. The new book of the dog; a comprehensive natural history of British dogs and their foreign relatives, with chapters on law, breeding, kennel management, and veterinary treatment. Dogs. COL. MALCOLM'S BOIDHEACH BY BO DAG H RHODDRY in the breed, to form a club for the promotion of the interests of the White West Highland Terrier. The photographs which accompany this chapter show the countess of the animal. aberdeens It is still to be CH. CROMAR SNOWFLAKE found all along by morven— the west coast of snowdrift. Scotland. I have myself seen good specimens belonging to Ross-shire, to Skye, and at


. The new book of the dog; a comprehensive natural history of British dogs and their foreign relatives, with chapters on law, breeding, kennel management, and veterinary treatment. Dogs. COL. MALCOLM'S BOIDHEACH BY BO DAG H RHODDRY in the breed, to form a club for the promotion of the interests of the White West Highland Terrier. The photographs which accompany this chapter show the countess of the animal. aberdeens It is still to be CH. CROMAR SNOWFLAKE found all along by morven— the west coast of snowdrift. Scotland. I have myself seen good specimens belonging to Ross-shire, to Skye, and at Ballachulish on Loch Leven, so that, as it is a breed with a long pedigree and not an invented breed of the present day, I thought it right to dissociate it from the name of Poltalloch ; but I find that many, perhaps better judges than my- self, think that that was a mistake, because there are some who claim that any white terrier born in the West High- lands may be called a West Highland White Terrier, though not a Poltalloch Terrier. I wish that I found it possible to give a verbal description of what the type of the dog should be, as I find my dogs constantly judged by what is called the " Scottish " terrier standard. I think, however, that the picture of an Eleven of Scotland which accompanies this chapter shows, to those who can see, more than any number of definitions in inches and tenths can explain. If anyone wishes to learn the peculiarities of the breed as compared with the accepted " Scottish" type, let him compare these eleven dogs, all workers of one kennel, with a good photo- graph of a Scottish Champion, say, He- worth Rascal {see p. 388) or Ems Cosmetic (see p. 386)—though I must remark that a singularly long fore-leg among the eleven is due not to the dog, but to photographic distortion. From the picture can be gath-. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readabilit


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