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Fig. | 1. Ground surface of a right fore hoof of the "regular" form | 590 |
| 2. Pair of fore feet of regular form in regular standing position | 591 |
| 3. Pair of fore feet of base-wide form in toe-wide standing position | 591 |
| 4. Pair of fore feet of base-narrow form in toe-narrow standing position | 592 |
| 5. Side view of an acute-angled fore foot, of a regular fore foot, and of a stumpy fore foot | 592 |
| 6. Side view of foot with the foot-axis broken backward as a result of too long a toe | 595 |
| 7. Left fore hoof of a regular form, shod with a plain fullered shoe | 599 |
| 8. Side view of hoof and fullered shoe | 599 |
| 9. An acute-angled left fore hoof shod with a bar shoe | 601 |
| 10. A fairly formed right fore ice shoe for a roadster | 601 |
| 11. Left fore hoof of regular form shod with a rubber pad and "three-quarter" shoe | 602 |
| 12. A narrow right fore hoof of the base-wide standing position shod with a plain "dropped crease" shoe | 602 |
| 13. Hoof surface of a right hind shoe to prevent interfering | 603 |
| 14. Ground surface of shoe shown in fig. 13 | 603 |
| 15. Side view of a fore hoof shod so as to quicken the "breaking over" in a "forger" | 604 |
| 16. Side view of a short-toed hind hoof of a forger | 604 |
| 17. A toe-weight shoe to increase the length of stride of fore feet | 605 |
| 18. Most common form of punched heel-weight shoe to induce high action in fore feet | 605 |