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The Boston Terrier Club
The Boston Terrier
The Boston Terrier Club By-laws
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Breeding For Good Disposition
This, to my mind, is the most important feature in the breeding of the dog that demands the most careful attention. If the disposition of the dog is not all that can be desired, of what avail is superb constitution, an ideal conformation and beaut...
Breeding For Size
When I joined the Boston Terrier Club in 1895, there were two classes for weight--the light weight, from 15 to 23 pounds, and the heavy weight, from 23 to 30 pounds, inclusive. This, of course, has been changed since to three classes--the light we...
Conclusion
I was sitting by an open fire the other evening, and there passed through my mind a review of the breed since I saw a great many years ago, when the world, to me, was young, a handsome little lad leading down Beacon street, Boston, two dogs, of a ...
General Hints On Breeding
Having become possessed of suitable kennels to house his stock, the breeder is confronted with the great question: How and where shall I obtain my breeding stock? Much depends on a right start and the getting of the proper kind of dogs for the fou...
Kenneling
It goes without saying that any place is not good enough for a dog, although when one considers the way some dogs are housed in small, dark outbuildings, or damp, ill-lighted and poorly ventilated cellars, or even perhaps worse, in old barrels or ...
Notes
There are several features of vital import in Boston terrier breeding that the passing years have disclosed to the writer the imperative need of attention to. Most of these have been spoken of in this book before, but they seem to me at the presen...
Picture Taking
It would seem at the first glance that to write on this subject was only a waste of time and energy, and yet I know that no one feature of the dog business is more vital in importance or more fraught with trouble than this apparently simple proces...
Rearing Of Puppies
Assuming that the bitch has successfully whelped and all goes well, there is practically nothing to do beyond seeing that the mother is well fed, in which good meat, and where there is a good sized litter of pups, a liberal supply of milk and oatm...
Sales
Every person who has bred Bostons for any length of time knows that a good dog sells himself. I do not imagine there is practically any part of this great country where a typical dog, of proper color and markings and all right in every respect, fa...
Technical Terms Used In Relation To The Boston Terrier And Their Meaning
A Crackerjack--A first class, typical dog. A Mutt--A worthless specimen. A Flyer--A dog capable of winning in any company. A Weed--A leggy, thin, attenuated dog, bred so. A Fake--A dog whose natural appearance has been...
The Boston Terrier
Who and what is this little dog that has forced his way by leaps and bounds from Boston town to the uttermost parts of this grand country, from the broad Atlantic to the Golden Gate, and from the Canadian border to the Gulf of Mexico? Nay, not con...
The Boston Terrier Club
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The Boston Terrier Club By-laws
ARTICLE I. DUTIES OF OFFICERS. SECTION 1. President.--The president shall discharge the usual duties of his office, preside at all meetings of the Club and of the executive committee, call special meetings of the Club, o...
The Boston Terrier Club Constitution
ARTICLE I. NAME. This Association shall be known as and called the Boston Terrier Club. ARTICLE II. OBJECT. The object of the Club shall be to promote and encourage the breeding and improvement of th...
The Boston Terrier Club Order Of Business
1. Calling meeting to order. 2. Roll call. 3. Reading of minutes. 4. Reports of officers. 5. Reports of standing committees by seniority. 6. Reports of special committees. 7. Communications. ...
The Boston Terrier Club The Revised Boston Terrier Standard
The present Boston terrier standard was adopted by the Boston Terrier Club on October 7, 1914, as a result of a revision recommended by a committee appointed by the Boston Terrier Club. It was felt, in view of the fact that the dog had become esta...
The Boston Terrier Cluban Early Standard
The following standard adopted when the dog was known as the Round-Headed Bull and Terrier Dog, will be of interest here. Skull--Large, broad and flat. Stop--Well defined. Ears--Preferably cut, if left on should be small and thi...
The Boston Terrier Clubits History Constitution By-laws And Official Standard
In 1890 a club was formed in Boston by a comparatively small body of men who were very much interested in the dog then known as the Round-Headed Bull and Terrier dog. These men were breeders and lovers of the dog, and their main object in coming t...