. Breeder and sportsman. Horses. Til B1IIDI1 AND 8P01TIMAM [Saturday, August 7, l COMMUNITY HORSE BREEDING. [By E. A Trowbridge. Breezers' Gazette.] Community breeding has been a potent factor in live stock improvement and agricultural prosperity. During the past ten years it has received considerable attention and has been responsible for much ad- vancement. Co-operative effort has had to develop under many different circumstances and as a result of different stimuli, but it has developed. As community breeding is generally conceived of it consists of a number of individuals, interested in th


. Breeder and sportsman. Horses. Til B1IIDI1 AND 8P01TIMAM [Saturday, August 7, l COMMUNITY HORSE BREEDING. [By E. A Trowbridge. Breezers' Gazette.] Community breeding has been a potent factor in live stock improvement and agricultural prosperity. During the past ten years it has received considerable attention and has been responsible for much ad- vancement. Co-operative effort has had to develop under many different circumstances and as a result of different stimuli, but it has developed. As community breeding is generally conceived of it consists of a number of individuals, interested in the same breed or type of animals, banded together, usually operating under a constitution and by-laws with elective officers and stated places and dates for meeting. Their co-operative effort is for general advancement of the breed or type in question and the particular development and advancement of that breed or type in their own community. This com- munity interest .n efficient farm animals carries with it the development of agricultural practices and com- munity prosperity, and the particular advancement of those individuals directly interested. These are the facts as observed by a casual study of conditions in localities known as community breed- ing centers. But it must be fully realized that back of these easily discerned facts there lies some im- pelling force which furnishes the basis for develop- ment. Where community effort is on a permanent footing this force is usually found in the form of an economic possibility and a man or group of men. Without the former any organization must 5ie of its own failure to give results; without the latter a good cause may become obscured and discontinued for lack of attention and effort. At the base of the entire superstructure of formal organization must lie the ability and desire to co-operate, to work with others and for others, to be willing to share the responsi- bility as well as the results, and really to become possessed of t


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1882