The Airedale terrier standard simplified . NEWBOLD JACK, One of the Earlier Dogs; No Pedigree, But Winnerof Many Prizes; Owned by Mr. A. Money Wigram 20 CHAPTER III. Breeding Airedales—Common Terms Explained—General Principles inPractical Breeding—Examples in Prominent Strains—Larchmere Aire-dales—Mr. McGoughs Airedales—The Geelongs. You Cant Breed Rats from Mice.—Old Yorkshire Saw Breeding Airedales does not differ in principle from breeding other live-stock. The same general laws and practices obtain. But a certain knowledgeof the commoner terms in breeding is necessary to a thorough underst

The Airedale terrier standard simplified . NEWBOLD JACK, One of the Earlier Dogs; No Pedigree, But Winnerof Many Prizes; Owned by Mr. A. Money Wigram 20 CHAPTER III. Breeding Airedales—Common Terms Explained—General Principles inPractical Breeding—Examples in Prominent Strains—Larchmere Aire-dales—Mr. McGoughs Airedales—The Geelongs. You Cant Breed Rats from Mice.—Old Yorkshire Saw Breeding Airedales does not differ in principle from breeding other live-stock. The same general laws and practices obtain. But a certain knowledgeof the commoner terms in breeding is necessary to a thorough underst Stock Photo
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The Airedale terrier standard simplified . NEWBOLD JACK, One of the Earlier Dogs; No Pedigree, But Winnerof Many Prizes; Owned by Mr. A. Money Wigram 20 CHAPTER III. Breeding Airedales—Common Terms Explained—General Principles inPractical Breeding—Examples in Prominent Strains—Larchmere Aire-dales—Mr. McGoughs Airedales—The Geelongs. You Cant Breed Rats from Mice.—Old Yorkshire Saw Breeding Airedales does not differ in principle from breeding other live-stock. The same general laws and practices obtain. But a certain knowledgeof the commoner terms in breeding is necessary to a thorough understandingof the application of these general principles in practical breeding. Theold adage, Like produces like, is a common expression among all breeders.Within limits it is true. It means that there is usually a strong resemblance. CH. CLONMEL MONARCH, A.K.C.S.B. 61, 021. Imported by Mr. Clement B. Newbold, of Philadelphia. Best Airedale in Show at New York, 1899. Then Owned by Mr. John Lorillard Arden (Courtesy of Mr. Chas. H. Mason) between offspring and parents. But it must be remembered that the grand-parents, great grandparents and the remoter ancestry all exert some influ-ence and tend to produce variation. When stock has been line bred for some time, and both parents arealike in general character, and have the same general foundation bloodbehind them, the get will far more likely resemble the general run of thefamily or strain they represent, and in all probability will closely resembletheir*immediate ^progenitors. Variation means the differences which exist between offspring and theparents, or between offspring in the same litter. In the earlier days of the 21 Airedale, variation was a very great factor in breeding. The earliest littersborn in America were a nondescript lot and varied greatly from their p