FOR EXHIBITION AND MARKET 



Great caution should be used against entering them 

 in the show room when too fat or in a moult, as the 

 new standard is rigid on these two points and they 

 will be cut severely for these faults. Do not breed 

 does or bucks that have rough coats, and keep them 

 in perfect condition at all times if you are planning 

 to enter them in the shows. To the average fancier 



GRAY FLEMISH GIANT DOE— "1915 FRISCO BELLE," 

 Cud winner at Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, 1915. 

 Largest and heaviest rabbit in show. Weight 19>4 Pounds. Janu- 

 ary, 1916. 



who has never seen a class of these real Giants, it 

 would be hard to describe what a wonderful sight it 

 is to see all the way from ten to thirty of them weigh- 

 ing from fourteen pounds to twenty pounds, and none 

 of them too fat. When we find the show room con- 

 taining twenty-two and twenty-four pound Flemish, 

 we can then say our American Flemish breeders are 

 at the top of the ladder, and what an excellent feature 



no 



