I04 The Arab Horse 



sistent and uniform producers of num- 

 erous and valuable offspring. By ac- 

 quiring, therefore, from breeders of 

 reputation, animals whose history has 

 been so well defined as to admit them 

 into authoritative records such as 

 Weatherbey's General Stud Book, and 

 the American Jockey Club Stud Book, 

 selecting carefully among them such as 

 are of the choicest strains and those 

 coming from long lived and prolific 

 families — for such are certainly to be 

 had — it is possible to secure the means 

 of breeding horses that shall be both a 

 pleasure and a profit to the breeder. 



FINIS 



