . If my ankles are thrown in from this cause, to travel it would be queer. And not sore my cord badly, and not cause me to interfere. You must look my feet aU over singly in order to see, They may all be nearly right but one, and that badly be ; And they may all be steering in opposite directions, so I cannot trot, run, walk, it sores and hurts me, you ought to know. Do, for my sake, look at my feet, crooked, many ways overrun, All caused by shoeing and the awful botch work on me done. There is a right way and wrong to do this, you ought to know ; It must be done so all will work in harmon}^, or I cannot go. To have my feet in pairs, traveling on opposite lines, My weight all thrown off of balance, it is hard, I find. My good G-od, creator of all that we can see and o{ me ; I never can tell all of my suffering and how to get free. You have power to all I see and behold to create ; And now is there not some way better care of me to take? This coniracticm throws two-thirds of my weight on my legs behind ; And this is not all, it spavhis me and strains me across the loin, And ih&t throws all internally out of order, too. thp: horse's rescue. 319 When this takes place no one sepms to know what to do ; Then there will always be a lot of quacks gather nronnd, To kill iiie with blisters, and cramming me with trash they seem bound ; To balance me up by allowing my heels to grow and not my toes ; That, too. is no better; in a short time over the other way I will go. It is plain enough, all might sec, it.'s as plain as a be; Then, with all tliis, have rnv shoulders blistered, it's hard for me. Then to be all out of harmony in many degrees and ways ; With all this, have to draw loads, great mi:=chief with me it plays. my God ! I wish I never had created been. To live a long life of suffering in this condition I am in. 1 cannot hardly get my head down lo drink or eat; I am thrown in such shape caused by ironing my feet; Neither can I get up my liead any better than down ; In fact, it throws me in such shape I can't turn around. Clear past the center two-thirds of my vreigiit is thrown back; Sometimes this is done slow; it is according as my feet contract ; It all depends on the care and treatment my feet has had. I am in all stages ;iud degrees of suHering ; sometimes very bad ; I wish vou could see the fearful condition it throws me and holds me You would have the cause removed, and more mercy on me show. Oh, dear ! with shoes on me. and on me two sets of contracted feet, Can't you see whera I have gnawed them ? On this manure heap, All paralyzed, unable to rise or stand for the want of care, There I am obliged to lie month after month and breathe foul air, Although I am down now, and nnable to rise, walk, or stand. With all this, if you would cut my feet down and them expand, I would soon recover, and grow strong, healthy, and spry ; And if that is not done, for there is no other v/ay, I must die. This is the last stages, and there are thousands like me all over the land. This is the final result, paralyzed, unable longer to stand. When T get this way, my God! look inside of my feet, They have become inflamed; now someihirig more than a little heat; All life and action completely destroyed for want of circulation : And this, too, is all located m my feet — ray foundation. When my base or foundation you destroy and undermine me, 820 THE horse's rescue. I am not of mneli use: I will have to come down you will find. To be down in this way, sick, fearful pains to endure, And breathe this pteneh; no bed, only stinking- maniire. O my creato^r, God! this stench and carrion are enough to kill me; If there was no other cause, this heat is taking my hair o£E, don't you see ? my creator and father God J this I do not comprehend, That we have such a life of pain and suffering to spend. Sure you could not, creating us, made such a mistake That we cannot eat, drink, walk, stand ; no comfort take. We can neither go up hill without hurting ; the same down. It hurts us very bad to rise on our feet ; the same to turn around It hurts me so it causes me to raise my hind legs high. And I cannot help it, ray forward legs I can't bend if I try. 1 am all pinched, bound, and murdered with contraction, And I have no control of myself, and I suffer; I have no action j I eiumot back without almost killing me dead. And it hurts me the same, from the same cause to go ahead. Sometimes I am divided against myself, you can easy see ; If I am all right on my forward feet, divided I shall be Unless my hind feet are all in harmony at the same time. All true should be toes, of equal length, and all travel on a straight line. How can I travel divided against myself, all out of harmony, too? You can see, reverse it, it is all the same, no good can it do ; To fix me all right, my feet at the same time must be in harmony of action. And to do this you must remove all leverage, run-over feet, and con- traction. That will let my weight all go back on its base you will find ; That will equalize my weight, balance me at the same time: Poise me on my equilibrium in the center ; I mean to be understood. Unless you understand this, to work on me you are no good ; You will be throwing me off my base in many different ways. And in this suffering condition I shall have to be all of my days. No more blisters, seatons, rowels, burning, liniment do I want arcund me, The whole trouble is removed by working on my feet ; you ean see My suffering is great, and I am deformed enough already now, THE horse's KESCUE. 321 Without burning and mutilating, to cure me 3'ou know not how. If you can find a place around me that is the least bit sore, The first thing will be to go at that, and sometimes make more. Almost any fool the effect can nearly always find, Unless he is a perfect blockhead and nearly blind. If you can find all of the effects ; you have only half, you can see, Burning, blistering, mutilating them will never cure me. The suffering from this treatment has been hard to endure; Added to all others, the cause you must remove in order to cure, my creator God I how I have had to be tortured and suffer ; It has been a good thing for us all that we were not tougher. How is such treatment as that going to put me on my base ? If you will and do it, I will take the back seat and give you the race; You never have cured or helped ono horse treating them in this way Either in ancient or modern times, or in any other day. And if that is all you can do is to mutilate the effect, 1 am better off without you, if my feet do contract. I can get around a little if I am stiff, lame, and sore; When you get at me I am always a wreck six months or more. To work on you have no theory, principle, plan, or foundation ; It is doctor the effect, when you can't find it. and all is mutilation. You have been all over me, mutilating in many different ways, And all is wrong; not once have you seen where the cause all lies All you have done has been very great damage to me ; Spreading my feat at the top is all wrong, you can see. I have been worked on on the great Dunbar plan, That was recommended by that great joining of fallible being- — man. A great fulcrum of principles and science must then be made. "When to him for nothing twenty-five thousand dollars was paid, For there is not one thing laid down in that work to me of use ; It is all torture to me; no help; only mutilation and abuse. Spreading my feet at the too, that is wrong, you ought to know. That will throw my heels together; in doing so That will cause the sole to raise ; that throws me back still more Off of my base again. My cords, my God! how sore. And this is done so as to give the coffin-joint a little more play. Then it must be contracted again for fe.nr it should get too much and run away. And the toe must bo kept as sho:-t as it can possibly be. 322 THE horse's rescue. To keep and prevent the cofQn-joint from separation, you see, There is no use saying any more ; it is like this all the way through. To spend my time with this baby trash I can't, I have other work to do. Poor, delormed, and suffering, tortured horse of hundreds of years, For many long years I have heard your cries and shed tears ; And now I have got tliis work nearly completed and done, And when it is finished, to your rescue I shall come. No man on this green earth can intimidate me so. That for your relief T dare not the same old bugle blow; For I shall bo in the center and in the hottest of the fight, No matter where or when nor what time, day or night. No quarters will I give until I do away with some of the poor horses' abuse. Tliere never was an effect without cause, of that you may be surcj And the cause is removed with this science and that in the cure. And now I am going to tell you what this science will do: It will cure nearly all cripples, I will except only a few. Of course there are cripples that the cause is not in their feet; They can be crippled in many ways; I will assure you it is not what they eat. You may ask. What is the reason this has not been done years ago? I cannot tell you, sir, for the reason I do not know. But there is one thing that I do know, of that I am very sure. It cost me money and forty-one years' labor that was liard to en- dure. Of that I have only given you a sketch, a glance, a bird's-eye view- Just enough to lay down principles to tell you this work how to do, For in that way I do not want my time to spend. I am ffettino- old now. of course my time here must suou end. To perfect a great work experience has taught me it takes a long tin;ie. And after it is done, to introduce it, it is the same I find. This is the reason I do not want my time to fool away. For I well know this great science cannot be introduced in a day. This science is far in advance of the age, that I well know. Of course I understand that it must spread very slow; Ignorance is the great power ; against that it will have to contend ; THE horse's rescue. S2S Nobody knows how long or when it ^vill end. It may be hundreds of years before it is well understood, Or it may go very fast; if it does it will do a power of good. I do not want any man to think, afier they have read this work through. To make money out of this work is all I want to do. Of course for this work I shall have to charge now a little fe^ Or I never can introduce this science, you can easy see. The last dollar is going now in this work that I have got, Excepting a few blacksmith tools and my little red shop. Before I quit there is a little more to you I want to say, The principles in tliis work are right ; there is no other way ; And if they are not adhered to, you had better beware, Your horses will all be better off with their feet bare. Now I will in this work bid you all adieu ; I do not want you to think I have given up and got through ; I have not, I am going to follow this work around, And teach and introduce this science I am bound. Adieu, your humble servant, Gerard Doan. 324 THB HORSE 3 RESCUE. ]^o. 1. Cut Xo. 1 represents the natural Iiorse 'before lie lias been changed from natural bj having Iiis feet ironed. There are other causes, which are often the case. The eauses tliat change the hc-rse froi^n natural are very slight compared with the inanj and great changes and many degrees of change about which I Imve written^ caused by ironing their feet. I hnve told you in tliis work tliat the horse ia a machine, and must be in harmony of action or he will run badly. These cuts are to show yon scientifically, to give you an idea, or to try to^ of the suffering condition your horses are thrown in. Cut No. 1 shows the horse natural, inside of his circle, all in hannony of action — no leverage, no runover feet, no contraction. The center perpen- dicular line, A, horizontal center line, B ; it crosses at A in the center of the horse. If the horse is not drawn out of shape or off }iis base^ he is balanced in the center. He can place his feet at fulcrum, E, where the two circles. F F, cross lines ; place tlie hind foot to D. lii* THE horse's rescue. 325 forming fulcrum with E ; place the forward foot to D line. When this is done, you can see there is another center and fulcrum of levers formed if the horse is as he should be. Wlien his feet ure all placed in the center at fulcrum, E, he can rotate both ways from points B B to K, or he can rear up until point B of horizontal line in front comes to A, perpendicular Ime. If he is natural, he can kick up in the same way. He can rotate both ways, horizontal line B B to A and K, with- out hurting him in any way, if he is natural and inside of his circle. "When the horse is going through this exercise, changing ends, every time he changes he will place both his hind feet when he comes down at fulcrum, E ; his forward feet the same. If you will watch liim, you can see this. The horse has four dnve-wheels. These cuts only show one side. The drive-wheels are all of one size if the horse is natural ; I mean he rolls four of a size, and the size is according to his own length and size ; and the size of wheel he rolls is governed by the harmony of action he is in or out. This cut shows him all in harmony of action. See how accurate all works out. The two per- pendicular, C C, lines crossing horizontal, B B, line to T T, forming two fulcrum of levers, or centers. Here is where the horse gets his pro. pehing power and balance of leverage that enable him to draw heavy loads up heavy hils. Throw him off his base, or out of his circle, and he loses his power according to the degree. The great circle, G» will show you the lever power the horse has if he is in his circle and natural. From B to B and from A to K he has that length of lever power, turn him any w^ay you may on this globe. The line H H, I drew tc show you a rest for the drive- wheels. It is made on a circle to represent the globe or earth — to convey principles that are not seen and yet exist. The lower line, I I, is the real line to show the earth and the leverage ppwer the horse has, and lines L L are pliced there to show another center or fulcrum of levers. No matter w! at part of the globe the horse is on, he is always on the summit. Ii he stands up, his feet and legs point to the center of the earth ; the .-^;ime witli man. The horse is quite a machine ; he has a gearing nir. Ming hori- zontal; his feet are a circle of leverages, all acting from :i center at every step the horse takes, if they are not fixed so they cannot. He has a very complicated perpendicular circular gearing, which I have not put all on in full, it not being necessary to convey what I wish to. I thought it would complicate it too much. It will bo easier to \inder- stand and explain all the better as it is. He has too, v.ithal, a folding crank motion, which I will explain. That crank can be affected 826 THE horse's RESCUE. badly and be made to vary in length by botch-work done on the feet In order to show the principles the horse moves on I have liaod the drive-wheels something like spokes in a wagon wheel; put the horso in motion, each spoke as the wheel rolls will take its place at the point T T ; all become in their turn perpendicular lines, C C ; tlie horso clianges when in motion, feet at the point T T at the same time, if he is all in harmony both forward and behind. When he is trotting fast if you see when he changes if He is all right, jon will have to see quick or you will not see when he does change. I do net pretend he spaces off as he rolls along his strides, or steps regular as they are spaced in this cut. 1 have marked some degrees on the forward drive- wheel to show something of the action of the horse; these degrees I did not put on the hind drive- wheel. The principle is the same on all and on all horses, both before and behind ; and after you have experi- mented on horses forty-one years, I am right, j'ou will find. The horse when natural can place his forward foot to No. 12, and even higher, the other foot remaining on the ground; he can do tlie same with his hind feet; he can place his hind feet where F F circles cross lines and form fulcrum at the top. I have marked off degrees, and numbered them from 1 up to 12. They are not regularly spaced off. These lines are to show the irregular change and degrees of change ou the same horse. Do not forget it is the same on the horse's hind feet. This will be more fully explained in other cuts. You can see I have struck circles from the two centers of drive-wheels at the gambrel and at the knee, M M. Look, then you can see at the fetlock there are circles from the gambrel and knee, N N. Look ; these two you can see. From the fetlock there is another circle from 0; and if you destroy the structure in my foot, or feet, you will find I cannot go. When the horse is put in motion he changes at point T T, and leg folds toward the center of drive-wheel at the knee and fetlock and heel. They fold the same on the hind drive-wheel, and these folding cranks all fold toward the great center. A, and he gets the balance of lever power in this way. When he reaches out his feet to put himself in motion one half of his legs folds toward three centers, the other half unfolds; he gets the balance of power. In this way the cranks fold and unfold, striking half circles rotatory motion. The principles are there just as much as they would be if this machine was made with cog-gearing. He has got a power ou those drive-wheels. When he is even with himself and in his circle, all natural as his crea- tor made liim, he can straighten out his legs from A to K, and whirl THE HORSES RESCUE. around and around very easy. You can seo all working in harmony from the great center. No. 2. Cut No. 2 shows the horse off his base, both forward and behind : it shows him out of his circle ; it shows two sets of circles and per- pendicular lines. This cut will show you something of the first stages of the horse's change from natural. Do not forget there arc all degrees of this change, and his suffering commences at the first change. As this horse now is, he is in a bad fix. Now I will ask some wise man to tell me how this horse can be got out of his trouble, burning, blistering, rowels, and all kinds of mutilating. You may fasten his feet where they now are, hitch tackles to his neck, and draw him in his circle, or roll him in, or pry him in, or blister him, or burn him in, he will not stay ; and you cannot get him in his circle and put him in harmony m any such way. I put him in his circle with a lever, and it is all lever principle I work on to do it. It is all done working on the feet. There is the cause. I have explained that 328 THE horse's rescue. about as well as I can. The light perpendicular lines, A and C C, are the natural lines ; the space between A and C, center perpendicular lines. The horse is out of his circle and off his base that much. You will find that throws all out of harmony of action ; the same degree the horse is all out of his balance. Look ; there are two sets of cir- cles and lines, you can see. Tliis only shows in this small cut a small degree. The horse is off his base or behind himself. Take a full- sized horse and hne him as this cut is lined ; you can find lots of horses off their base eighteen inches, and some more. I have marked and figured a few degrees. The horse in this condition cannot step far, he has not got much action. He has lost his lever power, caused by con- traction ; he is sick ; all is out of mash. The machine will not run much, and heats badly when put in motion. He cannot rotate from B B to A ; he cannot rear up or kick up either way ; neither can he any better turn around. It all works the same when he gets up or lies down. Roll him back until A line comes to P, then there will be only one set of circles and lines, you can see. If it is done right a will in harmoy of action be. I have left this cut as little complicated as I could and convey what I wanted to. If I had laid out two seta of gearing, and put all in these cuts which I could, it would about spoilt them to convey tlie principles that I well understand to others. Look where fulcrum E is ; it should be where the forward circles cross lines on heavy perpendicular, P, line, then A would take the place of S and in the center be; and T T would move forward with C C. There are six centers now. If that was done there would be only three. Take hold of circle at the top at point and line A, move it for- ward ; the circle wouW at that point travel a large degree, while it would hardly move at R and A. That you could see all would come in one line, then all in harmony would be. This poor horse's body must all move forward and his feet remain where they are. This may look like a hard job to do without medicine of any kind, and yet it can be done, and it is a very simple job to do when once understood. As the horse's body moves forward, no matter what degree, if it is done right, his back will straighten across the loin, and his head will rise a3 bis body moves forward, no matter what degree, until all is in harmony. THE HORSE 8 RERCUE. 829 No. 3. Thi3 cut No. 3, shows the horse in his circle and balanced in the center, and vet he is badly out of harmony of action, caused by im- proper care of his feet and contraction. This is what I call balancing the horse between runover feet, contraction, and leverage. This is what I call a bad job. It has balanced him over forward, tipped his ankles forward, and his kneej that is caused by leaving the heel too high, or toe too low, or both. Sometimes the fault is all in the slioe by dressing the foot ; it can be done in that way, and often is, and in many and many degrees of this and on the same hor.se. This horse is not so liable to fall over backwards as the horse shown in cut Ko. 2, but he is liable to lose the use of his feet and legs, and has, nearly. He has but very little action, and is liable to fall at every step if lie is hurried. His feet are bad, both internally and externally. He is a great sufferer, and the cause is located in his feet. Reader, you may think this picture overdrawn, some of you, but I assure you it is not. 330 THE horse's rescue. I can produce thousands of horses that are worse off than this horse is shov7n to be. This horse has more ailments than are shown in cnt No. 2. He has been kept in his circle, or, other words, tried to be kept on his base and balance and failed, as all do that try to do it in this way. Cut No. 2 shows the horse throv/n off his base by the soles of his feet rising up. Do not forget it can be done man}^ other ways, about which I have written, if the sole liad been lowered on the principles laid down in this work, he or his body would have gone back on his base. This horse (cut No. 3) has had his feet dressed in such a way it has added more to his trouble, and the first cause still remains, and has grown worse. It is of longer standing. The coffin- joints are badly affected, and all is bad internally. He is sick all over, and not fit to work. Now, I want some man to tell me, if he can, how he is going to get his poor horse out of this troul>le with medicine of any kind, or any treatment excepting the principles laid down in this work. I mean the ailments the horse has at the present day that I treat and write about. I well know this is the right and only way out of this trouble, and the horse should never be in it. But this is the way it is ; how long it will be so I know not. The horse shown in cut No. 2 thrown off his base I left in tlie fore- part of this work; at that time I could do no better. Such as he go over backwards often. And this horse (cut No. 3) I left in this work after balancing him as well as I could. Him I came around to see. I found him cocked on his ankles and tipped on his knees. I have no recollection of ever serving a horse in this way in my life ; bui I have straightened thousands of them, and shod them to prevent them from balancing over in the way this is shown in this cut. Some horses can stand and work many years in this condition. They suffer greatly; they are weak ; they cannot draw but a small load compared with a horse that is all sound and natural. I have marked a few lines or de- grees pointing toward the center of the forward drive-wheel. His steps are short; he does not get much balance of power on leverages; the folding cranks do not work ; he is stiff; no knee action ; no action in any way ; he stubbs and pegs ; blunders along ; swaying right and left. He has all he can do to stand on his feet. He can stand .hitched to a load or by the side of another sound horse better than in any other way. This horse is harder to cure than the one shown in cut No. 2, and yet it can be done. In the condition this horse is now in he has but very little action ; you place his forward feet to line D, forming fulcrum at E, How long do you think he could stand cocked THE HORSES RESCUE. 331 on his ankles and tipped on his knees ? Place his hind feet rit the same fulcrum E. In the condition he is now in he would fall very quickl3% you would see. If he was put in his circle by working on the right principle on his feet he could rotate both ways until H H No. 4. line and B B would meet, and he could rotate from A to K just in the same way, and that would be, of course, to line I. Tho condition he now is in he cannot do it if he should try, although A in the center seems to be, and so is the perpendicular lines C C, and the feet seem to be in about their proper place at T T: but it is all done ■wrong ; he cannot move well botclied in this way, for this reason, 332 THE horse's rescue. it is not done in the right way. Compare this horse with the one in cut No. 1, and 7011 can easj^ see why his machinery he cannot run. And after working on the horse forty-one years I found out how all this mischief was done after I got control and master of the horse's feet. If I do say it, balancing np horses I was and now am hard to beat. The opposition I meet with I do not mind. I can balance these horses and put them in harmony of action very nicely botli before and behind. Cut No. 4, or plate of cuts, is to show the base, or foundation, of the horse. This is to be h)oked at as though the horse had walked off and left the bottom of his feet with shoes on, the sole and frog all there. The object of this is to more clearly show and convey the condition — the foundation — of the most of horses are in, caused by unequal weight on the double heel, and showing what shape they will assume, caused by that and not bemg properly dressed and cared for. You can see there is not a true foot there ; they are all imper- fect and untrue in some way, and in many and different, no two alike. The two feet that the lines start from at the toe are to repre- sent the hind feet. The drive-wheels on the horse's hind feet are intended to run on the outside of the forward wheels if he is natural, and nature has made him so. If nature has a chance they will run in that way. If his feet are run over it will change these lines from a straight line in degrees according to how much his feet are run over. The top of heel is the place to look. There will be all degrees on the same horse from the same cause; the weight v*'ill turn the toe in or out, the same on all the feet. And this is a very important point to look to if you want your horse to move well. Equalizing the weiglit on the feet is one of the most important things to be looked to in dressing and ironing a horse's feet. If it is not done properly it will tarn the toe one way or the other. In driving twenty miles, and some feet in less, it throws the ankle in or out. If it should throw the ankles out. the toe would go in. If both feet should go in that way (I mean a pair), they would cross lines, as shown in this plate, and there are all degrees of that. Sometimes, when not very bad in that wav, these lines would cross some rods ahead of the horse. Wheii ' the horse is in this way he will grab his shoes and heels and con- stantly be running over himself. Sometimes he is run over in pair.'*, both forward feet one way and both hind feet the opposite. When he is in that way there is danger of his falling if he is hurried, and liable to if not. The fact is his feet are all turned one way or the other. THE HORSK'S RESCr.K. 333 If he is nin in on his feet he wit knocK his ankles until he is straight- ened. This is not seen by many. It racks the horse's ankles bad. There is another point to be looked to where this nin-over-feet busi- ness exists. Stand behind your horse and see if his legs are on a perpendicular Hne; that is, see if the hind drive-wheels do not stand under too much.; that> is, his feet huddled together In case they should by being runover, or from want of proper work done on his feet, the effect would be bad in many ways. Look up to the center of the drive-wheel ; there is a fulcrum of levers up there. If his leg stood under from a perpendicular line his weight would act at that center or fulcrum of levers. These levers act both ways. They are all right when they all act together, as nature intended they should. When thrown out of harmony they work against the horse and his owner badly. These principles work the same on the forward part of the horsa. Sometimes one wheel is badly out of cfrder, sometimes all ; sometimes two ; sometimes three. Go and look your horse all over, put him in motion, and if you have got an eye for a horse you can see. No. 5. Cut No. 5 shows the foot natural; that is, the covering of the sensitive part. It shows the surface of the sole and frog internally : the heels are low and wide apart ; the foot nearly round in shape ; the sole nearly flat down ; the double heels and frog all rest on the ground, or floor equal, and this is the way it always should be. No. 6. 834 THE horse's rescue. Cut No. 6 shows the foot badly changed from natural, it is badly contracted. You can see the heels are closed together. In doing this it raises the sole up. The mischief it does I have written about. To cure these horses my work treats on. I expand the foot, let the sole down, and make cut No. 6 have the appearance of cut No. 5. It does not tear the foot apart, as many would suppose ; it simply lets the sole down to its natural and proper place, as it originally was. In doing this every degree, no rnatter how small you change or expand the foot, the circle of the foot grows larger. There are three ways to do this : The first is to pull the shoes off, dress the feet, so as to let the horse's body go back on the base if Le is off, so the weight will be in center of feet; dress the feet, all slanting toward the point of frog; keep the frog cut away, so it will not touch the ground; drive with no shoes. Thp second is in expanding with shoes, and the principles are all laid down. The third is in expanding with shoe. The last does the wcrk in a few days. The other two processes are slow. They cannot all be cured in that way. The second process is in expanding the foot by the horse's weight with shoes ; and the last is by spreading, as shown in cuts No. 7 and 8. No. 7. Cut No, 7 shows the arch-shape the bottom of the foot will assume when contraction takes place. This little simple skeleton-cut is to show you the whole business of expansion and contraction. The straight line, B B, is to represent the ground. Arched line, A, and C C, shows the sole of, or bottom of, the foot raised up. A is sup- posed to be in the center of the foot at point of frog, but it is not, and there are few that are perfectly true. F is to show the frog under A. Now I want to expand the foot and settle the frog down to straight line, B B. Suppose I put Vv^eight (no matter what kind) on this arched line, A, and the arched line above was not made fast at points, B B, where arch-line, A, forms fulcrum, arch-line, A, would be likely to settle ; and if it did it would spread the foot and con- tinue to do so until the frog came to a rest on the ground, la THE HORSES RESCUE. 835 case the foot had shoes on that raised the frog up it would be hkely to dish tbc wrong war. In shoeing to expand the foot or to expand it in any other way, it should be prepared in the same way as shovvi:i in this cut — work from the center. At point, C C, an arched line, A, is to show how the foot should be dressed when shoeing to let the sole come down to flat rest on shoe. When the frog came to rest on the ground all would be right. Putting on a spreading shoe, the foot must be prepared the same. No. S. Cut No. 8 shows a very good shoe for expanding a foot and holding it. This is the best w&y to work on contracted feet. I can put them where I want them and hold them until they settle and grow. This shoe is concave, clear out to the edge, so as to let the sole down, except a little flat rest at the heels. This shoe is only for a temporary use. The lips raised at the heels are to No. 9. 336 THE hoese's rescue. fit inside of heel, so as to spread right at the heels. After the horse has worn these shoes a few months, and had his feet spread, other shoes can be used. There are many kinds of shoes to expand horse's feet. This shoe I like the best. Out No. 9 shows the runover-foot, caused by unequal weig:ht on the double heel. One is higher than the other, and, rolled under, that turns the toe in and out. The best place to see how that is is to look at the horses; there you can see it ten times better. And if you want to see how 'this expansion and contraction works, take a piece of stiff paper, strike circle the size of the horse's foot, cut out a goring-piece runmng to point in the center, about the size of the frog, then close up the space, you will see it will raise in the center in the form of a cone ; let it down a small degree, mark around the circle; do that way several times until it comes down to a tiat rest; you can see the circle is growhig larger every time you let it down. This is the way this works on all feet. It is all summed up in leverage. To illustrate this a little more, in order to make all as clear as I can, I will take one leg and foot of the horse. The foot is the base, or foundation, figuratively. We will say the leg is a column. If you want it to stand perpendicular you must make the bottom of the base true and work from the center. There must be a center perpendicular line pointing to the center of this earth, and you must do your work so your column will balance, if you want it to stand, and it must balance all around the center. This is the way the dressing on the bottom of a horse's foot must be done. Remember, you are working around a center; when you are paring the bottom of the foot of the horse you can throw him off of balance all around the center of his foot by cutting away the bot- tom of the base, and it is all leverage-balancing in all ways over a center or fulcrum of leverages. Now I will try to convey to you how these fulcrums of levers " work, and what shape they throw the horse in has already been told many times. There *is a horizontal fulcrum at the center of the foot raising and lowering in the center. There are three ful- crums of levers at the toe of the foot, caused by contraction and improper work done on the feet, throwing the horse off of balance in many ways, and there should be none to hold him there. If all is in harmony he will be balanced in the centers all over ; then he can take the advantage of this lever-power at will and balance and throw his weight back and forward, and in all ways, around the great THE HORSES RESCUE. 337 fulcrum of levers sliown hi cut No. 10. At point C he can throw liis weight forward and back of fulcrum, A; and if he is balanced ui the center he can turn on the great center and fulcrum and roll hirnseli in all ways; and, doing this, he rolls a great drive- wheel ^d a circle of them; and in his turnings and changing he rolls a yj: ,ball of circles around him. If he wants to hold a load that is .crowding him, and stop it going down a hill, he throws his weight ^l^ck of the canter, A, by bracing forward all of his legs. The more ..Jtjie load crowds the more he will get the balance of leverage by ., throwing his weight back of center. A, as is shown in cut No. 2. . If lie is all right lie must be so he can throw liis weight always ...around the great fulcrum, C, and perpendicular center-line, B. The J^vers must be equal, as shown in cut No. 10 from center. A, to Ko. lO. r> B. If they are ho can rotate (D D line) both way; and all ■ways to lino, E E, aroui.d the ^reat center," C, This whole busi- 838 THE horse's rescue. ness is summed up in leverage, the balance around a center of lever- power. We will go to work on the foot, or base, again. The heel is double. If you cut those heels one lower than the other, or cork or ciake your shoe of unequal thickness in any waj', j'ou will throw the weight of the horse unequal on the double heel by throwing weight past the center. Throw it either way, you set a fulcrum of levers to work at the toe of the foot. That ought not to be there. By constantly throwing and changing the weight from one heel to the other past the center, that causes the double heel to work up and down. Those levers form fulcrum at the toe of the foot, constantly expanding or contracting at the heel, and these levers form fulcrum at the toe. The}'- act horizontal, the end of lever growing on tlie toe of foot, the sole raising in the center. There is another fulcrum of levers, all working together, \vith the one on the end of too forming fulcrum with another at the center of foot, right over the coffin-joint, one lifting, one pulling down, throwing the horse off his base, as shown in cut No. 2. This tip- back and pull-down lever has a double action : it works both ways from its fulcrums; it tips the horse over on iiis nose sometimes. lean prepare and iron any horse's feet and throw liim over back- ward, and no power can make him stand, and I will do it with a lever. I can do it m this way: Cup out the feet, iron them, take a pair of tongs, and close the shoes together. That is done with lever-power. It will raise the sole of the foot in the center, throw the horse off of balance, and hold him. I can throw him over back, and down. The Creator of him cannot raise him. I will not put anything on him ou\v the slioes He mnsc lie there until I use the lever again. This trnie T expand the foot (that is done with a lever), let him go back on the base, and the shoes are levers forming fulcrums at the toe. These principles all work the same on all feet ami all horses and mules. To close up this l')ug sjory, I will tell you how many centers and fulcrums of leverages there are in the horse to bo thrown out of center and in center, caused by expansion and contraction, leverage, runover-feet, improper dressing of the four bases or foundation of the horse, throwing the horse off his four bases, throwing him off of balance, in many degrees and ways. There are thirty-five, one at whirlbone, stifle, gambrel. ankle, pastern, and coffin-Joint. These are the hind-centers on one leg. There is the same number tor- THE horse's rescue. 889 ward. And ihere are four legs, six ou each, tweniy-jfour in all, one in the center at A, one at fulcrum, E, one at R. These are perpendicular-ceuter.s. There are eight horizontal-centers to be kept in harmony — the center of the solo of the foot at point of frog, one at the toe of foot ; four feet, eight in all. In nearly all of these centers there is u double action of levers both ways, thrown out of center by contraction and other causes, which I liave ex- plained enough. And I will close this long story, and the result of my forty-one, and most forty-two, years' labor has simmered this whole business down to a very simple process, curing all the ail- ments I treat on in this work ; and that little process on the bases of the horse throws the whole entire machinery ofit of center and harmony of action ; and all are, by working on the feet on the prin- ciple laid down in this work, thrown in harmony of action, and no medicin is required to do this wonderful work. The difficulty these poor horses has been in (I know not how long) has puzzled the brains of millions of men for liundreds of years, and yet the process is very simple. All that is required to do this work is warm water, a little cow manure (ox manure will do as well), a reasonable amount of good brains and good judgment, physical force, courage, and patience. If there is any man, or men, teaching curing horses (that are troubled with the ailments that I have mentioned in this work) on any other principles than are laid down in this book, they are not right, and I know it, and I will be qualified before any magistrate and before a multitude of people that the principles to work on the horses to cure them of the ailments that I treat on, laid down in this book, are all right if they are done right and carried out. Now just think a little and you will see you have got the prevention, and that is worth more than the cure. Your humble servant, GERARD DOAN. APPENDIX. I thought my book was finished, yet there are a few more truths I would like to publish in this work. To begin, I will say I leave you the key with which I unlocked tins great mystery, and which cost me so many years of hard labor to find. This mystery has deformed the suffering horse and held him so. The key is expanding and mastering the base of the horse, his feet. Reader, you must begin there if you ever unlock this great science, which ongTit to*' be easy for you, now that you haive th6 k^y. This appendix is to show my powers of endurance and to put the cap-sheaf on the last of this work. While in New York super- intending the getting up of this work I put up at what I supposed to be a respectable house. It had on the front and both sid^^ •'Hotel." It turned out to be one of the lowest sinks of debauch- ery a man ever stepped in. I was so engaged iu my work that I did not take much notice of what was taking place around me. I made contracts with parties, advanced money, and set men at work on my book, and they were to draw on me as the work pro- gressed. After my work was nicely begun, some parties iu this hotel tried to rob me by using chloroform. I went to the keeper of this den for redress, but could get no satisfaction. I told him I would expose liis ranch, and went for a policeman. He told me he would take care of me. I went with him. He took me to the station. After getting me inside, two at one time went in my pockets and robbed me of my money, pocketbook, and contents, and not one word would they hear from me. I offered to take them to D. M. Bennett's printing-office and to Prof. Rawson's, where APPENDIX. 341 I was getting work done. No use talking. I was locked in a cell. I WHS taken out of there bound, jammed into a wagon on my back; dragged out of that and put in a hand- wagon, and from tlience dragged into the Bellevue Hospital, where for many days I was tortured ou a stretcher, kicked in the face when bound, and treated in the most cruel manner possible; pronounced insane; chalked for the asylum. I escaped, and reason is on its throne yet, and I liave had more powers of endurance than any liorse tliat ever lived, and have published this work, fulfilled my contracts with men in New York, and still I sail and the world moves for all that. I am going to publish a book and give the true account of the brutality I experienced. GERARD DOANE. AGENTS WANTED To introduce and sell this work, "Tk Horse's Rescue." } Throughout this (or should be), our GREAT REPUBLIC I will set off territory, towns, counties, and sup- ply agents with books, and give them an EQUAL CHANCE WITH MYSELF. This will be a rare chance to make some money. That is the only inducement that I can hold out. The retail price of this work will be $1.50. For further particulars address GERARD DOAN, Fleming, Cayuga Co., N. Y. Webster Family Library of Veterinary Medicine Cumnnings Sciiool of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University 200 Westboro Road North Grafton, MA 01536