UNIVERSITY OF B.C. LIBRARY 3 9424 00444 601 K i/' ■''.'' ,'?F CESS I NG-< U.E.C. UBRAKY mmmmm mam t&xct&ntrit par,, i-^T? / £ ^aii^xr. 5F oe$-. T&73 A MANUAL OF Angora Goat Raising WITH A CHAPTER ON MILCH GOATS. By GEORGE FAYETTE THOMPSON, M. S. Bureau of Animal Industry AUTHOR OF " Information Concerning the Angora Goat,'' " The Angora Goat," and " The Angora Goat Industry in 1901." Chicago, III., U. S. A : American Sheep Breeder Co. Press. 1903 Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1903, by the AMERICAN SHEEP BREEDER PRESS, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. • • • • • • • • • • • >TpO my father, Rev. R. S. Thompson, whose solicitude * for my welfare in youth has never been forgotten, whose Christian character has ever been my guide, and whose patient industry has ever been my inspiration, I dedicate this little work an deep affection. THE AUTHOR, PUBLISHERS' ANNOUNCEMENT. The remarkable development of the Angora and mohair indus- try in this country during the last three years and the widespread demand for definite and reliable information concerning the breed- ing and raising of this class of goats and the production of mohair, emphasized by more than one hundred thousand letters of inquiry, a large number of which have come directly to the office of the American Sheep Breeder, have made apparent the desirability of and necessity for a manual or hand-book concise and cheap enough to be within the reach of all, and yet comprehensive enough to meet the wants of new beginners as well as veteran breeders. To meet this demand we are pleased to present this volume — "Angora Goat Raising and Milch Goats." The author, Prof. Geo. F. Thompson, the distinguished editor of the U. S. Bureau of Animal Industry, is the recognized authority in this country upon the subjects herein treated. The book is the result of years of painstaking study and research, and we offer it to the American public in the belief that it will meet a warm welcome and subserve the purpose for which the gifted author prepared it. The industries treated in these pages are yet in their infancy and manifestly have a great future. The demand for Angoras and mohair is far in excess of the supply and likely to remain so for many a year to come. We have many millions of acres of rough mountain, hill and brush land eminently suited to the goat industry, but unsuited to any other domestic use, that may be profitably devoted to the raising of Angoras and mohair, and until these are utilized, the mission of this book will not be wholly fulfilled. Coincident and coextensive with the Angora movement is a general awakening of interest in milch goats, especially in the towns ami cities and among the leading physicians, hospitals and sanitariums. Our author gives an admi- rable summary of up-to-date information upon this subject, which we are sure will be received with marked approval. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. page Origin and History of the Angora Goat 11 CHAPTER II. Description of the Angora Goat 30 CHAPTER III. Importers and Importations 30 CHAPTER IV. Number of Angora Goats and Production of Mohair 4(.» CHAPTER V. Browsing and Pasturage 02 CHAPTER VI. Mohair and Mohair Manufactures 79 CHAPTER VII. The Meat, the Markets, and the Milk 90 CHAPTER VIII. Localities Adapted to Angora Goat Raising 104 CHAPTER IX. The Care of Angora Goats 117 CHAPTER X. Flock Management 135 CHAPTER XI. Shearing, Shears, and Shedding 143 CHAPTER XII. Diseases and Other Enemies 153 CHAPTER XIII. The Skins and Their Uses L64 CHAPTEB XIV. Minor Features of Importance 167 CHAPTER XV. Milch Goats, 170 PREFACE A wonderful interest has been manifested in the Angora goat industry during the last three years. Breeders and editors of live- stock papers have been overwhelmed with correspondence concern- ing these beautiful and useful animals. The Bureau of Animal Industry, burdened beyond anyone else probably with this corre- spondence, assigned to me the duty of preparing a bulletin on the subject. It was the purpose of that bulletin to answer all the inquiries that were made, and it met with a hearty reception every- where. That bulletin is now out of print. The demand, however, for a manual on goat raising is still very strong. Every day scores of farmers decide to investigate the industry with a view to engaging in it, and their first desire is for such information as may be found in this work. The information given herein is drawn from various sources — a thorough review of all literature on the subject, much correspondence with Angora goat men, personal acquaintance with nearly all of the leading Angora breeders in the United States, and some practical experience. The author desires to acknowledge here his obligations to persons and documents that have been helpful in the preparation of this volume. He is specially indebted to Mrs. Sallie Kussell Reeves, Dr. W. E. Griffith, and Charles M. Daugherty, and to many others, mentioned elsewhere, who have furnished photo- graphs. A list of the books which have proved very helpful, especially in the preparation of the chapter on "milch goats,*7 is appended below. The Author. Die Ziegen und Kaninchenzucht. Von Dr. William Lobe. Pp. 80. Berlin, 1875. Die Ziegenzucht in Deutchland. Ihre Mangel und Mittel zu ihrer Hu- bung. Von Peter Petersen. Pp. 78. Berlin, 1899. Leitfaden fur die Berbreitung, Pflege und rationelle Zueht der Ziege mit Verucksichtigung ihrer land und volkswirtschaftlichen Bedeu- tung. 2d part. Von. Fr. Dettweiler. Pp. 72. Darmstadt, 1896. PREFACE. vii Die Hausziege, das Milchtier des kleinen Mannes, ihre Naturgeschichte, Geschichte, Rassen, Schlage, Nutzverwertung, Haltung, Pflege, Futterung and Zucht. Von Docent Dr. Ernst S. Ziirn. Pp. 72. Leipzig, 1901. Die Zeigenzucht. Krankheiten der Ziegen, deren Heilung und verhii- tung. Von A. v. Renesse. Pp. 37. Munster i. W., 1901. Die Ernahrung und Haltung der Ziege als Milchtier des Kleinen Mannes. 2d edition. Von Dr. G. Kloepfer. Pp. 62. Essen, 1896. Rind, Schaf, Ziege und Schwein. Von J. G. Obst. Pp. 41. Leipzig. Milch Goats and Their Management. By Bryan Hook. Pp. 115. London. La Chevre. Races, Elevage, Malaaies, Produits de la Chevrerie. Par Huart du Plessis. Paris. INTRODUCTION* So far as history enlightens us, the goat has always been one of the best-known domestic animals. How long he has been in disfavor simply because he was "nothing but a goat" and been the subject of every funny man's joke, we are unable to say. The oldest accounts show him to have been a most useful animal in the furnishings of hair for curtains, skins for clothing and tents and meat for the tribes, yet down to this day he has been maligned beyond reason, and that, too, by those who have worn his skin as gloves and shoes and capes, his hair as the finest of furs and ex- pensive dress goods, and eaten his flesh as delicious lamb. There has recently been an awakening in the United States, especially among those who are ever ready to welcome and to dig- nify any industry that is honorable and bids fair to pay dividends. And so it is that the Angora goats, the finest breed of the goat fam- ily, is now receiving the credit that has long been their due. His usefulness is manifested in various ways, as is shown in the several chapters of this volume. The fleece, technically called "mohair," furnishes some of the finest fabrics known among ladies' dress goods, as well as plushes, robes, rugs, etc. ; their habit of browsing admits of their being put to an economic use as brush destroyers, thus enabling the farmer to subjugate his brushwood with little or no aid from the ax; their flesh is exceedingly delicate and nutritious and it finds a ready market; the milk, though not so abundant as with the established milch breeds of goats, is richer than cow's milk, and approaches very closely human milk in qual- ity; their tanned skins are not suitable for shoe leather, owing to their peculiar texture, but good work gloves and morocco for book binding are largely made from them ; their pelts, when properly dressed, make rugs and robes of striking beauty and great utility ; owing to their freedom from goat odor, so well known of common goats, and especially of their great attractiveness and docility, they make the very finest pets for children; a few of them among a flock of sheep are in a measure a protection to the sheep against the invasion of dogs; their manure is noticeably helpful to the grass which springs up under them as they clear away the under- brush. These are all subjects of varying degrees of importance, and will be discussed quite fully in this little volume. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Pages Geo. F. Thompson (portrait) Frontispiece Angoras in Asia Minor 16 Angoras on Sage Brush in Asia Minor 1G Pack Train on Skaria River 17 Davis Importation 21, 23 Kemble Brothers' "Aztec" 33 Jno. S. Harris (portrait) 41 Dr. W. C. Bailey (portrait) 45 F. O. Landrum 47 Wm. J. Cohill (the boy breeder) 51 N. A. Gwin 53 C. P. Bailey & Sons 57 California Angoras 61 Goats on Brushwood 65 D. C. Taylor & Son 67 R. C. Johnson 71 Geo. H. Baldwin 73 Mrs. M. Armer 75 Geo. B. Goodall (portrait) 85 American Mohair 89 Turkish Mohair 93 E. D. Ludlow & Co 107 W. S. Prickett Ill Place & Hoover 115 Jas. A. Moberley 1 19, 1 23, 1 29 The Hughes Separating Bridge r_>7 Philo> Ogden [37 Age Shown by the Teeth 139 Allen Shearing Machine 145 Ludlow Combination Shearing Table 146, 1 47. 148 Flexible Shaft Shearing Machine 149 Cooper Shearing Machine 151 African Goats nw;, 1 75 Mrs. Edward Roby (portrait) 178 Mrs. Edward Roby's Milch Goats L81 Common Milch Goat of Queensland, Australia is:; Hornless Buck and Starkenburger Buck 187 Sehwarzenburg-Guggisberger Doe and Ilinterwalder Doe 191 Goat of Malaga, Spain, and Goat of Granada, Spain 195 Maltese Goat and Nubian Goat 199 Maltese Goat g03 Saanen Buck and Saanen Doe 207 Swiss Goat 215 Spanish Maltese Buck 219 Spanish Maltese Doe and Hornless Spanish Maltese Doe 321 A MANUAL OF ANGORA GOAT RAISING. CHAPTER L ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE ANGORA GOAT. Historical Scope of this Volume. Whoever would undertake at this time to add anything con- cerning the origin and history of the Angora goat to that which lias been published by S. C. Cronwright Schreiner,1 or in- deed attempt to improve upon his facts, will be confronted with a task well nigh impossible. The purpose of the writer hereof is to present to the Angora goat raisers a manual for everv-dav use, rather than a discussion of a history that is at best quite nebulous, and therefore he will content himself with such a brief historical survey as will logically lead to a proper consideration of the goat itself and its adaptability to the varying conditions of the climate and the soil of our country. Breeders generally arc busy men and they will probably extend a more generous welcome to this volume if it condenses history and hastens on to measures of more im- portance. No thought is in mind of belittling the value of history to the student of any art or science, but an author should not add cost and inconvenience to a manual by giving a history in much detail of the subject treated. Origin of the Angora Goat. There are about ten sp< ciea of wild goats, according to natural- ists, and all of them, except possibly the Rocky Mountain goat, 'The Angora Goat. Pp. 296, New York. 1S9S. 12 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. are confined to Europe and the Himalayas of Asia. These are divided into two groups, as follows: I. The ibexes. — These according to Hayes, have, as a distinc- tive characteristic, horns "flat in front, with a horizontal triangular section, furnished with large transversal knots." II. Goats proper. — These, according to Hayes, have horns compressed and carinated in front, and, according to Wood, "may be distinguished from the ibex and the sheep by the peculiar for- mation of the horns, which are compressed and rounded behind and furnished with a well-developed keel in front." There are two subspecies of this second group — Capra falcon eri and Capra ccgagrus. The latter is known as the Paseng, the Bezoar goat, or wild goat, or Persia, and is now generally accepted by nat- uralists as the goat from which the Angora is descended through Capra hircus, which is claimed to be the ancestor of all common breeds of goats. As to the parent of the Angora stock, there is a difference of opinion between the two best-known writers on this subject — John L. Hayes, author of The Angora Goat, etc. (1882), and S. C. Cronwright Schreiner, author of The Angora Goat (1898). The one takes the position that it is descended from Capra falconeri, the other from Capra ccgagrus. Owing to the additional informa- tion which has been obtained since the appearance of Hayes's book and which is embodied in Schreiner's work, there can hardly re- main a doubt of the correctness of the contention that the Angora goat descended from Capra ccgagrus. Schreiner, who has made extensive research, has described these two subspecies as follows: "Capra falconeri has a beard which extends from the chin to the shoulders and chest, and long spirally twisted horns, the twist being outward from the base. The males, when old, become whitish all over. The ewes have a beard con- fined to the chin, and small horns with a slight spiral twist. It is a native of the Western Himalayas, northern Afghanistan, and possibly of Persia; it is- also found generally in Cashmere and on the Tibetan side of the Himalayas. Fossil remains show that it is one of the oldest types of goats. "Capra ccgagrus1 is chiefly remarkable for its enormous horns, which are larger proportionately than in any other ruminant 'There is evidence that in classic times this goat was widely distrib- uted over the Grecian Archipelago, although in Europe it is now found only in Crete, the island of Antemelo, in the Cyclades, and perhaps also in Guire to the northeast of Eubea. Eastward it is found in the hills and mountains of Asia Minor, being especially common in tho Taurus range, and it extends thence through Persia into Baluchistan, Sind, and Afghanistan. In India its range does not extend beyond the western side of Sind. It is found in Sind and Baluchistan in hills a little above the sea level: in the mountains of Persia it ascends to an elevation of 11,000 feet to 12,000 feet.— Schreiner. ANGORA GOAT RAISING. 13 animal; they approximate the triangular in form, transversely rigid, and arc bout backward as in the domestic varieties, being scimitar-like in shape and curve, and having do spiral twist Large horns of Capra cegagrus measure M) inches along the curve, but a Length of upward of 52^£ inches, with a basal girth of 7 inches, has been recorded. It stands somewhal higher than any of the domesticated varieties of the goat (an adult male stoo< inches at the withers), from which it further differs in its Bhort and powerful neck, its stouter limbs, and slender body. In the female the horns are exceedingly diminutive or are altogether wanting. The fur, which over the greater part of the body is short, is of a grayish brown color, with a black line running along the entire length of the back, while the under surface of the neck and the beard, which is present in both sexes, are of a brown color. In the winter coat the hair on the neck and shoulders is rather longer than elsewhere, and in the same season, in the colder part of the animal's habitat, a coat of woolly fur is developed beneath the hair." Native Habitat of the Angora Goat. At this time we can trace the history of the Angora goat back to the vilayet of Angora, in Asia Minor, and this location is usu- ally given as the place of its origin. Some have ventured to say that these goats were introduced there 2,400 years ago, but there is no reliable information extant bearing upon this point. There is pretty strong evidence which goes to show that they were a distinctive breed when Moses was leading the Israelites out of Egypt. Goats' hair was spun by the Israelites for curtains and other purposes for use in the temple.1 In the story recorded in I Samuel (chapter 19) of the artifice of Michal in deceiving the messengers of Saul by placing an image in the bed in place of David and giving it a pillow of goats' hair, is believed by Pen- nant to refer to a pillow made of the Angora fleece. The city of Angora, or Engurieh, the capital city of the vilayet of Angora, is the ancient Ancyra, and is located about 220 mile- south by southeast from Constantinople. Angora was the seat of *Take ye from among you an offering unto the Lord; whosoever is of a willing heart, let him bring it. an offering of the Lord; gold, ami sUver, and brass, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, and tine linen, and goat's hair.— Exodus xxxv, 5, 6. And every man, with whom was found blue, and purple, and scarlet, ami fine linen, and goat's hair, and red skins of rams, and badgers' skins, brought them.— Exodus xxxv, 23. And all the women whose heart stirred tbem up in wisdom spun goats' hair.- Exodus xxxv. 26. And he made curtains of goats' hair fur the tent over the tabernacle; eleven curtains he made them. The lengtb of one curtain was thirty cubits, and four cubits was the breadth of one curtain; the eleven curtains were of one size.— Exodus xxxvi. 14, 15. 14 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. one of the earliest Christian churches, and was probably estab- lished by the Apostle Paul. The province is mountainous to a con- siderable extent and furrowed by deep valleys. It is about 2,900 feet above the level of the sea. Of the climate Mr. H. A. Cum- berbatch, British consul at Angora (1895), and quoted by Schreiner, says: "The climate is extreme. In the months of January and February the thermometer will mark a minimum of 10° F. for several days at a time, reach as far as 0° F., whilst in June and July the maximum readings of 85° F. are maintained day after day, with little or no rain. The country is covered with snow in the winter, rain and snow falling frequently. In 1894 the total rainfall at Angora was 8.12 inches, but that was an exceptionally dry season. For the first six months of 1895 the rainfall was 10.10 inches, which is somewhat above the average; the heaviest rainfall in twenty-four hours having been 1.20 inches." The following description is by a native Turk, who was once connected with the Bureau of Animal Industry: "Asia Minor, in general aspect, is an extensive peninsula, projecting like a bridge from the main mass of the Eastern continent toAvards Europe. Elevated plains occupy a great part of the interior, intersected and bounded by ranges of mountains, leaving only narrow lowlands between them and the shores. No part of the whole peninsula is less than 2,000 feet above the level of the sea, and the average height of the most fertile tablelands is from 3,000 to 4,000 feet." With reference to the vilayet, or province, of Angora, the same writer says : "The peculiar domain of the Angora goat, even the very center of it — 39° 20' and 40° 30' north latitude and between 33° 20' and 35° longitude east of Paris — is more or less moun- tainous and furrowed by deep valleys. Elevated masses are generally shaded by fine forests, while the plateaus, which form a large part of the country, are but sparsely wooded. On account of this nudity the early spring heat dries up what humidity is left in the earth. The climate, as should be expected under such cir- cumstances, has extremes — winters very cold and summers exces- sively hot — the thermometer frequently descending to 5° to 10° F. below zero and rising as high as 90° F." One more quotation will be of interest as showing something of the diversity of climate and soil of Angora and their influence upon the quality of the mohair. No such distinction due to climate and soil can yet be made concerning localities in the United States, but this may be owing to the fact that since mohair lias been receiving particular attention it has not been grown a suf- ficient number of years in any one section to give it a distinctive ANGORA GOAT RAISING. lo character; ilm animals have recently had rapid change of owner- ship, and some have spent much time on the railroad. The following information is from Gavin Gatheral, many years British vice consul ;it Angora, and a man who Beized every opportunity to inform himself concerning the Angora goat in his native habitat. "The most northerly point at which the mohair goat thrives is Kastambou] — a large and fertile province, but too near the moisi winds of the Black Sea for the mohair goat to reach its highest development. The fleece, though lustrous, is harsh and coarse. It is somewhat unfortunate that the first selections for export to the Cape Colony for naturalization there, were made from this district. Had other varieties to be noted further on been preferred, the result of the Cape Experiment might have been more satis- factory. "Two hundred miles inland, and to the southward, lies Angora. This province produces five different varieties from as many dis- tricts. Yalmn-Ova is a heavy lustrous fleece; Chorba, a mohair so soft and fine that it falls to pieces as soon as it is shorn from the goat's back; Chubouk-Ova is remarkable for its length and fineness of fiber; Ayash is a white but lusterless fleece. The rams of these first-named districts are undoubtedly thoroughbred, though smaller in size than those of some other varieties. They po.-~ - all the points that a practical stock breeder will commend. "Sheltered by oak forests during the short but severe winters, and grazed on the valley grass during spring and summer, they seem to find in the alteration everything needful for strength and vigor, as is proved by their being so prolific, the ewes having frequently pairs and often triplets. Joevas is bright and showy. but full of what is technically known as stick, or kempy, hair. "Bei Bazar is so near Angora that the mohair it produces has no marked points of difference. The rams are larger in size, very hardy, and stand a sea voyage well. A few have been recently (1880) exported to the Cape Colony, the result being highly satis- factory. To flie northward are Cherkass and Geredeh, two dis- tricts where the mohair goats have been introduced in compara- tively recent times. There they develop distinct characteristics, owing to the difference of climate and elevation. The Geredeh ram is a large and powerful animal, covered with a fleece that seems almost black, surcharged with grease, but when scoured the mohair is found to be second to none in quality and quantity. "The difficulty of access to this mountain region has hitherto prevented securing any of the goats for export. To the eastward are Sivrihisar and Eskishihan. Both suffered severely from the 16 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. two years of excessive drought in 187-1-75, and the consequent famine. Many of the goats perished; but the grazers replaced them with stock from other districts, the result being a marked improvement in quality and value. ANGORAS NEAR SKARIA RIVER, ASIA MINOR. ANGORAS FEEDING ON SAGE BRUSH IN ASIA MINOR. "On the south lies Konieh, the soil there being of the color and character of brickdust. The fleece of the Konieh goat is a reddish brown and, though this reduces the value of the mohair, it is sought after for special manufactures. Climate, soil, or food ANGORA GOAT RAISING. IT cannot affect the products of high-grade mohair, provided two very essentia] points are carefully observed, namely, purity of blood and avoidance of humidity." It was in this country that this famous goat reached it.- per- fection— and such a perfection as has nol yel been reached by the goats of either ('ape Colony or the United States; indeed, the Turks themselves, by their shortsighted policy of extensive ci breeding, have failed to maintain the high standard once held by their animals. Thai the altitude, the soil, or the climate, or all n\' them together possibly, had much influence in producing this fleece-bearing goal is supported by strong evidence, although there are some writers of note who claim that the character of the soil PACK TRAIN ON SKARIA RIVER. ASIA MINOR. exerts no distinctive influence. Dr. .John Bachman, a well-known naturalist of this country and the Encyclopaedia Britannica both state that the fineness of the hair of the Angora goai may perhaps be ascribed to some peculiarity in the atmosphere, "for it is re- markable that the cats, dogs, sheep, and other animals of the country are to a certain extent affected in the same way as the goats." The same opinion was expressed by Captain Conblly, quoted by Southey (1848): "It is remarkable that wherever these goats exist the cats and greyhounds have long, silky hair also — the cats all over their bodies, the greyhounds chiefly on their ears and fails." These statements lead Schreiner to the conclusion that the atmosphere is the chief faciei'. He says: "At any rate, there Beems to ho no douitt that a limited and comparatively well-defined region around the town of Angora possesses in a degree unap- proached elsewhere in Asia Minor, and probably in the world, 18 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. those conditions favorable to the development of the soft, silky, lustrous white mohair goat/' Too much credit must not be given to the atmosphere of Angora in the production of mohair. That it has a marked influence on animals anywhere is generally ac- cepted. The experience of the Angora goat breeders of the Cape Colony and the United States shows that, with the best animals, a fleece equal to any produced by Turkey may be obtained. Indeed, it should be gratifying to the mohair growers to know that, while their mohair product of three years ago was very poor and that from twenty-five to fifty years ago it was sold with difficulty on account of its quality, the product now put upon the market is excellent and that of 1902 was superior, as a whole, to any that had been grown previously. George G. Emery, who is the leading, mohair expert in the United States, made the statement at the third annual (1902) meeting of the American Angora Goat Breed- ers' Association that he had seen some domestic fleeces that were in every way equal to the best Turkish. He also exhibited two pieces of piush — one from domestic hair and one from Turkish — which were so nearly alike that no one could distinguish between them without reference to a private mark. Our breeders are striving strenuously and intelligently toward a better quality of mohair, and, in order to bring about this matter, they are eliminat- ing so far as possible the common goat blood. Turkey, indeed, greatly injured her fleeces by crossbreeding, but until quite recently our own practice of the same error led us to further extremes than Turkey went. Again, the breeders of our country have learned that the feed of the animal has a pronounced influence upon the quality of the mohair in the same way that it has an influence upon the meat. The matter of better mohair is discussed quite fully in the chapter on "Mohair and mohair manufactures." Crossing Upon the Kurd Goat in Angora. Mr. Henry 0. Binns, who had about twenty years of experience with these goats in the vilayet of Angora, says the pure animals were about bred out in 1863. The reason for this was the exten- sive crossing with the common Kurd goat, reference to which has already been made. As early as 1839 there ceased to be a demand for the spun yarn of Asia Minor, owing to the fact that Europe could spin yarn at much less cost; but there was a European de- mand for the raw hair which exceeded the supply. This condition of things led to complications and a mixture of breeds from which the mohair world has not yet recovered. There can hardly remain a doubt, however, that, with the recent renewed interest in the industry, and with the intelligence that Hie breeders will bring to ANGORA GOAT RAISING. pi bear, the Angora goal industry will soon be placed on the highest plane. Tli<> Angora Goaf in the United States* To write a history of the Angora goal in the United States is not a prodigious task, 1 mi t it is a delicate one. The average newspaper correspondent of fifty years ago was no more careful of exact facts than he is now, and it is unfortunate that the his- torian of the Angora goat industry is Largely dependent upon that kind of literature for his raw materia]. However, their introduc- tion into this country was not so long ago that we are wholly dependent upon newspaper articles by unknown men, but there are those still living who have known the industry from the first day of its inception. Upon these men and upon the articles published by them and by Col. Richard Peters, the present writer depends for his information. During the Administration of President Polk, the Sultan of Turkey requested of him that he recommend some one who would experiment in the culture of cotton in Turkey. Accordingly Dr. James B. Davis, of Columbia, S. C, was recommended, and he received the appointment. The work done by Doctor Davis ap- peared to be highly gratifying to the Sultan, and so, upon his return, in 1849, the Sultan, desiring to reciprocate the courtesy of the President, presented him with nine of the choicest goats in his domain. These goats were imported as Cashmeres and were so regarded until after they passed to the ownership of Colonel Peters. Doctor Davis thought they were the goats which produced the fleece from which the famous and very costly Paisley shawls were made; and it is true that one of the number Mas a Tibet goat, which, in other words, means Cashmere, and was the breed producing the Paisley shawl fleece. As late as 1861 they were regarded as Cashmeres, for the records show that in that year William M. Landrum, who has been breeding Angoras longer than any other living man in this country, was awarded a silver goblet and $25 in cash for the introduction of the first Cashmeres (Angoras) into California. To tin1 casual observer, tin1 Cashmere and Angora were very much alike — indeed, may have appeared to be the same animal — hut the essential points of the animals are SO different that it i- a matter of wonderment how thev could be regarded as being one species under two names. 'These differences will appear in the chapter devoted to a description of the Angora goat. At the present tune it is everywhere acknowledged that tin1 goats imported by Dorter Davis and known as Cashmeres were Angoras, ami that the 20 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. Tibet goat which ho imported was a true Cashmere. That Doctor Davis really thought his goats were Cashmeres, no one will doubt for a moment, and at that time nearly everybody else who pre- tended to know anything about goats agreed with him. It was sub- sequent scientific investigation that finally adjusted the error. The situation as it existed when these goats were introduced, if con- sidered in connection with the situation as it exists to-day, does not justify a very few writers who hold to the idea that the goats originally imported were Cashmeres, and that subsequent methods of breeding here have transformed them into Angoras. The first (or Davis) importation of Angoras was frequently exhibited at fairs, and always attracted much attention. The reports made by the officials of fair associations were always favor- able, sometimes flattering, and as is known after years of experi- ence, not always correct. The United States Agricultural Society which held an exhibition in Philadelphia, in 1856, awarded to Col. Richard Peters, who was then the owner of the Davis goats, $100 as a special reward. The following report was made upon the ani- mals : "They have become known as Cashmere goats from the pure white color and fineness of their fleeces, and their undoubted Eastern origin. The fleeces from the bucks weigh 6 to 7 pounds, those from the ewes from 3 to 4 pounds. The flesh of the crosses is superior to most mutton, tender and delicious, making them a desirable acquisition to our food-producing animals. "The ease with which they are kept, living as they do on weeds, briers, browse, and other coarse herbage, fits them for many por- tions of our country, where sheep can not be sustained to advant- age, while their ability and disposition to defend themselves against dogs evidence a value peculiar to this race. They are free from all diseases to which sheep are liable, hardy and" prolific, and experience has proven that they readily adapt themselves to all portions of the United States. The bucks breed readily with the common goats, the second cross yielding a fleece of practical utility, whilst the fourth is but little inferior to that of the pure breed. "A flock of valuable wool-bearing goats can be raised in a few years by using grade bucks." The following extract is from a report of the special commit- tee appointed by the American Institute at t-;i exhibition in New York City in 1855. The report was signed by B. J. Johnson, Charles J. Goodrich, and James J. Mapes: "They have examined with much interest the fleece submitted to them, and as well from their own observations as from the results of a microscopic exam- ination made and certified to by several gentlemen of scientific eminence well known to them, they are convinced that the fiber of 22 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. these fleeces is identical in character, and fully equal in value, to that from which the highly prized Cashmere shawls were made. The fleeces on exhibition, and now under examination, amount to from 4 to 8 pounds each. "The enterprise exhibited by the introduction of these animals into this country and their propagation can not be too highly regarded. "First. These animals are long lived, such being the case with the whole goat race. "Second. They are prolific, breeding at the age of one year, with a period of gestation of about five months, and yielding twins almost universally after the first birth. "Third. They are hardy, experience having shown that they will thrive well in our climate from Georgia to New England, and that they require coarse and cheap food — as the inferior grasses, briers, bushes, etc. — such as is refused by other grazing animals. "Fourth. They produce a fleece of from 4 to 8 pounds, valued at from $6 to $8 per pound in France, or Paisley, Scotland, for the manufacture of those high-priced shawls. These fleeces can be produced when the animals become numerous at a less cost than the common sheep's wool and are superior to it. "Another fact of great practical value to our agricultural in- terests is the facility with which the Cashmere goats breed with the common goats of our country. "From these and other considerations, of the correctness of which your committee have entire confidence, it will be obvious that every encouragement should be shown this new enterprise — a bold and judicious movement." A committee composed of James Kenwick, Joseph E. Chilton, and W. H. Ellet submitted the following report to the New York State fair, held in New York City in 1854: "The undersigned can not avoid the conclusion that in the goats imported, and whose descendants have been the subjects of this examination, we have the first known specimens of that valuable race of animals from whose hairy fleece the celebrated shawls are manufactured, known in commerce by the inappropriate name of 'red camel's hair.' As the fleece does not appear to have deteriorated in the compara- tively warm climate of South Carolina, the distinctive character of the race is hard to be obliterated, while in the northern region of the United States this character can not well fail to be perma- nent. Viewed in this light, the introduction of this animal prom- ises to be of more value to the agriculture of the United States than that of almost any other animal." Manv other similar reports were made by committees of fair m z o o 0 < 24 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. associations about this time, and they show how favorably the new industry was regarded. However, the conclusion can not be avoided that the highly exaggerated statements appearing in these reports added to the enthusiasm of the time. It is possible that a few fleeces sold at $8 per pound, but in a search for authority it is learned that one man quoted another and one newspaper quoted another, and so on, but the purchaser was never located. At one time this matter was in warm discussion in the agricultural press, and correspondents demanded to know who sold the fleece and who bought it, but their inquiries appear not to have been answered. The most definite statement possibly that can be made regarding this matter is by Mrs. Harriet E. Davis White, a daughter of Doctor Davis. She says: "The fleece of the Davis Cashmere goat was very fine, and some of it was sold to parties in Paisley for manufacturing their famous shawls; and a Germantown com- pany also bought some of the fleece and it brought $6 to $8 per pound. So the records state truly, though some have tried to dis- pute this fact. Owing to the lack of proper machinery, I presume, the fleece did not find a ready sale for several years. I saw some of the first fleece ever dyed and sent to Paisley." It will be observed that Mrs. White refers in this quotation to the "Davis Cashmere goat/' which has already been mentioned as among the original importation. No one can doubt the accuracy of her statement, because the marketable fiber of the Cashmere goat- — the pashm — is exceedingly fine, only three or four ounces being the yield per goat, and the shawls made of it frequently sold for $1,500 each; and it is easy to believe that this hair, which was worth $2 per pound in the most inaccessible portions of Thibet, and having a number of additional charges put upon it as it gravi- tated toward the manufacturing mills, would bring the amounts mentioned by Mrs. White. As there was at the time much con- fusion as to the exact breed of the goats, there was the same con- fusion regarding the fleece and the prices. There were then no mills in the country to fabricate the fleece, and not enough was produced for export to establish a standard. With reference to +he fleece of the Angora goat, the following is taken from the Country Gentleman of January 9, 1868: "The conductors of that excellent Journal, the Boston Advertiser, ad- dressed Mr. Geo. W. Bond, the leading dealer in such material at Boston, for information, and in reply Mr. Bond expresses the opinion that if the Cashmere, or Angora, hair 'could be obtained here in sufficient quantities to warrant the starting of machinery suitable to its manufacture and could be offered at about $1 per pound, a steady and permanent demand for it would be created.' A.NGORA GOAT RAISING. S> He says, however, thai il is consumed by less thai] a dozen houses in Europe, and that, in fact, one firm consumes aboul one-third of the whole supply, and has agents in Turkey purchasing the same. Nearly the whole supply comes from Asia Minor, whence the exports for the past three years have averaged aboul t,000,000 pounds per annum. An inferior quality conic- from South Africa. As to its value here, he adds: 'Of the specimens raised in this country which I have seen, some fleeces have been very handso hut there has been a greal want of uniformity in the various Jots — souk1 fleeces being very poor and kempy, probably being en on the common goat, while others were as handsome as any thai I have ever seen from any quarter. The value in England lias. I lieve, at no time exceeded 4s., or $1, per pound, unless it may have been for some exceptional parcels of great beauty and desired for some fancy manufacture in small quantities. The highest quotations in England to-day are 2s. 7d., or 62 cents, for the choicest quality down to 2s., or 48 cents, for good. * * * I doubt whether there ever was a time when 1,000 pounds of it could have been sold here for $1 in gold per pound; but a short time since, when fringes and tassels made, of it became so fashionable, it is possible that a few of the choicest and most beautiful fleeces might have been sold at $4 and $6 per pound/ " A tabular statement of prices of mohair in England may he found in the chapter devoted to prices. Doctor Davis remained in the goat business but a few years, and his flock was disposed of to various persons. The world will probably never know just who all the parties were that secured them, An error has heretofore been made in writings of several persons — the present author among the number — in stating that the Davis flock of "purebreds" was purchased by Colonel Peters . But information recently coming to light corrects this error to some extent. A. 0. Osborn, of Waterville, N. Y., published an article in the Country Gentleman of January 21, L864, from which the following is extracted: "In the fall of 1854, Dr. I). C. Ambler, Col. William Osborn, and myself purchased of James B. Davis, Esq., of Columbia, S. C, three 'Cashmere goats' — one yearling buck, one yearling ewe, full blood, and one yearling half- breed — with the view of breeding for profit." Colonel Peters published an article in the American Agricul- turist for November, 1876, in which he said: "In the year 1854 1 visited the farm of Doctor Davis, near Columbia, S. C. and found his stock of purebreds to consist o( seven females and two males. Besides these he had one purebred Tibet ewe, several head of one-half Tibet and one-half Angora, and quite a number of 26 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. grade females bred from the common short-haired ewes of the country and his Angora buck. I purchased all of the purebred Angoras and several of the Tibet-Angoras." What Colonel Peters lias said can hardly be doubted, although the following statement to the author by Mrs. Harriet E. Davis White apparently disputes its accuracy: "Doctor Davis had bred the Cashmeres with the common goats and had a fine flock of graded goats when Colonel Peters visited him to purchase goats from him. They discussed the value of the fleece and Colonel Summer said it would prove equal to the 'golden fleece' in a commercial way, in time. All of the purebred goats were not sold to Colonel Peters. Doctor Davis retained an interest which he did not dispose of to Colonel Peters until Doctor Davis's health began to fail ; and Col. A. G. Summer also held an interest in them. Goats had been sold to other men before this sale to Colonel Peters. The original contract between Richard Peters, A. G. Summer, and Jas. B. Davis is still in the possession of his daughter" (Mrs. White). The contradictions which stand out in the three quotations above are probably apparent only. It is easy to believe that the goats referred to by Mr. Osborn were purchased before Colonel Peters purchased any and are probably the ones referred to by Mrs. White as having been sold before the purchase by Colonel Peters. We have a statement of record that one was purchased by Col- onel Davenport, who lived near Harpers Ferry, and another by Col. Wade Hampton, of South Carolina. A. 0. Osborn, in the same article from which he is quoted above, refers to his venture into the industry in this way : "In October I left home for Australia. Doctor Ambler, in the meantime and before winter, found a place for the ewes with a few owned by Colonel Davenport, near Har- pers Ferry, Va., and thither they were sent. They remained with Colonel Davenport's flock until 1859, when they and their increase were exchanged with Richard Peters, Esq., of Atlanta, Ga., who had purchased most of Doctor Davis's flock, for Brahmin cattle." One fact stands out prominently in the early history of the Angora goat industry in this country, namely, that previous to the outbreak of the Rebellion practically all of the Angora goats had passed to the ownership of Col. Richard Peters, of Atlanta, Ga. He took great interest in the little animal and its possibilities and is generally looked upon as the real founder of the industry in the United States. When we reflect that there was no real Angora goat industry in this country until within the last three years, we must reckon with others as well as Colonel Peters. Credit must first be given to Doctor Davis for his public spiritedness ; and ANGORA GOAT RAISING. whether his goats came from Persia, as he believed, or from Angora, there can be no doubl that they wen- the equal of any that ever came to this country, with many evidences of superiority. Pull credit is due to Colonel Peters, who gathered together the rem- nants of the Davis flock and distributed their progeny over a large area of our country, and preserved a nucleus of the flock when the industry appeared to result elsewhere in failure. The outbreak of the Rebellion played havoc with the industry, with the final result that the flocks in the Eastern and Southern section- of our country were annihilated, with the exception of a very few in isolated localities. Some goats, however, had previously been sent into California, and from that State had spread back into Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona, and north into Oregon. The Western men who adopted the industry and finally saved it to the country were William M. Landrum, C. P. Bailey, and John S. Harris. It is no less gratifying to these men than it is to the thousands of goat breeders now in the United States, who delight in honoring them, that they still live to see the work of their earlier years now being crowned with abundant success. Thus we have had three stages in the establishment of the An- gora goat industry. Each of them has been all-important in its day, and all credit can not, therefore, be given to any one man. Previous to the outbreak of the Kebellion, there were many fair-sized flocks in the South and Southwest. There were smaller flocks in many of the Northern and Western States. Dr. Diehl, in 1863, mentions flocks containing from 300 to 1,200 and more in Atlanta, Ga. ; Gallatin and Nashville, Tenn. ; Russellville, Frankfort, Paris, and Georgetown, Ky. ; Greenville, Lebanon, Montgomery, and Bucyrus, Ohio; Green County, Ind. ; Chicago. Decatur, and Evanston, 111.; St. Louis, Maramee, and Fayette, Mo. ; Baltimore, Md. ; Leavenworth, Ivans.; Brownsville, Pittsburg, Washington, and Philadelphia, Pa.; New York City, N. Y.; Bos- ton and Belmont, Mass.; Austin, Tex.; and in the States of Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, California, and in other localities. Soon after the close of the war they spread out into the West, principally into Texas and California, where the natural conditions were most favorable and where they have, quite unknown to the public, in- creased wonderfully in numbers and, in the light of recent events, in importance also. In the spring of 1864 Colonel Peters sold two 16-months-old bucks to William M. Landrum, of San Joaquin County, Cal. They were sent from Atlanta to St. Louis by express; thence by steamer to Fort Leavenworth, and thence on foot to California with a wagon train. They subsisted on the journey by browsing on what 28 ANGORA GOAT RAISING- other animals rejected, and arrived at their destination uninjured and in good condition. Mr. Landrum exhibited them at the State fair the same year, being awarded a silver goblet and $25 in cash. One of the goats, after siring about thirty kids, died of snake bite ; the other one, famous on the Pacific coast under the name of "Billy Atlanta," lived to be ten years old, and then was accident- ally killed. He had sired about two thousand kids. This buck won the sweepstakes prize over all competitors at every State fair down to his death; and Colonel Peters stated in 1876 that his numerous descendants were scattered all along the Pacific coast, and that "his blood courses in the veins of over one-half the Angora flocks in that part of the Union, estimated to approximate 70,000." Colonel Peters further stated "that about one-third of the pure- breds introduced into California were contributed from the first and original (Davis) importations of 1849, and that their blood is present in probably two-thirds or three-fourths of the Angora stock on the Pacific coast." Mr. Landrum was in California from 1850 to 1883, after which time he went to Texas. He is now at Laguna, Tex. There have been from time to time various other importations of Angoras from Turkey and South Africa, which will be discussed in a chapter to follow. These were widely disseminated and the blood of most of them has been exceedingly beneficial to the in- dustry in this country. During the last two or three years a wonderful interest has been manifested in the Angora goat. The one great factor which brought this about was the information which was published and widely disseminated by the Bureau of Animal Industry. The large flocks of the West and Southwest have been divided up and distributed throughout the country. They may now be found in every State and Territory, including Alaska, and a few head are in Porto Rico. A considerable number are in Canada, where they are thriving well. Five years ago very few people, comparatively, had ever seen a goat of this breed, but now the Angora is a familiar sight in hundreds of localities. There are three principal reasons for the present interest in the industry, which are as follows: (1) They are very effective brushwood destroyers; (2) they are mohair producers; (3) they yield a carcass that is palatable and highly nutritious. There is a chapter devoted in this work to each of these phases of the industry, and therefore further discussion will not be entered upon here. A history of the goats themselves is not a complete history of the industry. One of the reasons why the industry did not become ANGORA GOAT RAISIN'*;. _> | a brilliant success from the firsl was because there was in this coun- try no mills for fabricating the fleece which was produced, and the fleeces that were produced were not good enough for exporting. Goat raisers began to reap profits when mills were established here, and therefore the mohair manufacturer and the Angora goat raiser have conjointly established a great industry which is destined to fill a large place in the live stock industry of the United Stat- CHAPTER IL DESCRIPTION OF THE ANGORA GOAT. Pureforeds Ruined i>> Crossing with Kurd Goat. Before proceeding with a description of the Angora goat, it is well to advert to a bit of history in connection with the mohair industry of Asia Minor. In 1867, when Israel S. Diehl, bearing a commission from the United States Commissioner of Agriculture, visited the province of Angora, he found but a few hundred looms working up mohair fleeces where once there were from 1,700 to 1,800 in operation. These few were struggling hopelessly against the fatal competition of European machinery and the aggressive policy of the European governments. The fleeces were exported to Europe for fabrication, thus rendering Turkey tributary to the monopoly then existing in this industry in Europe. The European demand for the raw material was so great and the facilities for fabricating it so much better and cheaper, that Turkey was compelled by the laws of trade to export the raw mohair. This is an instance where the prosperity of an industry almost proved to be its ruin, as we shall see. In order to meet this great European demand for raw material, the Turkish mohair growers, without wise foresight, began the practice of crossing the Angora upon the Kurd goat of that country. The inevitable result of such a practice was the adulteration of the blood of every Angora in Asia Minor so far as anyone knows or can judge by investigation at this time. Description ot a Purebred Angora Goat. This ruinous practice has left the world without a purebred Angora goat apparently. There does not even appear to be a record anywhere of a description of a purebred animal, except the very brief one of Henry 0. Binns, who spent twenty years in the mohair districts of Asia Minor between 1864 and 1886, and copied here- with: "The pure Angora in his prime is about the size of a five- months-old Cape (Cape of Good Hope) kid, with small thin horns, wooled all over the body, the hair almost covering the eyes; exceedingly delicate, and so subject to disease that no one cared to keep him. What is to-day called the purebred Angora is like the ANGORA GOAT RAISING. 31 English thoroughbred horse — the result of crossing and recrossing until body, class, points, etc., have attained to what ifi generally considered thai the thoroughbred Angora ought to be." Srhreiner's opinion of what a purebred Angora was, is as follows: 'kI think it is certain that the original purebred white mohair goat was a small, very refined, delicate animal, of great beauty, clipping at twelve-months' growth of fleece, about from 2 to 4 pounds (according to age and sex — kids considerably less), of dazzling white, fine, soft, silky, very lustrous mohair, curling in ringlets from 10 to 18 inches long, with merely the minimum of oil in its fleece requisite to the growth of hair of the highest ex- cellence, so small in amount as to be inappreciable to the unskilled observer. It was perfectly clothed in every part; it had short, silky, curly hair about the face and down the lower parts of the legs to the hoofs; a soft, silky, curly ckuif (tuft on the forehead), and small, thin, light-colored horns. The ewe was of course smaller and finer than the ram, and had only one kid at a birth (of this there is abundant evidence)." Dr. John Bachman, a well-known naturalist, gives this brief description: "The Angora goat, more especially the varieties it has produced, is described by Hasselquist (1722-1752), Buffon (1707-1788), Pennant (1726-1798), and others as in general of a beautiful milk-white color, with short legs, and black, spreading spirally twisted horns. The hair on the whole body is disposed in long pendant spiral ringlets; its ears are pendulous, and the horns of the female, instead of divaricating as in the male, turn backward, and are much shorter in proportion." Description of the Modern Angora Goat. The facts stated in the above paragraph make it apparent that a description of the Angora goat of to-day would not necessarily apply to the purebred Angora of fifty or seventy-five years ago. As no effort has been made by an association or body of goat breeders to adopt a description of our ideal Angora goat, any de- scription that may be made is largely a matter of the individual opinion of the one who makes it. However, there is singular unanimity among goat breeders as to what the best Angora should be. The Angora goat is smaller than the ordinary common goat. It weighs from 60 to 100 pounds, although some are frequently found that weigh considerably more, especially if fat. The back should be straight, with shoulders and hips of equal height. A sloping rump is very objectionable. The chest should be broad, indicating good constitution, and the body round, legs short and 32 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. strong. The head should not droop, but be clean cut, with bright eye and broad muzzle; avoid a pinched nostril. The horns are grayish — never black ; in the buck they are heavy, with an inward twist, inclining backward and to the outside. The doe's horns rise immediately upward and backward, slightly outward, with very little inclination to twist. In most animals the ears are pendant and from 6 to 8 inches long, with an average width of about 2 inches, and well pointed. In some animals the ears are fox-like — short, pointed, and pricked. There appears to be no other differences between the goats having the different kinds of ears. The fleece of the animal should be pure white, although there are colored Angoras. No colored spots on the skin should be tol- erated. The fleece should cover the entire body — as dense on the belly and neck as on the back and sides; should extend to the ears and jaw. While some are breeding for the topknot and for mohair on the face and lower legs, this is not an evidence that the animal is better than another that may not have the head and face covered. The mohair should grow to the length of about 10 inches during a year, and hang in tight ringlets or wavy curls. The curl should extend entirely up to the skin. "Slipey" mohair, or that which has lost its curl and is dry, fluffy, and with but little luster, is an indication of a poor goat or one in poor health. Poor feed tends to bring about such a condition in the fleece. Are there Nonshedding Goats ? Yes; there are Angoras which do not shed — a very few; there are more which shed at regular intervals of 2 or 3 years. There is no evidence, however, that these animals are a distinct strain of the breed; the fact that they do not shed is probably due to local conditions, such as their health or their care. Hornless Angoras. There are a few hornless Angoras, but not many. They seem; like the nonshedders above, to be accidents rather than a distinctive type, or strain. Colonel Black says he has no doubt that the horn- less goats are a "distinct breed/' It is probably true that by proper selection in breeding a hornless type might be produced. Efforts in this direction are already being made with a flock in which Colonel Black is interested. Hornless Angoras, however, are not rare in Asia Minor. Absence of 111 Odor. A characteristic of ^he common goat that is very objectionable is the ever-present offensive odor from the bucks. In the Angora - a a o <9 o — +* n <& — ■< - o S M 5j > H X3 o - M a K & - O M CJ _ PQ Q - H 7. 54 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. appears to be no further opportunity for expansion under the con- ditions and method s which now obtain and the Turk will be slow to change his methods or to accept new ideas. Production of Mohair in the United States. The census collected statistics on "mohair and goat hair" (all was probably mohair), and ascertained the quantity produced in 1899 to be 961,364 pounds. The Bureau of Animal Industry, however, in correspondence with some of the leading mills which handle mohair, found that the four largest consumers used 1,077,- 000 pounds in 1899. Three of them used 1,089,550 pounds in 1900, and 1,327,095 in 1901. It might be argued that the mills purchased mohair which had been held over in store from a pre- vious year; but that hardly explains the increased production for three consecutive years, and leads one again to suspect the accuracy of the census figures. It must be remembered, also, that several mills which were not mentioned consumed a considerable quantity of mohair. So it is pretty safe to say that the production of Amer- ican mohair was about 1,000,000 pounds in 1899, with a small annual increase for the years since that time. The accompanying table compiled from census reports, shows for 1899 the quantity of mohair produced by States and Terri- tories, the total value of the same, and the value per pound in each State. The average value per pound for the whole country was 27.8 cents. ANGORA GOAT RAISING. ■ >■> QUANTITY AM) VALUE OF MOHAIR AM) GOAT HVIK PBODUCSD i.v 1899. FROM REPORTS OF THE TWELFTH I I..N State. Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Florida Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana Indian Territory Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Massachusetts.. Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Mexico New York North Carolina. North Dakota . . Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania. .. Rhode Island... South Carolina. South Dakota . . Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia... Wisconsin Wyoming Total Quantity. 27 1 169 1 11 Pounds. 469 030 763 ,?70 ,843 465 20 726 .688 .793 867 760 .080 .066 524 385 105 ,120 .833 556 268 ,203 ,750 ,801 ,590 30 ,545 383 416 ,220 469 693 ,780 720 10 73 693 486 810 459 5 343 000 140 514 100 10 2 5 10 113 1 267 1 1 274 961,364 Value. Dollars. 140 7,326 487 45,665 550 177 8 215 3,989 751 282 126 8.607 1,077 163 92 21 396 419 180 84 2,798 824 1.725 3,672 9 29,917 155 97 448 112 187 74.363 242 2 26 683 438 77.478 142 2 113 1,097 43 145 2.112 $267,875 Value per pound. CV-nts. 20 8 -'T.'.t 25 3 269 20.8 38 40 296 34.1 27 32 5 16.6 30.6 26.5 31 23.8 20 35.3 22.8 32.3 31.7 27.4 30 30 35 30 26.4 40 23 36.7 24 26 7 20.3 33.3 20 35.6 40.3 29 28.2 31 40 33 27.4 30.7 28.2 29.7 27.8 Foreign Uloliair in Competition. Returns to the Bureau of Animal Industry from the mills men- tioned above show that they consumed 1,119,465 pounds of im- ported mohair in 1899, 369,475 pounds in 1900, and 1S;U37 pounds in 1901. The reduced quantity of the imported product was not due to the increased quantity of the domestic product, for that increase was but slight, but to the fact that mohair manufac- tures have not been "in fashion'* for two or three years. Official reports show that we imported from Turkey, during the fiscal year of 1901, mohair to the value of $68,794.56.' Turkey is sending to England about 9,000,000 pounds of mo- 56 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. hair annually, and the Cape of Good Hope and other British pos- sessions 11,253,470 pounds; but so long as we are importers and not seeking a foreign market, these do not enter into competition with us. The conditions of our own country are so well adapted to the Angora industry that the time is not far in the future when it is probable that we shall produce more than domestic consump- tion demands ; then we shall attack the problem of foreign compe- tition with every feaure in our favor. Mohair Product of Turkey. There are no exact statistics available on the mohair production of Turkey; but it is known that practically all of the produfct is exported and that it goes to Bradford, England. The reports of receipts of mohair in that market, therefore, will enable us to form an estimate of the Turkish production, and they are quoted here- with for a series of years, as given by Schreiner upon good author- ity: Pounds. 1875 5.321.000 1876 4 420,000 1877 5,984.000 1878 4.641,000 1879 5.831.000 1880 8.245.000 1881 4.221,780 1882 9.065 250 1883 7 256.960 1884 9,019 860 1885 6,373,640 Pounds. 1886 9,825,320 1887 5,612.550 1888 7 509.070 1889 8,844.080 1890 4,120,220 1891 6,496.115 1892 7.774,541 1893 8.005,887 1894 6.889.165 1895 11,000,000 Year. Pounds. 4,829.410 10,701.390 10,161,869 12.351.342 8.538,374 Value. 1896 Si. 842. 734 1897 3.611.931 1 898 3.888.922 1899 4.392,367 1900 2,903,116 The returns for the years 1896 to 1900 are from reports of the Section of Foreign Markets of the Department of Agriculture, and are declared exports from Turkey to England. The reason for the wide fluctuations between years, which are sometimes very great, can be explained only on the supposition that not all of the mohair product of one year was exported, but was held back and placed upon the market the next year. The product could not vary in quantity as the exports have done. The average annual exports for 1896 to 1900 was 9,316,477 pounds, with an average annual value for the same period of $3,327,814. Moh&ir Product of Cape Colony. With Cape Colony, as with Turkey, estimates of the production < u H x O ■/. O d n Q w 58 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. of mohair must be based upon the exports ; practically none of the product is consumed in the Colony. Schreiner furnishes the official figures of exports of mohair from 1857 to 1898, and the same are quoted herewith: Pounds. 1857 870 1858 1859 502 1860 385 1861 784 1862 1,036 1863 1,354 1864 8,104 1865 6,992 1866 21,165 1867 50.832 1868 102,570 1869 260,932 1870 403,153 1871 536,292 1872 876.861 1873 765,719 1874 1,036,570 1875 1,147.453 1876 1,323,039 1877 1,433,774 Pounds. 1878 1,358.395 1879 2.288.116 18,80 2.590.232 188*1 4.U6.128 1882 3,776,657 1883 4.443.971 1884 ■... 4.329,355 1885 5.251.301 1886 5,421,006 1887 7.153,730 1888 9.598.768 1889 9.442,213 1890 9,235,249 1891 9.953.548 1892 10,516,837 1893 9,457,278 1894 10.003.173 1895 11,090,449 1896 10,001.028 1897 12.583,601 1898 10,876,014 The Section of Foreign Markets of the Department of Agri- culture has compiled statistics of exports for the years 1896 to 1900 showing the exports from British Possessions, including Cape of Good Hope, Madras, Bombay, Natal, and places of lesser impor- tance, and the same are quoted herewith: Year. 1896 1897, 1898. 1899. 1900. Pounds. 10.024,399 12,058,490 10.686,730 14,060.404 9,437,324 Value. B2. 63 1.560 3,088,130 3,152.387 4.155.986 3,055.262 The average annual production for these five years was 11,- 253,470 pounds, with an annual average value of $3,216,665. The Question of Overproduction. The question of overproduction of mohair has already been raised, but the most careful scanning of future conditions fails to reveal such a situation. The fact must be kept in mind that the larger part of the domestic product is of inferior quality and. of course, brings a reduced price. The same is true of the South African product. The great demand now is for a quality suitable for plushes, and these cheaper grades do not answer the purpose; consequently the demand for the low grades is growing weaker and weaker. The result is that the mohair growers are doing all that energy and intelligence can accomplish to produce the best — the kind which the market demands now and shall always call for. ANGORA GOAT RAISING. 58 While we in this country arc already doing wonders toward this desirable end, it will require many years to produce enough to supply domestic consumption. Therefore the coming of the day when we shall he producing a surplus of firsi quality of mohair is far in the future. In this connection it will be interesting to read an article from H. M. Williamson, editor of the Oregon Agri- culturist and Rural Northwest (September, 1902), a gentleman who has had a grasp of the Angora goat situation in this country for many years: "As to the probable growth in the use of mohair we can get some indications from what has already been done. The- exports of mohair from Turkey increased from 1,247,000 pounds in 1839 to about 11,000,000 pounds in 1895. The exports from South Africa increased from 870 pounds in 1857 to over 11,000,000 pounds in 1895. In a period of fifty years ending with 1895 the world's supply of mohair increased from about 2,000,000 pounds lo 22,000,000 pounds. The period of most rapid increase was from 1875 to 1895, when the combined exports from Turkey and South Africa rose from 6,468,453 pounds to a little over 22,000,000 pounds. Although there was a large increase in the exports of mohair from Turkey prior to 1875, there was no material change or reduction of prices. The lowest price for Turkish mohair at Bradford, England, between 1862 and 1876 was 2s. 4d. per pound, and the highest was 3s. lOd. In 1876 the price was 3s. 9d. The price then began to go down and went down pretty steadily until 1888, when the price of Turkish mohair in Bradford ranged from 12d. to 14d. per pound. The total supply of mohair that year was in excess of 17,000,000 pounds, as compared with less than 6,500,- 000 pounds thirteen years before. The rate of increase of pro- duction during that interval had been too rapid, apparently. Since 1888 the increase in the production of mohair has been at a much lower rate. It is not probable that the world's supply last year exceeded 25,000,000 pounds, or 8,000,000 pounds more than the supply in 1888, showing not merely a greatly reduced percentage of increase for the thirteen years as compared with the previous thirteen, but an actual falling off of increase from 10,500,000 pounds for the first period to 8,500,000 pounds for the second period. Prices during the past thirteen years have fluctuated ma- terially, hut the prices of Turkish mohair have never fallen below those of 1888 and for the past five years have been from 25 to 50 per cent higher than they were in that year. We may assume, therefore, that the rate of growth of increase in the use of mohair has been sufficient to take up fully the increase in production. This applies strictly, however, only to Turkish mohair. There has gO ANGORA GOAT RAISING. been a serious falling off in the price of South African mohair in the past year or two, due to the fact that the demand is for finer fibered hair than most of that produced in South Africa. The production of mohair has grown comparatively slowly in South Africa since 1888. The mohair growers were, however, more pros- perous than the wool growers until very recently. We lack knowl- edge upon which to base a guess as to the future increase of pro- duction there, but know of no reason which will operate to make the increase more rapid in the future than it has been since 1888. The United States is the only country in which the increase in the production of mohair is likely to be very rapid in the imme- diate future. The production in this country in 1900 was about the same as it was in South Africa in 1875. If production in- creases as fast in this country as it did in South Africa we shall be producing over 5,000,000 pounds in 1910. In view of the pres- ent volume of mohair produced in the world and the rate at which its use has been increasing, an increase of 4,000,000 pounds in the production in the United States in ten years should not dis- turb the market or injuriously affect prices. It is possible that the increase may be greater than 4,000,000 pounds. It would be possible to increase the production in ten years from 1,000,000 to 10,000,000 pounds. There is no probability of such an in- crease and it would not be desirable. To make such an increase would mean no improvement in the average quality of the mohair produced in this country. "There is already too much low-grade mohair produced both in South Africa and the United States, but the conditions are not such as to warrant any fear of overproduction of mohair of fine quality for many years to come, nor is it likely that the prices of mohair equal in quality to Turkish will average lower than they have been during the past four or five years." If a moment's thought is given to the many uses to which mohair is now put and to which it may be put in the future, it is difficult to conceive of a surplus at any time. It must not be forgotten that mohair has a field all its own in most respects, and it is a thrifty competitor in some other fields. Its beauty and durability will recommend it for a host of things which are now made of wool or other fiber. The pages devoted to mohair and mohair manufactures are full of reasons why there is not likely to be an overproduction. The most essential thing at this time is to have mohair divorced from the caprices of fashion and be- come a staple on the market as distinct as wool or cotton. o — o < K O o CHAPTER V. BROWSING AND PASTURAGE. Goats Are Browsers oy Nature. Goats are browsers by nature, and there is no vegetation which they will eat in preference to the leaves and twigs of bushes. This fact establishes them at once as an intolerable nuisance in the orchard and the garden or any other place where desirable shrub- bery may be growing, but it was this characteristic which com- mended them to the farmers of this country as destroyers of use- less brushwood. They are omnivorous eaters of brushwood, briers, and weeds, but seem to be careful to avoid that character of vege- tation which other kinds of live stock prefer. Every leaf and twig within their reach is greedily eaten, even to most of the bushes and weeds that are considered poisonous to other ruminants, while a remarkably few weeds are passed by. They will desert the finest clover and blue grass for such an outlay. As Brushwood Ha terminators. A patch of brushwood which may be so dense that a man can not get through it will soon be converted into an open woodlot if Angoras are permitted to operate upon it. In this effort to get the leaves and twigs, they will stand on their hind feet and strip a sapling to a height of five or six feet. They will do more than that. With an instinct approaching human intelligence, a single animal will get astride a small sapling and ride it down and hold it there until it is completely stripped of leaves and twigs by as many goats as may be able to get at it. This will explain why so many saplings are seen which are stripped to a greater height than any goat could possibly reach. Oftentimes they will strip the bark from young trees. Their habits in this respect, however, are erratic. Sometimes they will run among the saplings for weeks without touching the bark of a single one, and then, as if for the very fun of the work, all will begin some morning to tear the bark off most vigorously. A thousand men have wondered why the goat had not been used as a brush exterminator years and years ago, for his habits have been known since the days of Abraham and even before; but ANGORA GOAT RAISING 63 lie was not so employed, and when he was recently brought to the front as an economic factor he was hailed as a "modern discovery/' The credit for the discovery of the goat as an economic factor in the matter of destroying brush is generally conceded to Dr. J. B. Standley. of Iowa, lie read an article in a consular report con- cerning the value of milch goats in a foreign country, hut the objection was made that they destroyed every tree and shrub with which they came in contact. Instantly the thought occurred to him that the characteristic which made the goat a nuisance abroad would make it beneficial on his large tract of land which was idle and useless because of its dense growth of underbrush. Acting upon the thought, he went into Texas and secured a carload of Angora goats and turned them onto his land, with the gratifying result, now duplicated in every State of the Union, that the brush- wood had met a master. Upon his recommendation, based upon his experience, thousands of goats were taken into Iowa for clear- ing brush land some time before they were seriously considered elsewhere. Dr. Standley's opinion of goats as brush destroyer s is given herewith : "Land can be cleared of the worst brush known to this country for a little less than nothing by Angora goats. Some one asks how. Simply this: Angora goats will pay a profit and live on leaves and weeds, leaving the land cleaner and nicer than can be done in any other way. Many persons have the idea that goats bark the trees and in that way kill them. They also think that goats wholly eat the hazel and other small brush. There is nothing in this. The way in which goats kill brush is by continually cropping the leaves, which serve as the lungs of the brush. The continued cropping of the leaves makes the brush, as it were, sick, caused by lack of nourishment. This sickness sink- to the very extremity of the roots, thus preventing sprouting. Any and all kinds of bushes are in this way easily killed. Some kinds of brush and some kinds of stumps are, of course, much harder to kill than others. Many varieties are entirely killed by one summer's trimming of the leaves. Almost any are killed by two years' trimming. To clear the worst brush do not cut any- thing that the goats can reach or bend. The tallest or largest is better not cut. All trees and saplings should be cut and the goats will keep all the sprouts down. If stumps are allowed to sprout one year before the goats are turned in, the sprouts need not be cut. About 200 goats for 40 acres of brush will in two or three years make the land as clean as a garden. If the pasture has only patches of brush, turn in a few goats and it will make more grass for other stock than if the goats were not in. They eat very little grass when they can get leaves. Goats even like weeds better 64 ANGORA GOAT RAIDING. than grass. In clearing brush land in the old way by grub and plow there are always left many eyesores in the way of brushy nooks and bends and steep places which can not be plowed. "There are millions of acres of land in nearly every State in the Union which might be much more than doubled in value by . the use of Angora goats at no cost at all. Commence and count the worth of your land, then the fencing, and see if you can afford to leave your brush land so nearly worthless for all time. Then count the cost of grubbing and plowing, if indeed such land is susceptible to the plow. No man can afford to grub and plow brush land in this day and age of the world any more than he can afford to plant a large field of corn without a planter. In hilly or mountainous portions of the country the Angora goat can be made to do a great service in the way of clearing the underbrush, when the land will bring grass after the brush is gone. It would surely be a paying business to buy up large tracts of rough land in the mountain districts, or indeed any brush land in the United States, and clear the brush and set in grass. Afterwards, if the owner liked other stock better, he might dispense with the An- goras. In many places where the country is too bare to furnish sheep with sufficient feed goats will do exceedingly well. In many places where leaves arc abundant and there is scarcely any grass making it impossible to profitably keep sheep, goats will do ad- mirably." The following testimony of Prof. C. D. Woods, director of the Maine Experiment Station, shows what the Angoras will do in that part of New England: "In May, 1902, six ewes, one buck, and five kids were put in an acre of young woodland of a mixed growth, most of the trees being three to six inches in diameter. There was a quite thick growth of underbrush. The small under- brush of birch, maple, hazel bush, etc., have been cleaned up so that where there are no alders or evergreens the ground under the trees is as clean as though it had been burned over. Sweet fern they do not like very well, but they have cleaned all of the hardhack out of this piece. Ferns and brakes have been eaten to some ex- tent. They have eaten the leaves and young sprigs of bushes in preference to grass. Birches two inches or more in diameter they have not injured, but they have stripped the bark from every maple. Even maple trees six inches in diameter have been thus killed. We have found them to be fond of the bark of apple trees, even eating the bark from old trees. "To clean up birch or evergreen woodland, they have proven very effective. There has been practically no cost for the sum- mer's keeping. The twelve goats have been kept without other < o Q O O p « n o «: o o o P H « 66 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. food on one .acre of young woodland. They have required no care other than an occasional visit to see that they are all right and that they have water." Here is the experience of another New England gentleman, W. 0. Corning, of New Milford, Conn. : "I first fenced off ten acres with American wire fence thirty inches high, and no goat has ever jumped over that fence yet. I also built a shed for them to stay in nights and rainy days, which they nightly utilize, and at any signs of a shower or storm they march into that shed in military precision, and when the storm is over out they go in like proces- sion to resume their daily task, like the busy bee. On the 10th of May these goats were turned into this lot and it was soon evident that it would be but a short time before they would need a fresh field. On the 19th of June, just thirty-nine days after turning the goats in, I had to cut down quite a lot of chestnut trees to give them leaves to feed upon. This piece of land looked as if a cyclone had struck it. The goats broke the small brush down and devoured the leaves of sumachs eight and ten feet high. Grass soon began to grow, and the present indications are that next year a fine crop of grass will grow where before it has been almost bar- ren, now fertilized by these goats. "The work they have done is beyond my expectations, and what has been said about their efficiency as brush or land cleaners that I have read or heard has not been overdrawn." Now, let us have another testimony, this one from Hon. James S. Hogg, ex-Governor of Texas, who had a flock of 104 head when he made this statement: "Goats have a predilection for desserts very much like the human race, but I never discovered this until I made this recent purchase. My goats go out in the morning and feast on briers, young saplings, cacti, and other substantial food products until about noon, when they turn their attention to this gear's growth of limbs, including leaves, where they cut six or seven wide swaths, then along about eventide they finish up on about 104 saucers of poison oak leaves. They arranged the bill of fare to suit themselves and manifested no desire for a change. They are perfectly willing to work for their board and give me their clothes. They are doing good work, too." A. Kemble, of Muscatine, Iowa, was the gentleman who readily paid $1,400 for the sweepstakes buck at the Kansas City exhibit in 1902, and thousands have questioned his business judgment if rot his sanity; but the gentleman knew what he was about, for he was already a goat raiser, and he knew their value. The following are some of his remarks after he purchased Aztec, the prize buck mentioned above: "Last March my sons came into possession of FOUR FAMOUS ANGORAS. Bred by D. C. Taylor & Son, Lake Valley, New Mexico. No. 1. Toltcc- No 2 Monte- zuma; No. 3, Champion Aztec; No. 4, Andy Jackson. ' 68 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. the Daniel Hayes ranch over in Illinois. The ranch consisted of about 1,200 acres. Something like 500 acres was in cultivation, but the other 700 was underbrush and land hardly fit for pasture. I undertook the supervision of the property, and the first thing I tried to do was to put as much of it as possible under cultiva- tion. I tried all sorts of schemes to rid the land of the brush and clean it up, but by far the best and surest remedy was the Angora goat scheme. Last May I bought 240 head and they cleared 100 acres in a short time and left a fine growth of blue grass and clover. In another year what was once a tangled wilderness filled with wolves, snakes, and the like, will be the finest pasture land in the country." The curse of the valuable lands of the Hawaiian Islands is a shrub, or small tree, known as lantana. The question with the residents is an important one, as to how to eradicate it. The writer has several times been asked whether goats would not de- stroy this shrub as well as others in the States, but it is only recently that he has seen a statement by a native Hawaiian that goats had been known to destroy this plant utterly and he rec- ommended that they be employed in large numbers for the pur- pose. It is believed they will save 75 per cent of the present cost of clearing the land. It seems they are trying so-called "scientific methods" there by attempting to destroy lantana by parasitic in- sects. The employment of goats may not be so scientific, but it would certainly be more rational, with every chance of better success. Morris Lewis, of Ottawa, 111., has quite recently published the following statement: "In the spring of 1901 I fenced 47 acres of the heaviest brush I ever saw. This land is three miles from Belleville, 111. 1 used. 27-inch woven- wire fencing with two barbed wires on top. On this 47 acres I put 175 Angora wethers. In the fall of 1901 I sold 100 of the wethers and wintered the rest on corn fodder, feeding it on the ground, the goats having the run of the 47 acres and access to a warm, dry shed. I sheared the first of April and the mohair more than paid the expense of wintering. Last spring (March, 1902) I sowed timothy and clo- ver over this land and I did not see the land again until October, when I went to Belleville to see what condition the land was in. There is not a live bush or shrub on the tract and there is a complete stand of timothy and clover. I find that I will need the goats no longer. In the spring I will put cattle on this land and will continue to use it in this way until the stumps are rotted out, when the land will be put in com. A lady whose land ad- ANGORA GOAT RAISING 68 joins this pasture was so well pleased with the result that she put in a load of goats last spring. "Hereafter 1 will keep only a few purebred goats to keep down any sprouts and to eat the weeds along the fence lines. Good goats pay well." The suggestion contained in the following from H. T. Fuchs, Marble Falls, Tex., should be of value on thousands of farms where the cocklebur has almost gained the mastery: "A few years ago the Colorado Kiver washed away a great deal of my field fence and covered the bottom land wi+h cockleburs all along the river. It looked like a forest of cockleburs. To save the crop I had to build a new fence, joining the river on the upper side of the field, so that goats could not keep down the weeds along the river inside of the field, but they kept all the cockleburs eaten up clean so far as they could go. Last winter I hired help to beat down the ripe cockleburs from the dead bushes inside the field and built a new fence of eight wires parallel with the river and opened the whole bottom to the goats this spring after shearing. At that time the cockleburs and elder bushes had entirely covered the entire bottom for the distance of a mile, and it looked like the goats would get lost in there, but after about two months I had the great pleasure to see that the bottom was as clean from cockleburs and elder as pecan gatherers may wish for." At this time there might be added to the testimony of these gentlemen that of every one who has used goats for the same purpose; but, because of this unanimity of sentiment, it is not deemed necessary to produce more testimony here. It is strange, however, that statements of this habit of the Angora goat are the most difficult for people to accept. They believe it is beautiful, that it gives nutritious milk, that it is good to eat by those who have no scruples about the matter, and that its fleece is worked up into fabrics the most beautiful and durable ; but when it is told how they will convert a wilderness into a rich pasture, doubt takes possession. Doubters may be assured that the testimony of the gentlemen who are qouted above is that of thousands of others at this time, and evidences in the way of the cleared land itself may now be seen in every Stale. In those localities where valuable land is completelv subdued by brushwood the goats are considered of more value for the pur- pose of clearing it than for their mohair or meat. Thus they become a most important tool to the farmer. Their value in this respect must be measured by the value of the land which they ren- der cultivable. In Oregon it has been estimated that the average cost of clearing the brush land was $20 per acre; th< cents per pound, and in town I sell it at T> and 6 cents per pound." From George A. Houek, Eugene, Oreg. — "It is better than mutton, being free from the oily taste of sheep meat and partaking somewhat of the flavor of wild meat." Angora mutton should be cooked longer than sheep mutton. If this is not done disappointment is almost certain. Well fattened old goats, if thoroughly cooked, may be made tender and palatable. There is not much to be said about the flesh of the common goat. It is not so generally used as that of the Angora, and in quality is not to be classed with it. The kids of the common goats, however, are considered very fine, and in some parts of the South many grown animals are slaughtered. Flavor of Angora Mutton. A fact noted in connection with Angora mutton, if the goat has been fattened principally on brushwood and weeds, is that it has the game flavor common to the flesh of deer and other Avild game. It is this flavor which has given the name "venison" by some to the flesh of the Angora. There is no reason to doubt the presence of this flavor, for it is well known that flavor may not only be fed into meat, but into milk and eggs as well. All game flavor disappears when the animals are fed grain and grass. One of the first and most important questions that arises in the mind of one who may contemplate engaging in the Angora goat raising is, Is there a market for the products? The same ques- tion arises in connection with any other line of stock raising or commercial enterprise, and it must be answered satisfactorily if there is to be an investment. Markets for Goats for Meat. It can not be said at this time that there is or will be a market for goats as steady as that for sheep, for the reason that compara- tively few have entered the regular channels of live stock trade; but it can be said that those which have been placed upon the market have been sold without difficulty. Usually the price has been a little below the ruling price for sheep, but it has frequently occurred at Kansas City (where most goats have so far been mar- keted) that a bunch of Angora wethers has brought more than sheep on the same day. This is where they are slaughtered and put upon the retail market as dressed mutton or used for canning. ANGORA GOAT RAISING. lOl The time will soon come when dressed Angora will bo called for. and it will bring as good a price as mutton. There is room now for the Angora as a meat animal. Cattle. sheep, and hogs arc all bringing very high prices and Angora prices are high also, in sympathy with them. The live question just now, however, is not so much where to market them as where to get them. If the industry develops from the best breeding stock, with the purpose of mohair production in view, there will not be any considerable number to go upon the market for some time. Wethers are good mohair producers for seven or eight }Tears; they may be then fattened for market, and then become excellent meat. The demand for a better quality of mohair will have a tendency to throw the poorer grade of goats upon the market as meat, but this quality will grow fewer and fewer every year. From the standpoint of mohair production alone, it would be a grand thing for the industry if three-fourths or more of the An- goras in the country at this time could be sent to the slaughter- house. For some time to come, as in the past, many breeders will continue the practice of building up Angora flocks by crossing Angora bucks upon common does, and then upon the does of the first, second, and third crosses, and so on. The males resulting from such crossing must not be permitted to grow to breeding age. They should be castrated early, for they sometimes breed when very young. The only use to which such wethers can be put is to convert them into meat. The flesh from such crosses is considered to be nearly as good as that of the higher grades. The Milk of Angoras. The Angora is not primarily a milch goat and is not often employed for that purpose. Information at hand shows that the quantity of milk given by an Angora doe is uncertain, and in exceptional cases only does it approach in quantity that produced by the established breeds of milch goats, such as the Toggenburger, Saanen, Maltese, and Nubian. Evidently the reason why the An- gora is so uncertain in milk production is because it has never been bred with that end in view. The established breeds of milch goats have become such after long years of careful breeding — the selection of individuals with specially developed characteristics. This is necessary to insure quantity, quality, and duration of lactation. There appears to be no reason why the Angora might not be developed into a very fair milch goat if such a thing were desirable. But it is deemed wiser to charge the Angora with the duty of 102 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. producing a good fleece and raising a strong and healthy kid. When she does this, she does well. The hair on a good Angora covers the entire body alike, and thus it greatly interferes with the operation of milking. In the Southwest, where the practice of crossing the Angora upon the common and Mexican does has been in vogue, it is said that a good milch animal is frequently produced. The milking strain is very apt, in such cases, to come from the side of the common or Mexican doe. It is stated upon the authority of some of the oldest breeders of the country that the likelihood of finding a good milch goat among Angoras diminishes as the grade of the animal is raised. In this connection the remarks of William Gr. de Coligny, formerly a government officer of Ecuador (now of Springfield, Mass.), and one who had experience in that country with cross- bred Angoras and Nubian goats for milk, are full of interest. "The Angora goat in itself is not a good milch goat at all, but crossed with the Nubian, or Upper Egypt, goat, becomes quite a good milch goat." He states that from such crosses produced in Ecuador the daily yield of milk per head was about 2y2 liters. The crossing of the Nubian and common goat of Ecuador produced a goat with a milk yield of 3y2 liters. There is an abundance of authority that goat's milk is more nearly equal to human milk than that of any other animal, and that of the Angora is equal to that of any other breed of goats. An anlysis of goat's milk for the British Goat Society, with an analysis of cow's milk also for comparison, is shown in the table below. The cow's milk was from a cow which had been a winner at a dairy show : COMPARISON OP ANALYSIS OF GOAT'S AND COW'S MILK. Element. Joafs Milk. Cow's Milk. Per cent. 83.21 7.30 4.18 4.10 1.21 Per cent. 87.56 Butter fat . 3.63 Milk sugar . . 8.81 Ash Total 100 100 The special reason why the milk of the goat is considered so beneficial is. that it is not likely to contain the germs of tubercu- losis. Bovine tuberculosis is so prevalent now-a-days that many people will not touch it if it is not sterilized. .Goats are practically ANGORA GOAT RAISIN' i Utt immune to tuberculosis. It is true thai goats will have this dis- ease if they are inoculated with it, bul they are not at. all Likely to contract it otherwise. The reader, it' interested, Is advised to read the discussion of tuberculosis in the chapter on "Milch goats." CHAPTER VOL LOCALITIES ADAPTED TO ANGORA GOAT RAISING. The Question of Climate. So far as temperature is concerned, no place has been found that is too hot or too cold for Angoras. Although not partial to heat, they will endure it quite as well as sheep. Shade is essential to success if the sunshine is very warm. The climate of Angora, where the breed originated and is still supposed to flourish in its more perfect state, is extreme. A tem- perature as high as 85° F. is registered in the summer and as low as 0° F. in the winter. The United States presents a wider range of temperature, where, in southern Texas and New Mexico, it may go above 100° F. in the summer, and in Idaho as low as 30° F. below zero in winter. The range of localities where An- goras have done well is from Guadalupe Islands, in the Lesser Antilles, to Ukamak Island, belonging to the Alaska Peninsula. M. L. Washburn, superintendent for the Alaska Commercial Com- pany at Kadiak, says: "On Ukamak Island we have a flock of Angora goats, which have increased 60 per cent a year since they were placed there. They have given very good results in mohair, some of which is of good quality and fine texture." William M. Landrum is quoted as follows : "White goats can stand any amount of cold and snow, but sleet and wind are very injurious. On the other hand, they can endure the scorching heat of the Tropics. Their fleece is best at an altitude of from 3,000 to 6,000 feet above the sea level. The fleece never sheds on the Guadalupe Island, 210 miles from San Diego, at an altitude of only from 2,000 to 4,000 feet. I have grown mohair there 2 feet long, of lovely texture." In considering Angora culture it is of importance to study the climate with reference to moisture rather than temperature. It should be remembered that the original home of the goat is high up in the mountains, where the air is not laden with moisture. Under like conditions it thrives best here. It is a historical fact that the first effort to transplant the An- gora goat outside of Asia was a failure on account of these condi- ANGORA GOAT RAISING. In."; tions. This was in 1554, when a few individuals were taken to Holland, but they soon died, owing to the moist climate. The effect of climate has a great deal to do with the character of mohair. On this point John S. Harris, of Salem, Oreg., for- merly of Oakley, Idaho, a gentleman of much experience, is quo- ted: "Mohair grown here in Idaho is very bright when scoured, and, owing to the electric currents which exist in the air, the hair possesses elasticity, a property requisite to mohair. Goats do not grow a long staple here, but, owing to the cold, it is very dense. Neither do they grow so heavy a fleece as in a milder cli- mate, owing to the dryness of the air." Col. W. L. Black, who is a writer upon Angora subjects, and whose experience as a breeder covers a period of thirty years and more, says that the Angora goat will thrive in any part of our country, and the yield of mohair will be greatest in the colder States. He estimates that the yield can be increased fully one pound by removing the goats from Texas to any of the Northern States. Since Colonel Black expressed this opinion, the Angora goat industry has spread into every State of the Union and has in most particulars confirmed his view. Some who have taken them into Northern States and met with losses have been inclined to ascribe their misfortune to the change in climatic conditions, but there is much room for doubt about this. The condition of the goats when shipped, the change in character of feed, exposure in many cases to severe weather, and possibly the development of disease, are more likely to have been the adverse factors than the mere difference in climate. The Character of Soil Desirable. Almost any kind of soil, except wet and marshy land, is suit- able for these goats. Their preference is mountainous or rocky land, where they find it necessary to climb hillsides and cliffs to browse. Such situations not only afford them the most apparent satisfaction in climbing and feeding, but the rocks serve to trim the hoofs, which is a matter of importance ; for on soils devoid of rocks and coarse sand the feet must oftentimes be trimmed by hand. One thing which is essential to successful goat raising is pure drinking water, and no place affords this better than the springs and rivulets of hilly and rocky localities. It must not be understood, however, that rocks and hills are essential, though they afford the ideal to the goat. Some of the best goats in this country are on valley lands. As stated above, almost all kinds of soil are suitable except wet and marshy land. 106 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. Goat? are not partial to water in any form — in the soil or as rain, snow, or sleet — and they drink a very small amount. It is well to remember that Angoras must be kept dry overhead and under- foot. Goats are as subject to foot rot as are sheep, and this is one reason why they should not be kept on wet soil. Such a locality has a deleterious effect on the mohair also. Land Available for Goat Raising. The character of land first suggested as being available for goat raising is that part of many thousands of farms which is already thickly covered with brushwood or which is gradually becoming covered. All through the Eastern and Southern States fields which were once in a high state of cultivation are now covered by a dense growth of brush and briers. Only the most vigorous application of the grubbing hoe and the torch prevents the brush from taking every cultivated acre. In some places there may be seen corn furrows made so long ago as to enable pine trees a foot in diameter to grow up in them since. In the lumber regions the removal of the trees gives an impetus to the under- bush, which soon becomes an intolerable nuisance. So there are, in Michigan and Wisconsin especially, thousands and thousands of acres of "stumpage" which are the best of soil and which, when the brushwood is removed, may be converted into the best of pas- tures for other live stock. These are the available lands which the Angora goats are now feeding upon; for they are giving a double return to their owners by clearing up the farm and by producing mohair. There is enough of this kind of work to engage the atten- tion of the Angoras for several years. Besides the kind of land mentioned above, there are millions of acres of rough mountainous land which are densely covered with brushwood, and which, in present condition, are of no economic use. Much of this land, if cleared of brush, would become seeded by natural methods to blue grass, and thus become good pasture land for other live stock. Much of it, too, is useful for nothing else than goats; grass will not "come in'* after the goats. If the goats are removed after it is once cleared, brush will follow again. All of this mountainous land will in time become pasture for millions of head of Angoras. Capt. Almont Barnes, in an article entitled "Keeping goats for profit," makes some estimates of the amount of unimproved land in the country, basing his calculations upon the reports of the Eleventh Census. He finds that the total amount of unim- proved land in the United States is 2C>r),000,000 acres. In Maine H M « i of Kids* Thoroughbred Angora goats do not generally drop more than one kid at a time, while the common goats nearly always drop two or three. There are many twins with the first cross, but the number of twins diminishes as the crosses become higher. It is stated that the purebred Angoras never dropped but one at a time, and that the presence of twins in a flock is evidence of a base origin of the goats. The latter statement is disputed by some, who believe that the purebred Angora (having no trace whatever of base blood) will drop twins as regularly as the common goat. This is a point that is liable to remain in dispute, as there is no way to settle it. In the Southwest, where most of the large flocks are located and where no particular care is given the goats on most ranches, the average percentage of kids is about 70. In other places, where such care is given the does at kidding time as they ought to have, the increase may easily be 100 per cent. There are instances of the increase reaching as high as 120 per cent. Good handling of a flock anywhere ought to give a kid for every doe of the flock. Size of Flocks. All goat raisers agree that Angoras can not stand crowding together; and the higher the grade of the goats the more suscepti- ble are they to injury from crowding. Special stress should be laid upon this matter of crowding, for it is more serious than many people will be inclined to think. They will argue that goats ought to stand what sheep and hogs do in this respect, but the fact is they will not stand it. Let no one crowd his animals, and be convinced of his error when he finds a half dozen dead ones in his goat shed some morning. Goats require much fresh air and it must be afforded them. Many who have taken goats from the South to the North have worked injury to their flocks when attempting a kindness by providing barns too warm, without sufficient ventilation. For well-fleeced goats dry barns are needed more than very warm ones. 142 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. To state just how many should be kept in a flock is difficult, as the number depends upon the character of their restraint. Where they have the range at day and large yards at night, the flocks may be very large, but where they have pasturage and small pens at night the flock must not be large. It is stated by some that goats in small flocks shear more than those running in large flocks. A flock ought not to exceed 2,000 in number. Dehorning. Dehorning the goats has received very little consideration, and it is probable that Q. M. Beck, of Beargrove, Iowa, is the only goat raiser who is now practicing it. Many other breeders report that they do not dehorn but believe it practicable, while a very few ex- press opposition to the practice. Mr. Beck writes as follows : "I dehorned 45 head last fall (1899) and found it a success, as it stops a great deal of bunting, which is liable to cause abortion, saves shed room, saves broken legs, and will save many kids." These same reasons have brought the dehorning of cattle in quite general favor among breeders, and it is probable that as the Angora goat industry grows into a large industry the practice of relieving the goats of their civilized weapons of warfare will be generally adopted. Mr. Beck dehorns in the fall after all flies are gone. A different view of the question of dehorning is taken by C. P. Bailey & Sons Co., who dehorned 250 head which were in a band by themselves. They bunted as much or more than before the horns were removed. "Goats always butt each other, but we have never seen any ill effects resulting, except occasionally a leg being broken from being caught between the horns. It deprives them of their only means of defense, and we consider it unnecessary and objectionable." CHAPTER XL SHEARING, SHEARS, AND SHEDDING. Shearing Once or Twice a Year. In Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and sometimes in California shearing is done twice a year — in the months of March or April and in September or October. The reasons for this are that the fleece will often shed in the fall as well as in the spring, if it is not clipped owing to the long warm season. H. T. Fuchs, of Texas, says: "I find it quite necessary to shear twice a year, as they suffer too much from heat in the summer and autumn and even during the warm days in winter if they are not sheared about the middle of September, and in the springtime as soon as they begin to shed their long silky hair." There are occasional in- stances in these localities where goats carry their fleece through the year, but all breeders, except in some parts of California, report the practice of shearing twice a year. In the other parts of the country shearing is done but once a year, and that in the months of March or April. The rule for shearing time does not depend so much upon the calendar as upon the condition of the fleece. It should not be delayed until the fiber begins to shed, as then the oil will begin to go back into the body of the animal, the mohair thus losing its life and luster. After goats once begin to shed, the loss of mohair is considerable. A bit of the fleece may be caught upon a twig or thorn or silver and be pulled out. When the hair is not shedding the goat is very careful about its hair, for it gives pain to have it pulled; but when it is shedding the skin itches, and every effort will be made to rid itself of the fleece. As to the relative values of the semiannual and annual fleeces, there does not seem to be much difference of opinion. The semi- annual fiber is shorter and therefore less desirable for fabricating, and the price is not so high as for that of the annual fleece. It is generally agreed that the two shearings combined weigh a little more than the annual shearing, but probably the increase does not average more than a quarter of a pound. However, some who have practiced it report that the gain is not equal to the cost of the second shearing, and that shearing twice is done from necessity rather than from the standpoint of profit. 144 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. It is well to keep in mind the fact that our mohair manufac- turers have never yet been able to secure all the long staple that they needed, but at the same time the market has always been overstocked with the shorter staple. This is especially true of the mohair which is not over four inches in length. Much of the semi- annual shearing is not so short as this and so brings a better price in a more certain market. Use of Clipping Machines. The use of clipping machines, although largely employed among large sheep raisers, has not yet come into general use among goat raisers. Those who have used them indorse them, and they will no doubt soon come into general use. They are more rapid than hand work, and the results are more satisfactory. The cutting of the skin is easily avoided in reasonably careful hands, while it requires extreme care with hand shears to prevent cutting. Mr. H. I. Kim- ball, of New Mexico, says of the use of the machines: "I sheared them [the gcats] myself faster than the best hand shearer I ever saw, and I got a better price for my mohair." Another gentle- man says: "I will say that the clipping machine for sheep will work well on goats in every respect. I have sheared ten goats in one hour and done up the fleeces." The power machines may op- erate any number of shears, all of which are connected with the driving shaft. The same machine, Avith one pair of the same kind of shears, is made for operation by hand power, A man or a boy of good strength may easily operate this machine, while another applies the shears to the goat or sheep. The machine is not ex- pensive, and goat men generally will find it to be to their advantage to use it. Of course, the goat raiser will consider the relative cost of shearing with machines and by hand before he will purchase a machine. The decision will probably depend upon the number. The cost of hand shearing is about 4 cents a head. In the South- west there are Mexicans who follow the profession of shearing sheep and goats; these usually receive 2 cents a head with their board. Many of them will shear 85 or 90 a day, the average of all being about 60. Any man who can shear sheep can shear goats. If shearing is clone by hand, a short-bladed shear should be used in order to avoid cutting the hair twice. Another objection to hand shearing is that there is often double cutting of the hair. The results are a shortening of the fiber and an increased amount or noilage. The shears used for goats, both hand and machine, are the same as those used for shearing sheep. It is much easier for the POWER AND HAND SHEARING MACHINFS. Manufactured by the Allen Sheep Shearing Machine Co., Chicago. 14G ANGORA GOAT RAISING. shearer and more humane to the goat if the shears are always sharp. The Operation of Shearing. Goats are not so gentle in the hands of the shearer as sheep, and many, especially among beginners in the industry, are anxious to know how best to handle them during the operation of shearing. The illustration presented here is of a combination shearing trough and table, and was devised by F. W. Ludlow, of Lake Val- ley, N. Mex. This table is very simple and is equally suited to LUDLOW COMBINATION SHEARING TABLE. hand and machine shearing. It is first used in the shape of a trough. The goat is placed in it on its back and held down by means of an iron yoke across the throat. While in this position all the underparts, sides, and legs may be worked upon. Mr. Lud- low says that in machine shearing it is a good plan to start at the brisket and shear all the belly as far back as possible; then shear the front legs and neck; then start at the hocks and shear up the hind legs and along the sides to the point of beginning. After shearing one of the sides allowed by the trough, the goat is tied — "hog-tied," to use a Western expression; that is. all four feet are tied together. The sides of the trough are now dropped, forming a table upon which to finish the operation. The illustration shows that there is now free access from the tail to the head, and the goat remains helpless. In the illustration the fleece already cut has ANGORA GOAT RAISING 14" been pulled away in order that the table might be Bhown, but the proper course is to leave all the fleece upon the table until the goat is liberated, and then roll it up inside out. Mr. Ludlow's description of this table is given herewith: "The table is simple in construction. It is about 22 inches high, 2 fee? 10 inches long, and 21 inches wide. The top is composed of two 9-inch sides, which are hinged to the 3-inch centerpiece. On the lower side of these movable flaps is a narrow piece 8 inches long, which catches on the framework of the table when the sides are lifted and holds them stationary. When the sides are elevated, the top of the table forms a trough 3 im-hes wide at the bottom and possibly a foot wide at the top. Into this trough the goat to be shorn is thrown feet up. A small iron yoke, which is attached to the end of one of the sides, is placed over the goat's neck and fastened to the other side. The goat's head is hanging over the end of the table and the yoke prevents it getting free. The belly 148 ANGORA GOAT RAIDING. and legs are then shorn. The legs of the goat are then tied to- gether, the yoke removed from' the neck, and the sides of the table dropped, so that one has a plane surface on which to shear the rest of the animal. An untrained man can shear 100 goats a day with a shearing machine and such a table." Since Mr. Ludlow wrote the above, a Mexican in his employ sheared 226 goats in eight hours and fifteen minutes on this table, record for goat shearing. This stands as the world's Washing the Goats Before Shearing. If the animals have been well cared for through the winter and early spring, it will not be necessary to wash them before shearing. And yet it is next to impossible to have a flock where all or any considerable number of them are clean enough to shear without washing, ana it will be time and money well spent to put them through the water. Most goat men do not wash their goats before shearing and this is the reason why so much very foul mo- GOAT CLIPPING MACHINE. Manufactured by Chicago Flexible Shaft Co., Chicago. SHEARING PLANT. USING STEWART SHEAR. Made by Chicago Flexible Shaft Co., Chicago. 150 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. hair is thrown upon the market. Some goat men, like many sheep men, harbor the foolish notion that the mohair buyer is going to pay them just as much for their dirty mohair as for that which is comparatively clean. On the contrary, they are liable to be of- fered less than it is really worth. Care of the Fleece After Shearing. The operation of shearing should be done in a building free from straw and dirt, which might adhere to the fleece after it drops from the goat. It should then be rolled up, inside out, and packed in the sack without being tied in any way. This is the manner in which the mills desire to receive it. The practice of tying the fleece with almost any kind of twine that may be at hand obtains very largely among goat raisers in the United States, but not with those of Turkey and Cape Colony. The reasons why the mill operators do not desire fleeces tied are very forcibly stated by one of them (George B. Goodall), as follows: "I want to mention another evil which should be corrected, and that is the use of twine or string around the fleeces. Vegetable fibers will not take dyes used for animal fibers, and in cutting these strings by the sorters more or less of the vegetable fibers get into the mohair and have to be carefully burled out from the face of the finished goods, which adds to the cost of each piece. A mohair should be simply rolled up without twine of any description. You never see it on Turkey or Cape mohair. " Previous to the year 1902 the manufacturers complained bit- terly of the practice of many shippers of mohair tying fleeces with all sorts of dirty and frowsy twine. Some even used baling wire; and the instances were not rare where stones and clods weighing several pounds were found in the sacks. These were no doubt placed there to make additional weight, and they did: but the mohair buyer does not pay the freight, neither does he buy without careful examination of every sack, so the loss falls directly back upon the shipper. For the year 1902 the mohair buyers of American mohair state that there have been no flagrant efforts at fraud by such schemes. After the fleece is taken from the goat, it should be spread out upon a clean table, as stated before, and all foreign particles care- fully removed. The fleece is apt to contain straws, pieces of briers, burs, and sometimes even cockleburs, and all these should be taken out before the fleece is rolled up. While this procedure is neces- sarily tedious and to some may appear useless, it will pay. This work must be done somewhere, and wherever it is done the mo- hair producer pays for it either directly or indirectly. As labor ; 48 I :"- ■■--.' I • . / HAND AND POWER SHEARING MACHINES. Manufactured by the Cooper Shearing Machine Co.. Chicago. 152 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. on the farm and ranch is cheaper than that in the mills, it would better be done there. Some have adopted the practice of baling their mohair instead of using the old-fashioned sack ; but the baling is not so satisfactory to the manufacturers as the sack, and it will therefore probably not be generally adopted. The Question of Shedding. The question of shedding is not now provoking so much dis- cussion as it did two or three years ago. There were a few breed- ers who maintained that purebreds and thoroughbreds would not shed their coats under natural conditions ; there were others who asserted that they would shed biennially ; others who maintained that the matter of shedding and nonshedding was a question of feed and care and still others who stoutly affirmed that it is per- fectly natural for the Angora to drop his fleece annually, and when he does not, it is the exception, not the rule, which obtains. This last view is rapidly coming to be generally accepted by the breed- ers; at the same time, they acknowledge that there are some indi- viduals that carry their fleece two years. This characteristic of the individual, however, is not believed to be applicable to any partic- ular strain; it is only an incident. As a rule, Angora goats, like sheep, shed their fleece annually as soon as the warm weather of spring opens up. In the Southern States, it is found that they will shed twice a year, and it is for this reason that semiannual shearing is practiced there. CHAPTER Xn. DISEASES AND OTHER ENEMIES. Goats are less subject to a variety of diseases than sheep, yet there are some diseases that appear to affect both alike. The two animals are so closely allied that treatment for disease is about the same for both. Stomach worms (Strongylus con tortus) affect goats as readily as sheep. They are also found in cattle and deer. In discussing this disease, the attention of goat raisers is called to some experi- ments conducted in Texas only quite recently by Dr. Ch. Wardell Stiles, then zoologist of the Bureau of Animal Industry. As this is an important and somewhat extensive disease, and as great care is needed in proper treatment, Dr. Stiles is quoted somewhat at length as follows: "Sheep, goats, and cattle suffer from the effects of roundworms. This is especially true during wet years. These parasites are found particularly in the lungs, the fourth stomach, and the bowels, and, when present in large numbers, they may result in death of 5 to 50 per cent of a flock. For some of these parasites treatment is pos- sible, but for others treatment has not been found altogether satisfactory. "Roundworms which live free in the fourth stomach or in the bowels may be expelled by using various drugs in drenches. A long list of medicines might be mentioned, but many of the drugs most highly recommended frequently fail to effect a cure. Fail- ures are due to several causes: The drug itself may be of little or no value; it may not be administered in the proper dose; it may not be administered in the proper way. "One of the most commonly used drenches is turpentine, but more satisfactory results are obtained from the use of coal-tar creosote, or coal-tar creosote and thymol or gasoline, or Milestone. "I have had excellent success in treating sheep, goats, and cattle for the twisted wircworm (Strongylus con tort us) with a 1 per cent solution of coal-tar creosote. The medicine is easily prepared and quite inexpensive. It may be purchased of the druggist in small quantities of 1 ounce or in pound bottles. One ounce is sufficient for about 20 adult sheep, and the cost of the treatment is less than 154 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. one-half a cent per head; if creosote is purchased by the pound, the cost is reduced to less than one-quarter of a cent per head. If creosote is called for at a drug store, beechwood creosote will usually be dispensed. This is more expensive than the coal-tar creosote and not so satisfactory in expelling worms. "A 1 per cent solution of coal-tar creosote is made as follows: Coal tar creosote 1 ounce Water 99 ounces * "Twisted wireworms (Strongylus contorius), taken directly from the stomach of sheep or cattle, die in one-half to one and a half minutes when immersed in this solution. "If, in dosing, this liquid enters the lungs the animal may succumb in a few minutes. If the dosing is performed carefully, as much as 6 2-3 ounces may be given to a full-grown sheep with- out fatal results. In some cases, however, the animal shows ill effects, from which it usually recovers within half an hour. Six ounces were given to a number of sheep without the slightest ill effects. The following table gives the doses of the 1 per cent mix- ture which were used in about 400 cases without ill effects: Lambs 4 to 12 months old 2 to 4 ounces (about 60 to 120 c. c.) Yearling sheep and above 3 to 5 ounces (about 90 to 150 c. c.) Calves 3 to 8 months old 5 to 10 ounces (about 150 to 300 c. c.) Yearling steers 1 pint (about 480 c. c.) Two-year-olds and above 1 quart (about 960 c. c.) "Sheep, goats, and calves which received this treatment showed a marked improvement a feAV days after receiving a single dose. "In experiments with creosote at Washington, D. C, sheep were drenched with a 1 per cent solution and killed immediately after- wards. Upon opening the fourth stomach, it was found that the wireworms present were dead. In some cases where this was tried later, the wireworms were found to be still alive ; but it is believed that the explanation of this fact has now been discovered. Creo- sote does not appear to have much effect upon the worms below the stomach. "If an overdose is given by mistake, and if the sheep appears severely affected by it, the animal should be placed in the shade. Even in some cases of very severe overdoses, where the animal is given up for dead practically, it may entirely recover within an hour. "If, in addition to the stomach worms, the animals were suf- fering from severe infection of bowel worms, such as the hook- worms, better results were obtained in the treatment when pow- dered thymol was added to the creosote. In cases of this kind, the * 99 ounces equals 6 pints and 3 ounces. ANGORA GOAT RAISIN*;. 155 creosote solution is prepared, as directed above, and 30 to 80 or even 100 grains of thymol added to each dose after it has beer i lie- 1> 1 1 red. "Thymol is expensive, the price varying in different parts of the country. It may be purchased by the ounce, but it is con- siderably cheaper if purchased by the pound. Avoid using thymol which has become yellowish or reddish and which has run together in the bottle so as to form a solid mass. Powder the crystals and have the druggist measure 30 grains. Give 30 grains to a lamb, about 50 grains to a yearling, and 70 to 80 or 100 grains to older sheep, according to size. "In experiments I have had excellent results with a single dose of the creosote and thymol mixture. If necessary, however, the dose could be repeated after a week. "The popular method of drenching is with a bottle. The use of a drenching tube is, however, far more satisfactory. A drench- ing tube may be made by taking an ordinary tin funnel, which may be purchased for 5 or 10 cents, and inserting the narrow end into one end of a rubber tube or hose, say 3 feet long and three- eighths or one-half inch in diameter; into the other end of the rubber tube is inserted a piece of three-eighths-inch brass or iron tubing about 4 to 6 inches long. "The metal tube is placed between the animal's back teeth, and the sheep or calf is allowed to bite upon it. The water or drench is poured into the funnel, which may be held by an assistant or fastened to a post at a convenient height. The man who holds the metal tube between the animal's teeth can control the animal's head with the left hand, find by holding the tube in the right hand, near the point of union of the rubber and metal tubes, he can easily control the flow of the fluid by pinching the rubber hose. Care must be taken not to hold the patient's nostrils closed, other- wise the dose will enter the lungs. "It is usually advisable to fast animals twelve to sixteen hours before dosing. "Different persons prefer to hold the animals in different posi- tions during drenching. Thus (1) the animal may be left stand- ing on all four feet; or (2) it may be placed en its haunches, one man holding its back up against his own body; or (3) it may be placed directly on its back on a sloping piece of ground, its head being in a direct line with its back, and higher than its rump ; or (4) it may be placed upon its side, the head being brought around so that the horns are squarely on the ground; the operator may then place one foot on one of the horns (especially in the case of semiwild cattle) and thus aid in holding the animal still. 156 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. "So far as administering the dose is concerned, the position on the back (3) is by far the easiest in the case of sheep, and the side position with head down (4) is the easiest in dosing cattle; furthermore, in these positions there is much less danger of an accident by getting the dose in the lungs. If animals are dosed standing or on their haunches, the nose should never be allowed to go above the eyes; otherwise the drench may pass down the windpipe into the lungs. "By dosing sheep with water colored red and blue with dyeing- material, and killing the animals immediately after the liquid was swallowed the following results were obtained : "If the dose was given with the sheep standing, (1) almost the entire quantity went directly into the fourth stomach; if the sheep was placed on its haunches, the fluid passed in part into the fourth stomach and in part into the first (the paunch) ; if the sheep was placed directly on its back (3), or if a steer was placed on its side (4) with head down, almost the entire dose passed into the first stomach (the paunch). If the animal, even when standing (1), struggled to a considerable degree, a portion of the fluid passed into the paunch. "It will be immediately apparent that these facts are of prac- tical importance in dosing. If, for instance, gasoline, turpentine, or creosote is used, better results may be expected, if the sheep is dosed standing (1). PREVENTIVE MEASURES. "First. Every ranch should have a hospital pasture situated on high, dry ground, well drained, and without any pools or ponds. This should be supplied with raised troughs for watering and feeding, and the water supply should come from a well. This pasture should not drain into any pasture in which healthy stock are feeding. "Second. As soon as any sick animal is noticed in the large pasture it should be immediately separated from the healthy stock and taken to the hospital pasture. To allow sick animals to run at large with healthy stock means to deliberately permit the spread of infection in the pastures and thus endanger the unin- fected animals. "Third. Proper watering places should be supplied in the large pastures by digging wells and erecting windmills to pump the water into tanks. These tanks should be raised above the ground so that thev can not become contaminated with the ani- mal's droppings being washed into them by rains and floods. ANUOKA GOAT RAISING. 157 "Fourth. Select high sloping ground for pasture when this is possible. Low pastures should be properly drained. "Fifth. When practicable, burn the pasture- regularly, thor- oughly, and systematically. The heat from the burning grass will kill many of the eggs and young worms on the grass, ground, and in the droppings. "Sixth. As parasites are more fatal to young animals than to old. a liberal -supply of oats or some similar food will aid in giving to young animals strength which will enable them to with- stand the infection. A daily allowance, say, half a pound of oat* per lamb, ought to reduce the mortality. At first they may not be inclined to eat it, but they will soon become accustomed to it. This simple precaution is reported, as very effectual in Xew Zea- land. "Seventh. Keep plenty of salt accessible to the animals. Some men add slaked lime to the salt; others add 1 part of sulphate of iron to 100 parts of salt. As a matter of experience, salt kills many young worms." In the Southwest the goats are sometimes affected with grub in the head. These outbreaks are usually due to local causes and have not been difficult to overcome. The treatment followed is the same as for sheep. The treatment recommended for the screw worm is as follows : Add to any one of the carholic sheep dips 10 per cent of chloro- form. Apply this mixture, after thoroughly cleaning the wound, with a wad of cotton. The chloroform immediately destroys the larvae and the carbolic dip prevents the further blowing of the wound. The stomach worm (StrongyltLS contortus) is the same form as found in sheep, cattle, and deer. The treatment in all cases is the same as for sheep. In this connection it is proper to state that there are proprietary worm powders on the market for stomach worms which are used in enormous quantities with sheep and goats, and they have given quite general satisfaction. The toxaline treatment, which is well known to readers of sheep journals, has many strong advocates among those who have used it. These facts are given because the goat breeder, no less than the sheep breeder, is entitled to all infor- mation that has in any way proved valuable. Goats have at least three kinds of scab parasites peculiar to their species, but apparently only two kinds of seal) develop. Psoroptic scab of sheep does not develop disease upon them, though it can undoubtedly sustain life for a while. 158 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. Tapeworms of the genus Moniezia are found in goats. In the intestines are also found five round worms, namely, Strongylus pJicollis, Aesopliagostoma venulosum, Sclerostoma hypostomum , Uncinaria cernua, and Trie hoc cphalus affinis. Verminous pneumonia of sheep also occurs in goats. Tuberculosis is sp rare in goats that it may be said that they are practically immune from this widespread and insidious dis- ease. Takosis in Goats. — A disease of goats which appears to be prevalent among the flocks in certain sections of this country was investigated by the Bureau of Animal Industry in 1902, and described in the Nineteenth Annual Eeport under the name of Takosis, by Dr. Jno. E. Mohler. This term is used to designate a progressive debilitative, but none the less highly fatal, infectious disease, the symptoms and lesions of which are entirely unlike any of the known diseases which affect this species of animals. Reports have been received from goat owners in Oregon, Missouri, Virginia, Maryland, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Massachusetts, all describing the affection as an incurable, weakening, and wasting disease, usually accompanied by uncontrollable diarrhea and occa- sional cough. That this disease is not of recent origin appears evident from an article in the Country Gentleman of April, 187G, which states that, despite the friendly warning of a naturalist against taking Tibet goats into Georgia, the writer in 185-1 consummated a pur- chase and encountered some thoroughly discouraging experiences. Later in recounting these experiences he wrote that all the Tibet goats, pure and grades, in his flock died in a few years after the purchase from a disease of the lungs combined with dysentery. A writer in the Country Gentleman of February 4, 1875, also reports serious losses in a flock placed in his care. Although no specific symptoms are recorded the description is highly suggestive of takosis. Pegler (1885), in his description of a disease peculiar to goats, has mentioned the symptoms which might in most particulars very well be applied to a flock affected with this disease. Not- withstanding takosis appears to have been known to some individ- ual breeders for a long time, it seems to have remained in a smoldering condition and not until the affection became so wide- spread during the past year was its economic importance brought to the attention of the Bureau of Animal Industry and the char- acter and causation of the disease elucidated. Takosis of goats is undoubtedly contagious and the recent ANGORA GOAT RAISING. 1 .'/J investigations have proven conclusively that it is caused by a specific organism the Micrococcus caprinus, which need not be described here. In order to demonstrate the pathogenic properties of this micrococcus and establish its etiological significance to the disease in question, inoculation experiments were conducted upon white mice, white and brown rats, guinea pigs, rabbits, chickens, dogs, sheep, and goats. Of these animals, dogs and rats have appeared totally immune. The only noticeable effect of inoculation upon sheep was a temporary rise of temperature. The disease presents many of the symptoms usually accompany- ing a parasitic invasion of diarrhea and pneumonia. In the early stages of the affection there is usually little to indicate that any- thing is seriously amiss with the animal. The first ohservable symptom manifested is the listless and languid demeanor of the animal evidenced by its lagging behind the flock and is usually accompanied by a drooping of the ears and a drowsy appearance of the eyes. The pulse is slow and feeble and the temperature is elevated slightly at first, but becomes subnormal a few days before death. The highest temperature observed in the natural disease was 104.1° and the lowest, in a prostrated animal a few hours before death, registered 99.7° F. Snuffing of the nose, as in a case of coryza, and occasionally coughing is sometimes in evidence. They would move about in a desultory manner, with back arched, neck drawn down toward the sternum, and with a staggering gait. Rumination is seldom impaired. The appetite, while not so vigorous, is still present, though capricious, and the affected animals show plainly that the ravages of the disease are rapidly overcoming the restorative elements derived from the food. The fleece usually presents a surprisingly thrifty appearance when the condition of the animal is taken into consideration. All the exposed mucous membranes are pale and the respirations are accel- erated and labored. The goats become so weak that they are readily knocked down and trampled upon by their fellows. If picked up they move off slowly and eat a little, but within a few hours are dowrn again, and in this way linger for several days, shrinking to about half their natural weight, and occasionally bleating or groaning with head bent around on the side or drawn down to the sternum. A fluid discharge from the bowels of a very offensive odor is usually observed in the last few days of life, but this symptom is not constant. This disease may assume an acute or chronic type, the animal usually dying of inanition in from eight days to six or eight weeks. 100 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. Several owners have reported deaths after only two or three days of illness, but the goats doubtless had been affected for a longer period, although not noticed on account of their mingling in the flock. It is the consensus of opinion among the breeders inter- viewed that many of the animals succeeded in living for weeks, but they gradually became weaker and more debilitated and finally died in a comatose condition. In no instance has the natural recovery of an animal been observed after once the symptoms of takosis were noted. The younger goats seem to be the most susceptible to the disease, although the old animals are by no means immune. The does, wethers, and bucks all become affected, but probably as a result of the usual preponderance of does in a flock the latter appear to be the most susceptible. As already indicated the general appearance of the carcass simulates that produced by a wasting disease. The visible mucous membranes are pale and anemic, while the fleece, which appears dry and lusterless, furnishes a shroud for the extreme emaciated condi- tion that is perceptible on skinning. This masking quality of the hair prevents an accurate estimate of the condition of the animal by the eye alone and necessitates handling of the individual cases to appreciate to the full extent the inroads made by the affection. The same anemic condition of the subcutaneous and muscular tissues is observed in dehiding the carcasses. The lungs in most cases are the seat of a peculiar diversified inflammation, never of a remarkable extent. The external appearance of these organs is at times mottled, caused by a few congested areas, several patches of an iron-gray color similar to areas of pneumonia during the process of absorption and normal tissues. The liver is usually normal, but necrotic areas were observed in one case, due probably to parasitic invasion. The kidneys are anemic and softened. The intestines may contain normal fecal matter or semifluid feces of disagreeable odor. The effects of internal parasites upon goats are very similar in many of their outward manifestations to the symptoms of takosis, but the infectious nature of the latter when compared with the enzootic course of a parasitic invasion will justify one in making a definite diagnosis. In attacks of takosis symptoms of pneumonia will be frequently noted, especially labored breathing or rapid respiration. These symptoms are not diagnositic of parasitism. The edamatous lump under the jaw so frequently present in cases of parasitism fails in takosis. The luster of the fleece is less affected in takosis, while diarrhea is more frequently noted. Finally in parasitism a careful postmortem examination will quickly dis- close the presence of the offending parasites. ANGOKA GOAT RAISING. p,l In goats anemia is very rare and when it does occur it is usually secondary to some previously existing disease as chronic pneumonia, peritonitis, or to poor food and starvation. It does not assume an infectious character and may be differentiated from the anemic- condition accompanying takosis by the absence of the specific organism on microscopic examination. Watery cachsia or hydremia usually results from poor feeding, innutritious food, and pasturing in low lands. The natural goat pasture is high, dry lands. The animal is weak, readily exhausted, breathes rapidly and heart palpitates. The mucous membranes of the eyes, nose, and mouth are pale and swollen. The edema which is present about the head and neck and abdomen will serve to dif- ferentiate this disease from takosis. This edema of the head dis- appears when the animal lies down. Icterus may accompany the disease when the discoloration of the mucous membrane easily establishes the nature of the affection. A change of pasture and a more nutritious diet are accompanied by a return of health to the flock. In the study of takosis, four points have been brought promi- nently into view which may properly be grouped together when considering measures for the prevention of the disease. Sudden climatic changes should be avoided so far as possible, and when shipments of goats for breeding purposes are to be made, which necessitate their transportation northward over considerable dis- tances, the changes should be made during the months of summer or late spring, and not in the fall or winter, when the contrast of temperature will be so much greater. The second precautionary measure is closely allied to the first, namely, Angora goats should be provided with stables that are thoroughly dry, not alone in their ability to shed rain, but they should be placed upon ground that has perfect natural drainage, and these should be accessible by them at all times, as the effect of rains upon the general health and strength of these animals has been frequently proven to be very disastrous. So great is their natural aversion to a wetting that they will seldom get caught out in a shower if shelter is within their reach, but will leave their browsing and march under cover before the downpour. As a third measure of prevention may be mentioned careful feeding. Xo animal is as well fortified against the attack of an infection when reduced by lack of nourishment as it is when in a vigorous, thriving condition. Among the predispos- ing causes of disease, usually enumerated by general pathologists. will be found debility due to insufficient or unsuitable food, and although the reason for this may not be established beyond the 162 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. reach of argument, it is pretty generally conceded that the con- tinued lack of proper nourishment establishes in the blood of an animal an abnormal degree of alkalinity which grants an increased susceptibility to the inroads of pathogenic organisms. The last preventive measure to be mentioned is one that is applicable only after the disease has made its appearance in the flock. The segrega- tion, or isolation, of all affected animals as soon as they evince any symptoms of the disease, will be found a most valuable means of protection for those that remain unaffected, and a strict quarantine over all of the diseased members of the flock should be maintained so long as the disease remains upon the premises. The sheds, yards, and corrals where the animals have been kept should be disinfected with a five per cent solution of creolin or carbolic acid. The most pleasing results that have been derived from the use of drugs have followed the administration of calomel given alone in .10 gram doses twice daily for two days, to be followed by powders composed of arsenic, quinine, and iron as follows: Arsenious acid, 1.40 grams; iron, reduced, 12 grams; quinine sulphate, 6 grams. Mix and make into twenty powders, giving one to each adult goat morning and evening, at the conclusion of the administration of calomel. After an interval of two days this treatment is repeated. Experiments are at present under way with a view of procuring a vaccine for the preventive inoculation of exposed goats, but the results thus far obtained are not uniform, and further investigation must be made before any definite statements will be hazarded. Goats are apt to have foot rot, but a cure is easily effected by the use of sulphate of copper (blue vitrol). It is usually applied by driving goats through a trough containing a solution of strong blue vitrol. The solution should be about an inch in depth. Oscar Tom, a breeder of much experience, says: "Butter of antimony applied with a stiff feather will cure it, or mix 1 ounce of sul- phuric acid with 2 ounces of vinegar and apply as above. Go over the whole band. Generally one application cures if well done. Change the range at the same time if you can." All goats become infested with lice if they do not receive proper attention. It is not a difficult matter, as all men agree, +o rid goats of this annoyance by dipping them, as sheep are dipped, in any of +he common sheep-dip preparations. The ani- mals can not thrive to best advantage when they are carrying a fleece full of lice; oftentimes the lice become so numerous as to cause the goat to lose much flesh and finally to fail to produce a ANGORA GOAT RAISING !,;;> good quality of mohair, or even to produce a kid, if the infested animal is a doe. Goat raisers should know that an animal which is badly infested with lice in the winter always requires an extra amount of feed ; in other words, if lice are to be raised they must be fed. The better practice is to dip goats twice a year — in the spring just after shearing and again in the fall. One of the principal enemies of the Angoras is the wolf. The best guard against wolves is a good wire fence. Sometimes the wolves dig under the fence, and then it becomes necessary to trap them. This is practiced by H. T. Fuchs, who says : "Three steel traps are fastened to each other, but to nothing else, and catch the wolves. If the trap is made fast the wolf will break loose, but the weight of three traps fastened together simply tires the wolf out, and it rarely drags them more than 200 or 300 yards." In many localities the wildcats are especially troublesome. Their prey is the kids. CHAPTER XIIL THE SKINS AND THEIR USES. Their Use as Rugs, Robes, and Trimmings. The skins of the Angoras, if taken when the hair is about 4 inches long, make very handsome rugs. The hair retains its origi- nal luster, and may be used in the natural white or dyed any color desired. The pure white ones are more generally preferred. There is a demand for Angora rugs in the United States which so far has not been supplied by domestic production. These rugs can be purchased at prices ranging from $4 to $8. Another article of manufacture from the skins is the carriage robe, rivaling in beauty and durability the buffalo robe, which is no longer a factor in the market. They are not expensive when the demand for skins is considered, and may be purchased for about $20. The smaller skins of the does and wethers and the kid skins find an extensive use in baby carriages, and are exceedingly attractive in their brilliant whiteness. These skins are used largely in the manufacture of children's muffs and as trimmings for coats and capes. The finest kid fleeces adorn the collar and border of the ladies' most handsome opera cloaks. In the stores they are sold often under some peculiar name which does not inform the purchased that they are orna- mented with the hair of the Angora goat, and so thousands of such articles are worn by people who are unaware of the true name of their "furs." Their Use as Leather. While the skin should always be taken as an item of salvage, it is not at all probable that it will ever be profitable to produce them for leather. The skin should be removed from the carcass very soon after death, else decomposition in its most incipient stage will cause the hair to "slip." If the skin happens to con- tain a fleece of sufficient length, it might be converted into a rug or robe; if not, it can be tanned and used for binding books or manufactured into gloves of excellent quality. The skin of the Angora is of a more delicate texture than that of the common goat and so is not suitable for shoe leather. This feature will ANGORA GOAT RAISING. 165 forever preclude tho possibility of its becoming a competitor of the goatskins, which are now imported for shoe leather. Angora skins for leather will not hring as good a price in the market as those of the common goat. A prominent Xcw York dealer in skins says: "Domestic skins are worth from 50 cents for kids up to $2 each for large full-fleeced pelts. The low, crossbred com- mon skins and short pelts not suitable to dress are used by mo- rocco and glove leather manufacturers, and are worth from 15 to 18 cents a pound for large sizes down to 10 and 11 cents for small ones and kids." Tanning and Dressing the Skins. There are many recipes in various books for tanning and dress- ing skins; but the sale of Angora rugs and robes at good prices depends so much upon their excellent appearance that it is rec- ommended that the work be placed in the hands of a professional tanner. Even then it is well to be certain of the character of his work, for goat men have frequent cause of complaint that their skins have not been well manipulated. Tanners who have done good work with Angora skins should advertise in those papers which devote space to Angora goat discussion. They will help themselves and at the same time aid a feature of the industry that is to be ever present. Importations of Angora Goatskins. While there is a duty of 12 cents a pound on mohair and a varying schedule applying to mohair manufactures, skins having fleeces attached are admitted duty free. Importations are without doubt very considerable, as large numbers are in use, and we know that the domestic production is yet very limited. The two tables herewith will give some idea of the extent of importations at Boston and Philadelphia. The importations at New York must be much greater, but the reports previous to 1002 are not readily available. IMPORTATION OF ANGORA GOATSKINS INTO THE PORT OF BOSTON FROM 1898 TO DECEMBER 15, 1901 Date of Entry. July August. 1898. April July August October November . . . December 15. 1901. Number of skins. Weight. Pounds. 1,800 5,388 750 •2,292 2,378 6 942 2.585 8.308 400 2,247 750 •2.190 900 2. 80S 1,500 4.306 Value. F5T4 244 705 914 239 245 319 480 166 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. IMPORTATIONS OF ANGORA GOATSKINS INTO THE PORT OF PHILADELPHIA FROM 1896 TO 1901. Date of Entry, 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 Pounds. Value. 706.571 $ 76,378 716,343 86 841 19 540 2.754 1,113.974 152.601 790,782 144.577 430,458 62,707 * I t \ < * * ** -i ■ AFRICAN GOATS. CHAPTER XIV. MINOR FEATUKES OF [MPORTANCE. Enrichment of the Land. In the chapter dealing with goats as brush exterminators ref- erence is made to the enrichment of the land by their droppings. This benefit is decidedly noticeable on land where they are kept a year or more. This is a factor of no small importance, not only where the goats have been employed to destroy brushwood, but on cleared land which may have grown up to weeds which the goats eat greedily. The sheds where the goats are kept at night should be cleaned out frequently and the manure preserved in bins where it can be kept dry. This manure may afterward be put upon the land in accordance with the farmer's plans. Goat manure was applied to the corn crop on a worn-out farm in Maryland with wonderful results. Land which ordinarily would not yield over fifteen bush- els to the acre gave forty bushels after the goat manure was ap- plied. Owing to the scarcity of the manure, much of it was ap- plied by the handful at a time in the hill as the corn was planted. This is the practice with commercial fertilizers and is getting the most out of little. Manure is considered as one of the resources in the best system of modern farming, and it should be taken into account by any one who is keeping goats or is contemplating doing so. There is no better fertilizer for fruit trees and lawns than goat manure, and none equal to it for this purpose except sheep ma- nure. The droppings of goals and sheep are about equal in fer- tilizing value. It has been estimated that the value per ton of the manure produced by a sheep is $3.30, and it is certain that the goat produces as much and probably more than the sheep. Protection for Sheep. The statement that an Angora buck running with a flock of sheep will protect them from the attack of dogs has received wide publicity. Much that has been published is without foundation, yet much also is correct. Some breeders state positively thai the goats are as cowardly as sheep ami just as liable to be attacked by 1(38 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. dogs, while others cite instances where dogs have actually been driven off. No doubt both statements represent the experiences of the respective breeders. It is a fact that one or two bucks will serve to protect a flock of sheep if they are trained to attack dogs. Very little effort is required to train them, for they are fighters naturally, and their pugnacious disposition is easily developed. Indeed, the most docile- doe may be trained to do the same service. Some pertinent remarks along this line are made by H. T. Fuchs, of Marble Falls, Tex., a well-known breeder of Angoras. He says : "It is quite amusing to see the courage of a doe when she protects her young kid from a dog, or hog, or fleck of buzzards. Two of my neighbors' dogs got in the habit of killing my kids, and one doe protected her kid quite a while from the two large vicious dogs until the neighbor caught one of the dogs and gave him a good whipping, when the goat assisted in this work by butting the dog with all her might. You should train the goats to be brave by taking your dogs into the goat pen with you, and, in case the dog refuses to ran from a brave goat, scold the dog to make the goat think that she whipped him. If you had a tame wolf trained in that way you could train your goats to fight wolves.'' Because of their inclination to fight dogs, bucks have been em- ployed in small numbers — say from one to three — to run with sheep. A few will remain with sheep for their company, but a considerable number are apt to separate to themselves and remain away from the flock. There is very little complaint regarding the ravages of dogs by breeders of Angora goats, while the sheep raiser has them as his foe always. Ordinarily an Angora buck will vanquish a dog and it is not likely that the goat industry will suffer from the ravages of dogs. Notwithstanding all this, the owner of Angoras will be wise if he keeps a close watch upon them until they demonstrate their ability to care for themselves in a contest. It might be well to send a few bucks to the kind of school mentioned by Mr. Fuchs. Disposition of the Angora. The remarkable intelligence of these little animals has already been mentioned ; but a question often asked is "Are they ugly ?" Yes, if they are made so by teasing, just as dogs, cats, horses, or pet roosters are made ugly. In flocks they are as docile as sheep and very soon learn to regard man as their friend. ANGORA GOAT RAISING. 100 Their Use as Pets. The highbred Angoras are very graceful, and their beautifully shaped bodies and fine silky hair make them very attractive. There is no animal, except possibly the horse, that is more beautiful than these goats, and no animal is more cleanly in his habits. As peta for children they are very popular, if they can be kept where they will be harmless to vegetation and anything made of cloth. They have all the propensities of the common goat for destroying fruit trees and chewing any kind of cloth and of climbing upon roofs. All kinds of goats are mischievous in the extreme. The Angoras are tractible and are often harnessed to carts, as are common goats, and their beauty makes them more desirable for this purpose. They are remarkably intelligent and are easily trained. The high- grade Angoras are free from the "goat odor" so objectionable in the common breed, and this is a very good reason why they are preferred as pets even if their beauty is not considered. It is true, however, that the average high-grade Angora is a smaller and more delicate animal than the common breed and must not be expected to draw heavy loads. Where to Buy Angora Goats. In this industry, as in every other, the public is informed that there are breeders of good goats, breeders of poor goats, brokers in all kinds of goats, and a host of unscrupulous dealers who are taking advantage of the great interest manifested at this time and have no reputation to lose. Most people who purchase ex- press a desire to sec the animals they buy. This is natural and affords some satisfaction ; but the fact is that, unless such a buyer is familiar with goats, he will know very little about them after seeing them. There would be no difficulty in imposing upon him. If one is not familiar with the points of an Angora, he would himself be liable to choose the poorest animals out of a flock. Be- cause an animal is large, lively, and strong is not an evidence that it is worth the cost of expressage to the next town. In this industry, as in all others, the purchaser must depend largely upon the reputation of breeders. There are very many en- tirely reliable breeders, and it is not a very difficult matter to ascertain the standing and practice of any one who offers goats for sale. Prospective purchasers should consult the advertise- ments of goat breeders, and, if any question arises in the mind, ask such breeders for references. And, too, let such a man, if he orders goats, to be paid for on delivery, furnish references as to his own reliability. If he writes to some one not directly interested, 170 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. let him inclose a stamp for reply. A stamp is a small matter, it is true, but the postage bill of some breeders amounts to several dollars per month. How to Handle Angora Goats. The best way to catch and hold an Angora is by the horns. It will struggle but little after it finds that its horn is in a secure grasp. To catch hold of it any other way gives it an opportunity to show all its strength, which is not a little in a healthy goat. Sheep are often caught by the wool and held without giving pain apparently, but it is painful to a goat to be caught thus. Many who are not familiar with the Angora seize it by the fleece at once, without a thought of the pain they give. This is not only painful for the animal but it is difficult to hold it when caught in this way. If it is desired to place the animal on its haunches, take its right horn with the right hand, if standing on the right side of the goat, and seize the left front leg with the left hand, and then lift it up, at the same time pulling it backward over the feet or knee. This is easily done and done without injury. To place the animal on his back or side, reach both arms over its back, seizing a front leg and a hind one and then lift it up onto your knees quickly. It can then be placed in any position desired. Will Angoras Cross with Sheep ? They will not cross with sheep, for the reason that goats and sheep are not of the same genus. This statement is made upon the authority of leading naturalists in this country and with full knowledge of the reports of the existence of such crosses, but they are, like the petrified human being, "somewhere else." There is a peculiar animal in New Mexico called the "cabrito" (male) or "cabrita" (female), Spanish words for the young of the goat. It is commonly but incorrectly spelled "eabretta." This animal, especially when young, resembles the young of the goat very much, and from this fact it probably receives its name. It is nothing else than a. lamb, the offspring of the Navajo ram upon a ewe of a common and better developed breed of sheep. There is no goat blood in it. The Navajo sheep, especially the ram, is said to be a coarse-wooled, leggy, upstanding creature, with horns extending backward like those of the goat, and might, upon casual observa- tion, easily be taken for a goat. It is the wool of this sheep that is made into the well-known Navajo Indian blankets. Schreincr cites several records of hybrids of the goat and the ANGORA GOAT RAISING. 1 T 1 sheep, and says lie had himself seen four animal- "reprea inted ae being the hybrid progeny of such a cross." The facts which confront us in discussing this question are that Angoras and sheep have been running together in this country for the last fifty years, and yet no one of scientific standing has ven- tured to say that he has seen a hybrid from them. From the practical standpoint of the breeder it is entirely safe to say that the goat and sheep will not interbreed. Colonel Peters, in the American Agriculturist. November, J 876, says: 'Trior to the year 1860 I tried many experiments, in hopes of obtaining a cross between the goat and sheep, and failed in every instance. Extensive correspondence with other breeders has convinced me that the cross can not be obtained. Dr. John Bach- man, the celebrated naturalist of Charleston, S. C, wlio was in correspondence with the most distinguished naturalists of Europe, informed me that he had no faith in the theory, and did not be- lieve the cross obtainable. He stated, however, that Cuvier, the renowned French naturalist, claimed to have examined a speci- men of such a hybrid, but Dr. Bachmau himself believed that Cuvier had been deceived, or had made a mistake. How to Designate the Sexes. The proper designation for the male goat is "buck'7 and for the female "doc." Previous to the issuance of the Government bulletins, the buck was indiscriminately referred to as male, sire, buck, ram, and billy; and the female was known as doe, ewe, and nanny. The terms "buck" and "doe" used in the publications re- ferred to are generally adopted at this time, and are given official sanction by their use in the catalogues and premium lists of the American Angora Goat Breeders' Association. The castrated goat is designated as a "wether/' as with sheep In Cape Colony he is called a "kapater," and the sheep wether is there called a "hamel;" but these arc foreign words which mean no more than our own American words, and there is no reason why they should be adopted by us. The young is called "kid,"' and there appear- to be absolute unanimity in this designation. What to Call the Flesh. The flesh of the Angora goat has not yet been found in many markets, and there is yet no general accepted term for it. Some speak of it as '"Angora mutton" and others as "Angora venison." It is claimed that if an animal has had a liberal diet of leaves and twigs while being fattened its flesh has the game flavor of 172 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. venison, and people who are familiar with this kind of feeding, call the meat Angora venison. If an Angora is fattened largely on forage and grain, its flesh will have a taste very much like mutton fattened under similar conditions. Those who have eaten of this kind of Angora flesh call it Angora mutton. Since it is entirely probable that most Angoras that will go into the market for meat will be finished off on grain, and so resemble mutton, it is better that the flesh be called Angora mutton. The term is just as good as "Angora venison/' and it has a domestic sound. By-Products Not Elsewhere Mentioned. In the modern methods of economic production and manufac- ture nothing is permitted to go to waste. Whoever it was that said facetiously that the packers saved every portion of a hog but his squeal spoke the truth. The same truth applies as well to the carcass of any food animal. In the case of goats the horns find many uses, and the fat is said to be the best tallow known for the manufacture of candles. Any part of the carcass not useful in any other way is converted into fertilizer. Registration Association. The American Angora Goat Breeders' Association was organized in 1900 at Kansas City, Mo. Previous to that time there was in existence the National Angora Kecord Association, with headquar- ters at Salem, Oreg., but its members generally entered the first mentioned and the latter went out of existence. As it is not known that there exists anywhere a purebred An- gora goat, it was manifestly impossible to base registration upon pure blood. The association created a force of inspectors whose duty it was to inspect goats for registration upon application and recommend to the secretary. Any goat fulfilling the standard re- quirements was registered. The number thus registered was 40,000. The registration books were closed against all such inspections on December 31, 1901. Since then only the offspring of regis- tered parents are eligible for registry. The Tariff. The act approved July 24, 1897, places a duty of 12 cents per pound upon mohair. Mohair cloth for buttons is taxed 10 per cent ad valorem. These rates are subject to increase under certain conditions of shipments. Angora skins with mohair attached are admitted free of duty. ANGOKA GOAT RAISING. 1 T.{ The Province of a Goat Paper. The purpose of this manual is to touch upon all points of the Angora goal industry, yet the author is conscious of the fact that a thousand questions will grow out of the experience of the next i'vw years. No one could pre! end to assume to know what they will be and to answer them at this time. While a manual of goat raising is invaluable and ought to be in the hands of every goat raiser, and its contents thoroughly familiar to him, it can not take the place of the journal which devotes space to the industry. Every day little matters of perplexity will arise and every week they find answer in the goat columns. The horse, cattle, sheep, and hog industries are represented by scores of volumes, yet no breeder of any one of these animals would try to succeed without a paper devoted to the subject ; so goat raisers will do well if they decide at once to take a paper which is alive to their interests. A Few Words About Common Goats* While this volume does not deal with the subject of common goats, there are innumerable questions continually arising about them. No effort will be made here to answer all these questions, but it is deemed advisable to touch upon a few of the leading ones. There are about a million common goats in the United States, according to the Twelfth Census. They are widely disseminated, but there are very few flocks of any considerable size. Where they are most numerous they are not kept for any special purpose and no particular attention is paid to them. Like Topsy, they "just grow." The kids are sometimes used for meat, and are nice, and occasionally a doe is milked for family use. They are not raised in this country for their skins, as they are found not to be profit- able. The effort to do so has been made under very favorable circumstances, and the result was that the gross income averaged but 80 cents per head. The domestic supply of skins, therefore, is nothing. We depend altogether upon imports for our goatskin manufactures. The table herewith, from Treasury reports, shows that we import goatskins, morocco leather, and gloves in very large quantities; 174 ANGORA GOAT RAISING. QUANTITY AND VALUE OP IMPORTS OP GOATSKINS, MOROCCO SKINS. AND GLOVES POR THE YEARS 1896 TO 1901. Year. 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 Goat Skins. Quantity. Value Pounds. 38.882,234 59,177,556 65,546,570 80,064,583 69.104,372 88,043,928 Dollars. 8,803,609 13,802,504 16,854,430 20.992,949 19,008,097 25,265.670 Morocco leather. Value. Dollars. 2,808.322 3.748,341 2,452,655 2,831.035 2,940.949 2,399.603 Gloves. Value. Dollars. 5,618,311 6,337,410 5.686,464 5,544,871 6,433,941 5,060,224 Will Sheep Destroy Brushwood. The statement is frequently made through the press that sheep will destroy brushwood just as effectually as goats, and the ques- tion whether they will or not is often asked by those who con- template the purchase of either goats or sheep to clear their land. The sheep is naturally a grazer, but it will browse a little occa- sionally, while the goat is naturally a browser and will graze occa- sionally. Sheep will not long thrive or even subsist upon a brush- wood diet. Neither will they completely annihilate brushwood as the goats do. Where goats do this an equal number of sheep would hardly make an impression. The sheep has its uses — and great they are — but the extermination of brushwood is not one of them. The Rocky Mountain Goat. The Rocky Mountain goat is a large strong animal, with a dense fleece of mohair and coarse hair, about equally divided as to quantity, and about equal in length. Samples which have been examined by the author show the mohair to be of good quality so far as fineness and luster are concerned, but whether it could ever be produced in quantity sufficient to be of any economic use is doubted. The goats are exceedingly rare, and it is not probable that they would thrive well outside their present high altitude — that of the higher Rocky Mountains. The hair is of two colors — white and black. The Avhite would bring from 12 to 15 cents per pound, and the black about 5 cents, at the mills. It would be serviceable in the manufacture of carpets. Several writers have suggested the possibility of producing a stronger Angora by crossing with the Rocky Mountain goat. The * Imported chiefly from Germany and France, and from other Europe in smaller quantities. ANGORA GOAT RAISING. 176 writer is not inclined to think well of the suggestion. There is already too much foreign blood in our Angoras, and the future success of the mohair industry depends upon our ability to get rid of it. I CHAPTER XV* MILCH GOATS. The Milch Goat Situation. Milch goats are a familiar feature of the live stock industry of Europe. They are especially prominent in Switzerland, Italy, Germany, France, and Spain, and the Island of Malta. Many may also be found in Egypt, Russia, and Norway. They are, by their habits of life, peculiarly adapted to the needs and surround- ings of the peasantry, or poorer classes, of these countries. There is, indeed, nothing truer or apter than the homely saying that "the goal is the poor mans cow." This is so because milk, which is food and drink to all mankind, is furnished by the goat in its cheapest form; because its quality is superior to cow's milk for all purposes; and also because the proportionate yield is much greater than that of a cow. It is frequently said that the feed required for one milch cow is sufficient for eight milch goats. In the old countries goats hold a respectable place in the live stock industry. There they are not the subject of every one's effort at jesting, as they have always been here. The Angora goat industry in this country has developed to such proportions that it is now looked up to with dignity, even by the jesters, and is sharing its respectability with the milch goats. The implied slur at the milch goat which occurs in a published remark concerning a certain small breed of dairy cattle that athey might do for a man who is too poor to own a cow and ashamed to own a goat/' is no longer in order. It is true that a milch goat is not handsome: neither is the best milch cow handsome. II must be confessed that it is de- structive in its habits and tendencies if not restrained; so also are cattle and hogs and chickens. Everybody knows that it is mischievous, oftentimes to an exasperating degree, but this same charge applies to your neighbor's boys as well. Remember this, that the waste from the kitchen will keep a hog or two, the waste grains and other food about the yards will feed a few chickens, and the weeds and twigs and waste vegetables will, with the addition of onlv a small amount of hay and grain, keep a goat or two. The MILCH (JOATS. 177 cow must have her regular meals of a particular menu; she is uot allowed to convert waste of an}' sort into meat or milk. There are no statistics at hand showing the number of goats in any of the European countries except Germany. The number in that empire for several years are given herewith: 1873 2,320,000 1883 2.&41.000 1885 2.W0.994 1892 3,091,287 Dettweiler gives some statistics of interest with reference to the annual value of the goats in Germany. His estimates follow: TyTo -plra Value of goats 50.000,000 ($11,900,000) Value of milk produced 150.000.000 (35,700,000) Value of kids slaughtered 7.500,000 (1, 785,000) Value of goats slaughtered 6,500,000 (1,547,000) These statistics show that the milch goat industry of Germany is one of importance. The same general situation obtains in the other European countries mentioned. The milch goat situation in the United States is at the present time practically confined to an awakening interest. There is an insistent demand for information on the subject. Physicians who know of the healthful qualities of goat's milk are considering the advisability and possibility of obtaining a supply for the needs of their patients. People in moderate circumstances in the suburbs of our large cities are asking whether they can not do better by keeping goats. The poorer classes of these suburbs, to whom milk is a lux- ury, are wondering if they can not find a blessing in a milch goat. It is more than probable that the miners in the coal districts would find in the goat a profitable friend. The author would j.eel that something of value, especially in the way of suggestion to persons of wealth, would be lost if he failed to mention the work undertaken by Mrs. Edward Roby, of Chicago. She is well known throughout the country, being a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Daughter of 1812, member of the Woman's Federation and the Woman's Press Clubs, and numerous other well-known patriotic organiza- tions. She is also the founder and president of the Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic, and at her home is serving her thirteenth year as president of the Woman's South Side Study Club. This much is said with the reluctant consent of Mrs. Eoby, in the hope that her work with milch goats for the benefit of the poorer classes will afl'ord suggestions to others. It shows that any work which has for its object the benefit of these classes is dignified by the support of such people. MRS. EDWARD ROBY. MILCH GOATS. ]7«, Mrs. Roby has been purchasing common goats which are giving a fair amount of milk, and has a few head which -lie personally selected on the Bermuda Islands. With these and such other.- as she may be able to obtain, she proposes to do all she can toward the development of the American goat. As fast as she has good milch goats to spare she purposes selling them at low rates and on time, if necessary, to the heads of such households as are most greatly in need of them, in order that the children may be better nourished and be relieved from the danger of disease that lurks in much of the cow's milk that finds its way to such households. Besides, if such a family possesses a milk-giving goat, it will save many dollars to the owner during many months of the year, and the problem of obtaining a livelihood will not be so difficult of solution. It is everywhere acknowledged that the best way to help people who need assistance is to help them to help themselves. To intro- duce the milch goat into communities such as the suburbs of our large cities or into the coal-mining districts, will almost certainly wrork out wonderfully in economic results. German writers say boldly that the milch goat in its later development has done great service to the state, in that it supplies a want which before caused great unrest among the peasantry. The real demand for milch goats will not cease. The need will always be present so long as there are mothers who can not or who will not nurse their infants — so long as there is tubercu- lous cow's milk — so long as there are children that need more nourishing food than is supplied to them — so long as there are people who can afford to own a goat but not a cow. The Ulilk of the Goat. Its various uses. — The various uses of the milk in its natural state (butter, cheese, and whey not considered) are these: (1) Food for the poor; (2) food for the invalid; (3) food for infants; (4) medicine for certain diseases. As a rule the goat is the only useful domestic animal of the poorer people of Germany, especially of the day laborer, and it plays an important part in his household. Of necessity, it plays the part that the cow does in the households of the better classes. Says Dettweiler: "It furnishes to its owner without doubt the best milk for nourishing infants, for the household, for the cook- ing of food, and for coffee, besides butter and cheese. When one considers that it very often depends solely on the milk production of the ffoat whether the nutrition of the child and the whole family is bad or good, and the nutrition from infancy on has a bearing on 180 MILCH GOATS. the ability to a greater or a comparatively small amount of work in later life, then one will believe me when I say that the goat is in a position to wield a great influence in sustaining life." Petersen, having the peasantry of Germany in mind, sums up the value of the goats in this wise: (1) The possibility of pro- curing a goat is generally within the reach of the poorest families; (2) the risk and the insurance premium are disproportionately much less in the case of the goat; (3) the goat utilizes its food better than the cow, and gives considerably more milk in propor- tion to its body weight; (4) the goat is satisfied with little feed, and with feed of any sort, which is to be had at much less cost; (5) by keeping two goats instead of a cow, the family of the working man may be provided during the entire year with milk by the proper regulation of the time of the birth of the kid; (6) the goat gives a more wholesome milk than the cow and the milk is richer in fats." Hilpert, in .discussing the keeping of goats from a patriotic and social standpoint, comments as follows: "As to the question of human nourishment, the goat occupies an important position. It yields a wholesome nourishment for the family, serves as a use- ful and agreeable occupation for wife and children, and awakens in its owner a desire for industry and a spirit of frugality. So long as the workingman is glad in the possession of a business, has a small bit of ground to call his own, and has a profitable domestic animal, just so long will he be an opponent of social strife, a careful provider for the family, and an adherent of some recognized creed." Hoffman says that in 75 per cent of the households of Ger- many where goats are kept they play an important role, not alone with the poorer classes, but with the more prosperous middle classes as well. The following from Dettweiler shows something of the use of goat's milk for the food of the family in Saxony: "The cattle owners who keep goats in addition to one or two cows, number 13,400, with 17,439 goats. If this number be included with the one above, it is evident that with 60,974 goats owners keeping 80,048 goats, or about 75 per cent of all the goat owners in Saxony. the goat plays an important role as the source of the milk of the household; likewise (hat the homes that are here under considera- tion belong to thai class <>f people who are without much means. Especially in the industrial districts of the mountains, with a preponderance of the smaller manufactories, the goat is the sup- porter of the family — in a broad sense, of the people among which Eh < O 182 MILCH GOATS. it finds its manifold uses. In this way it comes about that goat's milk is such a universally established food material and 'one of which the people have become so fond that they will pay the same price (or in many places even a pfennig higher price) for it than for cow's milk, which latter serves to help out when there is a scarcity of goat's milk. The reason for this may be found in the higher nutritive value of goat's milk, and the assertion is often made here that anyone who has become accustomed to the use of goat's milk for coffee feels it a degradation if he is compelled to be content with cow's milk in its stead, which is not so good tasted and is poorer in fat than goat's milk. But the goat is beginning to rise in prominence and gain in numbers in highly developed, thickly settled districts where the people are more prosperous." It may have already occurred to the reader that cow's milk is the universal milk of mankind and is, withal, a very good product, and is rendered free from tubercle bacilli by boiling. The advo- cates of goat's milk assert that boiling transforms the casein into a condition in which it is very difficult of digestion. Dr. Schwartz, medical counsellor for Cologne, holds this opinion and says that "it has come about that very often the boiling of milk is dis- pensed with." He also states that it is very difficult to accomplish complete sterilization of milk. While discussing this feature, let us quote Renesse: "At the present time the effort is made to sterilize the milk by long con- tinued cooking and to make it free of all germs, and for this pur- pose the most complicated apparatuses have been put upon the market. But it has been scientifically demonstrated that imoor- >. j. tant substances are destroyed in the milk simultaneously with the long continued cooking, which are of great value in the feeding of suckling babes, especially in the development of the bony frame- work, and so it transpires that these so-called 'bottle babies' develop a picture of illness similar to rhachitis, in spite of the greatest care on the part of the parents. Furthermore, it turns out that the washing of the apparatus requires so much vigilance and time that the question of the use of it can not be entertained in the case of the incredulous working man who has quite a number of children and where the mother takes the entire care of the house." Goat's milk is said to be especially desirable for use in tea and coffee and for pastry ; and that whoever becomes accustomed to using it thus prefers it to any other kind. They like its taste and recognize its wholesomeness. It is recommended that, if one pur- poses to use goat's milk instead of that of the cow, two goats be MILCH GOATS. 183 employed, one of which should become "fresh" in the spring and the other in the fall. By this means a constant supply is possible, whereas with one animal it would not be possible. While we are discussing the use of this milk as food for the family, it will be interesting to read what was recently written to the American Sheep Breeder by J. R. Chisholm, of Xorth Queens- land, Australia, who said : "We had a terrible season last year and most of us lost heavily in sheep, but the goats kept us going in milk all the time, and it was in that dry time I overcame my COMMON MILCH GOAT OF QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA. prejudice and ate and relished goat meat, or, as you would call it 'venison." The goats served us well until the rains came. I've just asked my girls about the flock, and they tell me they milk eighteen nannies and make four or five pounds of butter weekly from them and have, besides, an abundance of milk for our house- hold of seven and a hired man. We think of selling our cattle." As food for invalids the milk of the goal is almost universally endorsed. This is not only so because of its apparent medicinal qualities, which are discussed a little further along, but because of its high content of solids, which average a little over 14 per cent, and also because of its easy digestibility. This latter characteristic is due to the fact that the globules of goat's milk are much smaller 184 MILCH GOATS. than those of cow's milk, and therefore the fat remains longer as an emulsion. Goat's milk creams very slowly and usually very unsatisfactorily, owing to the smallness of the fat globules. The tables of analyses given show the fat of goat's milk averages about 4.5 per cent. A recent writer in the Rural World says it would be accurate to say that goat's milk contains about twice as much fat as that of the average Shorthorn cow and is far superior to that yielded by the best Jerseys. The same writer (Sirgar) says: "Individual instances, though they do not, of course, prove the average, may be quoted to show its extraordinary richness. The milk of an Angora goat which was analyzed by F. S. Lloyd, analyst to the British Farmers' Association, contained no less than 8.69 per cent of butter fat, and 9.85 per cent of casein and milk sugar, the water amounting to only 80.53 per cent; the water in the average cow's milk would be about 87 per cent. A crossbred Toggenburger and Nubian goat gave 8.11 per cent of fat, and we have seen no Jersey records that have reached these figures." This from Hilpert is direct: "That it serves as a means of preserving health, witness the cures with goat's milk in the moun- tain sanitaria, especially for pulmonary diseases." It is certainly the best kind of argument that whatever acts as a curative agent should be the very best preventive agent as well. A strong argument is made by Renesse for the use of goat's milk as a preventive of tuberculosis. In his paper he states that in Germany 100,000 people die annually from tuberculosis and the number of those who are sick with the disease is estimated at ten times as many; and they are, as a rule, persons in the prime of life. And this is not all — these tuberculous persons, through their long period of illness, are ever a menace to those who are not already infected. To counteract these conditions, Renesse advocates goat's milk as a curative and preventive agent. In connection with the consideration of goat's milk as a food for invalids, one should read what is said further on regarding the relationship of goat's milk to tuberculosis. The use of this milk for infants — say, babes under a year old — has given rise to contrary opinions. Those who have studied the goat's milk as a diet all agree to its beneficial results upon all who are old enough to have a good flow from the salivary glands, but some maintain that it may take the place of human milk from the birth of a child. For instance, Dettweiler says: "Goat's milk most nearly resemble" woman's milk, and, on account of the ease with which it is digested, is attended with happy results in the case of the feeding of the sick and children." Hoffman says: MILCH GOATS. 185 "Goat's milk more nrarly resembles mother's milk than cow's milk when it comes to infant feeding." He also states that in Germany many children take the milk direct from the udder "as the kid does" and thus escapes any chance of milk infection. Zurn men- tions the same practice and also says that goats will consent to suckle other young animals, such as colts and little pigs. "Goats should prove to be very valuable as nurses. Prof* Magne makes note in regard to this fact in his 'Handbook of Agri- cultural Cattle Breeding/ Goats are good mothers and readily adopt infants, calves, lambs, etc. The use of goats for suckling infants is familiar enough (in Germany, I do not know so much about it). In this regard they are of great value. The goats con- ceive a liking for the life which they nourish, since they conduct themselves with extraordinary ready willingness toward the one who takes their milk in the matter of gratifying the whims of the suckling or of the person who milks them. With lambs, they will lie down entirely when these can not easily reach the udder, and with infants they will submit to being brought indoors that they may be placed upon the cradle (bed)/' (B. E. Haddrup.) A contrary opinion as to the value of this milk for babes is ex- pressed by a few who state that the greatest objection to the use of goat's milk is its indigestibility, not only for the new-born but also for adults. The Milch-Zeitung (vol. 25, p. 716) says: "Most of the authors who are assured of the complete digestibility of goat's milk and who recommend its use above all others base their opinions on results obtained from feeding children several months old. * * * Ought not the great richness of casein which goat's milk possesses, as compared with woman's milk, make the milk harder to digest?" This paper points out the function of saliva in the process of digestion, and says that, in the case of the new-born infant, the role of saliva is almost nothing. The chemist of the Philadelphia board of health has published two analyses of human milk, one when the glands were probably nearly empty and the other when full. The average of the two are given herewith and Hoffman's analysis of goat's milk and cow's milk added to the table for use in comparison. All are in per- centages : Element. Human. Goat. Cow. Albumin and casein 1.885 4.-140 5.850 3.68 4.78 4.50 4.00 Fat :ihO 4.;"i0 Ig6 MILCH GOATS. It will be noted that in the matter of albumin and casein human milk falls far short of the goat, and the goat shows a con- siderably lower percentage than the cow's milk. There is not much difference between the fat content of human milk and goat's milk. Human milk is much richer in milk sugar than that of the goat. This phase of the subject is so important that it will bear a somewhat lengthy quotation from Dr. 0. G. Place, of Boulder, Colo., whose fields of observation have been New York City, Chi- cago, London, and Paris among the larger cities, and many of the cities of Italy, Arabia, India, China, and Japan. He says in a recent letter: "Anyone who will take the trouble to look up the data will readily see that in those countries where the goat is do- mesticated and its milk is used in the family there is very little tuberculosis, almost no scrofulous glands, and the infant mortality is decidedly less for those children which use the milk. "There is certainly no danger in infection from either the milk or the meat of the goat. The following table will help us to draw conclusions along this line. This shows the infant mortality in the several countries named per 1,000 : United States, approximately 200 Engrl and 197 Asiatic countries (European children) 150 to 170 Italy 134 Norway 44 "The Asiatic countries do not have the sanitary enlightenment that, is boasted of in this country and in England, and yet we find to-day not only the death rate lower in infants, but we also find markedly less tuberculosis among the adults. Asia is a goat country. "Italy is a country noted for its unsanitary customs, and yet we find the infant mortality 66 per cent less than in our own country; and here, too, tuberculosis is seldom found. Italy is decidedly a goat country, and there the feeding bottle is scarcely heard of. Children that are not so fortunate as to be nursed by their mother find in the little Italian goat their next best friend. It is not an uncommon sight there to see an infant or small child drawing its dinner direct from the little goat, which has been brought onto the steps or into the house for the purpose. "In Norway, which is a colder climate, and where people no doubt live more in harmony with sanitary laws than any other countrv in the world, v. c get the low death rate of 44 per 1,000. Here if a mother does not have nourishment for her child, some other mother nurses it for her as a rule ; but where no mother is HORNLESS BUCK. From Hilpert. STAKKENBURGER BUCK. From Hilpert. 188 MILCH GOATS. at hand the milk of the goat is the universal food, and this is fed direct from the little bowl into which the goat is milked. Feeding bottles are unknown in this country/' What has been said in the preceding pages concerning the rela- tionship of goat's milk to health has its application in the use of the milk more as a preventive than as a curative agent. The use of the milk and also the whey as a medicine, or curative agent, are considered at some length in a brochure issued by C. F. Eeuss in Leipzig in 1763. He states that in the days of Hippocrates the milk cure was ordered to be taught in the medical schools as a curative of almost all breast affections and consumption; and he gives a long list of old physicians who used the cure, naming the disease treated by each. Some of the diseases mentioned are arthritis, nephritis, goat, whooping cough, scurvy, jaundice, diar- rhea, worms, and inflammation of the liver. Eeuss states that these old physicians ascribed the curative properties of the milk to the kinds of herbs which the goats ate. He also says: "It is well known to the medical profession that the marked laxative quality and the characteristic smell of goat milk depends to a large extent upon the food which they get. And likewise it is easy to reach the conclusion that the efficacy and qualities of other drugs (than the laxatives) easily pass over into the milk. And right here also belongs the further statement that the goats give a rather large amount of milk, the whole spring, throughout the summer, and a part of the fall, to say nothing of the fact that the goats are much stronger and digest their food better than sheep do." So much for the milk cure as a matter of history. While milk- may not now be generally considered a medicine, it forms an im- portant part of the sick-room diet. The relationship between milk and medicine is very close indeed. This is especially true of the milk of the goat. Quantity. — Question: How much milk will a goat give? An- swer: How long is a string? With goats, as with cows, so much depends upon individuality, breed, feed, and care that it is not possible to say how much milk goats will give. We may, however, arrive at an approximate conclusion if we study the animal with the above elements in mind. A goat which gives less than a quart a day is not to be con- sidered a good milch animal; if it yields 2 quarts it is a good ani- mal, provided the period of lactation (which is discussed else- where) is not brief. In the European countries the c:oats which yield from 3 to 5 quarts a day are numerous and the period of lactation is a long one. MILCH GOATS. 189 Indeed, it is stated in the German literature on this subject that many goats yield ten times their body weight of milk annu- ally and exceptional animals as much as eighteen times their weight. This is very much greater than th< yield of cows pro- portionately. On this point Petersen says: "In its form the goat exhibits, as it were, the complete type of a milch animal and by demonstration gives annually ten to sixteen times its own weight in milk and considerably more even, whereas, in the case of the cow, we must be well satisfied with five times its weight/' This from Zurn: "The milk reaches ordinarily ten to twelve times the body weight, exceptionally eighteen times this weight, in each year. In the case of very good goats, 4 to 5 liters1 can be produced for each kilogram2 of body weight, or, at the least estimate, double what a good milch cow can show for each kilogram of her weight." It is a good goat of any breed that will give 2 quarts of milk a day for seven or eight months of the year. One that will give more than this is specially desirable. The Angora goat, which is not considered a good milch animal, owing to the uncertain quan- tity and its covering of long hair, gives from 2 to 3 liters of very rich milk. The Nubian produces from 5 to 12 liters. The yield of the best goats of Switzerland is, on an average, about 4 liters per day. This amount is not produced without proper care and feed. To show how the yield varies, Dettweiler is quoted with reference to the annual yield per head of 24 goats in the vicinity of Alten- burg, Geising, and Lauenstein: 9 grave 600 to 700 liters. 1 gave 900 to 1.000 liters. 7 gave 700 to 800 liters. 3 gave over 1,000 liters. 4 gave 800 to 900 liters. I Ten animals in the city of Sebnitz were also reported upon, and their production annually was as here given : 2 gave 600 to 700 liters. 2 gave 700 to 800 liters. 3 gave 800 to 900 liters. 1 gave 900 to 1.000 liters. 1 gave 1.100 to 1.200 liters. 1 gave over 1,200 liters. These goats were not of any particular breed, but they had been bred from selected parents, as are all the goats in Germany. This illustrates what may be done in our own country with the goats we now have if we handle them properly. Petersen records the statement that one Langensalzaer goat gave 1,800 liters in one year. He also says that this breed has jriven a maximum daily vield of 10 liters. Analysis. — It is not probable that any two analyses of the milk of any animal would agree; indeed, analyses o? the milk taken at *A liter is 1.0567 quarts. 2A kilogram is approximately 2.20 pounds. 190 MILCH GOATS. different times of the clay seldom agree exactly. The ingredients of milk are governed, first, by the species of animal, and then by the kind of feed it consumes, the time of day when the milk is taken, and by the part of a particular milking, whether the first part or the last, and other minor causes. Therefore an analysis of milk is only a general guide to its composition, and any varia- tion between analyses does not prove that either or anyone of them is wrong. The analyses which are here quoted from several dif- ferent authorities are not from individual goats, or from one milk- ing, but are the averages of a number of analyses and are, there- fore, a very good basis from which to form conclusions. The following is from Eenesse, and shows a comparison in percentages between goat's milk and cow's milk: Element. Goat. Cow. 85 50 5.00 4.80 4.00 .70 87.25 3.90 Fat 3.30 4.60 Ash . .75 We find in the Oesterreichisches landwirthschaftliches wochen- blatt another comparison in percentages between the milk of the goat and that of the cow : Element. Goat. Cow. 85.6 .7 3.5 1.3 4.6 4.3 87.5 Dry substance .7 3.5 Albumin .5 Fat . 3.5 4.3 Professor Hoffman gives the following percentages in com- paring goat's milk and cow's milk: Element. Goat. Cow. 86.19 3.68 4.73 4.50 .90 87.50 Albumin and casein 4.00 Fat 3.50 Sugar . . 4.50 Salts .50 The above three analyses are all of foreign goats. The total solids shown by them afe, respectively, 14.50, 14.40, and 13.81 per cent. The two analyses of foreign cow's milk show, respect- ively, 12.50 and 12.50 per cent. The difference in favor of goat's SCHWARZENBURG-GUGGISBERGER DOE. From Hilpert. HINTERWALDER DOE. From Dettweiler. 192 MILCH GOATS. milk is one that is maintained in general in all analyses. An American analysis of goat's milk — one reported in 1896 by the chemist of the board of health of Philadelphia — shows the total solids to be 16.33 per cent. This indicates a very rich milk. The same analysis shows a percentage of 5.11 for sugar and of 5.85 for fat. This analysis, it should be stated, is of the milk of one goat and in all probability does not represent the quality of the American goats, as a whole. Who would not wish that it were so ? Quality. — The element of quality is shown in detail in the para- graphs under the head of "Analyses." This entire chapter has to deal with quality, but the reader is referred especially to the re- marks under the head of "Its various uses/' Period of lactation. — This is a feature which, at first glance, would not seem to be appropriate under the head of milk; but the period of lactation is so intimately connected with the quantity which may be produced that it must be discussed here in order to best elucidate the subject. The period of lactation, as in the case of the quantity, depends almost wholly upon the individuality of the goat, its ancestry, and upon the feed and care which it may receive. Ln a general sense it may be said that the period of lactation is about 7 months. Many give milk 8 and 9 months, even 10, and some would continue throughout the year if permitted ; but it is not well to permit the milk to flow up to the time of the birth of a new kid, as it works injury both to the does and the kid. On this point, we quote from a correspondent of the Landwirthschaft- liche Zeitung: "A doe giving milk continuously during 9 to 10 months can be made to do so during 11 months and even for the entire year through by generous feeding and good feed in winter." A goat that is compelled to find most of its food, and if such as it gets is not very suitable for milk production, the yield will be low and the duration of lactation about 3 or 4 months. If there is a milch goat industry built up in this country, it will be established to a large extent among the poorer people, who are unable to own and feed a cow ; and these people will have need of a supply of milk throughout the year. Every such family should have at least two goats, and matters should be so arranged as to have them become fresh alternately six months apart. Thus each doe would drop kids but once a year, and they ought to be of such breeding and have such feeding as would insure a constant supply of milk. Flavor. — People are inclined to believe many things that are not true, and one of them is that there is an inherent ill flavor in MILCH GOATS 1!.;; the milk of the goat. Therefore, withoul parley, they decide that they have no use for either the milk or the animal. Briefly, it may be said that this is erroneous. However, in order to under- stand the matter, an explanation is accessary. If the goats are allowed to roam about and cat weeds and twigs and all kind- of vegetation at will while they are giving milk, the milk is apt to be strong, or of ill flavor. The tendency of the goat is to eat these very things at all times, and so it is but natural always to expect to note their influence upon the quality of the milk. On the con- trary, if the animal is fed properly, with the purpose in view of obtaining palatable milk, no ill flavor is noticed. Switzerland is one of the greatest of milch goat countries, and travelers there, always observe that the milk of the goat possesses a strong flavor. Bryan Hook, as well as some of the German writers, state that the animals there are not fed, but find it necessary to gather their subsistence from between the rocks on the mountain sides, where much of the vegetation is made up of aromatic plants. Hook further says: "The milk from goats fed upon what an English meadow or roadside yields has no flavor to distinguish it from cow's milk, except, perhaps, its extra sweetness and creaminess; in short, it is only distinguishable by its superiority/' Felix Hilpert, a well-known German writer on milch goats, says that milk with good taste may be obtained if the following points are scrupulously observed : (1) Good stable, dry stall, clean hands and bucket at milking time; (2) daily cleansing of the skin and washing off of the udder with warm water before milk- ing; (3) the feeding of wholesome, pure, and "good tasting'' (not strong tasting) food; (4) attention to fresh air in the stall, and, if possible, allowing the goats to exercise in the open air. The Milch-Zeitung (vol. xxv., p. 099) says: "An after-taste of goat's milk, according to statements of veterinarians, should not exist, and, if any rich taste or smell should exist it must be traced to unclean stables or bad feed. Even cow's milk very fre- quently smells badly under these conditions." Dettweiler says: "It [the milk] possesses a singular but not unpleasant sharp taste, the strength of which varies with the feed- ing and keeping. The better the feed, the cleaner the bedding, the better ventilated the stall, and the more painstaking the care, just so much more pleasing will be the taste of the milk. The goatish taste is always to be attributed to the lack of attention to one or more of these points." Kloepfer says: "A scrupulous care of the skin itself is abso- lutely necessary even with the best conditions of bedding. If the 194 MILCH GOATS. pores of the skin, which partly serve to bring air into the body and partly to emit excrementitous materials [such as perspira- tion] from it become filled with dirt and stopped up, on the one hand, metabolism suffers and, on the other, these materials remain in the body, the proper excretion of which is interfered with. Thus the rather unpleasant after:taste of goat milk, for the most part, is to be traced to the fact that the gaseous and liquid excrementi- tous materials can not pass from the body because of the occlusion of the pores of the skin and they therefore impart to the milk their unpleasant taste. The milk of healthy and cleanly goats has the same good wholesome taste that cow's milk has and excels it in the amount of fat and albumin contained. For these reasons it is imperative carefully to observe the following points: (1) To clean with a brush and comb the hair, first upward, then lightly down- ward, each day; (2) to wash the goats with soda water or soap suds on still sunny days in the spring before turning them out to pasture and in the fall before housing them, repeating the opera- tion a few days later in each season. By this means all vermin is destroyed and many skin diseases prevented; (3) to look carefully after the cleanliness of the udder by washing it frequently and with great care and pains." These opinions of writers of prominence and men of experi- ence are given to point out the source of unpalatable milk and also the way it may be avoided. If a goat is fed all sorts of vegetable rubbish, it must not be expected to yield milk of the best flavor. Onions, garlic, aromatic plants, and all varieties of twigs and bark alone are not the best for good milk. We should not forget the philosophy of the old saw that "you can't make a silk purse out of a sow's ear." If the same sanitary practices obtain in the goat dairy that are now followed by the best cattle dairies there need be no fear of unpalatable milk. However, goat's milk has a characteristic taste which, it is said, is always distinguishable in some degree, but not so pronounced in the fresh state. This may be so far eradicated by good feeding, good care and cleanli- ness that it may be almost imperceptible. The taste can not be observed when the milk is used in coffee or in cooking. The milk of the goat is nearly always pure white — very seldom having a yellowish tinge — and it is so thick as to lead one not familiar with it to doubt its purity and wholesomeness. Odor. — Besides the flavor of the milk, which is discussed above, there is often a disagreeable odor. This may be due to one or more of the various causes, but it is not a natural characteristic and therefore, as in the matter of ill flavor, may be avoided by proper care. Dr. M. Aiken of the London Agricultural Gazette says that < - < < < o o < o '_- 03 - 196 MILCH GOATS. the slight odor which the milk sometimes possesses is not a char- acteristic of the milk, but is peculiar to the skin of the goat and is imparted to the milk externally. Zurn mentions the cause of the odor and tells how it may be prevented. He says: "It is admitted that goat's milk sometimes has the smell of the buck. Much can be done toward lessening this and toward its ultimate entire re- moval by furnishing a dry, sweet stall, bedded with lots of clean straw, by good care of the skin and by permitting the continuance as long a time as possible in the open air." A German agricultural paper says that in consequence of un- cleanliness and the lack of proper action of the skin there is a strong smell of a decomposition product — namely, caporic acid. The article continues: "With a view to the greatest possible diminution of the goatish smell of the milk, there are here given the following directions for good stable goats: (1) Short hair; (2) uniformity of color; and (3) goats without horns. The argument in favor of short hair is that the skin may be the better cared for. With reference to the color, it is claimed by some that the purer the breeds the freer they are from the disagreeable odor, and that a pure bred goat is of solid color. Most of the German writers state that goats without horns are the better milch animals. Why so the writer is unable to say. The paper referred to above intimates that goats with horns are more active, thus causing perspiration, and this gives rise to the ill odor. Hilpert says that hornless goats should give milk less strong to the taste than other goats, but does not give a reason for his opinion. He makes a point with reference to the odor of the milk, however, which breed- ers should note — namely, that "at times an individual character- istic is responsible for this, and from such animals offspring should not be obtained/' He also says that if the goat's milk savors of the buck or of manure it is seldom the fault of the goat, but gen- erally that of the owner. Knowing, as we do now, the cause of the ill odor and how to prevent it, there is no reason why this characteristic should be quoted as an objection to the goat. Concerning tuberculosis. — The question of the milk of goats being the carrier of the germs of tuberculosis will be discussed under another head, as it is one that concerns the animal's body as well as the milk. Cost of product ion. — All estimates of the cost of producing milk are confined to German experiments. Of course, they can not be applied literally to the conditions in the United States. yet they indicate what may be expected. Dettweiler states that a goat which, under ordinary dairy conditions, yields 500 MILCH GOATS 197 liters annually does so at a cost of 12 pfennigs1 per liter. If the yield is GOO liters the cost te reduced to 8.3 pfennigs; a yield of 700 liters costs 7.1 pfennigs, and 800 liters costs 6.25 pfennigs each. He continues: "According to Dr. Lobe, a goat weighing 30 kilograms- needs a supply of hay weighing 1.05 kilograms, and gives on an average of 1.72 liters of milk at 12 pfennigs per liter; thus the goat converts 50 kilograms of hay, by means of the milk given, into a value of 9.80 mark- ; an evidence of the fact that the goat is a good utilizer of food. In the same way a cow weighing 300 kilograms, with a daily food supply of 10.5 kilograms, must give nearly 17 liters if she would utilize the food as well as the goat. Under very many circum- stances the keeping of two or three goats will be more profitable than that of one cow, for with the feed that a cow requires one can keep eight goats at quite an additional profit and at compara- tively less risk of loss." Description of a Good Milch Goat* The points of this description are those which are considered important in Europe. There seems to be no reason why the best milch goat here should not answer in all respects to the best type there. The goat should be hornless, short haired and of solid color. Long hair is an objection only as it is a nuisance at milk- ing time and makes the work of keeping the animal clean very difficult. The animal should usually present a lanky appearance, with broad muzzle, clean-cut head, graceful neck, deep in the stomach rather than broad. The chest should be broad and deep. The udder is hard rather than soft and fat. The size of the udder will depend upon the number of years the animal has given milk. In some of the old does, especially of the short-legged Maltese, the teats sometimes touch the ground. A very excellent description and one full of suggestions is that of Hilpert and is given herewith : "In a good milch goat the following points are to be described : A long body, growing larger at the hinder parts and beneath, nently rounded form, a deep and broad breast, short legs, broad buttocks, wide but filled out 'hungry hole' (the depression in front of the hip bone), a neck that is not too long nor too thick, a light, broad head, wide mouth and good udder. The udder should be of considerable size. Only those goats can give plenty of milk which have a bulky, well-developed milk gland; that i-. a large udder. But it is not always the case that a capacious udder signifies a high milk yield. The amount of glandular tissue in the 1 A pfennig is one-fourth of a cent. - A kilogram equals, approximately, 2.20 pounds. 198 MILCH GOATS. udder can be augmented by the surrounding flesh and fat, and then the udder is spoken of as a fleshy or fatty udder. A large udder is, then, a favorable sign of an abundance of milk when it is a genuine udder. A fatty udder feels soft and full; its skin is generally somewhat thicker, sparsely covered with long, coarse hair; does not wrinkle after milking and diminishes only slightly in circumference. A genuine milk udder feels tight and as having kernels in its upper portion; its skin is thin and tender, covered with short, fine hair, and forms very perceptible folds and wrinkles, which fall together after the milking is done, if the condition of the udder is not too tense. Moreover, the blood vessels course along very noticeably on account of the thin skin when the udder is filled — a condition not present in the case of a fatty udder. A good milch goat should have a fine, thin skin, which is best examined over the ribs, and it should be covered with fine (not bristly), smooth, glistening hair. That the absence of horns possesses an alleged influence in making the milk mild in taste has been spoken of before. When all these characteristics coincide it is certain that one is dealing with a good milch goat." In the matter of selection one should buy only well-bred stock. Goats designed for breeding should be descended only from such animals as gave an abundance of milk. In this connection it is well to remember that the milk yield is a quality which is inherited not only through the mother goat, but through the buck also, and handed down to the young. If both the males and females be descended from milch-giving animals, then it is of the utmost probability that the offspring will be blest with an abundance of milk later on. An American Milch Goat Suggested. Having in view the great difficulty that will be encountered in efforts to import foreign breeds of milch goats, it occurs to the writer that the people of the United States who are interested in the question may find it necessary to develop a strain of milch goats from the stock already available. Everybody calls this stock "common goats," as, indeed, they are. Mrs. Roby lias patriotically suggested that the term ''('0111111011 goats" be discontinued and "American goats" be substituted. But a change in name will nol change the animal, and ii will si ill remain a common animal, nol only in the United St.ites, but everywhere. Let us. rather, adopt a further suggestion of Mrs. Roby and by the use of our common goats as foundation stock develop an animal that shall produce a good quality of milk ; and. so soon as some breeding characteristics are fixed, call the new animal the "American goat." MALTESE GOAT. Raised in Tunis. NUBIAN GOAT. Photo by Wm. G cle Ooligny 200 MILCH GOATS. Such an outcome is not an impossibility by any means. En- glish breeders soon learned that the purebred milch goats from the continent and the Island of Malta would not thrive in their cli- mate; so they began crossing with their common goats, with the result that they now have a very good milch animal which they name the English milch goat. In our own country Daniel F. Tompkins of Jersey City, N. J., has met with very good success in efforts to develop such an animal as suggested here. Mrs. Roby, who has already been mentioned, is making efforts without regard to cost in the same direction. Breeding and Kidding. Milch goats as a rule are very prolific animals. They seldom drop fewer than two kids, and some breeds drop as many as four at a time. The Nubian, one of the best milch goats known, has had as many as eleven kids in a year. It is well known that An- gora goats will breed but once a year, but other goats breed very soon after kidding; and, as the period of gestation is only from 155 to 157 days, their increase may be quite rapid. The buclc. — First, the buck should be from a milk strain and himself have the characteristics of a milch animal. He should have a pedigree showing ancestors of milk propensities; even then, if upon trial he fails to transmit the milk characteristics, he should be dispensed with. He should be killed for the good of the indus- try. The Question of Feeding. The thought will no doubt come to many people at once that the best and cheapest manner to feed milch goats is to turn them upon brushwood and weeds, where they can feed as Angoras do. While this will prove to be a feed very much relished by the goaf and at the same time prove an effective means of destroying the brush and weeds, it will be observed that the milk supply will dimin- ish in quantity and the palatability will be greatly affected. Such a location will not answer for a goat dairy. The goat is a single- purpose animal; she can not produce good milk and destroy brush and weeds at the same time. She must be regarded as a milk- producing machine and fed such things and in such manner as will enable her to do the best at the pail. In a general way i( may be stated that eight goats can subsist and yield a good flow of milk upon the amount of feed that is required for one cow. It is proved by experiments in Europe that the goat makes much better use of its feed in producing milk than MILCH GOATS. 20] does a cow. Considering its proportionate weight, the goat is the greatest milk producer of all domestic animals. Some writers state that the average amount of hay required annually for a milch goat is ahout 300 pounds; but m an examina- tion of experiments where large milk production was the object in view it is shown that some goats will consume as much as 700 pounds. Let us be generous and allow our goats 500 pound- to eat; if we arc not careful Ave shall waste that much or more and charge it against the goat. For the milch goat hay is indispensable, winter and summer. Without hay goat keeping is scarcely possi- ble, because it can not be displaced by any other food. Of course, an abundance of dry fodders will answer the same purposes as the hay. Kioepfer says: "From my experiments, which I have con- ducted in the past two years upon my experimental animals, one must figure on at least 3 cwt. of hay yearly for each mature animal. If one can obtain more of course it is so much the better. As a means of saving the hay it is suggested that it be cut up and fed in a narrow rack and mixed with straw. By this means the animals will be prevented from tramping the feed under foot. It is best in the morning to feed half of the day's ration of hay, mixed with equal amount of straw, and after this to give water which in severe weather has been allowed to stand in a warm room or in the kitchen. The offal from the kitchen serves as the usual noon meal, which should be given not with, but without, a large amount of liquid." Good hay, especially clover hay, exercises a stimulating influ- ence upon the digestive organs and serves as an active element in the production of milk. Fresh hay, which has not yet undergone the sweat, is difficult of digestion and easily induces bloating. Old, dusty hay which has lain more than a year is tasteless and pro- vokes shortness of breath. The best food for goats is found in the pasture "where, nature has spread the table"; but before they go out and after they return from the pasture hay should be given them. Bran is an excellent feed ; its use will depend upon its cost. The daily ration may vary between one-half and three-quarters of a pound. Dampen the bran with a little salt water. The morn- ing and evening portions may contain the solid materials from the kitchen slops, such as potatoes, carrots, turnips and bread crusts. Malt is recommended where it can be had regularly and at rea- sonable cost. It is an excellent milk-producing feed. It should not be fed when sour. Dry malt (which has been preserved for a vear) is also srood for milk. 202 MILCH GOATS. Oats and barley are good. Green oats are especially good for kids at weaning time. Linseed cake meal may be fed in amount from 50 to 75 grams daily as an auxiliary feed. Its influence upon digestion and nour- ishment is excellent. Kloepfer says: "It is absolutely invaluable before delivery. When, on account of its digestibility and ready assimilation, it is a prophylactic against milk fever." A breeder of many years' experience declares that out of 100 cases of milk fever, 50 of which used to be fatal, now his herd is almost free from it because of feeding with linseed cake. This precautionary method is so simple and reasonable in price that all ought to be able to employ it. If, by reason of drouth, soiling is necessary, leaves, vegetable refuse, peelings of the apple or potato, bread crusts or stale bread, if they are sweet and clean, will be all the feed that is needed. All goats, however, will not eat the same food, and the feeder will have to study the appetites of the indi- vidual animal. Frequent feeding and a variety of food in winter will be found beneficial. Fencing and Housing. The fences and houses required for milch goats are very much the same as those required for dairy cattle. While the goat does not jump, except when trained to do so, it will climb and creep just where one would not expect it. Goats should not be tempted with a poor fence or one that offers any opportunity for climbing. If such opportunities are offered, the garden, shrubbery, and fruit trees are sure to suffer in consequence. The plan of a very convenient house is shown in Hook's excellent little English work, "Milch Goats and Their Manage- ment/' The stalls are very convenient; the rack above for the hay is easily accessible to the animal, and yet permits of no waste; the slatted floor favors cleanliness; if for any reason the goat should not be tied — at the time of kidding, for instance — the box stalls are available; a loft immediately over the stalls holds the forage, which may be fed directly to the rack below ; a hopper is provided for grain or soft feed. Anv goat hov.se should be ventilat- ed, for goats must have an abundance of fresh air. A goat house must be comfortable in winter, as all short-haired breeds suffer much from the told. It must not leak rain at anv time. There should be a yard in connection with the goat house where animals may exercise un warm days in winter season. 6 - O 204 MILCH GOATS Tlie Operation ol Milking. The act of milking by the milk vender in European countries and also in our insular possessions is usually done on the street at all hours of the morning or evening. The vendor drives his goats from door to door, and at each one draws the amount of milk de- sired. The better way, as our own people will at once recognize, is to have a place near the goat house for milking, just as we have an established place for milking the cow. Under no circumstances should milking be done in the stalls or in that part of the house where the stalls are located. The act of milking is done from the rear, as is shown in the illustration of the Maltese goat. All authorities agree that goats should be milked three times a day. This must be done regularly as to days and hours, if the goat is to be kept in milk — "in profit,7' as they say in England. This is an important point; a disregard of it is apt to render futile all other efforts in the way of breeding, feeding, and care. Kindness and gentleness is now a recognized necessity in the best cattle dairies. These characteristics are even more necessary with goats. On this point Von L. Albrect is quoted: "Milch goats will be particularly gentle and of kind disposition when handled and cared for, so far as possible, by the same person. To this end the milking must be done with regard to gentleness and regularity, and with the closed hand so far as possible. The strokes and tugs must be performed with care. The milking is clone besi by a stroke directed from above downward/*' Some excellent advice is given by Renesse as follows: "Before beginning to milk the two teats are to be washed off with luke- warm water and then dried off with a soft cloth, also the udder is to be stripped a few times from above downward. It is advisable that the animal be milked by one and the same individual with clean hands at regular and definite times. The milk pail is to be entirely sweet and clean. Milking must not be done in the stall. Tuberculous persons must not be allowed either to expectorate in the stable or, much less, to milk. That the milk may not depre- ciate in taste it should be put away in a suitable place. A state- ment of the amount of milk given daily should be kept in a book by dates, in liters, in order to have an accurate account as to the .profit." Milch Goat Dairies. Since there is almost universal indorsement of goat's milk for infants and invalids, am! since the cost of keeping is so much less than the keeping of cows, it would seem thai a goat dairy would prove a success, especially if it is in proximity to the large cities. MILCH Gi - LTS -H):, Instances arc known where the milk lias been sold in limited quantities at prices ranging from 12% cents to 85 cents a pint. It may not be that such prices would be maintained, brat there can not be a doubt that a much better price could be obtained than can be had for cow's milk. After a milch goat industry shall have been established in this country other matters in connection with it \\\\\ arise for attention. The matter of condensed milk will be one of the first. Thousands of infants are now compelled to live during their first tew months on condensed milk of cows, and it is not the best food for some stomachs. The Cheese. The cheese that is made from goat's milk is considered very choice and always brings good prices. Some of the varieties quite well known in the United States are the Roquefort, Kieotto, Schweitzer and Altenburger. It is stated that on an estate near Lyons, France, 12,000 goats are kept in flocks of 40 to 60 for the purpose of cheese manufacture. The goat cheese made in the vicinity of Mount d'Or enjoys a worldwide demand, and there are employed at this place about 15,000 goats. We are informed that the annual production of cheese there is valued at 1,500,000 francs ($289,500). The French goat cheeses worthy of special mention are Fromage de St. Marcellin, St. Claude, Cheverctin, Gratairon. The first one is a combination of the milk of the goat and the sheep. The strong taste and odor of goat cheese are qualities very pleasing to many. In Norway a goat cheese called Hoitcost is quite a favorite. On this account the French as well as the Ger- man, especially the Dutch and Swiss, dairymen have been in the habit of making cheese of an especially pronounced odor and flavor, and, in pursuit of this habit, some of them have uslmI the milk of the goat in part with that of the slice]) and the cow in the making of cheese. But while in some instances the milk of the sheep is used wholly as the basis of a special kind of cheese, that of the goat is only used when mixed with the ewe's or row's milk, simply for the purpose of securing the special flavor of it. And as the special kinds of cheese thus made find a market in our large cities to considerable extent, it is quite probable that the making of this kind of cheese may become an established and quite profitable industry. And, in fact, in view of the great enterprise and engenuity of the American citizen in all the busi- ness of life, it may easily become so to an enlarged extent when goat's milk cheese shall he offered in our markets. 206 MILCH GOATS. With reference to the manufacture of goat's cheese, Eenesse gives the following: "The milk is treated in a kettle, warmed to 25° to 26° K., and, while being stirred evenly, is brought to coagu- lation by the addition of rennet. By this moans the socalled curd is separated out of the whey. The curd is then manipulated with a strainer and the whey allowed to run off. When the curd after several hours has become dry, salt and caraway seed are intimately mixed with it and it is made into small cheeses. These little cheeses are to be placed on racks in the cellar to dry and are turned daily. After about fourteen days they are ripe and ready for use. The cheese takes on an especially fine taste and sweet odor if, after a long period of ripening, it be laid in the dried leaves of the sweet-scented woodroof. As a rule, 1 kilogram of cheese can be obtained from 10 liters of milk." The Butter. There is nothing about goat's milk to recommend it for butter making, although in those countries where milch goats are com- mon it is made frequently, but not extensively. There are several reasons why it is not satisfactory, and these will be mentioned here, but not discussed to any extent. Goat's milk is very slow to cream, a condition due to the fact that the fat globules are very small and consequently held much longer in emulsion. Owing to this condition the ordinary method of sep- arating the cream by skimming after the milk has been set is not successful, as only a portion of the cream will have separated in the time allowed. According to Zurn, 50 kilograms of milk, when skimmed in the ordinary way, yield only 1.5 to 2 kilograms of butter. Good goat's butter is usually white, rarely of a yellowish tinge, tastes sweet, and is very fat; because of the last characteristic it is softer than cow's butter. If it is used in its fresh state the taste is pleasant, particularly if it is freed by much washing of the peculiar taste which ordinarily clings to it, but which in a degree is pleasant to some. This taste returns again, however, if the but- ter is set aside for several days. Goat's butter becomes rancid very soon and very easily. It can be used as cooking butter only in a fresh state. The Milch-Zeitung (1893, p. 756) published an analysis of goat's butter, which is reproduced here: Per cent. Water Fat 86.5 Salts and ash 3.7 Proteids 0.8 Carbohydrates 0 . ? 100 SAANEN BUCK. From Wilsdorf. SAANEN DOE. From Wilsdorf. 208 MILCH GOATS. The low content of water is especially noticeable, being but 8.2 per cent. Cow's butter of good quality carries as much as 12 per cent. Tlie Wliey. Goat's whey is highly recommended by foreign authorities on account of its medicinal and nourishing properties. This para- graph will deal wholly with their opinions. Zurn says: "Goat whey is used for medicinal purposes and is recommended especially for diseases of the lungs for those suffering from bronchial catarrh, for weak anemic persons suffering from innutrition, and also for weak consumptives. The whey is easily, quickly, and completely separated from the milk." The same author publishes the follow- ing approximate analysis of the whey: Per cent. Fat 0.02 Sugar 4 .969 Salts 0.665 Albumin 0.581 Water 93.765 100 The composition of the ash is as follows : Per cent. Potassium 44.58 Sodium 7. 18 Calcium 5.99 Magnesium 2.48 Phosphoric acid 13.78 Sulphuric acid 2.42 Chlorine 30.41 The whey has a laxative effect on most people, a fact easy of explanation when the composition of the ash is considered. Zurn says : "The abundant amount of acid phosphate of calcium, which is presented in easily assimilable form in goat whey, has the power to influence favorably the upbuilding of the bony structures; the amount of potassium present, the activity of the blood and circu- lation, especially the heart. By means of its sugar the whey supplies carbohydrates in composition easily to be assimilated and which serves as a means of strengthening the respiratory activity. The amount of water contained in whey has the power to assist in carrying off the non-assimilable materials which are present, especially in the blood of those who are ill." The consideration of whey will close with the following sum- mary of its benefits, as given by Dr. H. May, physician and director of the royal sanitarium at Kreuth, Germany: "It is my opinion that the whey is of advantage in consumption because the sugar which it contains checks the albuminous and tissue waste and its salts compensate for the loss of inorganic matter as the result of increased bronchial and mucous secretion. The tests of the physio- MILCH GOATS. logical and therapeutic value of the whey brings us to the con- clusion that it is a valuable nourishment and healing agent which can take the place of other means of cure and we have do ground to fear that all the whey-cure institutes will be transformed into milk-cure institutes. While it is not possible to draw a hard and fast line of difference to say how many of the results we see in the whey-cure institutes are to he credited to the account of the whey and how many to other agents, especially climatic conditions, I learn from the history of my cases that I can attribute them in very great part to the healthy therapeutic action of the whey. "When we gather together the conclusions of what has been said they are these: (1) The salts of the milk and milk sugar are largely responsible for the physiological and therapeutic value of the whey. "(2) The sugar limits by its disintegration the further breaking up of the glycogen fats and albumin in the body and serves in this way for the maintenance of the body aright and puts the body in shape to take on more fat. "(3) The principal value of the sugar for our bodies is seen best in emaciated people when the possibility of keeping up nour- ishment is lessened and the life of the cells is hindered. Here the sugar acts similar to alcohol as a maintainer of strength. "(4) Though, it is not absolutely essential to have a surplus of salts in case of a sound, healthy body, it is very often that the presence of these salts acts to dispel pathological conditions in a remarkable degree when the body is sick. "(5) This is especially the case in fever, in suppuration, ex- udates, continuing catarrhal secretions, profuse expectorations, etc. "(6) Besides this compensating influence, the salts of whey exercise in the bodv a diuretic action and serve as a mild laxa- ■j five. "(7) A specific action of whey in the diseases of the respiratory organs is not worth while to mention when we know its physio- logical and therapeutic action. "(8) Wrhey contains by careful preparations no lactic acids; its milk sugar is not transformed into lactic acid in the intes- tines. "(9) From the irritation caused in these organs by the action of lactic acid we can see how valuable the elements of whey (salts of sugar) are, inasmuch as they are absorbed unchanged. "(10) Whey is a valuable means of nourishment and healing, which can be substituted and placed by the side of all the other means of cure. 210 MILCH GOATS. "(11) For the transformation of all the whey institutes into milk institutes we are not ready for the reasons cited/' Immunity from Tuberculosis. Whether or not goats are immune from tuberculosis (or con- sumption, or phthisis) is a question of the greatest importance, since those who advocate the keeping of goats for milk lay much stress upon the healthful qualities of the milk, especially in its relation to tuberculosis. If it were true, as is often stated, that goats are never affected with tuberculosis, they would no doubt be regarded as the most valuable of the animal kingdom to mankind. This would be the case because milk is the first food of man, and he is dependent, to a large degree, upon it throughout life; and we are assured by the medical fraternity that the dread disease of tuberculosis is transmitted more often and more readily by cow's milk than by any other cause. Hence, if there were a domestic animal which would prove to be absolutely immune from this dis- ease it would be one of the greatest boons to humanity. However, the goat is not entirely immune, as we shall see from the testimony of several who are thoroughly informed on this matter; but it may be safely said that it is practically immune from tuberculosis and that a very few goats only are affected. The subject of milch goats is a new one to the United States and our people, who always desire the opinions of men of experience, demand the fullest information before formulating their judgment. For this reason the opinions of scientific men and others in Europe are quoted here in reference to the goat and its relation to tuberculosis. Hook says : "Undoubtedly the most important of all the qualities of goat's milk, especially in its relation to its adaptability to the feeding of infants, is its immunity from the danger of carrying the germs of tubercular disease." A writer who signed himself "Sirgar" to a recent article in the Eural World, a person who writes with such force as to exhibit an acquaintance with goats, says: "I have seen this statement questioned — I do not know by what authority — but some years ago the British Medical Journal boldly declared that goat's milk is not liable to tuberculous infection; and in support of the state- ment quoted the greatest living authority on bacteriology, the well-known Professor Nocard, whose researches have proved so valuable in many directions to the stock keeper. Professor Nocard states that 'out of over 130,000 goats and kids that have been brought to Paris for slaughter at the shambles of La Villette every year, the meat inspectors have failed to discover a single case of phthisis.' This testimony should be sufficient to decide the ques- MILCH GOATS. 211 tion and its value would be little disturbed by the discovery, if it were made, that the goat is not immune. For all practical purposes the animal, when kept under healthy conditions, is free from the dreadful disease from which very few [cattle] herds in the coun- try can claim to be exempt." A German agricultural paper indorses goat's milk because of its "anti-tubercular properties, insuring a pure milk yield"; and the paper continues: "Since Lobe, Ehode, and others ascribed to goats an almost total immunity from tuberculosis, Koch makes the statement, in his first study concerning tuberculosis due to infection of cow's milk, that recently there are well-authenticated cases recognized in the literature due to inoculation by cow tuber- cles or in consequence of rearing goats on tuberculous cow's milk/' Hilpert says that since the goat is much more healthy than the cow and sheep, tuberculosis (which can be transmitted from them to man) attacks it very rarely, and so its milk is very much better and is especially adapted to children. Dr. A. von Eenesse says, with reference to the milk of the goat, there need be no "fear as to the transmission of tuberculosis." Dr. Schwartz, medical coun- sellor from Cologne, in an address at Frankfurt (1896) before the Association of German Naturalists and Physicians, directed the attention of the convention toward goat milk as a food for children because goats rarely have a tendency to tuberculosis, and even when they have it they become infected by coming in contact with tuberculous cattle. A few references follow to show to what extent one may expect to find tuberculosis in the goat. The first is from Herr Hoffman, professor of animal breeding at the Royal Veterinary High School, Stuttgart, Germany (1898), who says: "While the statement is not entirely true that goats are absolutely immune from tuber- culosis, yet, of 1,500 goats publicly slaughtered in one year only 0.6 per cent were affected. This bears no comparison to the prevalence of tuberculosis among cattle. For example, in the slaughter house at Kiel, Germany, in 1896, 41.03 per cent of all slaughtered cattle and 45.82 per cent of all cows were found to be tuberculous." This from Dettweiler: "In the kingdom of Saxony, according to a report concerning veterinary affairs for the year 1894, it is stated that out of 1,562 goats slaughtered only 10 (0.64 per cent) were found to be tuberculous, of which 2 were destroyed, 1 was kept under observation and 7 were found salable. In Prussia in 1899, in 381 slaughter houses 47,705 goats were killed. Of this number only 148 head (0.41 per cent) were infected, either gen- 212 MILCH GOATS. erally or locally. This result must be the more astonishing be- cause the goats, with only a few exceptions, were kept under con- ditions eminently favorable to the spread of tuberculosis. Peter- sen, quoting these same figures, says that the goats ran freely in the cattle sheds, ate out of the racks with tuberculous cows, and, owing to their well-known proclivities for mischief, took hay out of the mouths of the cattle, whereby they exposed themselves to the greatest possible infection. Hoffman continued as follows: * * * «Qf 4^146 goats slaughtered [in Saxony] in 1899, only 25 were found tuberculous. Of these 3 were destroyed and 22 passed inspection — that is, were salable." The opinion now quoted from the Deutsch Landwirthschaftliche Presse (vol. xx, p. 833) is on the other side of the question: "Assistant Eichhorn informs us as follows in 'Report of Veter- inary Science in Imperial Saxony/ concerning the appearance of tuberculosis in goats: 'There was a goat (in a large herd of 28 head) which had been brought for treatment and which, after its death, which soon followed, was found to be tuberculous to a high degree. This made it imperative to inoculate the entire remaining 27 head with tuberculin. In 18 of these, in consequence of the inoculation, a rise in temperature occurred of 1° to 2.5° C, and only in 9 did the increased temperature amount to less than 1° C. (0.6° to 0.9° C). Because of this result G8 per cent of all the goats had to be retained on suspicion of being tuberculous, and only 32 per cent were to be looked upon as probably free of tuber- culosis. The owner could only make up his mind to have 3 slaughtered, of which 2 were suspected of being tuberculous and 1 was probably free of the disease; the result justifying the con- clusion that the diagnosis was correct. This shows how necessary a greater degree of care is in the use of goat's milk as food in the milk cure.' " To discuss the tuberculosis question is a delicate matter and one which only the medical man and the scientist would dare to venture upon. The writer must be content witfi a presentation of the views of others who have made the question a study. There are, however, some conclusions which may be drawn from the quotations given above — namely, (1) goats will contract tubercu- losis; (2) they do so with some difficulty, thus showing that they are what may be termed highly resistant to the disease; (3) they are not likely to contract the disease if in good health and ordinary methods are employed to prevent exposure. MILCH GOATS. 213 Diseases ol milch Goats. Milch goats are subject to the same diseases as the Angora breed. The reader is therefore referred to the chapter on the diseases of the Angora goat for information on this subject. Some of Mi « Breeds. There are a great many different breeds of milch goats. The number is augmented by many cross breeds. It would subserve no useful purpose to give an account of all these here, or of even a considerable number of them. We shall be content with some general remarks about a few breeds that have received in their native home land high commendation as milch animals. The Malta goat. — It is probable that in no country has the rais- ing of fine milch goats been brought to such a degree of perfection as in the Island of Malta. The population of this island is about 200,000 and the people there rely almost wholly upon the goat. The number of goats there is very large, but no one seems to know just how many. There are various estimates ranging all the way from 12,000 to 30,000. They wander about in small flocks. David G-. Fairchild, to whose courtesy the author is indebted for the Malta pictures, notes that they feed largely on scraps of all kinds, such as they can. pick up on the streets. It is not strange that this method of subsistence gives to the milk a strong, unpleasant flavor, and on this account the English contingent prefer con- densed milk from England and the United States. There are no regular grazing fields for goats, such as are known in the United States, but every morning the flocks are driven out along the roads and uninclosed plots along the sides of the hills, where the goats pick up whatever they can find in the way of weeds, but there is seldom any sort of grass. Sometimes they get the leaves from the maize and the prickly pear. At night, when they are driven back to shelter, their day's feeding is supplemented by the carob bean. The proper winter food for these goats is the chick pea, broad bean, and sulla, all of which are grown all over the island. How these animals can give so much milk upon such feed as they get is a matter of frequent remark by foreigners who visit Malta. The amount of milk produced varies, of course, with the ani- mal and with the period of lactation. Hon. John H. Grout, TJ. S. Consul at Malta, says an average goat produces 44 pints of milk per day, and sometimes as much as 5 pints. Fairchild's informa- tion is that the average yield is between 3 and 4 quarts a day. Often the owner has an income of 16 cents a day from a single goat. The Maltese goats are about 2 feet (> inches in height, while 214 MILCH GOATS. they will often weight 100 pounds. They are usually hornless, and many that grow horns are dehorned. The predominant color is white, although there are many of other colors — red, brown, and black. The ears are moderately long, and horizontal. The ud- ders are very large, oftentimes nearly touching the ground when the animal stands. It is said that the milk characteristic of the breed has been so perfectly developed that nearly every doe kid becomes a good milker. There are two varieties of Maltese goats — ■ the long haired and the short haired. The hair of the former is often 4 to 5 inches long. The prices of good Maltese milkers range between $10 and $25. They have been imported into England out have not thrived there. In Malta it is asserted that they never do well when ex- ported. There is no record of any importations into the United States. The Toggenburger goat. — This breed is from the Toggenburg valley of Switzerland, a district forming a considerable portion of the Canton St. Gallen, in the northeast section of the republic. It is of the hornless type, though occasionally one is found with horns; the hair is medium long, and usually solid fawn color, but sometimes dark-brown mottled. The average weight of this animal is about 121 pounds. The Toggenburger has a somewhat slender body, and, except as to its larger size, very much resembles the Appenzeller, which comes from the same section of country and is sometimes considered by some not well informed to be of the same breed. Hook says: "The general appearance of the Toggenburger is attractive ; the color is a peculiar shade of brown, or mouse, color, and with white marking distributed with perfect regularity. The legs below the knees and hocks should be white, and a white streak runs down either side of the face and round the ears. The head is without horns ; the ears are pricked and of moderate size, as is the case with all the Swiss varieties, and the face bears a remarkably intelligent, gentle expression.*' Professor Anderegg, who was secretary of the Swiss Agricul- tural Society, in a monograph upon Swiss goats, speaks of the Toggenburger as one of the most valuable of Swiss goats. He also says that she is easily acclimatized, and will thrive as well in the stable as on the hills. Hook also says of this breed in Eng- land: "The Toggenburger goat is, in my opinion, by far the most valuable and the best suited to our climate of all the pure breeds that have been introduced into this country, and, having now become fairly common and well established with us, is the breed I should unhesitatingly commend to the attention of goat SWISS MILCH GOAT. (Toggenberg Breed.) Photo by Will C. Clos. 216 MILCH GOATS. keepers." This animal is always somewhat lean and bony looking when giving milk, as it seems to throw all the strength of its constitution into the production of milk. Anderegg says the daily milk product of this breed is about 41 liters. This must be regarded as a very heavy yield. The president of the British Goat Society is quoted as authority for the statement that a Toggenburger in England yielded a frac- tion less than a gallon per day. Although not equal to 4 liters, it is probably more than the average daily product of a year. In discussing this breed, Hook points out an important feature which, in the opinion of this writer, is applicable to all breeds, namely, that the high position occupied by the Toggenburgers as milk producers has been attained by the careful selection of indi- viduals for breeding, and from their offspring, preserving those only for breeding which have proved themselves to be good milkers. This method of practice will certainly lead to definite results if intelligent selection is made. It may be surmised, therefore, as has been stated in discussing the Saanen breed, that there are in Switzerland many Toggenburgers which are useless as milch goats. So, while it may be true that this breed has been so handled as to possess more definite or fixed characteristics than other breeds, it is by no means certain that any Toggenburger doe will prove herself to be a good milker. There are very few goats of this breed in the United States ; indeed, there is but one record of importation. On July 12, 1893, W. A. Shafor, of Hamilton, Ohio, now secretary of the American Oxford Down Eecord Association, imported through the port of New York 4 head of Toggenburgers. These were located on a farm in Indiana. From correspondence with Mr. Shafor, it is evident that there has been some difficulty in acclimating them, for as late as in 1898 he wrote that the purebred stock had reached the number of 7 only. Half-bloods and three-quarter-bloods had proved themselves, like the pure breeds, to be good milkers. This fact tends to confirm the statement of Hook that "they have a remarkable power of transmitting their characteristics to their offspring, many half-bred animals showing aU the distinguishing peculiarities of the race." The Saanen goat. — The Saanen breed of goats, according to Dettweiler, takes its name from the Saanen valley in Switzerland, but it is quite commonly kept also in the upper Simmon valley of the same country. The pure Saanen goat is rather large, of dainty white color, and is hornless. The neck is proportionately long, shapely, and not very heavy; breast well developed; udder 1 A liter equals 1.0567 quarts. MILCH GOATS. 217 very pretty, as a rule; milk production is plentiful under good food, averaging 4 quarts per day. Wilsdorf Bays the milk of this breed is, like that of most breeds, pure white (in rare caa yellowish white)- and somewhat thick in consistency as compared with the milk of the farm, or native, goats of Saxony, and that it is characterized by a positive pleasant taste. The statement of the milk production is upon the authority of Anderegg, but Dettweiler says that, so far as he is able to form an opinion from his own observation, the quantity is too large for the breed taken as a whole. Anderegg was writing of the Saanen goats in Switzerland, and Dettweiler acknowledges that in all goats in Switzerland the production of milk is noticeably higher than in Saxony, "where no one bothers himself about the goat." Petersen says concerning this breed: "The quantity of milk given when the animal is fresh is stated at 3 to 4 liters, increased in isolated cases to 5 or 6 liters; and it is also true that in other cases it remains under 3 liters. The average daily quantity for a lactation period of 9 to 10 months is estimated as a rule at 2 liters or a little over; so that the annual production runs about GOO liters. Germany imports large numbers of Saanen goats, not alone on account of their milk yield, but because of their becoming easily accustomed to the climate and the feed, and also because of their clean white color. The result of this large demand has been known to raise the price of a doe to 100 marks and of a buck to 200 marks. Doctor Kohlschmiclt, director of the agricultural school at Freiburg, Saxony, conducted experiments in 1896 and 1897 with various goats to test their capacity for milk production, and one of his conclusions was that the Saanen goats, which had been imported into Saxony in 1894, with the same feed and methods of keeping that the German goats had, could be classed as anything but better than the Saxony goats, as regards both quality and quantity of milk. Wilsdorf, however, after stating that the Saanen goats, after kidding, give from 4 to 6 liters of milk daily, and that "this yield happens not occasionally but as a rule in the Saanenthal/' probably gives the reason why these goats in Kohlschmidfs possession proved to be so inferior. He says that the owners of the Saanen goats are not so lacking in foresight as to dispose of their best milch goats, for by so doing they would soon have competitors in a lucrative business. Besides, lie calls attention to the depend- ence of the Swiss upon their goats, and for this reason also they will not sell the best animals out of their stalls. For the most 218 MILCH GOATS. part those which are exported are fit only for slaughter. An idea of the enormous exports of Saanen goats may be had when one learns that there were shipped out of the Saanenthal and the immediate vicinity in 1893 something over 50,000 head. "We have seen exports of goats from Switzerland purchased at a large total cost which would have been considered almost worthless to an intelligent breeder/' (Wilsdorf.) But let us return to Kohlschmidt^s experiments giving the re- sults as they are quoted by Petersen: Ten Saanen goats were employed — 7 of them from 3 to 3 1-3 years old, and 3 from 2 to 2^ years old. The average quantity of milk produced during a year by these 10 goats was 678.41 liters per head. The largest annual production was 911 liters, and the smallest production was 421.94 liters. The following statement shows the annual pro- duction per head: 2 gave over 400 liters (423 quarts). 3 gave over 500 liters (528 quarts). 1 gave over 600 liters (634 quarts). 2 gave over 800 liters (845 quarts). 2 gave over 900 liters (951 quarts). Animals of this breed which were 14 months old gave an aver- age during their first lactation of 509.72 liters per head per year. The maximum was 665.69 liters and the minimum 351.31 liters. The duration of the lactation of the animals 3 1-3 years old was 364 days as a maximum, 193 days as a minimum, 296 as an average. For the animals 14 months old the maximum during the lactation was 348 days, minimum 265 days, average 330 days. The Nubian goat. — The Nubian goat is larger by half than the common species, and many who are unfamiliar with it take it at first glance for a horse, says one prominent writer. Below the top of the head the forehead rises so as to form a conical prominence, then sinks toward the nose until the nostrils are in an actual depression. The lower jaw protrudes beyond the upper and the teeth oftentimes extend above the nostrils. The ears are flat, long, large, and pendant. Sometimes, however, an individual is found with ears short, straight, and pointed. There is an entire absence of beard. The females have no horns; those of the male are flat and short and lie upon the back of the head ; midway the horns are curved from within to without. The udder is deeply indented, so as to form two very distind lobes; the teals are situated, as in all species, upon the lower part of the udder, but in this breed upon the outside and below. The eyes are very large and iie Hal in the head — do not protrude. The hair is usually quite long, dee]) brown or black, and quite fine. There is no odor connected with this breed, even at rutting SPANISH MALTESE BUCK. Bred by B. H. Van Raub, Van Raub, Tex. 220 MILCH GOATS. time, which occurs at all seasons of the year. It is an exceedingly prolific animal, having been known to give birth to as many as 11 kids during one year — 4 on each of two occasions and 3 at another. No member of the goat family is more peaceful or gentle. This breed is very sensitive to cold, apparently being unable to withstand even a slight degree. This necessitates a warm barn or goat house. They should never be sent to pasture when there is frost. We are informed that the slightest cold produces abortion. A ration of dry, nourishing food — good hay will answer the pur- pose— is always advisable. Crosses of Nubian bucks upon other breeds of milch goats have been successful. Du Plessis says: "The half-bloods are more vigorous, better built, less delicate in their food requirements, and withstand the climate of France without the slightest in- jury." The records show that the Nubian is the most productive milch goat known. Du Plessis says: "We have known Nubian goats of good constitutions, when intelligently handled, to give from 5.28 to 6.34 quarts per day." There are reports of a few Nubian goats in the United States, but whether they are the real Nubian breed is not known to the writer. It is quite evident that they would not thrive in the colder sections of our country in their pure state ; but they would undoubtedly do well in the South and half-breeds would be able to withstand a colder climate. The Spanish-Maltese goat. — This breed of goats is found in Texas and New Mexico. It is known that Spain imports from Malta a great many Maltese goats and it is said that during the last hundred years large numbers have been exported from Spain to Mexico, where they are known as the Spanish-Maltese. While this is the claim made for them, which carries the inference that they arc the pure Malta goats under another name, there are many reasons to cause one to doubt that they are of the pure Maltese breed. The following description of Spanish-Maltese breed is by B. H. Van Raul), of Van Raub, Tex., who has been a breeder of them for more than twenty years: "The Spanish-Maltese goat is about the average size of the common or the Angora goat, pos- sibly a little larger, it is white or grayish in color, but many have brown, bluish black, or reddish spots. Many have coarse hair, some have long, fine, silken hair, and sonic have short coars< hair. As a rule, they have pendulous ears, but there are some superior milkers having fox-like ears. There are more horn! SPANISH MALTESE DOE. Bred by B. H. Van Raub, Van Raub, Tex. HORNLESS SPANISH MALTESE I > O ' : Bred by B. H. Van Raub. Van Raub, Tex. 222 MILCH GOATS. or muley, goats among the Spanish-Maltese than among any other breeds/' The description shows that there are two varieties of Spanish- Maltese goats, and the illustrations show them to be so different in many respects as to lead one to suspect them of being distinct breeds. The short-haired one has several markings which are characteristic of the Toggenburger and has very few markings of the pure Maltese. The long-haired one varies in form and feature from the pure Maltese. It does not follow, however, that the Spanish-Maltese goats are not a good milch breed, even though they may not belong to the Maltese breed. There is no statement at hand to show what is the average daily production of milk or how long is the period of lactation, but if the does can be made to produce as much as 2 quarts daily under ordinary care, it should be considered well adapted to the goat dairy. Mr. Van Kaub reports some which do much better than this. The literature concerning milch goats in the United States is but little and that unimportant. So far as the writer knows, there has been but one importation of milch goats, and that about twelve years ago. Those numbered about a dozen head of Toggen- burgers. They have not seemed to thrive well here, but what it is in particular that prevents their thriving is not known to the writer. The remnant of the original importations is somewhere in Indiana at this time. It is probable that if they were taken into the mountains to a location like that from which they came, they would do better than they are now doing. Switzerland, Italy, Germany, France, Spain, Egypt, and Malta, all have milch goats of great worth, but, unfortunately, the Uni- ted States has found it necessary to established a prohibitive quarantine against all these countries because of the presence in them of contagious diseases of domestic animals. Fairly good animals may be secured in England, but none of pure blood. England found it necessary to evolve an "English" goat, just as we may find it necessary here to produce an "American" goat. There is no registration in the United States for milch goats of any breed. England has a registration, and as any importations we may make for some years are likely to come from that country, it would be well if registration papers were secured of all goats and held until such time as an association might be formed here. As soon as we in this country produce a goat that will yield as much as 2 quarts of milk per day, with a period of lactation of MILCH GOATS. 22.', 5 or (i months, it will then be time to think seriously of a n tration association. Until such an organization ia formed, let the breeder keep a record of his goats' performances in the pro- duction of milk; stilted otherwise, let each breeder have an indi- vidual record for his flock. These will in time prove of great value to the milch goat industry. The skins are among the best of the goat kind, and they add a little to the profits of the industry. There should be no difficulty in disposing of them wherever hides are handled. There are many tanneries in our country that use them and they import millions of dollars' Avorth annually. There would be no profit in raising these goats for their skins alone, or even for both their meat and skins. The value of our imports of goatskins for a series of years is given in the chapter on "Minor matters of importance.*7 These goats will destroy brushwood as readily and completely as the Angoras, but in doing so they produce a poor quality of milk and not much of it, and the period of lactation is shorter than if stall fed. An Angora succeeds in excellent manner in converting brushwood into mohair, but the dairy goat can not convert the same sort of feed into good milk. INDEX. Page JEsophagosloma venulosum affecting goats 158 Age, how to determine 139 proper, for breeding 138 Aiken, M., remarks on odor of goat's milk 194 Alabama, number and value of all goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Albrect, Von L., remarks on milking 254 Albumin in goat's whey 208 Allen, Richard, remarks on Davis importation 36 Altenburger cheese from goat's milk 205 American milch goat suggested 198 Anderegg, Professor, remarks on Toggenburger goat 214 Angora and Kurd goats, similarity of breeds 19 goat, absence of ill odor 32 description 30 hornless, remarks 32 industry, reasons for renewed interest 28 modern, description 31 native habitat 13 origin and history 11 purebred, description 30 purebred ruined by crossing 30 quantity of milk given 189 question of hardiness 117 goats, distribution previous to Rebellion 27 from whom to buy 169 how to handle 170 in United States 19 nonshedding, remarks 32 number in South Africa, 1893-1898 52 number in Turkey 52 number in United States 49 pastured with other stock 77 Arizona, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Arkansas, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1S99 55 Ash in goat's and cow's milk 102 Bachman, John, description of purebred Angora 31 remarks on crossing of sheep and goats 171 influence of climate on coats of ani- mals 17 Bailey, C. P., concerning Diehl and Brown importation 39 226 INDEX. Page Bailey, C. P., development of industiy in the West 27 & Sons Co., importers 44 opinion of Angora mutton 98 remarks on dehorning 142 remarks on fences 122 Willard C, difficulties encountered in Asia Minor 44 general remarks on kidding 127 importer from Asia Minor 44 Barnes, Almont, remarks on land available for goat raising 106 Barnette, J. R., remarks on kidding 133 Beck, Q. M., remarks on dehorning 142 Bezoar goat, ancestor of the Angora 12 Binns, Henry O., remarks on crossing of Angora and Kurd goats. . 18 Black, William L., concerning Chenery importations 37 Davis importation 36 remarks on influence of climate on mohair.... 105 kidding 133 Bluestone for roundworms 153 Blue vitriol, remedy for foot rot 162 Bond, George W., remarks on value of fleece 24 Brannin, S. S., remarks on grazing of goats 76 Breeding and kidding of milch goats 200 in-and-in 139 proper age 138 Breeds of milch goats 213 Brewer importation of Cashmere goats 38 Bridge, separating, description 127 Brown, Charles S., importer 39 Browsing, adding game flavor 77 and pasturage, chapter 62 supplementing feeding 76 Brushwood, as permanent pasturage, treatment 70 destroying by sheep 174 extermination, availability of common goats 77 use of Angora goats 62 one year not sufficient 72 some objectionable features 72 Buck, remarks on management 140 Butter fat in goat's and cow's milk 102 from goat's milk, analysis and characteristics 206 Calcium in ash of goat's whey 208 California, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Cape Colony, production of mohair, 1857-1900 58 Capra wgagrus, subdivision of the goat family 12 description by Schreiner 13 falconeri, subdivision of the goat family 12 description by Schreiner 12 Carbohydrates in goat's butter 206 Casein in goat's and cow's milk 102 Cashmere and Angora goats, similarity of breeds 19 goat, description 34 goats, Brewer importation 38 [NDEX. Castration of kids, remarks 132 Cawootl, R., breeder of Bailey importation 14 Cheese from goat's milk, remarks 205 Chenery importation, remarks 37 Chesnut, V. K., note on laurel 74 Cheveretin, French goat cheese 205 Chisholm, J. R., remarks on milch goats in Queensland Chlorine in ash of goat whey Climate for Angora goat raising 104 of Asia Minor, description 14 Clipping machines, remarks 144 Coal tar creosote for roundworms 153 Coburn, F. D., opinion of Angora mutton 97 Coligny, William G. de, remarks on Angoras for milk 102 Colorado, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Connecticut, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Corning, W. O., remarks on Angora goats as brushwood destroyers. 6G Country Gentleman, remarks on fleeces 24 Stiles importation 39 Crosses upon common does 135 Cumberbatch, H. A., remarks on climate of Asia Minor 14 Dairies, milch goat, remarks 204 Davenport, Colonel, owner of some of the Davis goats 26 Davis importation, difficulty in obtaining the goats 36 James B., appointed cotton expert grower for Turkey 19 note on durability of mohair 86 Dehorning, remarks 142 Delagoa Bay, source of importation 43 Delaware, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 Dettweiler, Fr., remarks on cost of producing goat's milk 196 flavor of goat's milk 193 goat's milk 179, 180, 184 quantity of milk given by goats 189 tuberculosis in goats 212 value of goats and goat products in Germany 177 Diehl and Brown importation 39 Diehl, Israel S., description of Cashmere goat 34 importer 39 Dips for lice 162 Diseases, chapter 153 of milch goats, remarks 213 District of Columbia, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900. 50 Drenching for wireworms, remarks by Ch. Wardell Stiles 155 how to do it 155 Dressing and tanning the skins L65 Du Plessis, remarks on Nubian goat 220 Emery, George G., note on domestic and foreign mohair SI quality of mohair S2 opinion of Turkish and American mohair 18 remarks on price of mohair 88 228 INDEX. Page England, use of goat's milk 186 Eutichides importation 39 Fairchild, David G., concerning milch goats in Malta 213 Fat in goat's whey 208 butter 206 Feed and care, influence on mohair 86 tor Angora goats, remarks 124 Feeding of milch goats 220 Feet of Angoras, care 134 Fencing and herding Angoras 120 housing milch goats 202 Ferguson, J. A., opinion of Angora mutton 97 Fink & Co., importation 43 Henry, remarks on kidding 134 Flavor of Angora mutton, remarks 100 goat's milk 192 Fleece, care after shearing 150 Flesh, what to call it 171 Flock from small beginning, remarks 135 management, chapter ] 35 the best 135 Flocks, remarks on size 141 Florida, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Foot rot, remedy 162 Fromage de St. Marcellin, French goat cheese 205 Fuchs, H. T., opinion of Angora mutton 98 remarks on Angoras as cocklebur destroyers 69 kidding 134 shearing 143 training goats to fight dogs 168 trapping wolves 163 Fulton, John W., interest in exploiting Angora mutton 97 Game flavor added by browsing 77 Gasoline for roundworms 153 Gatheral, Gavin, remarks on quality of mohair in Asia Minor 15 Georgia, number and value of goats, all breeds, 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Germany, number of goats in 1873, 1883, 1S85, 1892 177 remarks on value of goats and goat products by Dett- weiler 177 Gloves, imports, 1896-1901 174 Goat, Angora. (See Angora goat.) Goat house, remarks 202 paper, its province 173 Rocky Mountain, remarks 17 4 Goating, one year not sufficient on brushwood 72 Goatskins, imports, 1896-1901 174 Goats, brief description by Hayes and Wood 12 common, as brush destroyers 77 remark? 173 all breeds, number in United States 49 and sheep affected by same diseases 153 jxm.x Goats, milk cheese, remarks cost of production ] 96 remarks on flavor odor 194 quality L88 number of species 11 to an acre of brushwood 77 Goodall, George B., first to weave plush in the United States remarks on kemp 84 the care of fleeces 150 Grass considered injurious when wet 125 springing up after goats 74 Gratairon, French goat cheese 205 Grazing of goats 76 Green briers injurious to goats 74 Grout, John H., remarks on Maltese milch goats 21S Habitat of Angora goats 13 Haddrup, B. R., remarks on goat's milk 185 Hardiness of Angora goats 117 Hales, C. H., remarks on availability of Oregon for goat raising. . . . 194 Hampton, Wade, owner of some of the Davis goats 26 Harris and Hall importation 40 John S., development of industry in the West 27 difficulties in importing Angoras 40 importer 40 note on influence of feed on fleece 87 remarks on climate of Idaho for Angoras 105 grazing of goats 76 in-and-in breeding 139 Hawaii, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 Hayes, John L., opinion of the Angora 12 Hays, George M., opinion of Angora mutton 98 Herding and fencing 120 Hilpert, Felix, description of milch goat 197 remarks on flavor of goat's milk 193 goat's milk 180, 184 tuberculosis in goats J 1 1 Hoffman, Doctor, analysis of goat's milk 190 remarks on goat's milk 170. 184 tuberculosis in goats 212 Hogg, James S., remarks on Angoras as brushwood destroyers. . . . 66 Holmes, R. C, breeder of Landrum importation 46 Holter, A. M., opinion of Angora mutton 97 Hook, Bryan, remarks on feed of goats 125 flavor of goat's milk 192 milch goat house 202 Toggenburger goat 214 tuberculosis in goats 210 Houck, George A., opinion of Angora mutton 100 Housing and fencing of milch goats 202 Hughes, W. G., concerning Chenery importation 37 opinion of Angora mutton 9S remarks on kidding 132 230 INDEX. Page Hughes, W. G., separating bridge 127 Ibexes, brief description 12 Idaho, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Illinois, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Importations, a glance into the future 46 Importers and importations, chapter 36 In-and-in breeding 139 Indiana, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Indian Territory, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900. . . 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899. 55 Iowa, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Italy, use of goat's milk 186 Jenks, C. W., concerning Peters importation 43 Kalmia latifolia (laurel), poisonous to goats 74 Kansas, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Kemble, A., remarks on Angoras as brushwood destroyers 66 Kemp, general remarks 82 why objectionable 83 Kentucky, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Kidding and breeding of milch goats . . 200 the kids, remarks 126 corral method, by W. C. Bailey 127 notes from correspondents 132 staking method, by W. C. Bailey 131 Kids and kidding, remarks 126 castration 132 number at a birth 141 weaning 132 Kimball, H. I., remarks on kidding 133 use of clipping machines 144 Kloepfer, G., remarks on feeding milch goats 201, 202 flavor of goat's milk 193 Kohlschmidt, Doctor, remarks on Saanen goat 217, 218 Kurd goat, crossing with the Angora 18, 30 Land available for goat raising 106 enrichment by goats 167 Landrum, William M., concerning Chenery importation 37, 38 Eutichides importation 39 Peters, or Jenks, importation.. 43 development of the industry in the West. . 27 importer from South Africa 46 of first goats into California 27 remarks on kidding 132 Laurel (Kalmia latifolia), poisonous to goats 74 Leather from Angora skins 164 Lewis, Morris, remarks on Angoras as brushwood destroyers 68 Lice, how to kill them 162 INDEX. 231 Page Louisiana, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 ■"" quantity and value of mohair production in L899 55 Ludlow, F. W., inventor of combination shearing table and trough. 14»; Machines for shearing Ill McMurtrie, William, remarks on mohair measurements 79 McPherran, E. W., availability of northern Michigan for Angoras. . 109 Magnesium in ash of goat's whey 208 Maine, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Markets for goats for meat 100 Marking of goats 125 Maryland, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 Massachusetts Mohair Plush Company, note 95 number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 Ploughman, concerning Chenery importation 38 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899. .. 55 May, H., remarks on goat's whey 208 Meat, what to call it 171 Micrococcus caprinus, organism of goat disease 159 Milch goat dairies, remarks 204 description 197 situation 176 goats, breeding and kidding. 200 breeds 213 chapter 176 diseases 213 fencing and housing 202 general remarks 213 notes on their skins 223 number in Germany, 1873, 1883, 1885, 1892 177 period of lactation 192 possibilities of importations 222 the matter of registration 222 Zeitung, analysis of goat's butter 206 remarks on flavor of goat's milk 193 goat's milk 185 Michigan, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Milking, remarks on operation 204 Milk of Angoras, remarks 101 cow, analyzed 102 goat, analyzed 102, 185, 189 cost of production 196 its various uses 179 quality 192 remarks on analysis 1 S4 sugar in goat's and cow's milk 102 Minnesota, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Mississippi, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Missouri, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 232 INDEX. Page Mohair and mohair manufactures, chapter 79 articles manufactured 91 description of quality in Asia Minor by Gavin Gatheral .... 16 influence of feed and care 86 manufactures, general remarks 91 prices at Bradford, 1856-1894 90 production, chapter 49 of Cape Colony, 1857-1900 57 Turkey, 1875-1900 56 United States 54 products, durability 86 remarks on foreign competition 55 luster 81 price 87 the question of overproduction 58 Mohler, John R., remarks on takosis 158 Montana, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Morocco leather, imports, 1896-1901 174 Mutton, Angora, discussion 96 Nebraska, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Nevada, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 New Hampshire, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900. . . 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899. 55 New Jersey, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 New Mexico, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899. ... 55 New York, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 North Carolina, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900. ... 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899. 55 North Dakota, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 Norway, use of goat's milk 186 Nubian goat, general remarks 218 quantity of milk given 189 Odor of goat's milk 194 Ogden, Philo, grazing of goats 76 Ohio, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Oklahoma, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Oregon, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Osborn, A. O., disposition of the Davis goats 26 Parasites, remarks by Ch. Wardell Stiles 153 scab, affecting goats 157 Paseng, ancestor of Angora goat 12 Pasturage and browsing, chapter 62 permanent, treatment of brushwood 70 Pasturing goats with other live stock 77 Pegler, S. Holmes, note on durability of mohair 86 [NDEX. Penny Magazine, notes on collecting and selling pashm Pennsylvania, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 quantity and value of mohair production in L899. . ■ ■ Pens and shelter 118 Peters, or Jenks, importation 43 Richard, concerning Davis importation 36 crossing sheep and goats 171 founder of Angora industry in the United States. management of buck 140 purchase of Angoras from Doctor Davis 25 Petersen, Peter, milk of the goat 180 quantity of milk of goats 189 remarks on Saanen goats 217 Pets, use of Angoras 169 Phosphoric acid in ash of goat's whey 208 Place, O. G., milk of the goat 186 Plush manufacture in United States, history 94 Pneumonia, verminous, affecting goats 158 Potassium in ash of goat's whey 208 Power, T. C, opinion of Angora mutton 98 Proteids in goat's butter 206 Registration association 172 Renesse, A. von, analysis of goat's milk 190 remarks on goat's milk 182, 184 making goat cheese 206 milking 204 tuberculosis in goats 211 Reusse, C. P., remarks on goat's whey 188 Rhode Island, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899... 55 Ricotto cheese from goat's milk 205 Ridgels (rignals), remarks 141 Robes from Angora skins 164 Roby, Mrs. Edward, efforts to develop American milch goat 200 interest in milch goats 177 suggests American milch goat 198 Rocky Mountain goat, remarks 174 Roquefort cheese from goat's milk 205 Roundworms affecting goats, remarks by Ch. Wardell Stiles 153 Rugs from Angora skins 164 Saanen goat, general remarks 216 Salting of goats, remarks L25 Salts in goat's butter 206 whey 208 Sanford Mills, mohair manufacturers !,:> Scab parasites affecting goats 157 Schreiner, S. C. Cronwright, crossing of sheep and goats 171 description of Capra falconeri and C. cegagrus 12 description of purebred Angora 31 influence of climate on coats cf ani- mals 17 feed on fleece s7 234 INDEX. Page Schreiner, S. C. Cronwright, origin of the Angora 12 production of mohair in Cape Colony. 28 Schwartz, Doctor, remarks on milk of the goat 180 tuberculosis in goats 211 Schweitzer cheese from goat's milk 205 Sclerostoma hypostomum affecting goats 158 Scott, G. M., remarks on kidding 133 Sexes, what to name them 171 Shafor, W. A., importer of Toggenburger goats 216 Shaw, Thomas, availability of Minnesota lands for Angoras 112 Shearing by hand, note 144 care of fleece after operation 150 description of operation 146 machines, remarks 144 once or twice a year 143 washing goats before operation 148 Shedding, remarks 152 Sheep and goats, affected by same diseases 153 crossing with Angoras, discussion 170 destroyers of brushwood 174 goats as protection 167 Shelter and pens 118 Skins and their uses 164 importations 165, 174 Sodium in ash of goat's whey 208 Soil desirable for Angora goat raising 105 South Africa, number of Angoras, 1893-1898 52 South Carolina, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900. ... 50 quantity and value of mohair production 55 South Dakota, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900.... 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899. . . 55 Spanish-Maltese goats, general remarks 220 St. Claude, French goat cheese 205 Standley, J. R., goats as brushwood destroyers 63 management of buck 140 Stiles, Ch. Wardell, remarks on drenching for wireworms 155 parasites 153 roundworms affecting goats 153 Stomach worms 153 Stiles importation 39 Stomach worms, preventive measures 156 (Strongylus contortus), discussion 153 use of worm powders 157 Strongylus ftlicollis affecting goats 158 Sugar in goat's whey 208 goat's and cow's milk 102 Sulphuric acid in ash of goat's whey 208 Summer, A. G., owner of some of the Davis goats 26 Takosis in goats, remarks by John R. Mohler 158 Tanning and dressing goatskins 165 Tapeworms affecting goats 158 Tariff on goat products 172 INDKX. Page Tennessee, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Texas, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Thymol for roundworms 153 Toggenburger goat, general remarks 214 Tom, Oscar, remarks on kidding 134 shelter required 120 Tompkins, Daniel F., efforts to develop American milch goat 200 Toole, J. K., opinion of Angora mutton 97 Trichocephalus aflinis affecting goats 158 Trimmings from Angora skins 164 Trowbridge, George, concerning Brewer importation 28 Tuberculosis, immunity of goats 210 in goats, remarks 196 note 158 with reference to Angora goats 102 Turkey, mohair production, 1875-1900 56 number of Angora goats in 1894 52 number of Angora goats in 1902, estimate 52 Turpentine for roundworms 153 Uncinaria cernua affecting goats 158 Utah, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Van Raub, B. H., breeder of Spanish-Maltese goats 220 Vermont, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Verminous pneumonia affecting goats 158 Virginia, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quanity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Water content of goat's and cow's milk 102 in goat's butter 206 whey 208 Watering goats, remarks 125 Washing goats before shearing 148 Washington, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Watts, J. Washington, concerning Stiles importation 39 Weaning kids, remarks 132 Wellington, Duke, note on durability of mohair 86 West Virginia, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899. . . 55 Whey, goat's analysis 208 composition of ash remarks 208 use as medicine 18S White, Mrs. Harriet E. Davis, concerning Davis importation 36 remarks on fleece of first importa- tion U sale of Davis goats. ... '26 Wildcat, enemy of kids 163 Williamson, H. M., discussion of overproduction of mohair 59 Wireworms, remarks on drenching 155 236 INDEX. Pagre Wisconsin, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Wolf, enemy of goats , 163 Woods, C. D., remarks on Angoras as brushwood destroyers 64 Worm powders, remarks , 157 Wyoming, number and value of goats, all breeds, in 1900 50 quantity and value of mohair production in 1899 55 Zurn, E. S., analysis of ash of goat's whey 208 notes on goat's whey 208 quantity of milk given by goats 189 • ••11 Iv ••• "DOMESTIC SHEEP" BY HENRY STEWART. A Twentieth Century Book. UP TO DATE IN EVERY PARTICULAR. A profoundly scientific and practical treatise on sheep, embracing the history, character, merits and demerits of all known breeds. 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