384 CATTLE 



Advanced Registry was for a time incorporated in the regular issue 

 of the herdbook. In Volume I 31 bulls and 300 cows were regis- 

 tered. Recently the Holstein-Friesian records have been published 

 in an annual yearbook. Among the organizations to promote the 

 breed are state associations, of which there are many to-day in the 

 United States. There are also many community breeders, associa- 

 tions for the promotion of this breed, notably in Ohio, Wisconsin, 

 Michigan, and New York. In 1914 Mr. W. H. Jenkins wrote '^: 

 " In Chenango and Madison counties. New York, are 500 breeders 

 of pure-bred Holstein cattle. An aid to breeding the finest cattle 

 has been the Chenango-Madison Holstein Cattle Club organized 

 a few years ago, which now has more than 200 members." An 

 extension bureau of the Holstein-Friesian Association of America, 

 organized in 19 18, has been instrumental in establishing breed 

 clubs in many communities. 



Holstein-Friesian interests in America are given wide publicity 

 through the efficient service of the Holstein-Friesian World, an 

 illustrated weekly published at Syracuse, New York. The British 

 Friesian Journal, published in London, advances the interests of 

 the breed in <jreat Britain. 



^Hoard's Dairyman, November 20, 1914. 



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